- La Court, ii. [509].
- Lacretelle, M., estimates the Huguenots as numbering 1,500,000 souls, or one-tenth of the population of France, ii. [159].
- La Force, Jacques Nompar de Caumont, Duke of, his wonderful escape in the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [472], [473].
- Lagebaston, President of the Parliament of Bordeaux, ii. [523].
- Lainez, second general of the Order of Jesus, makes an intemperate speech at Poissy, i. [536];
- compares the Protestant ministers to apes and foxes, i. [537].
-
Lambert, François, first monk converted, i. [112];
- his history, i. [113];
his imprudent appeals, i. [114];
his marriage and his death, ib. - Languedoc, fifteen cities in this province receive Protestant ministers, i. [429];
- the children learn religion only from the Geneva catechism, ib.;
of twenty-two bishops in Languedoc, all but five or six non-residents, ib. - Languet, Hubert his description of the persecution under Francis II., i. [366];
of the confusion after the Tumult of Amboise, i. [397]. - Lansac, a special envoy of Charles IX. to Germany, his unscrupulous misrepresentations, ii. [217], [218];
- "Lansquenets," i. [11].
- Laschêne, a Protestant nobleman, decapitated at Paris, ii. [330].
- Laudonnière René de, leads the second colonial expedition to Florida, ii. [199];
- escapes from the massacre of the Huguenots, and succeeds in returning to France, ii. [200].
- Lausanne, the "Five scholars of," arrested, i. [283];
- tried and executed, i. [284], [285].
- Leclerc, Jean, a wool-carder of Meaux, tears down a papal bull, i. [87];
- he is branded, i. [88];
and burned alive at Metz, i. [89]. - Leclerc, Pierre, a minister and martyr at Meaux, i. [253], [255].
- Le Coq, his evangelical sermon, i. [151].
- "Le Dieu le Fort," ii. [341].
- Lefèvre d'Étaples, Jacques, i. [44], [67];
- restores letters to France, i. [68];
his studies, ib.;
devotion, i. [69];
his commentary on the Pauline epistles, i. [70];
foresees the Reformation, ib.;
controversy with Beda, i. [71];
invited to Meaux, i. [73];
spiritual progress of, i. [75];
translates the New Testament, i. [77];
his exultation, i. [79];
retires to Strasbourg, i. [84-93];
tutor of the Duke of Orleans, i. [94];
librarian at Blois, ib.;
hopes entertained by Aleander respecting, i. [94];
mental sufferings and death, i. [95], [96]. - Leicester, Earl of, ii. [381], [397];
- it is proposed to offer him the hand of Mademoiselle de Bourbon, ii. [399];
on Charles IX. and the massacre, ii. [559], [560]. - Le Laboureur, on the massacre of Vassy, ii. [24].
- Lent, the Pope's bull permitting eggs, butter, and cheese to be eaten during the fast, condemned by parliament, and publicly burned, i. [286];
- negligent observance of, in court of Charles IX., i. [468].
- Leo X., his concordat, i. [35], [36].
- Léran, Viscount de, wounded and pursued into the room of Margaret of Valois, on St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [467].
- Léry, Jean, goes to Brazil with Villegagnon, and, on his return, writes a history of the expedition, i. [292];
- ii.[345], note;
his account of the siege of Sancerre, ii. [590], [591], [594-598]. - "Lettres de cachet," ii. [511].
- Lhomme, or Lhommet, Martin, a bookseller, hung for having a copy of the "Tigre" in his possession, i. [445].
- Libertine party, the, i. [195], [225].
- Lieutenant de la Mareschaussée, his ineffectual defence and death on St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [472].
- Ligny, violence at, ii. [249].
- Limousin, Protestantism in, i. [428].
- Limueil, Isabeau de, her amorous intrigue with the Prince of Condé, ii. [145], [303].
- "Lit de justice," i. [18], [312];
- ii.[492].
- Liturgies of Farel and Calvin, i. [275], [276], [341], seq.,[515].
- Livry, the hermit of, i. [92].
- Loménie, Martial de, a secretary of the king. Marshal Retz obtains his office and his estate of Versailles, and then causes him to be murdered, ii. [485].
- Longjumeau, edict of pacification of, March 23, 1568, ii. [234];
- the peace opposed by Coligny, and favored by Condé, ii. [235];
discussion of the question of the sincerity of the court, ii. [236], [237];
the edict thrown into the fire by Charles IX. in the parliament house, ii. [276]. - Longjumeau Sieur de, assault upon his house, i. [476].
- Longueville, Duke of, prevents the massacre of the Protestants from extending to Picardy, ii. [526].
- Lorraine, Charles, Cardinal of, i. [261];
- he exchanges the title of Cardinal of Guise for that of Cardinal of Lorraine, i. [269];
various estimates of his character, i. [270], [271];
his servility toward Diana of Poitiers, i. [273];
hypocrisy to the Swiss envoys, i. [310];
his conference with Cardinal Granvelle, i. [315];
his great power on the accession of Francis II., i. [351];
indignation of the people against him and his brother, i. [375];
message he receives from the escaped Huguenot prisoners of Tours, i. [399];
perplexity of, i. [413];
his politic speech at Fontainebleau, i. [422];
his hypocritical assurances to Throkmorton, i. [424], note;
pasquinade against, i. [447];
a virulent pamphlet against him entitled "Epistre au Tigre de la France," i. [409], [444-448];
effrontery of, in offering to represent the three orders at the States General, i. [457];
favors the holding of the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [495];
he meets Beza and professes to be well satisfied, i. [503], [504];
but subsequently boasts that he overthrew Beza in the first interview, i. [505];
his speech in reply to Beza, i. [528], [529];
he demands of the Huguenot ministers subscription to the Augsburg Confession, i. [533];
retires in disgust from Saint Germain, i. [555];
goes with his brothers to meet the Duke of Würtemberg at Saverne, ii. [13];
his lying assurances, ii. [15], [16];
he declares himself, on oath, guiltless of the death of any man for religion's sake, ii. [16];
he returns to France from the Council of Trent, and unsuccessfully seeks the approval of the decrees, ii. [154];
his wrangle at Melun, Feb, 1564, with Chancellor L'Hospital, ii. [154], [155];
his encounter with Marshal Montmorency in Paris, ii. [166];
forbidden by Catharine to hold communication with Granvelle and Chantonnay, ii. [181];
he disregards the prohibition, ib.;
his altercation with L'Hospital at Moulins, ii. [186];
the Huguenots plan to seize him, ii. [205];
his flight to Rheims, ii. [207];
he invites Alva to enter France, ii. [208];
his plot revealed, ii. [259], [260];
makes another attack upon L'Hospital, and is prevented by Marshal Montmorency from making a bodily assault, ii. [264];
his jealousy of Anjou, ii. [339];
retires from court at the peace of Saint Germain, ii. [368];
his rejoicing at Rome over the news of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [531], [532]. - Lorraine, John, first Cardinal of, i. [267];
- his many ecclesiastical benefices, ib.
