December, 1653
[16 December 1653]
And the Articles for the future Government of the Commonwealth.
I. That the Supreme Legislative Authority of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and the Dominions
thereunto belonging, shall be and reside in one Person, and the
People assembled in Parliament; the Style of which Person shall
be The Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland.
II. That the Exercise of the chief Magistracy, and the
Administration of the Government over the said Countries and
Dominions, and the People thereof, shall be in the Lord Protector,
assisted with a Council, the Number whereof shall not exceed
21, nor be less than 13.
III. That all Writs, Process, Commisions, Patents, Grants, and
other Things, which now run in the Name and Style of The
Keepers of the Liberty of England by Authority of Parliament,
shall run in the Name and Style of the Lord Protector, from
whom, for the future, shall be derived all Magistracy and
Honours in these three Nations; and have the Power of Pardons
(except in case of Murders and Treason) and Benefit of all
Forfeitures for the public Use; and shall govern the said Countries and Dominions in all Things by the Advice of the Council,
and according to these Presents and the Laws.
IV. That the Lord Proctector, the Parliament sitting, shall
dispose and order the Militia and Forces, both by Sea and Land,
for the Peace and Good of the Three Nations, by Consent of
Parliament; and that the Lord Protector, with the Advice and
Consent of the major Part of the Council, shall dispose and
order the Militia for the Ends aforesaid in the Intervals of
Parliament.
V. That the Lord Protector, by the Advice aforesaid, shall
direct in all Things concerning the keeping and holding of a good
Correspondency with foreign Kings, Princes, and States; and also,
with the Consent of the major Part of the Council, have the
Power of War and Peace.
VI. That the Laws shall not be altered, suspended, abrogated,
or repealed, nor any new Law made, nor any Tax, Charge, or
Imposition laid upon the People, but by common Consent in
Parliament, save only as is expressed in the 30th Article.
VII. That there shall be a Parliament summoned to meet at
Westminster upon the third Day of September, 1654, and that
successively a Parliament shall be summoned once in every
third Year, to be accounted from the Dissolution of the present
Parliament.
VIII. That neither the Parliament to be next summoned, nor
any successive Parliaments, shall, during the Time of five Months,
to be accounted from the Day of their first Meeting, be
adjourned, prolonged, or dissolved, without their own
consent.
IX. That as well the next as all other successive Parliaments
shall be summoned and elected in Manner hereafter express'd;
that is to say, the Persons to be chosen within England, Wales,
the Isles of Jersey, Guernsey, and the Town of Berwick upon
Tweed, to sit and serve in Parliament, shall be, and not exceed,
the Number of 400. The persons to be chosen within Scotland, to
sit and serve in Parliament, shall be, and not exceed, the Number
of 30: And the Persons to be chosen and sit in Parliament for
Ireland, shall be, and not exceed, the Number of 30.
X. That the Persons to be elected, to sit in Parliament from
Time to Time, for the several Counties of England, Wales, the
Isles of Jersey and Guernsey, and the Town of Berwick upon
Tweed, and all Places within the same respectively, shall be
according to the Proportions and Numbers hereafter express'd:
That is to say,
