GENERAL INDEX
TO
Volumes I.—VIII.
Transcriber's Note: Page numbers in the index link to the page in the relevant volume at Project Gutenberg.
The other complete volumes are available at Project Gutenberg as follows:
Volume I - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/59352]
Volume II - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60152]
Volume III - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60774]
Volume IV - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60035]
Volume V - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61277]
Volume VI - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65984]
Volume VII - [http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61913]
- Aarau, meeting of pastors at, to complain of exile of Megander, vi. [367];
- deputation sent to Berne, [367]
- Abelard, ii. [18]; iii. [44]
- Ab Hofen, Thomas, Bernese deputy to Geneva, ii. [311] sqq.;
- his evangelical work, [312];
- opposition and dejection, [314];
- death, [316]
- Adam, iii. [301] sqq.
- Adrian VI., Pope, attempts to prevent introduction of Luther's works and followers into Spain, viii. [4]
- Adrian, Dr., umpire at conference of Schässburg, vii. [384]
- Agrippa, Cornelius, at Strasburg, i. [360];
- his career, [363];
- his book on marriage, [363]
- Alasco, John, Baron, primate of Poland, vii. [433], [443];
- unfriendly reception of his nephew John, [445];
- his devotion to the papacy, [445];
- examines John, [446];
- his death, [450]
- — Stanislaus, vii. [433];
- at court of Francis I., [442]
- — Yaroslav, vii. [433];
- gets his brother John appointed a bishop, [452];
- interview with John, [458];
- his relations with Zapolya, [458];
- military service and imprisonment, [458];
- his death, [459]
- Alasco, John, Polish reformer, his birth and early life, vii. [434];
- sets out to visit European courts and universities, [434];
- at Louvain, [434];
- meets Zwinglius at Zurich, [435];
- difficulty of fixing dates of his travels, [436], [note];
- grateful remembrance of Zwinglius, [436];
- becomes guest of Erasmus, [437];
- influence of Erasmus on him, [438], [439];
- studies at Basel under Pellican, [439];
- friendship with Glareanus, [439];
- enjoined by King Sigismund to leave Basel, [441];
- uncertainty of his next course, [442];
- in Italy, [442];
- again in Poland, [443];
- his struggles, [444];
- worldly associations, [444];
- decline of faith, [445];
- false reports about him, [445];
- examined by the primate, [446];
- renounces doctrines of the Reformation, [447];
- urges Erasmus to write to the king, [448];
- named provost of cathedral church of Gnesne, [448];
- reads and corresponds with Melanchthon, [449];
- leans towards Luther, [449];
- coolness of Erasmus, [450];
- his place among reformers, [451];
- has to give up hope of reforming Poland, [451];
- appointed bishop of Wesprim, [452];
- bishop of Cujavia, [452];
- his difficult position, [452];
- refuses bishopric of Cujavia, [453];
- leaves Poland, [454];
- goes to Mentz and Louvain, [454];
- offers made to him, [455];
- marries, [456];
- his life at Embden, [456], [457];
- declines offer of pastorate there, [458];
- attends death-bed of his brother Yaroslav, [458], [459];
- returns to Friesland, [459];
- writes to Hardenberg, [459];
- accepts direction of churches in Friesland, [462];
- invited to Poland, [462];
- his task in Friesland, [462];
- charges against him, [463];
- opposition of John of Falkenberg, [464];
- writes to Bullinger, [464];
- conflict with the monks, [465];
- his appeal to Countess Anna, [466];
- victory over John of Falkenberg, [467];
- aims at union of Protestant sects, [468];
- has a conference with Menno, [468];
- with David Joris, [470];
- his ministry, [471];
- his church government, [471];
- relations to Erasmus, Zwinglius, and Melanchthon, [472];
- his Epitome of doctrine, [472];
- again appeals to Countess Anna, [473];
- resigns office of superintendent, [473];
- resumes it, [474];
- death of his child, [474];
- his country home, [475];
- his first letter to Calvin, [475], [note];
- at Louvain, [548], [552];
- meetings with Francis de Enzinas, viii. [43], [59]
- Albany, John Stuart, duke of, i. [414];
- special ambassador of Francis I. to Clement VII., ii. [148];
- his career, [148], [155];
- commands French fleet escorting Catherine de' Medici to Nice, [189];
- escorts Clement VII. to Marseilles, [190];
- regent of Scotland, vi. [15];
- returns to France, [15];
- again in Scotland, defeated by the English, finally quits the country, [21]
- Albert, duke of Prussia, protects the reformed in Poland, vii. [431]
- Albigenses, the, ii. [102]
- Alcagnices, Marchioness of, her conversations with Carranza, viii. [117];
- gets his works copied and translated, [119]
- Alcala de Henares, viii. [13];
- a theological disputation at, [14]
- Alciati of Milan, at Bourges, ii. [23]
- Aleander, papal nuncio, obtains edict of persecution for the Netherlands, vii. [488];
- receives recantation of Spreng, [490]
- Alençon, Duchess of
- [[Margaret of Angoulême]]
- Alençon, Duke of, i. [346]
- Alesius, presents Melanchthon's Common places to Henry VIII., v. [106];
- account of him, [186];
- present at convocation, [187];
- his speech, [188], [189];
- refused admission, [190];
- his birth and early life, vi. [11];
- publicly refutes Luther's doctrine, [51];
- his interviews with Patrick Hamilton, [52];
- refuses to condemn him, [75];
- preaches before the synod, [76];
- assailed by Prior Hepburn, and imprisoned, [76], [77];
- released by command of the king, [77];
- immediately imprisoned again, [78];
- urged to escape, reluctant to leave Scotland, [80], [81];
- his flight, [81], [82];
- embarks at Dundee, [83];
- his wanderings, [84];
- his letter to James V., [90], [91]
- Alexander VI., Pope, i. [119], [211];
- his decree on printing, ii. [173]
- Alexander Canus (Dumoulin), goes to Geneva, iv. [195];
- attempts to arrest him, [198];
- seized and banished, [205];
- leaves Geneva, [206]
- Alexander, Dr., preaches at Dantzic, vii. [425]
- Alexander, Peter, chaplain to the Regent of the Netherlands, viii. [86];
- holds a disputation with De Soto, [87];
- his flight, trial, and burning in effigy, [87];
- pastor of French church in London, [88]
- Alva, Duke of, i. [325]
- Amadeus V. of Savoy, i. [17];
- seizes the château de l'Ile, [17];
- becomes vidame, [18];
- bids for popular favor, [18]
- Amadeus VIII., his attempt on Geneva, i. [19];
- his abdication, [21];
- nominated pope by Council of Basel as Felix V., [21];
- makes himself prince and bishop of Geneva, [21];
- his death, [21]
- Amadeus IX., i. [22]
- Amman, Louis, vi. [434]
- Amsterdam, beginning of the Reformation at, vii. [531] sqq.;
- arrests of evangelicals by night, their execution, [535];
- Jan van Geelen's attempt to surprise, viii. [348]
- Amyot, Jacques, iii. [76]
- Anabaptists, burnt by Henry VIII., v. [63]; viii. [160]
- [[Spirituals]]
- Ancina, Messire d', i. [116], [122]
- Anderson, Lawrence, his birth and early life, vii. [239];
- receives evangelical doctrine, [240];
- administrator of diocese of Strengnaes, [240];
- friendship with Olaf and Lawrence Peterson, [241];
- before Gustavus, [258];
- appointed chancellor of the kingdom, [258];
- his character, [259];
- advises Gustavus, [259];
- translates the New Testament, [269];
- advises the king on church power, [281];
- his speech at Diet of Westeraas, [285] sqq.;
- deputy with Olaf to the king, [291];
- his speech on return of the king, [293];
- president of synod of Orebro, [299]
- Anderson, William, a Protestant of Perth, vi. [178];
- seized and condemned to death, [181];
- hung, [181]
- Andronicus, invited into Switzerland by Farel, iii. [233] sqq.;
- joins Farel, [235]
- Angelis, Francis de, viii. [4]
- Angers, University of, declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [40]
- Angoulême, city, iii. [5],
- Angus, Earl of, marries Margaret, regent of Scotland, vi. [15];
- takes the Great Seal, [22];
- defeats Lennox, [24];
- renews proscription of New Testament, [43];
- keeps the king in subjection, [72];
- banished, [74];
- joins English army against the Scots, [138];
- accompanies the liberated nobles to Scotland, [158];
- reinstated, [161];
- imprisoned, liberated, [184]
- Anhalt, Principality of, the reformation in, viii. [322];
- the princes of, [322];
- Luther's letter to them, [326];
- the reformation established in, [327]
- Anna, Countess [[Friesland]]
- Annates, in England, abolished, iv. [87]
- Anne Boleyn, meets Henry VIII., ii. [105]; iv. [21], [27];
- lodged in palace at Greenwich, [103];
- marriage of, [118], [127];
- included in Clement's excommunication of Henry VIII., [128];
- appears as queen, [131];
- her marriage pronounced lawful, [135];
- presented to the people, [135];
- her coronation, [136];
- unsatisfied, [137];
- her course and fate, [138];
- change in her character, v. [32];
- protects evangelicals, [32];
- orders liberation of Harman, [33];
- her bringing up, [119];
- her good works, [120], [121];
- esteem for Latimer, [121];
- Tyndale's present to, [122];
- character of, [124];
- opposite views of her, [125];
- hostility of Norfolk, [126];
- her difficult position, [127];
- jealousy of Jane Seymour, [128];
- gives birth to a dead son, [129];
- co-operates with Cranmer, [130];
- her choice of bishops, [130], [131];
- forebodings, [132];
- commends her daughter Elizabeth to Parker, [133];
- charges against her, [133], [134] sqq.;
- ordered to keep her room, [138];
- before the council, [139];
- taken to the Tower, [140];
- her sympathy, [141];
- watched, [145];
- agitation, [146];
- her letter to the king, [150] sqq.;
- alleged pre-contract of marriage not proved, [153];
- her trial, [155] sqq.;
- sentenced to death, [157];
- her address to the judges, [158];
- asks pardon of the princess Mary, [162];
- her execution, [165] sqq.;
- effect of her death in Europe, [170], [171]
- Anne of Beauregard, v. 427, 428
- Anne of Cleves, proposal for her marriage with Henry VIII., viii. [193];
- her portrait, [193];
- the marriage arranged, [193];
- at Calais, [194];
- a game of cards, [194];
- reaches Canterbury, [195];
- at Rochester, seen by the king, [195];
- received by him, [197];
- enters London, [197];
- married, [198];
- hopes, [198];
- scheme contrived for her divorce, [230] sqq.;
- consents, [231];
- receives report of judgment of convocation, [232];
- her submission, [233];
- a pension and a palace for her, [234]
- Anne of Cyprus, i. [21], [22], [23];
- accused by her son Philip to her husband, [25]
- Annonay, the 'holy virtues' of, i. [429];
- preaching of Stephen Machopolis at, [430];
- of Rénier, [430];
- of Jonas, [430];
- arrest and imprisonment of many evangelicals, [431]
- Anschar, apostle of Scandinavia, vii. [120]
- Antwerp, vii. [481];
- beginning of reformation at, [483] sqq.;
- persecution, [492];
- the convent of the Augustines destroyed, [499];
- open-air meeting of the reformed, [503];
- murder of Nicholas, [504];
- preaching attended by crowds, [517]
- Aosta, Lutheranism at, v. [451] sqq.;
- assembly of estates at, [452];
- resolution against Lutheranism, [453];
- monuments of Calvin's passage through, [454]
- Apologists, Christian, iii. [10], [182]
- Appeals to the pope, abolished in England, iv. [179]
- Aquinas, Thomas, Calvin's admiration of, i. [387]; ii. [167]
- Arcimbold, sells indulgences in Scandinavia, vii. [127];
- gains over the King of Denmark, [128];
- sends his brother to Gothland, [236]
- Aresen, Johan, bishop of Holum, vii. [226];
- his quarrel with bishop of Skalholt, [226];
- vanquished in single combat, [226];
- takes up arms against the reformation, [229];
- usurps the see of Skalholt, [229];
- arrested and executed with his sons, [230];
- barbarous revenge of his partisans, [230]
- Arlod, Jean d', i. [271]; iv. [313]; v. [352];
- imprisoned at Chillon, [353]
- —, Domaine d', iii. [364];
- proscribed by the bishop, [439];
- seized and imprisoned, [441], [457]
- Arnold of Winkelried, i. [194],
- Arran, Earl of, vi. [152];
- his character, [154];
- proclaimed regent of Scotland, [154];
- his evangelical chaplains, [155];
- favors project of marriage of Mary Queen of Scots with Edward of England, [158];
- confirmed in the regency, [161];
- dismisses his chaplains, [168];
- refuses the hostages to Henry VIII., [171];
- assembles an army at Edinburgh, [172];
- his irresolution, [173];
- joins the cardinal at Stirling, [173];
- submits to the pope and is absolved, [174];
- accompanies Beatoun to Perth, sanctions martyrdom of Protestants, [181];
- and persecution in Forfarshire, [182];
- flies from Edinburgh with Beatoun, [183];
- gives up Wishart to Beatoun, [197];
- writes to the cardinal about him, [197]
- Arras, martyrs at, i. [349]; iii. [142]
- Artois, preaching of Berquin in, i. [332], [333]
- Aske, Robert, heads revolt of Catholics in Yorkshire, v. [206];
- the pilgrimage of grace, [206];
- at Pomfret Castle, [209];
- confronts the Lancaster herald, [209];
- resolves to march on London, [210]
- Askew, Anne, account of, viii. [274];
- her marriage and separation, [275];
- imprisoned, her examinations, [276];
- before Bishop Bonner, [277];
- liberated on bail, [277];
- again arrested, examined, [277], [278];
- her firmness, [279];
- condemned to be burnt, [279];
- again examined and tortured by Wriothesley and Rich, [280], [281], and [note];
- her martyrdom, [283] sqq.
- Athanasian Creed, the, vi. [317]
- Audley, Sir Thomas, Speaker, iv. [9];
- appointed Chancellor, [91];
- one of Fryth's examiners, [151];
- begs for gift of convents, v. [99];
- member of commission of inquiry into conduct of Queen Anne, [136], [139]; viii. [226]
- Augsburg, Diet of, ii. [216], [255], [415], [421]; vii. [170];
- influence of the confession in Hungary, [345]
- Augustines, at Geneva, i. [44]
- Augustine, St., iv. [46]
- Austria, ii. [215], [216];
- delegates at Diet, of Augsburg, [217], [218], [219]
- [[Ferdinand] of Austria, [Philip] of Hesse]
- Avalos, Don Gaspard d', opposes publication of Spanish New Testament, viii. [61]
- Avenches, iii. [212]
- Avignon, Francis I., holds council at, ii. [214];
- the embroiderer of, iv. [325];
- seized and ill-used, [325];
- reaches Geneva, [326]
- Avila, John d', his preaching in Andalusia, viii. [4], [5], [6];
- exposes the fraud of Madeline de la Croix, [7];
- defends St. Theresa, [7];
- counsels Sancha de Carile, [8];
- arrested by the Inquisition, and acquitted, [17]
- Babinot, Albert, iii. [46];
- sent by Calvin to preach, [58];
- at Toulouse, [59], [61]
- Baduel, Claude, ii. [257];
- seeks introduction to Margaret of Navarre, [258];
- visits her, [259];
- his career, [259];
- envoy from Margaret to Melanchthon, iv. [368]
- Baillot, Jacques, of Neuchâtel, advocates giving help to Geneva, v. [323];
- on the march, [327]
- Bainham, James, iv. [106];
- arrested and tortured by More, [106];
- before Bishop of London, [107];
- his abjuration and sentence, [107];
- remorse, [108];
- repentance, [108];
- condemned, [109];
- visited by Latimer, [109];
- martyrdom, [110]
- Bakker, Johan van, with his father denounced as a Lutheran, vii. [510];
- sent to Louvain, becomes a priest, [511];
- imprisoned, liberated, goes to Wittenberg, [511];
- returns, and is banished, [511];
- wanderings, [511];
- separates from Rome, [512];
- opposes indulgences, [512];
- arrested, [513];
- his trial, [513];
- imprisoned, [514];
- his father, [515];
- his martyrdom, [515], [516]
- Balard, syndic of Geneva, i. [204];
- elected syndic, [263];
- cited, [292], [note]; iii. [282], [286], [290];
- recommends celebration of the mass, v. [367];
- his views, [411];
- examined before the Council, vi. [502] sqq.
- Balkerley, Martin, imprisoned at Edinburgh for reading the Scriptures, vi. [113];
- pays a ransom and is left in prison, a double ransom demanded, [113];
- liberated, [113]
- Balleyson, M. de, i. [278], [291], [295], [297]
- Balue, Master, deputy of the Sorbonne, ii. [287]
- Bandière, Ami, i. [267], [270], [276], [292];
- leads the search for Pontverre, and is wounded, ii. [379]
- Bandière, Jean, i. [292]
- Bandini, Francesco, Archbishop of Siena, receives deputation accusing Paleario, iv. [444];
- consents to support the charge, [445]
- Baner, Eric, in charge of Gustavus Vasa, vii. [245]
- Baptism, a reformed, at Geneva, iv. [249]
- Barbarossa, iv. [465]
- Barbier, instigates plot against reformers at Geneva, v. [244]
- Bar-le Duc, conference and treaty of, ii. [224] sqq., [297]
- Barlow, Dr., prior of Bisham, his embassy to Scotland, vi. [100], [101];
- ready to preach, [105]
- Barnes, envoy to reformers at Wittenberg, v. [106];
- sent by the king to invite Melanchthon, [107];
- well received by Elector of Saxony, [107];
- joined by Fox and Hare, [109];
- takes part in negotiating marriage of the king with Anne of Cleves, viii. [202];
- appointed to preach at Paul's Cross, superseded by Gardiner, [202];
- preaches, [203];
- reprimanded by the king, [204];
- reads a retractation, and again preaches, [204];
- committed to the Tower, [204];
- with Garret and Jerome and three Papists, burnt at Smithfield, [227], [228]
- Barton, Elizabeth [[Maid of Kent]]
- Basel, council of, i. [21];
- embassy to Geneva, ii. [390], [392];
- treaty with landgrave of Hesse, [420];
- conferences at, vi. [325]; vii. [43], [44]
- Baud, Claude, syndic of Geneva, attempts to direct Catholic rioters, iii. [375];
- plants the city banner, [379];
- refuses to give the signal for attack, [385];
- takes part in consultation for peace, [395]; iv. [200];
- searches for Froment, [205]
- Bayfield, Richard, in prison, iv. [83];
- his martyrdom, [84]
- Beatoun, David, abbot of Arbroath, negotiates return of his uncle, the primate, to St. Andrews, vi. [28];
- one of the judges of Patrick Hamilton, [61];
- accompanies James V. to Paris, [108];
- again in France, made bishop of Mirepoix, [108];
- negotiates marriage of James with Mary of Lorraine, [109];
- his character and aims, [110], [111];
- created cardinal, [111];
- unites with the king against the gospellers and the nobles, [112];
- finds money for the king, [113];
- his arrogance, [113];
- goes to France to seek aid for Scotland, [115];
- persecutes the gospellers, [116] sqq.;
- demands the burning of Kennedy and Russel, [123];
- succeeds his uncle as primate, [124]:
- his persecutions checked by the king, [126];
- holds assembly of prelates and nobles at St. Andrews, [126];
- aims at ruin of Henry VIII., [133];
- prevents interview of James and Henry, [135];
- visits James V. on his death-bed, [149];
- under alleged will of the king claims to be president of the council of regency, [153];
- opposes appointment of Arran to the regency, [154];
- appointed chancellor, [155];
- resists scheme for marriage of Mary Queen of Scots with Prince Edward of England, [158];
- excluded from the council and imprisoned, [159];
- results of his arrest, [160];
- liberated, [169];
- his intrigues against the regent, [169];
- convokes the clergy, [170];
- induces the regent to refuse the hostages, [171];
- removes the two queens to Stirling, [172];
- receives submission of Arran and absolves him, [174];
- crowns the queen, [175];
- resolves to crush the Reformation, [177];
- goes to Perth, condemns six Protestants to death, [181];
- persecutes them in Forfarshire, [182];
- on appearance of English army at Leith, flies from Edinburgh with Arran, [183];
- sets a body of armed men to waylay Wishart, [196];
- imprisons Wishart, [197];
- convokes the bishops, [197];
- arms his men to escort them and Wishart, [198];
- presides at his trial, [198] sqq.;
- witnesses his martyrdom, [205] sqq.;
- marries his daughter to David Lindsay, [208];
- quarrels with Norman Lesley, [209];
- a conspiracy formed against him, orders his partisans to meet him at Falkland, [209];
- his castle seized by Norman Lesley, [211];
- murdered, [212];
- opinions on the murder, [214]
- Beatoun, James, primate of Scotland, gathering of the Hamiltons in his palace, vi. [16];
- dissensions with the queen-mother and the nobles, [22];
- deprived of the Great Seal by Angus, [23];
- plots with the priests against Angus, [23];
- in concealment in Fifeshire, [24];
- returns to St. Andrews, [28];
- cites Patrick Hamilton before him, [28];
- invites him to a conference, [48];
- cites him on a charge of heresy, [54];
- orders his arrest, [59];
- pronounces sentence on him, [64];
- sanctions imprisonment of Alesius, [78];
- condemns Seaton's doctrines, [88];
- imprisons Thomas Forrest, [92];
- leaves his see to his nephew David, [124]
- Beatrice of Portugal, married to duke Charles III., i. [218];
- reception of, at Geneva, [219] sqq.;
- birth of a son, [234];
- deputation of women to her in behalf of Levrier, [251];
- quits Geneva, [251]; ii. [452]
- Beaugency, ancient custom at, ii. [6]
- Becon, Thomas, quoted, iv. [162]
- Beda, syndic of the Sorbonne, advises persecution of Lutherans, i. [332], [333];
- reports on Berquin's works, [334];
- principal of Montaigu College, [386];
- attacks Berquin, [403];
- his refutation of Erasmus, [404];
- arrested, [405];
- attacked by Berquin, [406];
- urges persecution of Berquin, [431], [432]; ii. [34], [36], [40];
- attacks the professors, [59];
- his charges dismissed by the parliament, [60];
- adopted by the Sorbonne, [60];
- declaims against reformers, [90];
- urges arrest of preachers, [119];
- general in the war against Lutherans, [121];
- sets mendicant friars to work, [121], [122];
- confined to his house by the king's order, [124];
- breaks loose, [125];
- appears before the parliament, [129];
- banished, [130];
- his departure, [133];
- censor of books, [167];
- detects heresy in Margaret's Mirror, [167];
- returns to Paris, [230];
- attacks professors of University of Paris, [230];
- demands burning of Roussel and others, [231];
- his debate with Roussel in the prison, [233];
- his Remonstrance read by the king, [233];
- imprisoned, [233];
- accuses the king, iii. [115];
- charged with treason, his imprisonment and death, [116]; iv. [40]
- Bell, Dr., joint commissioner to Oxford University, iv. [33]
- Bellantes, Antonio, his friendship with Paleario, iv. [439];
- his mother, [440];
- her property stolen by the monks, [440]
- Bellantes, Faustus, warns Paleario, iv. [441];
- at his trial, [441], [451]
- —, Evander, at trial of Paleario, iv. [451]
- Bellegarde, Sieur de, prepares ambuscade for Levrier, i. [246];
- seizes and takes him to castle of Bonne, [247];
- tortures him, [251];
- treachery to Bonivard, ii. [406];
- envoy to the emperor, iii. [282];
- bribes the grand equerry, [262];
- has audience of Charles V., [263];
- interview with Granvella, [265];
- his letter to the duke, [266];
- his plans against Geneva, [267];
- projects a fortress, [273]
- Bellessert, Captain, commands one of the bands against Lutherans, iii. [378];
- strikes down Philippe, and is wounded by him, [387]
- Bembo, Pietro, Cardinal, iv. [432], [465], [482]
- Benoit, Andrew, goes to Geneva, vi. [299]
- [[Spirituals]]
- Berger, Nicholas, assassinated by Pennet, iv. [233]
- Bergeron, G., syndic of Geneva, i. [308]
- Bernard, Carmelite, martyrdom of, vii. [516]
- Bernard of Lublin, vii. [422]
- Bernard, Claude, iii. [277], [296], [314];
- his daughter, [325], [327], [328];
- rescues Froment, [347];
- aids in rescue of Olivétan, [363];
- leads Huguenots in the fight in the Molard, [416];
- receives evangelists into his house, v. [245], [247], [250];
- proposes suppression of the mass, &c., [275]
- Bernard, Jacques, superior of Franciscans, converted by Farel's preaching, iv. [254]; v. [251];
- preaches in convent church, [251];
- undertakes a public disputation, [253];
- ten theses, [254], [255], [263];
- at the debate, [265] sqq.;
- appointed pastor at Geneva, vi. [414]
- Bernard, John, i. [57], [134], [256]; ii. [333]
- Bernard, Louis, throws off his priestly robes, iv. [283];
- marries, [305];
- writes to Calvin, vii. [14]
- Berne, i. [154], [155], [182];
- friendly to Geneva, [276], [277];
- embassy to Geneva, [280];
- exiles at, [283];
- receives news of Huguenot triumph at Geneva, [302];
- alliance with Friburg and Geneva, [303], [305], [306], [307], [308], [310], [376];
- Genevese and Savoyard deputations to, ii. [307];
- admonishes duke of Savoy, [338];
- warns Geneva, [338];
- triumph of the Scriptures at, [346];
- Bernese Lutherans at Geneva, [385], [390], [392], [400], [420];
- prepares to succour Geneva, [424], [432];
- asks help of Geneva, [442];
- refuses help to Geneva, [445];
- deputies propose renunciation of alliance, [446];
- demands it again, [449];
- Genevese embassy to, [450];
- alliance maintained, [450];
- joint-suzerain of Orbe, iii. [205];
- orders that all fathers of families should attend Farel's preaching, [217];
- opens churches at Granson to reformers, [238], [239];
- with Friburg publishes first act of religious liberty in Switzerland, [244];
- intervenes in favor of religious liberty at Geneva, [365];
- counter embassies to, from Geneva, [402], [403], [404];
- embassy to Geneva, [428];
- the deputies counsel yielding to the bishop, [453];
- sends Farel to Geneva, iv. [207];
- embassy to Geneva, [215];
- protects the reformers, [216];
- compels opening of a church to them, [219];
- insists upon trial of Furbity, [220];
- deputies assist at his examination, [243] sqq., [255];
- farewell of the embassy, [256];
- intervention on behalf of Maisonneuve, [273];
- Genevese embassy to, [309];
- exhorts Savoy and Burgundy to cease hostilities against Geneva, [317], [318];
- intervenes for Maisonneuve and Janin, [322];
- supports duke of Savoy, [340];
- refuses aid to Geneva, v. [316];
- negotiates with duke of Savoy on its behalf, [360];
- helps Geneva, [372];
- declares war against duke of Savoy, [373];
- march of the army under Nägueli, [374];
- demands sovereignty of Geneva, [397];
- reduction and annexation of Vaud, [398];
- the envoys at Aosta, [450], [451];
- the Bernese take Yverdun, and abolish Romish worship, vi. [229];
- edict issued for disputation at Lausanne, [234];
- ordinances for the Pays de Vaud, [263];
- treaty with Lausanne, [265];
- issues edict of reformation for the Pays de Vaud, [272];
- synod of, [320];
- another synod convoked, [327];
- a patched-up peace, [327];
- another synod, [327] sqq.;
- deputies of, at Geneva, support the malcontent Huguenots, [340];
- letter to the Reformers, [348];
- an embassy to Geneva promised, [348];
- and not sent, [349];
- sanctions the Genevese confession, [350];
- dismissal of Megander, [367];
- deputation of country pastors to Berne, [367], [368];
- views of Bernese on church and state, [371];
- on worship, [372];
- convoke a synod at Lausanne, [373];
- letters to Calvin and the Council of Geneva, [376];
- letter of the council to the Genevese on behalf of Calvin and Farel, [418];
- delegates sent with them to Geneva, [431];
- received by the council, [433];
- dispute about treaty with Geneva, [512];
- a new treaty, [513];
- quarrel about it, [514];
- summons the Genevese to a trial at Lausanne, [516];
- sentence against Geneva, [516];
- proposes fresh discussion, [517]
- Berquin, Louis, arrested and liberated, i. [332];
- his character, [332];
- preaching in Artois, [332];
- assailed by priests and nobles, [333];
- his books examined by the Sorbonne, [334];
- imprisoned, [335];
- interrogated, [343];
- threatened with the stake, [343];
- proceedings stopped by Francis I., [344];
- partial liberation, [358];
- set free, [377];
- his task, [378];
- resolves to attack the papal power, [403];
- letter to Erasmus, [404];
- rejects advice of Erasmus, [405];
- attacks Beda and the Sorbonne, [406];
- censured by Erasmus, [407];
- abuse of, [431]; ii. [30];
- judges appointed to try him, [33];
- Margaret's intercession, [34];
- arrested, [35];
- his letter discovered, [35];
- sentence pronounced, [36];
- appeals, [37];
- efforts of Budaeus, [38];
- a fall and a recovery, [39];
- sentenced to be burnt, [40];
- execution hurried on, [41];
- martyrdom, [43] sqq.;
- effect on spectators, [44], [55]
- Berthaud, appointed to preach in Paris, ii. [117];
- his end, [119];
- confined by the king's orders, [125];
- forbidden to preach, [228];
- burning of, demanded by Beda, [231];
- set free, [234];
- arrested, iii. [113];
- before the king, [117];
- sent to a convent, [125]
- Berthelier, Philibert, Genevese patriot, i. [2];
- his character and aim, [30], [36], [39];
- accepts from the Bastard the government of Peney, [40];
- friendship with Bonivard, [47], [50];
- tears up his commission, [56];
- his school of liberty, [59], [64];
- frustrates attempt of the duke to seize Levrier, [64];
- his intercourse with Bonivard, [66], [67], [68];
- calls a meeting of patriots, [69] sqq.;
- his exhortation to unity, [70];
- watched by agents of the bishop, [71];
- practical joke about Claude Gros' mule, [73];
- threatened with a fine by the vidame, [74];
- scheme to get rid of him, [76], [80];
- demanded by the bishop, [83];
- warned, [83];
- escapes with the Friburgers, [84];
- the search for him, [84];
- at Friburg, [84];
- his speech to the guilds, [86];
- offered a pardon by the duke, [92];
- alleged to be a 'charmer', [97];
- his return to Geneva, [110];
- promotes the Swiss alliance, [110];
- obstacle to destruction of liberty, [112];
- his trial, [112];
- his energy and devotion, [130], [131];
- his proposition for consultation of patriots, [134];
- his friendship with Marty, of Friburg, [136];
- rouses the Genevese to action, [143];
- tried by the syndics and acquitted by the council, [144];
- rejects bribe offered by the duke, [153], [160], [161], [173], [178], [185];
- the bishop 'watches for' him, [188];
- his serenity, [188];
- his retreat, [188];
- arrested, [189];
- in prison, [190];
- his religious faith, [191];
- refuses to be tried by Desbois, [192];
- proposal to rescue him, [193];
- sentence of death, [195];
- execution, [196];
- procession through Geneva, [196];
- impression produced by his death, [197];
- sanguis semen, [198], [213], [282];
- his memory honored, [314]; iv. [210]
- 'Bésolles war,' the, i. [181], [207]
- Beyaerts, Jan, vii. [550], [551];
- removes pictures from the churches, [552];
- arrested, [554], [555]
- Beza, Theodore, i. [386], [396], [398]; ii. [8], [19], [21], [22];
- birth and early life of, first meets Calvin, [23]
- Bible, the, in French, prohibited in France, i. [342];
- difficulty of obtaining at Paris, ii. [87];
- Latin, of Stephens, [87];
- first French published, v. [272];
- act passed by Scottish parliament for freedom to read, vi. [163]
- [[Tyndale], [Cromwell], [Cranmer], and names of various versions]
- Biderman, John [[Blanchet]]
- Billik, Carmelite, papal delegate at Ratisbon, viii. [102]
- Bilney, Thomas, character and opinions of, iv. [77];
- his preaching, [78];
- friendship with Latimer, [78];
- arrested, [79];
- attempts of monks to convert him, [79];
- his trial, [80];
- condemned, [80];
- his last evening, [81];
- martyrdom, [82], [83], [93]
- Bishopers and Commoners, at Geneva, ii. [329], [350]
- Bishops, of England, their reply to petition of the Commons, iv. [13], [14];
- the reply criticised, [15];
- resist attack on their privileges, [17];
- their subterfuge, [18];
- alliance with the king against reformers, [72];
- attempt to impose on lower clergy the payment promised to the king, [73] sqq.;
- begin persecution of Lutherans, [77];
- submit to the king, [89];
- their oath at consecration, [89];
- renounce orders of the pope prejudicial to the king, [90];
- election of, regulated, [180];
- declare the papacy a human invention, [181];
- suspension of their jurisdiction, v. [83];
- decline to answer German envoys, viii. [156];
- find a compromise impossible, [180], [181];
- protest against referring the translation of the Bible to the universities, [257]
- Bishops, government by, i. [284], [285];
- arguments for temporal power, iii. [452]
- Bishops in Denmark, excluded from the Diet, vii. [220]
- 'Bishop's Book,' the, viii. [261]
- Blancherose, physician, takes part in disputation at Lausanne, vi. [242], [245], [250], [253], [254]
- Blanchet, i. [69];
- his adventures, [109];
- imprisoned at Turin, [114];
- his examination, [115];
- tortured, [116], [121];
- sentenced to death, [122];
- beheaded, [123];
- treatment of his remains, [123], [124];
- agitation in Geneva, [124], [127], [182]
- Blois, Roussel and Lefèvre at, i. [363];
- a 'placard' on the king's door, iii. [106]
- Bockhold [[John of Leyden]]
- Bocking, Friar, instigates imposture of Maid of Kent, v. [8], [9];
- before Star Chamber, [15]
- Bocquet, Christopher, preaches at Geneva, iii. [329];
- again, [336], [353];
- ordered to leave Geneva, [354]
- Boehmer, Edward, his researches on the brothers Valder, iv. [457 note], [467 note]
- Bohemia, the Reformation in, vii. [417];
- the Calixtines, [417];
- the Taborites, [417]
- Boiling to death, penalty for poisoning, iv. [68]
- Bois-le-Duc, martyrs at, vii. [537]
- Boisseau de la Borderie, Jean, iii. [46]
- Bologna, Conference of, ii. [142] sqq.;
- another congress, iv. [22];
- meeting of Clement VII. and Charles V., [126];
- beginning of reformation at, [451];
- address of evangelicals to John of Planitz, [452]
- Bologna, University of, appealed to by Henry VIII. on his divorce, iv. [40];
- the judgment, [41]
- Boniface VIII., Pope, ii. [461]
- Boniface, Cardinal bishop of Ivrea, arrests Curione and his friends, iv. [416]
- Bonivard, Francis, his arrival at Geneva, i. [46];
- birth and education, [46];
- friendship with Berthelier, [47], [50], [57];
- rejects proposal made to him to seize Levrier, [63], [64];
- warns him, [64];
- his character, [67];
- fascinates Berthelier, [67];
- their intercourse and aims, [67], [68];
- his difference with the bishop, [72], [76], [80], [83], [96];
- attempts to save Pécolat, [98];
- resolves to 'bell the cat', [100];
- gets inhibition of the metropolitan served on the bishop, [100];
- his advice to Pécolat's friends, [103], [104];
- goes to Rome, [117];
- what he saw there, [118];
- fails in his suit for bishopric, [120];
- warned of danger at Turin, [121];
- his flight, [121];
- discouraged, [131], [134], [143], [151], [153];
- his speech in chapter, [157];
- his protest, [159];
- pacifies the people threatening the canons, [160], [161], [168], [169];
- escapes from Geneva, [173], [175];
- betrayed, [185];
- compelled to resign his priory, [186];
- imprisoned by the duke, [186], [191], [199];
- set at liberty, [211], [245], [255], [264];
- his estimate of La Baume, [265];
- restored to his priory, [314];
- advocates expulsion of the prince-bishop, ii. [329], [334], [336];
- detested by papal party, [348];
- threatened with expulsion from his priory, [348];
- his estimate of excommunication, [349];
- reflections on state of Geneva, [352], [353];
- his reply to proposal of Huguenots, [354];
- his fief at Cartigny, [358];
- maintains reciprocity of rights between prince and subject, [358];
- obtains support of the council to his claim, [359];
- takes possession of Cartigny, [360];
- loses it, [360];
- his expedition to recover it, [360];
- his grass mown by Pontverre, [371];
- among the Lutherans, [385];
- his raids to recover his rents, [401];
- fires at the papal proctor, [401];
- illness of his mother, [402];
- obtains safe-conduct to visit her, [403];
- at Seyssel, [403];
- slandered at Geneva, [403];
- perplexity, [404];
- safe-conduct extended, [405];
- proposes to give up his priory, [405];
- at Moudon, [406];
- journey to Lausanne, [406];
- kidnapped, [407];
- imprisoned at Chillon, [408];
- treatment, [408];
- liberation of, demanded and refused, [432];
- incidents of his confinement, v. [399];
- orders given for his death, [400];
- liberated, [401];
- made free of city of Geneva, marries, [416];
- a prediction fulfilled, [417], [418]
- Bonivard, Jean Aimé, prior of St. Victor, i. [46];
- orders his culverins to be cast into church bells, [47];
- his death, [47]
- Bonner, Edmund, envoy to Marseilles, iv. [168];
- forces his way into the pope's palace, [169];
- presents the king's appeal to a council, [170];
- threatened by the pope, [173];
- ambassador in France, viii. [177];
- conveys to Cromwell the Bibles printed at Paris, [177];
- appointed bishop of London, [202];
- declares against Cromwell, [211];
- his activity, [237];
- assails Grafton, [238];
- persecutes citizens of London, [238] sqq.;
- admonitions to his diocese, [257]
- Borthwick, Sir John, cited before Cardinal Beatoun, escapes to England, vi. [127];
- his property confiscated and his effigy burnt, [128];
- withdraws from the court, [168]
- Bothniensis, Nicolaus, president of assembly at Upsala, vii. [340]
- Bothwell, Earl of, opens negotiations on the part of Scottish nobility with Northumberland, vi. [85];
- withdraws from the court, [168];
- sides with Beatoun, [169];
- prohibits preaching of Wishart in Haddingtonshire, [194];
- arrests him, [196];
- gives him up to the regent, [197]
- Boulet, Bernard, treasurer of Geneva, i. [257];
- assaulted by Richardet, [258];
- his friends turn it to account, [259];
- reports it to ducal council, [259];
- appears at a general council, [260];
- condemned, [285]
- Bourbon, Constable of, i. [325], [337]
- Bourges, University of, ii. [23];
- centre of reformed doctrine, [24], [29];
- declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [40]
- Bouteville, Prior of, iii. [14], [17]
- Boxley, fraud of monks at, v. [89]
- Brandenburg, George, margrave of, vii. [392]
- Brask, bishop of Linkoping, resolves to suppress the Lutheran heresy, vii. [242], [243];
- entreats the pope that Olaf may be sentenced to death, [244], [257];
- his violence, [262];
- remonstrates with Magnus, [263];
- demands trial of the reformers, [263];
- circulates books against them, [264];
- his services to Sweden, [268];
- letters to Gustavus, [268];
- excommunicates Olaf, [268];
- stirs up the people against him, [269];
- censures the primate, [276];
- attends diet of Westeraas, [282];
- at secret meeting of the bishops, instigates opposition to reforms, [283];
- gains Thure Joensson, [284];
- his speech at the diet, [287];
- deprived of his castle, [294], [295];
- leaves Sweden, [295];
- his death, [295]
- Brereton, William, arrested, v. [136];
- examined, [148];
- beheaded, [159]
- Briconnet, bishop of Meaux, i. [355], [366], [428]; ii. [57]; iii. [76]
- Brion, Denis, burnt, iv. [364]
- Brothers, enmities of, viii. [99];
- love of, [119], [120]
- Brouwart, Jean de, i. [349]
- Brown, George, made archbishop of Dublin, v. [131]
- Bruccioli, translates New Testament into Italian, iv. [410]
- Bruly, Pierre, preaches at Ghent, vii. [546];
- removes to Strasburg, [547]
- Brunswick, beginning of reformation at, viii. [319];
- evangelical preaching decreed, [319];
- organization by Pomeranus, [320]
- Brussels, the reformation at, vii. [565];
- persecution, [568] sqq.