- Lorraine, Mary of, married to James V. of Scotland, i. [268].
- Loue, La, taken prisoner at Jarnac, ii. [306], [351];
- killed near Montpellier, ii. [352].
- Louis VIII., of France, confirms the privileges of La Rochelle, ii. [271].
- Louis IX., St Louis, disliked in Périgord, i. [6];
- his Pragmatic Sanction, i. [26].
- Louis XI., his aversion to assembling the States General, i. [12];
- consents to abrogate the Pragmatic Sanction, i. [32];
subsequently re-enacts it, i. [33];
confirms the privileges of La Rochelle, ii. [271]. - Louis XII., re-enacts the Pragmatic Sanction, i. [35];
- his motto, ib.;
confirms the privileges of La Rochelle, ii. [271]. - Louise de Savoie, mother of Francis I., i. [50], [60];
- encourages reformed preachers, i. [74];
regent, i. [109];
change in her attitude, i. [110], [123]. - Lude, Count of, ii. [324].
- Luns, Philippine de, a young lady of wealth and rank, strangled and burned at Paris, i. [307].
- Lusignan, "la pucelle," taken by the Huguenots, ii. [323].
- Luther, his teachings condemned by the Sorbonne, i. [108];
- wide circulation of his works, i. [112];
his books proscribed, ib.;
his letters respecting Melanchthon's projected visit to France, i. [185], [186]. - "Lutherans," rage of populace of Paris against, i. [302].
- Lyon, Jacques du, Seigneur de Grandfief, plots to surrender La Rochelle, ii. [617].
- Lyons, frontier town at accession of Francis I., i. [3];
- council of, i. [140];
inspection of books at great fairs of, i. [281];
in the hands of Maligny, i. [427];
besieged, ii. [102];
Huguenots accused of poisoning wells in, ii. [159];
massacre at, ii. [513], seq.
M.
- Macaulay, Lord, a remark ascribed by him to Admiral Coligny, ii. [463], note.
- Macchiavelli's Il Principe, "the Italian Bible," ii. [552], note.
- Mackintosh, Sir James, receives from M. de Châteaubriand important documents bearing upon the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [436].
- Macon, persecution at, i. [217].
- Madrid, a royal country-seat, ii. [259].
- Madrid, treaty of, declared null, i. [136].
- Magic, resort to, i. [48].
- Maigret, Friar Aimé, preaches at Lyons, i. [118].
- Malassise, M. de, Henry de Mesmes, ii. [359], [363], [366].
- Maligny seizes Lyons, but, not being supported, fails to keep the place, i. [427].
- Malot, Jean, a minister at the colloquy of Poissy, i. [509].
- Malta, siege of, by the Turks, in 1565, ii. [181].
- Mandelot, M. de, Governor of Lyons, ii. [513];
- his perplexity, ii. [514];
his responsibility for the massacre in Lyons, ii. [517];
a suppliant for the spoils of the Huguenots, ii. [518]. - Mangin, a martyr at Meaux, i. [254], [255];
- Mans, Protestants of, plundered or killed, ii. [162].
- Mansfeld, Count of. See Wolrad.
- Marcel, prévôt des marchands, ii. [482], etc.
- Marché-aux-pourceaux, i. [46].
- Marcourt, Antoine, probable author of the placard of 1534, i. [164].
- "Mardi Gras," the rising of, ii. [625].
- Margaret of Valois, youngest daughter of Henry II., born May 14, 1552, her hand declined by Sebastian of Portugal, ii. [379];
- proposed marriage to Henry of Navarre, ii. [392];
the proposal comes from the Montmorencies, ii. [394];
absurdity of the story of a romantic attachment of Margaret, in 1571, to Henry of Guise, ii. [395], note;
she is said to be at first indifferent, afterward anxious to marry Henry of Navarre, ii. [395], [396];
described by Jeanne d'Albret, ii. [405];
the betrothal, ii. [426];
the marriage, ii. [427];
the entertainment in the Louvre, ii. [429];
on the morning of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [466]. - Marillac, Bishop of Vienne, i. [418];
- his speech at Fontainebleau, i. [420], [421].
- Marlorat, Augustin, a prominent Huguenot minister at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [509];
- in the Conference of Saint Germain, i. [539];
he is hung by order of the Parliament of Rouen, ii. [80]. - Maromme, Laurent de, a leader of the murderers at Rouen, ii. [520], [521].
- Marot, Clément, i. [42];
- his flight to Ferrara, i. [179].
- Marsac, Louis de, his words at the stake, i. [278].
- Marshals, remonstrance of the, ii. [255].
- Martigues, Sebastian of Luxemburg, Viscount of, ii. [341];
- his impiety, ib., note.
- Martin Theodoric, of Beauvais, his elegies on Louis de Berquin, i. [157];
- remarks respecting Barthélemi Milon, i. [172].
- Martyr, Peter, or Pietro Martiro Vermigli, a native of Florence and a reformer, invited to the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [494];
- his arrival, i. [527];
his speech, i. [536];
takes part in the Conference of Saint Germain, i. [539];
his candid paper, i. [540]. - Martyrs, Protestant, constancy of, i. [177];
- ingenious contrivance for prolonging their sufferings, ib.
- Mary, Queen of Scots, wife of Francis II., i. [347];
- ii. [146], [545].
- Mass, Roman Catholic, songs against, ii. [121], seq.