|
| Bedfordshire | 5 |
| Bedford Town | 1 |
| Berkshire | 5 |
| Abingdon | 1 |
| Reading | 1 |
| Buckinghamshire | 5 |
| Buckingham Town | 1 |
| Aylesbury | 1 |
| Wycomb | 1 |
| Cambridgeshire | 4 |
| Cambridge Town | 1 |
| Cambridge University | 1 |
| Isle of Ely | 2 |
| Cheshire | 4 |
| Chester | 1 |
| Cornwall | 8 |
| Launceston | 1 |
| Truroe | 1 |
| Penryn | 1 |
| Eastlow and Westlow | 1 |
| Cumberland | 2 |
| Carlisle | 1 |
| Derbyshire | 4 |
| Derby Town | 1 |
| Devonshire | 11 |
| Exeter | 2 |
| Plymouth | 2 |
| East-Grinstead | 1 |
| Arundel | 1 |
| Rye | 1 |
| Westmoreland | 2 |
| Warwickshire | 4 |
| Coventry | 2 |
| Warwick | 1 |
| Wiltshire | 10 |
| Queenborough | 1 |
| Lancashire | 4 |
| Preston | 1 |
| Lancaster | 1 |
| Liverpool | 1 |
| Manchester | 1 |
| Leicestershire | 4 |
| Leicester | 2 |
| Lincolnshire | 10 |
| Lincoln | 2 |
| Boston | 1 |
| Grantham | 1 |
| Stamford | 1 |
| Great Grimsby | 1 |
| Middlesex | 4 |
| London | 6 |
| Westminster | 2 |
| Monmouthshire | 3 |
| Norfolk | 10 |
| Clifton, Dartmouth, Hardness | 1 |
| Totness | 1 |
| Barnstable | 1 |
| Tiverton | 1 |
| Honiton | 1 |
| Dorsetshire | 6 |
| Dorchester | 1 |
| Weymouth and Melcomb-Regis | 1 |
| Lyme-Regis | 1 |
| Pool | 1 |
| Durham | 2 |
| City of Durham | 1 |
| Essex | 13 |
| Malden | 1 |
| Colchester | 2 |
| Gloucestershire | 5 |
| Gloucester | 2 |
| Tewksbury | 1 |
| Cirencester | 1 |
| Herefordshire | 4 |
| Hereford | 1 |
| Leominster | 1 |
| Hertfordshire | 5 |
| St. Albans | 1 |
| Hertford | 1 |
| Huntingdonshire | 3 |
| Huntingdon | 1 |
| Kent | 11 |
| Canterbury | 2 |
| Rochester | 1 |
| Maidstone | 1 |
| Dover | 1 |
| Sandwich | 1 |
| Somersetshire | 11 |
| Bristol | 2 |
| Taunton | 2 |
| Bath | 1 |
| Wells | 1 |
| Bridgewater | 1 |
| Southamptonshire | 8 |
| Winchester | 1 |
| Southampton | 1 |
| Portsmouth | 1 |
| Isle of Wight | 2 |
| Andover | 1 |
| Suffolk | 10 |
| Ipswich | 2 |
| Bury St. Edmond's | 2 |
| Dunwich | 1 |
| Sudbury | 1 |
| Surrey | 6 |
| Southwark | 2 |
| Guilford | 1 |
| Ryegate | 1 |
| Sussex | 9 |
| Chichester | 1 |
| Lewes | 1 |
| Norwich | 2 |
| Lynn-Regis | 2 |
| Great-Yarmouth | 2 |
| Northamptonshire | 6 |
| Peterborough | 1 |
| Northampton | 1 |
| Nottinghamshire | 4 |
| Nottingham | 2 |
| Northumberland | 3 |
| Newcastle upon Tyne | 1 |
| Berwick | 1 |
| Oxfordshire | 5 |
| Oxford City | 1 |
| Oxford University | 1 |
| Woodstock | 1 |
| Rutlandshire | 2 |
| Shropshire | 4 |
| Shrewsbury | 2 |
| Bridgnorth | 1 |
| Ludlow | 1 |
| Staffordshire | 3 |
| Lichfield | 1 |
| Stafford | 1 |
| Newcastle under Line | 1 |
| New Sarum | 2 |
| Marlborough | 1 |
| Devizes | 1 |
| Worcestershire | 5 |
| Worcester | 2 |
| Yorkshire. |
| West-Riding | 6 |
| East-Riding | 4 |
| North-Riding | 4 |
| City of York | 2 |
| Kingston upon Hull | 1 |
| Beverley | 1 |
| Scarborough | 1 |
| Richmond | 1 |
| Leeds | 1 |
| Halifax | 1 |
| Wales. |
| Anglesey | 2 |
| Brecknockshire | 2 |
| Cardiganshire | 2 |
| Carmarthenshire | 2 |
| Carnarvonshire | 2 |
| Denbighshire | 2 |
| Flintshire | 2 |
| Glamorganshire | 2 |
| Cardiffe | 1 |
| Merionethshire | 1 |
| Montgomeryshire | 2 |
| Pembrokeshire | 2 |
| Haverford-West | 1 |
| Radnorshire | 2 |
The distribution of the persons to be chosen for Scotland and
Ireland, and the several Counties, Cities and Places therein,
shall be according to such Proportions and Number as shall
be agreed upon and declared by the Lord Protector and the
major Part of the Council, before the sending forth Writs of
Summons for the next Parliament.