- Bucer, reformer, his qualifications as peacemaker, ii. [62];
- his confidence in Margaret, [63];
- letter to Luther, [63], [88], [89], [183];
- interview with William Du Bellay, [245];
- mission of Chelius to, [263];
- his proposals examined before Francis I., [264] sqq.; iii. [67];
- his opinion of Servetus, [86], [150], [152], [153], [154];
- with Calvin visits Erasmus, [156];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42], [349], [352], [353];
- prepares to go to France, [361];
- his works read in Italy, [408];
- joint envoy to Henry VIII., v. [118];
- proposes a conference with Calvin, vi. [275];
- advocates union of Lutherans and Zwinglians, [324];
- defended by Myconius and Grynæus at Basel, [325];
- gets another synod held at Berne, [327];
- with Capito goes to Berne, [327];
- his views, [328];
- agrees to Calvin's view of the sacrament, [329];
- revises Megander's catechism, [366];
- attends synod of Zürich, [422];
- invites Calvin to Strasburg, [445];
- acquaintance with Juan Diaz, viii. [101];
- delegate to conference of Ratisbon, [102];
- writes to Cranmer, [147], [187]
- Buchanan, George, sent to Paris, vi. [16];
- his epitaph on Madeleine of Valois, [108];
- account of him, [118];
- imprisoned, [119];
- escapes to France, [119]
- Buckmaster, Dr., vice-chancellor of Cambridge University, iv. [29], [30], [31], [37];
- presents the sentence on the divorce to the king, [37];
- conference with the king, [38]
- Budaeus, William, ii. [9];
- one of the judges on trial of Berquin, [36];
- tries to save him, [38] sqq., [40], [50], [65], [140];
- present at torture of De la Croix, [242]; iv. [393]
- Budé, Matthew, goes with Juan Diaz to Geneva, viii. [101]
- Bugenhagen [[Pomeranus]]
- Bullinger, iv. [353]; vi. [323]; vii. [23]; viii. [144], [145];
- dedicates works to Henry VIII., [146], [147]
- Bulls, papal, proclamation of Henry VIII. against, iv. [44]
- Burgos, viii. [38], [41]
- Burgundians, at Geneva, i. [9];
- compilation of code, i. [9];
- first and second kingdoms of the, [9]
- Burgundy, Marshal of, takes part with Savoy in advance on Geneva, iv. [310], [315]
- Burrey, Denis, governor to Erick, son of Gustavus Vasa, vii. [325], [326];
- goes in search of Erick and is slain by his order, [329]
- Bursinel, meeting of knights at, Order of the Spoon instituted, ii. [355]
- Butler, John, writes to Bullinger, viii. [198]
- [[Students, English]]
- Cadan, peace of, ii. [255]; iv. [373]
- Cadena, Louis of, opposes scholasticism, viii. [16];
- his exile, [17]
- Cajetan, Cardinal, sent into Hungary, vii. [351]
- Calcagnini, Celio, iv. [427]
- Calixtines, the, in Bohemia, vii. [417];
- correspond with Luther, [418], [421];
- the majority adopt his views, [421]
- Calmar, blockaded by the Danes, vii. [246]
- Calmar, Union of, vii. [121];
- violated by Sweden, [128];
- dissolved, [257]
- Calvi, bookseller of Pavia, circulates the works of the reformers, iv. [407], [408]
- Calvin, i. [2], [4];
- distinction between his reformation and that of Luther, [4];
- his influence on politics, [4];
- his disciples in foreign countries, [5];
- founder of American republic, [5];
- the charge of despotism against him, [5];
- his plea for Servetus, [6];
- his work, [68], [317];
- his great idea, [319];
- the complete reformer, [321];
- his origin, [322];
- compared with Margaret of Angoulême, [323] sqq.;
- enters college of La Marche, [381];
- influence of Mathurin Cordier on him, [382], [383];
- removes to Montaigu College, [384];
- a Spanish professor, [385];
- classical studies, [385];
- his moral and devout character, [386];
- a strict Romanist, [386];
- a hard student, [386];
- has a benefice, visits Noyon, [387];
- first breath of the new Gospel, [387];
- friendship with Olivétan, [388];
- chronology of his student life obscure, [388];
- intercourse with Olivétan, [389];
- resists Olivétan's innovations in religion, [389];
- secret struggles, [390];
- alarm of his teachers, [390];
- confession to the priest, [391];
- distress of mind, [391];
- conversion, [394];
- reverence for church authority, [396];
- investigates claims of the pope of Rome, [397];
- longing for unity with truth, [398];
- results of his conversion, [398];
- its date, [399];
- shyness and reserve, [400];
- his father's grief and plan, [400], [401];
- consents to study law, [401], [404]
- —, goes to Orleans, ii. [1];
- enters household of Duchemin, [2];
- falls under influence of L'Etoile, [3], [4], [5];
- proctor of the Picard nation, [6];
- demands the maille de Florence at Beaugency, [6];
- a close student, [7];
- visits house of F. Daniel, [8];
- acquaintance with Wolmar begins, [9];
- studies Greek, [10];
- his fellowship with Wolmar, [11];
- inward struggles, [11];
- accused of schism, [12];
- sympathy with the Psalmist, [12];
- phases of his conversion, [14];
- renunciation of the world, [15];
- his motto, [16];
- his great qualities recognized, [16];
- study of the Bible and of the law, [17];
- sought as a teacher, [17];
- teaches in families, [18];
- called to Noyon, [20];
- his father's illness, [20] sqq.;
- his first extant letter, [21];
- first meeting with Beza, [22];
- goes to Bourges, [23];
- reads works of Luther and Melanchthon, [24];
- Wolmar's appeal to him, [25];
- hesitation, [25];
- preaches, [27];
- intrigues of priest, [28];
- again called to Noyon, his father's death, [29], [47], [48];
- curé of Pont l'Evêque, [49];
- preaches, [49];
- goes to Paris, [50], [51];
- his visitors, [51] sqq.;
- visit to a nunnery, [52];
- social habits, [54];
- renounces the law, [54];
- speaks at secret meetings, [55];
- his extensive correspondence, [56];
- returns to Paris, [58];
- observant of the Sorbonne, [60];
- works in obscurity, [61];
- his activity, [87];
- rejects Daniel's proposal of office in Roman church, [84];
- his commentary on Seneca, [85];
- publishes it, [86];
- form of his name, [86];
- makes his book known, [87];
- a search for Bibles, [87];
- interview with a young 'Frondeur', [89];
- writes to Bucer, [89];
- intercourse with La Forge, [90];
- with Tillet, [91];
- abstinence, [92];
- first intercourse with Margaret of Navarre, [93];
- declines to enter her service, [93];
- quoted, [123];
- preaches at Paris, [138], [176], [178], [183], [184];
- his labors at Paris, [198];
- writes address for Cop to deliver, [199];
- the address, [199];
- his idea of a universal church, [202];
- in favor with Margaret, [205];
- interview with her, [205];
- his arrest ordered by the parliament, [209];
- escapes, [210];
- recognized on his way, [211];
- in concealment, [212], [262];
- his narrative of conversion of the provostess of Orléans, [272] sqq.
- —, flight, iii. [4];
- received by Du Tillet, [6];
- his Doxopolis, [8];
- his studies, [9];
- sketches his Christian Institutes, [10];
- combats materialism, [12];
- love of nature, [13];
- teaches Greek, [14];
- visits prior of Bouteville, [15];
- conferences, [16];
- sermons, [18];
- preaches in Latin, [18];
- visits Roussel, [22];
- visits Lefèvre, [23];
- goes to Poitiers, [44];
- attends disputations at the university, [45];
- his friends, [47];
- his teaching, [47];
- visits the lieutenant-general, [48];
- in the garden, [48];
- his grotto, [51];
- view of the mass, [52], [53];
- sends evangelists into France, [58];
- care for the young, [60];
- leaves Poitiers, [64];
- renunciation of Roman orders, [64], [65];
- goes to Paris, [66];
- saddened, [77];
- first contact with the Spirituals, [78];
- attacks them, [81], [82];
- encounters Servetus, [86];
- agrees to conference with him, [87];
- Servetus absents himself, [87];
- first theological work, Psychopannychia, [88];
- his bitterness, [89];
- leaves Paris, [91];
- reaches Strasburg, [91];
- comments on procession of relics, [127] sqq.;
- his mission, [149];
- received by Zell, [150];
- friendships, [153];
- his estimate of Strasburg reformers, [153];
- meets Erasmus at Friburg, [156];
- goes to Basel, [157];
- received by Catherine Klein, [157];
- silent growth, [159];
- friendships, [160];
- his book on Immortality criticised, [161];
- translation of New Testament, [162];
- hears of persecution at Paris, [163];
- his plea for compassion, [163];
- effect of the martyrdoms on him, [169];
- resolves to publish his Institutes, [170];
- goes to the fountain head, [171];
- account of the Institutes, [172], [180];
- letter to the king, [182];
- publication of the Institutes, [191];
- starts for Italy, [192];
- his object, [193];
- agreement of Luther and Calvin, [368];
- in preparation for Geneva, [458]
- —, his influence in England, iv. [2];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., [42];
- his place in the Reformation, [208];
- protests against union with popery, [353];
- writes to Francis I., [383];
- welcomes Caraccioli at Geneva, [464];
- expected at Ferrara, [489]
- —, expected at Ferrara, v. [421];
- arrives at Ferrara, [421];
- his interviews with the duchess, [422], [423];
- preaches, [426];
- his portrait painted by Titian, [431];
- intercourse with Master François, [431] sqq.;
- his letter to Duchemin, [436], [437];
- writes to Roussel, [439] sqq.;
- his influence in Italy, [441];
- arrested by the Inquisition, [444];
- rescued, [445];
- his wanderings, [446];
- reaches Aosta, [447], [451];
- 'Calvin's farm', [452], [453];
- monuments of his flight, [454];
- returns to France, [455];
- at Noyon, [455];
- arrives at Geneva, [456];
- meeting with Farel, [458];
- consents to stay at Geneva, [462];
- visits Basel, [463];
- his vocation as reformer, [464];
- his concession to the state, [465];
- his place in history, [466] sqq.;
- mention of him in a council minute, [469]
- —, his arrival at Geneva, vi. [221];
- refuses any official charge, [222];
- reader in holy Scripture, [222];
- character of his teaching, [223];
- his view of church discipline, [225];
- retained by advice of the council, [228];
- goes with Farel to Lausanne, [228], [236];
- his speeches at the disputation, [247], [255];
- begins to take part in church government, [273];
- his work compared with Luther's and Zwingli's, [275];
- elected pastor at Geneva, [276];
- biographies of him, [276 note];
- prepares a catechism, [280], [281];
- and a confession of faith, [282];
- his memoir on order in the church, [285] sqq.;
- requires that all should profess the reformed faith, [292];
- encounters the Spirituals, [299] sqq.;
- intervenes between Viret and Caroli at Lausanne, [300], [307];
- accused of Arianism by Caroli, [308];
- his reply, [309];
- avoids use of the term 'Trinity', [310];
- writes to Megander, [312];
- goes to Berne, urges assembly of a synod, [312];
- at synod of Lausanne, [313];
- unmasks Caroli, [315];
- his confession on the Trinity, [315];
- his views of the early creeds, [317];
- confronts Caroli at synod of Berne, [320];
- his speech at another synod, lays the storm between Zwinglians and Lutherans, [331], [332];
- gains support of the civil power in church affairs, [333];
- pleads for the hospitals and the schools, [334];
- proposes compulsory swearing to the confession of faith, [337];
- at the council, [347];
- goes to Berne, vindicates himself and the reformers, [348];
- applies to the council for their support, [350];
- proposes to the council to exclude the disturbers from the Lord's Supper, [352];
- difference with Du Tillet, [356];
- blames the proceedings of the government and is warned to let it alone, [364];
- writes to Bucer, [370];
- excluded by Berne from colloquies of the Vaudois, [372];
- sent with Farel and Jean Philippe to synod of Lausanne, [373];
- has conference with Bernese delegates, [375];
- before the council, [377], [378];
- protests against imprisonment of Courault, [383];
- refuses to accept order for adoption of Bernese usages, and is forbidden to preach, [386];
- his perplexity, [389], [390];
- with Farel declines to administer the supper, [392];
- his embarrassment, [392], [393];
- preaches, [398], [399];
- a disturbance in the church, [401];
- banished, [403];
- is refused a hearing by the council, [405];
- sentence of the general council, [406];
- his reflections, [408];
- leaves Geneva, [409];
- goes to Berne, [416];
- with Farel complains to the council, [416], [417];
- at synod of Zürich, [421] sqq.;
- his demands, [422];
- returns to Berne, [426];
- interview with Kunz, [427];
- before the senate, [429];
- reconducted to Geneva by Bernese, [431];
- banished by vote of general council, [439];
- at Berne, [441];
- at Basel, [442];
- at Strasburg, [445];
- returns to Basel, [446];
- settles at Strasburg, [447];
- his letter to the Genevese, [453];
- his position at Strasburg, [456], [457], [458];
- pastor and teacher, [459], [460];
- his view of the Lord's Supper, [461];
- his poverty, [462];
- at Frankfort, [473];
- meets Melanchthon, [474] sqq.;
- replies to Sadoleto, [487] sqq.;
- intercourse with Caroli, [498];
- refuses to return to Geneva, [504];
- household troubles, [504];
- marriage projects, [505], [506];
- Idelette de Bure, [508];
- married, [509];
- difference between wives of Luther and Calvin, [510];
- attends assembly at Hagenau, [511];
- fruits of exile, [526]
- —, his recall desired, vii. [3];
- letter to his friends, [3], [4], [5];
- his perplexity, [6], [9], [10];
- deputy to conference at Worms, [7];
- receives letter of recall, [8];
- his reply to Geneva, [10], [11];
- meets Melanchthon and Cruciger at Worms, [15];
- friendship with Melanchthon, [15] sqq.;
- his Song of Victory, [19];
- deputy to diet of Ratisbon, [21];
- letter to Bernard, [21];
- loses his friend Feray, [23];
- his estimate of Contarini, [25];
- his part at Ratisbon, [26];
- his reply to manifesto of the papacy, [27-36];
- resists concessions made by the Protestants, [37];
- writes against reference to a council, [38];
- his moderation, [39];
- complains of the princes, [40];
- leaves Ratisbon, [41];
- at Strasburg, [42];
- edict of expulsion revoked, [43];
- writes to Farel, [47];
- leaves Strasburg, [48];
- visits Farel at Neuchâtel, [49];
- returns to Geneva, [51];
- his house there, [52], [53];
- benefit of his Strasburg life, [53];
- before the council, [54], [55];
- colleagues appointed to draw up with him articles of a constitution of a church, [55], [56];
- his project of the ordinances, [60];
- his desire for frequent communion, [74];
- limits of his responsibility for ecclesiastical ordinances, [80], [81];
- his active duties, [82];
- his preaching, [82];
- his method, [83];
- his sermon to young men, [86];
- on fitful devotion, [87];
- on self-love, [88];
- on grace unbounded, [90];
- on predestination, [92];
- his impartiality, [103];
- efforts for peace, [104];
- gentleness and strength, [105];
- loses his friend Porral, [110];
- illness of his wife, [110];
- reconciles Pierre Tissot and his mother, [112], [113];
- his place in the Reformation, [115] sqq.;
- his doctrines moderate, [117];
- compared with Zwinglius, [117];
- his desire for union, [118]
- —, correspondence with Enzinas, viii. [98];
- visited by English students, [144];
- his view of the Six Articles, [189]
- Cambray, treaty of, ii. [61]
- Cambray, bishop of, his cruelties, iii. [437]
- Cambridge, University of, appealed to by Henry VIII. on his divorce, iv. [30];
- meeting of the doctors, &c., [30];
- a committee appointed, [31];
- sentence, [32];
- disowns primacy of the pope, v. [20]
- Camillo, Giulio, invited to Paris by Francis I., iii. [74]
- Campbell, Alexander, prior of the Dominicans, his interviews with Patrick Hamilton, vi. [52];
- reports them to Beatoun, [53];
- accuses him on his trial, [62];
- insults him at the stake, [67];
- dies mad, [68]
- Campbell, John, of Cessnock, protects Lollards, vi. [6];
- denounced by monks, [7];
- acquitted by James IV., [8]
- Campeggio, papal legate, ii. [144];
- deprived of See of Salisbury, iv. [180];
- at diet of Nürnberg, [410], [411];
- reclaims see of Salisbury, v. [173]
- Canaye, Jacques, iii. [75]
- Canirmius, Frederick, vii. [500]
- Canons, i. [157];
- conspiracy of, at Geneva, [311];
- imprisoned, ii. [326];
- liberated, [331];
- quit Geneva, [332]
- Canterbury, visitation of, v. [85], [86];
- state of the monasteries, [86], [87]
- Capito, i. [361], [380]; ii. [246]; iii. [150], [153], [154], [244];
- writes to Calvin, vi. [275];
- at synod of Berne, [329];
- agrees to Calvin's view of the sacrament, [332];
- attends synod of Zürich, [421];
- approves the course taken by Farel and Calvin, [424], [425];
- his distress, [464];
- dedicates a book to Henry VIII., viii. [147]
- Cappel, battle of, ii. [256], [442];
- announced at Geneva, [444]; iii. [166]
- Caraccioli, Galeazzo, iv. [464];
- friendship with Caserta, [464];
- converted, goes to Geneva, [464];
- made cardinal, v. [64]
- Caraffa, Giovanni Pietro, Cardinal, iv. [476], [479], [482];
- made cardinal, 487; viii. [149]
- Cardinals, college of, refuses consent to papal gift of Geneva to Savoy, i. [52];
- hats asked for by Charles V., Francis I., and Henry VIII., ii. [162]
- Carlstadt, invited by Christian II., goes to Denmark, vii. [133];
- offends by his violent speech and is dismissed, [135], [136]
- Carmentrant, a creature of the Bastard of Savoy, i. [71], [72], [112]
- Carne, Sir E., envoy with Revett to the pope, v. [3], [4];
- interview with Du Bellay at Bologna, [4];
- too late, [5]
- Carnesecchi, Pietro, among friends of Valdez, iv. [473];
- character and career of, [473];
- his power under Clement VII., [474];
- goes to Naples, has interview with Charles V., [473];
- religious decision, [476], [477], [479], [480]
- Caroli, Peter, escapes to Switzerland, iii. [123];
- accounts of, v. [259];
- Farel's interview with him, [261];
- offers himself as umpire at a disputation, [262];
- takes part in disputation, [266] sqq.;
- at disputation of Lausanne, vi. [243] sqq.;
- made first pastor of Lausanne by the Bernese, [265];
- his career and character, [303], [304];
- between Rome and the Gospel, [304];
- quarrels with Viret, [305];
- condemned to made a retractation, [307];
- but is spared, [307];
- his ambition, [307];
- accuses Calvin and others of Arianism, [308];
- retracts the charge, [311];
- unmasked and condemned at synod of Lausanne, [314], [318];
- appeals to Berne, [318];
- agitation caused by the debates, [319], [320];
- at synod of Berne, exposed by Farel, [321], [322];
- deprived of his functions and banished, [322];
- his flight, [322];
- turns to the reformers, [498];
- at Strasburg, [498];
- goes to Metz, [499];
- his death, [499]
- Carranza, Bartholomeus, birth and early life of, viii. [112], [113];
- denounced to the Inquisition, [113];
- promotions, [113];
- his influence at Valladolid, [113];
- his almost evangelical teachings, [113];
- fervor of his preaching, [118];
- preaches before Philip II., in London, [118];
- assertion of evangelical faith, [120];
- elected primate of Spain, [120];
- his last years, [120];
- preaches at the burning of San Romano, [123]
- Cartelier, Francis, i. [41], [150], [168];
- gives signal for entry of Savoyards into Geneva, [171], [176], [181], [300];
- character, ii. [308];
- condemnation, [308];
- pardoned by the bishop, [309]
- Carthusians, of London, refuse to take oath of succession, v. [47];
- take it, [48];
- commanded by the king to reject papal authority, [59];
- their resolution, [59];
- a general confession, [60];
- again commanded to acknowledge royal supremacy, [60];
- three priors sent to the Tower, [61];
- and found guilty of high treason and executed, [62], [63]
- Casale, Da, agent of Henry VIII. at papal court, v. [64], [77];
- informs the pope of divorce of Queen Anne, [161], [172]
- Caserta, Giovanni Francesco, iv. [464]
- Cassander, George, account of, viii. [40], [41]
- Cassilis, Kennedy, Earl of, taken prisoner by the English, vi. [146];
- liberated and sent to Scotland by Henry VIII., [157];
- on failure of Henry's scheme, returns to captivity, [171];
- released with his brothers, [171];
- a friend of Wishart, [192]
- Catherine of Aragon, Queen of Henry VIII., iv. [26];
- refuses arbitration, [67];
- leaves Windsor, [71];
- writes to the pope, [87];
- refuses to appear before Cranmer at Dunstable, [133];
- her firmness, [133];
- the divorce pronounced, [134];
- her cause and fate compared with Anne's, [137], [138];
- joins in conspiracy against Henry VIII., v. [13];
- her firmness, [19];
- her marriage declared null and her child illegitimate, [19];
- writes to Mary, [111];
- refuses to renounce title of Queen, [111], [112];
- austerities, [112];
- illness, letter to the king, [114];
- her death, [115]
- Catherine de' Medici, i. [363];
- marriage of, with Henry duke of Orleans, proposed by Francis I. ii. [149];
- what she brought to France, [150];
- intrigues around her, [152];
- full powers sent by Francis for concluding the contract, [155];
- escorted to Nice by French fleet, [189];
- the marriage celebrated at Marseilles, [195];
- in her train, Death, [195];
- and corruption, [196], [215]; iii. [49];
- opposes plans of Francis I., iv. [355]
- Caturce, Jean de, studies New Testament, ii. [78];
- at Twelfth Night Supper at Limoux, [78], [79];
- arrested, [79];
- condemned to be burnt, [81];
- his degradation, [80];
- a Dominican preacher confounded, [81];
- burnt, [81]
- Cauvin, Gerard, i. [387], [400]; ii. [20] sqq., [29], [48]
- — Anthony, ii. [48], [49]
- — Mary, ii. [48]
- Cazalla, Augustine, attends lectures of Carranza, viii. [115];
- his mother, [115];
- preacher to Charles V., accompanies him to Germany, [115]
- Celibacy of the clergy, iv. [115]
- Chablais, Provena de, summons Geneva to receive duke Charles III., i. [165];
- declares war, [166]
- Chabot, put to the torture, iv. [325]
- Chabot, Philippe de, ii. [184]
- Chaillon, Anthony de [[Bouteville]]
- Chamois, François, at Geneva, demands withdrawal of Calvin's 'Confession,' vi. [484]
- Champion, Anthony, bishop of Geneva, i. [26];
- his attempt to reform the clergy, [27]
- Chapeaurouge, Etienne de, syndic of Geneva, i. [292];
- endeavors to stop the fight in the Molard, iii. [418];
- appointed syndic, iv. [242];
- again, v. [394];
- refuses to swear to the Confession, vi. [340];
- at the general council, [343];
- elected syndic, [361];
- one of the delegates to Berne, [512];
- signs a treaty, [513];
- again sent to Berne, [514];
- arrested, liberated on bail, [516];
- his flight, [518];
- sentenced to death, [519]
- Chappuis, Eustace, i. [91];
- employed to make a breach between the Swiss and the Genevese, [91];
- at Friburg, [92];
- Savoyard ambassador to Swiss Diet, [153], [200];
- Imperial ambassador to England, iv. [22]
- Chappuis, Dominican, intrigues for duke of Savoy, ii. [369], [370];
- banished from Geneva, [370], [371];
- takes part in great disputation, and is ordered to leave Geneva, v. [265]
- Charlemagne, at Geneva, i. [11], [12];
- characteristics of his age, vi. [317]
- Charles V., i. [9], [91], [218], [234], [266];
- receives news of battle of Pavia, [324];
- his projects, [324];
- proposes dismemberment of France, [325];
- receives Margaret of Valois, [328];
- unmoved by her appeals, [329];
- proposes to imprison her, [336];
- consents to liberate Francis I., [337];
- the treaty, [337], [356], [363], [379];
- accuses the Evangelicals, ii. [70], [103], [106];
- repulses Soliman, [107];
- passes into Italy, [108];
- at Bologna, [142];
- his schemes, [143];
- demands a general council, [143];
- conference with the pope, [144];
- appeals to the cardinals, [145];
- proposes Italian League against Francis I., [146];
- amused with scheme of marriage between Henry, duke of Orleans, and Catherine de Medici, [150];
- tries to prevent it, [152] sqq.;
- proposes marriage of Catherine with Sforza, [153], [154], [155];
- his new manœuvres, [156];
- rejects scheme of a lay council, [160];
- gets Italian League formed, [162];
- asks for cardinal's hat, [162];
- his displeasure against Henry VIII., [162];
- leaves Bologna, [163];
- tries to prevent meeting of the pope and Francis I., [186];
- demands justice for Queen Catherine, his aunt, [186];
- tries to draw the Swiss into the Italian League, [187];
- unconcerned about his brother's danger, [250], [254], [283];
- sack of Rome, [319];
- supports Savoy against Geneva, [390];
- interferes at Geneva, [395];
- will crush Protestantism, [421];
- censures attack on Geneva, [421];
- at Augsburg, [429];
- his letter to the Genevese, [430];
- counsels the bishop to cede Geneva to son of the duke of Savoy, [452];
- gives audience to Bellegarde, iii. [262];
- his answer, [263], [264];
- orders Genevans to extirpate the Reformation, [273];
- meets the pope at Bologna, iv. [22];
- receives embassy from Henry VIII., rebukes the ambassador, [26];
- leaves Bologna, [27];
- war with Solyman, [116];
- conferences with Clement VII., [117];
- exasperated at divorce of Catherine, [164], [177];
- his ambassadors oppose policy of Clement, [177];
- supports duke of Savoy and bishop of Geneva, [342], [344], [454], [455], [458];
- hears Occhino preach, [468];
- prohibits intercourse with Lutherans, [472];
- calls Carnesecchi before him, [475];
- ordered to execute the pope's sentence against Henry VIII., v. [4];
- preparations, [5], [21];
- censures execution of More and Fisher, [76];
- offers Milan to Francis I. and secures his alliance, [113];
- keeps Milan, [115];
- promises support to English Catholics, [202];
- writes to Henry VIII., [221];
- requires the Swiss to aid duke of Savoy against Geneva, [315];
- destruction of Geneva part of his plan, [370];
- keeps Milan, [377];
- concludes alliance with James V. of Scotland, vi. [86];
- attempts to prevent disputation at Lausanne, [233];
- convokes a conference of theologians at Frankfort, [473];
- at Diet of Ratisbon, vii. [26];
- interviews with Christian II. of Denmark, [138], [184];
- favors enterprise of Lübeckers in behalf of Christian, [207], [208];
- his attachment to the Netherlands, [481];
- his edict of persecution, [488];
- introduces the Inquisition, [491];
- his characteristics, [507], [508];
- his persecution in the Netherlands, [508];
- concludes peace of Madrid, [520];
- alliance with the pope, [524];
- treaty of Cambray, resolves to extirpate evangelical doctrine, [524];
- issues a new edict of persecution, [534];
- patronises Virves, viii. [18];
- rescues him from the Inquisition, [19];
- appoints Ponce de la Fuente one of his chaplains, [34];
- at Diet of Ratisbon, [55];
- gives audience to San Romano, [55];
- his victory over duke of Cleves, [64];
- appoints De Soto his confessor, [64];
- enters Brussels, [67];
- entertained by Mendoza, [69];
- invades France, [85];
- returns to Brussels, [85];
- promulgates edicts of persecution, [85];
- his treatment of his mother Joanna, [126];
- his birth, [129];
- conditionally approves marriage of Henry VIII. with duchess of Milan, [175];
- interview with Sir T. Wyatt, [200] sqq.;
- alliance with Henry VIII., [267];
- invades France, concludes a separate peace, [268]
- Charles the Bold, i. [313]; iii. [236]
- Charles III., the Good, duke of Savoy, i. [29];
- his character, [32];
- his scheme for getting possession of Geneva, [33], [34];
- claims the culverins of Bonivard, [48];
- his character, [48];
- made sovereign of Geneva by Leo X., [50];
- the bull recalled, [52];
- rebukes the bishop, [62];
- sends La Val d'Isère to arrest Levrier, [63];
- conspires with the bishop against Levrier and Berthelier, [65];
- goes to Geneva, [75];
- visits Lyons, [79];
- alarmed at the bishop's proceedings, [91];
- employs Chappuis, [91];
- goes to Friburg and Berne, [92];
- renews alliance with the Swiss, [92];
- determines to put Pécolat to death, [96];
- plots with the bishop at Geneva, [111];
- receives embassy from Genevese about death of Blanchet and Navis, [128];
- another embassy, [132];
- demands death of Berthelier and others, [134];
- resolves to break alliance of Swiss and Genevese, [145];
- his embassy to Geneva, [146];
- tampers with the Friburgers, [152];
- gains support of Swiss diet, [154];
- intrigues with the canons of Geneva, [157];
- secretly raises an army, [162];
- surrounds Geneva, [162];
- insolent embassy, [163];
- formally summons Geneva, [165];
- declares war, [166];
- plots with the Mamelukes, [168];
- at castle of Gaillard, [169];
- grants a truce, [171];
- attacks Geneva, [171];
- his promises, [172];
- enters the city, [174];
- pillages it, [176], [177];
- his proclamation, [179];
- imprisons Bonivard, [186];
- with the bishop restricts liberties of Geneva, [203];
- returns to Turin, [205];
- his marriage, [218];
- attempt to seduce the Genevese, [218];
- entry into Geneva, [219] sqq.;
- declines to attend the 'mystery', [228];
- birth of a son, [234];
- his attempts at usurpation resisted by Levrier, [239] sqq.;
- fails in attempt to gain him, [240];
- claims sovereignty of Geneva, [240];
- unmasks his batteries, [242];
- frightens the episcopal councillors, [244];
- threatens Levrier with death, [245];
- orders his seizure, [246];
- offers to give up Levrier in exchange for liberties of Geneva, [250];
- his oppression of Genevese, [261];
- threats of his council, [265];
- blows hot and cold, [266];
- demands the superior jurisdiction, [267];
- begins persecution of Huguenots, [269];
- his troops in Geneva, [270];
- alarmed at exodus of the patriots, [277];
- demands withdrawal of appeal to Rome, [278];
- urges on persecution of Genevese, [278];
- enters Geneva, [279];
- foiled by Swiss intervention, [281];
- his stratagem, [281];
- detected, [282];
- a new scheme, [285];
- assembles a general council at Geneva, [286];
- claims sovereignty, [287];
- his amnesty, [288];
- received as protector, [288];
- thwarted, [289];
- leaves Geneva, [289];
- sends de Lullins to Berne, ii. [307];
- plots against bishop of Geneva, [322];
- his scheme against Geneva, [323];
- its failure, [323], [324];
- irritation against the bishop, [330];
- orders Genevese to liberate the canons, [331];
- claims and threats, [338];
- tries to win the bishop [343];
- claims authority in matters of faith, [350];
- rebukes the canons, [351];
- reconciled with the bishop, [362];
- convokes a synod, [367];
- intrigues to make his son prince of Geneva, [368];
- sends the silver keys, [369], [370];
- instigates dissolution of Swiss alliance, [389];
- sends embassy to Geneva, [390];
- seeks help of the pope, [393];
- covets St. Victor's, [402];
- meets the bishop at Gex, [415];
- will attack Geneva, [416];
- censured by the emperor, withdraws his army, [422];
- prepares another attack, [432];
- Diet of Payerne, [432];
- threatens Geneva, [445];
- withdraws, [447];
- desires cession of Geneva to his son, [452];
- prepares another attack, [453];
- sends Bellegarde to the emperor, iii. [262];
- forms new plot against Geneva, iv. [308];
- his troops march for Geneva, [311];
- panic and retreat, [314], [315];
- advised by the Swiss to cease from hostilities, [317], [336];
- attempts to gain over the Genevese, [341];
- prepares to ruin Geneva, [342];
- forbids his subjects to attend disputation at Geneva, v. [257];
- applies to the pope for intervention at Geneva, [301];
- the de Montfort of the crusade, [314];
- his supporters, [314];
- summons Genevese to expel heresy and restore the bishop, [317];
- prepares for war, [319];
- orders attack on Geneva, [357];
- receives Bernese deputation at Aosta, [361];
- asks for a truce, [362];
- orders attack, [366];
- sends another army under Medici, [370];
- offers cession of territory, including Geneva, to Charles V., [377]
- Charles de Syssel, bishop of Geneva, i. [29]
- Charles of Egmont, vii. [509];
- his letter to the pope, [509];
- his persecution of Lutherans, [525], [526]
- Charles, duke of Sudermania, head of Protestants in Sweden, vii. [340];
- administrator of the kingdom, then king, [340];
- convokes assembly at Upsala, [340]
- Chautemps, Jean, ii. [455];
- character of, [457];
- visits Farel, iii. [277], [331];
- receives Froment, [348];
- aids in rescue of Olivétan, [363], [414];
- proscribed by the bishop, [439];
- escapes, [441];
- his wife Jaquéma seized, [442]
- Chelius, Ulric, his mission to Wittenberg, ii. [260] sqq.;
- visits Melanchthon, [261];
- Luther, [261];
- Bucer, [263];
- Hedio, [264];
- returns to Paris, [264]
- Children, assemblage of, join Catholic bands at Geneva, iii. [383], [385]
- 'Children of Geneva', i. [73], [88]
- Christaudins of Meaux, i. [427] sqq.;
- one of them burnt at Paris, [427]
- Christian II., king of Denmark, his character and aims, vii. [126];
- marries Isabella, sister of Charles V., [127];
- favors the papal legate, [127];
- suppresses revolt of Sweden, [128];
- his vengeance, massacre of the nobles and prelates, [129], [130];
- his interest in the Reformation, [130];
- publishes a code, [134];
- meets Charles V. in the Netherlands, [135];
- consents to repel the Lutheran doctors, [135];
- alliance formed against him, [136];
- influence of Sigbrit over him, [136];
- submits to the States, [137];
- his flight, [137];
- seeks aid of Charles V., Henry VIII., and other princes, [138];
- deserted, [138];
- a hearer of Luther, [138];
- death of his wife, [139];
- persuades Michelsen to publish translation of New Testament, [145];
- his intrigues, [184];
- obtains a fleet and an army and lands in Norway, [185];
- acknowledged king there, [186];
- invades Sweden and is repulsed, [186];
- submits to Frederick, [187];
- his letter to Frederick, [188];
- goes to Copenhagen and is made prisoner of state, [188], [189];
- confined at Sonderburg, [190];
- Luther's letter in his behalf, [192];
- enterprise of the Lübeckers, [207];
- flies from Stockholm, [256];
- set aside, and his dominions divided between Frederick and Gustavus, [265]
- Christian III., king of Denmark, vii. [147];
- sent to Germany, becomes a Lutheran, [148];
- signs articles of capitulation of Copenhagen, [149];
- resumes government of the duchies and demands electoral diet, [195];
- elected king by diet in Jutland, [211];
- besieges Lübeck, [211];
- proclaimed king, [212];
- defeats the Lübeckers, [213];
- invests Copenhagen, [213];
- visits Sweden, [213];
- receives surrender of Copenhagen, [215];
- enters the city, [216];
- consults the leading men, [216];
- introduces representation of the people, [218];
- invites Pomeranus to organize the new church, [221]
- Christina, duchess of Milan, sought in marriage by Henry VIII., viii. [174];
- the match conditionally sanctioned by Charles V., [175];
- the treaty broken off, [175]
- Christopher, son of duke Ulrich, of Würtemberg, birth and early life of, ii. [108];
- saved from the Turks, [108];
- at diet of Augsburg, [109];
- his project, [109];
- follows Charles V. to Italy, [110];
- his escape, [110];
- protected by duke of Bavaria, [111];
- claims Würtemberg, [111];
- his character and protectors, [112], [142];
- his claim considered by Francis I. at Avignon, [216];
- his intercourse with Du Bellay at Augsburg, [217];
- his supporters, [218];
- his cause won, [220];
- returns to Würtemberg, [253];
- won to the Reformation, [255]
- Chrysostom, cited, ii. [18]; iv. [46]
- Church and State, separate spheres of, distinguished by Bonivard, i. [158];
- separation of, in Geneva, advocated by dukes of Savoy, [241];
- confusion of two provinces, ii. [352];
- conflict of, in England, iv. [60], [88], [307];
- the church made department of the state by Henry VIII., v. [24];
- three kinds of relation between, [28];
- twofold enfranchisement, [250];
- separate existence of, [406]; vi. [353], [354];
- difference between Berne and Geneva about, [371];
- relation of, at Geneva, vii. [78] sqq.;
- Melanchthon's view of, questioned, viii. [157]
- Church, the true, iv. [124]
- Church Government, views of Bucer and Melanchthon, ii. [267], [268];
- church in transition, iii. [328]
- Clarenbach, Adolph, preaches in Guelderland, vii. [525];
- burnt at Cologne, [526]
- Claude, pastor of Ollon, iii. [302]
- Claude de Genève, proscribed by the bishop, iii. [439]
- Clement VII., Pope, i. [239], [261], [266];
- authorizes persecution of Lutherans in France, [331];
- approves treaty between Charles V. and Francis I., [337], [402];
- thwarts Henry VIII., ii. [103];
- French embassy to, [105];
- alarmed, [106];
- at Bologna, [142];
- opposed to a general council, [143];
- conference with Charles V., [144];
- reasons for inaction, [145];
- a disciple of Machiavelli, [146];
- 'moves softly', [146];
- agrees to marriage of Catherine de' Medici with Henry duke of Orleans, [149];
- promises an Italian state to Francis I., [149];
- refuses to marry Catherine to Sforza, [153];
- asks Francis I. for full powers for marriage contract, [153];
- receives them, [155];
- altercation with Charles, [156];
- joins the Italian League, [162];
- leaves Bologna, [164];
- agrees to meet Francis I., [164];
- announces marriage contract of Catherine to the cardinals, [185];
- obstacles raised to his journey to France, [186] sqq.;
- makes up his mind to go, [188];
- opinions about the voyage, [190];
- arrives at Marseilles, [191];
- the Latin address to him, [193];
- his promises to Francis, [194];
- publishes bull against heretics, [194];
- officiates at marriage of Catherine de' Medici, [195];
- departs for Rome, [197];
- failing health, [197];
- declines to help King Ferdinand, [250];
- alarmed at progress of Philip of Hesse, [253];
- appealed to for help by duke of Savoy, [393];
- his attainments, and perplexity, [395];
- grants subsidy to the duke, [396];
- a grace to Geneva, [433];
- publishes another, [434];
- publishes a Jubilee, [460];
- commands bishop of Geneva to return, iii. [424];
- meets Charles V. at Bologna, iv. [22];
- troubled about English embassy, [23];
- his brief to Henry VIII., [24];
- gives audience to English ambassadors, [25];
- puts off Cranmer, [28];
- nominates him grand almoner, [43];
- English address to him, [43];
- proposes bigamy to Henry VIII., [44];
- calls upon him to take back Catherine, [87];
- conferences with Charles V., [117];
- sends bulls for inauguration of Cranmer as primate, [121];
- again suggests bigamy to Henry VIII., [125];
- goes to Bologna, [126];
- conferences with Charles V. about divorce of Henry VIII., [126];
- murmurs against, in England, [127];
- issues brief of excommunication against Henry, [128];
- annuls Cranmer's sentence, [138];
- cites Henry to appear at Rome, [164];
- revokes proceedings of English courts and excommunicates the king, [164];
- meeting with Francis I., [167];
- creates four French cardinals, [169];
- Henry's appeal to a council presented to him by Bonner, [170];
- his wrath, [171];
- conversation with Francis I., [172];
- rejects the appeal, [173];
- threatens Bonner, [173];
- accord with Francis I., [177];
- consents to a council, [176];
- holds a consistory, [181];
- promises condemnation of Henry VIII., [182];
- disquieted, [183];
- appeal of Geneva to, [340];
- death of, [354];
- alarmed by spread of Lutheranism in Italy, [410]; v. [3], [22], [48];
- sends Cardinal Cajetan into Hungary, vii. [351];
- writes to F. Frangipani to support Catholic faith in Hungary, [369];
- co-operates with Charles V. in persecution in the Netherlands, [509];
- his brief to the bishop of Liége, [509];
- issues new species of indulgences, [512];
- alliance with Charles V. at Barcelona, [524]
- Cleyne, Martin van, vii. [547]
- Clifford, Lord, holds Skipton Castle for the king, v. [209]
- Cloet, Jerome, vii. [549], [550];
- arrested, [556]
- Clotilda, wife of Clovis, i. [9]
- Clovis, conversion of, i. [9]
- Cochlaeus, writes to James V. of Scotland against circulation of the New Testament, vi. [91], [92];
- invited to Denmark, declines to go, vii. [161], [162];
- papal delegate at Ratisbon, viii. [102]
- Coiffard, ii. [51]
- Coligny, iii. [3]
- Colladon Family, The, Calvin's friendship with, ii. [27]
- College of Navarre, Paris, the priests' comedy performed, ii. [174];
- search of police for author, [179];
- arrest of the actors and the head of the College, [179]
- Colonna, Vittoria, friend of Valdez, iv. [465]
- Comet, apparition of a, iii. [313]; iv. [187]
- Commons, House of, its petition to Henry VIII., iv. [10] sqq.;
- the bishops called upon to answer it, [12]
- Communal liberties, destroyed by princes and bishops, i. [111]
- Communion, frequent, recommended by Calvin, vi. [285]
- Compey, Philibert de, proscribed, iii. [439], [457]
- Conciliation, needful, iii. [196]
- Confession of Faith, prepared by Farel and Calvin, vi. [282];
- questions as to its authorship, [284];
- adopted by Council of Geneva, [289]
- Confession, Auricular, in England, demanded by some of the bishops, rejected by Henry VIII., viii. [190]
- Conscience, rights of, iii. [1], [2]
- Constance, Council of, i. [19]; ii. [245]
- Contarini, Gaspare, Cardinal, iv. [366];
- ambassador to Charles V. at diet of Worms, [484];
- senator of Venice, [484];
- ambassador to the Pope, [484];
- at coronation of Charles V., [485];
- joins Oratory of Divine Love, [485];
- created cardinal, [485];
- his views of church reform, [487] sqq., [490];
- at diet of Ratisbon, vii. [25];
- advises a reference to a council, [38]
- Conversion, i. [399], [401]
- Convocation of the clergy, in England, at St. Paul's, v. [180];
- division and strength of parties, [181];
- Latimer's sermon, [181] sqq.;
- lay element, [184];
- denunciation of the mala dogmata, [185];
- Alesius admitted, [188];
- refused admission, [190];
- character of Convocation, [190];
- accepts the king's Articles of Religion, [195];
- remedial measures passed, [196];
- dissolved by the king, [197];
- declares for divorce of Anne of Cleves, viii. [231], [232];
- discussion about translation of the Bible, [256], [257]
- Cop, Nicholas, Professor, visits Calvin, ii. [52], [53];
- intercourse with Calvin, [93];
- rector of the Sorbonne, [180];
- his speech on the priests' comedy, [180], [181];
- delivers address on 'Christian Philosophy', [200];
- its effect, [202] ;
- his heresies laid before the parliament, [202];
- his defence, [203];
- summoned before parliament, [206];
- goes in state, [206];
- is warned and returns home, [207];
- escapes to Switzerland, [208];
- intercourse with Calvin, iii. [160]
- Copenhagen, surrenders to King Frederick vii., [149];
- Diet of, [171];
- methods of procedure of the two parties, [172];
- the Lutheran Confession, [172], [174];
- charges of the prelates, [177];
- reply of Evangelicals, [177];
- a public discussion rejected by the prelates, [178];
- appeal of the Evangelicals to the king, [180];
- Master Mathias, [181];
- success of the pastors, [182];
- iconoclasts, [183];
- popular rising for liberation of Tausen, [201];
- entered by the Lübeckers, [208];
- besieged by army of Christian III., [213];
- state of the city, [214];
- capitulates, [215];
- entered by the king, [216];
- the university reorganized by Pomeranus, [222]
- Coppet, conference at, v. [341]
- Coppin, one of the Spirituals, iii. [77]
- Cordier, Mathurin, at College of La Marche, i. [382];
- influences Calvin, [383];
- influenced by him, [384];
- flies from Paris, iii. [124];
- teaches in schools of Geneva, vi. [296];
- banished, [467]
- Cornelis, Giovanni, sets out for Wittenberg, iv. [415];
- arrested, [416]
- Cornou, Jean, burnt, iv. [364]
- Cornu, Pierre, Cordelier, ii. [135]
- Cortesi, Gregorio, iv. [482]
- Cotta, Otto Melia, joins in plot against Paleario, iv. [440], [441];
- one of a deputation to archbishop of Siena, [444];
- at trial of Paleario, [447]
- Council, General, demanded by Charles V., opposed by Clement VII., ii. [143] sqq.;
- rejected by Clement, [157];
- reasons pro and con, [157];
- called for by the cardinals, [254]
- Council, Lay, proposed by Francis I., ii. [158];
- would constitute a revolution, [158];
- rejected by Charles V., [160];
- arrangement at council of Trent, [160]
- Council of Halberds, i. [287] sqq.
