A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II. eBook

Bulstrode Whitelocke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 486 pages of information about A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II..

A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II. eBook

Bulstrode Whitelocke
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 486 pages of information about A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II..
and although sometimes, upon an extraordinary rising of the Elbe to a great flood, these branches of it cover the lower rooms of the houses near them, to the damage of some owners, yet it makes amends by the constant benefit which it brings with it.  The buildings here are all of brick, only some few of brick and timber put together, and are generally fashioned and used as is before described touching the Luebeck houses.

The district or territory belonging to the town is in some places two, in others three, in some more, German miles distant from the city, in which precinct they have the jurisdiction and revenue; and near the town are many pleasant little houses and seats, with gardens and accommodations, belonging to the citizens, to refresh themselves and their wives and children in the summer-time, to take the fresh country air, and to have a diversion for their health and pleasure.  It may be said of this town, that God hath withheld nothing from them for their good.  They have plenty of provisions, health, profit, and pleasure, to their full contentment, in a peaceable and just government, with freedom, strength in their magazines, fortifications, and bodies of men for their defence and protection, conveniences for their habitation and commerce, and, which is above all, a liberty to know the will of and to worship God, for the health of their own souls.

June 13, 1654.

[SN:  The Diet of Germany.]

This morning Whitelocke returned a visit to the Swedes’ Ambassador, Bernelow, at his lodging, where he learnt of him the manner of the sitting of the General Diet of Germany, at which he was present:—­That they have three colleges or chambers:  the first is the College of the Electors, where they only assemble; the second is the College of the Princes, where the Archbishops, Bishops, Dukes, Graves, and Barons meet, to the number of about one hundred and forty; the third is the College of the Free Cities, where their Deputies, about two hundred, do meet.  When they consult, the Chancellor of the Empire, the Archbishop of Mentz, sends the proposal in writing to each college severally.  When they are respectively agreed, then all the colleges meet together in the great hall, at the upper end whereof is a chair of state for the Emperor.  On the right-hand of the chair the Electors sit, on the left-hand the principal officers of the Emperor’s court; on the right side of the hall, upon seats, are the Ecclesiastic Princes, Bishops, and Abbots; on the left-hand are the Temporal Princes, upon their seats; and on the seats below, one before another, are the Deputies of the towns.

The Archbishop of Mentz, as Marshal of the College of the Electors, begins and reads the proposal, and the resolution thereupon in writing of that college; after him, the Marshal of the College of the Princes doth the like; and lastly, the Marshal of the College of the Free Towns, who is always the chief magistrate of the place where the Diet sits.  If the resolution of the three colleges agrees, or of the College of the Electors and one other of the colleges, the business is determined accordingly; if the colleges do not thus agree, then they meet all together and debate the matter; whereupon, if they come not to an accord, the business is remitted to another day, or the suffrage of the Emperor decides it.

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A Journal of the Swedish Embassy in the Years 1653 and 1654, Vol II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.