- Massacre, of Protestants in Holy Week, 1561, i. [474];
- of Vassy, March 1, 1562, ii. [22];
of Sens, April 12, 1562, ii. [46], [55];
of Orange, June 5, 1562, ii. [49];
of Toulouse, ii. [52-54];
of Troyes, ii. [128], [129];
of Roman Catholics at Nismes ii. [234], [225];
in prisons of Orleans, Aug. 21, 1569, ii. [326];
of the garrison of Rabasteins, ii. [361];
at Paris (see Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day);
of Meaux, Aug. 25 and 26, 1572, ii. [505-507];
of Troyes, Sept. 4, 1572, ii. [507], [508];
of Orleans, ii. [508] seq.;
of Bourges, Sept. 12, 1572, ii. [511], [512];
of Angers, ii. [512], [513];
of Lyons, ii. [513-518];
of Rouen, Sept., 1572, ii. [519-521];
of Toulouse, ii. [521], [522];
of Bordeaux, Oct, 1572, ii. [522-524];
why the massacre is not universal, ii. [524], [525];
cases of mercy, ii. [526], [527]. - Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, in Paris, the question of its premeditation, chapter xvii. passim;
- La Huguerye's statements, ii. [423], [424];
a significant mock combat, ii. [431];
the plan as sketched by Anjou, ii. [433] seq.;
Salviati's testimony respecting the want of premeditation and the ignorance of the king, ii. [435], [436];
Coligny wounded, ii. [437];
Catharine and Anjou resolve upon extreme measures, ii. [446];
the blood council, ii. [447], seq.;
Charles reluctantly consents, ii. [449];
few victims selected at first, ii. [450];
religious hatred as a motive, ii. [452];
precautions taken, ib.;
the municipal officers of Paris called in, ii. [454];
murder of Coligny, ii. [457], seq.;
of Huguenot leaders in the Louvre, ii. [465], seq.;
on the signal bell from the Palais de Justice, the massacre becomes general, ii. [470];
the part taken by the courtiers and the royal guard, ii. [471];
pitiless butchery, ii. [474];
shamelessness of the court ladies, ii. [476];
wonderful escapes, ii. [477];
the dead bodies buried by the municipality of Paris, ii. [484];
the massacre not at first a popular movement, ii. [484], [485];
pillage of the rich, ii. [485];
action of the municipal officers, ii. [486];
ineffectual orders issued to lay down arms, ii. [487];
miracle of the hawthorn of the Cimetière des Innocents, ii. [488];
number of the victims in Paris, ii. [489];
speech of the king at the "lit de justice," ii. [492];
servility of parliament, ii. [493];
Coligny's memory declared infamous, ii. [496];
the verbal orders, ii. [502];
two kinds of letters sent out, ii. [504];
uncertain number of victims, ii. [530]. - Masso, an agent in the massacre at Lyons, ii. [504], note;
- [514], [516].
- Matignon, M. de, saves the Protestants of Caen and Alençon from massacre, ii. [526].
- Maubert, Place, ii. [339].
- Maurevel murders De Mouy, ii. [337];
- he is rewarded with the collar of the order, ii. [338];
wounds Admiral Coligny, ii. [438], [439]. - "Mauvais Garçons," highwaymen, i. [44].
- Maximilian, Emperor of Germany, styles the French king "a king of asses," i. [14];
- ii. [360], etc.
- May, Du, attempts to assassinate Admiral Coligny, ii. [194].
- Mayenne, Charles, Duke of, son of Francis, Duke of Guise, ii. [324].
- Maynet, a Huguenot member of the Parliament of Rouen, ii. [519].
- Mazurier, Martial, i. [75], [82], [90], [91].
- Medici family, the, is reputed to be destined to be fatal to Christendom, i. [569].
- Meaux, Reformation at, i. [67] seq., [74], [75], [83], [86], [92];
- new persecutions at, i. [253];
the "Fourteen of Meaux," i. [254];
their execution, i. [255];
iconoclasm at, ii. [68];
consequent severity of the Parliament of Paris, ib.;
massacre at, Aug. 25 and 26, 1572, ii. [505-507]. - Medals, commemorative of the junction of the Huguenots and their German allies, ii. [318];
- of the battles of Jarnac and Moncontour, ii. [336], note;
of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [532], [533], [559]. - Melanchthon, i. [43];
- answers the Sorbonne's condemnation of Luther, i. [109];
visited by a French agent, i. [160];
draws up a plan of reconciliation, ib.;
his extravagant concessions, i. [161];
his own misgivings, i. [162];
his plan makes a favorable impression on Francis I., ib.;
is entreated to come to France, i. [182];
his perplexity, i. [183];
he is formally invited by Francis, and consents, i. [184];
but fails to obtain permission from the Elector of Saxony, i. [185];
his chagrin, i. [186];
his articles reprobated by the Sorbonne, i. [187];
approves of the execution of Servetus, i. [212]. - Menendez, or Melendez, de Abila, sent by Philip II. to destroy the Huguenot settlements in Florida, ii. [200];
- his cruelty and success, ib.
- Mercenary troops, i. [11].
- "Mercuriale," nature of, i. [331];
- Henry II. goes in person to one of the Parliament of Paris, June 10, 1559, i. [332];
that of June 23, 1561, i. [480], seq. - Mérindol, some inhabitants of, summoned to Aix, i. [235];
- the infamous "Arrêt de Mérindol," November 18, 1540, i. [236];
preparations to carry it into effect, i. [237];
it is delayed by friendly interposition, i. [238];
the place is taken and destroyed, i. [247]. - Merle, d'Aubigné, a singular mistake of, i. [200].
- Merlin, Jehan Reymond, a Protestant pastor, at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [509];
- counsels moderation to the Queen of Navarre, ii. [149];
chaplain of Coligny, ii. [440], [457];
his wonderful escape, ii. [477]. - Méru, a younger Montmorency, ii. [441], note, [628].
- Messignac, Huguenot loss at, ii. [284].
- Metz, labors of Jean Châtellain at, i. [114];
- anger of the people at his execution, i. [116].
- "Michelade," the, at Nismes, ii. [224], [225].
- Milhau-en-Rouergue, calls for ministers, i. [479];
- the entire population becomes Protestant, ii. [147];
refuses to admit a garrison, ii. [250];
a Huguenot place of refuge, ii. [280];
political Huguenot assembly at, ii. [600];
second assembly, Dec. 17, 1573, at which the scheme of organization is perfected, ii. [617-619]. - Miracles popular, i. [57];
- miracle of the hawthorn tree of the Cimetière des Innocents, ii. [486].
- Milon, Barthélemi, a paralytic, executed, i. [172];
- remarks of Martin Theodoric, of Beauvais, respecting ib.
- Minard, President, assassination of, i. [370].
- Ministers, Protestant, the popular clamor for, i. [479];
- their moderation, i. [479], [480];
the demand unabated for, ii. [148]. - Mirabel, a Huguenot leader, ii. [348].
- Mirambeau, a Huguenot negotiator, ii. [623].
- Miron, the Duke of Anjou's confession to, ii. [433].
- Mole, La, one of the party of the Politiques, ii. [626];
- he is executed on the Place de Grève, ii. [628], [629].
- Monastic orders incur contempt, i. [60].
- Monclar, Viscount of, ii. [230], [352].
- Moncontour, battle of, Oct 3, 1569, ii. [332] seq.;
- exultation of the Roman Catholic party after, ii. [336];
medals struck at Rome, ib., note;
extravagant action of parliament, ii. [337]. - Money coined by the Huguenots, with the name and arms of Charles IX., ii. [219].
- Mons, capture of, by Count Louis of Nassau, ii. [412].
- Montagut, or Montaigu, Viscount of, ii. [230], note.
- Montargis, the residence of the Duchess of Ferrara, affords a safe refuge to the Huguenots, ii. [73], [327];
- flight of Huguenots from Montargis to Sancerre, ii. [328].