- Courault, appointed to preach in Paris, ii. [117];
- his preaching, [118];
- confined by the king's order, [125];
- forbidden to preach, [228], [229];
- burning of, demanded by Beda, [231];
- set free, [234];
- opposes the placards, iii. [95];
- arrested, [113];
- before the king, [117];
- sent to a convent, escapes to Switzerland, [125];
- meets Calvin at Basel, [164];
- reports the prosecution, [164];
- urges acceptance of Calvin's Confession by all the Genevese, vi. [292];
- attends synod of Lausanne, [313];
- forbidden to preach, [377];
- preaches at St. Peter's, [381], [382];
- arrested and imprisoned, [382];
- a protest against his imprisonment, [383];
- bail refused, [384];
- banished, [403], [407];
- leaves Geneva, [409];
- takes refuge at Thonon, [412];
- his death, [448]
- Courtelier, Father, sent to Geneva, iv. [246];
- submits his doctrines to the council, [246];
- his sermon, [247];
- interview with Farel, [250];
- his preaching compared with Farel's, [257];
- gives evidence against Maisonneuve, [297], [298]
- Coverdale, Miles, iv. [2];
- account of, v. [197];
- his Bible, [198];
- the king's sanction to it refused, [198];
- accompanies Grafton to Paris, to prepare new edition of Tyndale's Bible, viii. [177] [[Grafton]]
- Coxe, Leonard, gets John Fryth liberated, iv. [141], [142]
- Cracow, Luther's doctrines introduced at, vii. [430]
- Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, presents to Henry VIII. his treatise on the king's marriage, iv. [23];
- ambassador to the pope at Bologna, [23];
- his audience put off, goes to Rome, [28];
- nominated grand almoner by the pope, [43];
- sent to Nürnberg, [114];
- intercourse with Osiander, [114];
- marries, [116];
- negotiates with Elector of Saxony, [116];
- with imperial chancellor, [116];
- selected by the king for primate, hesitates, [117];
- goes to Italy, attends meeting of the pope and the emperor, [117];
- returns to England, [118];
- objection to the primacy, [119];
- consents, [121];
- sends the pope's bulls to the king, [121];
- his protest, [121];
- consecrated, [122];
- takes the oath, [122];
- energy and weakness, [123];
- papal order interred at his consecration, [124];
- his letter to the king, [131];
- a second, [132];
- receives royal licence, [132];
- his court at Dunstable, Henry VIII. and Catherine summoned, [133];
- pronounces divorce of the king and queen, [134];
- declares marriage of Henry and Anne Boleyn lawful, [135];
- his sentence annulled by the pope, [138];
- appointed one of Fryth's judges, [151];
- wishes to save him, [151], [159];
- detects imposture of Maid of Kent, v. [15];
- leader of evangelical party, [22], [46];
- his explanation of royal supremacy, [50], [51];
- his character, [53], [54];
- proposes translation of the Bible, [55];
- a compromise, [55];
- proceeds with the task, [56];
- visitation of London and Winchester, [57];
- his sermon at visitation of Canterbury, [85], [98], [99];
- intercedes for Princess Mary, [111];
- his communications with Queen Anne, [120], [130];
- hears of the queen's arrest, [142];
- writes to the king, [143];
- his false conscience, [144];
- the charges laid before him, [145];
- declares null the marriage of the king with Anne Boleyn, [160], [184], [186], [190];
- signs the king's Articles of Religion, [195];
- suggests remedial measures, [196];
- his cowardice and submission to the king, [226];
- asks permission for Tyndale's Bible to be sold, [227];
- baptizes Edward (VI.), viii. [141], [146];
- urges union with German Protestants, [153];
- conference with German envoys, [154];
- presses them to delay their return, [155];
- has a conference with Lambert, [165];
- condemns his views, [166];
- at Lambert's trial, [170];
- speaks against the Six Articles, [183];
- retains his see, [184];
- courted by the king, [185], [186];
- a banquet, [186];
- necessary to the king, [186];
- difficulty of filling his place, [186];
- his Bible published, [205];
- writes to the king in behalf of Cromwell, [212], [213];
- absents himself from parliament on the reading of bill of attainder, [218];
- consents with Convocation to divorce of Anne of Cleves, [231];
- his provision for education of ministers set aside, [236];
- conspiracy against him, [241];
- accused to the king, [243];
- interview with him, [244], [245];
- receives the king's ring, [245];
- summoned before the council, presents the ring, [246];
- formally reconciled with the lords, [247];
- embarrassed by disclosures of Lascelles against the queen, [248];
- reports them to the king, [249];
- sent with Norfolk to examine the queen, [250];
- receives her confession, [250];
- in favor, [256];
- introduces a Bill for the Advancement of Religion, [260];
- its absurdities, [260];
- obtains modification of Six Articles, [261];
- revises the King's Book, [261];
- plot of bishops and priests against him, [263];
- interview with the king, [263];
- acquitted by the commission, [264];
- pleads for Marbeck, [266];
- interview with the king on his death-bed, [307]
- Crawar, Paul, burnt at St. Andrews, vi. [5]
- Crespin, John, goes with Juan Diaz to Geneva, viii. [101]
- Crocus, Cornelius, account of, vii. [532];
- undertakes to write against Luther, [531];
- writes against Sartorius, [533]
- Crome, Dr., forbidden to preach, viii. [240];
- his falls and recovery, [272]
- Cromwell, Sir Richard, commissioner for visitation of monasteries, v. [84]
- Cromwell, Thomas, iv. [37];
- presents to the king Tyndale's Practice of Prelates, [53];
- writes to Vaughan, [57];
- suggests attempt to gain Fryth, [59];
- his expedient for making the king supreme over the clergy, [61];
- announces it to Convocation, [62];
- demands recognition of royal supremacy, [63];
- character of, [87];
- advises abolition of papal power in England, [87];
- in advance, [89];
- sends the Maid of Kent to the Tower, v. [15];
- Protestant leader, [23], [46];
- visits More and Fisher in the Tower, [64];
- advises abolition of the monasteries, [81];
- named vicegerent and vicar-general for visitation of churches and monasteries, [82];
- his commissioners, [84];
- lays the Black Book before parliament, [95], [98], [139], [161], [184];
- his position at Convocation, [184], [186];
- invites Alesius to attend, [186], [188];
- signs the king's Articles of Religion, [195];
- made lord privy seal, and vicegerent in ecclesiastical matters, [197];
- his instructions to the priests, [197];
- his efforts in behalf of Tyndale, [219], [221], [226];
- his report on birth of Edward VI., viii. [141];
- presents works of Bullinger to the king, [146];
- arrests Bishop Sampson, summons him before him, [162];
- his interview with Lambert, [172];
- extols the king, [173];
- resolves to issue another edition of the Bible, [176];
- orders seizure of the presses, types, &c., at Paris, [178];
- his Bible completed, [178];
- sanctions the Six Articles, [182];
- quarrels with Norfolk, [185];
- his aims, [192];
- recommends Anne of Cleves to the king, [193];
- conversations with the king, [196], [197];
- blamed by Henry, [197];
- his desire to have the Gospel preached, [201];
- his measures, [206];
- his speech in Parliament, [206];
- his promotions, [207];
- created Earle of Essex, [207];
- his possessions, [207];
- his fiscal measures, [208];
- a note from the king, [208];
- accused of treason and sent to the Tower, [209];
- the charges against him, [210];
- the real aim of his enemies, [211];
- bill of indictment against him, [214];
- denies alleged alliance with Pole, [215];
- bill of attainder adopted, [216];
- his alarm and distress, [216];
- his letter to the king, [217];
- the bill passed, [218];
- renewed examinations, [218];
- again writes to the king, [219];
- anxiety for his family, [220];
- his last days, [221];
- his confession and prayer, [222-224];
- his execution, [224];
- his character, [224]
- Culdees, the, their influence in Scotland, vi. [4], [5]
- Culpeper, viii. [253];
- beheaded, [254]
- Culverins, Prior Bonivard's, i. [47];
- claimed by duke of Savoy, [48]
- Curione, Celio Secundo, birth and early life of, iv. [413], [414];
- reads Luther, Melanchthon, and Zwinglius, [414];
- sets out for Wittenberg, [415];
- arrested, [416];
- placed in a monastery, [416];
- puts the Bible in place of relics, [417];
- escapes to Milan, [418];
- his philanthropy, [418];
- marries, [418];
- returns to Piedmont, [418];
- defends Luther against Dominican preacher, [420];
- again imprisoned, [420];
- harshly treated, [421];
- prison thoughts, [422];
- escapes, [423];
- teaches at Pavia, [424];
- attempts to seize him baffled, [425];
- escapes to Ferrara, [425]
- Curtet, Aimé, appointed syndic of Geneva, iv. [242]
- Curtet, Castellan of Chaumont, burnt at Annecy, vi. [486]
- Curtet, Jean Ami, attempt to murder him, iii. [459]; iv. [186]
- Cyriaci, Martin, goes to study at Wittenberg, vii. [347];
- returns to Leutschau, [355]
- D'Adda, Stephen, iv. [232], [233]
- Dalecarlians, The, demand banishment of Lutherans, vii. [277];
- declare for the pretender 'Nils Sture', [278];
- treat with Gustavus, [297];
- revolt suppressed, [297]
- Danès, Pierre, ii. [51];
- cited, [59];
- at Council of Trent, [65];
- accused by Beda, [230]
- Daniel, Francis, Calvin a visitor in his family, ii. [8], [9];
- his sister a nun, [52], [57];
- his views for Calvin, [84];
- asks for Bibles, [87], [93];
- Calvin's letter to, iii. [8]
- —, Robert, ii. [58]
- Daniel of Valence, at Waldensian synod, iii. [255];
- refuses to sign the new confession, [259];
- goes to Bohemia, [260]
- Danish New Testament, published by Michelsen, vii. [145], [146]
- Dantzic, beginning of reformation at, vii. [424], [425];
- opposition, [425];
- toleration established, [426];
- Romish worship abolished, [427];
- invites Pomeranus, [427];
- Hanstein sent, [428];
- Catholic deputation to King Sigismund, [428];
- his severity, [429];
- preaching of Klemme, [429]
- Darcy, Lord, head of Catholic league, v. [202];
- joins insurgents of Yorkshire, [206];
- at Pomfret Castle, [209];
- on the march southward, [210], [211];
- executed, [213]
- Dates, coincidence of, iii. [131]
- Dauphiny, i. [349], [359]; iii. [123]
- 'Day of the Ladders,' ii. [384]
- De Bresse, i. [116]
- De Chalans, René, Count, Marshal of Aosta, ii. [405], [406], [408];
- his hostility to the Lutherans, v. [449]
- De Cornibus, Pierre, invited to disputation at Geneva, v. [259]
- De Glautinis, accompanies Farel to Granson, iii. [235];
- preaches, [238];
- insulted by monks, [238]
- De la Croix, Father Laurent, condemned as heretic at Geneva, ii. [235];
- preaches in France, [236];
- at Lyons, [236];
- visits the prisons, [237];
- escapes discovery, [237];
- his Easter preaching, [240];
- arrested and condemned to death, [240];
- removed to Paris, [241];
- before the parliament, tortured, [242];
- condemned to be burnt, [243];
- his degradation, [243];
- martyrdom, [244]
- De la Fosse, (Barnabas Voré), sent to invite Melanchthon to France, iv. [358], [362], [365];
- importance of his mission, [373], [374];
- visits Melanchthon, [375], [378] sqq.
- De la Mare, Stephen, Genevese envoy with Hugues to Friburg, i. [140];
- elected syndic, [149];
- interview with the bishop of Geneva, [186], [187], [206];
- at general council, opposes Swiss alliance, [307];
- goes to Switzerland with Mamelukes to break it off, [313];
- appointed pastor at Geneva, vi. [414];
- charges against him, vii. [4]
- De la Mouille, William, ii. [316], [362]
- De la Place, Pierre, iii. [14], [44], [47], [48], [50]
- De la Tour, Sieur, martyrdom of, with his servant, i. [414]
- Delorme, watches Maisonneuve at the tournament, iv. [226]
- Democracy, i. [320]
- Denia, Marquis of, keeper of Queen Joanna, viii. [128], [136], [137], [138]
- Denis, a Christaudin, i. [427];
- his reconversion attempted by Briçonnet, [428];
- burnt, [429]
- Denmark, beginning of the Reformation in, vii. [120] sqq.;
- union of Calmar, [121];
- the crown offered to Frederick, duke of Holstein, [137];
- accepted by him, [142];
- Michelsen's translation of New Testament introduced, [146];
- assembly of the council at Copenhagen, [153];
- its resolutions against Lutherans and Lutheran books, [153];
- progress of the Reformation in, [160];
- alarm of the bishops, [161];
- agitation, Diet of Odensee, [162] sqq.;
- demands of nobles and priests, [164];
- the royal ordinance, [165];
- submission of the prelates, [165];
- Diet of Copenhagen, [171] sqq.;
- progress of the Gospel, [182];
- death of Frederick, [193];
- interregnum, intrigues of the priests, [195];
- Electorial Diet opened, [196];
- demands of the bishops, [196], [197];
- the compact published, [198];
- the election adjourned, [199];
- edict for prosecution of Lutherans, [205];
- polemical publications, [206];
- invasion of the Lübeckers, [208];
- Christian II. restored, [208];
- assembly of the Diet in Jutland, [209];
- proclamation of Christian III., [211];
- surrender of Copenhagen, [215];
- arrest of the bishops, [217];
- first representation of the people in the Diet, [218];
- charges against the bishops, [219];
- the compact signed, [220];
- the bishops excluded from the Diet, the Reformation established, [220];
- the bishops liberated, [220];
- constitution of evangelical church promulgated, [223];
- separation of Sweden from, [265]
- Denny, Sir A., viii. [307]
- De Pesmes, Percival, iii. [366], [368], [376];
- bears the banner of Geneva, [378], [379], [407], [411]; iv. [207], [312];
- escapes from Geneva, [316]
- De Prangins, Sire de Rive, Governor of Neuchâtel, v. [323];
- forbids departure of auxiliaries for Geneva, [323];
- orders the men to return home, [325]
- Derham, Francis, viii. [248], [250], [252];
- hung, [253]
- D'Erlach, Sieur, Swiss envoy to Geneva, i. [154];
- his speech, [154];
- leads Swiss army to Geneva, ii. [424];
- envoy with Nagueli to duke of Savoy, v. [361]
- Desbois, Jean, appointed to examine Berthelier, i. [192];
- passes sentence of death on him, [195]
- Des Fosset, iii. [75]
- De Simieux, sent to Geneva to hunt up charge against Maisonneuve, iv. [291]
- Devay, Mathias Biro, his birth and early life, vii. [367];
- conversion, [367];
- goes to study at Wittenberg, [367];
- returns to Hungary, [372];
- his sympathy with Melanchthon, his completeness, [372], [373];
- pastor at Buda, [373];
- removes to Kaschau, [374];
- successful labors, [374];
- denounced to King Ferdinand, [375];
- seized and carried off by the bishop of Eger's agents, [375];
- harshly treated in prison, [375];
- cited before Bishop Faber, [376];
- liberated, goes to Buda, [376], [377];
- imprisoned by Zapolya, [377];
- set at liberty, [378];
- received by Count Nadasdy, at Sarvar, [378];
- replies to Szegedy, [379];
- visits Melanchthon at Wittenberg, [379];
- at Basel publishes his works, [381];
- returns to Hungary, [381];
- his Grammar, [382];
- his preaching, [382];
- driven away by Turkish invasion, [391];
- at Wittenberg, [391];
- goes to Switzerland, [392];
- becomes acquainted with Calvinism, [394];
- returns to Hungary, [394];
- pastor and dean at Debreczin, [397]
- De Veigy, canon of Geneva, his mission to duke of Savoy, ii. [351];
- expelled from Geneva, [351];
- examines Farel, iii. [288];
- commands one of the bands against Lutherans, [378];
- charged to burn out the Lutherans, [388]; iv. [218]
- Deventer, envoys of Charles V. sent to inquire after Lutherans, refused admission, vii. [536]
- De Versonay, Marin, account of, iii. [411];
- incites to conflict, [412]
- De Versonex, F., v. [309]
- De Vio, Cardinal, protests against preaching of Occhino, iv. [467]
- Diana of Poitiers, iv. [355]
- Diaz, Alonzo, informed of his brother Juan's heresy, viii. [106];
- goes to Ratisbon, [107];
- consults with Malvenda, [107];
- their schemes for finding Juan, [108];
- finds him, [108];
- takes leave, [110];
- returns, murders Juan, [111];
- flies to Innspruck, [111]
- Diaz, Juan, account of, viii. [100];
- his conversion and friendships, [101];
- goes to Geneva, [101];
- visits Strasburg, [101];
- delegate with Bucer to conference of Ratisbon, [102];
- meets with Malvenda, [102];
- resists his endeavors to win him back to the Pope, [103-105];
- leaves Ratisbon, [109];
- at Neuburg, [109];
- visited by his brother Alonzo, [109];
- declines to go to Rome, [110];
- murdered by Alonzo, [111]
- Diaz, Peter, viii. [36]
- Diesbach, John of, commands Swiss auxiliaries at Pavia, iv. [321];
- his widow seeks intervention of Berne, [322]
- Diesbach, Nicholas of, avoyer of Berne, iv. [321]
- Diesbach, Rodolph of, envoy to Court of France, iv. [322];
- account of, [322];
- pleads for Maisonneuve and Janin, [322];
- succeeds, [328];
- delivers them up to Genevese authorities, [329];
- with Nägueli, envoy to duke of Savoy, v. [361]
- Diesbach, Louis of, Bernese ambassador to Pays de Vaud, v. [340];
- at conference of Coppet, [340], [341], [343], [345];
- seized by Savoyards and released, [350];
- at Geneva, [355]
- Diesbach, Sebastian of, head of Swiss embassy to Geneva, i. [313];
- again, ii. [391];
- reports failure, [392];
- deputy to Geneva, [445];
- again, [449];
- again, advocates religious liberty, iii. [428];
- advises consent to episcopal citation, [453];
- head of Bernese embassy to Geneva, iv. [215];
- demands a disputation between Furbity and the reformers, [216];
- at the tournaments, [218] sqq.;
- colloquy with Furbity, [220];
- demands his punishment, [221]
- Diplomacy, v. [339]
- Dispensations, papal, abolished in England, iv. [180]
- Dobszynski, writes in praise of Wycliffe, vii. [422]
- Dominicans, at Geneva, their vices, i. [44], [236]; iv. [200];
- compared with Franciscans, [245]
- Dort, beginning of Reformation at, vii. [485];
- complaint of Dominicans, [486];
- reply of Henry of Nassau, [486]
- Douglas, Gavin, competition for see of St. Andrews, vi. [10]
- Douglas, Sir George, guardian of James V., vi. [24];
- discovers flight of the king, [73];
- joins English army against the Scots, [138];
- returns to Scotland, [158];
- reinstated in his honors and estates, [161];
- imprisoned, liberated, [184];
- at the preaching of Wishart, [193]
- Doullon, Nicholas, martyrdom of, i. [393], [394]
- Du Bellay, Jean, bishop of Paris, Cardinal, ii. [50], [65], [74], [75];
- appoints two evangelical monks to preach in Paris, [117];
- warns the king of danger, [126], [134], [150], [152], [183];
- delivers Latin address to the pope at Marseilles, [193];
- ordered to persecute heretics, [196];
- closes the churches, [228];
- takes part in preparing French version of the reformers' opinions, [284], [287]; iii. [135]; iv. [4], [7];
- his efforts at mediation between England and the pope, [177];
- awaits success, [181];
- pleads with the consistory for delay, [181];
- his ancestry, [356];
- driven from France, [357];
- at head of moderate Catholic party, [357];
- advises the king to invite Melanchthon to France, [357];
- created cardinal, [362];
- ambassador to Rome, [365];
- writes to Melanchthon, [365], [368];
- interview with English envoys at Bologna, v. [4]
- Du Bellay, William, views of, ii. [95];
- desires union of France and Germany, [95];
- ambassador to Germany, [95];
- at Schweinfurth, [97];
- proposals to the Protestants, [99];
- addresses the landgrave of Hesse, [100];
- concludes agreement with Protestants, [102];
- sent to England, [102];
- negotiates alliance between Francis I. and Henry VIII., [103];
- supports Christopher of Würtemberg, [112], [151];
- his project of a lay council, [159] sqq.;
- quoted, [162];
- hopes of reformers fixed on him, [183];
- opposes publication of bull against heretics, [194];
- a friend of freedom, [215];
- explains transition from Marseilles to Avignon, [216];
- ambassador to Diet of Augsburg, [216];
- negotiates with the Swiss Protestants, [217];
- supports Christopher at Augsburg, [218] sqq.;
- in Germany, [220];
- negotiates with Philip, landgrave of Hesse, [222];
- opposed by Luther and Melanchthon, [222];
- has interview with Bucer at Strasburg, [246];
- returns to Paris, [246];
- estimate of Melanchthon, [246];
- hopes, [253], [257], [260], [263], [282];
- takes part in preparing French version of reformers' opinions, [284];
- submits it to the Sorbonne, [285], [287];
- his estimate of Bucer, iii. [67];
- ambassador in England, takes gifts for Francis I., iv. [39];
- his ancestry, [356];
- character, [356];
- advises the king to invite Melanchthon to France, [357], [362];
- letter to Melanchthon, [366], [367];
- envoy to Smalcalde, [394];
- has audience of Elector John Frederick, [395];
- received by German princes and deputies, [396];
- demands a congress, [397];
- a consultation held, [398] sqq.;
- receives reply of the princes, [404], [405];
- failure of his mission, [405]
- Du Bourg, John, iii. [72];
- arrested, [112];
- his martyrdom, [120]
- Du Châtel, Pierre, ii. [65];
- opposes persecution, iii. [113]
- Duchemin, Nicholas, character of, ii. [1];
- Calvin in his house, [2], [7], [9];
- appointed ecclesiastical judge, v. [436]
- Du Crest, Nicholas, premier syndic of Geneva, iii. [364], [374];
- takes part in consultation for peace, [395];
- envoy to Berne, [402];
- fails, [405]; iv. [190], [200];
- searches the bishop's palace, [235], [255];
- escapes from Geneva, [316]
- Dumont, syndic of Geneva, deputy to the bishop, i. [460]
- Dumoulin, [[Alexander Canus]]
- Dunbar, Gawin, archbishop of Glasgow, chancellor of Scotland, with the primate and other prelates placed at the head of the government, vi. [74];
- deprives the nobles of their jurisdiction and sets up a College of Justice, [85];
- presides at prosecution of Kennedy and Russel, [121];
- intimidated by agents of Beatoun, condemns them, [122];
- threatened by James V., [125];
- becomes chancellor, [162];
- opposes the law giving freedom to read the Bible, [162];
- takes possession of church at Ayr, to prevent Wishart preaching, [187]
- Duncan, Andrew, captured by the English at Flodden, vi. [9];
- attempts rescue of Patrick Hamilton, [59];
- captured by Beatoun's troops and banished, [59]
- Dunkeld, bishop of, counsels peace, vi. [16];
- with other prelates placed at head of the Government, [74];
- his interview with Thomas Forrest, [104]
- Dunstable, Cranmer's court at, iv. [133] sqq.
- Duprat, Cardinal, i. [342], [346], [360], [400], [409];
- character and position, [410];
- sides with Rome, [411];
- at synod of Paris instigates persecution of Lutherans, [415];
- appeals to Francis I., [416];
- his ambition and aggrandisement, [417];
- his quarrel with the parliament of Paris, [417];
- combines with the parliament against Lutherans, [417], [429]; ii. [33], [67], [120];
- sent to Paris to stop intrigues of the Sorbonne, [126];
- arrests Le Picard, [127];
- his spies, [128];
- summons the priests, [128];
- the doctors of the Sorbonne, [128], [212], [218]; iii. [113], [115]
- Dutch New Testament, published, vii. [501];
- Old Testament, [517];
- the whole Bible, [517]
- Duvillard, J., appointed syndic of Geneva, iv. [242]
- Eck, Dr., at Diet of Ratisbon, vii. [25];
- declines invitation to Denmark, [162]
- Edinburgh, entered by Lord Hertford and English army, vi. [184];
- pillaged and burnt, [184]
- Edward VI., King of England, proposal for his marriage with Mary Queen of Scots, vi. [157];
- the treaty concluded, [165];
- frustrated, [171];
- his birth, viii. [141];
- created Prince of Wales, [141];
- hopes excited by his birth, [143]
- Egidius, John, preacher at Seville, viii. [22], [23];
- his scholastic sermons, [23];
- his interview with Valerio, [24];
- conversion, [24], [25];
- his evangelical preaching, [26];
- interview with Ponce de la Fuente and Vargas, [27], [28];
- division of labor with them, [29];
- opposition aroused, [31];
- loses his two friends, [34], [35];
- schemes of his enemies, [35]
- Egmont, Nicholas van, inquisitor in the Netherlands, vii. [491], [493]
- Ehrard of Nidau, account of, v. [376]
- Einarsen, Gisser, vii. [228];
- sent to Copenhagen, [228];
- made bishop of Skalholt, [228];
- his death, [229]
- Einarsen, Morten, elected bishop of Skalholt, taken prisoner by Bishop Aresen, vii. [229]
- Eliae, Paul, vii. [125];
- interpreter of Reinhard, [131];
- sent to Odensee, [131];
- attacks Reinhard, [132];
- preaches against Lutheranism, [147];
- attends conference at Copenhagen, [171];
- remains silent, [181];
- publishes apology for the mass, [182];
- draws up plea for the bishops, [206]
- Eliot, Nicholas [[Students], English]
- Eliot, Sir Thomas, begs for gift of convents, v. [99]
- Elizabeth, Queen, birth of, iv. [166];
- excitement in London, [166];
- commended to care of Parker, v. [133]
- Elizabeth of Arnex, plots against Farel, iii. [213];
- her conversion, [226]
- Engelbrechtsen, Olaf, archbishop of Brontheim, receives Christian II., vii. [185];
- flies to the Netherlands, [223], [224]
- England, laity and clergy, iv. [1];
- Scriptural reformation, [2];
- special character of Reformation in, [3], [4];
- the Romish and political parties, [5];
- the Society of Christian Brethren, [6];
- Table-talk, [8];
- popular excitement, [8];
- petition of the Commons, [10];
- reforms of the clergy, [16];
- abolition of pluralism, [18], [19];
- English address to the pope, [43];
- the clergy predominant, [60];
- royal supremacy recognized by clergy, [65], [66];
- popular agitation, [67];
- beginning of persecution, [76];
- importance of choice of new primate, [113];
- papal authority set aside by parliament, [130];
- separation from France, [174];
- general movement against papal supremacy, [178];
- abolition of papal privileges, [179];
- Romish exactions, [179];
- the tree lopped, [180];
- a critical epoch, v. [1], [2];
- people and clergy against Rome, [7];
- confusion, [53];
- effect of execution of More and Fisher, [75], [76];
- general visitation of churches and monasteries ordered, [82];
- suppression of lesser monasteries, [96];
- advantageous results, [100], [102], [103];
- state of parties after Queen Anne's death, [171];
- sarcasms against the papacy, [180];
- the King's Articles of Religion published, [192];
- evangelical reaction, [198];
- prosecutions, [200];
- insurrection in the North, [202] sqq.;
- renewal of, [212];
- invasion of, proposed by Paul III., vi. [109];
- three parties in, viii. [140];
- source and effect of the Reformation in, [140];
- relations with Swiss reformers, [143];
- various parties, attempt at compromise, [179] sqq.;
- the Six Articles, [181] sqq.;
- Cranmer's Bible and others published, [205];
- Catholic policy on marriage of Henry VIII., with Catherine Howard, [236]
- Enthusiasts, The, in the Netherlands, vii. [538] sqq. [[Spirituals], The]
- Enzinas, Francis de [[Enzinas], The], returns to Burgos, interview with Peter de Lerma, viii. [41];
- desires conversion of Spain, [42];
- undertakes translation of New Testament, [43];
- his acquaintance with Alasco, [43];
- with Hardenberg, [43];
- writes to Alasco, [44];
- presents his sword to him, [45];
- goes to Paris, [45];
- attends death-bed of Peter de Lerma, [45];
- goes to Wittenberg, [48];
- completes his translation of the New Testament, [58];
- visits Alasco and Hardenberg, reaches Louvain, [59];
- at Antwerp, [59];
- opinions on his New Testament, [60];
- submits it to the dean of Louvain, [60];
- obstacles, [61];
- interview with the printer, [62];
- with a Dominican, [63];
- the title-page criticised, [63];
- goes to Brussels, [67];
- dedication of his New Testament, [67];
- difficulty of access to Charles V., [68], [69];
- interviews with Mendoza, [69];
- presented to the emperor, [71];
- the conversation, [71];
- interview with De Soto, [72];
- hears his sermon, [74];
- interviews with him, [75] sqq.;
- excitement in the convent, [78];
- arrested, [79];
- imprisoned, [79];
- his dejection, [79];
- consoled by Tielmans, [80];
- his examination, [81];
- reproached by friends, [82];
- reads Calvin and the Psalms, [83];
- his numerous visitors, [84];
- failure of attempts in his behalf, [85];
- resolves to fly, [88];
- escapes, [89];
- in danger at Mechlin, [90];
- reaches Antwerp, [91];
- a legend about him, [91];
- another tale, [92];
- his correspondence with Calvin, [93];
- goes to Wittenberg, intercourse with Melanchthon, [94];
- counsels his brother to leave Rome, [95];
- hears of his death, [97];
- writes to Calvin, [98]
- Enzinas, James de [[Enzinas], The], at Paris, viii. [46];
- his character, [46];
- impressed by heroism of martyrs at Paris, [46];
- his Catechism, [48];
- sent by his father to Rome, [95];
- his dissatisfaction, [95];
- resolves to leave Rome, arrested by the Inquisition, [96];
- his trial, [97];
- his martyrdom, [97] sqq.
- Enzinas, John de [[Enzinas], The], settles in Germany, viii. [48]
- Enzinas, The, viii. [38];
- sent to Louvain, [39];
- their character, [39];
- religious disposition, [39];
- friendship with Cassander, [40];
- study the Bible and read Melanchthon, [41];
- [Enzinas, [Francis de], [James de], and [John de]]
- Eperies, Conference of, vii. [410]
- Erasmus, i. [331];
- approves Berquin's propositions, [344], [378], [403];
- attempts to restrain Berquin, [405];
- again, [407];
- his colloquies proscribed by the Sorbonne, [407];
- shrinks from conflict, [408];
- writes to Margaret of Angoulême, [412];
- advice to Berquin, [432]; ii. [1];
- warns Francis I., [32], [299]; iii. [155];
- meeting with Calvin, [156];
- breaks with him, [157], [166];
- his followers, iv. [349], [454], [455], [458];
- laments More, v. [75];
- depicts court of Brussels, [222];
- the ideal of John Alasco, vii. [434];
- receives Alasco as his guest, [437];
- his counsels, [438];
- his controversy with Luther, [438];
- esteem for Alasco, [440], [441];
- mourns his departure, [441];
- letter to Alasco, [442];
- writes to King Sigismund, [448];
- his coolness towards Alasco, [450];
- friendship with Viglius, [476], [477];
- a forerunner of reformation, [485];
- assailed by theologians of Louvain, [487];
- his opinion of the monks, [491], [517];
- read in Spain, viii. [2];
- writes to Valerio, [13], [14]
- Erdoed, Conference of, vii. [409]
- Erick, king of Sweden, the government resigned to him by Gustavus, vii. [323];
- his character, [324];
- seeks the hand of the princess Elizabeth of England, [325];
- his character and attainments, [325];
- instructed in Calvin's principles, [326];
- abolishes Catholic rites, opens Sweden to all Protestants, [327];
- his madness, [328];
- slays Nils Sture, [328];
- his flight, [329];
- slays Burrey, [329];
- escapes from his guards, his wanderings, [329];
- taken to Stockholm, [330];
- conferences with his brother John, [330];
- deprived and imprisoned, [331];
- his treatment, [331];
- his murder ordered by John III., [336], [337];
- his death by poison, [337]
- Erick, St., Feast of, vii. [332]
- Eszeky, Emeric, preaches at Tolna, vii. [413];
- application of the priests to pasha at Buda against him, [414];
- declared free to preach, [414];
- establishes a school, [414]
- Etampes, Duchess of, ii. [184]
- Europe, awakening of, i. [315]
- Evangelicals. [[Lutherans], [England], [France], [Geneva]]
- Evangelists, sent out by Calvin, iii. [58];
- abuse of, [62]
- Excommunication, Calvin's view of, vi. [286], [288]
- Exeter, Marquis of, charged with treason and executed, viii. [152]
- Faber, John, bishop of Vienna, writes against Luther, vii. [375];
- appointed bishop, [376];
- cites Devay before him, [376]
- Fabri, John, Friburg envoy to Geneva, i. [154], [155]
- Fabri (Chr. Libertet), iii. [161];
- joins Farel at Morat, [202];
- sent to Neuchâtel, [203];
- removes to Bole, [305];
- Catholic riot in his chapel, [306];
- rising of Protestant peasants, [307];
- another riot, [308], [309];
- with Viret at Lausanne, vi. [229];
- his trials, [270]
- Facts and Ideas, iii. [409]
- Faith and Science, iii. [61], [62]; vi. [32], [33]
- Farel, William, i. [2], [305], [317];
- at Strasburg, [362] sqq.;
- light of France, [370];
- invited to La Marche, [372];
- his qualifications as reformer, [374];
- hesitation, [375];
- his connection with family of Mirabeau, [375];
- preaches at Gap, [376];
- arrested and rescued, [376];
- school-master at Aigle, [377], [381], [386]; ii. [100], [263], [436];
- his perils, [439];
- his attention fixed on Geneva, [439];
- calls Toussaint to go there, [439];
- consulted by evangelicals of Paris, iii. [94];
- draws up a protest, [95];
- the great evangelist, [199];
- development and character, [199];
- scene of his labors, [201];
- at Morat, joined by Fabri, [202];
- preaches at Orbe, [204];
- at Avenches, [212];
- again at Orbe, riot at his sermon, [212];
- plot of women, [213];
- assaulted and rescued, [214];
- his strange congregation, [216];
- another, [217];
- sermon on penance, [217];
- care for the ministry, [219];
- meets with Viret, [221];
- their friendship, [224];
- the Lord's Supper at Orbe, [227];
- invites preachers into Switzerland, [232];
- letter to Andronicus, [233] sqq.;
- goes to Granson, [235];
- rough reception at the convents, [237], [238];
- goes to Morat, [238];
- imprisoned at Granson, [239];
- assailed in a church, [240];
- invited to Waldensian synod, [251];
- his journey, [253];
- the discussions, [255], [257];
- resolves to visit Geneva, [261];
- reaches Geneva, [275];
- consults with Olivétan, [275];
- interview with Huguenot leaders, [277] sqq.;
- agitation against him, [281];
- appears before the town council, [282];
- conspiracy against, [285];
- summoned before episcopal council, [285];
- the examination, [288] sqq.;
- tumult, [289];
- threats, [291];
- assault, [291];
- dangers, [292], [293];
- banished, [293];
- attempt to kill him, [295];
- escapes, [297];
- at Yvonand, [298];
- invites Froment to go to Geneva, [298];
- urges Olivétan to translate the Bible, [300];
- sent by Bernese to Geneva, iv. [207];
- his character, [208], [211];
- at the tournament, [217];
- disputation with Furbity, [222] sqq., [244], [247], [249];
- interview with Father Courtelier, [250];
- preaches in the convent at Rive, [253], [257];
- domestic trials, [259];
- letter to evangelicals of Paris, [259];
- presides at first evangelical marriage, [278];
- at first evangelical Pentecost, [282];
- before the council, [306];
- protests against union with popery, [353];
- attempt to poison him, v. [246];
- promotes a public disputation, [252];
- invitations, [256];
- interview with Caroli, [261] sqq.;
- preaches at the Madeleine, [278];
- summoned before the Council, [278];
- preaches at the Cathedral, [281] sqq.;
- before Council of Two Hundred, [293];
- preaches to nuns of St. Claire, [302];
- exhorts the council, [364], [366], [408], [409];
- calls for a general confession, [410];
- asks for help, [418];
- meeting with Calvin, [458];
- presses him to stay at Geneva, [459] sqq.;
- urges the council to retain Calvin, vi. [228];
- goes to Lausanne, [229], [237];
- his theses at the disputation, [237];
- his opening speech, [238];
- opposes protest of the canons, [238];
- his closing discourse, [256], [259];
- his search for pastors, [268], [269];
- presents the confession of faith to the Council, [283];
- his reverence for Calvin, [295];
- made a citizen of Geneva, [297];
- his depressed state, [312];
- attends synod of Lausanne, [313];
- with Calvin at the council, [347];
- accompanies him to Berne, [348];
- excluded by Berne from colloquies of the Vaudois, [372];
- sent to synod of Lausanne, [373];
- before the council, [377], [378];
- protests against imprisonment of Courault, [383];
- with Calvin declines to administer the Supper, [391], [392];
- in defiance of prohibition preaches, [396];
- a disturbance in the church, [397];
- banished, [403], [407];
- leaves Geneva, [409];
- goes to Berne, [416];
- at synod of Zurich, [420] sqq.;
- returns to Berne, [426];
- interview with Kunz, [427];
- with Calvin before the senate, [430];
- reconducted to Geneva by Bernese, [431];
- banished by vote of general council, [439];
- at Berne, [441];
- at Basel, [441];
- goes to Neuchâtel, [446];
- his letter to the Genevese, [455];
- urges Calvin to return to Geneva, vii. [22];
- edict of expulsion revoked, [43];
- deprived and banished from Neuchâtel, [49];
- reinstated, [50];
- a man of action, [114], [115]
- Farnese, Alexander [[Paul III.]]
- —, Cardinal sent by the Pope to Charles V. at Ratisbon, vii. [26]
- Favre, Francis, Genevese deputy to Berne, ii. [307], [348];
- assailed by Mamelukes, iii. [449];
- envoy to Berne, iv. [309]
- Felix V. [[Amadeus VIII.]]
