[656] Driven from Scotland, in many cases, by James I.'s attempt to introduce the English Liturgy into the Scottish churches. Robert Monteith, author of the Histoire des Troubles de la Grande Bretagne, was professor of philosophy at Saumur for four years (Dict. Nat. Biog.).

[657] He composed in French A faithful and familiar exposition of Ecclesiastes, Geneva, 1557; cp. Dict. Nat. Biog., ad nom.

[658] Cp. Nicolas, Histoire de l'ancienne Académie de Montauban, Montauban, 1885.

[659] There was an early Academy at Lausanne which emigrated to Geneva and assured the latter's success (1559); cp. H. Vuilleumier, L'Académie de Lausanne, Lausanne, 1891.

[660] Essai de remarques particulières sur la langue françoise pour la ville de Genève, 1691. Quoted by Borgeaud, Histoire de l'Université de Genève, 1900, p. 445.

[661] C. Borgeaud, op. cit.

[662] They were united at Nîmes in 1617, and finally suppressed in 1644.

[663] Pattison, Isaac Casaubon, Oxford, 1892, pp. 40-42, 155. On the English at Geneva, cp. ibid. p. 20.

[664] Autobiography, ed. Sir S. Lee (2nd ed., 1906), p. 56.

[665] T. Scot, Philomythie, London, 1622.