Compare 1587 edition: 1 After this alſo, he being once fully eſtabliſhed in the eſtate of Britaine, coueted alſo to attaine to the ripe in gouernment of the whole Empyre, & therfore aſſembling al the forces of the Brytiſh youth ſayled into Gallia, cauſing himſelfe to be proclaimed emperor, & ſo vſurped ye title as in the EEBO page image 103 Engliſh and Italian Hyſtorie, you maye finde more largely expreſſed. He left behinde him in Brytayne his father in lawe Dionethus as chief gouernor their, with one legion of Romain ſoul|diours.
Compare 1587 edition: 1 After this did Etius the Emperors Lieute|nãt in France, ſend for ſuch Romains as Maxi|mianus had left in Brytaine, who reuolting frõ their othes of allegiãce giuẽ vnto the ſame Max|imianus, obeyed Etius as one that ſupplyed the roomth of their rightfull Lorde and maiſter the Emperour Valentinian. So that in this wiſe was Brytaine diſpurueyed of all maner of ab [...] men meete for defence,The Scots and Pictes inuade the Brytaynes. whereof the Scottes and Pictes tooke good occaſion to inuade the Brytiſh borders, not ſparing to purſue with fire & ſworde all ſuch of the Brytaines as did yet continue in obeyſance to Maximianus.
Compare 1587 edition: 1 They firſt droue thoſe Brytaines out of all the Countreys, which had bene taken from them by the ſame Maximianus, & by other of the Ro|mains and Britains, as Pictland, Kyle, Carr [...], [figure appears here on page 103] and Cunningham, Galloway, the Marches and Northumberland. This done, they entered into Cũberland,The proſpe|rous ſucceſſe of the Scot|tiſh men. Weſtmerland, & Kendal, not ceaſing til they had ſpoyled & defaced all thoſe countreys with the moſt part of all Yorkſhire, in ſuch cruell wiſe that they made al thoſe quarters barren both of corne & cattaile which way ſoeuer they paſſed.