- Feray, Claude, vii. [22], [23]
- Ferdinand, the Catholic, deprives his daughter Joanna of her crown and imprisons her, viii. [127];
- assumes the government of Castile, [128];
- meeting with Philip, [132];
- agreement between them, [132], [133];
- his secret protest, [133];
- his delegate left with Philip, [134]
- Ferdinand, of Austria, King of Bohemia and Hungary, ii. [109];
- invested with duchy of Würtemberg, [109], [217];
- threatened by alliance of Francis I. and Philip of Hesse, appeals to the pope, [249], [250];
- his army defeated by Philip, [253];
- loses Würtemberg, [255];
- attempts to maintain papal power in the duchy, [255];
- opposes Zapolya and is crowned King of Hungary, vii. [364];
- publishes edict against the Lutherans, [365];
- supported by Charles V., [370];
- annuls edict of toleration, [370];
- less hostile to the Reformation, [384];
- appoints a conference between the bishops and Szantai, [384];
- his embarrassment, [386];
- interview with the bishops, [386], [387];
- banishes Szantai, [387];
- concludes agreement with Zapolya, [390];
- issues ordinance for maintenance of Catholic faith, [399];
- another, [400];
- his desire for union of the two churches, [408]
- Ferrara, Hercules, duke of, his marriage at Fontainebleau, i. [418]
- Ferrara, Renée, duchess, of [[Renée of France]]
- Ferrara, University of, declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [41];
- knowledge of evangelical doctrines at, [427], [489];
- influence of Calvin at, v. [422] sqq.;
- the Inquisition, [444]
- Feyt, Florentius, Jesuit, sent to Sweden, vii. [333]
- Fief, Peter du, conducts persecution at Louvain, vii. [554];
- remonstrance of the townsmen, [556], [569]
- Finlason, James, one of the Perth Protestants, condemned by Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [180], [181];
- hung, [181]
- Fisher, John, bishop of Rochester, iv. [4], [5];
- defends the church, [16];
- summoned before the king, [17];
- his subterfuge, [18];
- rumor of attempt to poison him, [68], [141];
- supports Maid of Kent, v. [10], [12];
- attainted, sentenced to death, [16], [17];
- refuses to take the oath of supremacy, [46];
- attainted, [46];
- steadfast, [46];
- visited by Cromwell, [64];
- made cardinal, [64];
- his last moments, [66];
- death, [67];
- characterised, [74];
- effect of his death at Rome, [76]
- Fitzherbert, Anthony, commissioner for suppression of lesser monasteries, v. [100]
- Fitzwilliam, Sir William, lord-admiral, iv. [5]
- Fitzwilliam, Lord, Governor of the Tower, delivers Fryth to messengers of the primate, iv. [153]
- Flaminio, Marco Antonio, poet, iv. [427];
- birth and early life of, [477], [478];
- character, [478];
- at Naples with Valdez, [479] sqq.;
- at Rome, with Pole and Caraffa, [481]
- Florence, iv. [432]
- Folengo, Giovanni Battista, account of, iv. [482], [483]
- Fontainebleau, rejoicings at, i. [418] sqq.;
- interrupted, [422]
- Forest, Father, defends Catherine of Aragon, iv. [103]
- Forman, Andrew, competitor for see of St. Andrews, vi. [10];
- seizes the castle and monastery, [10]
- Forrest, Henry, Benedictine, imprisoned by Beatoun, vi. [92];
- degraded, [93];
- burnt, [93]
- Forrest, Thomas, Augustine, reads the writings of St. Augustine, vi. [103];
- priest of Dollar, [103];
- denounced, [104];
- his interview with the bishop of Dunkeld, [104];
- arrested, [116];
- examined before the cardinal, [116];
- burnt, [118]
- Fouquet, [[Trois-Moutiers], prior of]
- Fox, Edward, high almoner, deputed with Gardiner to obtain opinion of Cambridge University on the king's divorce, iv. [29];
- with Longland, that of Oxford, [33];
- summoned to Windsor, [35];
- ambassador to Germany, v. [109];
- concludes alliance with the princes, [110];
- sent to conduct discussion with Protestants at Wittenberg, [116];
- has audience of Elector of Saxony, [117];
- his speech at Convocation, [188]
- France, struggles in, i. [5];
- royalty in, [285];
- springs of reformation, [316];
- state of, [322] sqq.;
- after battle of Pavia, [323];
- dismemberment of, proposed by Charles V., [325];
- persecution of Lutherans in, [332];
- proclamation against the Bible in French, Luther's works and doubt, [342];
- who will be the reformer of? [369], [378];
- councils against heresy, [417], [418];
- hopes of reformers, ii. [132];
- progress of reform, [183] sqq.;
- flight of evangelicals from, [212];
- proposal for union with German Protestants, [214];
- rival plans of reform, [256];
- spirit of liberty in, [286];
- evangelization of, begun by Calvin, iii. [55], [58];
- progress of the Gospel, [60], [66];
- 'year of the placards', [92] sqq.;
- importance of, iv. [361];
- invasion of, by Henry VIII., viii. [267]
- Francis I., of France, i. [79], [234], [266], [285];
- captured at Pavia, [324];
- suppliant to Charles V., [325];
- at Madrid, [326];
- illness, [328];
- recovery, [329];
- patron of letters, [336];
- orders persecution to be stayed, [336];
- his abdication, [336];
- his contradictory oaths, [337];
- treaty with Charles V., [337];
- inconsistency, [338];
- stops proceedings against Berquin, [344];
- returns to France, [352];
- refuses permission for Count of Hohenlohe to go into France, [353], [354];
- liberates Lutheran prisoners, [358], [359]
- consents to marriage of Henry d'Albret and Margaret, [378];
- his promises to them, [379];
- treaty with Charles V., [379];
- his attitude towards the Reformation, [402];
- arrests Beda, [405];
- exasperation against the Sorbonne, [406];
- hesitation between Rome and the Reformation, [410], [411];
- deaf to appeal of Duprat, [415], [416];
- deaf to the priests, [417];
- goes to Paris, [422];
- investigates case of mutilation of image of the Virgin, [424];
- sanctions persecution, [426];
- consents to inquiry against Berquin, [432]
- —, warned by Erasmus, ii. [32];
- signs treaty of Cambray, [61];
- his children restored, [62], [63], [65];
- his marriage and coronation of his queen, Eleanor, [65] sqq.;
- the Protestants accused to him, [70];
- receives envoy and letter from German Protestant princes, [71];
- proposes a council, [72];
- hears Lécoq preach, [75];
- has secret interview with him, [75];
- veers towards reform, [94];
- sends Du Bellay to Germany, [95];
- and to England, [102];
- alliance with Henry VIII., [103];
- meets him, complains of the pope, [104];
- treaty with Henry, [105];
- sends embassy to the pope, [105];
- threatens separation from the papacy, [106];
- alarm in Europe, [106];
- confines heads of both parties in their own houses, [124];
- warned by Henry of Navarre and Du Bellay, [126];
- receives deputation from Sorbonne, [126];
- insults the deputies, [127];
- banishes Beda, [130];
- sends ambassadors to conference of Bologna, [142], [146];
- aims at alliance with Henry VIII. and the pope, [148];
- consequences of his scheme, [148];
- sends special ambassador to Bologna, [148];
- proposes marriage of Henry duke of Orleans with Catherine de' Medici, [149];
- claims an Italian state, [149];
- hesitation, [154];
- sends the pope full powers for the contract, [155];
- his policy, [157];
- proposes a lay council, [157];
- a meeting with Clement arranged, [163];
- silences Montmorency accusing Margaret, [177];
- orders inquiry on the decision of the Sorbonne, [180];
- meets Clement VII. at Marseilles, [192];
- his demands, [194];
- at marriage of his son with Catherine de' Medici, [195];
- orders persecution of heretics, [197];
- intrigues with Protestants, [197];
- holds a council at Avignon, [214];
- his policy in Germany, [216];
- goes to Bar-le-Duc, [221];
- invites Philip of Hesse to a conference, [224];
- discusses affairs of Germany, [224];
- desires to see Melanchthon, [225];
- concludes treaty with Philip, [226];
- returns to Paris, [232];
- refuses to burn Roussel and others, [232];
- imprisons Beda, [233];
- vacillation, [234];
- sets free the preachers, [234];
- quotes Scripture, [247];
- co-operates with Bucer and Du Bellay, [247];
- gives audience to waywode of Wallachia, [248];
- receives news of Philip's victory, [254];
- sends Chelius to Germany, [260];
- receives memoirs of German doctors, [264];
- holds conferences in the Louvre, [265];
- approves Melanchthon's views, [282];
- sends envoy to Germany and confesses his mistakes, [283];
- orders French version of reformers' opinions, [284];
- his tactics, [285];
- difference between him and Henry VIII., [295];
- leans towards the Reformation, [296];
- supports demands of Savoy against Geneva, [390]
- —, steps towards reformation, iii. [67];
- a 'placard' on his door, [106];
- his exasperation, [107];
- orders search for evangelicals, [107];
- returns to Paris, [113];
- harsh towards Margaret, [115];
- recalls her to Paris, [116];
- interview with her preachers, [117];
- pardons them, [125];
- orders procession of relics, [127];
- his penitence, [130];
- his speech, [133];
- present at torture and death of martyrs, [137], [138], [139];
- orders extirpation of Lutherans, [140];
- abolishes printing, [140];
- his motives, [144];
- writes to German princes, [148];
- illusions about him, [167];
- Calvin's letter to, [182]
- —, inclines towards Rome, iv. [127], [165], [167];
- meeting with Clement VII., [167];
- conference with English envoys, [167];
- conversation with the pope, [172];
- their accord, [174];
- attempts mediation between England and the pope, [177];
- at Pavia, [321];
- appeal of Bernese to, in behalf of Maisonneuve and Janin, [322];
- liberates them, [328];
- his letter to the syndics of Geneva, [330], [348], [349];
- writes to German princes, [351], [354];
- inclines to reform, [357];
- invites Melanchthon to France, [358];
- his letter to Melanchthon, [363];
- his sincerity questionable, [364];
- publishes amnesty, [368];
- instructs Cardinal du Bellay, [368];
- proposes a conference between Catholics and reformers, [369];
- gives up the scheme, [371];
- his political designs, [393];
- proposes to write to Elector of Saxony, [394];
- his views of reformation set forth by Du Bellay at Smalcalde, [399] sqq.;
- plays two parts, [405];
- his anger at Carnesecchi, [475]
- —, proposes interview with Henry VIII., v. [21];
- sends embassy to him, [58], [75];
- accepts alliance of Charles V., [114];
- proposes crusade against Henry, [114];
- prepares for war with the emperor, [116];
- secretly aids Geneva, [360], [365];
- resolves to invade Savoy and the Milanese, [377]
- —, refuses to deliver up Cardinal Pole to Henry VIII., viii. [150];
- expels Pole from France, [159];
- opposes marriage of Henry VIII. with duchess of Milan, [174];
- proposes marriage of Henry of Orleans with princess Mary of England, [176];
- authorizes printing and importation of Bibles by Grafton, [176];
- rejoices at Cromwell's fall, [211];
- and at persecution of Protestants in London, [240];
- pretexts of Henry VIII. for war with, [267];
- concludes peace with Charles V., [268]
- Francis, bishop of Geneva, i. [21], [26], [33]
- Franciscans, at Geneva, i. [44];
- compared with Dominicans, iv. [245]
- Frangipani, Francisco, vii. [369], [383]
- Frankfort, Protestant deputies at, ii. [97];
- assembly of Protestant Princes at, v. [118];
- Conference of theologians at, vi. [473] sqq.;
- beginning of reformation at, viii. [317]
- Frederick, duke of Holstein, forms alliance with Lübeck against Christian II., vii. [136];
- his character, [141];
- a canon of Cologne, resigns the canonry, [141];
- accepts crown of Denmark, [142];
- promises not to tolerate Lutherans, [142];
- resolves to maintain impartiality, [143];
- his edict of toleration, [145];
- his son Christian in Germany, [147], [148];
- enters Copenhagen, [149];
- professes Lutheranism, [149];
- his coronation, [154];
- liberates Tausen, [155];
- convokes diet at Odensee, [162];
- his speech, [162], [163];
- by his ordinance establishes freedom of conscience, [164];
- assembles a conference of the bishops and the Lutherans, [171];
- prohibits preaching of the Lutherans, withdraws the prohibition, [173];
- his impartiality, [181], [183];
- allies himself with German princes, [184];
- assembles army and fleet, [186];
- imprisons Christian II., [190];
- his death, [193];
- his character and his family, [194]
- Frederick the Wise, i. [406];
- his reply to the king of Hungary, vii. [349]
- Fregoso, archbishop of Salerno, made cardinal, iv. [487]
- Friburg, citizenship of, granted to Genevese patriots, i. [37];
- envoys of, at Geneva, protect Berthelier, [84];
- another deputation to Geneva, [87];
- indignation at refusal of safe-conduct for Berthelier, [87];
- Genevese embassy to, demands alliance, [140], [141];
- offer of alliance accepted by Geneva, [148], [149];
- the duke of Savoy tries to break the alliance, [152];
- disturbances, [152];
- Fabri sent to Geneva, [154];
- the alliance confirmed, [156];
- the canons of Geneva declare against it, [159];
- deputation sent to Geneva, [169];
- alliance renounced by Mamelukes, [179];
- sends army to Geneva, [179];
- message to the duke, [180];
- protects and receives fugitive patriots of Geneva, [275];
- promises help, [280];
- embassy to Geneva, [281];
- arrival of wives and children of exiles, [283];
- alliance with Berne and Geneva, [303];
- departure of Genevese exiles, [304], [305], [307], [310], [313], [314]; ii. [391], [392], [400], [404], [415], [418], [419], [423], [431], [441];
- asks help of Geneva, [442];
- outrages of Friburgers at Geneva, [444];
- demands renunciation of alliance, [449];
- alliance maintained, [450];
- complains of Lutheran proceedings, [466];
- joint-suzerain of Orbe, iii. [205];
- deputation from Orbe to, [212];
- orders liberation of priests, [231];
- with Berne publishes first act of religious liberty in Switzerland, [244];
- sends embassy with threats to Geneva, [354];
- mediation of Friburg merchants between Catholics and Lutherans, [393];
- urges bishop of Geneva to return, [423];
- demands satisfaction for Wernli's death, [428];
- deputies of, attend the bishop on his return, [432];
- rumors of intervention at Geneva, [447];
- the deputies demand justice for Wernli's death, [447];
- support episcopal citation, [451], [453]; iv. [231];
- renounces alliance with Geneva, [258]
- Friesland, religious condition of, vii. [457];
- a battle-field of religious parties, [457];
- Countess Anna, [461], [463];
- John of Falkenberg, [464];
- Countess Anna's reply to Alasco, [467];
- suppression of Romanism, [467];
- disorders, [473]
- Frobenius, iv. [407]
- Froment, Christian Anthony, iii. [298];
- urged by Farel to go to Geneva, [298], [299], [312], [313];
- goes to Geneva, [314];
- coldly received, [314];
- departs but returns, [315];
- advertises his school, [316];
- his proceedings, [316];
- success, [317];
- alarm, [319], [320];
- conversion of Claudine Levet, [323];
- disputation with Pellier, [331];
- ends with a riot, [333];
- advised not to preach, [335];
- preaches at the Molard, [338];
- forbidden by syndics, continues, [341];
- interrupted by armed priests, rescued by Bernard, [347];
- attempted concealment, [347];
- employed as a servant, [348], [350];
- attacked and rescued, [351];
- goes to Yvonand, [352];
- results of his labors at Geneva, [352];
- returns to Geneva, iv. [195];
- attempts to arrest him, [198];
- refutes Furbity, [204];
- assailed in the church, rescued by Maisonneuve, [204] sqq.;
- leaves Geneva, [206];
- returns, [215];
- at the tournament, [217];
- at first evangelical Pentecost, [282], [330];
- attempt to poison him by Antonia Vax, v. [246];
- at the disputation, v. [268]
- 'Frondeur', an unhappy, ii. [88];
- at Strasburg, [88];
- returns to France, [89];
- received by Calvin, [89]
- Fryth, John, sought for by Henry VIII., iv. [59];
- married, [59];
- account of him, [139];
- his true Catholicism, [140];
- assists Tyndale, [140];
- returns from the Low Countries, [140];
- his reply to More and others on purgatory, [141];
- in the stocks at Reading, [141];
- liberated, goes to London, [142];
- his doctrine of the Lord's Supper written down, [143];
- a copy treacherously taken to the Chancellor, [143];
- leaves London, [143];
- Tyndale's letter to, [144];
- hunted by More, [144];
- arrested, [145];
- reads More's reply to him, [146];
- writes the Bulwark, [147];
- other labors in prison, [147];
- some liberty allowed him, [148];
- visits Petit, [149];
- the bishops bent on his death, [150];
- ordered for trial, [151];
- his judges, [151];
- taken by Cranmer's messengers to Lambeth, [154];
- will not step backwards, [154], [155];
- the scheme for his escape, [156];
- refuses to escape, [158];
- his trial at Croydon, [159];
- his view of the sacrament, [159];
- again sent to the Tower, [160];
- his cause transferred to bishop of London, [160];
- sentenced to death, [161];
- in Newgate, [161];
- burnt at Smithfield, [162];
- influence of his writings, [162]; v. [34]
- Funeral Procession of the Papacy, at Geneva, ii. [347]
- Furbity Guy, Dominican, sent to Geneva, iv. [200];
- preaches in the Cathedral, [201];
- challenges Lutherans, [203];
- answered by Froment, [204];
- tumult in the church, [204] sqq.;
- eulogizes St. Thomas of Canterbury, [207];
- watched by city guards, [212];
- prevented from leaving Geneva, [213];
- appears before the council, will not speak, [217], [218];
- his trial demanded by Bernese, [219];
- colloquy with Diesbach, [220];
- disputation with Farel, [222] sqq.;
- visits Pennet in prison, [240];
- summoned before the council, [243];
- his apologies in the Cathedral, [244];
- violently assailed and again imprisoned, [245];
- his release requested by Francis I., [330];
- liberated, [330];
- declines to take part in disputation, v. [266], [267];
- liberated, [407], [408]
- Gabriel Dune, Gardiner's agent against Tyndale, v. [35] sqq.
- Gaillard, Castle of, Duke Charles III. at, i. [169]
- Galle, Peter, champion of the papacy against Olaf Petersen, vii. [274];
- discussion with Olaf at Westeraas, [290]
- Gallican Liberties, ii. [245], [246], [286]
- Gambara, nuncio, ii. [144]
- Gardiner, Stephen, deputed to obtain opinion of Cambridge university on the king's divorce, iv. [29], [31], [32];
- made bishop of Winchester, [72];
- his interviews with Fryth in the Tower, [146];
- one of Fryth's examiners, [151];
- envoy to Marseilles, [167];
- jealousy of Bonner, [168];
- resolves on death of Tyndale, v. [35];
- his agents, Philips, and Gabriel, [35], [41];
- opposes translation of the Bible, [55];
- opposes visitation by Cranmer, [57];
- opposes alliance with German Protestants, [110];
- his reply to Pole, [177];
- his policy, his embassy to France, viii. [158];
- complains to Granvella of calumnies about himself, [158];
- his entry into London, [158];
- urges the king to persecution of heretics, [160];
- his secret conferences with other bishops, [161];
- instigates prosecution of Lambert, [166];
- at his trial, [170], [187];
- preaches at Paul's Cross instead of Barnes, [202];
- brings subject of the king's divorce before Convocation, [231];
- reads the judgment, [232];
- introduces Catherine Howard to the king, [234];
- sent with Norfolk to examine the queen on charges made against her, [250];
- his argument for keeping Latin words in English Bible, [256];
- takes part in plot against Cranmer, [263];
- persecutes evangelicals of Oxford, [264] sqq.;
- examines Anne Askew, [278];
- gets royal proclamation issued against New Testament and many religious books, [279], [286], [287];
- instigates Henry against the queen, [288];
- intrigues against her, [289];
- with Wriothesley, draws up indictment against her, [290];
- in disgrace, appeals to the king, [293];
- excluded from number of the king's executors and from the council of regency, [298]
- Garret, evangelical preacher, viii. [202];
- preaches at Paul's Cross, [202];
- reprimanded by the king, [204];
- committed to the Tower, [204];
- burnt at Smithfield, [226-228]
- Gaudet, Pierre, iv. [284];
- settles at Geneva, v. [237];
- sets off for Gex, [238];
- seized and taken to Peney, [239];
- tortured, [240];
- his death, [241]
- Gaudri, Bishop of Laon, slain, ii. [450]
- Gazzini, Pietro, Bishop of Aosta, ii. [367];
- commissioned to seek help of the pope for Duke of Savoy, [393];
- his opposition to the Lutherans, v. [449], [450]
- Geelen, Jan van, 'Spiritual,' excites revolt in Holland, attempts surprise of Amsterdam, viii. [348];
- fate of his followers, [349]
- Geneva, centre of Reformation, i. [1];
- characteristics of the movement, [2];
- importance of political element, [3];
- great things to be studied in small at, [7];
- Roman, German, Christian influences combined, [8];
- Burgundian conquests, [9];
- the gospel first brought to, [10];
- its first bishop, [10];
- early history and liberties, [11];
- Charlemagne at, [11];
- the Counts of, [12];
- their castles and mode of life, [12];
- growth of power of the bishops, [13];
- the first prince-bishop, [13];
- coveted by House of Savoy, [14];
- seizure of the castle by Peter of Savoy, [16];
- placed under his guardianship, [16];
- attempt of Amadeus V., [17];
- the vidamy, [18];
- rectors of the city elected, [19];
- attempt of Amadeus VIII., [21];
- visit of Pope Martin V., [19];
- the fair transferred to Lyons, [26];
- surrounded by states of Savoy, [27];
- renovation preparing, [28];
- excitement at, about death of bishop Charles de Seyssel, [29], [30];
- entry of the Bastard of Savoy, [38];
- settlement of Savoyards in, [41];
- given to Savoy by Leo X., [50];
- excitement and opposition, [50];
- consent of cardinals refused, the bull recalled, [52];
- corruption fostered by Philibert the Fair, [58];
- assembly of patriots, [69];
- terror caused by torture and death of Pécolat, [83];
- peril, [86];
- Swiss alliance sought, [87];
- excommunication riot, [105];
- plot of the duke, the bishop, and the count, [111];
- agitation caused by deaths of Blanchet and Navis, [124] sqq.;
- meeting of the council, [127];
- embassy to Duke of Savoy, [128];
- critical position of the Republic, [129];
- another embassy to the duke and the bishop, [132];
- consultation of patriots, [134];
- rejection of sealed letter from the bishop, [138];
- the Great Council, [138];
- conflict of ecclesiastical and secular society in, [139];
- fruitless debate on Swiss alliance, [141];
- excitement, [142];
- reception of ducal embassy, [146];
- Swiss alliance carried, [148];
- election of Huguenot syndics, [149];
- Mameluke organization, [150];
- the canons in danger, [159];
- surrounded by ducal army, [162];
- insolent ducal embassy, [163];
- ordered by Swiss Diet to receive the duke, [164];
- summoned by Charles III., [165];
- reply of the Syndics, [165], [166];
- preparations for war, [166];
- a truce, [170];
- attack of the duke frustrated, [171];
- entered by the duke, [174];
- distribution of his army, [174];
- conquered, [176];
- pillaged, [177];
- Friburg army at, [180];
- the plague, [183];
- entered by the bishop, [187];
- Mameluke reaction at, [200];
- restriction of liberties, [203];
- the decrees revoked, [206];
- Huguenots recover their liberties, [207];
- papal citation, [208];
- procession organized by priests, [210];
- Pierre de la Baume, prince-bishop, [215];
- time of depression, [217];
- vanity of the Genevese, [219];
- entry of the duke and duchess, [220];
- 'mystery' performed, [222];
- seeming success of Savoyard seductions, [224];
- New Testament introduced, [225];
- quarrels with Savoyards, [232];
- corruption and disorders, [235], [236]
- agitation caused by seizure of Levrier, [248];
- indignation at his execution, [255];
- departure of the duke, [256];
- vengeance of Savoyard council for assault on Boulet, [261];
- election of Huguenot syndics, [263];
- appeal of Council to the pope against Savoy, [264];
- the delegates stopped by the duke, [266];
- appeal withdrawn, [268];
- the ducal army near, [269];
- enters, [270];
- exodus of patriots, [270];
- entered by Charles, [279];
- about to surrender independence, [280];
- Swiss embassy to, [280];
- departure of wives and children of exiles, [282];
- 'council of halberds', [287];
- departure of the duke, [289];
- mission of Lullin, [290];
- justification of the fugitives, [290] sqq.;
- return of the bishop, [297];
- election of Huguenot syndics, [301] sqq.;
- old constitution restored, [302];
- Swiss alliance concluded, [304];
- return of exiles, [304];
- Council, [305];
- General Council, [307] sqq.;
- gleams of reformation, [310];
- conspiracy of canons, [311];
- flight of Mamelukes, [312];
- Swiss embassy, [313];
- alliance sworn, [313];
- rejoicings, [314]
- —, the new situation, ii. [302];
- the castles, [303];
- traders, [303];
- measures of defence, [306];
- deputation to Berne, [307];
- immoralities, [318];
- project of the duke against, [322];
- warnings, [323];
- delivered from the canons, [325], [326];
- the bishop made a citizen, [328];
- civil jurisdiction conceded, [328];
- new party forms, [333];
- immorality attacked, [334];
- claim and threats of the duke, [338];
- flight of the bishop, [340];
- constitution formed, [344];
- fall of the ducal arms, [344];
- excommunication and interdict pronounced against, [345];
- papal letters prohibited, [346];
- funeral procession of the papacy, [347];
- bids the duke mind his own business, [350];
- assailed by 'gentlemen of the Spoon', [357];
- civil jurisdiction revoked, [363];
- menaced by the bishop, [363];
- reply to his envoys, [364];
- the messenger of the council insulted, [366];
- intrigues in the convents, [370];
- arrival and departure of auxiliary troops, [372];
- insolence and death of Pontverre, [376] sqq.;
- a Genevan crucified, [383];
- 'Day of the Ladders', [383], [384];
- embassies from the Swiss and from Savoy, [390];
- will not give up Swiss alliance, [391];
- defies the emperor, [395];
- emperor and pope unite against, [396];
- war begun by duke and bishop, [416];
- march of allies on, [417] sqq.;
- still a Catholic city, [417];
- blockaded, [418];
- skirmishes, [419];
- night attack, [420];
- retreat of Savoyards, [422];
- arrival of Swiss troops, [424] sqq.;
- preachings in the cathedral, [426] sqq.;
- truce of St. Julien, [428];
- declines intervention of the emperor, [431];
- another attack threatened and frustrated, [431], [432];
- Diet of Payerne, [432];
- a pilgrimage to St. Claire resisted, [433];
- another allowed, [434];
- 'de Christo meditare', [437];
- agrees to help Berne and Friburg, [442];
- again threatened by the duke, [442];
- election of Catholics, struggles, [444];
- threatened by the duke, [445];
- Swiss alliance adhered to, [446];
- withdrawal of ducal army, [447];
- preparation by sufferings and dangers, [447] sqq.;
- Swiss alliance cancelled by patricians, [449];
- but maintained by citizens of Berne, [450];
- cession of, to son of the duke proposed, [452];
- agitation about the General Pardon posted up by Lutherans, [463] sqq.;
- Friburg embassy and threats, [466];
- placards and preaching prohibited, [466];
- first official act in favor of reformation, [467];
- letter from archbishop to the syndics, [468];
- standard of the Gospel raised, [472];
- conflict of two parties, [472] sqq.
- —, saves Europe, iii. [199];
- Farel's arrival at, [275];
- progress of reformation, [325], [328];
- tumult, [333], [334];
- Froment's sermon at the Molard, priests in arms, [338], [339];
- balance of parties, [350];
- agitation against Lutherans, [366];
- conspiracy, [367];
- both parties armed, [371];
- disturbance in the cathedral, [372];
- Catholic preparations to fight, [375];
- the corps formed, [376];
- mustering of the corps, [377];
- distresses in the homes, [381], [382];
- the Huguenots on the defensive, [390];
- bloodshed prevented, [392];
- mediation of Friburgers, [393];
- peace proclaimed, [395];
- articles of peace, [397];
- disquietude, [401];
- holiday evening and a brawl, [411];
- the tocsin, [413];
- fight in the Molard, [415] sqq.;
- the bishop invited to return, [425];
- his entrance, [433];
- a general council, [434];
- the Charters consulted, [436];
- episcopal proscriptions, [439];
- deputation of elders to the bishop, [451];
- resolution of the Sixty, [453];
- of the Two Hundred, [455];
- gathering perils, [460]
- —, the part of Geneva in the Reformation, iv. [184];
- agitation about Lutheran prisoners, [186];
- the bishop's final departure, [192];
- evangelical preaching authorized by the Council, [196];
- plot of the Catholics, [211];
- both parties in arms, [211];
- Bernese embassy to, [215];
- the tournament, [217] sqq.;
- the bishop's coup d'état, [231];
- assassinations and tumult, [232], [233] sqq.;
- the bishop's palace searched, [236];
- the cathedral searched, [237];
- four Huguenot syndics, [242];
- Savoyard procession forbidden to enter, [279];
- another enters and is driven out, [280] sqq.;
- image-breaking, [281];
- Whitsuntide procession, [284];
- embassy from France, [292];
- Feast of Corpus Christi, [304];
- rumors of attack by bishop and duke, [308] sqq.;
- preparations, [309];
- plans of the invaders, [310];
- advance on the city, [311];
- treachery within, [311];
- a warning, [312];
- called to arms, [312];
- retreat of the Savoyards, [315];
- vigilance, [317];
- city and suburbs described, [323];
- destruction of suburbs ordered, [324], [326];
- opposition of Catholics, [327];
- the houses razed, lamentations, [333], [334];
- ramparts built, [335];
- the see removed to Gex, [338];
- excommunications by the bishop, [339];
- appeal to the pope, [340];
- prepares for defence, [342]
- —, three parties to uphold the Reformation, v. [232];
- Huguenot magistrates elected, [232];
- a monk allowed to preach the Gospel, [234];
- riot of women in the church, [236];
- plots of Roman Catholics, [243];
- a disputation announced, [256];
- refusal of the papists, [257];
- the debate, [264] sqq.;
- its effect, [274];
- trade or intercourse with Geneva forbidden by the bishop, [270];
- misery in the city, [276];
- Farel at the Cathedral, [280] sqq.;
- forbidden to preach there, [283];
- images broken, [285];
- campaign against idols, [288] sqq.;
- mass suppressed, church property confiscated, [295];
- the monks dumb before the Council, [299];
- flight of papists, [299];
- hospital and school founded, [309];
- mendicity abolished, [310];
- end of Romanism, [311];
- proclaimed as infected by duke of Savoy, [314];
- skirmishes and alarms, [314];
- refuses to expel heresy and restore the bishop, [317];
- news of battle of Gingins, [346];
- storming of convent of St. Jean, [357];
- blockaded, [358];
- assault repulsed, [358];
- coins money, [360];
- refuses a truce, [362];
- the troops partly withdrawn, [363];
- rejects offer of French protectorate, [365];
- attack on the church of our Lady of Grace repulsed by Jessé, [366], [367];
- night attacks by Savoyards, [368];
- the war of Cologny, [369];
- famine, [375];
- Bernese help promised, [376];
- entrance of Nagueli, and the Bernese army, [387];
- the castles burnt, [392], [393];
- rejects sovereignty of Berne, [397];
- attack on Chillon, [399] sqq.;
- evangelization of the town and the country, [404], [405];
- difficulties with the priests, [406];
- morals in the city, [408];
- the General Confession (21st May), [412] sqq.;
- return of refugees, [415];
- toleration, [416], [417];
- action of the Government in religious affairs, [465]
- —, importance of the services of Geneva to freedom and religion, vi. [219], [220], [221];
- arrival of Calvin, [221];
- church discipline before his time, [224];
- long preparation of the Genevese for triumph of the Reformation, [226], [227];
- conference of pastors at, [273], [274];
- Calvin's Confession of faith adopted, [284];
- his articles on order and discipline allowed, [289];
- measures of the council, [290], [291];
- Convocation of the people, the Confession adopted, [294];
- but refused by many, [294];
- discipline by the state, [297];
- description of the city, [298];
- parties at, [335];
- the Confession sworn to, [337] sqq.;
- resistance of the Huguenots, [338] sqq.;
- a general Council, [341];
- the remonstrance, [342], [343];
- confusion, [344];
- deputation to Berne, [348];
- refusal of the council to exclude any from the Supper, [354];
- disorders, [355], [356];
- two parties in the republic, [358];
- election of syndics, [360];
- victory of the opposition, [361];
- proclamation against disorders, [362];
- refuses to entertain project of submission to France, [363];
- confusion of church and state at, [365];
- Bernese usages adopted, [379];
- disturbances, [380];
- confusion, [386] sqq.;
- Easter Sunday 1538, [395];
- banishment of the reformers decreed, [403], [407];
- dismay at their departure, [412];
- licentiousness of the vulgar, [413];
- the new pastors, [414];
- reply to Bernese letter, [419];
- resistance to return of Farel and Calvin, [431];
- Bernese delegates received, [433];
- vote of banishment of the reformers by general council, [439];
- the ceremonies established, [449];
- new pastors, [449], [450];
- party strife, [450];
- disorders, [451];
- despotism, [465], [466];
- the rector and regents of the College banished, [467];
- election of new syndics, [471];
- suppression of disorders, [471];
- letter from Sadoleto received by the Council, [480];
- effect of Calvin's reply to it, [496], [497];
- Catholic priests before the Council, [500], [501];
- dispute about treaty with Berne, [512];
- a new treaty signed, [513];
- quarrel about it, [514], [515];
- summoned by Berne to a trial at Lausanne, the treaty rejected by general Council, [515];
- judgment against Genevese delivered at Lausanne, [516];
- a general reconciliation, [516];
- agitation about the quarrel with Berne, [517];
- flight of the Articulants, [518];
- a riot, [521];
- fate of the Articulants, [524]
- —, proceedings for recall of Calvin, vii. [5];
- letter of the Council, [8];
- edict of expulsion of the reformers revoked, [43];
- letters of the Syndics to Zurich, Basel and Strasburg, [43] sqq.;
- value of these documents, [45];
- preparation for reception of Calvin, [50];
- a day of humiliation, [59];
- the 'Ordinances' considered by the Council, [61], [62];
- adopted, [63];
- Geneva to be made an ecclesiastical fortress, [65];
- the name of Jesus engraved on the gates, [77];
- relation of church and state at, [77] sqq.;
- state of men's minds at, [96];
- new pastors, [106];
- moral change, [111]
- George, Duke of Anhalt, his birth and early life, viii. [322];
- his adherence to Rome, [323];
- searches the Scriptures, [323];
- inquiry and perplexity, [324];
- reads Luther, [325];
- gains over his brothers to his views, [325];
- exercises episcopal authority, [325]
- Gérac, castle of, iii. sqq.
- German Envoys in England, viii. [153] sqq.;
- their long stay, fruitless discussions, [155];
- their view, [155];
- leave England, [157]
- German Protestant Princes send envoy to Francis I., ii. [71];
- envoy sent to, [72];
- proposal for union of France with, [214];
- English embassy to, v. [109];
- attempt at alliance renewed, [117], [118];
- assembly at Frankfort, [118];
- embassy to Henry VIII., [118];
- renounce his alliance, [170];
- send envoys to Henry VIII., viii. [153];
- discussion at Lambeth, [154]
- Germans, The, papal treatment of, i. [120]
- Germany, affairs in, ii. [95] sqq.;
- peasant revolt in, compared with Pilgrimage of Grace, v. [207]
- Gex, meeting of duke of Savoy and bishop of Geneva at, ii. [415], [424]
- Ghent, the Reformation at, vii. [546] sqq.
- Ghinucci, deprived of see of Worcester, iv. [180]
- 'Ghost of Lyons', i. [408]
- Giberto, Giovanni Matteo, bishop of Verona, iv. [478], [482]
- Gingins, Aimé de, abbot of Bonmont, i. [31];
- elected bishop of Geneva, [32];
- set aside by the Pope, [35];
- pensioned by the Bastard, [40], [157], [159], [160], [169]; ii. [410], [467];
- episcopal council at his house, iii. [284];
- presides at examination of Farel, [288], [292], [397];
- armed gathering at his house, [412]; v. [257];
- flies from Geneva, [308];
- discovered by the Bernese at Divonne, ransoms himself, [386]
- Gingins, Francis de, lord of Divonne, account of, v. [385], [386];
- a ransom exacted from him by the Bernese, [386]
- Gingins, battle of, v. [332] sqq.;
- effect of it, [355]
- Giraldi, Lilio, iv. [427]
- Girard, Aimé, deputy to bishop of Geneva, i. [262], [270], [276]; ii. [366], [378]
- Gjöe, Henry, holds Copenhagen for Christian II., vii. [149];
- capitulates to Frederick, [149]
- Gjöe, Magnus, councillor of Denmark, embraces the Reformation, vii. [149];
- head of reform party, [164];
- his speech at the electoral diet, [197];
- refuses to sign the compact, [198];
- in Jutland, [209];
- urges election of Christian III., [210];
- announces to him his election, [212]
- Gjöe, Brigitta, vii. [204]
- Glareanus, his intercourse with Alasco, vii. [439]
- Gnapheus, William, vii. [500];
- takes part in translating New Testament, [501];
- arrested and imprisoned, [501];
- liberated, [502];
- again arrested, [519];
- his Tobias and Lazarus, [519]
- Goch, Jan van, vii. [482]
- Golden Bull, The, read at Geneva, ii. [460]
- Goldenhauer, Gerhard, preaches in Guelderland, vii. [525];
- goes to Strasburg, [526];
- Professor of Theology, Marburg, [526]
- Gonin, Martin, Waldensian deputy to Granson, iii. [251], [252], [298], [302], [303] sqq.
- Gonzaga, Giulia di, among friends of Valdez, iv. [465];
- Barbarossa's attempt to carry her off, [465];
- her religious struggles, [468];
- conversations with Valdez, [469] sqq.
- Gosseau, Jacques, vii. [551], [570]
- Gostwick, Sir John, accuses Cranmer, viii. [243];
- the king's menace to him, [247]
- Gothus, Lawrence, appointed archbishop of Upsala, vii. [333]
- Gottschalken, Oddur, vii. [226];
- secretary to Œgmund, [226];
- translates the New Testament, [227];
- his translation printed, [228]
- Goulaz, Jean, takes part in posting up General Pardon at Geneva, ii. [463];
- affray with a canon, [465];
- fined, [466];
- visits Farel, iii. [277], [278], [296], [314];
- supports Froment, [319], [372];
- with Porral charged to maintain good morals in the city, vi. [289];
- renounces citizenship of Geneva, and is imprisoned, [470], [471];
- assists Calvin in preparing constitution of a church, vii. [56]
- Gourlay, Norman, condemned and burnt with Straiton, vi. [96]
- Grafton, Richard, asks permission to sell Tyndale's Bible, v. [227];
- interview with Cranmer, [227];
- with Whitchurch, authorized by Francis I. to print and import the Bible into France, viii. [176];
- with Coverdale goes to Paris, [177];
- their difficulties, [177];
- the printing stopped by the Inquisition, [178];
- and completed in London, [178];
- cited before the Council, [238];
- saved by intervention of Wriothesley, [238]
- Graham, Patrick, primate of Scotland, deprived and imprisoned for life, vi. [6]
- Gramont, Cardinal de, ambassador to Clement VII., ii. [105];
- to Conference of Bologna, [142];
- characterized, [147] [[Tournon]]
- Gramont, De, Bishop of Tarbes, ambassador to the emperor, iv. [24];
- confers with Earl of Wiltshire, [27]
- Gran, Archbishop of, cites evangelists of Hermanstadt before him, vii. [350];
- goes to Rome, [351];
- takes part in suppression of Lutheranism, [352]
- Granson, battle of, iii. [236];
- the churches opened to Farel by order of Berne, [238];
- a fray in the church, [240]
- Granvella, Imperial chancellor, iii. [265];
- gives to Bellegarde answer of the emperor to duke of Savoy, [265];
- his relations with de Soto, viii. [67];
- orders arrest of Enzinas, [75]
- Grapheus, Cornelius, account of, vii. [492];
- seized by Inquisitors, [492];
- apologizes and is imprisoned, [492];
- retracts, [493];
- his property is confiscated, imprisoned for life, [493];
- his appeal fruitless, [494]
- Greenwich, tournament at, v. [137] sqq.
- Gregorius, Matthias, Bishop of Strengnaes, vii. [237];
- massacred at coronation of Christian II., [239]
- Gregory, Father, orator of Roman party at Conference of Schässburg, vii. [384] sqq.
- Grimani, Marco, legate, sent to Scotland, vi. [166];
- co-operates with Lennox, [167]
- Gringalet and Levrat, monks, intrigue for duke of Savoy, ii. [369];
- banished from Geneva, [371]
- Grivat, George, precentor, iii. [226];
- preaches at Orbe, [227]
- Groningen, reformers at, vii. [502]
- Groot, Gerard, vii. [482]
- Gros, Claude, his mule, i. [73], [74];
- mock auction, [74];
- his complaint before the vidame, [74]
- Grynæus, Simon, his intercourse with Calvin at Basel, iii. [160], [167];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42];
- defends Bucer, vi. [325];
- takes part in the synod of Berne, [327];
- his letter to Calvin and Farel, [442];
- receives Calvin into his house, [443];
- his early life, vii. [346];
- proclaims evangelical doctrines at Buda, [346];
- seized, imprisoned and banished, [354];
- Professor at Basel, 354; viii. [143]
- Guarino, Francesco, sets out with Curione for Wittenberg, iv. [415];
- arrested, [416]
- Guéné, William, instigates persecution at Brussels, vii. [569]
- Guerin, iii. [328], [352], [356], [358];
- presides at the Lord's Supper at Geneva, [360];
- leaves Geneva, [361]
- Guidacerio, of Venice, publishes commentaries on Scripture, ii. [90];
- accused by Beda, [230]
- Guido, iii. [298], [301], [303] sqq.
