- Quercu, or De Chesne, i. [23], [50].
- Quintin, Jean, orator for the clergy in the States General of Orleans, makes a speech of insufferable arrogance, i. [458];
- he pictures the sad straits of the clergy, and asks for the restoration of the Pragmatic Sanction, i. [459];
his word for the down-trodden people, i. [460];
he is compelled to apologize to Admiral Coligny, ib.
R.
- Rabasteins, massacre of the garrison of, ii. [361].
- Ramée, Pierre de la, or Ramus, assassinated at the instigation of Charpentier, ii. [478].
- Rapin, a Protestant gentleman sent by the king, judicially murdered by the Parliament of Toulouse, ii. [239].
- "Rapin, Vengeance de," ii. [351].
- Rapin, Viscount of, ii. [230], note.
- Read, M. Charles, i. [446];
- ii. [569].
- Rector of the university, i. [22].
- Reform, abortive efforts at, i. [61].
- Reformation, the French, becomes a popular movement, i. [196].
- Regnier, a Huguenot gentleman of Quercy, spared in the massacre at Paris, through the magnanimity of his personal enemy Vezins, ii. [480];
- by his bravery and determination saves Montauban for the Huguenots, ii. [574], [575].
- "Reiters," i. [11].
- Relics, reverence for, i. [49];
- great variety of, i. [50].
- Renaissance, era of the, i. [41].
- Renaudie, Godefroy de Barry, Seigneur de la, leader in the Tumult of Amboise, i. [379];
- assembles the malcontents at Nantes, i. [380];
is betrayed by Des Avenelles, i. [382];
his death, i. [389];
his body hung and quartered, i. [392];
inscription over his remains, ib.;
an alleged admission of disloyal intentions on his part, i. [394]. - Renée de France, Duchess of Ferrara, her hospitality, i, [179];
- her court, i. [205];
her eulogy by Brantôme, i. [206];
on her return to France, rebukes the Duke of Guise, i. [437];
affords a safe asylum to the Huguenots at Montargis, ii. [73], [110], [111], [327];
her letter to Calvin respecting the Duke of Guise, ii. [109];
her answer to Malicorne, ii. [111];
her aversion to war, ii. [327], note. - Renel, Marquis de, murdered by Bussy d'Amboise, ii. [472].
- Rentigny, Madame de, courageously refuses a pardon based on recantation, and is executed as a Protestant, i. [311].
- Renty, ii. [352].
- Representative government, long break in history of, i. [13];
- demanded by the "tiers état" at Pontoise, i. [492].
- Rescue of Protestant prisoners, i. [367].
-
Retz, De, Count and Marshal (Albert de Gondy), ii. [339], [443];
- at the blood council, ii. [447], [448], [449];
obtains the office and property of Loménie, including Versailles, and then causes him to be put to death, ii. [485], [527], [638]. - Re-union of Romanists and Protestants, hopes of, long entertained, i. [159].
- Rhinegrave, the, ii. [71], [298], [334].
- Ribault, Jean leads the first expedition to colonize Florida, ii. [199];
- returns to Florida in command of the third expedition, ii. [200];
flayed and quartered by the Spaniards, ib. - Rivière, M. de la, first Protestant pastor of Paris, i. [295];
- he is treacherously murdered, at Angers, by M. de Montsoreau, ii. [512].
- Roanne, la, the common prison of Lyons, ii. [515];
- butchery of Huguenots in, ii. [516].
- Roche Abeille, La, Huguenot victory at, ii. [319].
- Rochefort, De, orator for the noblesse in the States General of Orleans, i. [457].
