[INDEX.]

Aare, The, Swiss river, boundary between the Provinces of Mainz and Besançon, [23].
Abjuration, Act of, declaration of Dutch Independence, [267].
Abjuration of Papal Supremacy by the Church of England, [332].
Act of Restraint of Appeals (England), [329].
Act abolishing Diversity of opinion (England), [348].
[Act of Uniformity] (Edward VI.), The First, [357], [360].
Act of Uniformity (Edward VI.), The Second, [363].
Act de heretico comburendo, [374].
[Act of Uniformity] (Elizabeth), [390] ff., [395], [401] f., [403], [419].
Act of Supremacy (Elizabeth), [390] ff., [393] f., [397], [401], [408] f.
Acts completing England’s secession from Rome, [331].
Acts of Henry VIII. revived by Elizabeth, [393] and n.
Adda, The (Val Tellina), [50].
Adrian VI., his ideas of the need of reformation, [496];
a Dutch Ximenes, [497];
an Inquisitor, [497];
in Rome, [497];
tries to reform the Curia, [498];
the martyr of the Spanish Reformation, [499];
failure in life, success after death, [500]; [494], [610].
Advertisements of Archbishop Parker, [406], [418] n.
Adroyer, The, the chief Magistrate of Bern, [41] n.
Agen, Reformed church at, [166].
Agrarian troubles in England, [345], [359], [387].
Agrippa, Cornelius, [64] n.
Aigle, a district of the Pays de Vand, [67];
Farel at, [67], [69].
Albert of Brandenburg, [3].
Alcala, College at, [491] f., [537].
Alciat, André, lecturer in Law, [95].
Aleander, Hieronymus, Papal Legate at Worms, in the Netherlands, [229].
Alençon, The Duke of, Francis, till [157]4, then Duke of Anjou, [179] n., [203].
Alexander, of Arles, Peter, [358].
[Alva], Ferdinando Alvarez de Toledo, Duke of, [193], [255] f., [259], [262].
Amboise, Town of, [146], [310];
Conspiracy of, [176];
Edict of, [192].
Ammonius, Andreas, Latin secretary to Henry VIII., [316].
Amsterdam, [236], [239].
Anabaptists, The, outside the Peace of Augsburg, [5];
in Zurich, [35];
in the Netherlands, [224] ff.;
their origin, [235], [423], [432] ff.;
places of refuge, [238], [451];
attempts to gain a town in the Netherlands, [238] f.;
old mood of describing, [430] f., [431] n.;
connection with the social revolt, [432];
with the Brethren, [432];
their organisation, [435];
their hymns, [435], [449] ff.;
their strong individuality, [437];
views on Passive Resistance, [438];
their evangelists, [439];
repudiated a State Church, [442];
their “separation” from the world, [443], [461];
persecutions, [236] ff., [445];
in Switzerland, [445] f.;
in Münster, [459] ff.;
polygamy among, [463] ff.;
their views on Marriage, [464].
Andelot, Francis de, brother of Admiral Coligny, [172], [194].
Anduze, Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Angeles, Francisco de los, and Luther [495].
Angers, Reformed church at, [166].
Anhalt becomes Calvinist, [3].
Anna Reinhard and Zwingli, [36].
Annates (England), [328], [331].
Anne of Cleves, [342], [347], [349].
Anti-Trinitarians, [422], [424] f.
Antoine de Bourbon, titular King of Navarre, [20], [172], [175], [178], [181], [186], [192]. See [Bourbon].
Antwerp, [234], [254] f.
Apology, The, of William of Orange, [267].
Apostles, The Twelve (nickname), [252].
Apostolic Tribunal (Inquisition), The, [598].
Appenzell (Swiss Canton), [22], [46], [49].
Aquila, Bishop of, Ambassador of Philip II., [386].
Archeteles (treatise by Zwingli), [33].
Areopagitica, The, [13].
Armada, Destruction of the Spanish, [212].
Arran, the Earl of, [281], [283], [298] n.
Arthur, Prince of Wales, married to Catharine of Aragon, [322].
Articles of Geneva, [105] ff., [124].
Articles, The Ten, [333] ff.
Articles, The Six, [348] f., [355], [358].
Articles, The Forty-two, [363], [411].
Articles, [The Thirty-eight], [414] f.
Articles, [The Thirty-nine], [363], [411] ff., [415], [418].
Articles of the order and government of the Church, The, [417].
Articles, The Twenty-one (Anabaptist), [459], [465].
Articles, The Twelve (The Apostles’ Creed), [518].
Arundel, the Constitutions of Thomas, [337].