- Montauban, the Protestants of, being maligned, vindicate their loyalty, i. [480];
- beg that no more ex-monks be sent into France as Protestant ministers, ib.;
iconoclasm at, i. [485], [486];
it refuses to admit a garrison in, 1568, ii. [250];
a Huguenot place of refuge, ii. [280];
Coligny at, ii. [349];
becomes, through Regnier's agency, a Protestant stronghold, ii. [574];
political Huguenot assembly at, ii. [600];
it provides for a military organization of the Huguenots, ib. - Montbéliard, Farel at, i. [117].
- Montbrun, nephew of Cardinal Tournon, a Huguenot leader, in the Comtât Venaissin, etc., i. [414];
- ii. [226], [230], [284], [348], [526];
his exploits in Dauphiny, ii. [621], [622]. - Mont de Marsan, ii. [351].
- Montecuccoli, Count of, accused of having poisoned the dauphin, Francis, and drawn asunder by four horses, i. [259].
- Montélimart, Huguenots of, i. [404].
- Montereul, Claude a curate, active in the massacre of Rouen, ii. [520].
- Montesquiou, captain of Anjou's guards, treacherously murders the Prince of Condé, ii. [302].
- Montferrand, M. de, Governor of Bordeaux, ii. [522];
-
his brutal boast before the parliament that he had killed more than two hundred and fifty persons, ii. [524].
- Montgomery, Gabriel, Count of, captain of the Scotch guard, mortally wounds Henry II. in the tournament, i. [339];
- commands the Protestants at Rouen, ii. [78];
escapes with D'Andelot to La Rochelle, at the beginning of the third civil war, ii. [281], [282];
throws himself into St. Jean d'Angely, ii. [312];
takes for the Huguenots a great part of Béarn, ii. [323];
goes to Coligny's assistance, ii. [332];
his raids, ii. [349], [451];
escapes from the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [481-483];
obtains help from England for La Rochelle, ii. [588];
Queen Elizabeth's interest in him, ib.;
he lands in Normandy, ii. [630];
takes Carentan, ib.;
is taken prisoner at Domfront, ii. [631];
delight of Catharine de' Medici, ii. [631], [632];
his sentence and execution, ii. [633];
his constancy, ii. [634]. - Montigny's remark as to the Burgundians, ii. [185].
- Montluc, Bishop of Valence, his speech in the assembly of notables of Fontainebleau, i. [418], [419];
- his description of the Protestant ministers, i. [403], [418];
his evangelical preaching, i. [469];
confers with the Protestants at Poissy, i. [538];
Cardinal Lorraine's reference to him in the Colloquy of Poissy, ii. [8];
at the Conference of Saint Germain, ib.;
he is erroneously credited with writing Condé's reply to the Triumvirs, etc., ii. [61], [64];
he is sent to secure the election of Anjou to the throne of Poland, ii. [552];
his embarrassment, ii. [553], [560], note;
his success, ii. [592], [593]. - Montluc, Blaise de, a cruel general, ii. [51], [52];
- at Toulouse, ii. [53], [54];
is praised by Pius IV. for his part in the massacre, ii. [54];
his conversation with Alva at the Bayonne conference, ii. [171];
breaks down Coligny's bridge of boats, ii. [350];
accuses Damville, ii. [352];
succeeds in Béarn, ii. [361], [574]. - Montmorency, Anne de, Grand Master and Constable, i. [261];
- his ancient family and valor, i. [263];
his cruelty, i. [263], [264];
his unpopularity, i. [264];
disgraced by Francis I., but recalled by Henry II., i. [265];
opposes the breaking of the truce of Vaucelles, i. [297];
taken prisoner at the battle of St. Quentin, i. [302];
favors the peace of Cateau-Cambrésis, i. [322];
his fall from power at the accession of Francis II., i. [347];
retires to his estates, i. [352], [353];
his wealth, ib.;
indignation of Catharine de' Medici with him, i. [352];
his disgust at the progress of Protestantism and the popular demand for restitution, i. [469];
joins in the triumvirate, notwithstanding his son's remonstrances, i. [470], [471];
disappointment of the Protestants at, i. [470], note;
his exploits at Paris in burning the Protestant preaching-places earn him the title of "le Capitaine Brûlebanc," ii. [37];
is taken prisoner at the battle of Dreux, ii. [94];
he espouses the defence of Coligny, ii. [135];
he takes sides against Cardinal Lorraine at Melun, ii. [155];
opposes the nuncio's demand that the red cap be taken away from Cardinal Châtillon, ii. [182], [183];
at the Conference of La Chapelle Saint Denis declares that the king will not tolerate two religions, ii. [211];
he is mortally wounded in the battle of Saint Denis, ii. [215];
three times a prisoner in previous wars, ib., note;
his character and exploits, ii. [216];
his conduct on entering La Rochelle, ii. [273]. See Triumvirs. - Montmorency, François de, Marshal, eldest son of the constable, remonstrates with his father on the formation of the triumvirate, i. [470];
- he is temporarily removed from the governorship of Paris, ii. [32];
his inability to check the excesses of the turbulent mob, ii. [97];
espouses Coligny's defence, ii. [135];
takes energetic measures with the Parisians, ii. [166];
his encounter with Cardinal Lorraine, ii. [166], [167];
he brings Coligny to Paris, ii. [167];
proclaims the edict of Amboise by public crier, ii. [180];
hollow reconciliation with the Guises, ii. [184];
at Saint Denis, ii. [214];
his retort to Catharine de' Medici, when Santa Croce demands the surrender of Cardinal Châtillon to the Pope, ii. [229];
remonstrance of, ii. [255];
reply to Coligny, ii. [323];
proposes the marriage of Henry of Navarre to Margaret of Valois, ii. [394];
his honorable reception by Queen Elizabeth, ii. [399];
Charles's estimate of, ii. [409];
thrown into the Bastile, ii. [628]. - Montpézat, M. de, ii. [523].
- Montpellier, gathering of Huguenots for worship in the large school-rooms, i. [428], [429];
- the chapter of the cathedral introduces a garrison, whereupon the Protestants rise and strip the churches, i. [563], [564];
the consuls write to Geneva to double their corps of Protestant ministers, ii. [148]. - Montpensier, the Duke of, at the Bayonne conference, ii. [170];
- incites the massacre of Protestants, ii. [476], [529].
- Montpipeau, the "tears" of, ii. [418], [419].
- Montréal, ii. [359].
-
Montsoreau, M. de, his letter to Puigaillard, ii. [503];
- he treacherously murders M. de la Rivière, ii. [512].
- Morata, Olympia, her precocity, i. [206].
- Morel, François de, a minister at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [509].
- Mornas, cruelty of Huguenots at, ii. [50], [51].
- Mornieu, André, an échevin, heads the murderers of Lyons, ii. [515].
- Mortier, Du, a privy councillor, refuses to sign the sentence of the Prince of Condé, i. [440].