- Rochefoucauld, Count de la, escapes into Germany, hearing of the proscriptive plans of the court, i. [442];
- ii. [349], [428], [439], [451];
he is murdered on St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [470]. - Rochelle, La, the city of, secured for the Prince of Condé by the skill of François de la Noue, ii. [226], seq.;
- the alleged payment to Catharine de' Medici, in order to be free from a garrison, ib., note;
execution of Protestants at, in 1552, ii. [227], [272];
refuses, in 1568, to receive a garrison, ii. [250];
its government and privileges, ii. [270-273];
iconoclasm at, ii. [272];
places for Protestant worship in, accorded by Charles IX., ib.;
Constable Montmorency's roughness, ii. [273];
becomes a city of refuge, ii. [280];
strengthens its works, ii. [342];
the tidings of the massacre at Bordeaux determine it to refuse to admit the emissaries of Charles IX., ii. [524];
in Protestant hands, ii. [573];
a great number of refugees in, ii. [576];
refuses to receive Biron, who is sent as royal governor, ii. [578];
first skirmish before, ii. [579];
mission of La Noue to, ib.;
he is badly received, ii. [580];
the Rochellois reject the royal proposals, ii. [581];
they make advances to La Noue, ib.;
description of La Rochelle, ii. [582], [583];
resoluteness of the Rochellois, ii. [583];
their military strength, ii. [584];
they fight and pray, ii. [585];
bravery of the women, ii. [586];
determination of the inhabitants, ii. [587];
La Noue retires, ib.;
the promised aid from England miscarries, ii. [588];
great losses of the royal army before, ii. [591];
treacherous attempt upon, Dec., 1573, ii. [616];
the severe punishment for it approved by Charles IX., ii. [617];
resumes arms, at the persuasion of La Noue, in the beginning of the fifth religious war, 1574, ii. [622]. - Roche-sur-Yon, La, Prince of, his warning respecting the danger impending over the Huguenots from the designs adopted at Bayonne, ii. [197].
- Rochetti, Louis de, an inquisitor, becomes a Protestant and is burned alive at Toulouse i. [289].
- Roma, De, a Dominican monk, his threat, i. [76];
- his cruelty, i. [235].
- Roman Church, how far responsible for the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [562], seq.
- Romans, the Huguenots of, i. [404].
- Rome, quarrels of France with, i. [279];
- Protestants never more exposed to disaster than when such quarrels exist, ib.;
the couriers going to, stripped of their dispatches on the frontiers, i. [495];
rejoicings at, over the news of the massacre of the Protestants in France, ii. [530]. - Romorantin, the edict of, May, 1560, i. [410].
- Ronsard, the poet, takes the sword against the Huguenots, ii. [68].
- Roquefort, ii. [351].
- Rouen, capital of Normandy, persecution at, i. [217];
- rescue of a Protestant bookbinder at, i. [367];
Protestant assemblies in, i. [408];
seven thousand gather in the new market-place and sing psalms, i. [430];
besieged by the king, ii. [77];
makes a brave defence, ii. [79];
its fall, ib.;
vexatious delays in publishing the edict of Amboise at, ii. [129];
partiality of parliament, ii. [130];
its protest against the return of Protestant exiles, ii. [131];
it meets with a decided rebuff, ii. [131], [132];
riot when the edict of pacification of Longjumeau is published at, ii. [241];
troops quartered upon the Huguenots, ii. [244];
violence at, ii. [249];
Protestants attacked at, March 4, 1571, ii. [374];
massacre of, ii. [519-521]. - Roussel, Gérard, i. [74], [75], [83], [150], [151];
- retires to Strasbourg, i. [84];
his excessive caution, i. [85];
his theology and fortunes, i. [97];
his death, i. [98]. - Roussillon, county of, Spanish, ravaged by M. de Piles, ii. [351].
- Roussillon, declaration of Aug. 4, 1564, infringing upon the edict of pacification of Amboise, ii. [161], [162].
- Roy, Étienne le, a singer ii. [429], [431].
- "Royal council," the name given to meetings at which the king is not present, ii. [33].
- Roye, Éléonore de, wife of Louis de Condé, her grief and death, ii. [145], [303], note.
-
Roye, Madame de, mother-in-law of Condé, arrested, i. [437];
- but subsequently declared innocent, i. [465].
