Ref: EDC 5/1591/2

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5/1591/2 CHESTER (St John) Andrew Brodman vicar c Henry Aneon tanner saying “what doth Mr Brodman think that I am, a papist… if there is any papistry in Chester it is in him” – libel.

Summary:

Andrew Brednam M.A., vicar of St John’s in Chester contra Henry Aneon, senior.

Andrew Brednam’s libel claimed that Henry Aneon had accused the vicar of calling him a papist, to which his response was that it was Brednam who was the papist, as confirmed by his preaching. Aneon was also accused of stating that Brednam was dishonest and had libelled him.

Year

1591

Type of Cause:

Defamation – other

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1591/2 image 1]

In the name of God, Amen: before you, worshipful and distinguished Master David Yale, Doctor of Laws, lawfully deputed official principal of the Chester Consistory Court, or your substitute or any other judge whomsoever competent in this regard, the party of the distinguished Andrew Brednam, preacher of the holy word, and also vicar of the church of St John of the city of Chester against Henry Aneon, senior, tanner, of the city of Chester aforesaid and also against any other or any others whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law jointly, severally and in articles as follows:

Firstly, namely that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter or express abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, scandalous or defamatory words to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person with malicious intent and against public morals, were and are to be canonically corrected and punished according to the law; and he propounds jointly, severally and in articles as follows:

Also, that notwithstanding the premises and the same being true, the aforesaid Henry Aneon, not being ignorant of the premises but knowing them well enough, giving no thought to the welfare of his soul, being induced (as it is believed) by an evil spirit, in the months of January and February in the year of our Lord 1591/2 (now current) according to the computation of the English church, or in one or other of those months, in the city of Chester or elsewhere, seriously and grievously and with malicious intent and against public morals defamed the aforesaid Andrew Brednam previously in no way defamed in that respect, and he openly and publicly uttered and published defamatory words set out in English words, or similar in effect to these and importing the same effect, before trustworthy witnesses, saying, “what doth Mr Brednam thincke that I am A papist ney yf there be enye papistrye in eyther of vs I am perswaded in my conscience yt ys in him” meaning the said Brednam “and hath entered into matters which he Cannot goe through with and wounded my conscience with his sermon of the sacrament and confirmed the Papiste doctrine” however this party propounds and articles of any form whatever of defamatory words uttered by the aforesaid Aneon in this respect such as will be proved in the event of this suit; and he propounds jointly, severally and of any part thereof, as before.

 

Transcript

[5/1591/2 image 1]

In dei nomine amen Coram vobis venerabili et egregio
viro Magistro Dauid Yale legum doctore Curie Consistorialis Cestrensis
Officiali principali legitime deputato vestrove Surrogato aut alio Judice in hac parte competente quocunque Pars
discreti viri Andree Brednam sacri verbi predicator
necnon Vicarij Ecclesie Sancti Johannis Ciuitatis Cestrie
contra et aduersus Henricum Aneon seniorem Tanner
Ciuitatis Cestrie predicte necnon contra quemcunque alium seu quos-
cunque alios pro eodem coram vobis in Judicio legitime inter-
venientes per viam querele et vobis in hac parte quere-
lando dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis in Jure proponit
Coniunctim Diuisim et Articulatim prout sequitur

Imprimis videlicet Quod omnes et singuli Subditi et
subiecti huius Regni Anglie qui Convicia vituperia verbave
opprobriosa scandalosa  seu diffamatoria in alicuis bone
fame læsionem seu denigracionem animo malicioso et contra
bonos mores dicunt emittunt seu proferunt fuerunt
et sunt Canonice et iuxta Juris exigentia corrigendi et
puniendi Et Ponit Coniunctim Diuisim et Articulatim prout sequitur

 Item Quod premissis non obstantibus eisque veris existentibus
predictus Henricus Aneon premissorum non ignarus imo
satis sciolus anime sue salutis immemor spritu (vt creditur)
maligno ductus antedictum Andream Brednam prius in
ea parte minime diffamatum mensibus Januarij et
Februarij Anno Domini 1591 secundum computacionem Ecclesie
Anglicane iam currenti eorumve mensis vno siue
aliquo infra Ciuitatem Cestrie vel alibi grauiter et
enormiter animoque malicioso et Contra bonos mores
diffamavit ac verba diffamatoria in Anglicanis verbis
conceptis seu eis in effectu consimilia eundem effectum
importantia Coram testibus fidedignis palam et publice
Protulit et publicauit dicendo what doth Mr
Brednam thincke that I am A papist ney yf there
be enye papistrye in eyther of vs I am perswaded
in my conscience yt ys in him innuendo the said Brednam
and hath entered into matters which he Cannot goe
through with and wounded my conscience with his
sermon of the sacrament and confirmed the Papiste
doctrine Ponit tamen et Articulatur pars ista de qualibet
verborum diffamatorum forma per predictum Aneon in hac
parte prolata qualis in eventu huius litis probabi-
tur Et Ponit Coniunctim Diuisim et quolibet vt supra

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1591/2 image 2]

Also, that the aforesaid Henry Aneon in the months and year aforesaid these following defamatory words, or others similar in effect to them, openly and publicly saying in English “thou the said Brednam art or ys not an honest man but doest dele dishonestlye and badlye and gett thee out of the Citye to Farndon againe for thou art not estemed here in the Citye” meaning “the said Brednam”; and he propounds as before.

Also, that in the months and year aforesaid the abovementioned Henry Aneon, with persistent malicious intent, saying these defamatory words, or others importing the same effect in English words “thou the said Brednam hast and doest Cast libells against me in the
streetes” meaning “the said Brednam”; to the injury and denigration of the good name and fame of the said Bednam, both in the city of Chester and elsewhere, resulting in no small prejudice and trouble to the said Brednam; and he propounds as before.

Also, that before the utterance of these defamatory words the aforesaid Andrew Brednam was a man of good fame, unblemished reputation and honest conversation, and commonly called, taken, named and reputed openly and publicly for such and as such among his acquaintances and friends; and he propounds as before.  

Also, that by occasion and reason of the premisses the standing and good fame of the aforesaid Andrew Brednam are seriously and grievously injured among good and substantial people in the city of Chester and elsewhere, resulting in no small prejudice and damage to the said Brednam; and he propounds as before.

Also, that the aforesaid Henry Aneon, was and is of the parish of St John in the city of Chester and of Chester archdeaconry and diocese, and by reason thereof well known to be subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as before.

Transcript

[5/1591/2 image 2]

Item Quod antedictus Henricus Aneon mensis et
Anno predictis hæ verba diffamatoria subsequentia
palam et publice vel alia eis in effectu similia in
Anglice dicendo thou the said Brednam art or ys
not an honest man but doest dele dishonestlye
and badlye and gett thee out of the Citye
to Farndon againe for thou art not estemed here
in the Citye innuendo the said Brednam Et
ponit vt supra

Item Quod mensis et Anno predictis antefatus Henricus
Aneon in animo suo malicioso persistens hæ verba
diffamatoria vel alia eundem effectum importantia
in Anglicanis verbis dicendo thou the said Brednam
hast and doest Cast libells against me in the
streetes innuendo the said Brednam ad boni
nominis et fame dicti Brednam læsionem et
denigracionem infra Civitatem Cestrie quam alibi in
dictum Brednam preiudicium non modicum et gravamen
Et ponit vt supra

Iem Quod ante huiusmodi verborum diffamatorum
prolacionem predictus Andreas Brednam fuit vir bone
fame opinionis illese et conuersacionis honeste
proque tali et vt talis inter notos et vicinos suos
Communiter dictus tentus nominatus et reputatus palam
publice et notorie Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod occasione et pretextu premissorum status
et bona fama predicti Andree Brednam apud
bonos et graues infra Civitatem Cestrie quam alibi
grauiter et enormiter leduntur in dictum Brednam
preiudicium non parvum et grauamen Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod prefatus Henricus Aneon fuit et est parochie
Sancti Johannis Ciuitate Cestrie Archidiaconatus et diocesis Cestrensium
eoque pretextu vestre Jurisdiccionis notorie subditus et subiectus
Et ponit vt supra

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1591/2 image 3]

Also, that all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and at the same time infamous, and that there was and is public voice and rumour of and upon them.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Brednam prays that right and justice may be done and administered with effect to him and his party and that the said Aneon will be corrected and punished for the outrage of such temerity as in the premises and in matters concerning the same, according to the requirement of law; and also condemning him in the lawful costs incurred and to be incurred on behalf of the said Brednam, and having been condemned, that he will be obliged and compelled to the real payment of the same; and otherwise, that what will have been of right and reason in the premises is done, established and decreed; which the party of the said Brednam propounds and prays to be are done jointly and severally, not obliging himself to proving all and singular the premises, but so far as he will have proved in the premises thus far may he obtain in the petitions, always reserving the benefit of law in all things etc., humbly imploring your office in the premises, Lord Judge.

Transcript

[5/1591/2 image 3]

Item Quod  premissa omnia et singula fuerunt et sunt vera
publica notoria manifesta pariter et famosa et quod de et
super eisdem laborarunt et laborant publica vox et fama

Vnde facta fide de Jure in hac parte requisita
petit pars dicti Brednam ius et iusticiam sibi et parti sue
fieri et ministrari cum effectu dictumque Aneon pro tanto
temeritatis excessu in premissis et ea concernentibus iuxta
Juris exigentia corrigi et puniri necnon in expensis
legitimis ex parte dicti Brednam factis et fiendis
condemnando condemnatumque ad realem solucionem earundem
cogi et compelli vlteriusqueque fieri statui et decerni
in premissis quod Juris fuerit et rationis Quæ proponit
et fieri petit pars dicti Brednam Coniunctim et Diuisim
non arctans se ad omnia et singula premissa probanda
sed quatenus probauerit in premissis eatenus obtineat in
petitis Juris beneficio in omnibus semper salvo et cetera Vestrum
Officium Domine Judex in premissis humiliter implorando

Libel (image 4)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1591/2 image 4]

[Endorsement]

Libel on behalf of the distinguished Andrew Brednam against Henry Aneon senior etc. 1591.

[in pencil in a later hand]

Chester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[5/1591/2 image 4]

[Endorsement]

Libellus ex parte discreti viri Andree Brednam Contra Henricum Aneon seniorem et cetera 1591

[in pencil in a later hand]

Chester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Ref: EDC 5/1580/12

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5 1580. 12. MANCHESTER Robert Riding c Ralph Shalcrosse for saying he was a naughty man of his body – libel.

Summary:

Ralph Shalcrosse contra Robert Ridinges

 

Year

1580

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/12 image 1]

In the name of God, Amen; before you, worshipful Master Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, lawfully deputed official principal of the Chester consistory court, or any other judge whomsoever competent in this regard, the party of the distinguished Ralph Shalcrosse of the parish of Manchester of Chester archdeaconry against Robert Ridinges of the parish and archdeaconry aforesaid and against any other person or persons whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same, by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law in articles as follows: 

1          Firstly, namely that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who utter, assert or declare abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, scandalous or defamatory words tending or sounding to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person with malicious intent and against public morals, were and are to be canonically and according to the due requirement of law in that behalf corrected and punished; and he propounds as before.

2          Also, that notwithstanding the premises the aforesaid Robert Ridings, not being ignorant of the premises but knowing well enough, in the months of April and May in the year of our Lord 1580, now current, within the parish of Manchester aforesaid, with malicious intent and against public morals seriously and grievously defamed the aforesaid Ralph Shalcrosse, previously in no way defamed, of and concerning the crimes written below and he uttered, spoke and published some abusive, scandalous and defamatory words openly and publicly against the aforesaid Ralph and especially the following English words namely ‘Thou art or he is, meaninge the said Rafe Shalcrosse a naughtie[1] man of thy bodie & hast had […] dealing with […]’

[1] Promiscuous or immoral in this context.

Transcript

[1580/12 image 1]

In dei nomine Amen Coram vobis venerabili viro magistro Roberto leche legum
doctore Curie Consistorialis Cestrensis officiali principali legitime deputato aut
alio Judice in hac parte competenti quocunque Pars discreti
viri Radulphi Shalcrosse parochie de Mancestr’ Archidiaconatus
Cestrensis contra et aduersus Robertum Ridinges parochie et
Archidiaconatus predictis ac contra quemcunque alium seu quoscunque
alios coram vobis pro eodem in Judicio legitime interuenientem
per viam querele et vobis in hac parte querelando
dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis in Jure proponit
articulatim prout sequitur

1          Inprimis videlicet Quod omnes et singuli huius Regni Anglie
Subditi et subiecti qui Convitia vituperia verbaue
opprobriosa scandalosa seu diffamatoria ad alicuis
bone fame lesionem seu denigracionem tendentia seu
sonantia animo malicioso ac contra bonos mores proferunt
asserunt seu predicant, fuerunt et sunt canonice
ac iuxta Juris in ea parte Exigentiam corrigendi et
puniendi  Et ponit vt supra

2          Item Quod premissis non obstantibus prefatus Robertus Ridinges
premissorum non ignarus imo satis sciolus predictum Radulphum
Shalcrosse de et super Criminibus infrascriptis prius
minime diffamatum mensibus Aprilis et Maij Anno domini
1580 iam currenti infra parochiam de mancestr’ predict
animo malicioso ac contra bonos mores grauiter et
enormiter diffamaui, nonnullaque verba convitiosa
scandalosa seu diffamatoria contra prefatum Radulphum
palam et publice protulit dixit et promulgauit ac
presertim verba Anglice sequentia videlicet Thou
art or he is, meaninge the said Rafe Sh[alcrosse]
a naughtie man of thy bodie & hast had […]
dealinge with […]

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/12 image 2] 

3          Also, that the aforesaid Ralph Shalcrosse, before the utterance of these defamatory words and until then, was a man of good fame, unblemished reputation and honest conversation and for such and as such openly, publicly and notoriously commonly called, held, considered, named and reputed among his acquaintances and neighbours; and he propounds as before.

4          Also that by reason and occasion of the utterance of these words the standing and good fame of the said Ralph are diminished, injured and harmed and the same Ralph was and is of less esteem after the utterance of these words than before; and he propounds as before. 

5          Also, that the aforesaid Robert Ridings was and is of the parish of  Manchester of the archdeaconry of Chester and notoriously subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as before.

6          Also, all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well known and public voice and fame were circulating regarding and concerning the same, just as they are circulating at present.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the aforesaid Ralph Shalcrosse prays that right and justice may effectively be done and administered to him in all and singular the premises and anything whatsoever concerning them and that that the said Robert Ridings will be punished according to the demands of the law in that regard on account of his reckless excess in pronouncing the defamatory words aforesaid; and also that he will be condemned in the costs incurred and to be incurred on behalf of the plaintiff in this cause by you and  your definitive sentence or final decree; and otherwise, that what will have been of right and reason in the premises may be done, established and decreed; this party propounds the premises and prays that they are done jointly and severally, not obliging himself to proving all and singular the premises, nor to the burden of superfluous proof, concerning […]

Transcript

[1580/12 image 2]

3          Item Quod predictus Radulphus Shalcrosse ante huiusmodi verborum
diffamatoriorum prolacionem et vsque ad ea fuit vir bone fame
opinionis illese et conuersacionis honeste proque tali et
vt talis inter notos et vicinos suos communiter dictus tentus
habitus nominatus et reputatatus palam publice et notorie Et
ponit vt supra

4          Item Quod pretextu et occacione prolacionis huiusmodi verborum status
et bona fama dicti Radulphi attenuanter leduntur et
gravantur fuitque et est idem Radulphus minoris
Estimacionis citra huiusmodi verborum prolacionem quam ante
Et ponit vt supra 

5          Item Quod predictus Robertus Ridinges fuit et est parochie de
Mancestr’Archidiaconatus Cestrie vestreque Jurisdiccioni notorie
subditus et subiectus Et ponit vt supra 

6          Item Quod premissa omnia  et singula fuerunt et sunt vera
publica notoria manifesta pariter et famosa Et quod de et
super eisdem laborarunt prout in presenti laborant publica
vox et fama 

Vnde facta fide de et super premissis
de Jure requisita petit pars predicti Radulphi Shalcrosse
Jus et Justiciam sibi in premissis omnibus et singulis ac
ea concernentibus quibuscunque fieri et ministrari cum
effectu dictumque Robertum Ridinges propter suum
temerarium excessus verba diffamatoria predicta proferenda
iuxta Juris in ea parte Exigentia puniri atque in Expensis
ex parte agentis in huiusmodi causa  factis et fiendis condemnari
per vos et vestram Sententiam diffinitiuam siue finale decretum
Ceteraque fieri statui et decerni quod Juris fuerit
et Rationis Premissa proponit et fieri petit pars
ista Coniunctim et diuisim Non arctans se ad omnia et singula
premissa probanda nec ad onus superflue probacionis de […]

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/12 image 3]

[Endorsement] 

Libel offered on behalf of Ralph Shalcrosse against Robert Ridinges in a cause of defamation, 1580

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/12 image 3] 

[Endorsement] 

Libellus ex parte
Radulphi Shalcrosse
contra Robertus
Ridinges in causa
diffamacionis oblatus
1580

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Ralph Shalcrosse – plaintiff

Robert Ridinges – defendant

 

 

Officials

Robert Leche

Subjects

Defamatory words

 

 

 

 

 

Places

Manchester

Ref: EDC 5/1580/11

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5 1580. 11. MANCHESTER Jane wife of Henry Chetham c Richard Hall clerk for saying this place is not fit for any cuckold to walk in – libel.

Summary:

Jane Chetam, wife of Henry Chetam, contra Richard Hall, clerk

The libel states that Hall had referred to Henry Chetam as ‘cuckold’. While this suggested that Chetam’s wife had committed adultery, it was also an insult to Henry Chetam.

Year

1580

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/11 image 1]

[…] deputy or any other judge whomsoever competent in this regard, the party of the distinguished and honest woman, Jane Chetam, wife of Henry Chetam, of the parish of Manchester of the archdeaconry of Chester against Richard Hall, clerk, of the parish and archdeaconry aforesaid  and against any other person or persons whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement, by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law in articles as follows:

1          Firstly, namely that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter, express or declare abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, disparaging or scandalous words of anyone against public morals and with malicious intent were and are to be canonically corrected and punished according to the laws and statutes of this realm of England; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

2          Also, that notwithstanding the premises and they being true, the aforesaid Richard Hall, clerk, not being ignorant of them but forgetful of the welfare of his soul, being induced, as it is believed, by an evil spirit, in the months of September, October and November in the year of our Lord 1580, or in any of those months whatsoever, in one or other, with malicious intent and against public morals seriously and grievously defamed the said Jane Chetam, previously in no way defamed, and he uttered and pronounced these following opprobrious, defamatory and scandalous words or similar in effect to these and importing the same effect openly and publicly before trustworthy witnesses within the churchyard of the parish church of Manchester aforesaid or in other neighbouring places, namely ‘seinge the said Henrie Chetam walkinge there <[…]> the said Richard spake vnto him audibly this place is not fitt for any Cuckoldes to walke in And the said’

Transcript

[1580/11 image 1] 

[…] deputat[o aut ali]o Judice [in hac parte] co[mpetenti] quocunque
Pars discrete et hones[te] mulieris Jane Chetam
vxoris Henrici Chetam parochie de Mancestr’Archidiaconatus
Cestrie contra et aduersus Ricardum Hall clericum parochie et
Archidiaconatus predictis ac contra quemcunque alium seu
quoscunque alios Coram vobis in Judicio legitime
interuenientem per viam querele et vobis in hac
parte querelando dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis
in Jure proponit articulatim prout sequitur

1          Inprimis videlicet Quod omnes et singuli huius Regni Anglie
subditi et subiecti qui Convitia vituperia verbaue
obprobriosa vituperiosa seu scandalosa de aliquo
contra bonos mores animoque malicioso dicunt
emittunt proferunt seu predicant fuerunt et sunt
iuxta Jura et Statuta huius Regni Anglie
canonice corrigendi et puniendi Et ponit Coniunctim
diuisim Et de quolibet

2          Item Quod premissis non obstantibus eisque veris existentibus
predictus Ricardus Hall clericus eorundem non ignarus imo
anime  sue salutis immemor Spritu vt creditur maligno
ductus dictam Janam Chetam prius minime diffamatam
mensibus Septembris Octobris et Novembris Anno
domini 1580 eorumve mensium quolibet vno siue aliquo
animo malicioso ac contra bonos mores grauiter et
enormiter diffamauit verbaque obprobriosa diffamatoria
et scandalosa sequentia seu eis in effectu similia et
eundem effectum importantia coram testibus fidedignis
palam et publice protulit et pronuntiauit infra
Cemiterium Ecclesie parochialis de mancestr’ predict’ <aut alijs locis vicinis> videlicet seinge
the said Henrie Chetam walkinge there <[…]> the said
Richard spake vnto him audibly this place is not
fitt for any Cuckoldes to walke in And the said

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/11 image 2]

[…] the same Richard Hall uttered and pronounced these defamatory words or similar in effect to these and importing the same effect with malicious intent and against public morals; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

3          Also ‘That the Common Exposicion <& meaninge> of the said sclaunderous wordes within the parishe of manchester & other places thereaboutes was & is that the said Jane Chetam had abused her self in Adultrie or incontinencie & soe are the same words commonly reputed & taken & not in any other Sense or meaninge; and he propounds as before.