- Morvilliers, Bishop of Orleans, a skilful negotiator, his noble words on straightforward diplomacy, ii. [194], note;
- royal envoy, ii. [210], [255], [265], [368];
replies to Coligny's memorial, ii. [417], note. - Mothe Fénélon, La, French ambassador in England, his recommendation of the Duke of Anjou, ii. [379];
- his perplexity in defending the massacre, ii. [541];
declares himself ashamed to be counted a Frenchman, ii. [543];
his cold reception by Queen Elizabeth, ib.;
confesses that he is not believed, ii. [545];
he is instructed to press the suit of Alençon for Queen Elizabeth's hand, ii. [606]. - Motley, Mr. J. L., ii. [289], note, [537].
- Mouchy, De, apologizes for using French language, i. [56];
- at the Conference of Saint Germain, ii. [7];
his delight at its dismissal, ii. [8]. - Moulin, Charles Du, a jurist, writes an able treatise against the Council of Trent, ii. [155], [156].
- Moulins, the assembly of notables at, in 1566, ii. [183];
- alleged plan of the "Sicilian Vespers" to be executed at, ib.;
reconciliation of Coligny and the Guises, and of the Montmorencies and Guises at, ii. [184];
fresh encounter of Cardinal Lorraine and Chancellor L'Hospital at, ii. [185], [186]. - Mouvans, a Huguenot leader in Provence, i. [407];
- his message to the Duke of Guise, i. [408];
ii. [226], [230], [284]. - Mouy, M. de, ii. [315], [333];
- murdered by Maurevel, ii. [337].
- Mucidan, ii. [312].
- Muntz, on Clemangis, i. [64].
- Murderer, the, of a Huguenot rescued, ii. [97].
N.
- Nançay, captain of the guard, superintends the butchery of the Huguenot leaders in the Louvre, ii. [466].
- Nantes, the Protestants of, not to be compelled to hang tapestry on Corpus Christi Day, ii. [164];
- the municipality of, refuses to massacre the Protestants, ii. [529].
- Nantouillet, the affair of, ii. [598], [599], note.
- Nassau, Louis, Count of, brother of the Prince of Orange, enters France with the Duke of Deux-Ponts, ii. [315];
- at Moncontour, ii. [333], [335], [364];
confers with Charles IX. and urges him to espouse the cause of the Netherlands, ii. [384], [385];
captures Mons and Valenciennes, ii. [412];
receives from Charles IX. assurances of help for the Prince of Orange, ii. [609];
his death, ii. [610]. - Navarre conquered by the Spanish, i. [107];
- little left to the king, i. [108].
- Navarre, Bastard of, taken prisoner at Jarnac, ii. [306].
- Navarre, Antoine de Bourbon-Vendôme, King of, husband of Jeanne d'Albret, favors the Reformation, i. [313];
- rejects Montmorency's advances, i. [352];
his irresolution and pusillanimity, i. [354], [355];
wants indemnity for the kingdom of Navarre, i. [356];
is received at court with studied discourtesy, ib.;
is deaf to remonstrance, i. [357];
meets fresh indignity, i. [358];
his irresolution embarrasses Montbrun at Lyons, i. [427];
invites Beza to Nérac, i. [431];
his short-lived zeal, i. [432];
pressure upon him and Condé to force them to come to Orleans, ib.;
his concessions, i. [433];
at Limoges the Huguenot gentry offer him aid, i. [434];
he dismisses his escort, i. [435];
his infatuation, ib.;
reaches Orleans, i. [436];
is treated almost like a prisoner, ib.;
his danger, i. [440];
makes an ignominious compact with Catharine de' Medici just before the death of Francis II., i. [444];
his opportunity at Charles IX.'s accession, i. [451];
his contemptible character, ib.;
his humiliation, i. [466];
he receives more consideration in consequence of the bold demands of the Particular Estates of Paris, i. [467];
his assurances to M. Gluck, the Danish ambassador, that he would have the gospel preached throughout France ib.;
he invites Beza to the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [494];
his urgency, i. [496];
he is plied by the arts of the papal legate, i. [553];
his apostasy, ii. [9];
his defence of Guise after the massacre of Vassy, ii. [27];
and Beza's reply, ii. [28];
has become "all Spanish now," ii. [29];
seizes Charles IX. and brings him back to Paris, ii. [36];
he is mortally wounded at the siege of Rouen, ii. [79];
his last hours and death, ii. [81];
his character, ii. [82];
extravagant eulogy of De Thou, ii. [83];
mourning at the Council of Trent, ib.;
his delight at the prospective marriage of his son to Margaret of Valois, ii. [393]. - Navarre, Henry of, son of Antoine de Bourbon-Vendôme and Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of Navarre, afterward Henry IV. of France, born Dec. 14, 1553. Takes part in a tournament at the Bayonne Conference, ii. [179];
-
remonstrates against the perfidy displayed by the Roman Catholics in the murder of Condé and other Protestants at Jarnac, ii. [305];
with his cousin Condé, he becomes nominal general-in-chief of the Huguenots, ii. [314];
they are nicknamed "the admiral's pages," ib.;
at Moncontour, ii. [334];
proposed marriage of Henry to Margaret of Valois, ii. [392] seq.;
by the death of his mother he becomes King of Navarre, June 9, 1572, ii. [408];
the papal dispensation delayed, ii. [410];
the betrothal, ii. [426];
the marriage, ii. [427];
a significant mock combat, ii. [431];
complains to the king of the attack on Coligny, ii. [439];
his name not on the proscriptive roll, ii. [451];
he is summoned by Charles IX. and ordered to abjure the Protestant religion, ii. [468];
his very humble reply, ii. [469];
his name associated with the royal family as having been an object of the pretended Huguenot conspiracy, ii. [490];
his forced conversion, ii. [498], [499];
his submission accepted by Pope Gregory XIII. and the validity of his marriage recognized, ii. [500];
he re-establishes the Roman Catholic Church in Béarn, ib.;
attempts flight, ii. [625], [627];
his examination and defence, ii. [627], [628]. - Navarre, Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of, daughter of Henry, King of Navarre, and Margaret of Angoulême, sister of Francis I., marries Antoine of Bourbon-Vendôme, i. [313];
- reluctantly embraces the Reformation, i. [431], [432];
her constancy, ii. [10];
her letter to the Cardinal of Armagnac, ii. [82];
she is cited to Rome and threatened with deposition as a heretic, Sept. 28, 1563, ii. [141];
the royal council protests against the infraction of national liberties, and the insult to royalty, ii. [142];
she establishes the Reformation in Béarn, ii. [148];
meets much opposition, ii. [149];
Spanish and other plots against, ii. [150];
a plot to kidnap her and her children, ii. [150], [151];
goes to La Rochelle at the beginning of the third civil war, ii. [281];
her spirited letters, ib.;
her words on Condé's death, ii. [303];
her courage after the battle of Jarnac, ii. [311];
her offices after the defeat of Moncontour, ii. [347];
negotiates with Catharine de' Medici for peace, ii. [356];
her letter warning the queen mother respecting the observance of the peace, ii. [373], and note;
her reply to the royal proposal of a marriage of Henry of Navarre to Margaret of Valois, ii. [395];
she becomes more favorable to it, ii. [403];
her solicitude, ii. [404];
she is treated with tantalizing insincerity, ib.;
she is shocked at the morals of the court, ii. [405];
she goes to Paris, ii. [406];
her last illness and death, ii. [406], [407];
the story that she was poisoned, ii. [407];
her character and motives traduced by the Mémoires inédits de Michel de la Huguerye, ii. [424]. - Navarre, Margaret of. See Angoulême, Margaret of.
