[1113] Gachard, Correspondance de Philippe II, Tom. II, 27, 44, 58; III, 588.

[1114] Pallavicini, Hist. Conc. Trident., Lib. XIV, cap. xi, n. 2.

See also the letter of St. Pius V, April 26, 1569, to the Duke of Anjou (Henry III) congratulating him on his victory over the Huguenots at Jarnac, and urging him to show himself inexorable to those who should plead for mercy towards heretics and rebels.—Pii Quinti Epistolar. Lib. V, p. 168 (Antverpiæ, 1640).

[1115] Testamento y Codicilo del Rey Don Felipe II, p. 14 (Madrid, 1882).

[1116] Relazioni Lucchese, p. 16.

[1117] In his instructions to Colonel Lockhart, his envoy to France after the negotiation of the treaty of 1656, Cromwell tells him to explain to Cardinal Mazarin “what my principles are which led me to a closure with France rather than with Spaine ... viz. that the one gives libertie of conscience to the professors of the Protestant religion and the other persecuteing it with losse of life and estate.”—Prof. C. H. Firth, in English Historical Review, October, 1906, p. 744.

[1118] Coleccion de Tratados de Paz; Phelipe IV, P. VII, p. 685.

[1119] MSS. of Bodleian Library, Arch Seld., 130.

[1120] A. de Castro adv. Hæreses, Lib. I, cap. xiii.

[1121] Comentarios, fol. 209.