4          Also, that the aforesaid Jane Chetam, before the utterance of the said defamatory words and until then, was a woman of good fame, honest conversation and unblemished reputation and as such openly, publicly and notoriously commonly called, held, considered, named and reputed among good and substantial people; and he propounds as before.

5          Also that by occasion and reason of the utterance of these defamatory words the standing and good fame of the aforesaid Jane Chetam are seriously and grievously injured and diminished among and between good and substantial people and the same Jane was and is of less reputation after the utterance of the same words than before; and he propounds as before.

6          Also, that the aforesaid Richard Hall was and is of the parish of  Manchester and for that reason notoriously subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as before.

7          Also, that it was and is on the part and behalf of the said Jane Chetam that this action is lawfully brought to you and your Chester consistory court; and he propounds as before.

Transcript

[1580/11 image 2]

[…] hec
verba d[iffa]matoria seu eis in effectu similia et eun[dem]
effectum importantia idem Ricardus Hall animo malicioso
et contra bonos mores protulit et pronuntiauit
Et ponit Coniunctim diuisim Et de quolibet

3          Item That the Common Exposicion <& meaninge> of the said sclaunderous
wordes within the parishe of manchester & other
places thereaboutes was & is that the said
Jane Chetam had abused her self in Adultrie
or incontinencie & soe are the same words commonly
reputed & taken & not in any
other Sense or meaninge Et ponit vt supra

4          Item Quod predicta Jana Chetam ante dictorum verborum
diffamatoriorum prolacionem et vsque ad ea fuit mulier
bone fame, Conuersacionis honeste, et opinionis illese
sicque inter bonos et graues communiter dicta tenta
habita nominata et reputatata palam publice et
notorie Et ponit vt supra 

5          Item Quod occasione et pretextu huiusmodi verborum
diffamatoriorum emissionis status et bona fame predicte
Jane Chetam apud et inter bonos et graues
grauiter et enormiter leduntur et  attenuanter fuitque
et est eadem Jane minoris reputacionis citra prolacionem
eorundem verborum quam ante Et ponit vt supra 

6          Item Quod predictus Ricardus Hall fuit et est parochie de
mancestr’ et eo pretextu vestre Jurisdiccioni notorie
subditus et subiectus Et ponit vt supra 

7          Item Quod fuit et est ex parte et per partem dicte
Jane Chetam ad vos et vestram Curiam Consistorialem
legitime querelatur Et ponit vt supra

 

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/11 image 3] 

[…] public voice and fame are circulating.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Jane Chetam prays that right and justice may be done and administered to her with effect in all and singular the premises and that that the said Richard Hall will be punished by ecclesiastical censures and according to the demands of the law in that regard on account of his rash presumption in pronouncing the defamatory words aforesaid or similar in effect to them; and also that he will be condemned in the lawful costs incurred on behalf of the aforesaid Jane, and he protests those to be incurred, and having been condemned, that he will be obliged and compelled to the real payment of the same, by you and your definitive sentence, lord judge aforesaid; and otherwise, that what will have been of right and reason in the premises and anything whatsoever concerning them is done, established and decreed; this party propounds the premises and prays that they are done jointly and severally, not binding himself to prove all and singular the premises, nor to the burden of superfluous proof, concerning which he protests, but so far as he will have proved in the premises thus far may he obtain in the petitions, always reserving the benefit of law in all things, humbly imploring your office in the premises; and this party asserts the right of adding to, correcting and amending at an appropriate and suitable place and time etc.

Transcript

[1580/11 image 3]

[…] laboran[t publi]ca vox [et fam]a

Vnde facta
fide de Jure in hac parte requisita petit pars
dicte Jane Chetam Jus et Justiciam sibi in premissis
omnibus et singulis fieri et ministrari cum effectu
dictumque Ricardum Hall propter suum temerarium ausum
verba diffamatoria predicta seu eis in effectu
similia proferenda per Censuras Ecclesiasticas et
iuxta Juris in ea parte Exigentia puniri necnon in
Expensis legitimis ex parte predicte Jane factis et protestatur
de fiendis condemnari Condempnatumque ad realem
solucionem earundem cogi et compelli per vos et
vestram Sententiam diffinitiuam domine Judex antedicte
Ceteraque fieri statui et decerni in premissis et
ea concernentibus quibuscunque quod Juris fuerit et
racionis Premissa proponit et fieri petit pars ista
Coniunctim et diuisim non arctans se ad omnia et
singula premissa probanda nec ad onus superflue
probacionis de quo protestatur sed quatenus probauerit
in premissis eatenus obtineat in petitis Juris
beneficio in omnibus semper saluo Vestrum officium
in premissis humiliter implorando Et protestatur
pars ista de addendo corrigendo et emendando pro
loco et tempore conguis et oportunis et cetera

Libel (image 4)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/11 image 4] 

[Endorsement] 

[…] Richard Hall, clerk, a cause of defamation, offered 1580.

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/11 image 4] 

[Endorsement]

 […]
Ricard’ Hall
Cleric’ in causa
diffamacionis oblat’
1580

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Jane Chetam – plaintiff

Richard Hall – defendant

 

 

Ref: EDC 5/1580/10

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5 1580. 10. MIDDLETON Anna Jackson c Anna Johns saying she was a common liar and also a married man’s whore – libel, responsions, decree.

Summary:

Anne Jackson contra Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones

 

Year

1580

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel
Commission to examine witnesses outside Chester
Depositions on the libel
Report of commissioners
Exceptions against witnesses for the plaintiff

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 1]

[…] the party of the honest woman, Anne Jackson, of the parish of Prestwich against Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones, of the parish of Middleton of Chester diocese and of your jurisdiction and against any other person whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same, by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law jointly, severally and in articles as follows:

Firstly, that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter, express or declare abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, disparaging, scandalous or defamatory words sounding or tending to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person against the public morals of any person were and are to be canonically corrected and punished and are to be obliged and compelled to desist and to completely abstain from these abuses, disparagements and defamatory words in future; and he propounds as before.

Also, that the said Anne Jones, not being ignorant of the premises but forgetful of the welfare of her soul, being induced, as it is believed, by an evil spirit, in the months of March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January and February in the year of our Lord 1580, or in any of those months whatsoever, in one or other of them,  seriously and grievously defamed the said Anne Jackson, previously in no way defamed, namely these English words which follow ‘what Robert Ireland wilt thowe marry Anne Jackeson’ meaning the said Anne Jackson ‘that is a maried mans hore And beinge demaunded whose hore Answered that she’ meaning the said Anne Jackson ‘was Mr Leghes hore’ the said Anne Jones said and pronounced these defamatory words or others similar to these and importing the same effect of the same Anne Jackson, as will become clear and appear by lawful proofs in the event of this suit; and he propounds as before.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 1]

[…] Pars honeste mulieris Ann [Jackson]
parochie de Prestwiche contra et aduersus Annam Johnes vxorem
Thome Johnes parochie de Midleton Cestrensis diocesis et vestre
Jurisdicionis ac contra quemcunque alium coram vobis pro eadem in iudicio
Legitime intervenientem per viam querele et vobis in hac parte
querelando dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis in iure proponit coniunctim
diuisim atque articulatim prout sequitur

Inprimis Quod omnies et singuli huius regni Anglie subditi et
subiecti qui convicia vituperia verbaue obprobriosa vilpendosa
scandalosa vel diffamatoria ad alicuis bone fame lesionem seu
denigracionem sonantia vel tendentia contra bonos mores de aliquo dicunt
emittunt proferunt seu predicant fuerunt et sunt canonice
corrigendi et puniendi et vt ab huiusmodi convicijs vituperijs et
verbis diffamatorijs desistant et se penitus abstineant
in futurum cogendi et compellendi Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod dicta Anna Johnes premissorum non ignara immo anime
sue salutis immemor spritu vt creditur maligno ducta dictam Annam
Jackeson prius minime diffamatam mensibus Marcij Aprilis Maij
Junij Julij Augusti Septembris Octobris Novembris Decembris
Januarij et Februarij Anno domini 1580 eorumue mensium
quolibet vno siue aliquo grauiter et enormiter diffamauit
videlicet hec anglicis verbis sequutur what Robert Ireland wilt
thowe marry Anne Jackeson <innuendo dictam Annam Jackeson> that is a maried mans
hore And beinge demaunded whose hore Answered
that she Innuendo dictam Annam Jackeson was Mr
Leghes hore hec verba diffamatoria seu alia hijs similia et
eundem effectum importantia dicta Anna Johnes dixit et
pronunciavit de eadem Anna Jackeson prout in eventu huius
litis per probaciones legitimas liquebit et apparebit Et ponit
vt supra

 

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/10 image 2]

[…] the standing and good fame of the said Anne Jackson are injured and blackened and the said Anne Jackson was and is at no little trouble and expense and otherwise and elsewhere wearied, vexed, oppressed, burdened and perturbed in many different ways, and among and between good and substantial people she is of less reputation and favour and good and substantial people have ascribed and given, and at present ascribe and give, less trust and favour to the same Jane by reason of the premises; and he propounds, jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

Also, that the said Anne Jackson, before this defamation and the utterance, assertion and declaration of the defamatory words aforesaid and until then, was a woman of good fame, unblemished reputation and honest conversation, and previously in no way defamed among and between good and substantial people; and he propounds as before.

Also, that the said Anne Jones was and is of the parish of  Middleton aforesaid of Chester diocese and for that reason notoriously subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as before.

Also, that it was and is on the part and behalf of the said Anne Jackson that this complaint is rightly and lawfully brought to you, lord judge aforesaid, and to your Chester consistory court; and he propounds as before.

Also, that all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well known and public voice and fame were circulating and are circulating regarding and concerning this.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Anne Jackson prays that right and justice may be done and administered to her in all and singular the premises and that that the said Anne Jones should be corrected and punished for the imputation of the above-said crimes and for the pronouncing and declaration of these aforesaid scandalous and defamatory words according to the due requirement of law, and that she will be punished with effect etc. and also that she will be condemned in the lawful costs incurred on the part of the said Anne Jackson in that behalf, and he protests those to be incurred, by you and your definitive sentence, lord judge aforesaid etc. always reserving the benefit of law in all things, humbly imploring your office in the premises, not binding etc.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 2]

[…] status et bona fama dicte Anne Jack[eson leduntur] et  denigrantur
dictaque Annam Jackeson fuit et est in nonnullis laboribus et
expensis ac alias et aliunde mulipliciter fatigata vexata grauata onerata
et perturbata ac apud et inter bonos et graues [minoris reputacionis et fauoris bonique et graves] adhibuerunt et
dederunt adhibentque et dant in presenti eidem Anne Jackeson
minorem fidem atque fauorem pretextu premissorum Et ponit coniunctim
diuisim et de quolibet

 Item Quod dicta Anna Jackeson ante huiusmodi diffamacionem et verborum
diffamatoriorum predictorum emissionem assertionem et predicacionem et vsque
ad ea fuit mulier bone fame opinionis illese ac conuersacionis
honeste ac apud et inter bonos et graues prius minime diffamata
Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod dicta Anne Johnes fuit et est parochie de Midleton
antedicte Cestrensis diocesis et eo pretextu vestre Jurisdiccionis notorie
subdita et subiecta Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod fuit et est ex parte et per partem dicte Anne Jackeson
ad vos dominum Judicem antedictum et ad Curiam vestram consistorialem Cestrensem
rite et legitime querelatur Et ponit vt supra

Item Quod premissa omnia et singula fuerunt et sunt vera publica notoria
manifesta pariter et famosa atque de et super huiusmodi laborarunt
et laborant publica vox et fama.

Vnde facta fide de iure in
hac parte requisita petit pars dicte Anne Jackeson  ius et
iusticiam sibi in premissis omnibus et singulis fieri et ministrari
ac dictam Annam Johnes pro supradictum criminium imposicione
et huiusmodi verborum scandalosorum et diffamatoriorum prolacionem et predicacionem predictorum
iuxta iuris debitam exigentiam corrigendam et puniendam fore debere
decerni et cum effectu puniri et cetera Necnon in expensis legitimis
per partem dicte Anne Jackeson in hac parte factis et protestatur
de fiendis condempnari per vos et vestram Sententiam diffinitiuam
domine Judex antedicte et cetera in omnibus semper saluo vestrum officium
in premissis humiliter implorando non arctans et cetera

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 3]

[Endorsement]

[…] a cause of defamation, exhibited 1580.

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/10 image 3]

[Endorsement]

[…]
caus’ diffamacionis Exhibit
1580

[in pencil in a different hand]

Manchester

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Commission (image 4)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 4] 

Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, rightly and lawfully deputed official principal of the Chester consistory court, to our beloved in Christ, Oliver Carter, Bachelor of Sacred Theology, Thomas Williamson, clerk, Master of Arts and vicar of the parish church of Eccles, Thomas Richardson, clerk, rural dean of the deanery of Manchester, greeting in the Lord. Since, in a certain cause of defamation or foul slander which is in dispute and is pending undecided before us in the consistory court aforesaid between Anne Jackson, the party plaintiff on the one part, and Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones, the defending party and party complained of on the other part, we, rightly and lawfully proceeding […] to be made to the parties for the reception, admission, swearing of the oath and examination of any witnesses whatsoever on behalf of the said plaintiff necessary, as he has asserted, to prove his claim in a certain libel of his previously given and offered before us in the manner and form described below […] in the pursuance of justice.

Therefore, to receive, admit, and to be sworn in due form of law respectively producing every witness whatsoever of the witnesses for the said plaintiff before you in the parish or collegiate church of Manchester of Chester diocese […] ten and three in the afternoon of the same day, with adjournment of the days and places then next following, these witnesses, as aforesaid, having been judicially summoned by the opposing party to appear at the said day and place to be produced and admitted on behalf of the plaintiff, who will have presented himself to see them appear as produced otherwise he is contumacious in this. 

And they, the witnesses, thus received, admitted and sworn are to be examined and interrogated separately and singly, according to the requirement of law, upon the positions and articles of the said libel annexed to these presents and the interrogatories administered on behalf of the opposing party, if any such have been suitably made,

and their statements and depositions and replies caused to be recorded in writing and if these witnesses for the sake of hatred, fear or favour withdraw testimony they are to be canonically compelled by ecclesiastical censure to […] the truth which they may know in that respect

having taken with you jointly and severally Master Randle Cotgreave, principal registrar of the consistory court aforesaid, or any other notary public whomsoever nominated by the same Master Randle Cotgreave […] as your scribe in this behalf and of doing, executing and exercising all and singular other things which […] shall be necessary or in any way opportune 

We commit authority to you jointly and severally as our substitutes by these presents, asking that, this examination having been completed, you should send the authenticated depositions of the witnesses and the whole and complete process had and done before you […] to Chester cathedral church before 19 of January next, to the consistorial place there to us or to our deputy. Given […] Chester on the 15th day of the month of December in the one thousand five hundred and eightieth year of our Lord.

Agreed with the decree, John Morgell, notary public.

[There is no endorsement] 

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/10 image 4]

Robertus Leche legum doctor Curie consistorialis Cestrensis officialis principalis
rite et legitime deputatus dilectis nobis in christo Olivero Cartar sacre Theologie [Baccallario]
Thome Williamson Clerico Artium magistro Vicario Ecclesie parochialis de Eccles Thome Richardson
Clerico Decano Ruralis decanatus de Mancestr’ salutem in domino Cum nos in qu[adam]
causa diffamacionis siue Turpis convicij que Coram nobis in Curia consistoriali predict[a inter]
Annam Jackson partem Actricem  ex vna Et Annam Jones vxorem Thome Jones  [partem ream]
et querelatam  partem ex altera vertitur et pendet indecisa rite et legitime procedens […]
fieri ad partes pro receptione admissione Juramenti prestacione et examinacione quorumcunque [testium]
ex parte dicte partis Agentis ad probandum Intencionem suam in quodam suo libello alias c[oram nobis]
dato et oblato vt asseruit necessitum sub modo et forma inferius descriptis [fieret?]
Justicia mediante 

Ad Recipiendum igitur admittendum et in debita Juris forma Jurari [testium]
Testes quoscunque per dictam partem Agentem coram vobis in Ecclesia parochiali siue Collegiat’ [Mancestr’]
Cestrensis diocesis […]
Decimas et Tercias pomeridianas eiusdem diei respectiue producendum cum prorogatione [dierum]
et locorum tunc proximo sequentis parte aduersa ad interessendum iudicaliter moniti dictis di[e et]
loco huiusmodi Testes sic ut prefertur ex parte agenti produci et admitti se sua pr[esentauerit]
Interesse visuri sui autem in illius contumacem producendos 

Ipsosque Testes sic recep[tos]
admissos et Juratos super positionibus et articulis dicti libelli presentibus annexi et Interrog[atorijs]
si que congrue fuerunt ex parte aduersu ministratis secrete et sigillatim iuxta Juris exig[entia]
examinandis et Interrogandis 

eorumque dicta et depositiones ac responsa in scriptis fideliter redegi fa[ciendum]
ac Testes huiusmodi si se gratia odio Timore vel favore subtraxerunt Testimonium […] Veritati quam in ea parte nouerint per censuras Ecclesiasticas Canonice compellendis

Assumpto vobis coniunctim et diuisim magistro Ranulpho Cotgraue Curie consistorialis predicte Reg[istrario]
principali vel alio quocunque notario publico per eundem magistrum Ranulphum Cotgraue nominando […]
vestram scribam in hac parte Ceteraque omnia et singula faciendi exequendi et exercendi que […]
in hac parte necessaria fuerint seu quomodolibet oportuna 

Vobis coniunctim et diuisim vices
Auctoritatem nostras committimus per presentes Rogantes quatenus huiusmodi examinacione completa […]
deposiciones Testium totumque et integrum {et integrum} processum coram vobis […]
habitum et factum Ad  Ecclesiam Cathedralem Cestrensem Citra xix Januarij pro[ximo]
ad locum consistorialem ibidem nobis aut deputato nostro Auctentice transmittatis Da[tum …]
Cestren’ xvto die mensis decembris Anno domini Millesimo Quingentesimo Oct[agesimo]

Concordat cum decreto Johannes Morgell notarius Pub[licus]

[There is no endorsement] 

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Depositions on the libel (image 5)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 5] 

Statements of witnesses upon the libel on behalf of Anne Jackson against Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones, taken in the parish or collegiate church of Manchester before the distinguished Oliver Carter, Bachelor of Sacred Theology, Thomas Williamson, clerk, Master of Arts, vicar of the parish church of Eccles, Thomas Richardson, clerk, rural dean of the deanery of Manchester, by virtue of letters of commission, directed from the venerable Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, vicar etc. and lawfully deputed official principal of the right reverend father in Christ, William, by divine mercy lord bishop of Chester, on the 19th day of the month of December, 1580.