XI. That the Summons to Parliament shall be by Writ under
the Great Seal of England, directed to the Sheriffs of the several
and respective Counties, with such Alteration as may suit with
the present Government, to be made by the Lord Protector and
his Council, which the Chancellor, Keeper, or Commissioners of
the Great Seal, shall seal, issue, and send abroad by Warrant
from the Lord Protector. If the Lord Protector shall not give
Warrant for issuing of Writs of Summons for the next Parliament
before the first of June, 1654, or for the Triennial Parliaments,
before the first Day of August in every third Year; to be
accounted as aforesaid; that then the Chancellor, Keeper, or
Commissioners of the Great Seal for the Time being, shall, without any Warrant or Direction, within seven Days after the said
first Day of June, 1654, seal, issue, and send abroad Writs of
Summons (changing therein what is to be changed as aforesaid)
to the several and respective Sheriffs of England, Scotland, and
Ireland, for summoning the Parliament to meet at Westminster,
the third Day of September next; and shall likewise,
within seven Days after the said first Day of August,
in every third Year, to be accounted from the Dissolution
of the precedent Parliament, seal, issue, and send abroad
several Writs of Summons, (changing therein what is to be
changed) as aforesaid, for summoning the Parliament to meet at
Westminster the sixth of November, in that third Year. That
the said several and respective Sheriffs shall, within ten Days
after the Receipt of such Writ as aforesaid, cause the same to be
proclaimed and published in every Market-Town within his
County, upon the Market Days thereof, between Twelve and Three
of the Clock; and shall then also publish and declare the certain
Day of the Week and Month, for chusing Members to serve in
Parliament for the Body of the said County, according to the
Tenor of the said Writ, which shall be upon Wednesday five Weeks
after the Date of the Writ; and shall likewise declare the Place
where the Election shall be made: For which Purpose he shall
appoint the most convenient Place for the whole County to meet
in; and shall send Precepts for Elections to be made in all and
every City, Town, Borough, or Place within his County, where
Elections are to be made by Virtue of these Presents, to the
Mayor, Sheriff, or other Head-Officer of such City, Town, Borough,
or Place, within three Days after the Receipt of such Writ and
Writs; which the said Mayors, Sheriffs, and Officers respectively
are to make Publication of, and of the certain Day for such
Elections to be made in the said City, Town, or Place aforesaid,
and to cause Elections to be made accordingly.
XII. That at the Day and Place of Elections, the Sheriff of
each County, and the said Mayors, Sheriffs, Bailiffs, and other
Head-Officers within their Cities, Towns, Boroughs, and Places
respectively, shall take View of the said Elections, and shall make
Return into the Chancery within twenty Days after the said
Elections, of the Persons elected by the greater Number of Electors
under their Hands and Seals, between him on the one,
Part, and the Electors on the other Part; wherein shall be contained, That the Persons elected shall not have Power to alter
the Government as it is hereby settled in one single Person and a
Parliament.
XIII. That the Sheriff, who shall wittingly and willingly make
any false Return, or neglect his Duty, shall incur the Penalty of
2000 Marks of lawful English Money; the one Moiety to the
Lord Protector, and the other Moiety to such Person as will sue
for the same.
XIV. That all and every Person and Persons, who have aided
advised, assisted, or abetted in any War against the Parliament
since the first Day of January, 1641, (unless they have been
since in the Service of the Parliament, and given signal
Testimony of their good Affection thereunto) shall be disabled
and uncapable to be elected, or to give any Vote in the Election
of any Members to serve in the next Parliament, or in the three,
succeding Triennial Parliaments.
XV. That all such, who have advised, assisted or abetted the Reb
ellion of Ireland, shall be disabled and uncapable for ever to be
elected, or give any Vote in the Election of any
Member to serve in Parliament; as also all such who
do or shall profess the Roman Catholick Religion.
XVI. That all Votes and Elections given or made contrary, or
not according to, these Qualifications, shall be null and void:
And if any Person, who is hereby made uncapable, shall give his
Vote for Election of Members to serve in Parliament, such Person
shall lose and forfeit one full Year's Value of his real Estate, and
one full third Part of his Personal Estate; one Moiety thereof to
the Lord Protector, and the other Moiety to him or them who
shall sue for the same.
XVII. That the Persons who shall be elected to serve in
Parliament, shall be such (and no other than such) as are Persons
of known Integrity, fearing God, and of good Conversation, and
being of the Age of twenty-one Years.
XVIII. That all and every Person and Persons seized or
possessed to his own Use, of any Estate real or personal, to the
Value of 200l. and not within the aforesaid Exceptions, shall be
capable to elect Members to serve in Parliament for Counties.