- Navy, French, i. [11].
- Negotiations for peace of St. Germain, ii. [356] seq.
- Nemours, Duchess of. See Este, Anne d'.
- Nemours, Duke of, fails to keep his word pledged to the Baron de Castelnau, i. [388], [389];
- marries the widow of the Duke of Guise, and oppresses the Protestants of Lyonnais and Dauphiny, ii. [245];
praised by Pius V. in a special brief, ib.;
his jealousy of Aumale, ii. [317]. - Nevers, Duke of, at the blood council, ii. [447].
- New Testament, the, translated by Lefèvre, i. [77].
- New York, Huguenot church of, i. [345].
- Nicodemites, the, i. [235], [538], [539].
- Niort, ii. [283], [337], [338], [361].
- Niquet, Spire, a poor bookbinder, roasted in a fire made of his own books, in the massacre of Paris, ii. [474].
- Nismes, great concourse of the Huguenots of, i. [407];
- Huguenots guard the gates, i. [428];
massacre of Roman Catholics by the Protestants, known as the "Michelade," ii. [224];
brilliant capture of, by the Huguenots in the third civil war, ii. [345], [346];
in Protestant hands, in 1572, ii. [573], [574];
obtains a truce, ii. [599]. - Normandy, progress of Protestantism in, i. [287];
- burdens of taxation in, i. [313];
popular awakening in, i. [408];
Admiral Coligny's successes in (Feb., 1563), ii. [99]. See Rouen. - Non-residence of clergy, Claude Haton on, i. [457].
- Norris, Sir Henry, English ambassador, on the murder of Protestants in Paris, ii. [249];
- on the condition of the French court, ii. [255].
- Northumberland, Earl of, his rebellion, ii. [358].
- Nostradamus, predictions of, i. [47];
- ii. [606].
- Notables, assemblies of, i. [12];
- assembly at Fontainebleau, i. [415].
- Noue, François de la, justifies Condé's military conduct in evacuating Paris, ii. [33];
- his description of the discipline of the Huguenot army, ii. [66], [67];
on the irresistible desire for peace in 1568, ii. [235];
taken prisoner at Jarnac, ii. [306];
also at Moncontour, ii. [335];
his success at Sainte Gemme, ii. [361], [384];
he is sent by Charles IX. to treat with La Rochelle, ii. [579];
he is badly received, ii. [580];
he is subsequently chosen leader, ii. [581];
he retires when the hope of reconciliation disappears, ii. [587];
persuades the Huguenots to enter upon the fifth religious war, 1574, ii. [622].
O.
- Oath to be exacted of the Huguenots, ii. [257].
- Ossat, D', Cardinal, ii. [401].
- Obedience, spirit of, pervading all classes, i. [8].
- Œcolampadius, his correspondence with Lefèvre, i. [86].
- Official, or vicar, duties of i. [52].
- Olaegui, secretary of the Spanish ambassador, reports the rapid spread of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day to the provinces, ii. [505].
- Olivetanus, or Olivetan, Pierre Robert, translates the Bible for the Vaudois, i. [233].
- Olivier, Chancellor, at first refuses to seal the royal commission to the Duke of Guise, making him lieutenant-general of France, with absolute powers, i. [390];
- his remark as to the Cardinal of Lorraine, and death, i. [411], [412].
- Oppède, Jean Meynier, Baron d', first president of the Parliament of Aix, i. [243], seq.;
- his death, i. [252].
- Orange, city and principality of, i. [4], [66];
- origin of Protestantism in, ii. [48];
great regret of the Prince of Orange, ib.;
massacre of Protestants at, ii. [49];
the inhabitants reconciled by Charles IX. to those of the Comtât Venaissin, ii. [165];
infringement upon the peace at, ii. [373];
included in the Huguenot scheme of organization, ii. [618];
plundered by M. de Glandage, ii. [620]. - Orange, William the Silent, Prince of, learns from Henry II. the designs of Philip and himself for the extermination of the Protestants, i. [325];
- attempts to assist the Huguenots, ii. [288];
outgeneralled by Alva, ib.;
enters France and terrifies the court, ii. [289];
the insubordination of his troops compels him to retire, ib.;
his declaration, ii. [290];
re-enters France with the Duke of Deux-Ponts, ii. [315];
goes to Germany to obtain reinforcements for Coligny, ii. [332], [364]. - Ordinances, royal. See Edicts.
- Organization of the Huguenots, admirable, ii. [247].
- Orgies, pretended, in "la petite Genève," i. [365].
- Orleans, the "ghost" of, i. [57], [58];
- progress of Protestantism at, ii. [12];
the canons of the cathedral promise to attend the Protestant theological lectures, ii. [12];
seized by Condé, it becomes the Huguenot centre during the first civil war, ii. [39];
iconoclasm at, ii. [45];
left by Condé and Coligny in D'Andelot's hands, ii. [85], [98];
besieged by Guise, ii. [99];
capture of the Portereau, ii. [100];
use of bombs by the garrison, ii. [101];
massacre of Huguenots in the prisons of, Aug. 21, 1569, ii. [326];
the great massacre of, 1572, ii. [508], seq.;
a German account of the same, ii. [569-571]. - Orsini, Cardinal, ii. [531].
- Orthez, Viscount D', Governor of Bayonne, magnanimously refuses to murder the Protestants, ii. [528].
- Ory, Oriz, or Oritz, Inquisitor of the Faith, i. [224], [288].
P.
- "Paix boiteuse et mal-assise," ii. [366].
- Pamiers, persecution at, ii. [146];
- Huguenot commotion at, ii. [193].
- Pamphlets against the Guises, i. [409];
- Cardinal Lorraine has twenty-two on his table directed against himself, i. [423];
the "Epistre au Tigre de la France," i. [444], [448]. - Panier, Paris, a doctor of civil law, put to death, i. [266].
- Parcenac, ii. [226].