Assembly of Notables (France), [177].
Attrition and Contrition, as defined at the Council of Trent, [584].
Aubenas, Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Aubigny, Reformed church at, [166].
Augsburg, Peace of, Elizabeth’s desire to take advantage of, [397], [405] n., [408], [414].
Augsburg Confession, [124], [341], [397], [415], [576].
Augsburg Interim, [567]; [20].
Ausberger, Jacob, Reformer of Mühlhausen, [43].
Aventuriers, Les, in France, [144].
Aytta, Vigilius van, member of the Council of State for the Netherlands, [243].
Babylonian Captivity of the Church of Christ, [334], [494].
Baden (Switzerland), Diet at, [47].
Bale, John, [318].
Band subscrivit by the Lords, [289].
Baptism, Ceremony of, according to the Reformed rite, [69];
first instance in Geneva, [83];
Anabaptist mode of administering, [435];
mode in Münster, [461].
Baptism, Doctrine of, defined at the Council of Trent, [581].
Barcelona, Ladies of, Ignatius’ earliest disciples, [533], [561].
Barlaymont, Baron de (Netherlands), [243], [250], [255].
Barnes, Dr. Robert (England), [18], [340], [349].
Barricades, the day of (France), [211].
Barry, Godfrey de, Seigneur de la Renaudie (France), [175].
Basel, Bishopric of, [23], [64].
Basel, Town of, the Reformation in, [38];
accepts Calvinism, [60];
regulation of morals in, [109]; [22], [25], [122].
Bastille, The, used as a prison for Protestants, [164].
Bauny, qui tollit peccata mundi per definitionem, [556].
Bavaria, [48];
Anabaptists in, [449].
Bearnese, The, Henry IV. of France, [218].
Beatæ, Spanish Mystics, [530].
Beaton, David, Archbishop of St Andrews, Cardinal, [282] f., [345] n.
Beatus, Rhenanus, Humanist, [18] n.
Béda, Noël, leader of the Romanist party in the University of Paris, [94], [535].
[Beggars], The, [250] ff. See [Wild-Beggars], [Sea-Beggars].
Bekentones des globens und lebens der gemein Criste zu Monster, [464].
Benedictines, Reformation among the, [509].
Bentheim Confession, [4] n.
Ber, Hans, Anabaptist evangelist, [439].
Bern, The Reformation in, [40];
The Ten Theses of, [42], [45] f., [103];
protects Swiss Protestants, [45], [63];
seeks to evangelise Western Switzerland, [63], [66], [103] f.;
Liturgy of, in use in French Switzerland, [69], [117], [118] ff.;
demands a Public Disputation at Lausanne, [70];
Synod at, [73];
protects the Evangelicals of Geneva, [79] f.;
conquers the Pays de Vaud, [89];
regulation of morals in, [109];
commanding position in Western Switzerland, [116];
Consistory of, [117] ff.;
intercedes with Geneva on Calvin’s behalf, [121] ff.; [22], [48], [113], [129].
Bernard, Jacques, minister at Geneva, [131] n.
Berquin, Louis, a French Lutheran, [18], [143].
Besançon, Archiepiscopal Province of, [23].
Bèze, Théodore de (Beza), [95], [155], [313];
at Poissy, [186] ff.
Bible, The English, [335], [337] ff., [389].
Biel or Bienne (Swiss Canton), [46];
becomes Calvinist, [60].
Bishops’ Book, The, [10], [319], [336].
Blaarer (Blauer), Ambrose, [43], [47].
Blandrata, Giorgio, Anti-Trinitarian, [426].
Blast ... against the monstrous Regiment of Women, [292], [296].
Blaurock (Brother Jörg), [446] f.
Blois, town of, [146], [166].
Bloody Tribunal, The, [255].
Boabdilla, Nicholas, Jesuit, [537], [557].
[Bockelson], Jan (Jan of Leyden), arrived at Münster, [459];
leader in Münster, [463] ff.;
introduced polygamy [465] ff.
Bocquet, Christopher, a Dominican preacher in Geneva, [75];
called a Lutheran preacher, [75] n.
Boekbinder, Bartholomaeus, disciple of Jan Matthys, [459].
Boleyn, Anne, [324], [331].
Bolsec, Jerome (Geneva), [130].
Bonner, Edmund, Bishop of London, [369], [374] f., [380] f., [389].
Book of Common Order, The (Scotland), [306].
Book of Communion, The (England), [356].
Book of Discipline, The First (Scotland), [307].
Books, Index of Prohibited. See [Index].
Borgia, Francis, Duke of Candia, a Jesuit, [556].