XIX. That the Chancellor, Keeper, or Commissioners of the
Great Seal, shall be sworn before they enter into their Offices,
truly and faithfully to issue forth, and send abroad, Writs of
Summons to Parliament, at the Times and in the Manner before
expressed: And in case of Neglect or Failure to issue and send
abroad Writs accordingly, he or they shall for every such Offence
be guilty of High-Treason, and suffer the Pains and Penalties
thereof.
XX. That in case Writs be not issued out, as is before expressed,
but that there be a Neglect therein, fifteen Days after the Time
wherein the same ought to be issued out by the Chancellor,
Keeper, or Commissioners of the Great Seal; that then the
Parliament shall, as often as such Failure shall happen, assemble
and be held at Westminster, in the usual Place, at the Times
prefixed, in Manner and by the Means hereafter expressed;
that is to say, That the Sheriffs of the several and respective Counties, Sheriffdoms, Cities, Boroughs, and Places
aforesaid, within England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, the
Chancellor, Masters, and Scholars of the Universities of Oxford
and Cambridge, and the Mayor and Bailiffs of the Borough of
Berwick upon Tweed, and other the Places aforesaid respectively,
shall at the several Courts and Places to be appointed as aforesaid, within thirty Days after the said fifteen Days, cause such
Members to be chosen for their said several and respective
Counties, Sheriffdoms, Universities, Cities, Boroughs, and Places
aforesaid, by such Persons, and in such Manner, as if several and
respective Writs of Summons to Parliament under the Great
Seal had issued and been awarded according to the Tenor abovesaid: That if the Sheriff, or other Persons authorized, shall
neglect his or their Duty herein, that all and every such Sheriff
and Person authorized as aforesaid, so neglecting his or their
Duty, shall, for every such Offence, be guilty of High Treason,
and shall suffer the Pains and Penalties thereof.
XXI. That the Clerk, called the Clerk of the Commonwealth in
Chancery for the Time being, and all others, who shall afterwards execute that Office, to whom the Returns shall be made,
shall for the next Parliament, and the two succeeding Triennial
Parliaments, the next Day after such Return, certify the Names
of the several Persons so returned, and of the Places for which he
and they were chosen respectively, unto the Council; who shall
peruse the said Returns, and examine whether the Persons so
elected and returned be such as is agreeable to the Qualifications,
and not disabled to be elected: And that every Person and Persons being so duly elected, and being approved of by the major
Part of the Council to be Persons not disabled, but qualified as
aforesaid, shall be esteemed a Member of Parliament, and be
admitted to sit in Parliament, and not otherwise.
XXII. That the Persons so chosen and assembled in Manner
aforesaid, or any sixty of them, shall be, and be deemed the
Parliament of England, Scotland, and Ireland; and the Supreme
Legislative Power to be and reside in the Lord Protector and
such Parliament, in Manner herein expressed.
XXIII. That the Lord Protector, with the Advice of the
major Part of the Council, shall at any other Time than is before
expressed, when the Necessities of the State shall require it, summon Parliaments in Manner before expressed which shall not be
adjourned, prorogued, or dissolved without their own Consent,
during the first three Months of their Sitting. And in case of
future War with any foreign State, a Parliament shall be
forthwith summoned for their advice concerning the same.
XXIV. That all Bills agreed unto by the Parliament, shall be
presented to the Lord Protector for his Consent; and in case he
shall not give his Consent thereto, within twenty Days after
they shall be presented to him, or give Satisfaction to the
Parliament within the Time limited, that then, upon Declaration
of the Parliament that the Lord Protector hath not consented
nor given Satisfaction, such Bills shall pass into and become
Laws, although he shall not give his Consent thereunto; provided
such Bills contain nothing in them contrary to the Matters contained in these Presents.