- Ruble, Baron de, his remarks respecting La Huguerye's misrepresentation of the character of the Queen of Navarre, ii. [425].
- Rubys, an agent in the massacre at Lyons, ii. [504], note, [514].
- Russanges, De, a goldsmith, betrays the Protestants of Paris, i. [360].
S.
- Sacramentarians excepted from the pardon extended in the Declaration of Coucy, i. [179].
- Sadolet, Bishop, his kindness to the Waldenses or Vaudois of Provence, i. [242].
- Sague, an agent of the King of Navarre, arrested, i. [424].
- Sainctes, Claude de, his speech at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [532];
- complains of Huguenot boldness, i. [570];
a violent advocate of persecution, ii. [254]. - "Saint," the prefix of, insisted upon by the Sorbonne, i. [223].
- Saint André, Jacques d'Albon, Marshal of, i. [266];
- his rapid advancement, i. [272];
makes terms with the Guises, i. [354];
his influence with Constable Montmorency, i. [469];
becomes one of the triumvirs, i. [470], [471];
he returns a defiant answer to Catharine de' Medici, when ordered to go to his government, ii. [27];
lays siege to and takes Bourges, ii. [71], [72];
is killed in the battle of Dreux, ii. [95];
enmity of Catharine de' Medici toward, ii. [97]. See Triumvirs. - Saint Denis, battle of, Nov. 10, 1567, ii. [213].
- Saint Étienne, ii. [353].
- Saint Germain, Conference of, 1561, i. [539];
- its article on the eucharist rejected by the Roman Catholic prelates, i. [541];
assembly of notables at, i. [574];
conference of, January 28, 1562, ii. [7];
its profitless discussions, ii. [8];
delight of Mouchy and his companions at its close, ii. [8], [9];
flight of the court from, ii. [626]. - Saint Germain, the edict of pacification of, ending the third civil war, Aug. 8, 1570, ii. [363];
- dissatisfaction of the clergy, ii. [365];
sincerity of the peace, ii. [367]. - Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the old abbey of, ii. [483], note.
- Saint Germain l'Auxerrois, church of, i. [174];
- bell of, ii. [455], [470], note.
- Saint Goard, ii. [537], [538].
- Saint Héran, Governor of Auvergne, his reported magnanimity, ii. [527].
- Saint Hippolyte, Wolfgang Schuch at, i. [116].
- Saint Jacques, Rue, affair of, Sept. 4, 1557, i. [303], [304];
- savage treatment of the prisoners, i. [305];
malicious rumors respecting Protestants, i. [306];
trials and executions, i. [307]. - Saint Jean d'Angely, ii. [312];
- disastrous siege of, by the Roman Catholic army, ii. [339], seq.
- Saint Lô, in Normandy, i. [408];
- ii. [631], [632].
- Saint Médard, the "tumult" of, i. [571], seq.
- Saint Michael's Day, the Huguenots to rise upon (Sept. 29, 1567), ii. [205];
- the secret leaks out, ii. [206].
- Saint Paul, François de, a minister at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [509].
- Saint Quentin, defeat of, August 10, 1557, i. [302].
- Saint Rémy, Nicole de, a mistress of Henry II., and a Spanish spy, suggests the marriage of Cardinal Bourbon in the contingency of the death of all Catharine de' Medici's sons, ii. [180], [181].
- Saint Romain, Archbishop of Aix, cited by the Pope, ii. [141], [161].
- Saint Romain, M. de, ii. [600].
- Saint Thomas, M. de, ii. [511].
- Sainte Chapelle, founded by Saint Louis, its relics, i. [174].
- Sainte Foy, De, or Arnauld Sorbin, a violent Roman Catholic preacher, ii. [254];
- instigates the massacre of Orleans, ii. [508];
acts as confessor of Charles IX. before his death, ii. [637]. - Sainte Gemme, La Noue's success at, ii. [361].
- Saintes, ii. [283], [361].