Borromean League (Switzerland), [60].
Borromeo, Carlo, Cardinal, [60], [595].
Bourbon, [ Antoine de] (1518-1562), Duke of Vendôme, and through his wife, Jeanne d’Albret, titular King of Navarre, [20], [172], [175], [178], [181], [186], [192].
[Louis] de, brother of Antoine, Prince of Condé (1530-1569), Bourbon: married (1) Eléanore de Roye, (2) Françoise d’Orléans, [172], [175], [178] f., [187], [190] f.
Charles de, brother of Antoine (1523-1590), Cardinal de Bourbon, chosen King by the League as [Charles X]., [209], [216], [212] f.
Henry, son of Antoine and Jeanne d’Albret, King of Navarre and King [Henry IV.] of France (1163-1610), recognised as leader of the Huguenots, [194];
married to Marguerite de Valois, [197];
becomes heir to the French throne, [206];
declared by the Pope incapable of succeeding, [208];
at Tours with Henry III., [214];
succeeds as Henry IV., [216];
his Declaration, [217];
becomes a Roman Catholic, [219] f.;
grants the Edict of Nantes, [221].
[Henry de] (1552-1588), son of Louis of Condé and Eléanore de Roye, [195], [204], [208].
Antoinette de (1494-1583), aunt of Antoine de Bourbon, married Claude, Duke of Guise, the mother of the Guises, [190].
Bourg, Antoine du, the Chancellor, [146];
the martyr, [160], [170], [174] f.
Bourges, Calvin at, [95];
church at, [166]; [249].
Breda, [249].
Brederode, Henry, Viscount, [249] f.
Bremen becomes Calvinist, [3].
Bremen Consensus, [4] n.
Brès, Guido de, drafted the Belgic Confession, [272].
Brethren, The, [432] f., [434], [440], [445].
Brethren of the Common Lot, The, [226], [228].
Brethren and Sisters of the Free Spirit, The, [441].
Briçonnet, Guillaume, Bishop of Meaux, [11], [141] and n.
Brill (Brielle) taken by the Sea-Beggars, [260].
Broet, Paul, the Jesuit, [537].
Brooks, James, Bishop of Gloucester, [378], [380].
Bruno, Giordano, [423].
Bucer, Martin, Reformer of Strassburg, [43], [73], [149], [358], [507], [519].
Buchanan, George, [281], [533] and n., [556].
Budé, Guillaume (Budæus), [12], [95].
Buenzli Gregory, teacher of Zwingli, [25].
Bullinger, Henry, successor to Zwingli in Zurich, on ecclesiastical excommunication, [111];
influence in England, [360], [364], [402] and n., [437]; [60].
Burgundy. See [Charles the Bold].
Busche, Hermann von dem, of Marburg, [457].
Cachi, Jean, Rom. Cath. in Geneva, [86].
Caffard, [80].
Cahiers, list of grievances presented to the States-General, [182], [185].
Calvin (Cauvin), Jean, “atrocious mysteries of,” [1] n., [415];
doctrine of the Holy Supper, [58] ff., [412];
on substance and presence, [59], [412];
preachers trained by, [71];
youth and education, [92] ff.;
at the Colleges de la Marche and Montaigu, [93];
at the College Fortet, [95];
at Orléans and Bourges, [95];
conversion, [95], [97];
edition of Seneca’s De Clementia, [12], [96];
knowledge of the Classics and of Patristic, [96], [104], [109];
joined the Protestant community in Paris, [97];
writes the Discourse on Christian Philosophy, delivered by Nicolas Cop before the University of Paris, [98];
in Basel, [99];
in Geneva with Farel, [102] ff.;
at the Disputation at Lausanne, [103];
aimed at restoring the ecclesiastical usages of the first three centuries, [109];
his idea of ecclesiastical discipline, [108] ff.;
believed that the secular power should enforce ecclesiastical sentences, [110];
his views of ecclesiastical discipline not adopted by Geneva, [112];
his Catechisms, [113], [306];
his Confession sworn to by the Genevese, [115];
opposition to, in Geneva, [115]-[124];
accused of heresy, [116];
and the ceremonies of Bern, [118] ff.;
at the Synod of Lausanne, [118] f.;
banished from Geneva, [74] n., [120];
at the Synod of Zurich, [122];
signs the Augsburg Confession, [124];
settles at Strassburg, [124];
asked to return to Geneva, [125] f.;
returns, [127];
work in Geneva, provides a trained ministry, [132];
plans for education, [133];
influence on the French Protestant Church, [153] and n., [158];
fond of Children, [154];
as a writer of French prose, [155] and n.;
a democrat, [155] f.;
value of his theology for the Reformation, [156];
influence on the organisation of the French Church, [164];
discourages rebellion in France, [175];
writes against iconoclasm, [183], [191];
Renan and Michelet on, [159];
influence on the Scottish Church, [305];
at the Regensburg Conference, [523] f.; [8] ff., [12], [16], [27], [138], [147] f., [305], [514], [557], [577].