XXV. That Henry Lawrence, Esq., &c. [whose Names are
before-mention'd at p. 247.] or any seven of them, shall be a
Council for the Purposes expressed in this writing; and upon the
Death or other Removal of any of them, the Parliament shall
nominate six Persons of Ability, Integrity, and fearing God, for
every one that is dead or removed; out of which the major
Part of the Council shall elect two, and present them to the Lord
Protector, of which he shall elect one: And in case the
Parliament shall not nominate within twenty Days after Notice
given unto them thereof, the major Part of the Council shall
nominate three as aforesaid to the Lord Protector, who out of
them shall supply the Vacancy: And untill this Choice be made,
the remaining Part of the Council shall execute as
fully in all Things, as if their Number were full
And in case of Corruption, or other Miscarriage in any
of the Council in their Trust, the Parliament shall appoint seven
of their number, and the Council six, who, together with the Lord
Chancellor, Lord Keeper, or Commissioners of the Great Seal for
the Time being, shall have Power to hear and determine such
Corruption and Miscarriage, and to award and inflict Punishment,
as the Nature of the Offence shall deserve: which Punishment
shall not be pardoned or remitted by the Lord Protector: And,
in the Interval of Parliaments, the major Part of the Council,
with the Consent of the Lord Protector, may, for Corruption, or
other Miscarriage as aforesaid, suspend any of their Number from
the Exercise of their Trust, if they shall find it just, untill the
Matter shall be heard and examined as aforesaid.
XXVI. That the Lord Protector and the Major Part of the
Council aforesaid may, at any Time before the Meeting of the
next Parliament, add to the Council such Persons as they shall
think fit; provided the Number of the Council be not made
thereby to exceed twenty-one, and the Quorum to be proportioned
accordingly by the Lord Protector and the major Part of the
Council.
XXVII. That a constant yearly Revenue shall be raised, settled,
and established for maintaining of 10,000 Horse and Dragoons,
and 20,000 Foot, in England Scotland, and Ireland, for the Defence
and Security thereof, and also for a convenient number of Ships
for guarding of the Seas; besides 200,000l. per Ann. for
defraying the other necessary Charges of Administration of
Justice, and other expences of the Government; which Revenue
shall be raised by the Customs, and such other Ways and Means
as shall be agreed upon by the Lord Protector and the Council,
and shall not be taken away or diminished, nor the Way agreed
upon for raising the same altered, but by the Consent of the Lord
Protector and the Parliament.
XXVIII. That the said yearly Revenue shall be paid into the
publick Treasury, and shall be issued out for the Uses aforesaid.
XXIX. That in case there shall not be Cause hereafter to keep
up so great a Defence both at Land or Sea, but that there be
an Abatem nt made thereof, the Money which will be saved thereby, shall remain in Bank for the public Service, and not be employed to any other Use but by Consent of Parliament; or, in the
Intervals of Parliament, by the Lord Protector and major Part of
the Council.
XXX. That the raising of Money for defraying the Charge of
the present extraordinary Forces, both at Sea and Land, in respect of the present Wars, shall be by Consent of Parliament, and
not otherwise: Save only that the Lord Protector, with the Consent of the major Part of the Council, for preventing the Disorders and Dangers which might otherwise fall out both by Sea
and Land, shall have Power, untill the Meeting of the first Parliament, to raise Money for the Purposes aforesaid; and also to
make Laws and Ordinances for the Peace and Welfare of these
Nations, where it shall be necessary; which shall be binding and
in Force, untill Order shall be taken in Parliament concerning
the same.
XXXI. That the Lands, Tenements, Rents, Royalties, Jurisdictions and Hereditaments which remain yet unsold, or undisposed
of, by Act or Ordinance of Parliament, belonging to the Commonwealth, (except the Forests and Chases, and the Honours and
Manors belonging to the same; the Lands of the Rebels in Ireland,
lying in the four Counties of Dublin, Cork, Kildare, and Caterlaugh;
the Lands forfeited by the People of Scotland in the late Wars;
and also the Lands of Papists and Delinquents in England who
have not yet compounded) shall be vested in the Lord Protector
to hold, to him and his Successors Lords Protectors of these
Nations; and shall not be alienated but by Consent in Parliament, And all debts, Fines, Issues, Amerciaments, Penalties and
Profits, certain and casual, due to the Keepers of the Liberties
of England by Authority of Parliament, shall be due to the Lord
Protector, and be payable into his public Receipt, and shall be
recovered and prosecuted in his Name.
XXXII. That the Office of Lord Protector over these Nations
shall be elective and not hereditary; and upon the Death of the
Lord Protector, another fit Person shall be forthwith elected to
succeed him in the Government; which Election shall be by the
Council, who, immediately upon the Death of the Lord Protector,
shall assemble in the Chamber where they usually sit in Council;
and, having given Notice to all their Members of the Cause of
their assembling, shall, being thirteen at least present, proceed
to the Election; and, before they depart the said Chamber, shall
elect a fit Person to succeed in the Government, and forthwith
cause Proclamation thereof to be made in all the three Nations
as shall be requisite: And the Person that they, or the major Part
of them, shall elect as aforesaid, shall be, and shall be taken to be,
Lord Protector over these Nations of England, Scotland, and
Ireland, and the Dominions thereto belonging. Provided that
none of the Children of the late King, nor any of his Line or Family,
be elected to be Lord Protector or other Chief Magistrate over
these Nations, or any the Dominions thereto belonging. And untill
the aforesaid Election be past, the Council shall take Care of the
Government, and administer in all Things as fully as the Lord
Protector or the Lord Protector and Council are enabled to do.