- Guillaume, Thomas, named chaplain to Earl of Arran, vi. [155];
- outcry against him, [156];
- forbidden to preach, goes to England, [168]
- Guillet, M., i. [42]
- Gundebald, at Geneva, i. [10]
- Gustavus Vasa, his birth and boyhood, vii. [244];
- his first campaign, [245];
- one of the hostages assigned to Christian II., taken prisoner and confined in Jutland, [245];
- escapes to Lübeck, pursued, [246];
- returns to Sweden and enters Calmar, [246];
- escapes to the mountain district, attempts to rouse the peasants, [246];
- his wanderings, [247] sqq.;
- his interview with archbishop Ulfsson, [248];
- hears of the Stockholm massacre, [249];
- in concealment in Dalecarlia, [249];
- recognized at Ornaes, [251];
- received by Perssons, [251];
- denounced, escapes, [251];
- pursued and wounded, again escapes, [252];
- his appeal to the peasants, [253];
- proclaimed captain of all the communes of Sweden, [254];
- growing success, [255];
- the Danish camp broken up by his followers, [255];
- takes possession of Westeraas, [255];
- besieges Stockholm, and takes it, [255];
- convokes a diet at Strengnaes, [256];
- proclaimed king there, [257];
- his interview with the reformers, [258];
- his policy, [258];
- appoints Anderson chancellor, [258];
- conversations with him, [259];
- at Malmoe, arranges with Frederick the separation of the kingdoms, [261];
- refuses to persecute the Lutherans, [261];
- appoints Magnus primate, [262];
- expels the iconoclasts, [266];
- makes a progress through the provinces, [267];
- present at Olaf's marriage, [267];
- bids the bishops translate the New Testament, [269];
- demands part of the tithes for state purposes, [270];
- at Upsala on the Feast of St. Erick, [271];
- confers with the Chapter on church temporal power, [272];
- attends public disputation between Olaf and Peter Galle, [274];
- declaration of his purpose, [279];
- cites the primate before him, [279];
- resolves on reformation, [280];
- convokes Diet at Westeraas, [281];
- his speech and abdication, [287], [288];
- in retirement, [289];
- receives deputations from the Diet, [291];
- returns to the Diet, [293];
- his requirements, [293];
- his victory, [296];
- suppresses revolt of the Dalecarlians, [297];
- his coronation, [298];
- convokes a synod, [298];
- his political view of religion, [299];
- undertakes restoration of the schools, [304];
- marries Catherine of Saxe-Lauenburg, [307];
- discovers and frustrates scheme of alliance of Hanse Towns and Denmark against him, [308];
- his ecclesiastical measures, [309];
- compared with Olaf, [309];
- his coolness towards Olaf, [309];
- rebuked by him, [310];
- marries a second time, [312];
- his letter to the primate, [312];
- anger against Olaf and his brother, [314];
- commands them to be brought to trial, [315];
- compared with Henry VIII., [316];
- his claim to rule the Church, [317];
- absolute in church and state, [318];
- his rule of the church, [320];
- orders arrest of the bishop of Strengnaes, [321];
- excuses for severity, [321];
- declines to join the League of Smalcalde, [322];
- his speech on resigning the government to his son, [322], [323];
- last conversations, [323], [324];
- death, [324];
- grief over his sons, [325]
- Guy Regis, Superior of Grey Friars, iii. [237], [238];
- contends with Farel and Viret, [239]
- Gyldenstern, Count, his interview with Tausen, vii. [170]
- Gyldenstern, Knud, commander-in-chief of forces of Denmark, vii. [186];
- receives submission of Christian II., [187];
- his convention annulled, [189]
- Gypsies, banished from England, iv. [68]
- Hacket, Sir John, at Brussels, iv. [163];
- attempts to seize Tyndale's New Testaments in the ports of the Netherlands, vi. [25]
- Halidon, battle of, vi. [138]
- Haller, Berthold, invites Farel to Switzerland, i. [376]; ii. [400]; v. [316], [360];
- blesses the Bernese army, [373];
- his death, vi. [325]
- Hamburg, Congress at, German mediation between Christian III. and Lübeck, vii. [214];
- beginning of reformation at, viii. [320];
- church organized by Pomeranus, [320], [321]
- Hamilton, made archbishop of St. Andrews after murder of Beatoun, vi. [215]
- Hamilton, Catherine, her trial before the ecclesiastical court, vi. [97];
- leaves Scotland, [98]
- Hamilton, James, Lord, detained by the Lesleys as a hostage, vi. [214]
- Hamilton, John, of Linlithgow, accompanies Patrick Hamilton to the Netherlands, vi. [29]
- Hamilton, John, abbot of Paisley, arrives in Scotland, vi. [167];
- his influence on the regent, [167];
- interviews with Beatoun, [168];
- alarms the regent, [172]
- Hamilton, Sir James, at Council at Edinburgh, demands reforms, vi. [105];
- treasurer, charged to seize heretics, [128];
- imprisoned and put to death, [129]
- Hamilton, Sir James, resolves to rescue his brother Patrick, vi. 55;
- is prevented, 56;
- cited before ecclesiastical court, leaves Scotland, 97;
- is condemned, excommunicated and deprived of his estates, 97
- Hamilton, Sir Patrick, vi. [12];
- his great reputation, [13], [14];
- counsels peace, [16];
- slain in affray at Edinburgh, [16]
- Hamilton, Patrick, his birth and early life, vi. [12];
- sent to Paris, [14];
- abbot of Ferne, [14];
- becomes acquainted with Luther's writings, [17];
- death of his father, [17];
- returns to Scotland, [18];
- enters University of St. Andrews, [19];
- refuses to enter on the monastic life, [20];
- begins to preach, [20];
- lays open the New Testament, [26];
- cited before Beatoun, [28];
- escapes to the Netherlands, [29];
- arrives at Marburg, [30];
- visits Lambert of Avignon, [31];
- member of the university of Marburg, [34];
- his evangelical theses, [37] sqq.;
- sails for Scotland, [40];
- at Kincavil, [43];
- his zeal, [43];
- his brother and sister, [44];
- his ministrations, [45];
- preaches at Linlithgow, [46];
- his marriage, [47];
- invited by Beatoun to a conference, [48];
- goes to the conference, [49];
- avows his principles, [49];
- his interviews with Alesius, [51];
- with Alexander Campbell, [52];
- cited to answer a charge of heresy, [54];
- appears before the bishops, [57] sqq.;
- his doctrines declared heretical, [58];
- arrested and confined in the castle of St. Andrews, [59];
- his trial in the Cathedral, [61] sqq.;
- declared a heretic, [64];
- at the stake, [66-68];
- the effects of his martyrdom, [70-72]
- Hanse Towns, alliance of, with Denmark, against Gustavus Vasa, vii. [308];
- German and Swedish participators put to death, [308];
- rumors, [308]
- Hardenberg, Albert, vii. [435];
- declines invitation to Friesland, [458];
- remains in convent of Aduwert, [459], [460];
- denounced as a heretic, [460];
- escapes imprisonment, [460];
- his inward conflicts, [460], [461];
- leaves the convent, goes to Wittenberg, [461];
- meets with Francis de Enzinas, viii. [43];
- again, [59];
- leaves his convent, [59]
- Harman, Richard, liberation of, ordered by Queen Anne, v. [33]
- Harvel, Edmund, ambassador in Italy, viii. [269]
- Haughton, Prior, refuses to take oath of succession, v. [47];
- sent to the Tower, [48];
- takes the oath, [48];
- resolves to resist the king's command, [59];
- sent to the Tower, [61];
- found guilty of high treason and executed, [62], [63]
- Haussmann, Nicholas, viii. [317], [326]
- Haveloos, Antoinette, vii. [548];
- receives Alasco as her guest, [548];
- her daughter Gudule, [549], [551];
- her widowhood, [553];
- arrested, [556];
- buried alive, [563], [564]
- Hawkins, English ambassador to conference of Bologna, ii. [163]
- Heath, Archdeacon, ambassador to Germany, v. [109];
- signs alliance with the princes, [110];
- takes part in discussion at Wittenberg, [116]
- Hedio, ii. [246];
- visit of Chelius to, [264];
- his proposals examined before Francis I., [265] sqq.; iii. [150]
- Henry III. of England, i. [16]
- Henry V. of England, i. [20]
- Henry VIII. of England, i. [356], [378]
- —, ii. [99], [102];
- alliance with Francis I., [103];
- meets Francis I., [104], [105];
- dances with Anne Boleyn at Calais, [105];
- treaty with Francis, [105];
- alarm in Europe, [106];
- his opinion of marriage of Henry duke of Orleans with Catherine de' Medici, [151];
- displeasure of Charles V. against, [162];
- tries to prevent meeting of the pope and Francis I., [185];
- his marriage with Anne Boleyn, [186];
- censured by the pope, [186];
- contributes to recovery of Würtemberg from Austria, [254], [294], [296]
- —, personification of Anglo-Saxon tendency, iv. [2];
- summons a parliament, [4];
- opens it, [9];
- requires the bishops to answer petition of the Commons, [12];
- his character and intentions, [20], [21];
- motives, [21];
- sends embassy to the emperor and the pope, [22];
- invites opinions of universities, [29];
- letter to Oxford, [33];
- another, [35];
- receives Cambridge deputation, [37];
- sends gifts to Francis I., [39];
- sends agents to Italy, [40];
- his proclamation against papal bulls, [44];
- tries to gain the evangelical doctors, [45];
- reads Tyndale's Practice of Prelates, [53];
- sends Vaughan in search of Tyndale, [54];
- exasperated by his report, [57];
- fails to gain Tyndale, [58];
- aims at being head of the church, [61];
- demands recognition of supremacy, [63];
- agrees to compromise proposed by Warham, [64];
- his supremacy recognized by the clergy, he pardons them, [66];
- desires Catherine to leave Windsor, [71];
- authorizes persecution of Lutherans, [76];
- will not allow his cause to be tried at Rome, [86];
- compels submission of the bishops, [88];
- errors of his policy, [91];
- his court, [95];
- his see-saw policy, [105];
- chooses Cranmer as primate, [116];
- marriage with Anne Boleyn, [118];
- insists on Cranmer's primacy, [119];
- converses with him, [120];
- demands necessary bulls of the pope, [121] ;
- marriage with Anne Boleyn, [127];
- excommunicated by Clement VII., [128];
- obtains decision in favor of divorce from Convocation, [131];
- requires Cranmer to modify his letter, [131];
- insists on supremacy, [132];
- summoned before Cranmer at Dunstable, [133];
- the divorce pronounced, [134];
- his marriage with Anne declared lawful, [135];
- presents her to the people, [135];
- informs the pope, the emperor, &c., of his divorce and marriage, [138];
- threatened with excommunication, [138];
- orders trial of Fryth, [151];
- cited to appear at Rome, appeals to a general council, [164];
- his isolation, [165], [166];
- sends envoys to Germany, [165];
- sends Gardiner and Bryan to Marseilles, [167];
- sends Bonner, [168];
- a proclamation drawn up, [174];
- announces to foreign states his determination to reduce the power of the pope, [176];
- his message to Francis I., [176];
- dispenses with a council, [177];
- condemned by the pope, [182], [348]
- —, condemned by the pope, v. [2];
- proposes arrangement with the pope, [3];
- writes his book against the pope, [5];
- informed of sayings of Maid of Kent, [10];
- admits her to an audience, [11];
- conspiracy against him, [13] [14];
- his supremacy recognized by monks, [20];
- interviews with Francis I., [21];
- abolishes power of the pope by proclamation, [23];
- anger against Queen Anne, [34];
- summus episcopus, [42];
- his tyranny, [49];
- his new title ratified by Parliament, [49];
- consents to translation of the Bible, [56];
- his fixed idea, [56];
- papal decree against him withdrawn, [58];
- danger of insurrection, [60];
- hesitates about execution of More and Fisher, [64];
- bull of Paul III. against, [76];
- his excuses, [77];
- at Reading Abbey, [79];
- makes advances to German Protestants, [106];
- writes to Melanchthon, [107];
- sends Barnes to invite him, [107];
- sends another embassy to Germany, [109];
- requires Catherine to renounce her title, [112];
- renews attempt at union with German Protestants, [118];
- attracted by Jane Seymour, [127], [128];
- required by the pope to put away his wife, [131];
- resolves to get rid of her, [133];
- appoints commission of inquiry, [135];
- summons Parliament, [136];
- at Greenwich tournament, [137];
- withdraws, [138];
- orders the queen to keep her room, [138];
- sends her to the Tower, [140];
- effect of her letter to him, [152];
- attempts to prove a pre-contract of marriage, [153];
- determines to annul the marriage with Queen Anne, [160];
- puts her to death, [167];
- at a hunting party, [168];
- will maintain rupture with Rome, [173];
- Pole's book presented to him, [174], [177];
- his marriage with Jane Seymour ratified by Parliament, [178];
- plays the pope, [191];
- his Articles of Religion, [192] sqq.;
- dissolves Parliament and Convocation, [196];
- refuses to sanction Coverdale's Bible, [198];
- threatens insurgents of the North, [205];
- his energetic policy, [208];
- sends Lancaster herald to the rebels, [209];
- abandons Tyndale, [221];
- authorizes sale of Tyndale's Bible, [227]
- —, his quarrel with James IV. of Scotland, vi. [9];
- receives Scottish exiles, [99];
- projects marriage of his daughter Mary to James V., [99];
- the title of Defender of the Faith withdrawn from him by the pope, [109];
- sends Norfolk to observe events in Scotland, [114];
- sends Sir R. Sadler to Scotland, [124], [133];
- invites James V. to an interview at York, [134];
- goes to York, [135];
- his wrath at abandonment of the interview by James, [136];
- writes to him, [137];
- prepares for war, [137];
- refuses to receive ambassadors, [139];
- his manifesto, [140];
- orders exposure of the captive Scots in London, [146];
- projects marriage of his son Edward with Mary queen of Scotland, [157];
- his arrangement with the banished nobles, [157];
- his scheme resisted by Beatoun, [158];
- adopted by Scottish council, [159];
- frustrated by refusal of the hostages, [171];
- declares war against Scotland, [175];
- his aims, [184];
- desires to see Melanchthon, [476];
- Calvin's opinion of him, [476]
- —, promises aid to Christian II. of Denmark but does not give it,vii. [138]
- —, birth of his son Edward, viii. [141];
- on death of Queen Jane seeks another wife, [142];
- several ladies proposed, [142];
- demands delivery up of Cardinal Pole by Francis I., [150];
- writes to Hutton, [151];
- begins persecution of Anabaptists, [160];
- issues ordinances against the reformed faith, [163];
- arranges for trial of Lambert, [166];
- presides at the trial, [167] sqq.;
- extolled by the Catholic party, and by Cromwell, [173];
- seeks the hand of the duchess of Milan, [174];
- the treaty broken off, [175];
- sanctions printing of the Bible, [176];
- attempts a compromise between the conflicting parties, [179];
- failure of the scheme, [180];
- his measures of defence against alliance of the pope, the emperor, and the King of France, [181];
- his 'Six Articles,' [181];
- his proclamations declared to be laws, [183];
- his attentions to Cranmer, [184];
- appeal of Melanchthon, [189];
- exhibits a sea-fight on the Thames, [191];
- his autocratic temper, [192];
- marriage purposes, [192];
- Anne of Cleves, [193];
- the marriage arranged, [193];
- incognito sees her at Rochester, [195];
- returns to Greenwich, [196];
- his perplexity, [196];
- conversations with Cromwell, [196], [197];
- receives Anne at Greenwich, [197];
- determines to get rid of her, [197];
- his antipathy, [198];
- communications to the emperor, [199], [200];
- receives delegates of Elector of Saxony and Landgrave of Hesse, [201];
- promises to them to soften harshness of the Six Articles, [201];
- imprisons Barnes, Garret, and Jerome, [204];
- ill-will towards Cromwell, [205];
- heaps honors and wealth upon him, [207];
- reasons why, [207];
- his want of money, [208];
- gives assent to bill of attainder against Cromwell, [218];
- permits him to write to him, [219];
- a fête in honor of the queen, [220];
- his scheme for getting rid of her, [221];
- sends three Protestants and three Papists to the stake together, [226] sqq.;
- scheme for the divorce of his wife, [229] sqq.;
- the divorce pronounced by Convocation, [232];
- marries Catherine Howard, [235];
- becomes a Catholic, [235];
- adopts a Catholic policy, [236];
- royal infallibility by Act of Parliament, [236];
- consents to Cranmer's committal, [243];
- his interview with Cranmer, [244];
- gives him his ring, [244];
- submission of the council, [246];
- Bibles published under his sanction, [247];
- goes to York to meet the King of Scotland, [247];
- the interview prevented by Beatoun, [248];
- receives disclosures respecting the queen, [249];
- investigations by the lords, [249];
- sends Cranmer to her, [250];
- sends her to Sion House, [252];
- orders prosecutions, [253];
- the queen executed, [254];
- letters to Cranmer, [260];
- marries Catherine Parr, [262];
- receives list of charges against Cranmer, [263];
- has interview with him, [264];
- nominates a commission, [264];
- his pretexts for war with France, [267];
- private occasions of offence, [267];
- alliance with Charles V., its conditions, [268];
- invades France, [268];
- takes Boulogne, [269];
- prorogues Parliament, [272];
- his last speech, [272], [273];
- proscribes English New Testament and many religious books, [279];
- overlooks the Queen's evangelical zeal, [285], [286];
- his ill-health, [286];
- offended with the queen, [287];
- signs bill of indictment against her, [290];
- informs his physician, [291];
- visits the queen, [293];
- visited by her, [293] sqq.;
- prevents her arrest, [296];
- erects new Court of Augmentations, [297];
- chooses Cranmer as guardian of his son and the realm, [298];
- his fears of conflict after his death, [299];
- receives a warning of ambition of Surrey, [300];
- orders investigation, [300];
- sends Norfolk and Surrey to the Tower, [301];
- illness, [304], [306];
- interview with Cranmer, [307];
- his death, [307];
- his epoch, [308];
- his will, [308];
- his character, [309], [310]
- Henry d'Albret, King of Navarre, his character, i. [345];
- escapes from prison, [345];
- courts Margaret of Angoulême, [346], [356];
- their marriage, [378];
- visits Béarn, [413];
- at St. Germain, ii. [30];
- at Roussel's preaching in the Louvre, [114];
- complains to the king of agitation in Paris, [124];
- warns the king at Meaux, [126];
- strikes Margaret, iii. [28]
- Henry, duke of Orleans, his marriage with Catherine de' Medici proposed by Francis I., ii. [149];
- solemnized at Marseilles, [195];
- his character and position, iv. [355]
- Henry of Nassau, governor of Flanders, his reply to the Dominicans of Dort, vii. [486]
- Henry, a monk of Tournay, martyrdom of, vii. [522]
- Hepburn, John, competitor for see of St. Andrews, vi. [10];
- storms the castle, [10]
- Hepburn, Patrick, prior of St. Andrews, one of the judges of Patrick Hamilton, vi. [61];
- denounces Alesius, [75];
- assails and imprisons Alesius, [76], [77];
- ordered to release him, casts him into a fouler dungeon, [77];
- compelled by the king to liberate him, [78];
- again imprisons him, [78];
- appoints John Hay keeper of the prison, [79];
- pursues Alesius, [82];
- misses him at Dundee, [83];
- demands tithe of fish of David Straiton, [94];
- proceeds against him for heresy, [94]
- Heretics, L'Etoile's view on treatment of, ii. [4];
- in England, withdrawn from episcopal jurisdiction, viii. [191]
- Herman, fanatic, at Groningen, vii. [542];
- his pretensions, [543];
- imprisoned, [544]
- Herman of Liége, goes to Geneva, vi. [299] [Spirituals]]
- Hermanstadt, Transylvania, evangelists at, vii. [350];
- expelled, [350];
- persecution at, Lutheran books burnt, [353];
- disturbances by the monks, [369];
- the monks banished, [370]
- Hertford, Edward Seymour, Earl of, commands English army in Scotland, vi. [184];
- pillages and burns Leith and Edinburgh, 184; viii. [141]
- Hewet, Andrew, burnt with Fryth, iv. [162]
- Hildebrand and Calvin, vi. [255]
- Hilderley, made bishop of Rochester, v. [130]
- Hilles, Richard, account of, viii. [258];
- suspected by Gardiner, goes to Strasburg, [259]
- History, various kinds of, iii. [198]; vi. [1], [2]
- Hoen, Cornelius, vii. [501];
- arrested and imprisoned, [501];
- sent to the Hague, [502]
- Hoffman, Melchior, vii. [541]; viii. [332]
- Hohenlohe, Count of, [[Sigismund]]
- Hollard, Christopher, iii. [204];
- protests against the friar's sermon at Orbe, [207];
- assaulted by the women, and imprisoned, [207];
- liberated, [209];
- iconoclast, [228];
- procures arrest of priests, [230]
- Holstein, duchy of, the Reformation established in, vii. [225]
- Holyrood Palace, pillaged and burnt by the English, vi. [184]
- Honter, John, his labors in Transylvania, vii. [395]
- Hosius, Cardinal, sends Jesuits to Sweden, vii. [333];
- his instructions, [334];
- writes to the king and queen, [335]
- Howard Family, The, divisions in, viii. [302]
- Howard, Catherine, passion of Henry VIII. for her, viii. [221];
- account of her, [234];
- married to Henry, [235];
- accompanies him to Scotland, [248];
- disclosures about her made by Lascelles, [248] sqq.;
- examined, denies the charges, [250];
- makes confession to Cranmer, [250];
- her delirium, another interview with Cranmer, [250], [252];
- sent to Sion House, [252];
- many prosecutions ordered by the king, [253];
- condemned and executed, [254];
- effects of the disclosures, [255]
- Howard, Harry, at a tournament, viii. [221]
- —, Lord William, his embassies to Scotland, vi. [101];
- sent to the Tower, viii. [253]
- Hubberdin, preaches against the reformers, iv. [97];
- his mountebank tricks, [98]
- Hugonin, of Arnex, iii. [213];
- pleads for friar Juliani, [214];
- converted, [226];
- imprisoned, [231]
- 'Huguenots', origin of the term, i. [88];
- its first meaning political, [89];
- meetings of, at Geneva, [135];
- a war-cry, [142];
- rapid growth of the party, [148], [181];
- excluded from the councils, [200];
- recover their liberties, [207];
- unsuccessfully attempt conciliation, [208];
- the founders of modern liberty, [254];
- support appeal to the pope against duke of Savoy, [268];
- persecution of, by the duke, [268] sqq.;
- exodus, [270];
- the fugitives attacked by troops of the duke, protected by Friburgers, [272];
- arrival at Friburg, [273];
- their wives and children join them, [283];
- justification of the fugitives, [293] sqq.;
- election of Huguenot Syndics, [301] sqq.;
- resent tyranny of the prince-bishop, ii. [318];
- invite Bonivard to put himself at their head, [353];
- resolve to eat meat in Lent, [355];
- claim right of free inquiry, [388];
- their bold front against Savoy and other powers, [392];
- complaint of the fiscal against them, [397];
- sentenced, [397];
- their negative Protestantism, [399];
- intercourse with Swiss Evangelicals, [399];
- imprisoned by allies of the bishop, [416];
- assailed by Friburgers, [444];
- discuss encroachments of the clergy, [462];
- [[Lutherans]] massacre of, iii. [3];
- leaders visited by Farel, [277], [278];
- visit him, [280];
- attend disputation between Froment and Pellier, [331], [332];
- advocate religious reformation, [348];
- demand the Scriptures, [349];
- arms of the flesh, [409];
- fight in the Molard, [411] sqq.;
- proscription, [438];
- prepare resistance to bishop's removal of prisoners, iv. [187];
- armed attendance on Farel's preaching, [211];
- assassinations, [232], [233];
- consultation, [235];
- search the bishop's palace, [236];
- Huguenot syndicate, [242];
- demand a church, [250];
- occupy grand auditory at Rive, [252];
- discoveries among the relics, v. [287] sqq.;
- their heroism contributes to triumph of the Reformation, vi. [226];
- division among them, [279], [335];
- resist faith by compulsion, and influence of foreigners, [336], [337];
- refuse to swear to the Confession, [338];
- decree of banishment against them, [339];
- the decree a dead letter, [339];
- their opposition to the rule of Calvin, [358]
- Hugues, Besançon, i. [36], [37];
- opposes surrender of culverins to Duke of Savoy, [48], [50], [67], [87];
- leader of the Huguenots, [89];
- syndic, [111], [134], [137], [138];
- envoy to Friburg, [140];
- his speech to Genevese assembly, [147];
- proposes Swiss alliance, [148];
- envoy to Friburg, [156], [160], [161], [164], [180], [182], [200], [205];
- his interview with La Baume, [212];
- becomes his adviser, [212];
- his promise to the duke, [256];
- his qualifications for leadership, [262];
- elected syndic, refuses the office, [263];
- resists claims of the duke, [267];
- treacherous visit of Vuillet to, [271];
- missing at Friburg, [273];
- escapes by night, [274];
- at Friburg, [274];
- his speech before the senate, [275];
- detects the duke's stratagem in the safe-conduct, [281], [300], [302];
- speech on return of the exiles, [305];
- proposes Swiss alliance at general council, [306], [307];
- his conservatism, [309], [310];
- elected captain-general, ii. [306];
- influenced by Ab Hofen, [316];
- the bishop's gift to him, [320];
- bishop's envoy to Berne, [321];
- frustrates the duke's plot against Geneva, [324];
- sets a watch, [327], [333];
- assists flight of the bishop, [340];
- escapes seizure by Savoyards, [341];
- replies to menaces of the bishop, [364];
- mission to Berne and Friburg, [368], [402];
- hostile to Bonivard, [404];
- his resignation, [450];
- his death, [451];
- a martyr of liberty, [451];
- the bishop's letter to, iii. [268] sqq.;
- date of death, [273]
- Hugues, Denis, i. [292]
- Hugues, Guillaume, syndic of Geneva, ii. [468]; iii. [282], [286], [291]
- Hungary, invaded by Turks, ii. [107];
- King John supports duke Christopher of Würtemberg, [218];
- evils of submission to Rome, vii. [342];
- revolts, [342];
- fitness of the people for the Reformation, [343];
- kept back by persecution, [343];
- early partial enlightenment, [343];
- marriage of Louis II., [344];
- beginning of the Reformation, [345];
- Luther's writings introduced, [346];
- and condemned, [346];
- first evangelical preachers, [346];
- eagerness of students to go to Wittenberg, [347];
- persecution sanctioned by the king, [348];
- intolerance of the priesthood, [348];
- edict for burning of heretics, [355];
- invasion of, by Sultan Solyman, [356];
- unprepared, [357];
- rout of Mohacz, [360], [361];
- persecution breaks out, [364], [365];
- emigration of Christians, [366];
- conversion of magnates, [368];
- persecution slackened, [369];
- again invaded by Solyman, [370];
- influence of Confession of Augsburg, [371];
- Devay and other reformers, [372] sqq.;
- the first printing press in, [381];
- Conference of Schässburg, [384], [385];
- progress of Reformation, [388];
- adoption of Zwinglian views, [389];
- agreement between the two kings, [390];
- death of Zapolya, his son proclaimed king, [391];
- invasion by Turks in his support, [391];
- disorder and distress, [392];
- progress of Reformation, [393], [394];
- persecution instigated, [399];
- the Pope and Mohammed in, [406] sqq.;
- effects of Council of Trent in, [408];
- conference of Erdoed, [409];
- conference of Eperies, [410];
- progress of the Gospel, [415]
- Hungerford, Walter, Lord, executed, viii. [224]
- Hunter, James, Protestant of Perth, vi. [180];
- condemned to death by Cardinal Beatoun, [181];
- hung, [181]
- Huntley, Earl of, defeats the English at Halidon, vi. [138];
- in command of army at Edinburgh, [141];
- a mutiny, [141];
- takes part in conference against the regent, [169]
- Hus, John, ii. [102]; vi. [5];
- his followers in Bohemia divided, vii. [417], [421]
- Hutton, English envoy at Brussels, viii. [142], [151], [174]
- Ibach, preaches at Frankfort, viii. [318]
- Ibrahim Pasha, takes Peterwaradin, vii. [356]
- Iceland, vii. [225];
- its bishops, [225];
- resists imposition of new constitution of the church, [229];
- gradual extinction of Roman services, [230]. [[Aresen, Johan].]
- Icelandic New Testament, vii. [228]
- Image-breakers, imprisoned, iv. [309];
- at Geneva, v. [285-292] sqq.;
- at Lausanne, vi. [231], [266], [267]
- Individuality and Community, iv. [372], [373]; vi. [277]
- Innocent VIII., Pope, i. [45]
- Inquisition, The, introduced in the Netherlands, vii. [491];
- in Spain, Torquemada, viii. [2];
- destroys Spanish Bible, [42];
- at Paris, prohibits Regnault from printing Bibles and seizes those printed, [178]
- Irenaeus, i. [9]
- Isabella, Queen of Spain, her severity towards her daughter Joanna, viii. [128];
- sends confessors to her, [128];
- her distress, [129];
- her plan of excluding her from the throne, [130];
- her death, [131]
- Isabella, sister of Charles V., marries Christian II. of Denmark, vii. [127];
- adheres to evangelical faith, [139];
- her death, [139]
- Islamism, action of, in Hungary, contrasted with that of Roman church, vii. [407] sqq., [414], [415], [416]
- Italian League, concluded at Bologna, ii. [162]
- Italian New Testament, by Bruccioli, iv. [410]
- Italy, beginning of Reformation in, iv. [406];
- spread of its doctrines by students and soldiers, [409];
- enthusiasm for Luther, [409];
- revival of, promoted by two groups of Christians, [476];
- wave of reformation reaches the Vatican, [481];
- two camps, [488];
- Italian sympathy with England in war with France, viii. [269], [270]
- James IV. of Scotland, examines and acquits Campbell of Cessnock and his wife, vi. [8];
- killed at Flodden, [9]
- James V. of Scotland, his minority, vi. [9];
- his defective education and devotion to pleasure, [22];
- declared of age, [23];
- submits to the priests, [23];
- sent by them on pilgrimage to St. Duthac, [55];
- complains to Henry VIII. of his treatment by Angus, [72];
- escapes in disguise to Stirling Castle, [73];
- banishes Angus and assumes to govern, [74];
- his character, [74];
- places the government in the hands of the priests, [74];
- orders liberation of Alesius and the other canons, [77];
- compels Hepburn to release Alesius, [78];
- concludes alliance with Charles V., [86];
- receives secret embassy from the emperor, [86];
- accepts order of the Garter from Henry VIII., [101];
- rejects proposal of marriage with Mary of England, [101];
- gets severe laws passed against reading the Bible, [102];
- demands reforms, [105];
- gives up proposed interview with Henry VIII., [106];
- sends secret mission to Rome, [106];
- quarrels with the queen-mother, [106];
- offers aid to Francis I., [107];
- marries Madeleine of Valois, [107];
- loses his wife, [108];
- marries Mary of Lorraine, [109];
- under Cardinal Beatoun's influence, [111];
- prepares for war with England, [114];
- present at the burning of five martyrs, [118];
- corresponds with Henry VIII., [125];
- demands reform, and threatens the bishops, [125];
- again takes the side of the priests, [128];
- invests Sir James Hamilton with functions of an inquisitor, [128];
- imprisons and puts him to death, [129];
- birth of his son, [129];
- embarks on a voyage, [129];
- rebukes the cardinal and prelates, [130];
- birth of a second son, [130];
- his remorse, [130], [131];
- death of his sons, [132];
- agrees to meet Henry VIII. at York, [134];
- bribed by the prelates, abandons the interview, [136];
- threatened with war by Henry, [137];
- obtains subsidies of the prelates, [137];
- after Halidon proposes negotiation, [139];
- assembles his army at Edinburgh, [140];
- abandoned by the army, [141];
- holds a council at Holyrood, sanctions a proscription against the reformation party, [142];
- flight of his army at Solway, [145];
- his distress, [147];
- returns to Edinburgh, [147];
- secretly leaves the city, [148];
- birth of his daughter, Mary Stuart, [149];
- last interview with the cardinal, [149];
- his death, [150];
- his character, [150]
- Janin, the armorer, iv. [202], [205];
- accompanies Maisonneuve to Lyons, [266];
- arrested, [267];
- conversations with the prisoners, [287] sqq.;
- dejection, [290];
- his liberation sought by Bernese, [322];
- liberated by order of Francis I., [328];
- restored to Geneva, [329]
- Janssen, Thure, grand master of the Court of Sweden, supports Christian II., vii. [185];
- put to death by Christian, [186]
- Jean de Courte-Caisse, prince-bishop of Geneva, i. [20]
- Jean de La Rochetaillée, prince-bishop of Geneva, i. [20]
- Jeanne d'Albret, birth of, i. [413];
- edits Novels of her mother, ii. [171]
- Jerome, evangelical preacher, v. [199];
- preaches at Paul's Cross, viii. [203];
- reprimanded by the king, [204];
- committed to the Tower, [204];
- burnt at Smithfield, [227], [228]
- Joachim, prince of Anhalt, viii. [322];
- supports the Reformation, [325];
- wavering, encouraged by Luther, [327]
- Joanna, Queen of Spain, account of, viii. [126] sqq.;
- kept in captivity, [127];
- her marriage with Archduke Philip, [128];
- her hostility to Rome, [128];
- birth of her son (Charles V.), [129];
- excluded from the throne, [130];
- reported to be mad, [130];
- goes with Philip to Spain, [131];
- her rights sacrificed by agreement between her father and her husband, [132], [133];
- death of her husband, [134];
- placed in confinement, [134];
- her hand sought by several princes, [134];
- removed to Tordesillas, [134], [135];
- rumors, [135];
- her treatment, [135], [136];
- her religious belief, [136], [139];
- her death, [139]
- Joensson, Thure, marshal of Sweden, vii. [281];
- his pride and vanity, [285];
- agrees with Brask, [285], [287], [288];
- his demands, [291];
- escapes into Norway, [297]
- John, the Bastard of Savoy, his birth and breeding, i. [33];
- his bargain with Duke Charles for bishopric of Geneva, [33], [34];
- sent to Rome, [34];
- honorable reception of, by Leo X., [35];
- nominated bishop, [35];
- exasperation of the Genevese, [36], [37];
- accepted by the majority, [37];
- enters Geneva, [38];
- proclaimed sovereign, [39];
- tampers with Berthelier, [40];
- feasts the young men, [41];
- a mere servant of the duke, [53];
- his tyranny and extortion, [53];
- carries off Claude Vandel, [55];
- refuses to release him, [55];
- flies from Geneva, [57];
- pardons a robber, [61];
- reproved by the duke, [62];
- escapes from Geneva, [65];
- joins in the duke's plot against Levrier and Berthelier, [66];
- visits the duke at Lyons, [79];
- tortures Pécolat, [81] sqq.;
- demands Berthelier, [83];
- refuses safe-conduct for Berthelier, [87];
- declares he will not return to Geneva, [90];
- seizes Pierre d'Orsières, [90];
- returns, [92];
- liberates d'Orsières, [92];
- accused by the syndics before the duke, [93];
- demands torture for Pécolat, foiled by Levrier, [98];
- inhibition of the metropolitan served on him, [102];
- threatened with excommunication, laughs at the archbishop, [103];
- excommunication published in Geneva, [104];
- plots with the duke, [111];
- orders arrest of Bonivard, [117];
- his treatment of the bodies of Blanchet and Navis, [123];
- indignation of Genevese, [126];
- his reply to their letter, [129];
- Mameluke deputation to, [132];
- demands death of Berthelier and others, [134];
- his sealed letter to Genevese, [137];
- rejected by the Council and the people, [138], [182];
- at Troches, conspires with Mamelukes, [184];
- raises troops, [186];
- enters Geneva, [187];
- his message to the council, [187];
- arrests Berthelier, [189];
- refuses a just trial, [192];
- puts him to death, [196];
- revolutionizes Geneva, [199];
- retires to Pignerol, [265];
- forbidden by Leo X. to return to Geneva, [206];
- appoints a coadjutor, [212];
- his death-bed, [212] sqq., [285]
- John III., King of Sweden, vii. [322], [323], [324];
- his claims and arrest, [327];
- conferences with Erick, [330];
- succeeds his brother, [330];
- cruel treatment of Erick, [331];
- his queen, a Romanist, [332];
- won over to the Catholic side, [332];
- publishes an ordinance in favor of Romanism, [332];
- Romanism in the ascendent, [333];
- sends embassy to the pope, [335];
- persecutes the Protestants, [336];
- his instructions for the murder of Erick, [336], [337];
- his report to Duke Charles, [337];
- received into Romish communion, [338];
- claims duchies of Bari and Rossano, [339];
- loses his wife and marries again, [339];
- persecutes the Catholics, [339];
- his death, [340]
- John Louis, bishop of Geneva, i. [21];
- his character, [23];
- gives protection to his father, Louis, [23]
- John of Falkenberg, marries Dorothea of Austria, vii. [464];
- opposes Alasco in Friesland, [464];
- attempts to get him banished, [464]
- John of Leyden (John Bockhold), iv. [374];
- his preaching in the Netherlands, vii. [542];
- arrives at Munster, viii. [335];
- account of him, [335], [336];
- on death of Matthison becomes king, [342];
- his debauchery, [342];
- undertakes conquest of the world, [343];
- his pomp, [344];
- his wives, [344];
- sends out his apostles, [345];
- beheads a woman, [346];
- excites revolt in the Netherlands, [348];
- captured by troops of Philip of Hesse, [350];
- feigns conversion, [350];
- his cruel fate, [351]
- John of Lucerne, i. [116]
- John of Molines, at Waldensian synod, iii. [255];
- refuses to sign the new confession, [259];
- goes to Bohemia, [260]
- John, prince of Anhalt, signs Compromise of Augsburg, viii. [322];
- supports the Reformation, [325]
- John, son of Christian II., the hope of the Catholic party, vii. [184];
- his death, [193]
- Jomory, archbishop of Cologne, commands Hungarian army against Solyman, vii. [360]
- Joris, David, account of, vii. [469];
- his conference with Alasco, [470];
- at Basel, [470]; viii. [353]
- Joubert, William, martyrdom of, i. [347], [348]
- Joye, Amadeus de, i. [69];
- carries off the image of St. Babolin, [201];
- imprisoned, [202];
- his trial, [202];
- threatened with torture, [203];
- permitted to escape, [203]
- Joye, George, account of, v. [31];
- his New Testament, [32]
- Jubilee, The, ii. [460]
- Julian de' Medici, i. [34];
- his marriage with Philiberta of Savoy, [49], [50]
- Juliani, Michael, friar, preaches against reform at Orbe, iii. [205], [206];
- arrested, [209];
- his trial, [214];
- liberated, [215]
- Julius II., Pope, i. [119]; iv. [131]
- Justification, ii. [268], [269]
- Kempis, Thomas à, vii. [482]
- Kennedy, imprisoned, vi. [120];
- tried before archbishop of Glasgow, [121];
- burnt, [123]
- Killon, a monk, his tragedy acted at Stirling, vi. [115];
- arrested, [116];
- burnt, [118]
- 'King's Book,' The, viii. [261]
- Kingston, lieutenant of the Tower, receives Queen Anne, v. [140], [141], [163];
- at her execution, [164]
- Kirkcaldy, James, of Grange, reveals to the king the projects of Beatoun, vi. [129];
- withdraws from the court, [168]
- Kirkcaldy, William, takes part in conspiracy against Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [210];
- assists at seizure of castle of St. Andrews, [211];
- obtains conditional promise of protection from Henry VIII., [215]
- Kirwan, preaches against Peto, iv. [105]
- Kiss, Stephen. [[Szegedin, Stephen]]
- Klaessen, Wendelmutha, account of, vii. [520];
- imprisoned, [520];
- her trial and martyrdom, [522]
- Klein, Catherine, receives Calvin at Basel, iii. [157]
- Knevet, Sir Antony, refuses to continue torture of Anne Askew, viii. [281]
- Knevet, Sir Henry, at Ratisbon, investigates rumor about Bishop Gardiner, viii. [159]
- Knipperdolling, Bernard, receives Bockhold and Matthisson at Munster, viii. [336];
- burgomaster, [338];
- has power of life and death, [342], [344];
- his cruel fate, [351]
- Knox, John, i. [6];
- his birth and boyhood, vi. [14];
- a disciple of Mayor, [18], [19];
- hears preaching of Guillaume, [156];
- a follower of Wishart, [192];
- keeps watch over him, [192];
- parts with him, [195]
- Kunz, pastor at Berne, vi. [325], [367], [369], [370];
- hostile to Calvin, [371];
- the ape of Luther, [372];
- one of the presidents of synod of Lausanne, [374];
- undertakes to advise the Genevese to recall the reformers, [426];
- account of him, [426];
- visited by Calvin and Farel, [427];
- his wrath, [428], [429];
- places Calvin's articles in the hands of Vandel, [435]
- La Baume, Pierre de, coadjutor of bishop of Geneva, i. [212];
- at death-bed of the bishop, [213];
- his character, [214];
- appointed Bishop of Geneva, [215];
- his entry into the city, [215] sqq., [235];
- his worldly policy and vacillation, [261];
- receives deputation respecting Savoyard oppression, [262];
- his promises, [262];
- invited by Genevese to plead their cause at Rome, [264];
- as agent of Charles V. goes to Milan, [265];
- fugitives from Geneva repulsed by his officers at St. Claude, [273];
- his anxiety, [284];
- called to Geneva, [296];
- his reception, [297];
- won over by Vandel, [298];
- braves and fears the duke, [299];
- resists election of Huguenot syndics, [300], [301];
- at general council, [308];
- protests against Swiss alliance, [308];
- flight from Geneva, [311];
- vacillation, ii. [309];
- disposes of benefices vacant by sack of Rome, [317];
- his alarm, [319];
- sequestrates property of the Mamelukes, [320];
- seeks alliance with the Swiss, [320];
- the duke's plot against him, [322];
- escapes, [324];
- in concealment, [325];
- attends a general council and is made free of the city, [328];
- concedes civil jurisdiction, [328];
- abduction of a girl, [335];
- compelled to restore her, [336];
- his fears, [338], [339];
- his flight by night, [340];
- negotiation with the duke, [343];
- takes his ease, [343], [349];
- reconciled with the duke, [362];
- hateful to Geneva, [363];
- revokes civil jurisdiction, [364];
- his menaces, [364];
- anger at reply of Geneva, [366];
- insults the messenger, [366];
- prohibits reform, [389];
- demands release of Mandolla, [411];
- appeals to Knights of the Spoon, [412];
- authorizes them to make war on Geneva, [413];
- meets the duke at Gex, [415];
- the attack frustrated, [422];
- liberates his prisoners, [429];
- asks intervention of the emperor, [429];
- prepares another attack, [431];
- applies to the pope, [432]; iii. [268];
- his letters to Besançon Hugues, [268-272];
- receives deputation from the council, [324];
- urged by Friburgers to return to Geneva, [423];
- commanded to do so by Clement VII., [424];
- invited by Genevese, [425];
- hesitation, [426];
- preparations to receive him, [430];
- his entrance, [433];
- orders a procession, [433];
- at a general council, [434];
- his despotic plans, [437];
- proscribes Huguenots and Evangelicals, [438], [439];
- invites the proscribed to his palace, [440];
- seizes and imprisons them, [441];
- what to do with them, [443];
- a strange request, [444];
- refuses a lawful trial to the accused, [448];
- receives deputation of elders, [450];
- will not yield, [451];
- uneasiness, iv. [185];
- resolves to remove Lutheran prisoners, [186];
- compelled to surrender them, [189];
- anxious to leave, [190], [191];
- visit of the syndics to, [191];
- his flight, [192];
- his name a byword, [194];
- forbids preaching, [196], [198];
- his letters disregarded, [199];
- a proclamation, [213], [230];
- meditates a coup d'état, [231];
- his palace searched, [236];
- his plot discovered, [239];
- result of the discovery, [242], [297];
- accuses Maisonneuve of relapsing, [298];
- urges his punishment, [299], [307];
- forms a new plot, [308];
- marches for Geneva, [311];
- retreats, [315];
- cuts off supply of food from the city, [337];
- favors brigandage, [337];
- transfers see to Gex, [338];
- excommunicates Genevese, [339];
- forbids the faithful to attend a disputation, v. [257];
- forbids speaking or trading with Genevese, [270];
- created cardinal, vi. [479]
- La Forge, Stephen de, his intercourse with Calvin, ii. [90];
- receives him at Paris, iii. [68];
- his zeal, [76];
- his household, [89];
- burnt, [141]; iv. [259], [267]
- 'La Gaborite,' martyrdom of, iii. [142]
- Lamb, Robert, Protestant of Perth, vi. [178];
- seized and condemned to death by Cardinal Beatoun, [181];
- hung, [181]
- Lambert, Denis, vi. [271], [272]
- Lambert of Avignon, i. [339], [340];
- called to Marburg, vi. [31];
- intercourse with Patrick Hamilton, [31], [32], [34];
- his testimony to Hamilton, [34]
- Lambert, Jean, iv. [240], [241]; v. [352];
- imprisonment at Chillon, [353];
- burnt at Chambery, vi. [486]
- Lambert, Jean, assists Calvin in preparing constitution of Church of Geneva, vii. [56]
- Lambert, (John Nicholson) seized and sent to London, iv. [92];
- his examination, [93] sqq.;
- liberated, [95];
- settles in London, account of him, viii. [163], [164];
- his interview with Dr. Taylor, [165];
- conference with Cranmer and others, [165];
- his views condemned, [165];
- appeals to the king, [165];
- writes his Treatise on the Sacrament, [166];
- his trial before the king, [167] sqq.;
- condemned, [172];
- burnt, [172]
- Lambert, Savoyard ambassador to Swiss Diet, i. [153];
- again sent, [162]
- Langerben, Michael, colleague of Olaf Peterson at Stockholm, vii. [261]
- Lannoy, i. [325]
- La Sarraz, Michael Mangerot, Baron of, ii. [412];
- commissioned to make war on Geneva, [413];
- character of, [416];
- takes the field, [416], [417];
- at battle of Gingins, v. [336] sqq.;
- in command at blockade of Geneva, [358]
- Lascelles, John, his disclosures about Queen Catherine (Howard), viii. [248] sqq.;
- examined by the lords, [249]
- Latimer, Hugh, his sermon before the court, iv. [37];
- the king tries to gain him, [45];
- strengthened by the Fathers, [46];
- letters to the king, [47] sqq.;
- his oratory, [49];
- his boldness, [50];
- accused to the king, [51];
- protected by him, [77];
- friendship with Bilney, [78];
- tries to save him, [80];
- laments for him, [83];
- hated by priests and courtiers, [95];
- sermon in the city, [95];
- quits the court, [97];
- summoned before bishop of London, [98];
- examined, [99], [100];
- maintains freedom of preaching, [100];
- appears before Convocation, [101];
- excommunicated, [101];
- will not recant, [101];
- absolved, [102];
- visits Bainham in the Tower, [109];
- the popular orator of Protestantism, v. [23];
- chaplain to Queen Anne, [23];
- his view of monasticism, [97];
- the queen's esteem for, [121];
- bishop of Worcester, [130];
- preaches before Convocation, [181] sqq.;
- on the pilgrimage of grace, [206];
- his letter on birth of Edward VI., viii. [141];
- opposes the Six Articles, and resigns his see, [184];
- retires to the country, [184];
- committed to the Tower, [184]
- Latomus, takes part in persecution at Louvain, vii. [556], [559]
- Lauder, John, official accuser under Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [116], [121];
- at the trial of Wishart, [199] sqq.
- Laufen, battle of, ii. [253]
- Laurent, Peter, professor at Malmoe, vii. [169]
- Laurent, Philip, ii. [8]
- Lausanne, Farel and Viret driven from, iv. [256];
- offers troops to Geneva, [317];
- preaching of Viret and Fabri at, vi. [229], [230];
- image-breaking, [231];
- a disputation appointed by Berne, prohibited by Charles V., [234];
- its importance, [235];
- the Romish and Protestant champions, [236];
- the opening, [238];
- manuscript Acts of the Disputation, [238 note];
- protest of the canons against the discussion, [240];
- results of the meeting, [260];
- moral reform at, [261];
- treaty with the Bernese, [264];
- synod of, [313];
- another, convoked by Bernese, [373];
- discussion refused to Genevese deputies, [374];
- the usages of Berne accepted, [374]
- La Val d'Isère, seignior of, i. [62];
- attempts to gain Bonivard, [63];
- vows to seize Levrier, [64];
- escapes from Geneva, [65]
- La Vaux, opposition to reformation at, vi. [267]
- Lay power, growth of, i. [285];
- assembly of laity and clergy discussed, ii. [293];
- laymen and clergy, [311] sqq.;
- encroachments of clergy, [462];
- triumph of, in England, iv. [19];
- one of the forces of Protestantism, [298];
- in primitive church, v. [26], [27];
- revival of, in England, [83]
- Le Clerq, curé, searches for Margaret's 'Mirror,' ii. [172];
- his act disavowed by Sorbonne, [181];
- his defence, [182];
- imprisoned, [233]
- Le Comte, John, iii. [74], [92];
- invited to Switzerland by Farel, [232]
- Lecoq, his preaching at Paris, ii. [74];
- before Francis I. and the court, [74];
- a secret interview with the king, [75];
- pronounced an arch-heretic, [76];
- examined by doctors of the Sorbonne, [76];
- retracts, [77]
- Lee, Edward, ambassador to Charles V. and the pope, iv. [22];
- made archbishop of York, [72];
- disowns primacy of the pope, v. [20];
- sent to Queen Catherine, [112];
- encourages the Catholic revolt in Lincolnshire, [204];
- at Pomfret Castle, [209], [213]; viii. [180]
- Lefèvre, of Etaples, publishes his New Testament, i. [225], [317];
- flies from persecution, [332], [335], [367], [368];
- at Paris, [361], [362];
- consoles Margaret, [412]; ii. [9], [57], [68];
- his Bible, [90];
- at Nérac, iii. [21];
- interview with Calvin, [23], [24];
- his Mass of Seven Points, [117];
- his New Testament, [162];
- used by Olivétan, [358];
- allowed to be printed at Geneva, [358];
- invited to take part in disputation at Geneva, v. [258];
- his Bible compared with Olivétan's, [272]
- Leighton, Dr., v. [82];
- commissioner for visitation of monasteries, [84];
- his proceedings, [85] sqq.