- Salcède, sentenced to be boiled alive for counterfeiting, i. [46].
- Salic law, the, a bit of pleasantry, ii. [208].
- Salignac, Abbé, confers with the Protestants at Poissy, i. [538];
- his professed sympathy with the Reformation, and his timidity, i. [538], [539].
- Salviati, papal nuncio in France, his testimony respecting the want of premeditation of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, and the king's ignorance, ii. [435], [436], [531], [535], [564].
- Sancerre refuses to admit a garrison, in 1568, ii. [250];
- ford near, ii. [269];
a Huguenot place of refuge, ii. [280];
fruitless siege of, by Martinengo, ii. [297];
siege of, in 1573, ii. [589];
incipient famine in, ii. [590];
terrible straits of, ii. [595], [596];
capitulation of, ii. [597]. - Sansac, ii. [325], [344].
- Santa Croce, Cardinal, sent as nuncio to France, i. [548];
- his reluctance, i. [549];
his alarm at the time of the assembly of notables at Saint Germain, i. [575];
he claims the surrender of Cardinal Châtillon to the Pope, ii. [228], [229]. -
Santa Fiore, pontifical general in France, his instructions, ii. [319], note;
- severely reproved by Pius V. for having spared any heretics that fell into his hands, ii. [335], [568];
recalled, [342]. - Sapin, a member of the Parliament of Paris, executed by order of Condé, by way of retaliation, ii. [80].
- Saumur, ii. [324], [503], [504], [512].
- Saunier, or Saulnier, Matthieu, i. [90].
- Saverne, conference of, between the Duke of Würtemberg and the Guises, ii, [13-17].
- Savoy, Duke of, intercession of Charles IX. with, in behalf of the Waldenses, or Vaudois, of Piedmont, ii. [390];
- collects an army to overwhelm Geneva, ii. [557].
- Saxony, the elector of, refuses to let Melanchthon go to France, i. [185];
- his severe language to the reformer, ib.;
refuses to help the Huguenots, ii. [217]. - Schism, the, i. [28].
- Schmidt, Professor C., on Roussel's mysticism, i. [97].
- Schomberg, Gaspard de, a negotiator, ii. [71], [290], [550], [551], [608].
- Schuch, Wolfgang, tragic end of, i. [116].
- Sebastian, King of Portugal, affronts Charles IX. by declining the hand of Margaret of Valois, ii. [379].
- Sébeville, Pierre de, i. [83].
- Séguier, President of the Parliament of Paris, makes a manly speech against the introduction of the Spanish Inquisition, i. [289], [290];
- his leaning to Protestantism, i. [329].
- Senlis, the bishop of, translates the "Hours" of Margaret of Angoulême in a Protestant fashion, i. [151].
- Sens, provincial council of, i. [138];
- its decrees against heresy, i. [139];
persecution at, i. [256];
massacre of, ii. [46], [55]. - Serbelloni, Fabrizio, cousin of Pope Pius IV., massacres the Protestants at Orange, ii. [48], [49].
- Serignan, Viscount of, ii. [230], note.
- Sermons, seditious and fanatical, ii. [5], [240], [279], [523].
- Serres, Jean de, the historian, ii. [572], note, et al.
- Servetus, Michael, burned contrary to the desire of Calvin, i. [212];
- his execution approved by Melanchthon and other reformers, ib.
- Sevyn, Pierre de, a Protestant member of the Parliament of Bordeaux, killed, ii. [524].
- Shakerley, Thomas, organist of the Cardinal of Ferrara, papal legate: he is a spy in the pay of Throkmorton, i. [566], note;
- his account of the French court, ib.
- Sigismund Augustus, King of Poland, letter of Pius V. to him, ii. [564].
- Sismondi, M. de, on the massacre of Vassy, ii. [24].
