[77] Benrath, Bernardino Ochino of Siena, Eng. tr. 1876. pp. 268–72, 287–92. [↑]
[78] McCrie, p. 230; Audin, ch. xxxv; Benrath, Bernardino Ochino, p. 297. [↑]
[79] Cp. Pusey, Histor. Enquiry into Ger. Rationalism, 1828, p. 14 sq.; Beard, p. 183. [↑]
[80] Stähelin, ii. 337. Biandrata went to Hungary, where, as we saw (p. 421), he turned persecutor, and then Protestant. [↑]
[81] Mosheim, 16 Cent. sec. iii, pt. ii, ch. iv, § 6; Audin, pp. 394–99; Aretius, Short Hist. of Valentinus Gentilis, Eng. tr. 1696; Stähelin, ii, 338–45; Wallace, Antitrinitarian Biography, ii, Art. 20. [↑]
[82] See the Historical Account of his life and trial in the Harleian Miscellany, iv, 168 sq. [↑]
[83] See Stähelin, ii, 293, 304, etc. [↑]
[84] Cp. Menzel, Geschichte der Deutschen, 3te Aufl. Cap. 417; A. F. Pollard, in Cam. Mod. Hist., vol. ii, ch. vii, p. 223; The Dynamics of Religion, pp. 6–8. [↑]
[85] See Beard, Hibbert Lectures, pp. 189–90, 196. The same avowal was made in the eighteenth century by Mosheim (16 Cent. sec. iii, pt. ii, § 5). [↑]
[86] F. A. Cox, Life of Melanchthon, 1815, p. 544, citing Adam, Vitæ philosophorum (p. 934). Cp. pp. 528–29. [↑]