- Leith, the English fleet at, vi. [183];
- entered by the army, [184];
- pillaged and burnt, [184]
- Lennox, John Stuart, Earl of, marches on Edinburgh, vi. [23];
- defeated by Angus and slain, [24]
- Lennox, Earl of, supporter of the French party, vi. [166];
- at conference against the regent, [169];
- enters service of Henry VIII., [176];
- marries Lady Margaret Douglas, [176]
- Leo X., Pope, i. [34];
- brings about marriage of Philiberta of Savoy with his brother Julian, [34], [35];
- nominates the Bastard of Savoy bishop of Geneva, [36];
- false steps, [36];
- his character, [49], [50];
- gives Geneva to Savoy, [50];
- annuls censures of archbishop of Vienne in Pécolat's case, [106], [114], [118];
- characterized by Bonivard, [119];
- forbids the Bastard to return to Geneva, [206];
- his summons to syndics of Geneva, [208], [211];
- prohibits introduction of Luther's works into Spain, viii. [4]
- Lepeintre, Claude, account of, viii. [47];
- his martyrdom, [47], [48]
- Le Picard, champion of the Sorbonne, ii. [121], [126];
- arrested, [127];
- before the parliament, [129];
- banished, [130];
- his departure, [133];
- returns, [230];
- with Beda renews persecution, [230];
- imprisoned, [233]
- Lerma, Peter de, abbot of Alcala, viii. [15];
- imprisoned by the Inquisition, [16];
- submits, [16];
- his exile and death, [16], [41], [42];
- his last days, attended by F. de Enzinas, [45]
- Le Sage, Charles, iii. [46], [47], [53]
- Lesley, John, conspires against Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [209];
- assists at seizure of castle of St. Andrews, [211];
- slays the cardinal, [212]
- Lesley, Norman, quarrels with Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [209];
- conspires against him, [209];
- his plan, [210];
- seizes the castle of St. Andrews, [211]
- L'Etoile, Pierre de, teaches at Orléans, ii. [1];
- his influence, [3];
- his view on treatment of heretics, [4]
- Leutschau, Christian courage at, vii. [401]
- Levet, Claudine, iii. [320];
- hears Froment, [321];
- alone with the Bible, [322];
- her conversion, [323];
- dress and charities, [325];
- her friends, [326];
- meetings, [327];
- threatened by Catholic rioters, [388];
- advises flight of her husband, [441];
- character of, [442]; iv. [195]; v. [304], [305]
- Levet, Aimé, iii. [320], [327];
- Froment concealed in his house, [351], [358];
- proscribed by the bishop, [439];
- escapes, [441];
- his wanderings, [445];
- pursued and taken, [446];
- liberated, iv. [195];
- invites Froment, [195], [235];
- refuses to honor relics and is imprisoned, [258], [324];
- elected syndic, v. [394]
- Levrat, Jean, iv. [311], [312];
- arrested, [316]
- Levrier, Aimé, i. [61], [62];
- doomed to destruction by duke of Savoy, [62];
- the scheme proposed to Bonivard, [63], [64];
- warned by Bonivard, [64];
- the attempt frustrated, [65];
- foils the Bastard in Pécolat's trial, [98];
- his proposal for saving Pécolat, [99], [104], [130], [134], [138], [200];
- proposes deprivation of the bishop, [206];
- commissioned to go to Rome, [206];
- proof against Savoyard seductions, [233];
- his character, [237];
- frustrates the duke's attempt to usurp the vidamy, [239];
- his interview with Charles at Bonne, [240];
- leads opposition to his demand of sovereignty, [241];
- his death determined on, [243];
- refuses to leave Geneva, [244];
- before the duke, [244];
- seized and carried off by Bellegarde to Bonne, [247];
- the bishop's councillors refuse to intervene, [249];
- the duke's plot, [250];
- debate in the Council, [250];
- tortured, [251];
- his calm courage, [252];
- execution by night, [253] sqq.;
- consequences, [254], [282];
- his memory honored, [315]
- Levrier, Pierre, i. [37], [74], [93], [94]
- Libertines, The, ii. [91]; iii. [78]; [[Spirituals]]
- Liberty, Modern, three sources of, i. [8];
- morality necessary to, [59];
- first declaration of religious liberty, iii. [429];
- Rome and liberty incompatible, v. [61]
- Libraries of convents in England, destroyed or carried off, v. [99]
- Lichtenberg, astrologer, ii. [249]
- Liesveld, publishes a Dutch Bible, vii. [517]
- Limburg, a family of martyrs at, vii. [536], [537]
- Lincolnshire, Catholic revolt in, v. [204] sqq.
- Linlithgow, vi. [12], [46], [125]
- Lippomano, iv. [482]
- Lisle, Lord, commander of English fleet sent to Leith, vi. [183]
- 'Little Geneva', ii. [55]
- 'Little Germany', ii. [63]
- Littlejohn Smallfoot, abbot of Bonmont's fool, i. [74], [75]
- Lollards, The, ii. [102]
- London, persecution by Bonner at, viii. [238] sqq.
- London, Dr., commissioner for visitation of monasteries, v. [84];
- collects information for accusation of Cranmer, viii. [242];
- arrests evangelicals at Oxford, [264];
- at Windsor, [270];
- set in the pillory and imprisoned, [270]
- Longland, bishop of Lincoln, Chancellor of Oxford, deputed to obtain opinion of the university on the king's divorce, iv. [33]
- Longueville, John, Count of, ii. [83]
- Lorraine, Cardinal of, i. [366];
- presides at discussion with Lecoq, ii. [76]
- Losonczy, Stephen, account of, vii. [411];
- expels Szegedin and other pastors, [412]
- Louis II. of Hungary, marries Mary sister of Charles V., vii. [344];
- character of, [344];
- declares against reformation, [348];
- writes to Elector of Saxony against Luther, [349];
- urged by the pope proscribes the Reformation, [352];
- issues edict for burning of heretics, [355];
- summoned by Solyman to pay tribute, [357];
- prepares to resist invasion, [357];
- sets out to meet the Turks, [358];
- his army, [359];
- defeat and death at Mohacz, [361]
- Louis XI., of France, i. [25]
- Louis XVI., iii. [131]
- Louis, Duke of Savoy, i. [22];
- takes refuge at Geneva, [23]
- Louisa of Savoy, regent of France, persecutes Lutherans, i. [331];
- stops proceedings against Berquin, [344], [365];
- her character and influence at court, [409];
- takes part against the Reformation, ii. [31], [33];
- her illness, [68];
- will die governing, [69];
- her death, [69], [418]; iii. [205]
- Louvain, vii. [435];
- Luther's writings introduced, [484];
- rage of the theologians, [484];
- Erasmus assailed, [485];
- appeal of the doctors to the governess Margaret, [486];
- arrival of Alasco at, [548];
- pestilence at, [553];
- persecution of the reformed at, [554];
- night arrests, [554], [555];
- the examinations, [556] sqq.;
- the torture, [560];
- martyrdom, [562] sqq.;
- cowards, [568]
- Louvre, The, opened for Lutheran preaching by Margaret of Navarre, ii. [114] sqq.
- Loys, Fernand de, represents Lausanne at the disputation, vi. [236], [243], [264]
- Lübeck, resolves on invasion of Denmark, vii. [207];
- [Oldenburg, Count of]] besieged by Christian III., [ 211]
- with other Hanse Towns allied against Denmark, [308];
- resistance to the Reformation at, viii. [321];
- church organized by Pomeranus, [322]
- Lucas, elder of the Hussites, vii. [418], [420]
- Ludovico, attendant of the legate at Ratisbon, imprisoned for a calumny against Bishop Gardiner, viii. [159]
- Luft, Hans, Marburg printer, publishes writings of Tyndale, vi. [30];
- his illness at Wittenberg, [36]
- Lugrin, Sieur de, at castle of Gingins, lies in wait for Swiss auxiliaries, v. [333];
- battle of Gingins, [335] sqq.
- Lullin, Jean, i. [233];
- insults the servants of duke of Savoy, [233];
- resists claims of the duke, [267], [270], [276];
- returns to Geneva, [290];
- rouses the citizens, [290-292];
- envoy to Switzerland, ii. [381];
- again, [415];
- assailed by Mamelukes, iii. [449]; iv. [187], [188], [195];
- envoy to Berne, [309];
- to Lucerne, [343]; v. [315];
- a leader of opposition, vi. [340];
- elected syndic, [361];
- one of the delegates to Berne, [512];
- signs a treaty, [513];
- refuses to go again, [514];
- arrested, liberated on bail, [516];
- his flight, [518];
- sentenced to death, [518]
- Lullin, Pierre, v. [411], [412]
- Lullin, Sire de, governor of the Pays de Vaud, v. [341];
- at Coppet, arrests Claude Savoie, [341];
- his schemes, [342];
- meets fugitives from battle of Gingins, [344];
- invites Maisonneuve to treat for peace, [352];
- imprisons the envoys at Chillon, [353];
- prepares for blockade of Geneva, [358];
- orders seizure of Maisonneuve, [363]
- Lund, Archbishop of, arrested, vii. [217]
- Luther, i. [3], [103], [118], [120], [183], [201], [209];
- his influence at Geneva, [210], [216], [235], [237]
- his starting-point, [319], [332];
- his writings introduced at Strasburg, [339];
- prohibited in France, [342], [352], [374], [386], [388], [430]; ii. [72], [94];
- opposes war, [96];
- and diplomacy, [98], [99];
- prevails, [101];
- opposes alliance of Francis I. and landgrave of Hesse, [222] sqq.;
- aversion of Chelius to, [261], [263], [408], [436]; iii. [25], [49];
- a letter on the evil times, [147];
- organ of a new creation, [171];
- agreement of Luther and Calvin, [368];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42];
- Lambert's esteem for, [93];
- on use of images, [102];
- conference with Melanchthon, iv. [383];
- writes to the elector, [384];
- has interview with him, [384], [386];
- opposes journey of Melanchthon to France, [387], [389];
- writes to Jonas, [389], [390], [410], [414], [454], [483]; v. [80];
- his view of Henry VIII., [108];
- takes part in discussion with English divines at Wittenberg, [116];
- refuses concession, [117], [183], [292];
- his writings read in the schools of Paris, vi. [17];
- and proscribed in Scotland, [21];
- rumor of his death in Germany, [35];
- his illness, [36];
- receives sick persons into his house, [37];
- on marriage, [46];
- approves the confession of Basel, [325];
- greets Calvin, [462];
- again, [496];
- difference between wives of Luther and Calvin, [510];
- an originator of Reformation, vii. [114];
- invited by Christian II., [133];
- his letter to King Frederick on behalf of Christian II., [192], [221], [235];
- his letter to Gustavus Vasa, [318];
- his writings introduced in Hungary and condemned, [345];
- his letter to the Queen of Hungary, [362];
- receives emigrants from Hungary, [366];
- visited by Devay, [367];
- his reply to Hungarian pastors about Devay, [396];
- condemns the United Brethren, [418];
- receives deputation from them, [419];
- addresses to them his Worship of the Sacrament, [420];
- writes to the Calixtines, [421];
- receives deputation from Dantzic, [427];
- his advice to them, [428];
- ordinance against him published at Thorn, [430];
- his message to Christians of Livonia, [432], [484], [485], [486], [488], [494];
- interview with a Dutch illuminé, [505];
- writes to Antwerp Christians, [505], [506];
- read in Spain, viii. [3], [53];
- confers with Melanchthon and others on the Six Articles, [188], [189];
- his works read by Bugenhagen, [316];
- sale of his hymns at Magdeburg, [318];
- and at Brunswick, [319], [320];
- his sermons burnt at Lübeck, [321];
- intercourse with prince of Anhalt, [322];
- his letter to the princes, [326];
- to Duke George, [326];
- to Joachim, [327];
- intercourse with the duke of Pomerania, [328];
- his last visit to Eisleben, intercourse with the Counts of Mansfeld, [354], [355];
- illness and death, [355-358]
- Lutherans, in France, persecuted, i. [332];
- martyred, [333] sqq.;
- extirpation of, demanded by clergy, and refused by Francis I., [411];
- denounced by Duprat, [414];
- private meetings stopped, pastors seized, ii. [229], [230];
- burning of, decreed, [231];
- seizure of three hundred, [232];
- at Geneva, [385];
- post up a General Pardon, [463];
- increase of, [467];
- call themselves Evangelicals, [467];
- edict for extirpation of, by Francis I., iii. [140];
- at Geneva, agitation against, [367];
- the doctors condemn divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42]
- Lutry, Canon, locks up the belfry, i. [307];
- meeting of canons at his house, [311];
- flight, [311];
- his house entered, [312]
- Lutry, in the Pays de Vaud, reformation at, vi. [267], [268]
- Lyndsay, Sir David, vi. [126], [127], [133];
- withdraws from the court, [168]
- Lyons, persecution at, i. [10];
- Geneva fairs transferred to, [26];
- visited by Francis I., [79];
- distribution of New Testaments from, [225];
- preaching of De la Croix at, ii. [236] sqq., [240];
- church of, iv. [268];
- inquisitional court at, [268];
- meeting of prelates at, vi. [479], [480]
- Lyra, Nicholas, iii. [332]
- Machiavelli, i. [199]; ii. [146], [148], [157], [227]
- Machopolis, Stephen, preaches at Annonay, i. [430]
- Macrin, i. [363]
- Madeleine of Valois. [[James V. of Scotland]]
- Madrid, Treaty of, i. [337], [412]; vii. [520]
- Magdeburg, beginning of Reformation at, viii. [318]
- Magnus, papal legate in Sweden, vii. [257];
- his policy, [257];
- his advice to the king, [261];
- made primate, [262];
- becomes tolerant, [262];
- his embarrassment, [263];
- cites the reformers before the chapter of Upsala, [263];
- declares them excommunicated, [264];
- changes his policy, his ostentation, [270], [271];
- entertains the king, [272];
- demands the trial of Olaf, [273];
- cited before the king, [279];
- goes to Rome, [280]
- Maid of Kent, the, account of, v. [7] sqq.;
- appears before Henry VIII., [11];
- her threats, [11];
- a conspiracy, [13];
- arrested, [15];
- makes confession, [15];
- executed, [17]
- Maison-Neuve, Baudichon de la, Syndic of Geneva, i. [142], [205];
- welcomes the New Testament, [226], [256];
- imprisoned at Lyons, ii. [237];
- deputy to Berne, [307];
- influenced by Ab Hofen, [316], [332], [333];
- organizes 'funeral procession of the papacy', [347], [462];
- posts up a General Pardon, [463], [467];
- visits Farel, iii. [277], [314];
- a zealous Protestant, [354];
- with Salomon goes to Berne, [363], [365];
- his friends assemble to defend him, [371];
- his daughter Micah, [381];
- gathering of Lutherans in his house, [385];
- his courage, [386];
- a prayer, [386];
- proposal to burn his house, [389];
- goes to Berne to oppose Du Crest, [403], [421];
- escapes from proscription, [441];
- at Berne, [443], [448]; iv. [187];
- his Lutheranism, [187], [188];
- heads the Huguenots and compels the bishop to surrender his prisoners, [189];
- his success, [192];
- impetuosity, [196];
- has preaching in his house, [197];
- rescues Froment in the cathedral, [205];
- secures his escape from Geneva, [206];
- complains at Berne, [206], [207];
- his character, [209], [210];
- demands arrest of Furbity, [210];
- his house threatened by Catholics, [211];
- keeps order at Farel's preaching, [212];
- watches over him during the tournament, [226], [236], [241], [246];
- a baptism in his house, [248], [249];
- takes possession of the Grand Auditory at Rive for Farel's sermon, [252];
- at Frankfort, [256];
- at Lyons, [261];
- sells a reliquary, [261];
- his bold speaking, [262], [263];
- defends Renier, [264];
- hostility to, aroused, [265];
- again at Lyons, [266];
- arrested, [267];
- summoned before inquisitional court, [268];
- his trial, [269] sqq.;
- agitation in Geneva, [271];
- his brother's efforts, [271] sqq.;
- again examined, [273], [274];
- answer of the court to Bernese demand, [275];
- examined by inquisitors, [273], [289], [290];
- false witness, [292];
- enquiry continued, [293];
- placed in solitary confinement, [293];
- challenges the judges, [294];
- harshly treated, [296];
- confronted with Courtelier, [297];
- the bishop's accusation, [298];
- chooses to be tried in France, [299];
- intervention of Genevese magistrates, [299];
- final summons of the court, [300];
- pronounced heretical, [300];
- the sentence, [301];
- his liberation sought by Bernese, [322];
- liberated by order of Francis I., [328];
- restored to Geneva, [329];
- leader in campaign against idols, v. [289], [304];
- named captain-general, [318];
- leads troops to aid of Wildermuth, [346];
- invited by de Lullin to treat for peace, [351];
- sends envoys to Coppet, [352];
- returns to Geneva, [354];
- discovers treachery of his trumpeter, [356];
- pleads cause of Geneva in Switzerland, [362]
- Malbuisson, Jacques, iv. [312]
- Malbuisson, Jean de, i. [219]
- Malbuisson, Pierre de, i. [269]; iii. [374];
- takes part in consultation for peace, [395]; iv. [200], [208], [255]
- Malmoe, the Reformation at, vii. [157] sqq.;
- school of theology founded at, [169]
- Malvenda, Peter, viii. [102];
- his interviews with Juan Diaz at Ratisbon, [103], [104], [105];
- writes to De Soto, [105];
- interview with Alonzo Diaz, [108]
- 'Mamelukes', a party name at Geneva, i. [89];
- organization of, [149], [150];
- go out to duke of Savoy, [167];
- plot with him, [168];
- draw up proscription list, [177];
- haggle with the headsman, [177];
- renounce alliance with Friburg, [179];
- conspire with the bishop at Troches, [184];
- come into power, [200];
- vote for withdrawal of appeal to the pope, [268];
- draw up proscription lists, [268];
- consent to withdraw appeal, [278];
- fawn on the duke, [279], [280];
- accept his sovereignty at 'council of halberds', [287];
- oppose justification of fugitives, [295];
- dismissed from office, [301];
- conspiracy, [311];
- flight, [312], [313];
- their property sequestrated by the bishop, ii. [320];
- fugitives condemned to death, [355];
- join in attack on Geneva, [355];
- their plots against Lutherans, iii. [368] sqq.;
- arms of the flesh, [405];
- a council at the episcopal vicar's, [409];
- fight in the Molard, [415] sqq.;
- invite the bishop to return, [426];
- exiles forbidden to enter Geneva, [431];
- support absolute power of the bishop, [435];
- demand justice for Wernli's death, [448];
- their fanaticism, [448];
- their triumph, [461];
- alarmed at success of Lutherans, iv. [196];
- flight of, [318];
- brigandage, [319]
- Mandolla, procurator-fiscal, ii. [409];
- flies from Geneva, [410];
- imprisoned, [410];
- his release demanded by the bishop, [411];
- released, [429]
- Mannock, viii. [248], [249]
- Manrique, Don Alfonso de, archbishop of Seville, procures acquittal of D'Avila, viii. [17];
- his banishment and death, [18], [19]
- Marbeck, examined by Bishop Gardiner, viii. [265];
- vindicated by Cranmer and acquitted, [266]
- Marburg, publication of Tyndale's writings at, vi. [30];
- foundation of a university, [31];
- its inauguration, [32];
- its principles, [32], [33]
- Marcii, burnt at Toulouse, ii. [82]
- Marcourt, Antoine, pastor at Geneva, vi. [449], [450];
- with Morand at Berne, [452];
- leaves Geneva, vii. [2]
- Marcus Aurelius, i. [9]
- Marennes, Countess of, account of, v. [425]
- Marennes, Count of, v. [425], [428]
- Margaret of Angoulême (of Valois), Queen of Navarre, character and position of, i. [322];
- compared with Calvin, [322], [323];
- her desire for reformation, [326];
- journey to Spain, [326];
- nurses her brother, Francis I., [328];
- at Toledo, [329];
- fruitless appeals to Charles V., [329];
- before the council, [330] sqq.;
- admiration of Spaniards for her, [330];
- her acquirements and courage, [331];
- procures release of Berquin, [332];
- pleads for the exiles, [335];
- escapes arrest by flight from Spain, [336], [337];
- her influence over Francis I., [338];
- corresponds with Count Sigismund, [340];
- her scheme of reformation, [341];
- invites Count Sigismund to France, [341];
- intercedes for Berquin, [343] sqq.;
- courted by Henry d'Albret, [346];
- her first marriage, [346], [347], [352], [353] sqq.;
- her religious poems, [355];
- marriage schemes, [356];
- obtains release of the prisoners, [358];
- pleads for Toussaint, [359];
- receives refugees from Strasburg, [361], [362];
- goes to Paris, [364];
- receives Toussaint, [364];
- her hopes, [365], [368], [371];
- as a missionary, [372] sqq.;
- gets Berquin liberated, [377];
- her marriage, [378];
- prevents persecution of Lutherans, [411];
- at Fontainebleau, [413];
- birth of her daughter, [413];
- returns to Paris, [414];
- at Fontainebleau, [418];
- her Marguérites, [421] sqq.;
- her university of Bourges, ii. [23];
- her sorrows at court, [31];
- intercedes for Berquin, [34], [37], [40], [42];
- her Martyr's hymn, [46], [61];
- appeals to Bucer, [62];
- birth and death of her son, [64];
- at wedding of Francis I. and Eleanor, [65];
- her hymn 'The fountain', [67];
- attends her mother's death-bed, [68] sqq.;
- protects Lefèvre, [68];
- her dream of reformation, [69], [71];
- revises her prayer-book, [73];
- invites Calvin into her service, [93];
- projects scheme of evangelical preaching, [113];
- opens a hall in the Louvre for Roussel, [114];
- her zeal, [114];
- her plan of reformation, [117];
- defamed, [120], [122];
- fury of the Sorbonne against her, [165];
- enemies at court, [166];
- her Mirror of the Sinful Soul, [166] sqq.;
- her tales of the monks, [170] sqq.;
- seizure of the Mirror by the Sorbonne, [172];
- violence of the monks, [172];
- corresponds with Montmorency, [173];
- her book prohibited, [173];
- satirized in the priests' comedy, [174];
- interview with Calvin, [205];
- retires to Béarn, [213];
- pleads for Lutherans, [234];
- returns to Paris, [238];
- her ambition, [238], [247];
- visit of Baduel to, [258] sqq.;
- at Nérac, iii. [20] sqq.;
- interested in Calvin, [25];
- at Pau, [26];
- secret observance of the Lord's Supper, [27];
- her mystery, The Nativity, represented, [29] sqq.;
- her alarm about the placards, [114];
- intervenes for Roussel, [115];
- leaves Paris, [115];
- recalled, [116];
- her scheme of compromise, [116];
- procures liberation of her preachers, [124];
- sends Baduel to Melanchthon, iv. [368]; v. [119], [120];
- procures a bishopric for Roussel, [438]
- Margaret of Austria, Governess of the Netherlands, vii. [486];
- her reply to doctors of Louvain, [486];
- carries out edict of persecution, [488];
- present at suppression of Augustinian convent, [499], [518];
- her views of reform, [518];
- her death, [529]
- Margaret, widow of James IV. of Scotland, regent for her son, vi. [9];
- marries Angus, [15];
- appeals to Henry VIII. for aid against Albany, [20];
- desires a divorce, [22];
- conspires with Beatoun against Angus, [23];
- flies from Stirling, [24];
- returns to Holyrood, [27];
- quarrels with James V., [106];
- her death, [137]
- Margaret, Countess of Salisbury, joins conspiracy against Henry VIII., v. [14];
- arrested, viii. [152]
- Marot, Clement, arrested, i. [332];
- liberated, [358];
- escapes to Italy, iii. [122];
- writes to Francis I., [140]; iv. [370];
- at Ferrara, v. [426], [428];
- ordered to leave Ferrara, [443]
- Marquina, delegate to conference of Ratisbon, his interview with De Soto, viii. [106];
- returns to Rome, [106];
- reports heresy of Juan Diaz to Alonzo, [106]
- Marriage of priests discussed, ii. [293]
- Marseilles, meeting of Clement VII. and Francis I. at, ii. [192]; iv. [167]
- Martin V., Pope, i. [19];
- twice nominates a prince-bishop of Geneva, [20]
- Martin of Kalmance, vii. [367];
- umpire with Dr. Adrian at conference of Schässburg, [384];
- their embarrassment, [385];
- goes to Wittenberg, [393];
- colleague of Devay at Debreczin, [398];
- his characteristics, [398];
- assassinated by a priest, [398]
- Marty, Councillor of Friburg, receives Berthelier, i. [85];
- at Geneva, [136];
- again sent to Geneva, [170];
- his interview with duke Charles, [170];
- his advice to the Council, [171], [172];
- remonstrates with the duke, [178], [181]
- Martyr, Peter, (Vermigli), iv. [427];
- parentage and early life of, [433];
- disinherited, enters a monastery, [433];
- character, [433], [434];
- begins to preach, [434];
- studies Hebrew, [435];
- called to Naples, [435], [461];
- search after truth, [461];
- his preaching, [462];
- his audience, [463]
- Martyr, Peter, of Anghiera, iv. [455]; viii. [2], [3]
- Martyrs, youthful, i. [347] sqq.; ii. [45];
- a hymn, [46];
- at Paris, iii. [118] sqq.; [136], [141], [182];
- effects of deaths of, iv. [111];
- Roman as well as Protestant, v. [52];
- multitude of, in the 16th century, viii. [124];
- heroes of the conscience, [125]
- Mary, Princess, of England, refuses to renounce her title, v. [111];
- Cranmer's intercession for her, [111];
- separated from her mother, [111];
- Anne Boleyn asks pardon of her, [162];
- restored to favor, [178]
- Mary, queen of Scots, her birth, vi. [149];
- marriage of, to Edward of England projected by Henry VIII., [157];
- the treaty concluded, [165];
- failure of the scheme, [171];
- her coronation, [175]
- Mary, Regent of the Netherlands, iv. [163]; v. [221];
- her marriage with Louis II. of Hungary, vii. [344];
- her character, [344], [345];
- her coronation, [348];
- her distress after Mohacz, [362];
- consoled by Luther, [362];
- appointed Governess of the Netherlands, [364], [529];
- the pope's complaint of her to the emperor, [529];
- difficulty of her position at Brussels, [530];
- inconsistencies, [530];
- appoints Peter Alexander her chaplain, viii. [86];
- favors marriage of Henry VIII. with duchess of Milan, [174]
- Mary of Lorraine, marries James V. of Scotland, vi. [109];
- left a widow, [150];
- resists scheme for marriage of her daughter Mary with Edward of England, [158];
- present at submission of Arran to the pope, [173];
- induces Bothwell to give up Wishart to the regent, [197]
- Mass, The, views of Bucer and Melanchthon, ii. [269];
- massmongers, [290], [291];
- conversation on, iii. [48];
- Calvin exposes it, [53];
- the placards against, [94] sqq.;
- Lefèvre's Mass of Seven Points, [117];
- opinion of Francis I. on, iv. [400];
- suppressed at Geneva, v. [295], [297];
- Calvin on its evil influences, [432], [433];
- differences about, at Ferrara, [435]
- Masson, Peter, Waldensian, sent to Basel, iii. [247];
- conference with Œcolampadius, [247];
- executed at Dijon, [250];
- effect of his martyrdom, [252]
- Master, priest of Kent, instigates imposture of Maid of Kent, v. [8];
- before Star Chamber, confesses conspiracy, [15]
- Materialism, iii. [11], [12]
- Mathurin, Friar, appears before parliament of Paris, ii. [129];
- banished, [130];
- his departure, [133]
- Matthison, John, vii. [541]; viii. [335];
- instigates expulsion of evangelicals from Munster, [339];
- exercises chief authority, [340];
- killed at siege of Munster, [341]
- Maurienne, bishop of, i. [78];
- sent by duke of Savoy to bribe Genevese patriots, [152], [158], [161], [212], [228];
- deputy to the duke about seizure of Levrier, [249];
- again, [250];
- attends 'council of halberds', [286]
- Maximus, a Greek monk, revises Slave version of the Bible, vii. [432];
- confined in a convent, [433]
- Maxwell, Lord, vi. [144], [145];
- surrenders to the English, [146];
- set at liberty and sent with others to arrange marriage of Prince Edward with Mary, queen of Scots, [157];
- proposes a law giving freedom to read the Bible, [162]
- Mayence, Albert, archbishop of, iv. [386],
- Mayor, John, teaches philosophy at Paris, vi. [17];
- teaches at Glasgow, [18];
- his doctrines, [18], [19];
- his De Jure Regni, [19];
- removes to St. Andrews, [19]
- Meaux, ii. [57]
- Mecklenburg, Albert, duke of, besieged in Copenhagen, vii. [215];
- submits to Christian III., [215]
- Medici, Giangiacomo, account of, v. [370];
- takes command of Savoyard troops against Geneva, [371];
- his flight before the Bernese, [381];
- letters to him seized by the Bernese, [384]
- Medici, Lorenzo de', i. [50]
- Medici, Lorenzo II., de', ii. [142]
- Medici, Cardinal de, iv. [173]
- Megander, at disputation of Lausanne, vi. [246];
- presides at synod of Lausanne, [314];
- his influence at Berne, [324];
- head of delegates to Basel, [325];
- opposes Kunz and Meyer, [326];
- opposes Bucer and Capito at synod of Berne, [329];
- his catechism revised by Bucer, [366];
- retires to Zurich, [367],
- Mekins, accused by Bonner, tried and burnt, viii. [238], [239]
- Melanchthon, ii. [72], [73];
- sent with Luther to Philip of Hesse, [222] sqq.;
- Du Bellay's estimate of him, [246];
- opposes Philip, [249], [252], [257];
- introduces Baduel to Margaret of Navarre, [258];
- anxieties, [260];
- mission of Chelius to, [261] sqq.;
- his desire for union, [261];
- sketches plan of new church, [262];
- his proposals examined before Francis I., [265] sqq., [284]; iii. [84], [145], [147]; iv. [349], [352];
- his conciliatory character, [357];
- invited to France, [357];
- resolves to go, [361];
- letter to bishop of Paris, [361];
- letter to Sturm, [362];
- receives envoy of Francis I., [375];
- his perplexity, [375], [377] sqq.;
- decision, [376];
- his character, [377];
- applies to the elector, [380];
- opposed by the courtiers, refused permission by the elector to go to France, [382];
- confers with Luther, [383];
- objections of Germans to his going to France, [385], [386];
- his grief, [388];
- letter to du Bellay, [389];
- letter to Francis I., [391];
- to du Bellay, [392];
- to Sturm, [393];
- goes to Smalcalde, [395];
- at conference with du Bellay, [398];
- draws up answer to him, [404];
- his Commonplaces circulated in Italy, [408], [411];
- his letter to Campeggio, [411];
- laments More, v. [75];
- corresponds with Henry VIII, [106];
- horror at execution of More and Fisher, [107];
- declines invitation to England, [107];
- takes part in discussion with English divines at Wittenberg, [116];
- appointed joint envoy to Henry VIII., [118];
- the embassy given up, [170];
- interview with Calvin at Frankfort, vi. [474] sqq.;
- his dream, [478];
- friendship with Calvin, vii. [15] sqq., [236], [379], [380];
- writes to Count Nadasdy, [380];
- appeals to Margrave of Brandenburg in behalf of Hungarian exiles, [392];
- corresponds with Alasco, [449];
- his works read by the Enzinas, viii. [41];
- intercourse with Francis de Enzinas, [93], [94];
- writes to Henry VIII., [157];
- his view of the office of kings in relation to the church, [157];
- confers with Luther and others on the Six Articles, [188], [189];
- writes to Henry VIII., [189];
- compared with Pomeranus, [317], [320]
- Melville, James, conspires against Cardinal Beatoun, vi. [212], [213]
- Mendicants, The, ii. [121];
- excite sedition at Paris, [122]
- Mendoza, Don Francisco de, bishop of Jaen, his interviews with Enzinas, viii. [69];
- entertains Charles V., [69], [70];
- presents Enzinas to him, [71]
- Menno, his conference with Alasco, vii. [468]
- Merlin, grand penitentiary, ii. [42], [44]
- Meyer, Sebastian, pastor at Berne, vi. [326];
- his doctrine of the sacrament, [326], [367], [369], [370]
- Michael d' Aranda, made bishop, i. [359];
- at Strasburg, [362], [380]; ii. [236]
- Michelsen, private secretary to Christian II., vii. [145];
- completes and publishes Danish New Testament, [146];
- his preface, [146], [157]
- Michod, Jean, at disputation of Lausanne, vi. [236], [244]
- Middle Ages, The, i. [318]
- Milan, duchy of, offered by Charles V. to Francis I., v. [113]
- Milon, Bartholomew, paralytic, conversion of, iii. [69] sqq.;
- imprisoned, [111];
- martyrdom, [119]
- Mirabeau, Farel and, i. [375]
- Modena, spread of Lutheranism at, iv. [428]
- Mohacz, battle of, vii. [360], [361];
- its effect on Europe, [361]
- Moine, Thomas, head of lay opposition to reform at Geneva, iii. [330], [363], [365], [366], [367], [368], [396]; iv. [312]
- Molard, Claude du, syndic of Geneva, ii. [468]
- Mollerus, Henry, of Zutphen, vii. [494];
- at Wittenberg, [494];
- his theses, [495], [496];
- preaches at Antwerp, [496];
- prior of the Augustines, [496];
- arrested, [497];
- rescued, [497];
- his wanderings, [498];
- preaches at Bremen, [498];
- in Holstein, [499];
- murdered, [499]
- Mollio, John, teaches at Bologna from the New Testament, iv. [453];
- expelled from the university, [453]
- Monachism, ii. [170]; iv. [401]; v. [58]
- Monasteries, in England, state of, v. [80];
- suppression of, urged by Cromwell, [81];
- middle course proposed and adopted, [82];
- the system rotten, [83];
- the commissioners for visitation, [84];
- Canterbury, [85];
- Langton Abbey, [86];
- Fountains, [88];
- Mayden-Bradley, [88];
- Bristol, [88];
- fraud at Hales, [88];
- fraud at Boxley, [89];
- discoveries in, [89];
- Norton Abbey, [91];
- Woolstrop Abbey, [91];
- the nunneries, [91];
- permission to leave, given to young monks and nuns, [93];
- Report of Commissioners, [93];
- deliberations of council on, [94];
- debate in parliament, [96];
- the smaller, secularized, [96];
- bill for suppression of, [96];
- petitions of nobles for gifts of, [98], [99];
- libraries destroyed, or carried off, [99];
- suppression of, carried out, [100];
- closing scenes and sufferings, [100], [101];
- gain to learning, [102];
- crown revenues increased, [103];
- the process completed, [105];
- popular discontent and agitation about, [202-204];
- restoration of monks to their convents in Yorkshire, [206], [207]
- Monathon, Genevese delegate to Berne, vi. [512];
- signs a treaty, [513];
- again sent, [514];
- arrested, liberated on bail, [516];
- flight from Geneva, [518];
- sentenced to death, [518]
- Montague, Lord, iv. [70];
- charged with treason and executed, viii. [152]
- Montaigne, ii. [297]
- Montbel de Verey, Sieur de, commands French auxiliaries sent to Geneva, v. [359];
- defeated by de la Sarraz in the mountains, reaches Geneva, [364];
- proposes French protection, [365]
- Montbèliard, pledged to France by Ulrich, ii. [226]
- Montchenu, Seigneur de, invites Genevese to become subjects of the king of France, vi. [362];
- at Annecy, [485]
- Montheron, Abbot of, betrays Bonivard to duke of Savoy, i. [184];
- receives priory of St. Victor, [186];
- his death at Rome, [211]
- Montius, ii. [42], [44]
- Montluc, John de, at Paris, ii. [115], [116]; iii. [180]
- Montmorency, warns Margaret of Angoulême of intention of Charles V. to arrest her, i. [336];
- sets Berquin free, [377];
- supports petition against him, ii. [33], [68];
- hostile to Margaret, [166];
- corresponds with her, [173];
- intrigues against her, [173];
- silenced, [177]; iii. [107];
- treachery towards Margaret, [115];
- opposes union of Catholics and reformers, iv. [370]
- Montrotier, Sieur de, commands Savoyard army, i. [162], [167], [174], [176]
- Montyon, syndic of Geneva, i. [111], [132];
- pronounces acquittal of Berthelier, [144], [148], [150], [168];
- syndic, [200];
- again, [263];
- at 'council of halberds', [288], [290], [293];
- at election of syndics, [300]
- 'Morality,' a, performed at Geneva, i. [305]
- Morand, Jean, pastor at Geneva, vi. [449];
- with Marcourt, vindicates himself at Berne, [452];
- resigns and leaves Geneva, vii. [2]
- Moravia, the Reformation in, vii. [417]
- More, Sir Thomas, ii. [299];
- appointed chancellor, iv. [5];
- opens the parliament, [9], [55], [59];
- presents decisions of universities on the king's divorce to parliament, [67], [75];
- orders arrest of Bilney, [79];
- a persecutor, [85];
- his fanaticism, [90];
- resigns the seals, [91];
- arrests and tortures Bainham, [106];
- tries to bend him, [106];
- proposes to answer Fryth, [141];
- threatens Tyndale, [143];
- answers Fryth, orders search for him, [144];
- hatred of the Reformation, [145];
- his book against Fryth, [146];
- doubts about the Maid of Kent, v. [10];
- attempts to win him over, [12];
- his name struck out of indictment, [16];
- fears, [45];
- refuses to take the oath of supremacy, [46];
- attainted, [46];
- visited in the Tower, [46], [47];
- harsh treatment, [52];
- sees Carthusians led to execution, [62];
- visited by Cromwell, [64];
- summoned before the King's Bench, [68];
- condemned to death, [69];
- the parting with his daughter, [69] sqq.;
- his last days, [71];
- execution, [73], [74];
- characterized, [74];
- laments for him, [75]
- Morel, George, Waldensian, sent to Basel, iii. [247];
- conference with Œcolampadius, [247];
- imprisoned at Dijon, escapes, [250]
- Moulins, Bertrand des, iii. [78]
- Mountjoy, Lord, royal commissioner sent to Queen Catherine, v. [18]
- Mullinen, Gaspard de, head of Swiss embassy to Geneva, i. [280];
- receives from Duke Charles safe-conduct for exiles, [281]
- Munster, Westphalia, viii. [333];
- preaching of Rottmann at, [333];
- the priests deprived, and arrested, [333];
- arrival of fanatics from the Netherlands, [334];
- Bockhold and Matthison, [335];
- Knipperdolling, [336];
- spread of their views, [337];
- the town seized by the Visionaries, [337];
- they establish themselves in power, [338];
- expulsion of evangelicals, [339];
- the new kingdom set up, [340];
- image-breaking, [340];
- communism, [341];
- investment of, by the bishop, [341];
- Tausendschar, [343];
- a festival, [345];
- invested by Philip of Hesse, [347];
- famine, [347], [348];
- captured, [349].
- [[Spiritualists], [John of Leyden]]
- Myconius, Oswald, meets Calvin at Basel, iii. [165];
- account of, [166];
- his council sermon, [167];
- president of the church, [167];
- sympathy with Calvin, [167]; vi. [323];
- takes part in synod of Berne, [327]
- Myconius, Frederick, one of the German envoys to England, viii. [153];
- preaches at Zwickau, [317]
- 'Mystery,' performed at Geneva, i. [222];
- another, 'Monde Malade', by the Huguenots, [228];
- at Pau, The Nativity, iii. [29] sqq.
- Nadasdy, Count, promotes the Reformation, vii. [378];
- receives Devay into his house at Sarvar, [378];
- sets up the first printing press in Hungary, [381]
- Nägueli, Francis, Bernese deputy to Geneva, ii. [445];
- ambassador to the Pays de Vaud, v. [340];
- at Conference of Coppet, [340], [343], [345], [348];
- seized by Savoyards and released, [350];
- at Geneva, [355];
- head of deputation to duke of Savoy, [361];
- commander of expedition against Savoy, [373];
- meets the Savoyards at Morges, [378], [379];
- his victorious march, [380-384];
- enters Geneva, [387];
- his interview with the council, [390];
- his march for Chambery, [395];
- reduces Vaud, [398]
- Navarre, King of. [[Henry d'Albret]]
- Navarre, Queen of. [[Margaret of Angoulême]]
- Navis, Andrew, i. [42], [69], [73], [74], [76];
- imprisoned at Turin, [115];
- his examination, [116];
- removed to Pignerol, [116];
- his torture and confession, [116], [117];
- sentenced to death, [122];
- beheaded, [123];
- treatment of his remains, [123], [124];
- agitation in Geneva, [125], [131], [183]
- Navis, Pierre, i. [42], [73], [112];
- his character, [113];
- demands arrest of Berthelier, [113];
- his accusations, [113];
- grief over death of his son, [125], [131]
- Nemours, Philip, duke of, takes part in attack on Geneva, ii. [416], [431]
- Nergaz, Michael, syndic of Geneva, i. [128], [136], [137], [138], [150], [168], [267];
- attempts to break off alliance of Geneva with the Swiss, [314]
- Netherlands, the contest against Philip II., i. [5];
- home of a free people, vii. [480];
- industry and commerce, [480], [481];
- suzerainty of Austria, [481];
- Charles V., [481];
- Catholicism, in, [482];
- fore-runners of the Reformation, [482];
- intercourse with foreigners, [484];
- voices in praise of Luther, [487];
- edict of persecution, [488];
- a Christian triumvirate, [500], [501];
- illuminism, [505];
- unknown enlighteners, [506];
- persecution by Charles V., [508];
- persecution authorized by Clement VII., [509];
- a new edict, [519];
- a new placard demands delivery of Lutheran books, on pain of death, [524];
- martyrs, [525-528];
- Mary queen of Hungary regent, [529];
- increase of evangelicals, [531];
- the Bible eagerly read, [534];
- a new edict of persecution, [534], [535];
- night arrests, [535];
- martyrs, [537], [538];
- lasting effects of these persecutions, [538];
- the Enthusiasts, [538], [539];
- their influence and pretensions, [540];
- arms found in their possession, [541];
- origin of the Reformation in, [544] sqq.;
- its progress, [545];
- general persecution, 552; viii. [85];
- troubles caused by the Spiritualists, [348], [349]
- Neuchâtel, iii. [305], [307];
- evangelical faith established in, [307];
- offers troops to Geneva, iv. [317];
- gives help to Geneva, v. [323];
- the men forbidden to go by De Prangins, [323];
- the muster, [324];
- again forbidden, [325];
- part return, [326];
- the volunteers betrayed, [330];
- battle of Gingins, [333];
- auxiliaries entrapped, [349];
- troubles in the church, vii. [49]
- Nevil, Sir Edward, charged with treason and executed, viii. [152]
- Nicholson, John. [[Lambert]]
- Nicolai, Lawrence, Jesuit, sent to Sweden, vii. [333]
- Nidau, the heroine of, v. [321]
- 'Nils Sture,' pretender to Swedish crown, vii. [278];
- detected, escapes to Norway, [279]
- Noircarmes, envoy of Charles V., ii. [70]
- Norfolk, Duke of, President of the Council, iv. [5], [38];
- conveys to Pole the king's offers of English sees, [70], [90];
- recalled from Italy, [138], [176]; v. [49];
- hostility to Queen Anne, [127];
- member of commission of inquiry into her conduct, [135];
- informs her of charges against her, [139];
- conducts her to the Tower, [140];
- sent to examine her, [149];
- on commission for trial of Weston, Norris, etc., [154];
- presides at trial of Queen Anne, [155];
- pronounces sentence of death, [157];
- sent to Princess Mary, [178];
- commands against insurgents in the North, [208];
- his proclamation to them, [211];
- sent to Berwick to watch Scotland, vi. [114];
- his reports, [114], [115];
- enters Scotland and retires, [140];
- presents the Six Articles to the house of peers, viii. [181];
- quarrels with Cromwell, [186];
- envoy to France, [200];
- accuses Cromwell of treason, [209];
- in favor with the king, [210];
- examines Cromwell in the Tower, [217], [218];
- sent with Cranmer to examine the queen as to charges against her, [250];
- retires to Kenninghall, [253];
- writes to the king, [253];
- one of the presidents at burning of Anne Askew, [283];
- chief of the Catholic party, [299];
- his proposals to the Seymours, [299];
- charges against him and his son investigated, [300];
- committed to the Tower, [301];
- the king's delegates at Kenninghall, [301] sqq.;
- depositions taken, [303], [304];
- declared guilty of high treason, [304];
- in the Tower, [305];
- his letter to the king, [305];
- his confession, [305];
- bill of attainder passed, [306]
- Norfolk, Duchess-dowager of, sent to the Tower, viii. [253];
- pardoned, [254]
- Norman, George, governor to sons of Gustavus Vasa, vii. [318], [319];
- the high position assigned to him, [319]
- Norris, Henry, charge against him, v. [133];
- at Tournament at Greenwich, [138];
- arrest of, [139];
- examined, [148];
- indicted, [154];
- tried and sentenced to death, [154];
- beheaded, [159]
- Northumberland, Duke of, denies pre-contract of marriage between Anne Boleyn and himself, v. [153];
- one of her judges, [156];
- refuses to join Pilgrimage of Grace, [207];
- his conference with Bothwell as to intervention of Henry VIII. in Scotland, vi. [86]
- Norway, receives Christian II. as king, vii. [186];
- Danish fleet sent against, [186];
- loses its independence, [224];
- state of the church in, [224];
- constitution of the Danish church imposed in, [224]
- Noyon, i. [317]; ii. [47]
- Nürnberg, Peace of, ii. [101]; iv. [115]; viii. [331]
- Nürnberg, the Gospel at, iv. [114], [188]
- Nyon, conference of Knights of the Spoon at, ii. [374]
- Occhino, Bernardino, iv. [427];
- early life and character of, [428], [429];
- joins the Capuchins, [429];
- conflicts, [430];
- his preaching, [431] sqq.;
- at Naples, [467];
- forbidden to preach, [473]
- Odensee, Diet of, vii. [162] sqq.