- Smith, Sir Thomas, his account of the riotous conduct of the Parisian mob, ii. [96], [97];
- his tribute to the Duke of Guise, ii. [112];
his remonstrance against the edict of pacification of Amboise, ii. [116];
his altercation with Sir Nicholas Throkmorton, ii. [128];
his words as to the Prince of Condé, ii. [145], note;
his view of the design of the "progress" of Charles IX., ii [158];
on the growth of Protestantism in France, ii. [182];
his account of an interview with the Cardinal of Lorraine, ii. [321], note;
his account of the offer of a ring by Charles IX. to the Cardinal of Alessandria, ii. [402], note;
his plea for Queen Elizabeth, ii. [422], note;
his letter respecting the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [546]. - Soldan, Professor, his view respecting the cities offered by the king to the Huguenots, ii. [358], note;
- as to the terms of the edict of Boulogne, ii. [594], note.
- Soleure, the canton of, ii. [557].
- Sommières, brave defence of, ii. [589].
- Sorbin. See Sainte Foy, De.
- Sorbonne, or theological faculty, i. [22];
- its great authority, i. [23];
its intolerance, i. [24];
declaration of, i. [71];
condemns Luther's teachings, i. [108];
its recommendations, i. [110];
reprobates Melanchthon's articles, i. [187];
publishes twenty-five articles of faith, March 10, 1543, i. [223];
denounces the Parliament of Paris as heretical, i. [328];
despatches Artus Désiré to invoke the aid of Philip II., i. [467], [468];
declares it impossible to have two religions in a kingdom without confusion, ii. [228]. - Soubise, M. de, entreats Catharine to throw herself into the arms of the Huguenots, ii. [31];
- at Lyons, ii. [102];
his humanity, ib.;
taken prisoner at Jarnac, ii. [306]. - Souillac, Huguenot reverse at, ii. [348].
- Spanish ambassador's house in Paris the centre of intrigue, ii. [181].
- Spanish troops recalled, ii. [342].
- States General an object of suspicion, i. [11];
- rarely convoked, i. [12];
compensating advantages, i. [13]. - States General of Orleans, elections for, i. [430];
- complaints inserted in the "cahiers," ib.;
demands of clergy at Poitiers, i. [431];
opening of, Dec. 13, 1560, i. [454];
the chancellor's address, i. [455];
Cardinal Lorraine's effrontery, i. [456];
De Rochefort's address for the noblesse, ib.;
L'Ange for the tiers état, i. [458];
Jean Quintin's arrogant speech for the clergy, ib.;
Admiral Coligny presents a Huguenot petition, i. [461];
the States prorogued, ib.;
meanwhile persecution to cease, i. [462];
meet at Pontoise, i. [488];
speech of Bretagne,vierg of Autun, for the tiers état, i. [489];
demands of the tiers état, i. [490];
representative government, religious toleration and an impartial council insisted upon, i. [492];
the prelates at Poissy, i. [493];
an invitation extended to Beza and other Frenchmen, i. [494]. - Strasbourg intercedes for Protestants of France, i. [191];
- but receives an unsatisfactory reply, i. [192].
- Strozzi, Philip, ii. [319], [576], [583], [584], [623].
- Stuart, a Scotch gentleman, said to have shot the constable in the battle of Saint Denis, ii. [215];
- murdered in cold blood at Jarnac, ii. [304].
- Sturm, John, lecturer in Paris, and afterward rector of the University of Strasbourg, writes to beg Melanchthon to come to France, i. [182].
- Sully, Maximilien de Béthune, Duke of, his escape in the massacre of Paris, ii. [477].
- Sureau du Rosier, Hugues, an instrument in the forced conversion of Navarre and Condé, ii. [499].
- Suriano, Michel, a Venetian ambassador, his account of the Protestant ministers, i. [463];
- his lugubrious account of France, i. [569].
- Swiss, hesitation of the Protestant cantons to seem to countenance rebellion, ii. [56];
- bravery at the battle of Dreux, ii. [94];
levy of six thousand men sent for, ii. [196];
causes distrust among the Huguenots, ib.;
they escort Charles IX. to Paris, ii. [207];
after the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. [558]. - Sympathy of the judges with the Protestants, i. [300].
- Synod, the first national, held in Paris, May, 1559, i. [335-337];
- the second, Poitiers, March 10, 1561, ii. [62], note;
the third, Orleans, April 25, 1562, ii. [61];
the seventh, La Rochelle, April 2-11, 1571, ii. [387].
T.
- Tadon, ii. [580].
- Tailor of the Rue St. Antoine, his bold speech and execution, i. [276], [277].
- Talaize, ii. [516], note.
- Tanquerel, a doctor of the Sorbonne, declares that the Pope can depose heretical kings, i. [566].
- Tavannes, Gaspard de, Marshal, remonstrates against the peace, and favors the revival of the confraternities, ii. [245], [246];
- author of plot to seize Condé and Coligny, ii. [266], [339];
the king's estimate of his character, ii. [409];
his blunt advice, ii. [429], note;
at the council of blood, ii. [447], [448] note;
he rides through the streets of Paris encouraging the "blood-letting," ii. [476]. - Teil, a Protestant captain, ii. [329].
- Téligny, ii. [256], [357], [359], [363], [384];
- marries Louise de Châtillon, daughter of Admiral Coligny, ii. [387];
a conversation with Charles IX., ii. [408], [409];
opposes the proposition of the Vidame de Chartres to leave Paris, as a mark of distrust of the king, ii. [446], [453];
he is among the first victims of the massacre, ii. [471]. - Tende, the Count of, ii. [298];
- he refuses to massacre the Protestants in Provence, ii. [527];
his speedy death attributed to poison, ib. - Terrides, a captain of Anjou, ii. [323].
- Tessier, ii. [509].
- Theatrical effects, i. [58].
- Theophilus, letter signed, to Catharine de' Medici, i. [409].
- Thionville, brilliant capture of, i. [321].
- Thoré, a younger Montmorency, ii. [441], [452], [625], [628].
- Thou, Christopher de, First President of the Parliament of Paris, member of the commission that condemned Condé to death, i [438];
- his son's attempt to clear the memory of, i. [440];
ii. [371];
his unmanly speech at the "lit de justice," when Charles IX. assumes the responsibility of the massacre, ii. [493];
presides at the trial of La Mole and Coconnas, ii [629]. - Thou, Jacques Auguste, de, the historian, son of Christopher, ii. [330], note;
- at the marriage of Henry of Navarre to Margaret of Valois, ii. [428];
on his father's part in the action of parliament at the time of the massacre, ii. [493], note. - Thouars falls into the hands of the Huguenots, ii. [282].
- "Three Bishoprics," the, i. [66].
- Throkmorton, Sir Nicholas, English ambassador, his account of the wound of Henry II., i. [340];
- of the dismay after the Tumult of Amboise, i. [387];
of the perplexity of the Guises, i. [413];
his information respecting plans of Philip II. and the Pope, i. [426], [427];
respecting the illness of Francis II., i. [443];
his account of matters at the French court, February 16, 1562, ii. [17], [18];
urges Cecil to induce Queen Elizabeth to put away the candles and cross from the altar in her royal chapel, ii. [19];
regards the Huguenots as the stronger party, ii. [42];
entreats Queen Elizabeth to inspirit Catharine de' Medici, ii. [47];
invokes her aid for the Huguenots, ii. [55];
is captured by the Huguenots and remains with them, ii. [72];
is hated by Catharine de' Medici, ib.;
his frankness with Queen Elizabeth, ii. [74];
he asks her to help heartily, ii. [75];
his altercation with Sir Thomas Smith, ii. [128];
Chantonnay's boast that with his assistance he could overturn the state, ii. [181]. - Tiers État, its patient endurance, i. [13];
- its radical demands at the States General of Pontoise, i. [490] seq.
- "Tiger, Letter to the, of France," a virulent pamphlet against Cardinal Lorraine, i. [444-448];
- written by François Hotman, i. [446].
- Title-pages, deceptive, i. [275].
- Toledo, Don Frederick of, routs Genlis and takes him prisoner, ii. [415].
- Toleration, religious, demanded by the tiers état at Pontoise, i. [492].
- Toulouse, execution of Jean de Caturce at, i. [150];
- character of the city according to Protestant and Roman Catholic authors, ib;
massacre of Huguenots at, May, 1562, ii. [52-54];
commemorated in 1762, but the commemoration forbidden by the French government in 1862, ii. [54];
the parliament, instead of publishing the edict of Amboise, forbids the profession of the reformed religion, ii. [128];
the parliament of, murders judicially M. Rapin, a Protestant gentleman sent by the king, ii. [239];
reluctantly registers the edict of pacification of 1568, ii. [240];
a "crusade" preached at, ii. [278];
massacre of, in 1572, ii. [521], [522]. - Tour, Jean de la, a minister at the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [509].
- Tournon, Cardinal of, i. [139];
- his arguments to dissuade Francis I. from intercourse with heretics, i. [188];
instigates the persecution of Protestants, i. [282];
his reported bad faith, i. [285];
tries to cut short the Colloquy of Poissy, i. [521];
his new demand, i. [529]. - Tours, the Protestants of, attacked while at worship, ii. [162].
- Tourtray M. de, executed on the Place de Grève, ii. [628].
- Toussain, Pierre, on the timidity of Lefèvre and Gérard Roussel, i. [86].
- Trade despised, i. [15].
- Traps for heretics, i. [367].
- Treacherous diplomacy, ii. [220].
- Treaty of amity between Charles IX. and Queen Elizabeth, April 18, 1572, ii. [398].
- Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis, i. [322].
- Trent, the Council of, closes its sessions, Dec., 1563, ii. [152];
- confirms the abuses of the Roman Catholic Church, and renders indelible the line of demarcation between the two religions, ii. [153], [154];
Cardinal Lorraine makes a fruitless attempt to have the decrees received in France, ii. [155];
able treatise of Du Moulin against them, ii. [155], [156]. - Triumvirate, the, formed by Montmorency, Guise, and St. André, i. [470], [471];
- a spurious statement of its objects, i. [471-473];
it retires in disgust from Saint Germain, i. [556]. - Triumvirs, petition of, ii. [58];
- they amuse Condé before Paris with negotiations until reinforcements arrive, ii. [90], [91];
they consult Catharine de' Medici respecting the engagement, ii. [92], [93]. - "Trivium" and "quadrivium," i. [20].
- Trouillas, an advocate, pretended orgies in the house of, i. [365];
- he insists on being put on trial for these orgies, and not for heresy, and is tardily released, i. [365], [366].
- Troyes, progress of Protestantism in, i. [562];
- great crowds at the Huguenot services, ii. [11];
massacre of Huguenots in the prisons of, ii. [128], [129];
formation of the "Christian and Royal League" at, ii. [246];
violence at, ii. [249];
Protestants returning from worship attacked, ii. [432], [433];
massacre of, Sept 4, 1572, ii. [507], [508]. - Truchares, a political Huguenot, mayor of La Rochelle, ii. [227].
- Truchon, a judge, much edified by the signs of concord, just before the outbreak of the second civil war, ii. [197].
- Tuileries, new palace of the, built by Catharine de' Medici, ii. [598].
- Turenne, ii. [625].
- Turks, French civilities to, ii. [181].
- Tytler-Fraser, Mr., ii. [291], note.
U.
- University of Paris, i. [20];
- the four nations, i. [21];
the faculties, ib.;
chancellor and rector, i. [22];
number of its students, i. [24];
gives name to a quarter of the city, i. [24];
barbarism at, i. [42]. - Unlettered persons forbidden to discuss matters of faith, i. [281].
- Uzès, Duke of, ii. [604].
V.