Cambridge, [17], [276], [320].
Campeggio, Thomas, Bishop of Feltre, a Cardinal, in England, [323] ff.;
proposed that the Princess Mary should marry her half-brother, the Duke of Richmond, [323];

at the Council of Trent, [570].
Canisius, Peter, a Jesuit, [557] ff., [591], [595], [605] f.
Canon Law in the Elizabethan Church, [417] f.
Canus, Alexandre, Reformed preacher in Geneva, [79].
Cany, Madame de, [158].
Capistrano, John of, a revival preacher in the Abruzzi, [502].
Capito, Wolfgang, [38], [43], [64] n., [453], [456].
Capucins, a reformation of the Franciscans, [507] f.
[Caraffa], Giovanni Pietro, Cardinal and later Pope Paul IV., member of the Oratory of Divine Love, [505];
the Theatines, [509] f.;
character and training, [515];
an Inquisitor, [601];
his conduct as Pope, [585] f.; [510], [545].
Carlyle, Thomas, on the Thirty Years’ War, [2].
Caroli, Pierre, accuses Calvin of heresy, [116].
Carvajal, Juan de, Cardinal, [497].
Cassel, Confession of, [3], [4] n.
Castellio, Sebastian, [130].
Catechism, The Racovian, [473], [477].
Catechism of the Brethren, The, [433].
Catechisms of the Reformed Church, the Heidelberg, [3], [4] n., [306];
Calvin’s, [113], [306];
Craig’s, [306].
Catharine of Aragon, [321] ff., [324], [330], [342], [388].
Catherine de’ Medici, wife of Henry II. of France, begins to reign, [178];
her children, [179] n.;
and ladies’ side-saddle, [180] n.;
at Poissy, [186] ff.;
leader of the Romanist party in France, [192];
matrimonial policy, [196];
dies, [214]; [173], [177], [180], [195], [211], [313].
Cas communes and cas privilégiés, [162].
Cauvin, Gerard, father of Calvin, [92] ff.; [95].
Cecil, Sir William, afterwards Lord Burghley, [19], [292], [295], [297] ff., [311] f., [386] f., [396].
Ceremonies of Bern, The, [118] ff.
Cervini, Marcello, Cardinal de Santa Croce, Legate at the Council of Trent, [566], [568] ff.
Chablais, District of, [117].
Chambéry, [65].
Chambre Ardente, The, [162], [169], [290].
Chandieu, Antoine de, minister at Paris, [167].
Chapuis, Jean, Romanist in Geneva, [86].
Chapuys, Eustace, Ambassador of Charles V. in England, [330], [369].
Charles V., Emperor of Germany, disapproved of the Bern Disputation, [41];
how he inherited the Netherlands, [225];
consolidates the Netherlands, [226] ff.;
establishes the Inquisition there, [229];
increasing severity towards Protestants, [231];
Lutherans among his family, [233];
abdicates at Brussels, [240];
and Philip II., [240] f.;
persuaded that Protestants and Romanists may be re-united, [518], [523], [567]; [225], [327], [358], [368] f., [371], [377], [496] f., [581].
Charles IX., King of France, [178], [186], [196], [198], [203] f.
“Charles X.,” the League King of France. See [Bourbon].
[Charles the Bold], Duke of Burgundy, [22] f., [26], [225].
Chateaubriand, Edict of, [161] f., [169], [296].
Châtelet, The Grand and the Petit, prisons in Paris, [164].
Christian Civic League (Protestant), [48], [51].
Christian Philosophy, Discourse on, [98].
Christian Union, The (Romanist), [48].
Christianæ Religionis Institutio. See [Institutio].
Church, Calvin’s Doctrine of the, [7], [110], [129].
Church, Doctrine of the, among the Anabaptists, [445].
Church, Doctrine of the, among the Socinians, [480] f.
Church, Doctrine of the, at the Regensburg Conference, [521] f.
Classis, ecclesiastical court in Dutch Church, [271].
Clement, Jacques, assassinates Henry III., [215] f.
Clement VII. See [Popes].
Clergy, dissolute lives at Geneva, [90] n.;
disliked in England, [319], [326].
Codure, Jean, The Jesuit, [537].