- Odin, vii. [120]
- Œcolampadius, i. [365], [367]; iii. [84];
- Waldensian deputation to, [247];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42]
- Oldenburg, Count of, at the head of the Lübeckers in Denmark, vii. [207], [208];
- enters Copenhagen, [208];
- conquers Zealand, [208];
- gets Christian II. recognized as king, [208], [209];
- his demands on Copenhagen, [212];
- submits to Christian III., [215]
- Olivétan, Pierre Robert, his character and scholarship, i. [388];
- intercourse with Calvin, [389], [398];
- tutor at Geneva, ii. [455];
- his missionary zeal, [456] sqq.;
- a pioneer, [459];
- his disappearance, [460];
- speaks against the jubilee, [461];
- forbidden to preach, [466], [467]; iii. [275];
- consulted by Farel, [275], [276];
- summoned before episcopal council, [285];
- assaulted before the council, [291];
- banished, [293];
- escapes, [296], [297];
- promises to translate the Bible, [300], [301];
- journey to the Pays de Vaud, [301] sqq.;
- assisted by Waldenses, [304];
- his work, [356];
- questions of translation, [358];
- is refused permission to print his Bible, [358];
- contradicts Dominican preacher, and is banished from Geneva, [363];
- completes his French Bible, v. [272];
- his translation compared with Lefèvre's, [272];
- his death, vi. [463]
- Opposition, uses of, iii. [195]
- Oratory of Divine Love, founded at Rome, iv. [481], [482]
- Orbe, in the Jura, iii. [203];
- sale of pardons at, [204];
- history of, [205];
- commission of Bernese and Friburgers appointed to arrange differences, [212] [[Farel]];
- evangelical worship established, [231];
- tumult at, [243]
- Ordinances, Ecclesiastical, The, of Geneva, projected by Calvin, vii. [60];
- submitted to the councils, [61];
- Calvin's concessions, [62];
- adopted, [62], [63];
- their aim, [63] sqq.;
- view of the ministry, [66], [67];
- of schools and charities, [68], [69];
- of election of pastors, [70], [71];
- of teachers, [71];
- of elders, [72], [73];
- the Consistory, [72], [73];
- preaching declared the chief duty of the pastors, [73];
- public prayers, [75];
- functions of the elders, [75];
- severity of discipline, [75], [76];
- subjects before the Consistory, [99] sqq.
- Orebro, Synod of, vii. [299];
- authority of Scripture recognized, [300];
- regulations for preaching and schools, [300];
- reduction of Saints' Days, [301];
- compromise as to rites and ceremonies, [302];
- 'Form of Reformation' signed, [302]
- Orléans, ii. [1];
- students at university of, [3];
- democratic spirit, [3];
- early heretics at, [12];
- conversion of wife of the provost, [272] sqq.;
- the provost and the monks, [273];
- apparition in the convent, [275];
- inquest on the spirit, [277];
- appeal of the provost to the king, [278];
- commission appointed, arrest of the monks, [278];
- confession of the novice, [280];
- the monks condemned, [281];
- University of, declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [40]
- Orsières, Pierre de, i. [90];
- head of deputation to John the Bastard, [90];
- imprisoned by him, [90]
- Orsières, Hugonin d', i. [90]
- Osiander, intercourse of, with Cranmer, iv. [114];
- at Nürnberg, [188]
- Ousberghen, Jan van, pastor at Louvain, vii. [549], [551], [553]
- Ousberghen, Justus van, vii. [569], [570];
- arrested, [570];
- his trial, [571];
- imprisoned, [572];
- before the Judges, [573];
- his martyrdom, [574]
- Oxford, University of, appealed to by Henry VIII. on his divorce, iv. [33];
- opposition, [34];
- disputations, [34];
- voting, and the sentence, [36];
- disowns papal supremacy, v. [25];
- state and visitation of, [84]
- Oxford, Society of friends of the Gospel at, viii. [264];
- fourteen arrested by Dr. London, prosecution of Testwood, Filmer, and Pierson, [264];
- their martyrdom, [266].
- [[Marbeck]]
- Paderborn, the arrest and threatened execution of Evangelicals at, by Elector of Cologne, viii. [330];
- appeal of women, and pardon of the prisoners, [330]
- Padua, University of, declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [41]
- Paleario, Aonio, lectures at Sienna, iv. [435];
- his birth and education, [435];
- quits Rome, goes to Sienna, [436];
- his poem on immortality, [437];
- conversion, [437];
- his marriage, and family, [438];
- love of nature, [438];
- friendship with Bellantes, [439];
- hated by the monks, [440];
- a plot against him, [440];
- catechized by monks, [441];
- goes to Rome, [441];
- returns to his family, [443];
- accused of heresy, [443];
- a deputation to the archbishop against him, [443], [444];
- trial before the senate, [446];
- his defence, [447] sqq.;
- acquitted, [451], [476]
- Palladius, bishop of Zealand, vii. [222], [224]
- Pallavicini, Battista, iv. [41]
- Panter, Master David, arrives in Scotland, with abbot of Paisley, vi. [167]
- Pantheism, of the Spirituals, iii. [79] sqq.
- Papacy, The, in danger, ii. [294]
- Papists and Protestants, three of each sent to the stake together, viii. [227] sqq.
- Paradis, Paul, accused by Beda, ii. [230]
- Pardon, General, A, posted up in Geneva, ii. [463]
- Paris, decree of the parliament against Lutherans, i. [331];
- martyrs at, [347] sqq.;
- synod, [415];
- image of the Virgin mutilated, [423] sqq.;
- the new learning at, ii. [50];
- secret meetings of evangelicals, [55];
- university of, [59];
- carnival, [112];
- agitation caused by Lutheran preaching, [119];
- reforming itself, [134];
- satires of the students, [135];
- suspense, [139];
- flight of evangelicals from, [213];
- Lutheran preaching at, [227];
- prohibited, [228];
- private meetings, [228], [229];
- the placards posted up, iii. [97];
- the parliament convoked, [108];
- arrests, [110];
- martyrs, [118];
- fugitives, [121];
- Procession of Relics, [127];
- martyrs, [137], [141];
- Terror, [143];
- persecution of Lutherans, iv. [258];
- martyrs at, viii. [46], [47]
- Parker, Matthew, account of, v. [122];
- named almoner to Queen Anne, [123];
- his subsequent history, [123], [124];
- Princess Elizabeth commended to his care, [133]
- Parr, Catherine, Queen of Henry VIII., viii. [262];
- favors the Reformation, [262];
- accusations against her, [284];
- her zeal, [285], [286];
- attentions to the king, [286];
- her friends examined by Gardiner and Wriothesley, [289];
- distress on discovery of the plot, [291];
- visited by Henry, [293];
- visits him, [293];
- her declaration, [293] sqq.;
- her arrest prevented, [296]
- Partridge, Nicholas. [[Students, English]]
- Pascual, Matthew, takes part in disputation at Alcala, viii. [14];
- imprisoned by the Inquisition, [15]
- Pau, iii. [26]
- Paul III., Pope, iii. [156];
- account of, iv. [354];
- promises a council, intends reform, [354], [366], [485];
- creates cardinals, [487];
- attempts at reform, [489];
- persecutes the reformers, [490]; v. [3], [48];
- withdraws decree of Clement VII. against Henry VIII., [58];
- creation of cardinals, [64];
- indignant at execution of Fisher, [76];
- his bull against Henry, [76];
- receives news of divorce of Queen Anne, [161];
- desires alliance of England, [172], [173];
- supports Duke of Savoy against Geneva, [302], [314];
- proposes to Duke of Ferrara expulsion of the French, [442];
- proposes alliance between the emperor and the kings of France and Scotland for invasion of England, vi. [109];
- sends Cardinal Farnese to diet of Ratisbon, vii. [27];
- his manifesto characterized, [36];
- fears and hopes for England, viii. [147];
- invites Pole to Rome, [148];
- creates him cardinal with others, [149];
- sends him as legate to France, [149];
- willing to sanction marriage of Henry VIII. with duchess of Milan, [175];
- publishes the bull against Henry, [175];
- forms alliance with the emperor and the king of France, [181];
- his irritation against Henry VIII. [255];
- subsidizes Francis I., [269]
- Paulet, William, on commission of inquiry about Anne Boleyn, v. [136]
- Paulsen, Oegmund, bishop of Skalholt, vii. [225];
- his quarrel with the bishop of Holum, [226];
- victor in single combat, [226];
- sends Einarsen to Copenhagen, [228];
- resigns the see to Einarsen, [228];
- accused of murder, his death, [229]
- Pave, Master, directs execution of Bainham, iv. [109];
- his despair, [110];
- he hangs himself, [111]
- Pavia, introduction of works of reformers at, iv. [408]
- Pavia, battle of, i. [276], [323];
- news of in Spain, [324];
- effect of, in Europe, [325], [328], [345], [346]; iv. [321]
- Payerne, diet of, ii. [432];
- meeting of evangelicals at, [470];
- their letter to Geneva, [470]
- Pays de Vaud, The, iii. [198];
- conquest of, by Bernese, spread of the Reformation in, vi. [228];
- a disputation appointed, [232];
- the project opposed by Friburg, [233];
- and by Charles V., [233] [[Lausanne]];
- image-worship suppressed, [263];
- Bernese ordinances, [263];
- edict of reformation, [272];
- the pastors forbidden to admit Calvin and Farel to their colloquies, [372]
- Pécolat, Jean, i. [72];
- his character and position, [77], [78];
- his saying about the bishop, [78];
- accused of attempt to poison the Bastard, [79];
- stratagem for his arrest, [79];
- seized and imprisoned, [80];
- put to the torture, [81], [82];
- report of his death, [82], [87], [89], [90], [92], [93];
- his trial, [94];
- new examination, [95];
- threatened with the torture, [95];
- declared innocent, [95];
- handed over to the priests, [96];
- again threatened with torture, [96];
- the demon in his beard, [97];
- tries to cut out his tongue, [97];
- Bonivard's intervention, [99];
- appeal on his behalf to archbishop of Vienne, [99];
- removed to Peney, [102];
- his release demanded by the archbishop, [103], [104];
- liberated, [106], [107];
- the order countermanded, [106];
- his triumphal return to Geneva, [107];
- his dumbness, [108];
- his depositions produced at Berthelier's trial, [112], [161], [205], [214], [267], [271], [276];
- becomes a bishoper, ii. [333];
- a fray, [337];
- proscribed by the bishop, iii. [440]
- Pécolat, Stephen, i. [99], [103]
- Pellican, Conrad, vii. [439];
- teaches Alasco, [439]
- Pellicier, ii. [65]
- Pelliez, Claude, preaches against Froment at Geneva, iii. [330], [331]
- Pempflinger, Mark, Count, protects evangelists in Transylvania, vii. [350];
- commanded by the king to extirpate heresy, [355];
- resolves to appeal to the king, [359];
- saves evangelicals from the monks, [361]
- Peney, Castle of, its brigands, v. [238], [239];
- Genevese attack on, repulsed, [241];
- burnt, [393]
- Pennet, Claude, iv. [232];
- assassinates Berger, [233];
- in hiding, [235];
- seized, [238];
- his execution, [241]
- Pennet, Pierre, iv. [202];
- gives evidence against Maisonneuve, [270]
- Pennet, the jailer, iv. [232];
- assassinates N. Porral, [233];
- in hiding, [241];
- escapes to Savoy, [241]
- Perceval, Claude, iii. [78]
- Perenyi, Peter, magnate of Hungary, becomes a Lutheran, vii. [368];
- adopts views of Zwinglius, [389]
- Perrin, Ami, iii. [277], [296], [314];
- supports Froment, [319], [331], [332];
- receives Froment, [348];
- attacks agent of the priests, [411];
- leads Huguenots in the fight in the Molard, [416];
- proscribed by the bishop, [439];
- seized and imprisoned, [441], [457]; iv. [205], [235]; v. [283];
- takes part in breaking images in the cathedral, [285], [287];
- leader in campaign against idols, [289];
- complaint against him at the council, vi. [344];
- commissioned to arrange for return of Calvin, vii. [3];
- assists Calvin in preparing constitution of a church, [56]
- Persecution, impious, iii. [1];
- Roman, [3]
- Pertemps, Claude, assists Calvin in drawing up constitution of a church, vii. [56]
- Perth, account of evangelicals at, vi. [177] sqq.;
- persecution by Cardinal Beatoun, [180];
- agitation in the town, [181]
- Pescara, Marquis of, i. [324]
- Peter of Savoy, his early life, i. [15];
- created Earl of Richmond by Henry III. of England, [16];
- seizes castle of Geneva, [16];
- assumes protectorate of Geneva, [16];
- rejected, [17];
- his death, [17]
- Peter of Savoy, bishop of Geneva, i. [21]
- Petersen, Geble, bishop of Bergen, declares for the Reformation, vii. [224]
- Peterson, Lawrence, his birth and character, vii. [232];
- chooses the study of theology, [233];
- at Strengnaes, [237];
- witnesses the massacre of Stockholm, [239];
- narrowly escapes, [239];
- with Olaf at his father's funeral, [242] sqq.;
- before Gustavus, [258];
- Professor of Theology at Upsala, [260];
- cited before the chapter, [263];
- excommunicated, [264];
- his character, [305];
- elected primate, [306];
- marries the king and crowns the queen, [307];
- hated by the canons of Upsala, [307];
- betrothed to a kinswoman of Gustavus, [307];
- conspiracies of the canons against him, [307];
- devotion to his work, [312];
- marries Gustavus to a second wife, [312];
- assailed by Burrey, [326];
- opposes Burrey's views on the Supper, [327];
- offers no opposition to ordinance re-establishing Romanism, [333];
- his death, [333]
- Peterson, Olaf, his birth and character, vii. [232];
- scenery of Orebro, [233];
- chooses the study of theology, [233];
- sets out for Rome, [235];
- hears of Luther and goes to Wittenberg, [235];
- becomes a friend of Luther, [235];
- his zeal and attainments, [236];
- sails for Stockholm and is driven to Gothland, [236];
- gets the seller of indulgences expelled, [236];
- reaches home, settles at Strengnaes, [237];
- deacon, and chancellor of the bishop, [237];
- begins the Reformation in Sweden, [237];
- attractiveness of his teaching, [238];
- witnesses the massacre of Stockholm, [239];
- narrowly escapes, [239];
- his influence over Lawrence Anderson, [240];
- his preaching opposed by Dr. Nils, [240];
- visits Orebro and attends his father's funeral, [241], [242];
- discussions with his mother, [242];
- denounced with his brother by the Carmelites, [243];
- hostility of Bishop Brask, [244];
- preaches at Strengnaes, [256];
- before Gustavus, [258];
- preacher at Stockholm and secretary of the town, [260];
- his character, [260];
- violently assailed, [261];
- cited before the chapter of Upsala, [263];
- excommunicated, [264];
- marries, [267];
- excommunicated by Brask, [268];
- translates the New Testament, [269];
- trial of, demanded by the primate, [274];
- public disputation with Peter Galle, [274] sqq.;
- declared victor, [276];
- discussion with Galle at Westeraas, [290];
- deputy with Anderson to the king, [291];
- proclaims Gustavus king, [298];
- assists at synod of Orebro, [299];
- insists on recognition of authority of the Scriptures, [300];
- his concessions, [302];
- superintendent of schools at Stockholm, [304];
- offends the king, [309], [310];
- compared with Gustavus, [310];
- his complaints, [310];
- loses the king's friendship, [311];
- rebukes the king, [312];
- his proceedings about the mock-suns, [313];
- charges against him, [314], [315];
- condemned to death, [316];
- ransomed, [316];
- preaches again, [317];
- he submits to the king, [317]
- Petit, Jacques, deputy of the Sorbonne, ii. [287]
- Petit, John, iv. [18];
- in the Tower, [79];
- visited by Fryth, [149]
- Petit, Peter, vii. [125]
- Petit, William, bishop of Senlis, ii. [73];
- translates Margaret's revised prayer-book, [73]
- Peto, his invective against Henry VIII., iv. [104];
- summoned before the council, [105]
- Petre, Dr., at Convocation of clergy, v. [184]
- Petrovich, Count Peter, guardian of John Sigismund Zapolya, vii. [390];
- promotes the Reformation, [411]
- Philibert, the Fair, corrupts the Genevese, i. [58]
- Philiberta of Savoy, i. [34];
- her marriage with Julian de' Medici, [49]
- Philip, Archduke of Austria, viii. [126], [127];
- marries Joanna of Spain, [128];
- protests against assumption of government of Castile by Ferdinand, [131];
- goes with Joanna to Spain, [131];
- meets Ferdinand, [132];
- agreement with him, [133];
- his death, [134], [139]
- Philip, Landgrave of Hesse, ii. [71], [100], [101];
- his character, [221];
- supports Christopher of Würtemberg, subsidy promised by France, [221], [222];
- Luther and Melanchthon sent to dissuade him, [222], [223];
- meets Francis I. at Bar-le-Duc, [224];
- explains to him affairs of Germany, [224];
- concludes a treaty, [226];
- his cautious proceedings, [248];
- opposition to his scheme, [249];
- marches against Austria, [252];
- defeats imperial army, [253];
- on Austrian frontier, [253];
- concludes peace, [255];
- makes treaty with Zurich and Basel, [420];
- takes Munster, iv. [374];
- delegates of, at conference with du Bellay, [398];
- receives embassy from Henry VIII., v. [109];
- alliance concluded, [110];
- founds university of Marburg, vi. [31];
- invests Munster, viii. [347];
- takes it and puts an end to reign of Spiritualists, [349], [350];
- his lenient measures, [351]
- Philip, Count of Genevois, leads unsuccessful attack on Geneva, i. [171];
- enters with the army, [173];
- named governor, [175];
- disarms the people, [175], [176].
- [[Nemours, Duke of]]
- Philip (Lackland) of Savoy, i. [22];
- his quarrel with his mother, [23];
- captures her treasures, [24];
- interview with his father at Geneva, [25];
- his marriages, and accession to the throne of Piedmont, [48]
- Philip, Thomas, imprisoned for heresy, iv. [179];
- discharged by parliament, [179]
- Philip, bishop of Utrecht, vii. [504], [510];
- his death, [514]
- Philippe, Jean, Syndic of Geneva, i. [219];
- his character, [227];
- provides a 'mystery', [227];
- resists claims of duke of Savoy, [267], [270];
- elected syndic, [300] sqq., [302], [304];
- appointed commander of auxiliaries for Berne, ii. [442];
- as captain-general, attempts to stop Catholic insurgents, and is struck down, iii. [387];
- wounds Bellessert, [387], [397];
- assailed by Mamelukes, [449]; iv. [186], [308];
- his feud with Sept, v. [317];
- resigns, [318];
- refuses to go to preaching, vi. [225];
- at the council, [345];
- elected syndic, [361];
- attends synod of Lausanne, [373];
- intrigues with Cardinal de Tournon at Lyons, [479];
- named Captain-general, [517];
- his character, [519];
- heads a riot, [521];
- conceals himself, [522];
- arrested, [522];
- his trial, [523];
- executed, [523]
- Philips, Harry, Gardiner's agent in plot against Tyndale, v. [35] sqq.;
- consults imperial government, [37];
- procures arrest of Tyndale, [38] sqq.;
- denounces Poyntz, [220]
- Picard, Pérot. [[Wingle]]
- Picardy, Vaudois in, i. [349];
- study of the Scriptures in, [388]
- Piedmont, beginning of Reformation in, iv. [412]
- Pierrefleur, P. de., iii. [205];
- deputy to Friburg, [212], [229];
- procures liberation of priests at Orbe, [230]
- Pilgrimage of Grace, v. [206];
- compared with peasant revolt in Germany, [207];
- supported by the nobles, [207];
- the king's energy, [208];
- agitation in London, [208];
- siege of Skipton Castle, [209];
- Lancaster herald sent to the rebels, [209];
- the march southward, [210];
- proclamation of Norfolk, [211];
- conditions of peace, [212];
- the rebels disperse, [212]
- 'Placards,' ii. [135], [136];
- at Paris, iii. [92];
- Farel's, [95];
- discussion about, [95], [96];
- posted up, [97];
- contents, [97] sqq.;
- character of, [102];
- effect of, [104];
- posted on the king's door, [106];
- effects of, iv. [350]
- Plater, Felix, iii. [191]
- Plater, Thomas, printer, iii. [166], [167];
- prints Calvin's Institutes, [191];
- and his letter to the king, [191]
- Plato's 'Philetes', i. [303]
- Pluralism, and non-residence abolished in England, iv. [18], [19]
- Poille, arrested, iii. [112];
- martyrdom, [120] sqq.
- Pointet, Master, ii. [229];
- his martyrdom, iii. [69]
- Poitiers, Calvin at, iii. [44] sqq.
- Poland, beginning of Reformation in, vii. [421], [422];
- project of reform presented to the Diet, [422];
- state of the country, [423];
- Luther's works known, [423];
- Dantzic, [424] sqq.;
- Thorn, [429];
- Cracow, [430];
- a middle party, [430], [431];
- progress of the Reformation, [431]
- Pole, Reginald, account of, iv. [69];
- rejects the king's offers of promotion and condemns the divorce, [70], [71];
- permitted to leave England, [71];
- his influence on Flaminio, [481], [482];
- made cardinal, [487]; v. [14];
- laments More, [75], [174];
- his defence of unity of the church quoted, [174] sqq.;
- ordered to return to England, [177], [191];
- takes part in insurrection of the North, [212];
- quoted, viii. [148];
- invited by Paul III., goes to Rome and is made cardinal, [149];
- the creation criticised in England, [149];
- nominated cardinal-legate, [149];
- his mission, [149];
- declared a rebel by Henry VIII., [149];
- expelled from France, [150];
- writes to Cromwell, [150];
- his courier arrested by order of the emperor, [150];
- attempts to communicate with English ambassadors, [151];
- demands audience of the regent of the Netherlands, [151];
- returns to Rome, [152];
- his reception, [152];
- fatal consequences of his mission, [152]
- Polish translation of New Testament by Seclucyan, vii. [424]
- Pomerania, beginning of Reformation in, viii. [315];
- struggles, [328];
- the duke at Wittenberg, [328];
- his sons, [328];
- a church organized by Pomeranus, [329]
- Pomeranus (Bugenhagen) ii. [99];
- account of him, vii. [221];
- invited to Denmark to organize the evangelical church, [221];
- reorganizes the university, [221];
- crowns the king and queen, [222];
- consecrates evangelical bishops, [222];
- invited to Dantzic, 427; viii. [188];
- his birth and early life, [315];
- reads Luther's Babylonish Captivity, [316];
- goes to Wittenberg, [316];
- professor and pastor, [317];
- a church organizer, [317];
- at Brunswick, [320];
- at Hamburg, [321]
- Ponce de la Fuente, Constantine, account of, viii. [27], [28];
- interview with Egidius, [28];
- union and division of labor with him and Vargas, [29];
- his freedom from vanity, [30];
- declines promotion, [30];
- his eloquence, [32], [33];
- appointed chaplain to Charles V., [34];
- accompanies Philip to the Netherlands, [35]
- Pontanus (Bruck), interview with Melanchthon, iv. [382];
- at conference with Du Bellay, [398]
- Ponthus de St. George, abbot of Valence, iii. [55];
- invites Calvin, [56];
- becomes a Lutheran, [57]
- Pontverre, lord of. [[Ternier]]
- Pope of Rome, The, his pretensions, i. [396];
- penalties of præmunire imposed on recognition of his authority in England, v. [179]
- Pope, Sir Thomas, v. [72], [73]
- Porral, Ami, syndic of Geneva, i. [93], [94], [256], [292], [296]; ii. [333], [468];
- visits Farel, iii. [277];
- elected syndic, v. [394];
- requires attendance on preaching, vi. [224];
- attends disputation of Lausanne, [237];
- with Goulaz, charged to maintain good morals in the city, [289];
- his zeal ridiculed by the youth, [290];
- persecuted, [469];
- charges De la Mare with heresy, vii. [3];
- assists Calvin in preparing constitution of a church, [56];
- sickness and death, [107-110]
- Porral, Nicholas, assassinated by Pennet, iv. [232], [233]
- Porter, sent to Newgate for reading Bible, dies there, viii. [241]
- Portier, episcopal secretary, iv. [231], [235];
- in hiding, [237];
- seized, [238];
- his papers discovered, [239];
- tried, [241], [242];
- condemned to death, [256]
- Portugal, i. [219];
- 'fashions of', [221]
- Possevin, Antoine, Jesuit, in Sweden, receives John III. into the Romish communion, vii. [338];
- his influence over Swedish church, [338]
- Poyntz, Thomas, receives Tyndale, v. [29];
- attempt of Gardiner's agent to gain him, [37];
- friendship with Tyndale, [218];
- letter to his brother on behalf of Tyndale, [218];
- applies to Cromwell, [219];
- denounced by Philips, [220];
- escapes to England, [220]
- Præmunire, statute of, enforcement of, against the clergy, threatened by Henry VIII., iv. [62];
- averted, [66];
- penalties of, inflicted for recognition of papal authority, v. [179]
- Pragmatic Sanction, ii. [245]
- Prierias, his book against Luther, i. [120]
- Priesthood, formal, ii. [26]
- Priests, immorality of, i. [43];
- complaints at Geneva, [44], [45];
- encroachments of, ii. [239], [397], [398];
- sentence against, [398], [399];
- priests and pastors, vi. [218]
- Primer, The, circulated by Cranmer, v. [130]
- Prince-bishop of Geneva, the first, i. [13];
- popular election of the, [14];
- evils of temporal power of the bishops, [309], [310];
- church power of, questioned, [310];
- concession of civil jurisdiction, ii. [328];
- authority of, questioned, [329];
- fall of, iv. [193]
- Printers and Booksellers, flight of, from Paris, iii. [123]
- Printing, abolition of, in France, iii. [140]
- Progress, of all kinds, produced by the Reformation, viii. [313]
- Prophetess, A, i. [204]
- Protestantism, and Freedom, i. [3];
- two kinds of, iii. [356]
- Purgatory, iv. [141], [400]
- Ramel, J. L., syndic of Geneva, i. [111], [205], [271]; iii. [333]
- Ramus, Peter, iii. [158], [179]
- Rantzau, John, tutor to the son of Christian II., accompanies him to Germany, vii. [147];
- won over to Lutheranism, [148];
- drives the Lübeckers out of Jutland, [212];
- charged to arrest the bishops, [217]
- Rastell, iv. [141];
- Fryth's regard for, [147];
- his conversion by Fryth's treatise, [148]
- Ratisbon, Conference at, iv. [371]; viii. [55], [56], [102]
- Raveleson, James, a Protestant of Perth, vi. [178], [179];
- seized and condemned to death by Cardinal Beatoun, [181];
- hung, [181]
- Reading Abbey, visited by Henry VIII., v. [78];
- the abbot sent to the Tower, [79]
- Reff, Johan, bishop of Opsloe, accepts the Reformation, vii. [224]
- Reformation, The, spread of, in Switzerland, i. [310];
- beginnings of, at Geneva, [310];
- in France, [316], [317];
- its work, [318];
- Calvin's idea, [319];
- necessity for the three principles of Luther, Zwinglius and Calvin, [320];
- Margaret of Angoulême's plan, [341];
- prepares for unity, [357];
- conversion its fundamental act, [402];
- opposed by parliament of Paris and by the Sorbonne, [403];
- the dominant force, [410];
- contained germ of modern liberties, [416];
- sources of, ii. [13], [15];
- substitutes evangelical for Roman church, [26];
- advances in France, [67];
- cross currents in Germany, [96];
- auxiliaries of, [135];
- progress, [138], [183], [184];
- proposed fusion with Catholicism, [245];
- begun in Würtemberg, [255];
- question between Rome and the Reformation, [297];
- need of, [299] sqq.;
- brings about union of faith and morality, [319];
- beginning of, at Geneva, negative, [387];
- 'de Christo meditari', [437];
- nature of, [453];
- negative Protestantism not enough, [454];
- general awakening of the West, iii. [7], [8];
- in South of France, [19];
- its teachings, [49];
- friendly to Science, [61], [62];
- a creation, [171];
- stagnation after first struggles, [197];
- importance of, [198];
- benefits women, [208];
- the scriptural, iv. [2];
- internal and external, [2];
- character of, in England, [2], [3];
- wrought by the Scriptures and evangelical men, [92];
- part played by England and by Geneva in, [184];
- evangelical preaching ordered at Geneva, [196];
- beginning of, in Italy, [406];
- in England conduces to general prosperity, v. [103];
- origin of, in England, [120];
- protests of, [283], [298];
- the originators of, vii. [114], [115];
- Calvin its lawgiver, [115], [116];
- one of the secondary epochs, [119];
- the revived Gospel, [523];
- its method and results, viii. [311], [312];
- originated all kinds of progress, [313], [314]
- Regnault, Francis, printer, viii. [177];
- his Bibles seized by the Inquisition and himself prohibited from printing more, [178];
- the presses, types, &c., seized by Cromwell's agents and taken to London, [178]
- Regnier de la Planche, Pierre, invites Calvin, iii. [48];
- gained to Protestantism, [49]
- Reinhard, Martin, sent to Denmark, vii. [130];
- preaches in German, [131];
- burlesqued at instigation of the priests, [131], [132];
- deprived of interpreter, leaves off preaching, [132];
- his report to Luther, [133]
- Reinhold, Matthew, envoy to Francis I., ii. [71];
- questioned by courtiers, [71]
- Relics, ridiculed by Genevese, ii. [385];
- procession of, at Paris, iii. [126] sqq.
- Rémond, Florimond de, on Calvin, ii. [16], [27 note]; iii. [16]
- Renaissance, The, i. [380], [383]; ii. [299]
- Renée of France, duchess of Ferrara, iii. [193];
- her early life, iv. [425];
- marries duke of Ferrara, [426];
- her character and tastes, [426];
- the scholars gathered around her, [427]; and v. [420];
- expects Calvin, iv. [489];
- receives him with du Tillet, v. [421];
- deprived by the duke of her French friends, [442], [443];
- rescue of Calvin ascribed to her, [446]
- Rénier, Stephen, burnt, i. [430];
- defence of, by Maisonneuve, iv. [264]
- Rennsburg, Dominican, opposes the Reformation at Hamburg, viii. [320]
- Resby, John, burnt at Perth, vi. [5]
- Resistance, Right of, in the Middle Ages, ii. [336]
- Reva, Francis, vii. [389], [400]
- Revett, William, envoy with Carne to the pope, v. [3], [4]
- Revival, religious, epochs of, ii. [102]
- Rhodius, John, vii. [501], [510]
- Riccio, Bartolomeo, iv. [427]
- Rich, Richard, conducts prosecution of Cromwell, viii. [215];
- takes part in torture of Anne Askew, [281]
- Richardet, Claude, i. [93], [94], [206];
- elected syndic, [241];
- calls Boulet to account and assaults him, [258];
- commands auxiliaries for Friburg, ii. [442];
- refuses to go to preaching, vi. [224];
- elected syndic, [361];
- introduces French agents into the city, [363];
- takes part in riot under Philippe, [519];
- killed, [524]
- Richerme, put to the torture, iv. [324]
- Ridicule, in controversy, iii. [406]
- Rillaert, Matthew van, vii. [550]
- Ritter, Erasmus, vi. [326], [327], [367];
- one of the presidents of synod of Lausanne, [374];
- advocate for Calvin and Farel at Geneva, [434]
- Robert de la Marche, his sons at Paris, i. [371];
- invite Farel, [372]
- Rochford, Lord, envoy to Francis I., ii. [151].
- [[Wiltshire, Earl of]]
- Rochford, Lady, plots against Queen Anne, v. [126], [127], [134]; viii. [253];
- condemned and executed, [254]
- Rochford, Lord, charge against him, v. [134];
- at Greenwich tournament, [138];
- arrest of, [139];
- examined, [148];
- condemned to death, [159];
- beheaded, [159]
- Roennov, Joachim, chosen bishop of Roeskilde, vii. [168];
- investigates persecution of Lutheran preachers, [182];
- threatened by the populace, [202];
- saved by Tausen, [203];
- sanctions evangelical preaching at Copenhagen, [204];
- his futile attempt to persecute, [205];
- takes oath of allegiance to Christian II., [208];
- arrested, [217];
- refuses to submit, his death, [221]
- Rogers, assists Tyndale in translation of the Bible, v. [215];
- gets the Bible printed, [215], [216]
- Rogers, John, preacher, his imprisonment and death, vi. [182]
- Romain, Mark, iii. [204];
- procures liberation of Hollard, [209];
- assaulted by the women, [210]
- Rome, ecclesiastical corruption at, i. [118];
- causes assigned, [119];
- sack of, ii. [319]
- Rome, Church of, a persecuting power, iii. [3];
- its character in the 16th century, vi. [42];
- action of, in Hungary, contrasted with that of Islamism, vii. [406] sqq., [414-416]
- Roovere, Paul van, vii. [549];
- arrested, [556];
- recants and is imprisoned, [561]
- Roper, Margaret, v. [16];
- visits her father in the Tower, [46];
- again, [62];
- after his sentence, [70], [71];
- last offices, [72]
- Roset, Claude, i. [271];
- visits Farel, iii. [277], [397]
- Roset, Michel, i. [88], [210], [267]
- Rosselli, Lucio Paolo, writes to Melanchthon, iv. [411];
- defends him, [412]
- Rottmann, Bernard, preaches at Munster, viii. [333], [334];
- marries, [334];
- joins the Spirituals, [337];
- killed at siege of Munster, [349]
- Rough, John, chaplain to Earl of Arran, vi. [156];
- outcry against him, [156];
- dismissed, [168]
- Roussel, Gerard, i. [332];
- recalled to France, [362];
- at Paris, [367];
- his weakness, [370], [371];
- interview with sons of Robert de la Marche, [371], [380], [412]; ii. [56], [93];
- declines to preach in Paris, [113];
- preaches in the Louvre, [115] sqq.;
- denounced by the Sorbonne, [120];
- confined to his house by the king's order, [124];
- the order revoked, [130];
- his timidity, [134], [138];
- forbidden to preach, [228];
- burning of, demanded by Beda, [232];
- refused by the king, [232];
- debate with Beda in the prison, [232];
- set free, [234];
- appointed to preach at Notre Dame, [238];
- prevented by the populace, [239];
- at Nérac, iii. [21];
- compromise, [22];
- interview with Calvin, [23];
- celebrates the Lord's Supper at Pau, [27];
- arrested, [113];
- before the king, [117];
- sent to a convent, [124];
- made bishop of Oleron, v. [438]
- Roxas, Don Domingo de, influenced by Carranza's teaching, viii. [114];
- adopts doctrines of the reformers, [114];
- conversations with Carranza, [117]
- Rozet, Claude, banished from Geneva, vi. [407];
- superseded as secretary to the Council, [438];
- ordered to give up the Confession of Faith, [485];
- assists Calvin in preparing constitution of a church, vii. [56]
- Russel, Jerome, imprisoned, vi. [120];
- tried before archbishop of Glasgow, [121];
- burnt, [123]
- Russel, Sir John, sent against insurgents of the North, v. [205]
- Russia, movements of reform in, vii. [432], [433]
- Rythove, Peter, summoned before the judges, escapes, vii. [558]
- Sacraments, The, views of Bucer, ii. [269];
- discussed between the Sorbonne and the ministers, [291], [292]
- Sadler, Sir Ralph, ambassador of Henry VIII. to Scotland, vi. [124], [133];
- charged to conclude marriage treaty between Prince Edward and Queen Mary, [164];
- his report of Beatoun's intrigues, [170];
- insulted by the Scots, [170];
- complains to the regent, [171];
- demands the hostages and is refused, [171];
- his letter to the regent, [174]
- Sadoleto, cardinal, iv. [392], [432], [437];
- invites Paleario to Rome, [441];
- defends him at Sienna, [445], [482];
- made cardinal, [487];
- account of, vi. [479];
- at meeting of prelates at Lyons, [479];
- his letter to Geneva, [480] sqq.; viii. [149]
- Sadolin, of Viborg, professes Lutheranism, vii. [156];
- first professor in the Free School, [156]
- St. Andrews, competitors for the see of, vi. [10];
- its university, [19];
- seizure of the castle by conspirators against Cardinal Beatoun, [211];
- the castle unsuccessfully besieged by the regent, [215]
- St. Anthony, founder of monasticism, v. [97]
- St. Anthony of Padua, his image broken, iv. [280]
- St. Augustine, Calvin's resemblance to, ii. [26]
- St. Babolin, image of, carried off by de Joye, i. [201]
- St. Bernard, cited, i. [43]
- St. Clair, Sir John, commissioner for suppression of lesser monasteries, v. [100]
- St. Claire, convent of, Orbe, iii. [204]
- St. Claire, convent of, Geneva, burnt, ii. [425];
- the Friburgers billeted in, [426];
- processions and vigils of the nuns, [428];
- pilgrimage to, [433];
- another, [434] sqq.;
- pride of the nuns, [435];
- alarm at Farel's teaching, iii. [280], [333];
- sympathize with attack on Lutherans, [380], [422];
- a midnight alarm, iv. [319], [320];
- line of ramparts carried through the garden, [335];
- the nuns invited to a disputation, v. [258];
- their last mass, departure of father-confessor, [296];
- Farel preaches to the nuns, [302];
- departure of the nuns, [306]
- St. Firmin, martyr, story of, ii. [6]
- St. George, Brotherhood of, i. [135]
- St. James, neuvaine in honor of, at Paris, ii. [122]
- St. Jullien, army of Savoy at, i. [162];
- truce of, ii. [428]
- St. Theresa, viii. [7];
- her friendship with John d'Avila, [7]
- St. Thomas of Canterbury, iv. [207]
- St. Victor, Priory of, Geneva, i. [46], [185];
- restored to Bonivard, [314]; ii. [400], [401];
- annexed to hospital of Geneva, [402];
- ordered to be demolished, iv. [332], [333]
- Saints, intercession of, ii. [289], [290]
- Saleneuve, Sieur de, i. [146];
- Savoyard ambassador to the Swiss diet, [153], [181], [291], [295], [297]
- Salomon, Claude, iii. [277], [331];
- with Maisonneuve goes to Berne, [364], [365];
- with Maisonneuve at Berne, [403]; iv. [195];
- his gentleness, [196], [235]
- Sampson, Richard, bishop of Chichester, his embarrassment at Lambeth conference, viii. [154];
- opposes prayers in the vulgar tongue, [161];
- committed to the Tower, [162];
- acknowledges alliance with Gardiner and others for defence of the old religion, [162];
- on the Thames with Bishop Tonstall, [102];
- liberated, [162];
- at Lambert's trial, [167], &c.
- Sancha de Carile, viii. [8]
- San Romano, Francis, viii. [38];
- at Antwerp, [49];
- sent to Bremen, [49];
- hears Spreng preach, [49];
- his visits to him, and conversion, [50];
- his resolve, [51];
- writes to Charles V., [51];
- schemes of his friends at Antwerp, [52];
- returns to Antwerp and is seized by the monks, [52];
- his books burnt, [53];
- imprisoned, [54];
- counsel of Enzinas to him, [54];
- his fervency, [54];
- at Ratisbon, has audience of Charles V., [55];
- again imprisoned, [56];
- harshly treated and removed, [56];
- heroic endurance, [57];
- in the dungeons of the Inquisition at Valladolid, [58], [121];
- harsh treatment, [121];
- condemned to be burnt, [122];
- led to execution, [122];
- burnt, [123];
- declared to be damned, prayer for him prohibited, [124];
- date of his martyrdom, [124 n.];
- results of his death, [125]
- Sarrasin, iii. [59], [60]
- Sartorius, John, vii. [532];
- his conversion and zeal, [532], [533];
- assailed by Crocus, [533];
- his works, [533];
- death, [534]
- Saunier, iii. [251];
- accompanies Farel to the Pays de Vaud, [253];
- reaches Geneva, [274];
- interviews with Huguenots, [277] sqq.;
- appears before the town council, [282], [285], [286];
- assaulted before episcopal council, [291];
- banished, [293];
- escapes with Farel, [294];
- named director of College at Geneva, v. [310];
- his success, vi. [296];
- made a citizen, [297];
- banished, [467];
- edict of expulsion revoked, vii. [43]
- Savoie, Claude, syndic of Geneva, ii. [468]; iii. [277], [333]; iv. [195];
- envoy to Lucerne, [343]; v. [315];
- at Berne, [316];
- asks aid of Wildermuth, [321];
- at Neuchâtel, [322];
- on the march, [328];
- goes to Coppet, [331];
- seized by de Lullin, [341];
- disappears, [345];
- strikes a new coinage for Geneva, [360];
- elected syndic, [394];
- suspended from office for receiving letter from a French agent, vi. [363];
- imprisoned, [470];
- escapes to Berne, [470];
- renounces citizenship of Geneva, [470]
- Savoy, the House of, covets Geneva, i. [14], [15];
- importance of struggle with Geneva, [15];
- Peter of, [15], [16];
- Amadeus V., [17], [18];
- Amadeus VIII., [18], [20];
- Peter, John Louis, [21];
- Amadeus IX., Philip Lackland, [22];
- Charles III., [29];
- sides with the emperor, [276];
- loses Geneva, [301], [302];
- its rights threatened by Swiss alliance with Geneva, ii. [303];
- deputation to Berne, [307]
- Saxony, the Reformation in, viii. [318]
- Saxony, John, Elector of, ii. [71], [100];
- his death, [101];
- John Frederick, Elector of, opposes alliance of Francis I. and landgrave of Hesse, [222];
- rejects overtures of Henry VIII., iv. [165];
- gives audience to Melanchthon, [380];
- refuses him leave to go to France, [382];
- his character, [383];
- his fear of Melanchthon's concessions, [386];
- letter to him, [387];
- letter to Francis I., [390];
- goes to Smalcalde, [394];
- gives audience to du Bellay, [395];
- receives Barnes, envoy of Henry VIII., v. [108];
- another embassy, [109];
- alliance with Henry concluded, [110];
- receives embassy from him, [117], [118]
- Scala, Julius Cæsar della. [[Scaliger]]
- Scaliger, settles at Agen, ii. [77]
- Schässburg, Conference of, vii. [384], [385], [394]
- Schleswig, duchy of, the Reformation established in, vii. [224]
- Schoener, George, envoy to France, iv. [322]
- Scholasticism, fall of, at Oxford, v. [84]
- Schools, evangelization of, iii. [60], [61]
- Schweinfurth on the Maine, Conference at, ii. [97] sqq.