XXXIII. That Oliver Cromwell, Captain-General of the Forces
of England, Scotland, and Ireland, shall be, and is hereby declared
to be, Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland,
and Ireland, and the Dominions thereto belonging, for his Life.
XXXIV. That the Chancellor, Keeper, or Commissioners of the
Great Seal, the Treasurer, Admiral, Chief Governors of Ireland
and Scotland, and the Chief Justices of both the Benches, shall
be chosen by the Approbation of Parliament; and, in the Intervals
of Parliament, by the Approbation of the major Part of the Council,
to be afterwards approved by the Parliament.
XXXV. That the Christian Religion, as contained in the Scriptures, be held forth and recommended as the public profession
of these Nations; and that, as soon as may be, a Provision, less
subject to Scruple and Contention, and more certain than the
present, be made for the Encouragement and Maintenance of able
and painful Teachers, for instructing the People, and for
Discovery and Confutation of Error, Heresy, and whatever is
contrary to sound Doctrine: And that untill such Provision be
made, the present Maintenance shall not be taken away nor
impeached.
XXXVI. That to the public Profession held forth none shall be
compelled by Penalties or otherwise: but that Endeavours be
used to win them by sound Doctrine, and the Example of a
good Conversation.
XXXVII. That such as profess Faith in God by Jesus Christ,
(though differing in Judgment from the Doctrine, Worship or
Discipline publickly held forth) shall not be restrained from, but
shall be protected in, the Profession of the Faith, and Exercise
of their Religion; so as they abuse not this Liberty to the Civil
Injury of others, and to the actual Disturbance of the Public
Peace on their Parts: Provided this Liberty be not extended to
Popery nor Prelacy, nor to such as, under the Profession of Christ,
hold forth and practise Licentiousness.
XXXVIII. That all Laws, Statutes, and Ordinances, and
Clauses in any Law, Statute, or Ordinance to the contrary of
the aforesaid Liberty, shall be esteemed as null and void.
XXXIX. That the Acts and Ordinances of Parliament, made
for the Sale or other Disposition of the Lands, Rents, and
Hereditaments of the late King, Queen, and Prince, or Archbishops
and Bishops, &c., Deans and Chapters, the Lands of Delinquents
and Forest Lands, or any of them, or of any other Lands,
Tenements, Rents, and Hereditaments belonging to the Commonwealth, shall nowise be impeached or made invalid, but shall
remain good and firm; and that the Securities given by Act and
Ordinance of Parliament for any Sum or Sums of Money, by any
of the said Lands, the Excise, or by any other public Revenue;
and also the Securities given by the public Faith of the Nation,
and the Engagement of the public Faith for satisfaction of Debts
and Damages, shall remain firm and good, and not be made void
and invalid upon any Pretence whatsoever.
XL. That the Articles given to, or made with, the Enemy, and
afterwards confirmed by Parliament, shall be performed and
made good to the Persons concerned therein: And that such
Appeals as were depending in the last Parliament, for relief
concerning Bills of Sale of Delinquents Estates, may be heard
and determined the next Parliament, any Thing in this Writing,
or otherwise, to the contrary notwithstanding.
XLI. That every successive Lord Protector over these Nations
shall take and subscribe a solemn Oath, in the Presence of the
Council, and such others as they shall call to them, that he will
seek the Peace, Quiet, and Welfare of these Nations, cause Law
and Justice to be equally administered; and that he will not
violate or infringe the Matters and Things contained in this
Writing; and, in all other Things, will, to his Power, and to the
best of his Understanding, govern these Nations according to the
Laws, Statutes, and Customs thereof.
XLII. That each Person of the Council shall, before they enter
upon their Trust, take and subscribe an Oath, that they will be
true and faithful to their Trust, according to the best of their
Knowledge; and that in the Election of every successive Lord
Protector, they shall proceed therein impartially, and do nothing
therein for any Promise, Fear, Favour, or Reward.