- Paris, nobles flock to, i. [8];
- learns obedience, i. [9];
wealth and population, i. [10];
persecution at, i. [216], [220];
first Protestant church organized, i. [294];
the example followed elsewhere, i. [296];
alarm at, after defeat of St. Quentin, i. [302];
progress of Protestantism in, i. [562], [563];
immense crowds at the Huguenot preaching, ii. [11];
fanaticism of the people, ii. [37], [38];
their delight at the prospect of war, ii. [41];
their fury, ii. [69];
approached by Condé, ii. [89];
insubordination and riot at, ii. [96], [97];
the people disarmed, ii. [141];
the citizen soldiers at the battle of Saint Denis, ii. [215];
processions at ii. [325];
line of the walls in the sixteenth century, ii. [483];
the municipal officers call the king's attention to the massacre, ii. [486]. - Parliament of Bordeaux, i. [19].
- Parliament of Paris, i. [16];
- claims right of remonstrance, i. [17];
humored by the crown, i. [18];
protests against repeal of Pragmatic Sanction, i. [33];
opposes the concordat, i. [37];
reluctantly registers it, i. [39];
proceeds vigorously against the "Lutherans," i. [171];
denounced by the Sorbonne as altogether heretical i. [328];
its inconsistent sentences, i. [329];
the mercuriale of 1559, i. [330], seq.;
different issues of the trials of the five imprisoned judges, i. [375];
the mercuriale of 1561, i. [481], seq.;
diversity of sentiment in, i. [482], [483];
its decision embodied in the "Edict of July," i. [483];
its opposition to the edict of January, ii. [6];
which it reluctantly registers, ii. [7];
its excessive severity, ii. [68];
it affects to regard Condé as a prisoner in the hands of the Protestant confederates, ii. [70];
sternly reproved by Charles IX. for failing to record the edict of Amboise, ii. [139], [140];
declares Coligny infamous, and sets a price on his head, ii. [330], [331];
extravagance after the victory of Moncontour, ii. [337];
its servile reply to Charles IX., ii. [493];
it declares Coligny's memory infamous, ii. [496]. - Parliament of Rouen, or Normandy, puts to death Augustin Marlorat, ii. [80]. See Rouen.
- Parliaments, provincial, i. [17].
- Parma, Duchess of, Regent of the Netherlands, sets a price on the head of Theodore Beza, ii. [388], note.
- Partenay falls into the hands of the Huguenots, ii. [282].
- Pasquier, Étienne, on barbarism at the university, i. [42];
- his estimate of Calvin, i. [216];
on Paris at the beginning of the first civil war, ii. [41]. - Pasquinade against the Cardinal of Lorraine, i. [447].
- Patriarche, the, a Protestant place of worship, i. [571], [573].
- Paul III., Pope, his alleged intercession for the Protestants, i. [180];
- grounds of doubt respecting it, i. [181].
- Paul IV., Pope, his disappointment at the escape of Andelot from the stake, i. [320];
- ii. [568];
believes that no heretic can be converted, ib. - Paulin, Viscount of, ii. [230], note; [600].
- Pauvan, Jacques, i. [89];
- his theses, i. [90];
burned on the Place de Grève, i. [91]. - Pavia, battle of, Feb. 24, 1525, i. [122].
- Peace of Amboise, March 19, 1563, terminating the first civil war, ii. [115];
- peace of Longjumeau, or "short" peace, after the second civil war, ii. [234];
number of Protestants murdered during, ii. [250];
peace of St Germain, after the third civil war, ii. [363]. - People, rights of, overlooked, i. [11];
- "incomparable kindness of," i. [14];
submission to nobles, i. [15]. - Périgord, Protestantism in, i. [428].
- Perry, Mr. G. G., his remarks on Whittingham, ii. [293].
- Persecution, failure of, i. [220];
- more systematic, i. [224];
severity of, i. [296], [359]. - Petit, Guillaume, the king's confessor, i. [72].
- Petition of the Triumvirs, ii. [58].
- Peyrat, M. du, ii. [514].
- Pézénas, in Languedoc, i. [428].
- Philip the Fair and Pope Boniface VIII., i. [27].
- Philip II., King of Spain, offers aid to Catharine de' Medici, i. [358];
- opposed to a French national council, i. [426];
plots with the Pope, ib;
his aid invoked by the Sorbonne i. [467], [468];
his threats of invasion, i. [555];
his message to Catharine de' Medici, i. [567];
he is commended by the Pope, i. 568;
he sends Courteville on a secret mission, ib.;
hesitates to aid the French Roman Catholics, ii. [54];
his offers on paper, ib.;
looks with suspicion on the projected conference at Bayonne, ii. [167];
is said to have threatened Charles IX., ii. [195];
he approves Alva's procrastinating policy respecting assistance to the Guises, ii. [208];
offers 200,000 crowns if Charles will continue the war against the Huguenots, ii. [228];
recalls his troops, ii. [342];
opposes the peace, ii. [360], [365];
his ambassador leaves the French court in disgust, after giving away the silver plate Charles had given him, ii. [391];
his delight at hearing of the massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii., [536] seq. - Philippe, M., an inconsiderate minister at Cateau-Cambrésis, leads the iconoclasts, ii. [190];
- he is executed, ii. [191].
- Philippi, ii. [603].
- Pibrac, avocat-général, ii. [493].
- Picardy, the Duke of Longueville prevents the massacre of the Protestants from extending to, ii. [526].
- Pierre-Gourde, M. de, ii. [284].
- Piles, M. de, ii. [312];
- his brave defence of St. Jean d'Angely, ii. [340];
ravages the Spanish county of Roussillon, ii. [351], [355], [439];
his murder at the Louvre on St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [467]. - Pinart, ii. [623].
- Pithiviers, or Pluviers, captured by Condé, ii. [87];
- retaken by Guise, ii. [97].
- Pius IV., Pope, his solicitude respecting France, i. [548];
- sends the Cardinal of Ferrara as legate, ib.;
commends Philip II., i. [568];
praises Blaise de Montluc, by a brief, for his part in the massacre of Toulouse, ii. [54];
his bull against princely heretics, April 7, 1563, ii. [141]. - Pius V., Pope, is said to have threatened Charles IX., ii. [195];
- his nuncio tries to prevent peace being concluded with the Huguenots, ii. [228];
praises the Duke of Nemours for his severity, ii. [245];
approves by a bull the crusade at Toulouse, ii. [279];
his sanguinary injunctions after the battle of Jarnac, ii. [308], [309];
severely reproves Santa Fiore for sparing any heretics, ii. [335], [568];
his congratulatory letters after the battle of Moncontour, ii. [336];
recalls his troops ii. [342];
his bull against Queen Elizabeth, ii. [359];
opposes the peace ii. [360], [365], [369];
alarmed at the prospects of the Huguenot ascendancy in France, he despatches his nephew, the Cardinal of Alessandria, as legate, to Paris, ii. [400];
the king's assurances, ii. [400-403];
the conditions required for granting a dispensation for the marriage of Henry of Navarre and Margaret of Valois, ii. [410], note;
gives no dispensation until after the marriage, his bull being dated Oct 27, 1572, ii. [427];
his letters to Charles, Catharine, Anjou, etc., instigating them to exterminate the heretics, ii. [564], seq.;
his thirst for Huguenot blood, ii. [567], [568];
redeems the Huguenot captives of Mornas in order to have the satisfaction of ordering their public execution, ii. [568]. - Placard, the, of 1534. Féret sent to Neufchâtel to have it printed, i. [164];
- its authorship, ib.;
its publication opposed by Courault and other prudent reformers, i. [165];
its contents, ib.;
it produces great popular excitement in Paris, i. [167];
a copy posted on the door of the king's bedchamber, ib.;
anger of Francis I., ib.;
barbarous executions consequent upon it, i. [171], [177];
marks an epoch in the history of the Huguenots, i. [193]. - Placard, the year of the, i. [164], etc.