- Sclercx, Catherine, before the Judges, vii. [557]
- Scotland, the Reformation in, i. [5];
- two periods, vi. [3];
- impulses from the South, [4];
- the Culdees, [4], [5];
- the Lollards, [5];
- the Hussites, [5];
- struggle between the king and the nobles, [6];
- first glimmerings of the Reformation, [6];
- Campbell of Cessnock, [6], [7];
- war with England, Flodden, [9];
- conflicts of king, priests and nobles, [9];
- election of a bishop, [10];
- election of priests, [10];
- Alesius, [11];
- Patrick Hamilton, [13];
- beginning of the Reformation, [18];
- the writings of Luther prohibited by the parliament, and ordered to be confiscated, [21];
- flight of Beatoun, [24];
- Tyndale's New Testament imported, [25];
- preaching of Patrick Hamilton, [45] sqq.
- [[Angus, Earl of,] [James V.], [Hamilton, Patrick,] [Beatoun, Primate]];
- the nobles deprived of their jurisdiction, a College of Justice set up, [85];
- their project of a union with England, [86];
- the New Testament proscribed, [90];
- skirmishes on the Marches, [91];
- the priests attempt to make a breach between James V. and Henry VIII., [100], [101];
- progress of the Reformation, [132];
- war with England, [137] sqq.;
- battle of Halidon, [138];
- persecution stayed, [139];
- a proscription list, [142];
- invasion of England, [144];
- an English envoy murdered, [148];
- death of James V., [150];
- ambitious attempt of Beatoun, [153];
- Regency of Arran, [154];
- scheme for marriage of the queen with Edward of England, approved by the Council, [158];
- meeting of lords at Perth, their demands, [160];
- the lords cited to Edinburgh, [161];
- meeting of the parliament, the marriage scheme approved, [161];
- Act passed for freedom to read the Bible, [163];
- joy of the people, [163] ;
- conclusion of the marriage treaty at Greenwich, [165];
- the hostages refused, [171];
- troops assembled by both parties, [172];
- war declared by Henry VIII., [175];
- the English fleet at Leith, [183];
- Edinburgh pillaged and burnt, [184];
- murder of the Cardinal, [212];
- why the Gospel triumphed, [215], [216];
- results of the Reformation, [217]
- Scott, Thomas, of Pittgorno, his crimes, remorse, and death, vi. [130], [131]
- Scripturists, The, iii. [93]
- Scriptures, interpretation of, iv. [223], [224]
- Seaton, Alexander, Dominican, preaches evangelical doctrine, vi. [87];
- condemned by Beatoun, [89];
- quits Scotland, [89];
- becomes chaplain to duke of Suffolk, [89]
- Seaton, condemned to bear a faggot, at Paul's cross, viii. [240]
- Seclucyan, John, translates New Testament into Polish, vii. [424]
- Senarclens, Claude de, viii. [101];
- present at death of Juan Diaz, [111]
- Seneca, Calvin's commentary on, ii. [87];
- cited, [89]
- Senlis, Bishop of, sent to Paris with Duprat, to stop intrigues of the Sorbonne, ii. [126]
- Sept, Michel, i. [267], [271], [276], [292];
- appointed syndic of Geneva, iv. [242];
- receives warning of impending attack on Geneva, [312];
- his feud with Philippe, v. [317];
- suspended from office for receiving letter from a French agent, vi. [363]
- Sergine, De, Friburg notary, i. [290];
- at council of Geneva, [293], [294]
- Servetus, Michael, Calvin's plea for, i. [6];
- account of him, iii. [84];
- goes to Paris, [85];
- invites Calvin to a conference, [86];
- does not appear, [87];
- result of his death, [197]
- Seso, Don Carlos de, viii. [116];
- his evangelical labors, [116];
- marriage, [116]
- Seville, beginnings of reformation at, viii. [21];
- labors of Egidius, Ponce de la Fuente and Vargas, [29] sqq.;
- opposition to them, [31]
- Seymour, Edward, v. [132];
- created Earl of Hertford, viii. [142].
- [[Hertford]]
- Seymour, Jane, attracts notice of Henry VIII., v. [126], [128], [179];
- birth of her son Edward, viii. [141];
- her death, [142]
- Seymour, Sir Thomas, v. 132; viii. [221], [299]
- Seymours, the, friendly to the Reformation, viii. [299];
- proposals of duke of Norfolk for alliance with, [299]
- Seyssel, Claude de, i. [49], [75];
- his judgment on the mock auction, [76];
- made archbishop of Turin, [91];
- attempts to withdraw Pécolat's case from the syndics, [93], [111]
- Sforza, Bona, queen of Poland, vii. [431]
- Shaxton, bishop of Salisbury, v. [130];
- opposes the Six Articles, viii. [183];
- resigns his see, [184];
- imprisoned, liberated, [271]
- Shrewsbury, Earl of, sent against insurgents of the North, v. [205]
- Siderander, Peter, account of, ii. [132], [137];
- watches at the Sorbonne, [139]
- Sienna, iv. [436]
- Sigismund I., king of Poland, vii. [422];
- receives Catholic deputies from Dantzic, [428];
- summons leading reformers, goes to Dantzic, [428];
- his severe measures, [529];
- becomes king of Sweden, persecutes the Protestants, [340];
- driven away, [340]
- Sigismund, Count, of Hohenlohe, conversion of, i. [339];
- endeavors to propagate Luther's doctrines in France, [339], [340];
- his Book of the Cross, [340];
- writes to Margaret of Angoulême, [340], [354];
- leave refused for him to go into France, [354]
- Simon, Michel, preaches at Bourges, ii. [29]
- Sinapi, Giovanni, iv. [427];
- at Ferrara, v. [427]
- Sinclair, Oliver, vi. [124], [142];
- commander-in-chief at Solway, [144];
- captured by the English, [146]
- Six Articles, The, presented to the peers, viii. [181];
- passed, [183];
- characterized, [187];
- commissioners appointed to carry them out, [187];
- five hundred victims, [187];
- indignation in Germany, [188];
- conference of Luther, Melanchthon and others, [188];
- the five hundred liberated, [191];
- promise of the king to soften their harshness, [201];
- modified, [261]
- Sixteenth Century, characterized, i. [7], [316], [325], [410];
- state of the papacy in, ii. [144];
- first politico-religious war of, [251], [252];
- excitement and suspense, [300];
- moral revival, iv. [229], [269];
- persecution in, explained, [302];
- epoch of transformation, [346] sqq.
- Sixtus IV., decree of, respecting printing, ii. [173]
- Slave Version of the Bible, revised by Maximus, vii. [432]
- Smalcald, meeting of Protestants at, ii. [96];
- alliance of, [97]; and viii. [328]; iv. [394];
- mission of du Bellay to, [394] sqq.;
- conference between the two parties, [398] sqq.
- Smeton, Mark, charge against him, v. [133];
- interview with the queen, [137];
- arrested, [137];
- examined, [148];
- indicted, [153];
- tried and sentenced to death, [154]
- Society and the State, i. [28]
- Soleure, i. [182];
- friendly to Geneva, [276];
- sends embassy to Geneva, [280]; ii. [390], [392];
- mass restored, [444];
- the Reformation crushed, vi. [323]
- Soliman, Sultan, invades Hungary, ii. [107]; iv. [116], [117]; vii. [356];
- demands tribute of Louis II., [357];
- battle of Mohacz, [360], [361];
- ravages Hungary, [361];
- again invades Hungary, confirms Zapolya as king, [371];
- prohibits oppression of Protestants, [371]
- Solway, flight of the Scots at, vi. [145];
- its effect on the nation, [151]
- Sorbonne, The, i. [331], [334], [343], [346];
- opposes the Reformation, [403];
- attacked by Berquin, [406];
- proscribes Erasmus, [407], [414], [415], [418], [429];
- instigates the people against Berquin, [431], [432]; ii. [32];
- demands trial of Berquin, [33];
- condemns the professors, [59];
- Lecoq examined by the doctors, [77];
- closes pulpits of Paris against Roussel, [114];
- agitation caused by evangelical preachings, [119];
- denounces Roussel, [120];
- meets with repulses, [120];
- scurrilous attacks, [120];
- doctrines of Roussel, [123];
- complains to the king, [124];
- sends deputation to him, [126];
- threat of revolt, [127];
- doctors summoned before Duprat, [128];
- alarmed by condemnation of Beda, [130];
- calls for the stake, [136];
- placards, [136], [137], [141];
- increasing alarm at progress of Lutherans, [165];
- furious against Margaret of Navarre, [165];
- finds heresy in her Mirror, [167];
- seizes all the copies, [172];
- prohibits the book, [173];
- disavows the priests' comedy, [181];
- apologizes to the king, [182], [183];
- alarm at Cop's inaugural address, [201];
- debates, [203], [228];
- stops private meetings of Lutherans, and seizes preachers, [229], [230];
- imprisons three hundred Lutherans, [232], [271];
- alarm of, at articles of reform, [285], [286];
- defends the old doctrine, [286];
- conference with the ministers, [287] sqq.;
- growing alarm, [294];
- schemes, [294], [295];
- anger about the 'placards', iii. [105];
- avenged on Margaret, [112];
- pronounces against divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [39];
- declares for it, [40];
- protests against union with Lutherans, [353];
- refuses conference with reformers, [369];
- opposes concession to them, [394]
- Soto, Pedro de, confessor to Charles V., viii. [64];
- his appearance, [64];
- his preaching, [65], [66];
- instigates persecution, [66];
- applies to Granvella, [67];
- examines New Testament of Enzinas, [72];
- receives Enzinas, [73];
- a sermon, [74];
- his report to Granvella, [75];
- his treachery, [75] sqq.;
- holds a disputation with Alexander, [87];
- perplexed about case of Juan Diaz, [106]
- Soubise, John of, conversion of, at Farrara, v. [428];
- his zeal, [429]
- Southampton, Earl of, one of the escort of Anne of Cleves, viii. [194];
- writes to Henry VIII., [195];
- lord keeper, presents bill of attainder against Cromwell, [218]
- Spain, ecclesiastical state of, viii. [1];
- Torquemada and the Inquisition, [2];
- the universities, [2];
- political circumstances favorable to the Reformation, [3];
- relation between Spain and the Netherlands, [3];
- introduction of Luther's works and partisans prohibited by Leo X. and Adrian VI., [4];
- preaching of John d'Avila, [5];
- preparation for reform, [8];
- an examination before the Inquisition, [9];
- the chief reformer, [10] sqq.;
- awakening of curiosity, [20];
- silent progress of the Gospel, [112]
- Spandemayer, preaches at Malmoe, vii. [158] sqq.
- Spanish Version of the Bible, destroyed by the Inquisition, viii. [42];
- of the New Testament, by Enzinas, completed, [58]
- Spirituals, The, iii. [77], [78];
- their doctrines opposed by Calvin, [80], [81];
- their dupes, [82];
- their cunning, [82];
- at Geneva, vi. [299];
- their pantheism, [300];
- Herman and Benoit heard before the Council, [301];
- a public disputation, [301];
- they refuse to retract, [302];
- banished from Geneva, [302];
- their fanaticism, viii. [331], [332];
- subjected to persecution, [332];
- at Munster, [334];
- [[Munster], [John of Leyden], [Matthison], [Knipperdolling], [Rottmann]];
- cause troubles in Holland, [348], [349];
- their proceedings not connected with Protestantism, [351];
- severity of the German Diet, [352];
- three causes of their disorders, [352], [353]
- Spoon, order of the, originated by de Ternier, ii. [357];
- the 'gentlemen' assail the Genevese, [357];
- raid on the meadows, [371];
- meeting at Nyon, [373];
- death of the leader Pontverre, [379];
- disorders and violence of, [379], [380];
- threaten attack on Geneva, [383];
- respond to appeal of the bishop, [413];
- commissioned to make war on Geneva, [413];
- led by La Sarraz, take the field, [416];
- march on Geneva, [417];
- retreat, [422];
- castles assailed by Swiss troops, [423], [424]
- Spreng, Jacob, account of, vii. [483];
- at Wittenberg, [483];
- his preaching at Antwerp, [488];
- arrested and condemned to be burnt, recants, [489], [490];
- preaches at Bruges, arrested and taken to Brussels, [490];
- escapes to Bremen, [491];
- his preaching there, viii. [49];
- interviews with San Romano, [50], [51]
- Statilius, bishop of Stuhlweissenburg, vii. [383], [386]
- Stirke, Hellen, a Protestant of Perth, vi. [178];
- seized and condemned to death by Cardinal Beatoun, [181];
- drowned, [182]
- Stirling Castle, meeting of priestly party in, vi. [23]
- Stockholm, massacre of nobles and prelates by Christian II. at, vii. [129], [130], [239];
- blockaded by the Danes, [246];
- fortified against Gustavus, [255];
- besieged by him for two years and taken, [256];
- iconoclasts at, [265]
- Stokesley, ambassador to Charles V. and the pope, iv. [22];
- calls a meeting of priests at St. Paul's, [73];
- a clerical riot, [73], [74];
- complains of Latimer to the King, [80];
- condemns Bayfield to be burnt, [84];
- condemns Tewkesbury, [85];
- examines Latimer, [99];
- Bainham, [107];
- one of Fryth's examiners, [151];
- presides at his trial, [160];
- sentences him to death, [161];
- summoned before parliament to answer complaint of Philips, [179];
- opposes translation of the Bible, v. [55], [57], [181], [189];
- opposes admission of Alesius to Convocation, [190];
- opposes union with German Protestants, viii. [154];
- at Lambert's trial, [170];
- visits Shaxton in prison, [271];
- examines Anne Askew, [277], [278]
- Straiton, David, vi. [94];
- charged with heresy, [94];
- his conversion, [95];
- imprisoned, [96];
- burnt, [97]
- Strappado, The, at Paris, iii. [137]
- Strasburg, introduction of Luther's writings, i. [339];
- refugees at, [362] sqq.;
- learning and theology at, iii. [150];
- the Antioch of the Reformation, vi. [456];
- the plague at, vii. [23], [42], [45];
- sends delegates to Ratisbon, viii. [102]
- Strengnaes, Diet of, vii. [256];
- offers throne of Sweden to Gustavus, [257]
- Students, English, at Zurich, viii. [143];
- visit Calvin at Geneva, [144];
- their letters to him, [145];
- and to Bullinger, [146];
- present Bullinger's works to Cranmer, Cromwell and the king, [146]
- Students, satires of the, ii. [135]
- Sture Family, The, in Sweden, suspected of conspiracy against King Erick, vii. [328];
- several imprisoned, [328];
- Nils slain by Erick, [328]
- Sturm, John, at Paris, ii. [115], [116], [120];
- his report to Germany, [131];
- as lecturer, [132]; iii. [75];
- dejection, [144];
- writes to Melanchthon, [145]; iv. [349], [350];
- account of, [358], [359];
- letter to Bucer, [359];
- presses Melanchthon to go to France, [359];
- writes to him, [368];
- at conference between du Bellay and Germans at Smalcalde, [398];
- joint envoy to Henry VIII., v. [118]
- Suabian League, The, ii. [220]
- Suffolk, Duke of, Vice-president of the Council, iv. [5], [21];
- one of Fryth's examiners, [151];
- member of commission of inquiry into conduct of Queen Anne, v. [135];
- on commission for trial of Norris, Weston, &c., [154];
- at trial of the queen, [155], [157];
- sent against insurgents of the North, [208];
- his death, viii. [271]
- Supremacy, Royal, in England, demanded by Henry VIII., iv. [61];
- discussed in Convocation, [62] sqq.;
- compromise agreed to by the king, [64];
- Convocation silent, [65];
- conceded by Convocation of York, [65], [66];
- dangers of, [66];
- recognized by monks and priests, v. [20];
- abolition of papal supremacy by Henry VIII., [24];
- protests against, [43];
- mental reservations, [43];
- meaning of title, 'Supreme head of the church', [50], [51];
- Carthusians refuse to acknowledge, [59]
- Surrey, Earl of, at trial of Queen Anne, v. 155; viii. [300];
- his character and endowments, [300];
- committed to the Tower, [301];
- family quarrels, [302];
- depositions, [303], [304];
- condemned and executed, [304]
- Sussex, Earl of, commissioner for suppression of lesser monasteries, v. [100];
- head of commission sent to Queen Catherine, [112], [161]
- Sweden, violates the union of Calmar, vii. [128];
- laid under interdict by the pope, [128];
- the revolt suppressed by Christian II., [128];
- the massacre at Stockholm, [129], [130];
- renewed revolt of, [136];
- sends an army against the Lübeckers, [213];
- influences of nature and of race on the Reformation, [231], [232];
- social life in, [234];
- the Reformation begun, [237];
- massacres by Christian II., [250];
- Gustavus proclaimed king, [257];
- compact of separation from Denmark signed, [265];
- the pretender, 'Nils Sture', [278];
- Diet of Westeraas, [281] sqq.;
- abdication of Gustavus, [288];
- his return, [289];
- submission of the bishops, [294];
- the compact of Westeraas, [295];
- fall of Romanism, [296];
- ecclesiastical confusion, [298];
- synod of Orebro, [299];
- 'Form of Reformation' signed, [302];
- obstacles to reformation, [302], [303];
- progress, [305];
- the throne declared hereditary, [318];
- form of church government, [320];
- accession of Erick, [325];
- of John III., [331];
- Romanism re-established, [333];
- Jesuits at Stockholm, [333];
- Jesuits expelled, [339];
- Sigismund succeeds, [340];
- Charles, [340];
- assembly at Upsala, [340];
- Protestantism re-established, [341]
- Swedish New Testament, published, vii. [269]
- Swiss, The, alliance with Geneva, i. [148];
- the diet declares for duke of Savoy, [154];
- intervention between Geneva and Friburg, [182];
- help of, sought by Hugues, [275], [276];
- protest of Genevese in favor of alliance, [294];
- alliance concluded, [304];
- opposition to it, [307];
- voted by general council, [308];
- embassy to Geneva, [313];
- alliance sworn, [313];
- decline to join Italian League, ii. [187];
- decline to take part in wresting Würtemberg from Austria, [217];
- the Bernese and Friburgers take opposite sides at Geneva, [353];
- send embassy to Geneva, and propose dissolution of alliance, [390] sqq.;
- army sent to Geneva, [423];
- alliance maintained by diet of Payerne, [432];
- adhered to by Geneva, [446];
- cancelled by patricians, [449];
- maintained by citizens, [450];
- at diet of Lucerne, consent to restoration of duke and bishop at Geneva, iv. [344];
- required by the duke to restore them, v. [315].
- [[Berne], [Friburg], [Zurich]]
- Switzerland, evangelical movement in, iii. [94];
- debates as to union with Lutherans, vi. [324]
- Sylvestre, John, vii. [381];
- his translation of New Testament, [393]
- Szalkai, Cardinal, undertakes to suppress Lutheranism in Hungary, vii. [352]
- Szantai, Stephen, preaches in Hungary, vii. [383];
- conspiracy against him, [383];
- at conference of Schässburg, [385];
- banished, [387]
- Szegedin, Stephen, vii. [401];
- his labors, [402], [403];
- his writings, [403];
- view of the Supper, [404];
- brutal treatment and banishment of, [405];
- removes to Temeswar, [410];
- banished, [412]
- Szegedy, Gregory, writes against Devay, vii. [379]
- Taborites, The, [United Brethren]]
- Taccon, Jean, i. [37], [56]
- Taccon, Pierre, i. [37]
- Tandy, Jean, at disputation of Lausanne, vi. [251] sqq.
- Tast, Hermann, preaches Lutheran doctrines in Schleswig, vii. [144], [145];
- his labors, [145];
- chaplain to the king, [156]
- Tausen, John, Danish reformer, his birth and early life, vii. [121], [122];
- enters a monastery, [123];
- receives tidings from Germany, [123];
- sets out for Louvain, [124];
- reads Luther's writings, [124];
- goes to Wittenberg, [125];
- returns to his convent, [125];
- teaches at university of Copenhagen, but is recalled, [136];
- his preaching in the convent, [150];
- its effects, [150];
- exiled to Viborg, [151];
- his teaching there, [152];
- tried and imprisoned, [154];
- his dungeon a pulpit, [155];
- liberated and made chaplain to the king, [156];
- driven from the convent, [166];
- his preaching prohibited, [166];
- disputes with the monks, [167];
- his first publication, [168];
- appointed by the king pastor at Copenhagen, [169];
- head of Protestant party at diet of Copenhagen, presents the evangelical confession, [174];
- cited by the bishops, [200];
- condemned to death, [200];
- the sentence commuted to banishment, [201];
- a popular rising in his favor, [201];
- discharged, [202];
- again preaches at Copenhagen, [204];
- bishop of Ribe, [223]
- Taylor, Dr., his sermon on the real presence, viii. [164];
- interview with Lambert, [165]
- Temporizers, The, iii. [93]
- Ternier, Francis de, lord of Pontverre, i. [194];
- hostile to alliance of Swiss and Genevese, ii. [303], [304];
- turns highwayman, [304] sqq.;
- assembles a body of knights, [355];
- hostility to Geneva, [356];
- originates order of the Spoon, [357];
- reconciles the duke and the bishop, [361], [362];
- his raid on meadows of Geneva, [372];
- convokes Knights of the Spoon at Nyon, [373];
- passes through Geneva, [373];
- presides at Nyon, 'down with Geneva', [374], [375];
- again passes into Geneva, [376];
- his insolence, [376];
- fight with citizens, [377];
- wounds Bandière, [379];
- slain, [379];
- his funeral, [380];
- his plot discovered, [380]
- Tewkesbury, John, tortured by the bishops, iv. [84], [85];
- arrested and again put on the rack, [85];
- his martyrdom, [85]
- Theology, restoration of, iii. [170]
- Thiene, Gaetano de, iv. [482]
- Thomas, a friar, at Geneva, i. [57]
- Thorn, Diet at, ordinance against Luther published, vii. [430];
- disturbances, [430]
- Tielmans, Giles, vii. [565] sqq.;
- arrested, [569];
- his intercourse with Ousberghen, [573];
- put to the torture and burnt, [575];
- consoles Enzinas, viii. [80]
- Tifernus, Michael, appointed tutor to Christopher of Würtemberg, ii. [108];
- aids his escape from Charles V., [110]
- Tillet, Jean de, iii. [13], [14]
- Tillet, Louis du, his character and intercourse with Calvin, ii. [91];
- receives him, iii. [6];
- accompanies him to Poitiers, [44], [64], [91], [150], [151], [154], [157];
- his doubts and sufferings, [163], [192];
- with Calvin arrives at Ferrara, v. [421];
- at Strasburg, [455];
- meets Calvin at Geneva, [457];
- difference with Calvin, vi. [356];
- quits Geneva, [357];
- re-enters Catholic church, [358]
- Titian, at evangelical meetings at Ferrara, v. [430];
- paints portrait of Calvin, [431] and [note].
- Tobar, Bernardin de, viii. [13];
- arrested by the Inquisition, [14]
- Tondebinder, Claus, preaches at Malmoe, vii. [157] sqq.;
- futile attempts to silence him, [159];
- assists in publishing Danish hymn-book, [160];
- Professor of Theology, [169]
- Tonstal, Cuthbert, bishop of Durham, opposes royal supremacy, iv. [63];
- communicates Pole's book to the king, v. [174];
- writes to Pole, [177];
- opposes union with German Protestants, viii. [154];
- at Lambert's trial, [170]
- Tonsure, The, iii. [64]
- Tordesillas, Francis de, translates Latin works of Carranza, viii. [119];
- his 'notice to the reader,' [119]
- Torgau, meeting of Protestants at, ii. [96]
- Torquemada, Inquisitor-general, viii. [2]
- Toulouse, superstition at, ii. [77];
- trial of Caturce, [80] sqq.;
- university of, declares for divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [40]
- Tour-Landry, Chev. de la, his works on education, iv. [356], [357]
- Tournon, Cardinal de, presides at discussion with Lecoq, ii. [76];
- ambassador to the pope, [105];
- to Conference of Bologna, [142];
- characterized, [147];
- policy of the embassy, [147], [155]; iii. [107];
- instigates persecution, [113]; iv. [308], [370];
- opposes union with Lutherans, [370], [371];
- obtains absolution from the pope for Caroli, vi. [322];
- presides at meeting of prelates at Lyons, [479]
- Toussaint, Pierre, imprisoned, i. [350];
- liberated, [359];
- goes to Paris, [360];
- at court, [364];
- his disgust, [367];
- leaves Paris, [368], [377];
- called to preach at Geneva, ii. [439];
- declines, [440];
- invited into Switzerland by Farel, iii. [232]
- Tracy, William, his remains exhumed and burnt, iv. [76]
- Traheron, Bartholomew. [[Students, English]]
- Trajetta, duchess of. [[Gonzaga, Giulia di]]
- Transubstantiation, v. [283];
- discussed at Lausanne, vi. [245]
- Transylvania. [[Hungary], [Hermanstadt], [Honter, John,] [Leutschau]]
- Trent, Council of, arrangement for a lay council, ii. [157], [158];
- anathematizes the doctrines of the Reformation, vii. [408];
- its effect in Hungary, [408]
- Tricks of the monks, ii. [385] sqq.
- Trinity, The, Servetus and Calvin on, iii. [84] sqq.
- Trois-Moutiers, Prior of, iii. [45], [63]
- Troll, Gustavus, archbishop of Upsala, imprisoned, vii. [128];
- crowns King Frederick, [154];
- supports Christian II., [185];
- commander of the Lübeckers, [213]
- Turin, introduction of reformed doctrines at, iv. [412]
- Tyndale, William, iv. [2];
- his Practice of Prelates presented to the king, [53];
- sought for by the king, [54];
- meets with Vaughan, [55];
- his warning to Henry, [56];
- distrusts the clergy, [56];
- second meeting with Vaughan, [58];
- a gulf between him and the king, [58];
- friend of Lambert, [92];
- his translation of New Testament read in London, [105], [111];
- assisted by Fryth, [140];
- letter to Fryth, [144];
- another, [151];
- at Antwerp, v. [29];
- his labors and charities, [30];
- his New Testament in demand, [30];
- his protest of integrity as translator, [31];
- Gardiner's plot against him, [35];
- beset by Gardiner's agents, [35];
- treacherously arrested, [40];
- imprisoned at Vilvorde, [40];
- presents his New Testament to Queen Anne, [122], [197];
- his peculiar work as translator, [214], [215];
- assisted by Rogers, [215];
- his joy at the printing of his translation, [216];
- intercourse with the jailor and his family, [217];
- efforts of Poyntz to save him, [218];
- of Cromwell, [219];
- his liberation promised, [219];
- conflict with Romish doctors, [220];
- abandoned by Henry VIII., [221];
- before the court, [222];
- undertakes his own defence, [222];
- condemned, [223];
- degraded, [224];
- his religious courage, [224];
- his martyrdom, [225], [226];
- circulation of his New Testament, [226];
- sale of his Bible authorized by Henry VIII., [227];
- universally read, [228];
- Hacket ordered to burn his New Testaments, vi. [25];
- they are imported in Scotland, [25];
- publication of his writings at Marburg, [30];
- new edition of his Bible, viii. [177], [178];
- his Bible suppressed, but issued without his name, [260]
- Ulrich, duke of Würtemberg, ii. [100];
- expelled from his states, [100];
- his cause supported by France at Augsburg, [219], [221], [226];
- restored, [253], [255];
- promotes reformation, [255]
- Uniformity, in church government and worship, ii. [97]
- Union with God, three acts necessary to, i. [319]
- United Brethren, The, in Bohemia, vii. [417];
- differences about the Supper, [418];
- condemned by Luther, [418];
- send a deputation to him, [419];
- send a statement of their views, [420]
- Unity, ecclesiastical, sought by three parties, iv. [348] sqq.;
- common feature of the three, [350], [372];
- Roman and Christian contrasted, viii. [312]
- Universities, decisions of, on divorce of Henry VIII. presented to parliament, iv. [67];
- visitation of English, v. [84]
- Upsala, assembly of, re-establishes Protestantism in Sweden, vii. [340]
- Urbino, Duke of, at war with Leo X., i. [114];
- duchy of, ii. [149]
- Utenhov, Nicholas, vii. [547]
- Valdez, Alfonso de, birth of, iv. [454];
- sees Luther's works burnt, [455];
- his Dialogue, on events at Rome, [455] sqq.;
- attacked by Castiglione, [457];
- defended by his brother, [457];
- at Augsburg, [458]; viii. [3]
- Valdez, Juan de, birth of, iv. [454];
- his Dialogue between Mercury and Charon, [457];
- Hundred Considerations, [457 note];
- in Italy, [459];
- character of, [459], [460];
- at Chiaja, [460];
- Considerations, [466] sqq.;
- conversation with Giulia di Gonzaga, [469] sqq.;
- his Spiritual Abecedary, [469 note]
- Valerio, Rodrigo de, Spanish reformer, his birth and early life, viii. [10], [11];
- his renunciation of the world, [11];
- studies the Bible, [12];
- begins to propagate evangelical doctrines, [12];
- his labors at Seville, [21];
- his influence over Egidius, [24];
- preaches publicly, [25];
- arrested by the Inquisition, defended by Egidius and liberated, [25], [26];
- teaches the Gospel privately, [36];
- then publicly, and is imprisoned for life by the Inquisition, [36], [37];
- his death, [37]
- Valeton, Peter, iii. [73];
- arrested, [110];
- his books seized, [111];
- tortured, [137];
- burnt, [138]
- Valladolid, beginnings of reformation at, viii. [21], [112]
- Vandel, Claude, and his sons, i. [54];
- the father kidnapped by the Bastard of Savoy, [55];
- liberated by episcopal council, [57], [87];
- syndic, [111], [134], [148], [206]
- Vandel, Hugues, ambassador to the Swiss, ii. [400]
- Vandel, Pierre, i. [292]; iii. [277];
- wounded in the Cathedral, [372], [385];
- proscribed by the bishop, [439];
- seized and imprisoned, [441], [457];
- leader in campaign against idols, v. [289], [305]; vi. [435];
- account of him, [435];
- gets possession of Calvin's articles, [435];
- reads them before the council, [436]
- Vandel, Robert, i. [207], [292], [293];
- wins over the bishop of Geneva, [297], [298];
- at election of syndics, [300];
- defends the Reformation, [310];
- bishop's envoy to Friburg and Basel, ii. [320];
- a fray, [337], [348], [369];
- envoy to Switzerland, [381];
- again, [415];
- again, [450];
- visits Farel, iii. [277]
- Vandel, Thomas, v. [235]
- Van der Hulst, Franz, inquisitor in the Netherlands, vii. [491], [493];
- takes the lead in persecution of Henry of Zutphen, [497]
- Vargas, viii. [27];
- interview with Egidius, [28];
- shares the labors of Egidius and Ponce de la Fuente, [29];
- his death, [35]
- Vatable, Francis, ii. [51];
- cited, [59];
- accused by Beda, [230]
- Vaudois, in Picardy, i. [349]
- Vaughan, Stephen, sent by Henry VIII. to find Tyndale, iv. [54];
- meets with him at Antwerp, [55];
- their conference, [56];
- second meeting, [58];
- searches for John Fryth, [59];
- envoy to Elector of Saxony, [165]
- Vax, Antonia, account of, v. [244];
- consents to take part in plot against reformers at Geneva, [245];
- poisons Viret, [246];
- her remorse, [247];
- tried, and condemned, [248];
- executed, [249]
- Vedastes, John, i. [361], [362]
- Venice, appearance of Protestantism at, iv. [410]
- Vergara, John de, his attainments, viii. [13];
- corrects the Vulgate and is arrested by the Inquisition, [13], [14]
- Vergara, Francis de, viii. [13]
- Vergerio, legate, papal ambassador at Smalcalde, iv. [399];
- interview with Luther, v. [108]
- Vernou, Jean, iii. [46];
- sent by Calvin to preach, [58], [61]
- Veron, Anthony, iii. [46]
- Veron, Philip, sent by Calvin to preach, iii. [58], [59], [61], [62]
- Vevey, Reformation at, vi. [267]
- Viborg, vii. [151];
- free school at, [154];
- Reformation at, [155];
- departure of the monks, [167];
- a printing press established, [168]
- 'Vidamy,' The, of Geneva, i. [18];
- attempt of duke of Savoy to usurp, [238], [242]
- Vienne, Archbishop of, i. [99];
- summons bishop of Geneva to hear judgment in Pécolat's case, [99], [100];
- threatens the bishop with excommunication, [103];
- his official posts up the excommunication in Geneva, [104];
- his censures annulled by the pope, [106]
- Vienne, persecution at, i. [10]
- Viglius of Zuychem, vii. [476];
- his admiration for Erasmus, [476];
- President of Council of Mechlin, [477];
- President of Privy Council, [477];
- inward conflict, [477];
- secret report about him, [478];
- his moderation, [479]
- Vilvorde, castle of, v. [40]
- Viret, Pierre, early life of, iii. [220];
- goes to University of Paris, [221];
- meets with Farel, [221];
- refuses the tonsure, [222];
- his struggles, [222];
- friendship with Farel, [224];
- preaches at Orbe, [225];
- his place among the reformers, [225];
- imprisoned at Orbe, [239];
- accompanies Bernese embassy to Geneva, iv. [215];
- at the tournament, [217];
- presides at a reformed baptism, [249];
- takes part in first evangelical Pentecost, [281];
- summoned before the Council, [306];
- poisoned by Antonia Vax, v. [246];
- contends with Caroli at the disputation, [269];
- preaches at Lausanne, vi. [230];
- takes part in the disputation, [241] sqq.;
- condemns image-worship, [262];
- second pastor, with Caroli, [265], [266];
- dispute with him, [305], [306];
- intervention of Calvin, [306], [307];
- at synod of Lausanne, [313];
- pleads for recall of Calvin and Farel to Geneva, [433], [443];
- goes to Geneva, vii. [12];
- Calvin's colleague, [56];
- assists Calvin in preparing the Ordinances, [60];
- returns to Lausanne, [110]
- Virgin, Image of the, at Paris, mutilated, i. [423] sqq.;
- processions, [425], [426];
- miracles, [426], [427];
- at Geneva, broken, iv. [186];
- appearance of the Virgin, at Geneva, [279]
- Virves, Alfonso, chaplain to Charles V., viii. [18];
- slandered by the monks, [18];
- his esteem for the reformers, [18];
- imprisoned by the Inquisition, [18];
- intervention of Charles V., [19];
- condemned, [19];
- his retractation, [19];
- liberated and made a bishop, [19];
- his Philippicæ Disputationes, [19]
- Viry, Sire de, ii. [382];
- withdraws from attack on Geneva, [384]
- Voré, Barnabas. [[De la Fosse]]
- Voruz, Sieur de, betrays Bonivard to duke of Savoy, i. [185], [186];
- his reward, [186]
- Vuillet, Messire, governor of Gex, his treacherous visit to Hugues, i. [271];
- his prey escapes him, [274];
- orders pursuit, [274]
- Waim, Gervais, envoy of Francis I. to German princes, ii. [72];
- his rashness at Wittenberg, [72]
- Waldenses, The, ii. [102]; iii. [245], [246];
- send a deputy to Wittenberg, [246];
- synod at Merindol, [246];
- deputation (Morel and Masson) to Œcolampadius, [247];
- story of Peter Waldo, [248];
- confessions of the Barbes, [249];
- the deputies go to Strasburg, [250];
- are imprisoned at Dijon, Masson put to death, [250];
- synod proposed, Farel invited, [251];
- tell their story at Granson, [251];
- two parties at the synod, [255];
- synod opened, [255];
- new confession signed, [258];
- old manuscripts, [259];
- agree to French translation of the Bible, [260];
- contribute to Olivétan's, [304]
- Wallachia, the waywode has audience of Francis I., ii. [248]
- Wallop, Sir John, ambassador in France, viii. [210], [211]
- Waltham Abbey, the monks netted, v. [81], [82]
- Warham, William, archbishop of Canterbury, iv. [13];
- proposes a compromise on supremacy, [64];
- orders exhumation and burning of Tracy's remains, [76];
- examines Lambert, [94];
- presides at examination of Latimer, [99];
- invites him to visit him, [100];
- excommunicates him, [101];
- his character, protest against reformation, [113];
- death, [113], [116];
- his belief in Maid of Kent, v. [10]
- Watteville, J. J. de, avoyer of Berne, i. [174];
- deputy to Geneva, ii. [445];
- intervenes at Granson, iii. [241];
- encounter with the sentinels, [241];
- reviews the Bernese army, v. [375];
- ambassador to disputation of Lausanne, vi. [239];
- presides at synod of Berne, [328];
- deputy to Geneva, [517]
- Wernli, Peter, Canon of Geneva, iii. [363], [368], [396];
- his activity, [406];
- conducts high mass, [408];
- prepared for battle, [412];
- his appeal, [415];
- gives the signal for battle, [416];
- slain, [417];
- his body found, [419];
- consequences of his death, [420];
- the funeral, [421];
- a miracle, [422];
- removal of the body to Friburg, [422], [425], [447], [454]; iv. [194]
- Wessel, Johan, vii. [482]
- Westeraas, Diet of, vii. [281];
- the banquet, [282];
- secret meeting of the bishops, [283];
- their engagement, [284];
- speech of the chancellor, [285];
- speech of the king, his abdication, [287], [288];
- popular agitation, [289];
- discussion between Olaf and Peter Galle, [290];
- return of the king, [293];
- Compact of, signed, [295]
- Weston, Sir Francis, charge against him, v. [134];
- at Greenwich tournament, [138];
- arrest of, [139];
- examined, [148];
- indicted, [153];
- tried and sentenced to death, [154];
- beheaded, [159]
- Westphalia, conflicts of the Reformation in, viii. [329]
- Wickliffe, John, iv. [2];
- known in Poland, vii. [422]
- Wildermuth, Jacob, account of, v. [320];
- undertakes to help Geneva, [321];
- takes command of auxiliaries, [324];
- dismisses cowards, [326];
- his plan of march, [327];
- in the Jura, [329] sqq.;
- guides offered, [330];
- the men betrayed, [332];
- defeats Savoyards at Gingins, [334] sqq.;
- duped by Savoyards at Coppet, returns home, [350]
- William of Orange, i. [5]
- William, of Zwoll, preaches and is arrested, vii. [526];
- burnt at Mechlin, [527]
- Wiltshire, Earl of, ambassador to Charles V. and the pope, iv. [22], [24];
- audience with the pope, [25];
- audience with Charles V., [26];
- reproved by Charles, [26];
- conference with De Gramont, [27];
- presents Cranmer's book to the pope, [28];
- returns to England, [28];
- at the coronation of his daughter Anne, [136];
- one of Fryth's examiners, [151]; v. [126], [136], [155]
- Winding-sheet, Holy, Feast of the, iii. [407]
- Windsor, persecution of evangelicals at, viii. [265], [266]
- Wingle, Pierre de, printer, v. [272], [273]
- Winsheim, Dr., professes evangelical faith in Hungary, vii. [346];
- banished, becomes professor at Wittenberg, [354]
- Wishart, George, account of, vi. [185];
- his return to Scotland, [185];
- preaches at Dundee, [186];
- forbidden to preach, [186];
- goes to Ayr, preaches in the market-place, [187];
- in country places, [188];
- returns to Dundee on outbreak of the plague, [188];
- attempt to murder him, [189];
- escapes ambuscade of the cardinal, [190];
- at Invergowrie, his night of prayer, [190];
- at Leith, [192];
- prohibited preaching in Haddingtonshire, [194];
- his last sermon, [195];
- dismisses Knox, [195];
- arrested by Bothwell, [196];
- imprisoned at Hailes, [197];
- given up to the regent, and by him to the cardinal, [197];
- cited before the cardinal, [198];
- his trial, [198-203];
- sentenced to death, [203];
- the communion refused him, [204];
- preparations for his execution, [205];
- his martyrdom, [206], [207];
- its effects in Scotland, [207], [208]
- Wittenberg and Geneva, i. [183], [191];
- first echo of Wittenberg at Geneva, [209], [216], [305]; ii. [434], [437]
- Wittenberg, discussion between English and German divines at, v. [116], [117];
- the plague at, vi. [36], [37];
- the university transferred to Jena, [37]
- Wolfgang, prince of Anhalt, signs Confession of Augsburg, viii. [323]
- Wolmar, Michael, ii. [9], [10], [11];
- called to Bourges, [23];
- his appeal to Calvin, [25]
- Wolsey, Cardinal, i. [356]; iv. [44], [60], [61]
- Women, join Catholic bands at Geneva, iii. [383], [384];
- weep and pray, [391]
- Wormorsen, Francis, Carmelite, preaches at Malmoe, vii. [159];
- professor there, [169];
- his apology for the evangelicals, [206];
- made bishop of Lund, [222]
- Worms, Conference of theologians at, vii. [8];
- transferred to Ratisbon, [18]
- Wriothesley, Chancellor of England, conducts negotiation for marriage of Henry VIII. with duchess of Milan, viii. [174];
- arrests Cromwell, [210];
- takes part in examination of Anne Askew, [276];
- tortures her, [281];
- presides at her burning, [283], [287], [289];
- with Gardiner intrigues against the queen, [289];
- aids in drawing up bill of indictment, [290];
- drops it in the palace, [291];
- attempts to arrest the queen, [296];
- in disgrace, [297];
- investigates charges against Norfolk and his son, [300], [301]
- Würtemberg, duchy of, affairs of, ii. [100] sqq., [215], [216], [217], [220];
- treaty between Francis I. and Philip of Hesse for deliverance of, [226];
- preparations for war, [251];
- restoration of Duke Ulrich, [253], [254];
- opened to the Reformation, [255]
- Wyatt, Sir Thomas, ambassador, quoted, viii. [175 n.];
- his interview with Charles V., [199] sqq.
- Wynram, Gilbert, accompanies Patrick Hamilton to the Netherlands, vi. [29]
- Yorkshire, Catholic revolt in, v. [206]
- Yvonand, iii. [298], [300]
- Yverdun, sends a procession to Granson, iii. [239];
- taken by the Bernese, vi. [229];
- the Reformation introduced by force, [229]
- Zapolya, head of the grandees of Hungary, vii. [357];
- crowned King of Hungary, [364];
- opposed by Ferdinand of Austria, [364];
- publishes edict against the Lutherans, [364];
- supported by Solyman, [370];
- does homage to him, [371];
- imprisons Devay at Buda, [377];
- liberates him, [378];
- concludes agreement with Ferdinand, [390];
- marries Isabella of Poland, [390];
- his death, his son proclaimed king, [391]
- Zapolya, John Sigismund, proclaimed King of Hungary, vii. [391];
- supported by Solyman, [391]
- Zell, Matthew, his preaching at Strasburg, i. [339], [361]; ii. [246];
- receives Calvin, iii. [150];
- prosecuted, [151];
- his wife Catherine, [151];
- lodges persecuted Christians, [151];
- Catherine's failings, [152], [153]
- Zoete, Louis de, agent of the Inquisition, meets Enzinas at Mechlin, viii. [90]
- Zurich, i. [182], [277], [310]; ii. [390], [392], [399], [400];
- treaty with landgrave of Hesse, [420], [442], [443];
- defeat at Cappel, [444];
- synod of reformed churches at, vi. [420];
- articles of Calvin and Farel approved by the synod, and their recall recommended, [425]; vii. [43], [44];
- English students at, viii. [143], [144]
- Zwinglius, i. [201], [277];
- his special work, [319], [352]; ii. [311], [313], [314];
- encourages Ab Hofen, [314], [436], [438], [439], [443]; iii. [49], [165];
- condemns divorce of Henry VIII., iv. [42];
- his works read in Italy, [408], [461];
- a man of action, vii. [114];
- his views compared with Calvin's, [117];
- his doctrine received in Hungary, [389], [395];
- intercourse with Alasco, [435];
- defended by Alasco, [436]
THE END.
530 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
November, 1877.
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