Elizabeth Smythe, wife of Alexander Smythe, of the parish of Middleton of the age of about 50 years, has known Anne Jackson for 20 years and Anne Jones for the same time.

To the first article she believes that the same is consonant[1] with justice and equity.

To the second article ‘this deponent saieth that betwixte Whitsontyde and midsomer last to this deponentes nowe remembrance This deponent having occasion to goe to the watermilne att middleton Anne Jones the defendant willed her beinge in The same milne to sit downe by her beinge present The saide Anne in the saide milne togeather with one Richard Ireland the vnder milner of the same milne and when shee this deponent had staied in the Same milne came thither one Robert Ireland whoe when hee was come into the milne and going vppe a payre of steares in the same milne the saide Anne saide art thou heare speaking to Robert Ireland That shall marrie Anne Jackson Mr leighes whore I knowe ytt to bee true for a man tooke her with Mr leighe in Acrington spring getting a borne[2] of Kelinges[3] And Mr leighe because hee would haue the same man leaue with hym badde hym gett one other borne of Kelinges And badde the saide Robert Ireland come to her The saide Anne and shee would tell hym whoe hee was that sawe them and the same Robert would not come To her’ being present then there in the said mill at the time of the utterance of the words, Robert Ireland and Richard Ireland aforesaid […] this deponent; otherwise she knows nothing certainly to depose.

[1] consonant = in accordance with.

[2] burn = burden or load of (OED).

[3] I may have misread this but assume that if it reads ‘borne of Kelinges’ it may mean ‘load of kindling’ otherwise the meaning is not clear to me.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 5] 

Dicta Testium super libello ex parte Anne
Jackson contra Annam Jones vxorem Thome
Jones capta coram discretis viris Olivero
Cartar sacre Theologie Baccallario
Thoma Williamson Clerico artium
magistro Vicario Ecclesie parochialis de Eccles
Thoma Richardson Clerico decano
Rurali decanatus de Mancestr’
virtute litterarum commissionalium a venerabili viro
Roberto leche legum doctore Reverendi in
christo patris et domini domini Willielmi
miseracione diuine Cestrensis Episcopi
vicario et cetera et officiali principali legitime
deputato directarum xixmo die mensis
Decembris 1580 in Ecclesia parochiali
siue Collegiat’ de Mancestria 

Elizabetha Smythe vxor Alexandri smythe parochie de Middleton
etatis Circiter lta Annorum nouit Annam Jackson per xx
Annos et Annam Jones per idem Tempus

Ad Primum articulum credit eundem esse consonum Juri et equitati

Ad secundum articulum this deponent saieth that betwixte Whitsontyde
and midsomer last to this deponentes nowe remembrance
This deponent having occasion to goe to the watermilne
att middleton Anne Jones the defendant willed her beinge in
The same milne to sit downe by her beinge present
The saide Anne in the saide milne togeather with
one Richard Ireland the vnder milner of the same
milne and when shee this deponent had staied in the
Same milne came thither one Robert Ireland whoe
when hee was come into the milne and going vppe a
payre of steares in the same milne the saide Anne saide
art thou heare speaking to Robert Ireland
That shall marrie Anne Jackson Mr leighes whore
I knowe ytt to bee true for a man tooke her with
Mr leighe in Acrington spring getting a borne of Kelinges
And Mr leighe because hee would haue the same
man leaue with hym badde hym gett one other borne of
Kelinges And badde the saide Robert Ireland come to her
The saide Anne and shee would tell hym whoe hee
was that sawe them and the same Robert would not come
To her presentibus tunc ibidem in dicto molendino prolacionem  huiusmodi
verborum Roberto Ireland et Richardo Ireland predictis [… i]sto deponenti
[aliter nescit c]erte deponere

Depositions on the libel (image 6)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 6]

To the third article she believes that the same contains the truth.

To the fourth article ‘shee this deponent saieth shee neuer hard evill speaches vttered att anie tyme against the saied Anne Jackson butt alwaies amongest her neighbors accompted of good name & fame and of honest lyfe and conuersacion’ otherwise she knows nothing certainly to depose.

To the fifth article, she says that the same is true.

To the sixth article she believes that complaint is justly brought on behalf of the said Anne Jackson.

To the last she says that the depositions she has made before are true, she is not coached or hired nor instructed  etc.

Robert Ireland, son of Edmund Ireland, gentleman, of the parish of Middleton his age about 22 years, has known Anne Jackson for as long as this deponent can remember and Anne Jones for 6 years.

To the first article he believes that the same is consonant with justice and equity.

To the second article ‘this deponent saieth that aboutes midsomer last to this deponentes nowe remembraunce This deponent had occasion to goe to middleton milne and when hee came thither in the same.milne hee found the saide Anne Jones Elizabeth Smyth his precontest[1] and Richard Ireland and going vppe a payre of steares of the same milne the saide Anne called this deponent and This deponent bicause hee was sent for by his master Richard Ashton of Midleton Esquier would not staie butt went his waie from Them and hard noe talke farther att that tyme’.

[1] precontest = previous fellow-witness.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 6]

Ad Tercium articulum credit eundem continere veritatem

Ad Quartum articulum shee this deponent <saieth shee> neuer
hard evill speaches vttered att anie tyme against
the saide Anne Jackson butt alwaies amongest
her neighbors accompted of good name & fame
and of honest lyfe and conuersacion alias nescit
Certe deponere

Ad Quintum articulum dicit eundem esse verum

Ad Sextum articulum credit ex parte dicte Anne
Jackson esse Juste querelatum

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera non est
docta non conducta nec instructa et cetera

Robertus Ireland filius Edmundi Ireland generosi parochie de Middleton
etatis sue Circiter xxij Annorum novit Annam Jackson
a noticia istius deponentis et Annam Jones per vj Annos

Ad Primum articulum credit eundem esse consonum Juri et equitati

Ad secundum articulum this deponent saieth that aboutes
midsomer last to this deponentes nowe remembraunce
This deponent had occasion to goe to middleton
milne and when hee came thither in the same
milne hee found the saide Anne Jones Elizabeth
Smyth his precontest and Richard Ireland
and going vppe a payre of steares of the same
milne the saide Anne called this deponent and
This deponent bicause hee was sent for by
his master Richard Ashton of Midleton Esquier
would not staie butt went his waie from
Them and hard noe talke farther att that tyme

Depositions on the libel (image 7)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 7]

And about ij daies after Ambrose Jackson brother To the saide Anne Jackson told this deponent that Elizabeth Smythe had told hym that Anne Jones had saide within the watermilne of Middleton that Anne Jackson was a married mans whore and Mr leighes’ whore whereappon hee willed This deponent to goe to her toe her house which this Deponent att his request dyd and goinge on the waie sawe the saide Anne Jones come from a feld of her husbandes from marling[1] and this deponent beinge then in the fold neare her house the saide Anne cominge by this deponent willed hym to come neare and drincke with her and then shee saide Robert you are my cosen[2] will you marrie one that goeth in the name of a weded man you would bee sorie that you shuld marie such a one and this deponent Asked her whether shee would stand to that shee had spoken in the milne yee saide shee that I will and more then that’ he was asked ‘what shee the saide Anne meaned by the same speeches’ namely ‘that goeth in the name of a wedded man saieth hee verelie beleveth in his conscience shee dyd meane the same Anne Jackson was Mr Thomas leighes <of Acrington> whore and not otherwise’ nobody being present besides this deponent and the same Anne Jones, otherwise he knows nothing certainly to depose.

To the third article ‘this deponent saieth ytt hath somewhat impayred her good name for yf the same would haue nott byn spoken this deponent would haue maried her.’

[1] Marl is a type of earth rich in carbonates which was spread on farming land as a soil conditioner. Marling was the process of spreading marl.

[2] Cousin meant s a relative, but not necessarily the child of a parents’ sibling, and could be a much more distant family connection.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 7]

And about ij daies after Ambrose Jackson
brother To the saide Anne Jackson told this
deponent that Elizabeth Smythe had told
hym that Anne Jones had saide within the
watermilne of Middleton that Anne Jackson was
a married mans whore <and Mr leighes’ whore> whereappon hee willed
This deponent to goe to her toe her house
which this Deponent att his request dyd
and goinge on the waie sawe the saide Anne
Jones come from a feld of her husbandes from
marling and this deponent beinge then in
the fold neare her house the saide Anne cominge
by this deponent willed hym to come neare
and drincke with her and then shee saide Robert
you are my cosen will you marrie one that goeth
in the name of a weded man you would bee sorie that
you shuld marie such a one and this deponent
Asked her whether shee would stand to that
shee had spoken in the milne yee saide shee
that I will and more then that Interrogatus
what shee the saide Anne meaned by the same
speeches videlicet <that goeth> in the name of a wedded man
saieth hee verelie beleveth in his conscience shee
dyd meane the same Anne Jackson was Mr <Thomas> leighes
<of Acrington> whore and not otherwise
nullo presente preter isto deponente Et eadem Anna Jones
alias nescit certe deponere

Ad Tercium articulum this deponent saieth ytt hath
somewhat impayred her good name for yf the same
would haue nott byn spoken this deponent would
haue maried her

Depositions on the libel (image 8)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 8]

To the fourth article ‘this deponent saieth shee the said Anne was accompted to bee a mayd of good and honest conversacion among her neighbors’.

To the fifth article, he believes that the same is true.

To the seventh, he believes that the same contains the truth.

To the eighth he says that the depositions he has made before are true and that fame is circulating upon this etc.

Richard Ireland of the parish of Middleton of the age of about 20 years has known Anne Jackson for 12 years and Anne Jones for 6 years. 

To the first article he believes that the same is consonant with justice and equity.

To the second article ‘this deponent saieth that hee being vnder milner att the watermilne in Middleton there came thither about forten or xv weekes sythens To this deponentes now remembrance Anne Jones to see her Corne grounden and quicklie after her came Elizabeth Smyth this deponentes precontest and when they had staied there a whyle Robert Ireland came and was in speache with this deponent and the saide Anne Jones called Robert Ireland and saide I will speake with you and withall the saide Anne saide will you marie Anne Jackson That goeth in the name of a wedded man and the saide Robert went his waie and gaue her

Transcript

[1580/10 image 8]

Ad Quartum articulum this deponent saieth shee
the saide Anne was accompted to bee a mayd
of good and honest conversacion among her
neighbors

Ad Quintum articulum credit eundem esse verum

Ad Septum credit eundem continere veritatem

Ad Octavum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera
et famam super huiusmodi laborare et cetera

Richardus Ireland parochie de Middleton etatis circa xx
Annorum novit Annam Jackson per xij Annos et Annam
Jones per vj Annos 

Ad Primum articulum credit eundem esse consonum Juri
et equitati

Ad secundum articuluthis deponent saieth that hee being
vnder milner att the watermilne in Middleton
there came thither about forten or xv weekes sythens
To this deponentes now remembrance Anne Jones
to see her Corne grounden and quicklie after
her came Elizabeth Smyth this deponentes
precontest  and when they had staied there a whyle
Robert Ireland came and
was <in speache> with this deponent and the saide
Anne Jones called Robert Ireland and saide I will
speake with you and withall the saide Anne
saide will you marie Anne Jackson
That goeth in the name of a wedded man and
the saide Robert went his waie and gaue her

Depositions on the libel (image 9)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 9]

her noe answere whereby this deponent thinketh by reason of the noyse in the milne hee hard ytt nott soe well as this deponent which was nearer to the said Anne Jones then the saide Robert was; beinge demaunded what the saied Anne dyd meane att the same tyme by the saide speaches’ namely ‘that goeth in the name of a wedded man answereth hee beleveth shee ment that Anne Jackson had plaied the whore with some wedded man’ otherwise he knows nothing certainly to depose.

To the third article he believes that the same contains the truth.

To the fourth he says ‘the saide Anne Jackson was accompted to bee a woman of honest lyfe and conversacion amonge her neighbors and neuer evill saied of to this deponentes knowledg before the saied speaches’.

To the fifth, he says that he believes that the same is true.

To the sixth, he believes that the same is true.

To the last he says that the depositions he has made before are true etc.

Margery Lorte, wife of Thomas Lorte, of the parish of Middleton of the age of 34 years has known Anne Jackson since the birth of this deponent and Anne Jones for 6 years. 

To the first article she believes that the same is consonant with justice and equity.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 9]

her noe answere whereby this deponent thinketh by reason
of the noyse in the milne hee hard ytt nott soe well
as this deponent which was nearer to the saide
Anne Jones then the saide Robert was beinge demaunded what
the saide Anne dyd meane att the same tyme by the
saide speaches videlicet that goeth in the name of a wedded
man answereth hee beleveth shee ment that Anne Jackson
had plaied the whore with some wedded man alias
nescit Certe deponere

Ad Tertium articulum credit eandem continere veritatem

Ad Quartum dicit the saide Anne Jackson
was accompted to bee a woman of honest lyfe
and conuersasion amonge her neighbors and neuer evill
saide of to this deponentes knowledg before
the saide speaches

Ad Quintum dicit credit eundem esse verum

Ad Sextum credit eundem esse verum

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera et cetera

Margeria Lorte vxor Thome Lorte  parochie de Midleton
etatis sue xxxiiij Annorum novit Annam Jackson
a nativitate istius deponentis et Annam Jones per
vj Annos 

Ad Primum articulum credit eundem esse consonum Juri
et equitati

Depositions on the libel (image 10)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 10]

To the second article she knows nothing to depose ‘saving that Shee hard Elizabeth Smythe saie that Anne Jones had saide Anne Jackson was a maried mans whore farther this deponent saieth shee cannott depose’.

To the third article ‘this deponent  saieth sythens the same speaches weare vttered to her by the saide Elizabeth shee hath thought the worse of her the saide Anne Jackson’.

To the fourth she says ‘the saide Anne hath alwaies hearefore byn accompted for a mayde of honest name & fame among her neighbors’.

To the fifth article, she says that the same is true.

To the sixth, she believes that the same is true ‘because of the speaches that Elizabeth Smyth vttered as before’.

To the last she says that the depositions she has made before are true etc.

Thomas Jones, husband of Anne Jones, of the parish of Middleton his age 40 years has known Anne Jackson for 12 years. 

To the first article he believes that the same is consonant with justice and equity.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 10]

Ad secundum articulum nescit deponere saving that
Shee hard Elizabeth smythe saie that
Anne Jones had saide Anne Jackson was
a maried mans whore farther this deponent
saieth shee cannott depose

Ad Tercium articulum this deponent saieth sythens
the same speaches weare vttered to her by
the saide Elizabeth shee hath thought the
worse of her the saide Anne Jackson

Ad Quartum dicit the saide Anne hath
alwaies hearefore byn accompted for a mayde
of honest name & fame emong her neighbors

Ad Quintum articulum dicit eundem esse verum

Ad Sextum credit eundem esse verum because of the speaches that Elizabeth Smyth vttered
as before

Ad Septum dicit predeposita per eam
esse vera et cetera

Thomas Jones maritus Anne Jones parochie de Middleton
etatis sue xltum Annorum novit Annam Jackson
per xij Annos 

Ad Primum articulum credit eundem esse consonum Juri
et equitati

Depositions on the libel (image 11)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 11]

To the second article ‘this deponent saieth hee cannott depose nether ever hard The saide Anne his wyfe vtter suche Speaches a> are specified in the Article or the lyke […] against the saide Anne Jackson.

To the third article he replies as before.

To the fourth article he knows nothing certainly to depose.

To the fifth, he says that the same is true.

To the sixth ‘this deponent saieth hee thinketh the saide Anne Jackson hath had noe Juste occasion to sue his wyfe’

To the last he says that the depositions he has made before are true.

[There is no endorsement] 

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/10 image 11]

Ad secundum articulum this deponent saieth
hee cannott depose nether ever hard
The saide Anne his wyfe vtter suche
Speaches <as> are specified in the Article
or the lyke […] against the saide
Anne Jackson

Ad Tercium articulum respondet vt supra

Ad Quartum articulum nescit certe deponere

Ad Quintum articulum dicit eundem esse verum

Ad Sextum this deponent saieth hee
thinketh the saide Anne Jackson
hath had noe Juste occasion to
sue his wyfe

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera

[There is no endorsement] 

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Report of commissioners (image 12)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/10 image 12]

To the venerable Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, vicar general in spirituals of the right reverend father in Christ, William, by divine mercy lord bishop of Chester and rightly and lawfully deputed official principal of his consistory court, or to his deputy in that behalf […]; Oliver Carter, Bachelor of Sacred Theology, Thomas Williamson, Master of Arts and vicar of the parish church of Eccles, and Thomas Richardson, rural dean of the deanery of Manchester, greetings in the Lord with due […].

We cause you to be notified and we signify by these presents that on the 19th day of the month of December in the year of our Lord 1580, Master James Banester, notary public, proctor of Anne Jackson, plaintiff, named in the letters of commission annexed to these presents, appeared before us, sitting publicly and judicially in the parish or collegiate church of Manchester in the presence of John Pewson otherwise Morgell, notary public: and he presented the said letters of commission and prayed that we take to ourselves the burden of the execution of the same, and we determined to proceed according to the form and effect of the same and we have accepted the same John Pewson otherwise Morgell as scribe of our acts; when this was done the aforesaid Master James Banester prayed that Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones, the defendant specified in the said letters is summoned, who, having been summoned three times (at the petition of the said Banester) and in no way appearing, we pronounced to be contumacious and as penalty for this, her contumacy, the same Banester produced as witnesses upon the libel affixed to the said letters a certain Robert Ireland, Thomas Jones, Richard Ireland, Elizabeth Smyth, wife of Alexander Smyth, Margery Lord, wife of William Lord, all and singular the which witnesses at the petition of the aforesaid James Banester we admitted and bound with a corporal oath upon the holy gospels of God to depose faithfully all, and in every way, the truth which they have known or have learnt about and concerning the libel aforesaid and with all hatred, fear, love, odium, entreaty, reward and all manner of corruption having been distanced and set aside; we warned them not to leave the town of Manchester aforesaid before their examination, we examined all and singular witnesses separately and singly upon the aforesaid libel and we caused to be rendered in writing by the aforesaid John Morgell their statements and depositions, which we faithfully deliver to you by the aforesaid John Morgell ; given […] with our seals on the 20th day of the month of December in the year of our Lord aforesaid.

And whereas I, John Pewson otherwise Morgell, of Coventry and Lichfield diocese, notary public by authority of the Queen, was personally present in public having been lawfully taken on  as scribe of their acts by virtue of the aforesaid letters of commission […] having assumed the burden of the execution of the same, by the production of the witnesses aforesaid, binding them with the oath and examination of them and all and singular other premises, together with the said Oliver Carter, Thomas Richardson and Thomas Williamson, while, as thus aforesaid, all was being put in motion and done in the year of our Lord, month, day and place aforesaid, and thus I have noted all and singular matters that I have done, seen, known and heard; therefore I have written these present letters of certification in my own hand by command of the said Oliver Carter, Thomas Richardson and Thomas Williamson; and in witness of all and singular premises I have underwritten my name to these presents.

[signed] Johannes Pewson otherwise Morgell, notary public

[There is no endorsement]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/10 image 12]

Venerabili viro Roberto Leche legum doctori Reverendi in christo patris et domini
domini Willielmi miseracione divina Cestrensis Episcopi et Vicario in spiritualibus generali eiusque Curie
Consistorialis officiali principali rite et legitime deputato siue eius in hac parte deputato […]
Oliverus Cartar sacre Theologie Baccallarius Thomas Williams[on]
Artium magister et vicarius Ecclesie parochialis de Eccles et Thomas Richards[on]
decanus Ruralis decanatus de Mancestr’ salutem in domino cum debit[…] 

Vobis notari facimus et significamus per presentes Quod <coram> nobis xixmo [die]
mensis Decembris Anno domini 1580 in Ecclesia parochiali siue Collegi[ali [de]
Mancestr’ publice pro Tribunali sedentibus in presentia Johannis Pewson alias Morg[ell notarij]
publicis magister Jacobus Bannister notorius publicus procurator Anne Jackson [partis] Agentis in dictis litteris commissionalibus presentibus annexis nominatus comparuit dictasque l[itteras]
Commissionales presentavit et petijt nos onus execucionis earundem in nos acceptare [secundum]
formam et effectum earundem procedere decreuimus eundemque Johannem Pewson alias M[orgell]
in Actorum nostrorum scribam Assumpsimus quo facto prefatus magister Jacobus Bannister
preconizari petijt Annam Jones vxorem Thome Jones partem defendentem in dictis litteris specif[icatam]
qua trina vice preconizata <et> (Ad peticionem dicti Banister) nullo modo comparentem
pronuntiavimus contumacem et in penam contumacie sue huiusmodi idem Banister
super libello dictis litteris affixo produxit in Testes quosdam Robertum Ireland
Thomam Jones Richardum Ireland Elizabetham Smyth vxorem Alexandri
Smythe Margeriam Lord vxorem Willielmi Lord Quos quidem Testes
Omnes et singulos nos ad peticionem prefati Jacobi Bannister admisimus Juram[enti] Corporali ad sancta dei evangelia oneravimus de fideliter deponendo omnem
et omnimodam veritatem quam sciverint aut noverint de et super libello predicto Omnique o[dio]
Timore amore prece pretio et alijs corrupcione generis sepositis et sem[otis]
monuimus ne redeant a villa de Mancester predicta ante eorum ex[amen]
quid Testes omnes et singulos nos secrete et sigillatim super libello predicto ex[aminavimus]
earundemque dicta et depositiones per prefatum Johannem Morgell Scriptis redigi f[aciendis]
quas vobis fideliter transmittimus per prefatum Johannem Morgell […]
nostris sigillatis datum xxmo die mensis Decembris Anno domini pre[dicto]   

Et Ego Johannes Pewson alias Morgell Coven’ et Lichfeldien’ d[iocesis]
publicus Regine Auctoritate notarius quia prefatis litteris commissionalibus […]
Onere execucionis earundem Assumpcionis Testium predictorum producionis
Juramenti prestacionis et examinacionis Ceterisque omnibus et singulis
premissis dum sic ut premittitur sub Anno domini mensis
die et loco predictis agebantur et fiebantur vnacum dictis Oliv[ero]
Cartar Thoma Richardson et Thoma Williamson
publice personaliter interfui in eorum actorum scribam legitime Assumpt[us]
eaque omnia et singula sic fieri vidi scivi et audivi
in notam sumpsi ideo hac presentes litteras Certificacionales man[u]
mea propria scripsi de mandato dictorum Olivero [Cartar]
Thome Richardson et Thome Williamson et in fidem om[nium]
et singulorum premissorum nomen presentibus subscripsi

Johannis Pewson alias Morgell notarius publicus

[There is no endorsement]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Exceptions against witnesses for the plaintiff (image 13)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/10 image 13]

In the name of God, Amen; in a certain pretended cause of defamation or foul slander which is in dispute and depending undecided before you, the worshipful […] Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, lawfully deputed official principal of the Chester consistory court or any other judge whomsoever competent in this regard, between Anne Jackson, the party plaintiff and complainant on the one part and Anne Jones, wife of Thomas Jones, defendant and party complained of, on the other part; the party of the said Anne Jones excepting against the characters, statements and depositions of a certain Elizabeth Smith, widow, Robert Ireland, Richard Ireland and Margery Lorte, pretended witnesses produced upon and concerning a libel given and offered on the part of the plaintiff in this cause, says, alleges and in these writings in law propounds in articles as follows:

1          Firstly, namely that no credit, at least sufficient in law is to be attached to the statements and depositions of the aforesaid pretended witnesses or any of them in this matter inasmuch as all and singular the aforesaid witnesses for the whole and entire time of their production, admission, oath-swearing and examination in this behalf and before and since were, just as they are at present, conflicting, vacillating, singular and inconsistent among themselves in very many parts of their depositions and intimate friends and familiar acquaintances of the party producing them and mortal enemies of the party against whom they are produced and for such and as such were and are called, held, considered, named and reputed commonly openly, publicly and notoriously among acquaintances and neighbours; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

 2          Also, that no credit, at least sufficient in law is to be attached to the statements and depositions of the aforesaid Elizabeth Smith, widow, in this matter inasmuch as the aforesaid Elizabeth for the whole and entire time of her production, admission, oath-swearing and examination in this behalf and before and since was, just as she is at present, a woman of ill fame, blemished reputation and dishonest conversation, in addition she is a pauper and destitute, having nothing in goods, after deduction of debts, living on alms almost as if she were begging ‘And suche as is Acompted for a Common lier & so reputed and taken amongest her neighbours And that litle that she hath, she hath it vnder the said Robert Ireland and Richard Ireland & therfor durst not supose otherwise then they would’; and he propounds as before.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 13]

[In dei] nomine Amen In quadam pretensa Causa diffamacionis siue turpis
[conuitij] que Coram vobis venerabili viro […] Roberto leche legum
[doctor]e Curie Consistorialis Cestrensis officiali principali legitime deputato
[seu] alio Judice in hac parte Competenti quocunque inter
Annam Jackson partem agentem et querelantem ex vna et Anna Jones
vxorem Thome Jones  partem ream et querelatam partibus ex
altera vertitur et  pendet indecisa Pars dicte Anne Jones
Contra personas dictas et depositiones quorundum Elizabeth Smith
vidue Roberti Ireland Richard Ireland et Margerie Lort
testium pretensorum de et super libello ex parte agente in huiusmodi Causa
dato et oblato productorum excipiendo dicit allegat et in hijs
scriptis in Jure proponit articulatim prout sequitur

 1          Imprimis videlicet Quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut
est dictis et deposicionibus predictorum pretensorum testium aut eorum alicuius
in hac parte reddit adhibenda pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod predicti
Testes omnes et singuli toto et omni tempore eorum in hac parte
productionis Admissionis Juramenti prestacionis et Examinacionis
anteque et citra fuerunt prout in presenti sunt in quamplurimis
partibus depositionum suarum varij vacillantes singulares inter se
discrepantes partique eos producentis Amici intimi et familiares
ac parti contra quam producentis Inimici Capitales pro que
talibus et ut talis fuerunt et sunt inter notos et vicinos
suos Communiter dicti tenti habiti nominati et reputati palam
publice et notorie Et ponit Coniunctim Diuisim Et de
quolibet 

2          Item Quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut
est dictis et deposicionibus predicte Elizabeth Smith vidue in hac
parte Reddit adhibenda pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod predicta Elizabeth
toto et omni tempore eius in hac parte productionis Admissionis
Juramenti prestacionis et Examinacionis anteque et citra fuit
prout in presenti est mulier male fame opinionis lese et Conuersacionis
inhoneste pauper insuper et Egena nihil in bonis habens
ære alieno deducto victam quasi ostitiatim mendicans And
suche as is Acompted for a Common lier & so reputed
and taken amongest her neighbours, And that litle <that> she
hath, she hath it vnder the said Robert Ireland and
Richard Ireland & therfor durst not supose otherwise
then they would Et ponit vt supra

Exceptions against witnesses for the plaintiff (image 14)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1580/10 image 14]

3          Also, that no credit, at least sufficient in law is to be attached to the statements and depositions of the aforesaid Robert Ireland in this cause inasmuch as the aforesaid Robert for the whole and entire time of his production, admission, oath-swearing and examination in this behalf and before and since was, just as he is at present, a singular […] and hostile witness, and after and since the time of his examination aforesaid he has taken her, Anne Jackson, as his wife as he contracted before the same time ‘and would haue maried her sooner but that of purpose he staied that he might be a witnes in this Cause And it is vehementlie to be presumed that the said Robert would not haue married her if her good name by any wordes the defendant had spoken had bene impaired, And further the testimonie of the said Ireland cannot hurt the said Anne Jones in this Cause for that he longe before this Sute began diuers and sundrie tymes confessed before honest witnesses that he had Carnallie knowne the said Anne Jackson & had taken[1] Mr Leighe libellate and her in the feilde together’ and so he would brag about his wickedness; and he propounds as before.

4          Also, that no credit, at least sufficient in law is and should be attached to the statements and depositions of the aforesaid Richard Ireland in this matter inasmuch as the aforesaid Richard for the whole and entire time of his production, admission, oath-swearing and examination in this behalf and before and since was, just as he is at present, a singular witness, a pauper and destitute, having nothing in goods, after deduction of debts, also an intimate friend and familiar acquaintance of the aforesaid Anne Jackson and Robert Ireland, her husband,  and a close blood relative of the aforesaid Robert, ‘& the said Robert Ireland and Richard Ireland were at the tyme of there Examinacion farmers of the mylne in theire Examinacion mencioned and parteners of the gayne thereof’ and in addition because the same Richard Ireland at the time of his examination was not past 20 years of age, those less than 25 years are not to be admitted as a witness in the consistory court; and he propounds as before.

[1] To take in this context means to come upon or catch in a fault.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 14] 

3          Item Quod nulla fides saltem de Jure [sufficiens fuit] aut est
dictis et deposicionibus predicti Roberti I[reland in] huiusmodi Causa
reddit adhibenda pro eo videlicet et ex [eo quod] predictus Robertus
toto et omni tempore eius in hac parte [produc]tionis Admissionis
Juramenti prestacionis et Examinacionis anteque et citra
fuit prout in presenti est testis singularis […] Contrarius,
et ipsam Annam Jackson post et citra tempus Examinacionis
sue predicte duxit in vxorem anteque idem tempus ipsam
Contraxit, and would haue maried her sooner but that
of purpose he staied that he might be a witnes in this
Cause And it is vehementlie to be presumed that the
said Robert would not haue married her if her good
name by any wordes the defendant had spoken had bene
impaired, And further the testimonie of the said
Ireland cannot hurt the said Anne Jones in this Cause
for that he longe before this Sute began diuers
and sundrie tymes confessed before honest witnesses
that he had Carnallie knowne the said Anne
Jackson & had taken Mr Leighe libellate and her in the
feilde together Et sic gloriabatur in malicia sua
Et ponit vt supra 

4          Item Quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut est
dictis et deposicionibus predicti Richardi Ireland in hac parte
reddit et facta adhibenda pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod predictus
Richardus toto et omni tempore eius in hac parte productionis
admissionis Juramenti prestacionis et Examinacionis anteque
et Citra fuit prout in presenti est testes singularis pauper
Et Egenus nihil in bonis habens ære alieno deducto, Amicus
quoque intimis et familiares predicte Anne Jackson et Roberti
Ireland eius mariti ac predicti Roberti propinquis
Consanguineus, & the said Robert Ireland and Richard
Ireland were at the tyme of there Examinacion farmers
of the mylne in theire Examinacion mencioned and parteners
of the gayne thereof Et insuper quia idem Richardus Ireland
tempore Examinacionis sue xx {seu} [sue] Etatis annum non preteriebat,
cuia in Curia Consistoriali minor xxv annis in testem non addmittendum;
Et ponit vt supra

Exceptions against witnesses for the plaintiff (image 15)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/10 image 15]

 Also, that all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well-known and that public voice and fame were circulating regarding and concerning the same just as they are circulating at present.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, there is to not be established, decided or anything else to be done in this matter as is sought in the libel offered on behalf of the plaintiff, but the party of the aforesaid Anne Jones is to be absolved and dismissed from the claim, petition and unjust vexation of the same Anne Jackson touching the matters set forth in the same libel, together with her costs incurred and to be incurred in this cause by you and your definitive sentence, lord judge aforesaid;  this party propounds the premises and prays that they are done jointly and severally, not binding himself to prove all and singular, nor to the burden of a superfluous proof, against which he protests, but so far as he shall prove in the premises so much may he obtain of the petitions, always reserving the benefit of law in all things, humbly imploring your office in the premises; and this party asserts the right of adding and correcting etc.

Transcript

[1580/10 image 15] 

[Item quod] premissa omnia et singula fuerunt et sunt vera
publica notoria manifesta pariter et famosa Et quod
de et super eisdem laborarunt prout in presenti laborant
[publica] vox et fama

Vnde facta fide de Jure in hac
parte requisita non est statuendum decernendum aut
aliquid aliud faciendum in hac parte prout in libello
ex parte agenti oblato est petitum sed est Pars predicte
Anne Jones ab instantia impeticione et iniusta vexacione
eiusdem Anne Jackson quoad deducta in eodem libello
absoluenda et dimittenda vnacum Expensis suis in huismodi
Causa factis et fiendis per vos et vestram Sentenciam deffinitiuam
domine Judex antedicte Premissa proponit et fieri petit
pars ista Coniunctim et diuisim non arctans se ad omnia et singula
probanda nec ad onus superflue probacionis de quo protestatur
sed quantus probaverit in Premissis Eatenus obtineat
in petitis Juris beneficio in omnibus semper saluo vestrum
officium in Premissis humiliter implorando Et protestator
pars ista de addendo et Corrigendo et cetera 

Exceptions against witnesses for the plaintiff (image 16)

Original Document

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Translation

[1580/10 image 16] 

[Endorsement]

[…] Jackson […]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1580/10 image 16]

[Endorsement] 

[…] Jackson […]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Anne Jackson – plaintiff

Anne Jones – defendant

Robert Ireland – witness

Oliver Carter – commissioned to examine witnesses

Thomas Williamson – commissioned to examine witnesses

Thomas Richardson – commissioned to examine witnesses

Elizabeth Smith – witness

Richard Ireland – witness

Margery Lord – witness

Thomas Jones – witness

Officials

Robert Leche

William Chaderton

John Pewson otherwise Morgell

Ref: EDC 5/1575/4

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5/1575/4 BOWDON Urian Bowdon c William Charlton and Ellen wife of Robert Lether saying that Urian had committed adultery with Katherine Leigh – libel.

Summary:

Urian Bowdon contra William Charlton and Ellen Lether.

Urian claimed that both defendants had wrongly accused him of committing adultery with Katherine Leighe, wife of John Leighe the younger, of Altrincham, with a rather specific allegation.

Year

1575

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/4 image 1]

In the name of God, Amen; before you, William, by divine permission bishop of Chester, or your commissary general or other judge whomsoever competent in this regard, the party of the honest man, Urian Bowdon, of the parish of Bowdon of Chester diocese and of your jurisdiction against William Chorlton and Ellen, wife of Robert Lether, of the parish aforesaid of your Chester diocese and jurisdiction, and against any other person whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same, by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law jointly, severally and in articles as follows:

1          Firstly, that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter, assert, express or declare abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, disparaging, scandalous or defamatory words of any person against public morals, sounding or tending to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person, were and are to be canonically corrected and punished and are to be obliged and compelled to desist and to completely abstain from these abuses, disparagements and defamatory words in future; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

2          Also, that the said William Chorlton and Ellen Lether not being ignorant of the premises but forgetful of the welfare of their souls, being induced, as it is believed, by an evil spirit, seriously and grievously defamed the said Urian Bowdon, previously in no way defamed, in the months of March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January and February, namely in the year of our Lord 15[..], or in any of those months whatsoever, in one or other of them, affirming openly and publicly ‘that the plaintiff Vrian bowdon had committed adulterie or fornicacion with Katherine leighe the wiffe of John leighe of Altrincham the younger’ namelyWilliam Chorlton one of the defendantes hath openlie reported that Vrian bowdon the plaintiff had carnall copulacion with the said Katherine leighe and Japed[1] her in a chaire in her husbandes howse’ and similarlyEllena lether the other defendant hath spoken and reported the said woordes by the plaintiff’ namely ‘Ellen lether hath reported that Vrian bowdon Japed Katherine leighe the wief of John leighe of Altrincham the younger in a chaire in her husbandes howse’ these defamatory words or other defamatory words similar to these and importing the same effect, the defendant said of the plaintiff, and either party said of the plaintiff, as will become clear and appear by lawful proofs in the event of this suit, and he propounds as above.

3          Also, that by occasion and reason of this defamation of crimes and reproaches and the utterance, assertion and declaration of the aforesaid defamatory words the standing and good fame of the said Urian Bowdon are injured, blackened and diminished and the said Urian Bowdon was and is

[1] Jape – to have sexual intercourse.

Transcript

[1575/4 image 1]

 In dei nomine amen coram vobis Willelmo permissione divina
Cestrensi Episcopo vestroue  Commissario generali seu alio Judice in hac parte
competenti quocunque Pars honesti viri Urian bowdon
parochie de bowdon Cestrensis diocesis et vestre Jurisdiccionis contra et aduersus Willelmum Chorlton et Ellenam vxorem Roberti lether parochie predicte vestre
Cestrensis diocesis et Jurisdiccionis ac contra quemcunque alium coram vobis
pro eisdem in iudicio legitime interuenientem per viam querele et
vobis in hac parte querelando dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis
in iure proponit coniunctim diuisim atque articulatim provt sequitur

1          Imprimis Quod omnies et singuli huius regni Anglie subditi et
subiecti qui convitia vituperia verbaue opprobriosa vili-
pendiosa scandalosa  [vel] diffamatoria ad alicuis bone fame
lesionem seu denigr[ationem] sonantia vel tendentia contra bonos
mores de aliquo [dicunt em]ittunt asserunt proferunt se[u]
predicant fuerunt [et sunt] Canonice Corrigendi et puni[endi]
Et vt ab huiusmodi [convitijs vitu]perijs et verbis diffam[atorijs]
desistant et [se penitus abst]ineant in futurum Cogendi [et]
compellandi E[t ponit coniunctim d]iuisim et de quolibet

 2          Item Quod d[icti Willelmus Chor]lton et Ellena lether p[remiss]-
orum non ignari immo [animarum suarum s]alutis immemores spritu vt Cred[itur]
maligno ducti dictum [Ur]ianum Bowdon prius minime diff[amatum]
mensibus Martij Apri[lis M]aij Junij Julij Augusti septembris oc[tobris]
Novembris decembris Januarij et Februarij videlicet in anno domini 15[..]
eorumve mensium quolibet vno siue aliquo graviter et
enormiter diffamauerunt affirmando palam et publice that the pla[intiff]
Vrian bowdon had committed adulterie or fornicacion with
Katherine leighe the wiffe of John leighe of Altrincham the
younger videlicet William Chorlton one of the defendantes hath openlie reported
that Vrian bowdon the plaintiff had carnall copulacion with the
said Katherine leighe and Japed her in a chaire in her
husbandes howse et similiter Ellena lether the other defendant
hath spoken and reported the said woordes by the plaintiff
videlicet Ellen lether hath reported that Vrian bowdon
Japed Katherine leighe the wief of John leighe of
Altrincham the younger in a chaire in her husbandes howse
hec verba diffamatoria seu alia verba diffamatoria
hijs similia et eundem effectum importantia pars rea dixit
de parte actrice et vtraque pars dixit de parte actrice provt in eventu
huius litis per probaciones legitimas liquebit et apparebit et ponit
vt supra

 3          Item Quod occatione et pretextu huiusmodi diffamacionis criminum et
conviciorum ac verborum diffamatoriorum predictorum emissionem assertionem et  predicacionem status et bona fama dicti Vria[ni] Bowdon leduntur
denigrantur et attenuantur dictusque Vri[anus] fuit et est in

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/4 image 2]

at no little trouble and expense and otherwise and elsewhere wearied, vexed, oppressed, burdened and perturbed in many different ways, and among and between good and substantial people he is of less reputation and favour and good and substantial people have ascribed and given, and at present ascribe and give, less trust and favour to the same Urian Bowdon by reason of the premises; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

4          Also, that the said Urian Bowdon, before this defamation and the utterance, assertion and declaration of the defamatory words and until then, was a man of good fame, unblemished reputation and honest conversation, and previously in no way defamed among and between good and substantial people; and he propounds as above.

5          Also, that the said William Chorlton and Ellen Lether were and are of the parish of [Bowdon] of your Chester diocese and for that reason subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as above.

6          Also, that it was and is on the part and behalf of the said Urian Bowdon that complaint is rightly and lawfully made to you, lord judge, and to your Chester consistory court; and he propounds as above.

Also, that all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well known and public voice and fame were and are circulating regarding and concerning this in the parish of Bowdon and in other parishes neighbouring and surrounding the same.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Urian Bowdon prays that right and justice may be done and administered to him in all and singular the premises and that it should be decided that the said William Chorlton and Ellen Lether will be corrected and punished for the imputation of the above-said crimes and for the pronouncing and declaration of these aforesaid scandalous and defamatory words according to the due requirement of law, and that they will be punished with effect etc.; and also that they will be condemned in the lawful costs incurred on the part of the said Urian Bowdon in that behalf, and he protests those to be incurred, and having been condemned, that they will be canonically obliged and compelled to the due and real payment of the same by you and  your definitive sentence, lord judge aforesaid etc; humbly imploring your office in the premises, lord judge aforesaid.

Transcript

[1575/4 image 2]

nonnullis laboribus et expensis ac alias et aliunde mulipliciter fatigatus
vexatus grauatus oneratus et perturbatus ac apud et inter bonos
et graues minoris reputacionis et fauoris bonique et graves
adhibuerunt et dederunt adhibentque et dant in presenti eidem
Vriano Bowdon minorem fidem atque fauorem pretextu
premissorum Et ponit Coniunctim Diuisim et de quolibet

4          Item Quod dictus Vrianus <bowdon> ante huiusmodi diffamacionem et verborum diffamatoriorum emissionem assertionem et predicacionem et vsque ad ea
fuit vir bone fame opinionis illese et conuersacionis
honeste ac apud et inter bonos [et] graues prius minime
diffamatus et ponit [vt] supra

5          Item Quod dicti W[illelmus Chorl]ton et Ellena lether fue[runt]
et sunt parochie de [Bowdon] vestre Cestrensis diocesis et eo [pretextu]
vestre Jurisdiccionis subd[iti et subiecti] et ponit vt supra

6          Item Quod fu[it et est ex par]te et per partem dicti Vria[ni]
Bowdon ad vos [dominum Judic]em et ad Curiam vestram
Cestrensem  rite et l[egitime que]relatum et ponit vt supra

Item Quod premissa omnia  et singula fuerunt et sunt vera pu[blica]
notoria manifesta pariter et famosa atque de et super huiusmodi
in parochia de bowdon et in alijs parochijs eidem convicinis et circumvicinis
laborarunt et laborant publica vox et fama

Vnde facta
fide de iure in hac parte requisita petit pars dicti Vriani bowdon
Jus et iusticiam sibi in premissis omnibus et singulis fieri
et ministrari Ac dicti Willelmum Chorlton et Ellenam
lether pro supradictorum criminum imposicione et huiusmodi verborum
scandalosorum et diffamatoriorum prolacione et predicacione predictis iuxta
iuris debitam exigentiam corrigendos et puniendos fore
debere decerni et cum effectu puniri et cetera Necnon in
expensis legitimis per partem dicti Vriani bowdon in hac parte
factis et protestatur de fiendis condempnari et condemnatos ad
debitam et realem solucionem earundem Canonice Cogi et
compelli per vos et vestram Sententiam diffinitiuam domine
Judex antedicte et cetera vestrum officium in premissis domine Judex
antedicte humiliter Implorando

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/4 image 3]

[Endorsement]

[…] Bowdon against William Chorlton and Ellen Lether, wife of Robert Lether, in a cause of defamation exhibited in the year of our Lord 1575.

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1575/4 image 3]

[Endorsement]

[…] Bowdon contra et aduersus Willelmum Chorlton et Ellenam lether vxorem Roberti lether in causa diffamationis exhibitus Anno domini 1575

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Urian Bowdon– plaintiff

William Chorlton – defendant

Katherine Leighe – named in the libel

Ellen Lether  – defendant

 

 

 

 

Officials

William Downham 

Subjects

Defamatory words

 

Places

Bowdon

 

Ref: EDC 5/1575/2

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5/1575/2 CHESTER (Watergate Street) Rose Smith c Elena Bannicle calling her whore and unfit to speak to any woman – libel, depositions.

Summary:

Ellen Bamvile contra Rose Smith.

The libel, giving the words complained of has not survived, but witnesses deposed that Rose called Ellen ‘bawdrie whore’ ‘not mete to kepe companie with any honest women’ and said that she accused her of an illicit relationship with her husband.

Depositions on the libel (image 1)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 1]

 […] of Oliver Smith […] and offered in a cause of defamation, taken before the venerable Master Robert Leche, Doctor of Laws, 22nd of June 1575.

Adam Johnson of the parish of Holy Trinity within the city of Chester, draper, his age about 33 years, has known the plaintiff for about 16 years and the defendant for a similar time, or longer.

 To the first article he says that he believes it to be consonant with law and equity.

 To the 2nd article This deponent saieth that he vppon sundaie ether fortnight or thre wekes before Sundaie last sitting in <a certen> Settell by the defendantes husbandes dore <in Chestre> together with Saolomon Smith sonne to the said defendantes husband, & the plaintiff & this deponentes weif  <sytting the same tyme> ouer against this deponentes owne dore <being next howse adioning to ye defendents husbands house>, the defendent came furth of her husbandes house & set her downe in another Settell nere <to> the <place where ye> plaintiff & this deponentes weif <were setting> And when she had <satte> there a litle while she called vnto her Prudence Smith one of her husbandes doughters & said <alowde> doest not thou see these bawdrie[1] whores howe they sitt here to countenaunce me & these naughtie[2] Jades[3] & other reprochfull wordes <she vsed meaning the same plaintiff and this deponentes wief for this deponent sayth there were none other women then & there nere them> that she cold meane saving William browne his maide wherevppon this deponent said to the said Salomon Smith, this is an evill hearing to heare your mother speake so farre out of order by her neighbors, for she spake that the plaintiff & this deponentes weif did <or might> heare her. And this deponent being therwith greved departed because he cold not abide to heare suche disorderly talke otherwise he says that he knows nothing to depose.

To article 3 he says that he doethe verely beleue that the good name of the plaintiff is muche impaired by reason of the <said wordes spoken as deposed as above> & the rather because this deponent hath certenly heard of his neighbors that the defendent hath sclaundred the said plaintiff diuers & sundrie tymes calling her whore & errand[4] whore

[1] Bawdry – immoral, sometimes implying connection to a brothel.

[2] Naughty or naught- here means immoral.

[3] Jade -a term of condemnation usually only applied to women.

[4] Probably for ‘errant’ meaning arrant = notorious or ‘common’.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 1]

[…] Oliueri Smith in causa
diff[amacionis] […] et oblato
capta coram venerabli
viro M[agistro] Roberto Leche legum doctore
xijo Junij 1575

Adamus Johnson parochie Sancte Trinitatis infra Civitatem Cestrie draper
etatis sue circiter xxxiij annos nouit partem agentem circiter
xvj annos et partem defendentem similiter vel vltra

 Ad primum articulum dicit quod credit eundem esse consonum Juri et
equitati

 Ad ijd articulum This deponent saieth that he vppon sundaie
ether fortnight or thre wekes before Sundaie last
sitting in <a certen> Settell by the defendantes husbandes dore <in Chestre> together
with Saolomon Smith sonne to the said
defendantes husband, & the plaintiff & this deponentes weif
<sytting the same tyme> ouer against this deponentes owne dore <being next howse adioning to ye defendents husbands house>, the defendent
came furth of her husbandes house & set her
downe in another Settell nere <to> the <place where ye> plaintiff & this
deponentes weif <were setting> And when she had <satte> there
a litle while she called vnto her Prudence Smith
one of her husbandes doughters & said <alowde> doest not
thou see these bawdrie[1] whores howe they sitt
here to countenaunce me & these naughtie[2] Jades[3]
& other reprochfull wordes <she vsed meaning the same plaintiff and this deponentes wief for
this deponent sayth there were none other women then & there nere them>
that she cold meane saving William browne his maide wherevppon this
deponent said to the said Salomon Smith, this
is an evill hearing to heare your mother speake
so farre out of order by her neighbors, for she
spake that the plaintiff & this
deponentes weif did <or might> heare her. And this deponent
being therwith greved departed because he cold
not abide to heare suche disorderly talke alias dicit
quod nescit deponere.]

Ad iij articulum dicit that he doethe verely beleue that the
good name of the plaintiff is muche impaired by reason of the
<said wordes spoken as deposed vt supra > & the rather because this deponent
hath certenly heard of his neighbors that
the defendent hath sclaundred the said plaintiff diuers &
sundrie tymes calling her whore & errand[4] whore

[1] Bawdry – immoral, sometimes implying connection to a brothel.

[2] Naughty – here means immoral.

[3] Jade -a term of condemnation usually only applied to women.

[4] Probably for ‘errant’ meaning arrant = notorious or ‘common’.

Depositions on the libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 2]

[…]  & is a verie honest
gentleman […] <as above deposed>doeth th[ink] that she wold haue bene loth to haue complayned but that she <hath> bene so oft sclaundred by her <the said Rose smythe>, that if she shold suffer from tyme to tyme as she hath done <it myght happen to be thought> that there were some matter why she durst not shewe her greif

To 5 he says that the same is true.

To 6 he believes that the same is true.

To the last he says that the things deposed before by him are true and that fame is circulating about this.

by me Adam Johnson [signed]

Katherine Johnson, wife of Adam Johnson the previous witness, her age is about 23 years, has known the plaintiff about 3 years and the defendant 5 or 6 years.

To the first article she believes that the same is true.

To the 2nd article This deponent saieth that diuers & sundrie tymes she hath heard the defendant raile[5] against the plaintiff in calling her whore & saieng that she was not mete[6] to kepe companie with any honest women And further saieth that the defendant spake to this deponent vppon a tyme & said, katherine did not you see what countenaunce yonder whore (meaning the plaintiff) beared towardes my husband as they sat together And this deponent answered & said she sawe not And she the defendant said agayne yf you had marked it aswell as I you shold haue sene it.

[5] Rail – to utter abusive language.

[6] Meet – suitable or appropriate

Transcript

[1575/2 image 2]

[…]  & is a verie honest
gentleman […] <as above deposed>
doeth th[ink] that she wold haue bene loth to haue
complayned but that she <hath> bene so oft sclaundred
by her <the said Rose smythe>, that if she shold suffer from tyme to
tyme as she hath done <it myght happen to be thought> that
there were some matter why she durst not
shewe her greif

Ad v dicit eundem esse verum.

Ad vj credit eundem esse verum.

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera et famam super huiusmodi laborare.]

by me Adam Johnson [signed]

Katherine Johnson vxor Adami Johnson precontestis sui etatis sue circiter
xxiij annos nouit partem agentem circiter iij annos et partem
defendentem v vel vj annos

Ad primum articulum credit eudem esse verum

Ad ijd articulum This deponent saieth that diuers & sundrie
tymes she hath heard the defendant raile[5] against the
plaintiff in calling her whore & saieng that she was
not mete[6] to kepe companie with any honest women
And further saieth that the defendant spake to this
deponent vppon a tyme & said, katherine did not you see
what countenaunce yonder whore (meaning the plaintiff)
beared towardes my husband as they sat together
And this deponent answered & said she sawe
not And she the defendant said agayne yf you had
marked it aswell as I you shold haue sene it.

[5] Rail – to utter abusive language.

[6] Meet – suitable or appropriate.

Depositions on the libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 3]

[…] And further […] depose concerning this article of her owne knoledge

To article 3 she says that this deponent hath heard the said Rose Smith diuers & sundrie tymes speake such reprochfull wordes by the said plaintiff that she beleueth the good name of the plaintiff is much impaired by occasion of the same evill wordes pronounced & spoken by the defendant amonges her neighbors

To 4 she says that the said plaintiff was taken & reputed for an honest gentlewoman for any thing this deponent heard but only by the defendant

To 5 she says that the same is true.

To 6 she says that she believes the same to contain the truth in it.

To the last she says that the things deposed before by her are true and that fame is circulating about this.

 Elizabeth Johnson, widow, her age about 60 years, of the parish of Holy Trinity, has known the plaintiff about 12 years and the defendant about 20 years.

To the first article she says that she believes the same to be true and consonant with law.

To the 2nd article she says that the said defendant hath reported diuers & sundrie tymes to this deponent that the said plaintiff was not an honest woman & hath called her whore & <hath said to this deponent> that she liked not the countenaunce betwene the defendantes husband & the plaintiff, & saieth further that she this deponent hath heard the defendant speake these wordes or the like within Trinitie parishe in Chester diuers & sundrie tymes in the presence of diuers persons whom she toke no hede to of late tyme & a good while agoe otherwise she knows nothing to depose.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 3]

[…] And further […] depose concerning
this article of her owne
knoledge

Ad iij articulum dicit that this deponent hath heard the
said Rose Smith diuers & sundrie tymes speake such
reprochfull wordes by the said plaintiff that she beleueth
the good name of the plaintiff is much impaired by occasion
of the same evill wordes pronounced & spoken by
the defendant amonges her neighbors

Ad iiij dicit that the said plaintiff was taken & reputed
for an honest gentlewoman for any thing this
deponent heard but only by the defendant

Ad v dicit eundem esse veru

Ad vj dicit quod credit eundem continere in se veritatem 

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eam esse vera et famam super huiusmodi laborare .

 Elizabeth Johnson vidua etatis sue circiter lx annos parochie Sancte Trinitatis
nouit partem agentem circiter xij annos et partem defendentem
xx annos

Ad primum articulum dicit quod credit eundem esse verum et Juri
consonum.

Ad ijd articulum dicit that the said defendant hath reported
diuers & sundrie tymes to this deponent that the
said plaintiff was not an honest woman & hath called
her whore & <hath said to this deponent> that she liked not the countenaunce
betwene the defendantes husband & the plaintiff, & saieth further that she
this deponent hath heard the defendant speake these
wordes or the like within Trinitie parishe in Chester
diuers & sundrie tymes in the presence of diuers
persons whom she toke no hede to of late tyme
& a good while agoe alias nescit deponere.

Depositions on the libel (image 4)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 4]

To article 3 she says […] knewe nor heard any thing by […] then honest & good Saving [that] the said Rose Smith hath reported as she has deposed above otherwise she refers herself to the matters deposed before.

To 5 and 6 she says that she believes the same to be true.

To the last she says that the things deposed before by her are true and that fame is circulating about this.

Alice Massey, wife of William Massey, of the parish of Holy Trinity, her age about 34 years, has known the plaintiff about 12 years and the defendant about 16 years.

To the first article she says that she believes it to be consonant with law and equity.

Ad ijd articulum [To the 2nd article] This deponent saieth that vppon a Sundaie or hollie daie within this moneth or vj wekes last past this deponent & the weif of Thomas Tetlowe merchaunt & the plaintiff were sitting together in the Roe[7] nere vnto the defendantes husbandes dore, as neighbors commonly vse to mete & sitt in the same Roe and the said Rose Smith came furth and sat downe vppon a Settell nere by & when she had sitt there a while she rose & goeng awaie said alowd, doe you not see howe they bring an errand whore to face me & so went into her husbandes house againe, meaning as this deponent verely beleueth in her conscience, the said plaintiff, because this deponent hath diuers & sundrie tymes heard the defendant report evill of the plaintiff & call her whore otherwise she knows nothing to depose.

To 3 and 4 she says that this deponent <neuer heard nor> knoweth but the said plaintiff is an honest gentlewoman saving by the report of the defendant

To 5 and 6 she says that she believes that the same are true.

To the last she says that the things deposed before by her are true and that fame is circulating about this.

[7] The Rows comprise multi-storey properties of a design unique to Chester and many of these properties can still be seen in the centre of the city. Most of the premises have an undercroft, often partly below ground level The ground floor is either a shop or other commercial premises, set back from the street and fronted by a gallery. These galleries form the base of a covered walkway above, giving access to the first floor.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 4]

Ad iij [articulum dicit] […]knewe nor heard any
thing by […] then honest & good
Saving [that] the said Rose Smith hath
reported vt supra deposuit aliter
refert se ad predeposita.

Ad v et vj dicit quod credit eosdem esse

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eam esse vera et famam super huiusmodi
laborare.

Alicia Massie vxor Willelmi Massie parochie Sancte Trinitatis etatis
sue circiter xxxiiijor annos nouit partem agentem circiter
xij annos et partem defendentem circiter xvj annos

Ad primum articulum dicit quod credit eundem esse consonum Juri
et equitati.

Ad ijd articulum This deponent saieth that vppon a
Sundaie or hollie daie within this moneth or
vj wekes last past this deponent & the weif
of Thomas Tetlowe merchaunt & the plaintiff
were sitting together in the Roe[7] nere vnto the
defendantes husbandes dore, as neighbors commonly
vse to mete & sitt in the same Roe and
the said Rose Smith came furth and sat downe
vppon a Settell nere by & when she had
sitt there a while she rose & goeng
awaie said alowd, doe you not see howe they
bring an errand whore to face me & so went
into her husbandes house againe, meaning
as this deponent verely beleueth in her
conscience, the said plaintiff, because this deponent
hath diuers & sundrie tymes heard the defendant
report evill of the plaintiff & call her whore  alias
nescit deponere .

Ad iijd et iiij dicit that this deponent <neuer heard nor> knoweth
but the said plaintiff is an honest
gentlewoman saving by the report of the defendant

Ad v et vj dicit quod credit eosdem esse veros.

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eam esse vera et famam super huiusmodi
laborare.

[7] The Rows comprise multi-storey properties of a design unique to Chester and many of these properties can still be seen in the centre of the city. Most of the premises have an undercroft, often partly below ground level The ground floor is either a shop or other commercial premises, set back from the street and fronted by a gallery. These galleries form the base of a covered walkway above, giving access to the first floor.

Depositions on the libel (image 5)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 5]

Elizabeth Bristowe wife of […], of the parish of Holy Trinity within the city of Chester, her age about 34 years, has known the plaintiff about 10 years and has known the defendant well for about 5 or 6 years.

To the first article she says that she believes it to be consonant with law and equity.

To the 2nd article she says That the defendant in communicacion betwene her & this deponent hath reported evill by the said plaintiff calling her whore & saieng that she was informed that her husband & the said plaintiff had bene nought together this deponent saieth that she wold be loth to haue vttered this but because of her othe sake And being examined vppon the rest of the articles saieth she cannot depose any thing materiall Saving she knoweth not nor hath heard but of the defendant, but the plaintiff is a verie honest woman & so reputed & taken amonges her neighbors otherwise she knows nothing to depose].

 

Transcript

[1575/2 image 5]

Elizabeth Bristowe vxor […] parochie Sancte Trinitatis
infra Civitate[m Cestrie etatis] sue circiter xxxiiijor
annos nouit partem [agentem ci]rciter x annos et partem
defendentem circiter v vel vj annos bene nouit

Ad primum articulum dicit quod credit eundem esse consonum Jurique
equitati

Ad ijd articulum dicit That the defendant in communicacion betwene
her & this deponent hath reported evill by the said
plaintiff calling her whore & saieng that she was
informed that her husband & the said plaintiff had bene
nought together this deponent saieth that
she wold be loth to haue vttered this but
because of her othe sake And
being examined vppon the rest of the articles saieth
she cannot depose any thing materiall Saving
she knoweth not nor hath heard but of the
defendant, but the plaintiff is a verie honest woman &
so reputed & taken amonges her neighbors alias
nescit deponere.]

Depositions on the libel (image 6)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 6]

[Endorsement]

Ellen Bamvile against Rose Smith, 1575.