Cognac, a Huguenot stronghold, [194] f.
Colleges in Paris, de la Marche, [93];
de Ste Barbe, [98], [533] and n.;
de Montaigu, [94] f., [533];
Fortet, [95];
de Navarre, [97] n.
Colleges founded in Spain by Ximenes, [491].
Colleges, French, seed-beds of the Reformation, [151].
Colet, Dean, [319], [334].
Coligny, Gaspard de, Admiral of France, at the Assembly of Notables, [177];
at the States-General, [182];
at Poissy, [186];
in La Rochelle, [194] f.;
attempted assassination of, [197];
murdered by Guise, [199]; [172], [184], [191], [196].
Colloquy, an ecclesiastical court in the French Protestant Church, [168].
Colloquy at Marburg, [50].
Colloquy at Poissy, [20], [186] ff.
Colonna, Vittoria, [505] f., [508], [545], [559], [587] n.
Colporteurs, French Protestant, [152].
Commentary on the Psalms, Calvin’s, [97], [101].
Communism among the Anabaptists, [438], [457], [461] f.
Como, Lake of, [50].
[Company of Jesus], The, the beginnings of the, [546], [548] f.;
its constitution, [550] f., [551] and n.;
power in the hands of the General, [552] f.;
limitations to his power, [553];
rapid spread of the Order, [563];
and the Council of Trent, [595];
and the Counter-Reformation, [606];
and education, [607].
Compromise, The (Netherlands), [249].
Complutensian Polyglot, The, [492].
Conciergerie, Huguenot Prison in Paris, [164].
Concordat, The Spanish, of [148]2, [491].
Conference at Westminster, [20], [400] ff.
Confession, Augsburg, [1], [341], [415], [576].
[Confessions] of the Reformed Churches, [3], [4] n., [6] n.;
Consensus Tigurinus, [60];
Confession of Genecu, [114];
Confession of Waldenses of the Durance, [119];
the Belgic Confession, [272] f.;
the Scots’ Confession, [300], [302] f.;
the Confession of the French Church, [167] f.;
Helvetic Confession (Second), [413].
Congregation, The (in the Scottish Reformation Church), [289], [290], [299] f.
Congregation, The (in Western Switzerland), [105] n.
Congregation of the Holy Office, The (Inquisition), [601].
Congregation of the Index, The, [604] f.
Consilium ... de emendenda ecclesia, [510].
Consilium ... super reformatione sanctæ Romanæ Ecclesiæ, [511].
Consistorial ecclesiastical organisation, [4], [7].
Consistory, of Bern, [117], [122];
of Geneva, [128] f.;
in the French Church, [165] f.;
in the Dutch Church, [270] ff.
Constance, Bishop of, [30] f., [33], [34], [41], [47];
bishopric of, [23];
City of, [47] f.;
Lake of, [48].
Consulta, the confidential advisers of the Regent of the Netherlands, [243] f.
Contarini, Casparo, Senator of Venice and Cardinal, Member of the Oratory of Divine Love, [505];
character and training, [513];
and Calvin, [514];
sent as Legate to Germany, [516] ff.;
at the Regensburg Conference, [519] ff.;
returns to Italy, [524].
Continental Divines in England, [358] and n.
Convocation (England), [327], [329], f., [355], [363] f., [390], [411], [416], [418].
Cop, Nicolas, [12], [95], [98], [145].
Cope, [403] f. n., [406] and n., [407].
Coraut, Elie, the blind preacher of Geneva, [74] n., [119] and n., [120].
Cordier, Mathurin, teacher of Calvin, [93] and n., [94], [154].
Cortese, Gregorio, Abbot of San Giorgio Maggiore, [505], [509].
Council General of the Union of Catholics (France), [213].
Council of Sens (France), [144].
Council of Tumults, or the Bloody Tribunal (Netherlands), [255].
Coutras, Battle of, [209].
Covenants in Scottish Church History, [288] f., [299].
Cox, Dr., Bishop of Ely, [390], [402] n.
Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, trial and martyrdom, [378] ff.;
recantations of, [380]; [8], [318], [329] f., [338], [349], [371], [379].
Craw (Crawar), Paul, in Scotland, [277].
Crescentio, Marcello, Cardinal, sole Legate at the second meeting of the Council of Trent, [581].
Cromwell, Thomas, Earl of Essex, [332], [343], [347], [348].
Curia, The, [30], [495], [498], [503], [511], [517], [586].
[Curialism], at the Council of Trent, [571], [585], [591];
its triumph there, [593].
Cybó, Caterina, Princess of Camerino, [506], [508].
Dalbiac, