Страница - 92Страница - 94- 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]