- Placards and pasquinades, both for and against the reformed doctrines, i. [163].
- Place, Pierre de la, President of the Cour d'Aides, and a historian, murdered in the massacre at Paris, ii. [479].
- Plague, the, in Paris and Orleans, ii. [85].
- Planche, Regnier de la, consulted by Catharine de' Medici, i. [410].
- Pleasantries, Huguenot, ii. 192.
- Plessis Mornay, Philippe du, writes for Coligny a memorial on the Flemish project, ii. [416].
- Poissy, the prelates at, i. [493];
- Beza and other French Protestants invited to a conference, i. [494];
wrangling of the prelates, i. [499];
their demand, i. [542];
their character, i. [547]. - Poissy, the Colloquy of, the Huguenots petition for fair treatment at, i. [505];
- vexatious delay, i. [506];
the Huguenots determine to leave unless their petition is granted, i. [507];
an informal decree in their favor, ib.;
the last efforts of the Sorbonne to prevent the conference prove abortive, i. [508];
the Huguenot ministers and delegates of churches proceed from St. Germain to Poissy, i. [509];
list of the former, ib.;
the assembly in the nuns' refectory, i. [510];
the prelates, i. [511];
diffidence of Beza, i. [512];
Chancellor L'Hospital's oration at the opening, ib.;
the Huguenots are summoned, i. [513];
a cardinal's sneer and Beza's retort, i. [514];
Beza's prayer and address, i. [514-521];
he is interrupted by the theologians of the Sorbonne with cries of "Blasphemy!" i. [519];
Cardinal Tournon tries to cut short the conference, i. [521];
but Catharine declines to permit its interruption, i. [522];
advantages gained, ib.;
the prelates' notion of a conference, i. [526];
arrival of Peter Martyr, i. [527];
Cardinal Lorraine replies to Beza, i. [528];
Cardinal Tournon's new demand, i. [529];
Beza asks a hearing, ib.;
he replies, i. [532], [533];
speeches of Claude D'Espense and Claude de Sainctes, i. [532];
Cardinal Lorraine's demand that the Huguenot ministers should subscribe to the Augsburg Confession, i. [533];
Beza's reply, i. [533-565];
anger of the prelates, i. [536];
speeches of Martyr and Lainez, i. [536];
close of the colloquy, i. [537];
is followed by a private conference, i. [538];
and the arrival of five Protestant theologians from Germany, i. [544];
causes of the failure of the colloquy, i. [546]. - Poitiers, demands of the clergy at, i. [431];
- captured by the king, ii. [71];
siege of, by the Huguenots, ii. [324], [325]. - Poland, news of the massacre, how received in, ii. [553];
- Henry of Anjou elected king, ii. [593];
ambassadors from, come to France, ii. [598];
their magnificent reception, ib. - "Politiques," or Malcontents, the party of the, ii. [615];
- their unsuccessful rising, ii. [625].
- Poltrot, Jean, de Mérey, assassinates François de Guise, ii. [103];
- his history, ii. [104];
his torture and execution, ii. [105];
accuses Beza and Coligny of having instigated the murder, ii. [106]. - Poncher, Bishop of Paris, i. [71].
- Pons, ii. [283].
- Pont, Baron du, ii. [476].
- Popincourt, a Protestant place of worship at Paris, destroyed by Constable Montmorency, ii. [37].
- Populace, cruelty of, i. [366].
- Porcien, the Prince of, ii. [193];
- attempt to assassinate, ii. [194].
- Poulain, Poulin, or Polin, otherwise called Baron de la Garde, i. [246];
- ii. [361], [576].
- Pragmatic Sanction of St Louis, i. [26];
- of Bourges, i. [29], [30];
anger of the Pope at, i. [31];
abrogated, i. [32];
re-enacted, i. [33], [35];
abrogated by Francis I., i. [36];
still recognized by parliament, i. [40];
its restoration demanded, i. [459]. -
Pré aux Clercs, the public grounds of the university, psalm-singing on the, i. [314].
- Prelates, French, cited to Rome and condemned, ii. [141].
- Prerogative, royal, books upon, ii. [615], [616].
- Presidial judges, no appeal from their decisions in cases of heresy, i. [279].
- Primacy of France divided between the Archbishops of Lyons and Sens, i. [118].
- Princes, scanty revenues of, i. [8].
- Prior, the Grand, of France, i. [269];
- at Saverne, ii. [13].
- Privas, a Huguenot place of refuge, ii. [280].
- Processions, indecent, i. [59];
- expiatory, i. [142], and especially, i. [173], etc.;
to intercede for help in the war against La Rochelle, ii. [592]. - Profane oaths a test of Catholicity, ii. [134], [585].
- Profligacy of the court, the, ii. [132], note;
- alienation of, from the Huguenots, ii. [133].
- Protestants of France, appeal to the Swiss and Germans, i. [191];
- persecuted in various places, i. [216], [217];
the tongues of the victims cut out, i. [217];
or iron balls forced into their mouths, i. [257];
place a remonstrance in the chamber of Henry II., i. [308];
they appeal to Catharine de' Medici, i. [362];
a second and more urgent appeal, i. [364]. See Huguenots. - Protestantism, causes of its sudden development in the last years of Henry II. and the reign of Francis II., i. [399-403].
- Provence, Huguenots of, under Mouvans, i. [407];
- disorders and bloodshed in, ii. [47];
saved from witnessing a massacre of the Protestants in 1572 by the magnanimity of the Count de Tende, ii. [527];
demands of the tiers état of, ii. [603]. - Provins, preaching of friars at, ii. [5], [6], [279];
- intolerance at, ii. [191], [241], [242].
- Psalms, versified by Marot and Beza, sung on the Pré aux Clercs, i. [314];
- indignation of Henry II. at, i. [315];
set to music for worship by Bourgeois and others, especially by Goudimel, in several parts, ii. [517], note. - Puigaillard, ii. [503], [504], [512], [513], [617].
- Punishments, barbarous, i. [45];
- especially for heresy, i. [46].
- Puyroche, M., his monograph on the massacre at Lyons, ii. [513], note.
Q.