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1575/2 image 6]

[Endorsement]

[Ellena Bam]vile contra Roseam Smith 1575

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

 

Exceptions to the witnesses on the libel (image 7)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 7]

At Chester on Thursday, namely the 6th day of October 1575

[Marginal note]

Rose Smith against Ellen Bamvile in a cause of defamation

On which day John Prichard, in the name of proctor, and as lawful proctor of the said Rose Smith, in every better and more effective way, manner and form of law by which, in law, he has been or should be or is best or most effectively able and for every consequence of law that can follow thereupon in any way, says, alleges and in these writings propounds in law in articles as follows:

1          Firstly, namely that no credit, at least sufficient in law, was or is to be attached in any way in law to the pretended statements or depositions of Adam Johnson, Katherine Johnson, his wife, Elizabeth Johnson, Alice Massie and Elizabeth Bristowe, pretended witnesses on behalf of the said Ellen Bamvile, of and upon a certain pretended libel given and propounded in this court in whatever way produced, sworn and examined, inasmuch as all and singular the same pretended witnesses for the whole and entire time and place or places of their pretended production, reception, admission,  oath-swearing and examination had and done in fact in this matter were and are in their aforesaid pretended statements and depositions conflicting, vacillating, singular and inconsistent among themselves and they contradict themselves and are incompatible, not provable, at least sufficiently, on account of whom or what they were produced to prove, just as will be proved both from their pretended statements and depositions and from other lawful proofs in the event of this suit; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any part thereof.

2          Also that no credit, at least sufficient in law, was or is to be attached in law in any way to the pretended statements or depositions of the said pretended witnesses inasmuch as  all and singular the said pretended witnesses for the whole and entire time and place or places aforesaid and before and since were, just as they are at present, the greatest friends of the party producing them and her supporters and promoters of this cause and detractors of the said Ellen Bamville and of her good fame, malevolent and defamers, and such as regarded the said Ellen with the utmost hatred before the beginning of this suit, and voluntarily and without compulsion obtruded and offered themselves to testify in this matter; and he propounds as above.

 

 

 

Transcript

[1575/2 image 7]

Cestria die Jouis videlicet vjo die Octobris 1575

[Marginal note]

Rosa Smith contra Elenam Bamuile in causa diffamationis

Quo die Johannes Prichard nomine procuraturio ac vt procurator legitimus
dicte Rose Smith omnibus melioribus et efficatioribus via modo et
Juris forma quibus melius aut efficatius de Jure potuit aut
potest debuitue aut debet necnon ad omnem Juris effectum exinde
quouismodo sequi valentem dicit allegat et in hijs Scriptis in Jure
proponit articulatim prout sequitur

1          Inprimis videlicet quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut
est dictis seu deposicionibus pretensis Adam Joneson, Katherine Joneson
eius vxoris Elizabeth Joneson, Alicie Massye et Elizabethe Bristowe
testium pretensorum ex parte dicte Elene Bamuile de et super quodam pretenso
libello in hac curia dato et proposito taliter qualiter productorum Juratorum et
examinatorum de Jure quouismodo adhibenda, pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod
ijdem pretensi testes omnes et singuli toto et omni tempore ac loco siue
locis eorum productionis recepcionis admissionis Juramenti prestacionis et examinacionis
suarum pretensarum in hac parte de facto habitarum et factarum fuerunt et sunt in
dictis <et> deposicionibus suis pretensis antedictis varii vacillantes singulares et
inter se discrepantes ac sibi ipsis contrarij et repugnantes non probandis
saltem sufficienter ea seu id propter que vel quod probandum fuerunt
productis prout tam ex eorum dictis et deposicionibus pretensis quam ex
alijs probacionibus legitimis in eventu huius litis comprobabitur, Et  ponit
coniunctim diuisim et de quolibet

2          Item quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut est dictis
siue deposicionibus pretensis dictorum pretensorum testium de Jure quouismodo
adhibenda pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod dicti pretensi testes omnes et singuli
toto et omni tempore ac loco siue locis predictis anteaque et citra
fuerunt prout in presenti sunt nimis familiares partis eos producentis
eiusque fautores et sustentatores huius causse et dicte
Elene Bamuile et eius bone fame detractatores maleuoli et
diffamatores et tales qui dictam Elenam capitali odio ante
huius litis exordium prosequebantur, et sese ad testificandum in hac
parte vltro et non coacti ingesserunt et obtulerunt Et ponit
vt supra.

 

 

 

 

Exceptions to the witnesses on the libel (image 8)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 8]

3          Also that no credit, at least sufficient in law, was or is to be attached in any way in law to the pretended statements or depositions of the aforesaid Adam Johnson, one of the pretended witnesses in this matter, in any way whatsoever rendered, had and done, inasmuch as the said pretended witness, Adam, the whole and entire time and place or places of his aforesaid pretended production, admission, oath-swearing and examination in this matter in the cause aforesaid was and is a supporter of the party producing him and a promoter of this cause of the said Ellen for whom he is being produced, and brought in for this reason namely because the aforesaid Adam Johnson and his wife aforesaid often and at various times before trustworthy witnesses have wickedly and maliciously defamed the same Ellen about several crimes and adulterous embraces to the damage and injury of the good name of the said Ellen Bamvile; and he propounds as above.

4          Also that there was and is no credit, at least sufficient in law, to be attached to the pretended statements or depositions of the aforesaid Katherine Johnson, Elizabeth Johnson, Alice Massie and Elizabeth Bristowe on account of their sex, and also inasmuch the aforesaid witnesses were defamers of the said Ellen Bamvile who spoke and uttered opprobrious words of the same, tending to the damage of her good fame, before the start of this suit; and he propounds as above.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 8]

3          Item quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut est
dictis siue deposicionibus pretensis prefati Adami Joneson testium
pretensorum productorum vnius in hac parte vtcunque redditis habitis et
factis de Jure quouismodo adhibenda, pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod
dictus Adamus pretensus testis toto et omni tempore ac loco
siue locis eius in hac parte produccionis admissionis Juramenti
prestacionis et examinacionis suarum pretensarum predictarum, cause predicte ex parte
eum producentis  fuit et est fautor ac sustentator huiusmodi
cause dicte Elene pro qua producitur, et hac ratione ductus
videlicet quia prefatus Adamus Joneson et eius vxor predicta sepe
et diuersis temporibus eandem Elenam coram testibus
fidedignis nequiter et maliciose super nonnullis criminibus et
adulterinis amplexibus diffamauerunt in dicte Elene Bamuile
bone fame denigracionem et Lesionem Et ponit vt supra

4          Item quod nulla fides saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut est
dictis siue deposicionibus pretensis prefatarum Katherine Joneson
Elizabeth Joheson Alicie Massye et Elizabethe Bristowe
propter sexum adhibenda ac etiam  ex eo quod prefati testes fuerunt
dicte Elene Bamuile diffamatrices que verba opprobriosa
in eius bone fame lesionem tendentia ante huius Litis ingressum
de eadem dixerunt et protulerunt. Et ponit vt supra.

Item quod premissa omnia et singula fuerunt et sunt vera publica
notoria manifesta pariter et famosa atque de et super ijsdem
laborarunt et laborant publica vox et fama

Vnde facta
fide de Jure in hac parte requisita non est fides aliqua
saltem de Jure sufficiens fuit aut est dictis siue deposicionibus
pretensis pretensorum prefatorum testium in hac parte vtcunque habitis
et factis de Jure inualidis censendo pronunciando et declarando
Vlteriusque faciendo statuendo et decernendo in premissis et ea
concernentis quibuscunque quod Juris fuerit et rationis

Exceptions to the witnesses on the libel (image 9)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 9]

Also, all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well-known, and public voice and fame were and are circulating regarding and concerning this.

Having sworn the oath thereupon as required by law in this behalf, there is no credit, at least sufficient in law, in the pretended statements or depositions of the aforesaid pretended witnesses had and done in this matter in any way, assessing, pronouncing and declaring them invalid in law. And otherwise, doing, establishing and decreeing what will have been of right and reason in the premises and anything whatsoever concerning them,  which this propounding party propounds and prays that they are done jointly and severally, not binding himself to prove all and singular the premises, nor to the burden of a superfluous proof, against which he protests, but so far as he shall prove in the premises so much may he obtain of the petitions, always reserving the benefit of law in all things, and he asserts the right of adding to and correcting these exceptions, humbly imploring your office in the premises, lord judge aforesaid.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 9]

que proponit et fieri petit pars ista proponens coniunctim et diuisim
non arctans se ad omnia et singula premissa probanda nec ad onus
superflue probacionis de quo protestatur sed quatenus probauerit
in premissis eatenus obtineat in petitis iuris beneficio in
omnibus semper saluo, ac protestatur de addendo et corrigendo has
excepciones  vestrum officium domine Judex ante dicte humiliter
implorando

Exceptions to the witnesses on the libel (image 10)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 10]

[Endorsement]

Exceptions on behalf of Rose Smith against the pretended witnesses produced on behalf of Ellen Bamville, exhibited 1575.

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1575/2 image 10]

[Endorsement]

Excepciones ex parte Rose Smith contra pretensos testes ex parte Elene Bamuile productos exhibitas 1575.

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Depositions on the exceptions (image 11)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 11]

Answers [ …] taken before the venerable Master Robert Leche, doctor of laws etc. on the 13 day of December in the year of our Lord 1575.

Margaret Maynwaring of the parish of St Peter within the city of Chester, widow, her age 60 years, says that she has known the plaintiff for the whole time of the dwelling of the same party in this city and the defendant from the time of the solemnisation of the marriage between her and her husband.

To the first article she says that she well knows Adam Johnson, Katherine, his wife, Elizabeth Johnson, Alice Massie and Elizabeth Bristowe articulate and as for the rest of the contents of the said article she refers herself to their depositions and otherwise she knows nothing to depose Saving she saieth she beleueth they are honest persons.

To the 2nd article she says that the said witnesses & the said Ellen bamvile are neighbors & frendes in the waie of honestie and otherwise she knows nothing to depose.

To article 3 she says that she knows nothing to depose Saving she saieth she neuer heard the said Adam Johnson nor his weif slaunder the said Ellen

To article 4 she says that althoughe the said katherine Johnson Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie & Elizabeth bristowe be women, yet she beleueth they are so honest as they are to be credited

To the last she says that the things deposed before by her are true and that fame is circulating about this.

Peter Maynwaring of the parish of St Peter within the city of Chester, merchant, his age about 34 years, has known the plaintiff for the space of 12 years and the defendant for 12 years similarly.

 

 

 

Transcript

[1575/2 image 11]

Re[sponsiones] […]  Capte coram venerabli viro [Magistro] Roberto leche
legum doctore et cetera xiij [die d]ecembris
Anno domini 1575

Margareta Maynwaring parochie Sancti Petri infra Civitatem Cestrie vidua etatis sue lx
annorum dicit se nouisse partem agentem per totum tempore
eiusdem partis in hac Civitate habitacionis et partem ream
bene nouit a tempore matrimonij inter eam et
euis maritum solempnizationis

Ad primum articulum dicit quod bene nouit Adamum Johnson Katerinam
euis vxorem Elizabeth Johnson Aliciam Massie et Elizabeth bristowe
articulatos et quoad cetera dicti articulati contenta refert se ad eorum
deposiciones et aliter nescit deponere Saving she saieth she beleueth they are honest persons

Ad ijd articulum dicit that the said witnesses & the said Ellen bamvile are neighbors & frendes in the waie
of honestie Et aliter nescit deponere.

Ad iij articulum dicit quod nescit deponere Saving she saieth
she neuer heard the said Adam Johnson nor his
weif slaunder the said Ellen

Ad iiij articulum dicit that althoughe the said katherine
Johnson Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie &
Elizabeth bristowe be women, yet she beleueth
they are so honest as they are to be credited

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eam esse vera et famam super
huiusmodi laborare

Petrus Maynwaring parochie Sancti Petri infra Civitatem Cestrie mercator
etatis sue circiter xxxiiijor annos nouit partem
agentem per spacium xij annorum et partem ream per xij
annos similiter

 

 

Depositions on the exceptions (image 12)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 12]

He knows […] Alice Massie and Elizabeth Bristowe articulate well] & taketh them to be verie honest persons <& to be credited vppon their othes> otherwise he refers himself to their depositions.

To the 2nd article he says that he thinketh there is no suche familiaritie as is articulate betwene the said witnesses & Ellen bamvile articulate and otherwise he knows nothing to depose.

To article 3 he says that he knows nothing to depose except as he has previously deposed & saieth further that he neuer heard Adam Johnson sclaunder the said Ellen Bamvile

To 4 he knows nothing to depose], but saieth he neuer heard the said katherine Johnson Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie nor Elizabeth bristowe <or any of them> slaunder the said Ellen bamvile as is articulated.

To the last he says that the things deposed before by him are true and that fame is circulating about this.

[Signed] Peter Maynwaryng

Margaret Leche, wife of Robert Leche, of the parish of St Michael within the city of Chester, her age about 36 years, has known the plaintiff sithence she married fraunces bamvile her nowe husband and the defendant sithence she was maried to oliuer Smith her nowe husband.

To the first article she says that she knoweth Adam Johnson katherine his weif Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie & Elizabeth bristowe verie well & taketh them to be suche persons as are to be credited vppon their othes for she knoweth no cause to the contrarie And being further examined vppon this article she referreth herself to their deposicions

Transcript

[1575/2 image 12]

[…] Aliciam Massi[e e]t Elizabeth bristowe articulatas
bene nouit  & taketh them to be verie honest
persons <& to be credited vppon their othes>  alias refert se ad eorum deposiciones

Ad ijd articulum dicit that he thinketh there
is no suche familiaritie as is articulate betwene the said
witnesses & Ellen bamvile articulate Et aliter nescit deponere

Ad iij articulum dicit quod nescit deponere nisi vt prius deposuit
& saieth further that he neuer heard Adam
Johnson sclaunder the said Ellen
Bamvile

Ad iiij nescit deponere, but saieth he neuer heard
the said katherine Johnson Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie
nor Elizabeth bristowe <or any of them> slaunder the said Ellen bamvile
prout articulatur.

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera et famam super
huiusmodi laborare

[Signed] Peter Maynwaryng

Margareta leche vxor Roberti leche parochie Sancti Michaelis infra Civitatem
Cestrie etatis sue circiter xxxvj  annos nouit partem agentem
sithence she married fraunces bamvile her nowe
husband et partem defendentem sithence she was
maried to oliuer Smith her nowe husband

Ad primum articulum dicit that she knoweth Adam Johnson katherine his weif Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie &
Elizabeth bristowe verie well & taketh them
to be suche persons as are to be credited vppon
their othes for she knoweth no cause to the
contrarie And being further examined vppon this
article she referreth herself to their deposicions

Depositions on the exceptions (image 13)

Original Document

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Translation

[1575/2 image 13]

[…] [w]as married out of her house <in the watergate str[eet]> into another strea[t] And during the tyme of her seruice with the said […] she neuer knewe nor heard of any dishonestie by the said Ellen bamvile nor any falling out amongest any of the parties articulate And by reason this deponent hath dwelled out of that streate for these vj yeres  <farre of from them &> she hathe had litle to doe there she cannot further depose of her owne certen knoledge concerning thecontentes of this article or any other thing matteriall in the said Excepcions but that she neuer heard that any haue sclaundred the said Ellen before the begining of this sute otherwise she knows nothing to depose.

John Dickenson of the parish of St Mary within the city of Chester, labourer, his age about 60 years, has known the plaintiff for about 10 years and the defendant sithence she was married to Oliuer Smith

Ad primum articulum dicit that he knoweth Adam Johnson &his weif Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie & Elizabeth bristowe articulate & thinketh they are to be credited as honest  and otherwise he knows nothing to depose.

To the 2nd saieth he dwelleth in St Maries parishe farre from them & sometyme worketh with the defendantes husband & for the rest of the contentes of this article he cannot depose except as he has previously deposed.

To 3 and 4 he says that he is a poore laboring man & tendeth his labor in the feildes abroade for his lyving & marveileth why he shold be called about this matter <being not able to depose anything therein matteriall >And being asked whether he knoweth any dishonestie by the said Ellen bamvile saieth he knoweth non et aliter nescit deponere [and otherwise he knows nothing to depose.]

To the last he says that the things deposed before by him are true and that fame is circulating about this.

Transcript

[1575/2 image 13]

[…] [w]as married
out of her house <in the watergate str[eet]> into another strea[t] And during
the tyme of her seruice with the said […]
she neuer knewe nor heard
of any dishonestie by the said Ellen
bamvile nor any falling out amongest any of
the parties articulate And by reason this deponent hath
dwelled out of that streate for these vj yeres
<farre of from them &> she hathe had litle to doe there she cannot further
depose of her owne certen knoledge concerning the
contentes of this article or any other thing matteriall
in the said Excepcions but that she neuer heard that
any haue sclaundred the said Ellen before
the begining of this sute alias nescit deponere.

Johannes dicconson parochie Sancte Marie infra Civitatem Cestrie laborer
etatis sue circiter lx annos nouit partem agentem circiter
x annos et partem defendentem

Ad primum articulum dicit that he knoweth Adam Johnson &
his weif Elizabeth Johnson Alice Massie & Elizabeth bristowe articulate
& thinketh they are to be credited as honest Et aliter nescit deponere

Ad ijd saieth he dwelleth in St Maries parishe farre
from them & sometyme worketh with the defendantes husband
& for the rest of the contentes of this article he cannot depose nisi vt prius deposuit

Ad iij et iiij dicit that he is a poore laboring man
& tendeth his labor in the feildes abroade for his
lyving & marveileth why he shold be called about this
matter <being not able to depose anything therein matteriall >And being asked whether he knoweth
any dishonestie by the said Ellen bamvile saieth
he knoweth non et aliter nescit deponere.

Ad vltimum dicit predeposita per eum esse vera et famam super
huiusmodi laborare

Depositions on the exceptions (image 14)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/2 image 14]

[Endorsement]

[…] Bamvile 1575

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1575/2 image 14]

[Endorsement]

[…] Bamvile 1575

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Ellen Bamville – plaintiff

Francis Bamvile – husband of the plaintiff

Elizabeth Bristowe – witness on the libel

William Browne – referred to in the depositions

John Dicconson – witness on the exceptions

Adam Johnson – witness on the libel

Elizabeth Johnson – witness on the libel

Katherine Johnson – witness on the libel

Margaret Leche – witness on the exceptions

Alice Massie – witness on the libel

Margaret Maynwaring – witness on the exceptions

Peter Maynwaring – witness on the exceptions

Oliver Smith – husband of the defendant

Rose Smith – defendant

Thomas Tetlowe – referred to in the depositions

Officials

Robert Leche

Related Causes

EDC 5/1576/2 – sentence

Notes

This is an example of the defendant’s name appearing before that of the plaintiff in the pleadings as the defendant objected to material introduced by the plaintiff.

Ref: EDC 5/1575/1

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 5/1575/1 CHESTER (St Werbergh) Joan Shepherd wife of Robert c Francis and Margaret Sefton for saying she was a whore and a carted whore – libel.

Summary:

Jane Shepherd contra Francis Sefton and Margaret Sefton.

Jane, wife of Robert Shepherd, of the parish of St Werburgh also known as St Oswald in Chester, claimed that Francis Sefton and his wife, Margaret, of the same parish had called her a whore and a carted whore. The plaintiff’s forename is given in Latin as both Jane and Joan.

Year

1575

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/1 image 1]

 […] of the honest woman, Jane Shepherd, wife of Robert Shepherd, of the parish of St Werburgh of Chester diocese against Francis Sefton and Margaret, his wife, of the parish aforesaid and against any other whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf propounds and articles in these writings in law as follows:

1          Firstly, that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter, assert, express or declare abuse, disparagements or opprobrious, disparaging and scandalous or defamatory words of any person against public morals, sounding or tending to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person, were and are to be canonically corrected and punished and are to be obliged and compelled to desist and to completely abstain from these abuses, disparagements and defamatory words in future; and he propounds and articles as above.

2          Also, that the said Francis Sefton and Margaret, his wife, not being ignorant of the premises but heedless of the welfare of their souls, being induced, as it is believed, by an evil spirit, seriously and grievously defamed the said Jane Shepherd, previously in no way defamed, in the months of March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January, February in the year of our Lord 1575, or in any of those months whatsoever, in one or other of them, namely he said ‘that the said plantiffe was a whore and A Carted whore[1]’ he said and uttered these defamatory words of the same Jane, the plaintiff,  or other words similar to these and importing the same effect; his wife, Margaret, asserting and affirming the same words, as will become clear and appear by lawful proofs in the event of this suit, and he propounds as above.

[1] At the time ‘whore’ usually implied promiscuity rather than prostitution. Women found guilty of promiscuity by a secular court could be punished by being paraded through the streets in an open cart. Hence ‘carted whore’ was more seriously defamatory than ‘whore’.

Transcript

[1575/1 image 1]

 […] honeste [mulieris Jane S]hepherd vxo[ris Roberti Shepherd]
parochie Sancte Warb[ridg]ij Cestrensis diocesis contra et aduersus
Franciscum Sefton et Margaretam vxorem eius parochie
predicte ac contra quemcunque alium Coram vobis pro eisdem
in iudicio legitime interuenientem per viam querele et vobis
in hac parte querelando dicit allegat et in his scriptis
in iure proponit Articulatur pro vt sequitur

1          Inprimis Quod omnies et singuli huius regni Anglie
subditi et subiecti qui convicia vituperia verbaue
opprobriosa vilipendiosa et scandalosa vel diffamatoria
ad alicuis bone fame lesionem seu denigracionem
sonantia vel tendentia contra bonos mores de aliquo dicunt
emittunt asserunt proferunt seu predicant fuerunt
et sunt Canonice corrigendi et puniendi et vt ab huiusmodi
Convicijs vituperijs [et verbis] diffamatorijs desistant et se pe-
nitus abstineant in futurum cogendi et compellendi
et ponit et Articulatur pro vt supra

 2            Item Quod dictus Franciscus Sefton et Margareta
vxor eius premissorum non ignari imo animarum suarum salutis
immemores spritu vt creditur maligno ducti dicunt [for dictam]
Jannam Shepherd prius minime diffamatam Mensis
Martij Aprilis Maij Junij Julij Augusti Septembris
Octobris Novembris decembris Januarij Februarij
Anno domini 1575 eorumue mensium quolibet vno siue aliquo
grauiter et enormiter diffamauerunt videlicet dixit
that the said plantiffe was a whore and A
Carted whore hec verba diffamatoria seu alia verba
his similia et eundem effectum importantia de eadem
Janna parte actrice dixit et protulit  vxor sua Margareta
eadem verba asserens et affirmans pro vt in euentu
huius litis per probaciones legitimas liquebit et appa-
rebit Et ponit vt supra

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/1 image 2]

[3]       […] Jane is burdened and […] she was and is at no little trouble and expense and otherwise and elsewhere wearied, vexed, oppressed, burdened and perturbed in many different ways, and among and between good and substantial people she is of less reputation and favour and good and substantial people have ascribed and given, and at present ascribe and give, less trust and favour to the same Jane by reason of the premises; and he propounds and articles as above.

4          Also, that the said Francis Sefton and Margaret, his wife, were and are of the parish of St Werburgh of Chester diocese and for that reason subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds as above.

5          Also, that it was and is on behalf of the said Jane Shepherd, wife of Robert Shepherd, that complaint is rightly and lawfully made to you, lord judge aforesaid, and to your Chester consistory court; and he propounds as above.

6          Also, all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well known and public voice and fame were and are circulating regarding and concerning this.

Whereupon, due proof being made as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Joan Shepherd prays that right and justice may be done and administered to her in all and singular the premises and that it is decreed that the said Francis Sefton and Margaret, his wife, should be corrected and punished for the imputation of the above-said crimes and for the pronouncing and declaration of these aforesaid scandalous and defamatory words according to the due requirement of law, and that they will be punished with effect etc.; and also in the lawful costs incurred on the part of the said Jane Shepherd in that behalf, and he protests those to be incurred, by you and  your definitive sentence, lord judge aforesaid; always reserving in all things; humbly imploring your office in the premises, lord judge aforesaid.

 

Transcript

[1575/1 image 2]

[3]       […] Janne […] grauantur et […]
fuit et est in nonnullis laboribus et expensis ac
alias et aliunde mulipliciter fatigata vexita gravata onerata
et perturbata ac apud et inter bonos et graues minorum
reputacionis et favoris bonique et graues adhibuerunt et
dederunt adhibentque et dant in presenti eidem Janne
minorem fidem atque favorem pretextu premissorum Et
ponit et Articulatur prout supra.

4          Item Quod dictus Franciscus Sefton et Margareta
eius vxor fuerunt et sunt parochie SancteWarbridgij Cestrensis
diocesis et eo pretextu vestre iurisdiccionis subditi et subiecti Et ponit
vt supra

5          Item Quod fuit et est per partem dicte Joanne Shepherd
vxoris Roberti Shepherd ad vos dominum Judicem antedictum
et ad Curiam vestram Consistorialem Cestrensem rite et legitime
querelatum et ponit vt supra

6          Item Quod premissa omnia  et singula fuerunt et sunt
vera publica notoria manifesta pariter et famosa atque de et
super huiusmodi laborarunt et laborant publica vox et fama

Vnde facta fide de iure in hac parte requisita petit
pars dicte Janne Shepherd  ius et iusticiam sibi
in premissis omnibus et singulis fieri et ministrari Ac
dictum Franciscum Sefton et Margaretam vxorem eius pro
vt supradictorum criminium impositione et huiusmodi verborum
scandalosorum et diffamatoriorum prolacionem et predicacionem predictorum
iuxta iuris debitam exigentiam Corrigendos et puniendos fore
debere decerni et Cum effectu puniri et cetera Necnon in
expensis legitimis per partem dicte Janne Shepherd
in hac parte factis et protestatur de fiendis per vos et
vestram Sententiam diffinitivam domine iudex Antedicte
in omnibus semper salvo vestrum officium in premissis
humiliter Implorando

 

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1575/1 image 3]

[The endorsement is illegible]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1575/1 image 3]

[The endorsement is illegible]

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Sefton, Francis – defendant

Sefton, Margaret – defendant

Shepherd, Jane (Joan) – plaintiff

Shepherd, Richard – husband of plaintiff

Ref: EDC 5/1566/10

Catalogue Entry:

There is no catalogue entry for this cause but the papers are filed in a paper folder labelled EDC 5 (1566) NO 10 PRESCOT

Summary:

Ellen [Helen] Smith contra John Moseley [Mosteley], Katherine Moseley [Mosteley], Isabelle Croft and Margery Powell.

The last two names have been crossed out in some places but not in others.

 

 

 

Year

1566

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Sentence

Sentence (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/10 image 1]

In the name of God, Amen: the merits and circumstances of a certain cause of defamation or vulgar abuse which was disputed […] and is pending undecided before us having been heard, seen and understood and fully investigated by us, Robert Leche, bachelor of laws, vicar general in spirituals of the right reverend father in God, William, by divine permission lord bishop of Chester, and lawfully deputed official principal of his consistory court, between Helen Smith of the parish of Prescot, the plaintiff and complainant on the one part, and John Moseley and Katherine, his wife, the defendant and party complained of on the other part; with the parties aforesaid properly and lawfully proceeding before us […] by William Man, Master of Arts, her lawfully appointed proctor according to the acts of the court and the party of […] personally and Katherine Moseley, his wife, personally and by William Cowper, her proctor lawfully appointed this day according to the acts of the court; also, the party of the said plaintiff praying that sentence is passed and justice is administered to her, while the party of the aforesaid defendant also earnestly praying that justice is administered to them.

The whole and entire proceedings had and done in this cause having first been examined and diligently considered by us, and having observed what according to law should be observed by us in this behalf, we have thus thought fit to proceed to the pronouncement of the passing of our definitive sentence in the said cause, and we do proceed in this manner which follows:

Forasmuch as we know and clearly find by the acts enacted, brought, alleged, exhibited, confessed and proved done and had in the said cause that the aforesaid Helen Smith has sufficiently and fully founded and proved her claim in a certain libel of hers (the tenor of which follows and is thus; In the name of God, Amen: before you, William, by divine permission bishop of Chester etc., which libel we will have here read and inserted) and that nothing effectual has been and is brought on behalf of the said defendant and party complained of […] could destroy or in any way weaken […] of the said plaintiff and complaining party.

Therefore we, Robert Leche, Bachelor of Laws, official aforesaid, having first called upon the name of Christ, and having God himself alone before our eyes, from and with the advice of the learned in the law with whom we have consulted in a timely manner in this behalf, decree that they, John Moseley, Katherine Moseley, Isabelle Croft, Margery Powell, should be punished and corrected on account of their recklessness in the pronouncement of these defamatory words and we decree that they, John Moseley, Katherine Moseley, Isabelle Croft, Margery Powell, are to be condemned in the lawful costs incurred and to be incurred on the part of the said Helen Smith in this matter, and we do condemn them by this our definitive sentence or our final decree which we thus give and publish in these writings; reserving taxation of these expenses, and we do reserve it.

This sentence was read and issued by the judge aforesaid […] in the year of our Lord 1566, being then present there […] Thomas […], clerk, and John Barlow, rector of [Warmingham] witnesses and called to the premises etc..

Transcript

[5/1566/10 image 1]

In dei nomine Amen Auditis visis et intellectis ac plenarie discussis per nos Robertum Leche in Legibus baccallarium Reverendi in christo patris ac domini domini Willielmi permissione [divina]
Cestrensis episcopi vicarium in spiritualibus generalem ac eius curie Consistorialis officialem principalem legitime deputatum M[eritis]
et Circumstantijs cuiusdam cause diffamationis seu turpis convicij que coram nobis inter [Helenam]
Smyth parochie de Prescot partem actricem et querelantem ex vna et Jhonnem Mosteley et Kate[rinam eius vxor][1]
partem ream et querelatam partibus ex altera ve[rtebatur …]
et pendet indecise Rite et legitime procedentes [partibus] predictis Coram nobis sufficienter et legitime […]
per Willielmum Man Artium magistrum eius procuratorum legitime apud acta constitutum parte vero […]
<per se et>  Katerina Mosley <eius vxor>[2] personaliter et  per[3] Willielmum Cowper eius procurator isto die ap[ud acta]
constitutum comparentibus parte quoque dicte actricis Sententiam ferri et Justiciam sibi [fieri parte vero]
antedicte <rea> Justiciam etiam illis fieri instanter postul[antibus]

Rimato per nos primitus toto et integro processu in huiusmodi causa habito et facto atque diligenter recen[sito]
Servatisque per nos in hac parte de Jure Servandis ad nostre Sententie diffinitiue prolationem in dicta caus[a]
ferendam sic duximus procedendum et procedimus in hunc qui sequitur modum

Quia per acta inactita deducta
allegata exhibita confessata et probata in dicta causa facta et habita comperimus et Luculanter invenimus prefatam
Helenam Smyth intentionem suam in quodam suo Libello cuius tenor Sequitur et est Talis In dei nomine
Amen Coram vobis Willielmo p[ermissione] diuina Cestrensi episcopo et cetera Quem Libellum hic prolectum et insertum
haberi volumus sufficienter et ad plenum f[un]dasse et [probasse] Nihilque effectuale ex parte dicte[4] rea et querelate
[fuisse et esse deductum …]
<partis agentis> Elideret aut quomodolibet eneruaret

Idcirco nos Robertus Leche in Legibus bacc[allarius]
officialis antedictus christi nomine primitus invocato ac ipsum solum deum pre oculis nostris habendum de et cum
consilio Jurisperitorum cum quibus mature in hac parte comunicavimus eosdem Jhoannem Mostley Katerinam Mostley Isabelle croft [Margeriam Powell]
propter suam temeritatem in huiusmodi verborum diffamatorium prolationem puniendum et corrigendum fore decernimus ac
ipsos Jhoannem Mostley Katerinam Mostley Isabellam croft Margeriam powell in expensis legitimis per partem dicte Helene Smyth in
hac parte factis et fiendis condempnandum fore decernimus et condempnamus per hanc nostram Sententiam diffinitiuam
siue hoc nostrum finale decretum quam siue quod ferimus et promulgamus in hijs scriptis Taxacionem expensarum
huiusmodi reseruantem et reseruamus

lecta et lata fuit huiusmodi sentencia per iudicem anted[ictum]
[…]
Anno domini 1566 presentibus tunc ibidem ibidem […]
Thoma […]  clerico et Johanne barlow rectore de […]
testibus ac premissis vocatis et cetera

[1] The names Isabelle Croft, widow, and Margery Powell were originally included here as defendants but have been crossed out.

[2] The names Isabelle Croft and Margery Powell again crossed out at this point.

[3] The name of the proctor Robert Parkinson has been crossed out at this point.

[4] The names John Moseley, Katherine Moseley, Isabelle Croft and Margery Powell are crossed out at this point.

Sentence (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/10 image 2]

[Endorsement]

Sentence of Helen Smith against John Moseley and others in a cause of defamation.

[In a later hand]

Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[5/1566/10 image 2]

[Endorsement]

Sententia Helenæ Smyth co[ntra]
et aduersus Jhonnem Mostley et
alios in causa diffamationis

[In a later hand]

Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Ellen Smith – plaintiff

John Moseley – defendant

Isabelle Croft – defendant

Margery Powell – defendant

Katherine Moseley – defendant

John Barlow, rector of Warmingham – witness to the sentence

Thomas Haslingden – witness for the plaintiff (see transcript of EDC 2/8)

William Barnes – witness for the plaintiff (see transcript of EDC 2/8)

Officials

William Downham

Robert Leche

Subjects

Defamatory words

Women

 

Proctors

William Man – for the plaintiff

William Cowper– for the defendant

Places

Prescot

 

Related Causes

EDC 5/1566/9 Prescot

EDC/1566/26 Winwick

 

Notes

See also EDC 5/1566/9 which comprises an absolutory sentence, probably a draft, in favour of Katherine Moseley against Ellen [Helen] Smith in what was probably the same cause.

Depositions in a defamation cause between Ellen Smith and Jane Taylor (EDC/1566/26 Winwick) show that John Moseley had bribed Jane Taylor to slander Ellen Smith.

The defamation comprised a claim that Ellen Smith had given birth to an illegitimate child. (See Deposition Book EDC 2/8 ff. 1v-2, 11-11v, 19v-20 for depositions etc. in this and associated causes).

Ref: EDC 5/1566/9

Catalogue Entry:

There is no catalogue entry for this cause but the papers are filed in a paper folder labelled EDC 5 (1566) NO 9 PRESCOT

Summary:

Ellen [Helen] Smith contra Katherine Moseley, wife of John Moseley.

The sentence is absolutory in favour of Katherine but does not record that it was ever read and issued, so it was probably a draft (see notes on sentences).

 

 

Year

1566

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Exceptions against the witnesses for the plaintiff
Sentence – probably draft

Exceptions against the witnesses for the plaintiff (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/9 image 1]

[…]  commissary general, sufficiently and lawfully deputed, of William, by divine permission lord bishop of Chester or other judge whomsoever competent in this behalf, between Ellen Smith of the parish of Prescot of Chester diocese and jurisdiction, pretended plaintiff and complaining party on the one part and Katherine Moseley of the parish of Warrington of Chester diocese and also of your jurisdiction, defendant and party complained of, on the other part, is disputed and is still pending undecided, in the term judicially assigned to her for speaking and excepting against the characters, statements and depositions of certain pretended witnesses upon the positions and articles of a certain pretended false and fictitious libel invalidly produced on behalf of the said Ellen Smith. The party of the said Katherine Moseley, excepting against the same pretended witnesses, the statements and depositions of the same, says, alleges and in these writings propounds in articles as follows:

Firstly, this party, in excepting, propounds against Thomas Haslingden, the first pretended witness introduced against her, that his testimony is null and invalid and for the whole and entire time of his production, admission, oath-swearing and examination he has been and was a useless, inept and unsuitable witness, and to be prohibited, excluded and rejected from giving evidence in this behalf, inasmuch as the said pretended witness is a near neighbour and the greatest and closest friend of the party producing him also a principal supporter and promotor of the said pretended cause, therefore he could not nor cannot, at least in law, depose against the said Katherine Moseley, and his testimony is not and cannot be of any value, as hereafter will plainly appear, to which this excepting party refers and will have here inserted, as far as it is expedient to him and not otherwise nor in any other manner.

Transcript

[5/1566/9 image 1]

[…] domini Willielmi permissione divina
Cestrensi Episcopi, commissario generali sufficienter et Legitime de-
putato seu alio Judice in hac parte competenti quocunque
Inter Elenam Smith parochie de prescot Cestrensis <diocesis> et Jurisdiccionis
partem pretensam actricem et querelantem, ex vna, et Katheren
Moseley parochie de Warington Cestrensis diocesis et vestre
quoque Jurisdiccionis  partem ream et querelantam partibus ex
a[ltera] vertitur et adhuc pendet indecise in termino
sibi Judicaliter assignato ad di[cendum] et excipiendum
contra personas dictos et depositiones quorundam pretensorum
testium, super positionibus et articulis cuisdam pretensi falsi
et ficti libelli, ex parte dicte Ellenæ Smith nulliter
productorum. Pars dicte Katherinæ Moseley, contra
eosdem pretensos testes, dictas et depositiones eorundem
dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis excipiendo proponit
articulatim provt sequitur

In primis pars ista excipiendo proponit contra Thomam
Haslingdane primum pretensum testem contra se inductum
quod ipsius testimonium est nullum et invalidum ac toto
et omni tempore sue productionis admissionis Juramenti presta-
tionis et examinacionis, fuit et erat testis invtilis
ineptus et inidoneus, ac a testimonio in hac parte
prohibendum repellendum ac reijiciendum Pro eo videlicet et
ex eo quod dictus pretensus testis est proximus vicinus
summus et intimus amicus partis eum producentis
etiam dicte pretensæ causa principalis fautor et promotor
quapropter nihil poterat siue potest deponere
saltem de Jure contra, dictam Katherinam Moseley
nec testimonium eius valet aut valere potest prout
imposterum dilucide apparebit ad quæ refert
se pars ista excipiens et hic pro insertis habere
vult, quatenus sibi expedit et non aliter nec
alio modo

Exceptions against the witnesses for the plaintiff (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/9 image 2]

Also, this party, in excepting, propounds against [William Barnes], the second pretended witness, that his testimony […] false, null and invalid and for the whole and entire time of his production, admission, oath-swearing and examination he has been and was a useless, inept and unsuitable witness, and to be prohibited in law from giving evidence in this behalf and to be excluded and rejected, inasmuch as the said pretended witness is brother by marriage of the said Ellen Smith and for this said reason not admissible at all and to be prohibited from testimony against the said Katherine, at least in a criminal cause, for it is considered by Lanfranc in his chapter on the depositions of witnesses that affine[1] cannot be a witness for affine in a criminal cause “vt l. iij. q. j. C. j. et iij. q. ix.C. praesens”[2] and moreover this pretended witness produced is a prime mover and promoter of this cause, as will manifestly appear by lawful proofs in the event of this suit and therefore […] he cannot depose against the said Katherine Moseley, and his testimony is not and cannot, at least in law, be of any value, to which this excepting party refers and will have here inserted, as far as it is expedient to him and not otherwise nor in any other manner.

Also, all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well-known and regarding and concerning this public voice and fame were and are circulating etc. the party of the said Katherine Moseley prays that right and justice may be administered to him in the premises and the said pretended false, perjured, useless and unsuitable witnesses and their null and void statements and depositions are decreed, pronounced and declared lacking […] by reason of the premises and that she, Katherine, is dismissed from further suit and unjust vexation by the said Ellen, together with the expenses by you and your definitive sentence, lord Judge aforesaid; not binding himself to prove all and singular the premises, nor to the burden of a superfluous proof, against which he protests, but so far as he shall prove in the premises so much etc.

[1] Affine – a relative by marriage.

[2] This is a rare type of reference in these Cause Papers and refers to a book on trial practice by Lanfranco de Oriano (d. 1488), who was a jurist and professor of law in Padua, specialising in procedural law.

Transcript

[5/1566/9 image 2]

Item excipiendo proponit [pars] ista contra [William Barnes]
secundum pretensum testem quod ipsius testim[onium] […]falsum
nullum et invalidum ac toto et omni tempore sue produc-
tionis admissionis Juramenti prestacionis et examinacionis
fuit et erat, testis invtilis ineptus ac inidoneus, ac a
testimonio in hac parte de Jure prohibendus repellendus
ac reijiciendus Pro eo videlicet et ex eo quod dictus pretensus
testis est frater affinitate dicte Ellenæ Smith et hac
Dicte causæ non admittendus omnino, ad prohibendum testimonium
contra <dictam Katherinam> saltem in causa criminali, habetur nam que
Lanfranco Capite de testium depositionibus, quod affinis pro affine
in causa criminali <testis> esse non potest vt l. iij. q. j. C. j. et iij. q. ix
C. præsens est preterea testis iste, pretensus, productus dictæ
causæ principalis fautor, et promotor vt per probationes
Legitimes in eventu huius Litis manifeste apparebit
[…] nihil potest saltem de Jure deponere
contra dictam Katherinam Moseley nec testimonium
euis valet aut de Jure valore potest ad quæ
refert pars ista excipiens et hic pro insertis
habere vult quatenus sibi expedit et non aliter
nec alio modo

Item premissa omnia et singula fuerunt et sunt vera
publica notoria manifesta pariter ac famosa ac de
et super huiusmodi Laborarunt et ad huc laborant publica
vox et fama et cetera petit pars dicte Katherine
Mosley Jus et Justiciam in premissis sibi ministrari
et dictos pretensos testes, falsos periuros, ineptos ac inidoneos
eorumque dicta et depostiones nulla et Invalida […]
carentia premissorum pretextu decernendum pronunciandum et
Declarandum ipsamque Katherenam ab vlteriori instancia
et inusta vexacione dicte Elenæ vna cum expensis
Dimmitti per vos et vestram sententiam diffinitivam domine Judex
antedicte non arctans se ad omnia et singula premissa pro[banda]
nec ad onus superflue probationis de quo protestatur
Sed quatenus probaverit in premissis eatenus et cetera

Exceptions against the witnesses for the plaintiff (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/9 image 3]

[Endorsement]

 […] against  the witnesses of  Ellen Smith exhibited in the year of our Lord 1566.

[In a later hand] Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[5/1566/9 image 3]

[Endorsement]

[…] cont[ra] […] testes Elena Smith exhibit’ Anno Domini 1566

[In a later hand] Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Sentence

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[5/1566/9 image 4]

[There is no note that this sentence has been read, so it is probably a draft which was never passed.]

In the name of God, Amen: the merits and circumstances of a certain pretended cause of defamation which was disputed for a long time and is still disputed and is pending undecided before us having been heard, viewed, understood and fully investigated by us, Robert Leche, Master of Arts and Bachelor of Laws, vicar general in spirituals of the right reverend father in Christ, William, by divine permission lord bishop of Chester, and lawfully appointed official principal of his Chester consistory court; between Ellen Smith of the parish of Prescot of Chester diocese, as plaintiff and complaining party on the one part, and Katherine Moseley, of the parish of Warrington, of Chester diocese and of your jurisdiction, the defending party or defendant on the other part, the parties aforesaid proceeding rightly and lawfully namely, the party of the said Ellen Smith appearing personally and by William Man, Master of Arts, her lawfully appointed proctor according to the acts of the court also the party of the said Katherine Moseley appearing personally and by Robert Parkinson, Bachelor of Arts, her lawfully appointed proctor according to the acts of the court; the party of the aforesaid Ellen Smith praying that sentence is passed and justice is administered to her, while the party of the said Katherine Moseley also praying that justice is administered to her.

The whole and entire proceedings had and done in this cause having first been examined and diligently considered by us and matters which according to law should be observed in this cause having been observed by us, we have thus thought fit to making the pronouncement of our definitive sentence in the said cause, and we do proceed in this manner which follows:

Because we know and clearly find by the acts enacted, brought, propounded and alleged, confessed and proved in the above-mentioned cause that the said Ellen Smith has not in any way sufficiently established and not at all proved her claim propounded by her party in a certain libel in the same cause (the tenor of which certain libel follows and is thus; In the name of God, Amen; before you etc., which libel we wish to have here read and inserted) but has altogether failed in proof of this cause, we also find by the acts etc. in the same cause that the said Katherine Moseley has sufficiently proved her exceptive material against certain pretended witnesses produced in the same cause.

Therefore we, the vicar aforesaid, having first called upon the name of Christ, with the advice of those learned in the law with whom we have communicated promptly in this behalf, have thought fit completely to dismiss the said Katherine Moseley from further suit and petition of the said Ellen Smith, plaintiff, in and upon the aforesaid cause, just as we do fully dismiss and absolve her by this our definitive and absolutory sentence. We decree that the said Ellen Smith, plaintiff, is to be condemned to pay to the said Katherine Moseley her necessary costs incurred and to be hereafter incurred in the said cause, on account of her cause rashly and unjustly started and begun, and on account of the unjust vexation inflicted on the said Katherine Moseley, just as we condemn her, Ellen Smith, in the aforesaid expenses by this final decree or our definitive sentence judicially issued, read and promulgated in writing; likewise reserving the taxation of these costs to us, which at present we do likewise reserve.

[5/1566/9 image 5]

[Endorsement]

Absolutory sentence of Katherine Mosley against Ellen Smith in a cause of defamation exhibited [space to insert the day and month] in the year of our Lord 1566.

[In a later hand] Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[5/1566/9 image 4]

In Dei nomine Amen: auditis visis intellectis et plenarie discussis per nos Rob[ertum]
Lech artium magistrum et in legibus Baccalarium Reverendi in christo patris et domini domini Willelmi
permissione divina Cestrensis Episcopi vicarium in spiritualibus generalem, ac eius Curie Consistorialis
Cestrensis officialem principalem Legitime deputatum Meritis et circumstantijs, cuiusdam
pretensæ <causæ> diffamationis quæ coram nobis,  aliquando diu vertebatur et adhuc vertitur
pendetque indecisæ Inter Elenam Smith parochie de prescot Cestrensis diocesis partem
actricem et querelantem ex una et Katherenam Mosley parochie de Warington
Cestrensis diocesis ac vestre Jurisdiccionis partem ream seu defendentem partibus ex altera
rite et Legitime procedentes partibus predictis videlicet
parte dicte Ellenæ Smith per se personaliter et per Willelmum Man Artium Magistrum eius procu-
ratorem Legitime apud acta constitutum comparenti parte autem dicte Katherenæ
Mosley per se personaliter et per Robertum parkynson in artibus Baccalarium eius procurat[orem]
apud acta Legitime constitutum comparenti parte ante dicte Ellenæ
Smith  Sententiam ferri et Justiciam sibi fieri: parte vero dicte Katherenæ Mosley
Justiciam etiam sibi fieri postulantibus

Rimato per nos primitus toto et integro proc[essu]
in huiusmodi causa habito et facto ac diligenter recensito Servatisque per nos in huiusmodi
causa <de Jure> servandis ad nostre Sentencie diffinitiue prolacionem in dicta causa ferendam sic
duximus procedendum et procedimus in hunc qui sequitur modum

Quia per acta inacti-
tata deducta proposita ac allegata confessata et probata, in memorata causa comperi-
mus et Luculenter invenimus dictam Ellenam Smith intentionem suam in quodam libello per
eius partem in eadem causa proposito cuius quidem libelli tenor sequitur et est talis In
dei nomine Amen coram vobis et cetera quem quidem libellum pro hic lecto et inserto habere
volumus nequamque sufficienter fundasse nullatenumque probasse sed in causa probationis huiusmodi
omnino defecisse et luculentur etiam comperimus per acta et cetera in eadem causa dictam Katherenam
Mosley mateream suam exceptivam contra quosdam pretensos testes in dicta causa productos suffic-
ienter probasse

Idcirco nos vicarius antedictus christi nomine primitus invocato cum consilio
Jurisperitorum cum quibus  in hac parte mature communicavimus dictam Katherenam Mosle[y]
ab vlteriori instancia et Impeticione dicte Ellenæ Smith partis actricis in et de
predicta causa penitus dimmitendum duximus prout ipsam per hanc nostram sentenciam diffinitivam
et absolutoriam penitus dimmittimus et absoluimus. Dictam Ellenam Smith partem actricem
p[ropte]r suam litem temere et sine iusta causa incohatam ac inceptam ac propter iniustam vexacionem
dictæ Katherenæ Mosley illatam, ad solvendum dictæ Katherenæ expensas suas in dicta
causa necessarias factis et imposterum fiendis condempnandum fore decrevimus prout ipsam
Ellenam Smith per hoc finale decretum siue diffinitivam nostram Sententiam in scriptis
per nos iudicaliter Latam Lectam et promulgatam in eijsdem expensis condemp-
namus nobis nihilominus taxacionem huiusmodi expensarum reservatam quæ in presenti
etiam reservamus

[5/1566/9 image 5]

[Endorsement]

Sententia absolutoria Katherenæ Mosley contra et adversus Ellenam Smith in causa diffamationis exhibita [space] Anno Domini 1566

[In a later hand] Prescot

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Ellen Smith – plaintiff

Katherine Moseley – defendant

Thomas Haslingden – witness for the plaintiff (see transcript of EDC 2/8)

William Barnes – witness for the plaintiff (see transcript of EDC 2/8)

Officials

Robert Leche

Subjects

Canon law

Defamatory words

Women

 

Proctors

William Man – for the plaintiff

Robert Parkinson – for the defendant

Places

Prescot

Warrington

Related Causes

EDC 5/1566/10 Prescot

EDC/1566/26 Winwick

 

Notes

See also EDC 5/1566/10 Prescot for the sentence which was issued in the cause of Ellen [Helen] Smith against John Moseley and his wife, Katherine, probably the same cause.

Depositions in a defamation cause between Ellen Smith and Jane Taylor (EDC/1566/26 Winwick) show that John Moseley had bribed Jane Taylor to slander Ellen Smith.

The defamation comprised a claim that Ellen Smith had given birth to an illegitimate child. (See Deposition Book EDC 2/8 ff. 1v-2, 11-11v, 19v-20 for depositions etc. in this and associated cases).

Ref: EDC 5/1560/2

Catalogue Entry:

EDC 1560/2. TILSTON John Fytton wife of Robert Fytton c Ralph Leche for saying to Joan “Thou art a nawghty harlot with other similar words” which were spoken in the Town fylde of Cardesey – libel.

Summary:

Joan Fitton, wife of Robert Fitton, contra Ralph Leche

 

 

 

 

Year

1560

Type of Cause:

Defamation – sexual slander

Cause Papers:

Libel

Libel (image 1)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1560/2 image 1] 

[…] the party of the honest woman, Joan Fitton, wife of Robert Fitton, of Carden in the parish of Tilston of Chester diocese against Ralph Leche of the said parish and diocese and of your jurisdiction and against any other whomsoever lawfully intervening before you in judgement for the same by way of complaint and complaining to you in this behalf propounds says, alleges and propounds in these writings in law jointly, severally and in articles as follows:

1          Firstly, that all and singular subordinates and subjects of this realm of England who speak, utter, assert, express or declare abuse, disparagement or insulting, opprobrious, vexatious, disparaging, scandalous and defamatory words of any person against public morals, sounding or tending to the injury or denigration of the good fame of any person, were and are to be canonically corrected and punished and are to be obliged and compelled to desist and to completely abstain from these abuses, disparagements and defamatory words in future; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any of these points.

2          Also, that the said Ralph Leche, not being ignorant of the premises but heedless of the welfare of his soul, being induced, as it is believed, by an evil spirit, grievously defamed the said Joan Fitton, previously in no way defamed, in the months of July, August and  September last, namely in the one thousand five hundred and sixtieth year of our Lord now current, or in any of those months, in one or other, of and upon the crime of incontinence, and he proffered these defamatory words to the same Joan Fitton, with intent to defame her, in the place called ‘the Commen Town fylde of Carden’ namely ‘Thow art a nowghty[1] harlot’ or he proffered other words similar to these and importing the same effect, as will become clear and appear by lawful proofs in the event of this suit; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any of these points.

3          Also, that by occasion and reason of this defamation and of the crime and the utterance, assertion and declaration of the defamatory words aforesaid, the status and good fame of the said Joan Fitton are seriously injured and harmed and the said Joan Fitton is at some trouble and expense and otherwise and for other reasons in many ways wearied, vexed, oppressed, burdened and perturbed, and among and between good and substantial people of less reputation and favour and good and substantial people have ascribed and given, and at present ascribe and give, less trust and favour to the same Joan by reason of the premises; and he propounds as before.

[1] Naughty – here means immoral.

Transcript

[1560/2 image 1] 

[…] Pars honeste mulieris Joanne fytton vxoris Roberti
fytton [de] Carden in parochie de Tylston Cestrensis diocesis contra et
aduersus Radulphum leche dicte parochie et diocesis et vestre Jurisdiccionis
ac contra quemcunque alium coram vobis pro eodem in Judicio legitime
Interuenientem per viam querele et vobis in hac parte querelando
dicit allegat et in hijs scriptis in Jure proponit Coniunctim et diuisim
atque articulatim prout Sequitur

1          In primis Quod omnes et singuli huius Regni anglie subditi et subiecti
qui Convicia vituperia verba ve Contumeliosa opprobriosa
calumpniosa vilipendiosa scandalosa et diffamatoria ad
alicuis bone fame lesionem seu denigrationem sonantia vel tendentia
contra bonos mores de aliquo dicunt emittunt asserunt proferunt
seu predicant fuerunt et Sunt Canonice Corrigendi et puniendi
et vt ab huiusmodi Convicijs vituperijs et verbis diffamatorijs
desistant et Se penitus abstineant in futurum Cogendi et
Compellendi  Et ponit Coniunctim diuisim et de quolibet 

2            Item Quod dictus Radulphus leche premissorum non ignarus
immo anime sue salutis immemor spritu vt creditur maligno
ductus dictam Joannam fytton proprius minime diffamatam
mensis Julij Augusti et Septembris vltimo elapsis videlicet in Anno domini millesimo
quingentesimo Sexagesimo iam instanti eorumve mensium vno siue
aliquo de et super Crimine incontinentie grauiter diffamauit et
hec verba diffamatoria eidem Joanne fytton in loco vocato the
Commen Town fylde of Carden protulit animo diffamando
eadem videlicet Thow art a nowghty harlot seu alia
verba hijs similia et eundem effectum importantia
protulit provt in eventu huius litis per probationes legitimas
liquebit et apparebit Et ponit Coniunctim diuisim et de quolibet

3          Item Quod occatione et pretextu huismodi diffamationis criminiumque
et Conviciorum ac verborum diffamatorium predictorum emissionem
assertionem et  predicationem status et bona fama dicte Joanne
fytton leduntur grauantur et attenuantur dictaque Joanna
fytton fuit et est in nonnullis laboribus et expensis ac alias
et aliunde mulipliciter fatigata vexita grauata onerata et pertur-
bata ac apud et inter bonos et graues minorum reputacionis
et fauoris bonique et graues adhibuerunt et dederunt adhibentque
et dant in presenti eidem Joanne fytton minorem fidem atque
fauorem pretextu premissorum Et ponit vt supra

Libel (image 2)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1560/2 image 2]

4          Also, that before the assertion and declaration of these defamatory words the aforesaid Joan Fitton was a woman of good fame, unblemished reputation and honest conversation and among and between good and substantial people and previously in no way defamed; and he propounds as before.

5          Also, that the said Ralph Leche was and is of the parish of Tilston of Chester diocese and for that reason notoriously subordinate and subject to your jurisdiction; and he propounds jointly, severally and concerning any of these points.

6          Also, that it was and is on behalf of the said Joan Fitton that complaint is rightly and lawfully made to you, lord judge aforesaid, and to your Chester consistory court; and he propounds as before.

7          Also, all and singular the premises were and are true, public, notorious, manifest and equally well known and public voice and fame were and are circulating regarding and concerning this in the parishes of Tilston and Tattenhall and in other parishes and public places.

Whereupon, due proof being made, as required by law in this regard, the party of the said Joan Fitton prays that right and a complement of justice may be done and administered to her in all and singular the premises and that it will be decreed that the said Ralph Leche should be corrected for the expression and declaration of the aforementioned defamatory words according to the due requirement of law, and obliged and compelled to desist and to completely abstain in future from these abuses, disparagements and defamatory words and also that he will be condemned in the lawful costs incurred on the part of the said Joan Fitton in this matter, and he protests those to be incurred, and having been condemned, that he will be canonically obliged and compelled to the due and real payment of the same by your passing your definitive sentence in that behalf, lord judge aforesaid; and otherwise, that what will have been of right and reason in the premises and anything whatsoever concerning them may be done, established and decreed. The party of the said Joan Fitton propounds the premises and prays that they are done jointly and severally, not binding himself to prove all and singular the premises, nor to the burden of superfluous proof, about which he protests, but so far as he shall prove in the premises so much may he obtain of the petitions, always reserving the benefit of law in all things, humbly imploring your office in the premises, lord judge aforesaid.

Transcript

[1560/2 image 2] 

[4        Item Quod predicta Joanna fytton ante huiusmodi verborum
diffamatorium]  assertionem
et pre[dica]tionem et vsque a[d ea] fuit mulier [bone] fame opinionis
illese et Conuersacionis honeste ac apud [et in]ter bonos et
graues proprius minime diffamata [Et p]onit vt supra

5          Item Quod dictus Radulphus leche fuit et est parochie de tylston
Cestrensis diocesis et eo pretextu vestre Jurisdiccioni notorie Subditus
et Subiectus Et ponit Coniunctim diuisim et de quolibet

6          Item Quod fuit et est ex parte dicte Joanne Fytton ad vos
dominum Judicem antedictum et ad Curiam vestram Consistorialem
Cestrensem Rite et legitime querelatum Et ponit vt supra

7          Item Quod premissa omnia  et Singula fuerunt et sunt
vera publica notoria manifesta pariter et famosa atque de
et super huiusmodi in parochijs de Tylston et Tetnall et alijs parochijs
et locis publicis laborarunt et laborant publica vox et fama

Vnde facta fide de Jure in hac parte requisita petit pars
dicte Joanne fytton Jus et Justiciam ac Complementum
Justicie sibi in premissis omnibus et singulis fieri et ministrari
Ac dictum Radulphus leche pro supradictorum verborum diffamatorum
prolacionem et predicationem predictorum iuxta Juris debitam exigentiam
Corrigendum fore debere decerni et vt ab huiusmodi convicijs
vituperijs et verbis diffamatorijs desistat et se penitus abstineat
in futuro cogi et Compelli Necnon in expensis legitimis per partem
dicte Joanne fytton in hac parte factis et protestatur de fiendis
Condempari ac Condempnatum ad realem solucionem
earundem Canonice Cogi et Compelli  per vos et vestram sententiam
diffinitiuam in hac parte ferendam domine Judex antedicte

Vlteriusque fieri statui et decerni in premissis et in ea concernentibus
quibuscunque quod Juris fuerit et Rationis
Premissa proponit
et fieri petit pars dicte Joanne fytton Coniunctim et diuisim Non
arctans se ad omnia et singula premissa probanda nec ad onus
superflue probacionis de quo protestatur Sed quatenus probauerit
in premissis eatenus obtineat in petitis Juris beneficio in omnibus
semper Saluo vestrum officium in premissis domine Judex antedicte
humiliter Implorando

Libel (image 3)

Original Document

Click to view fullscreen

Translation

[1560/2 image 3] 

[The original endorsement is illegible.] 

[in pencil]

/2

1560

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Translation copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

Transcript

[1560/2 image 3] 

[The original endorsement is illegible.] 

[in pencil]

/2

1560

[Produced with the permission of the Chester Diocesan Board of Finance.]

Transcript copyright ©2022 P J Cox All Rights Reserved

People

Joan Fitton – plaintiff

Ralph Leche – defendant

Related Causes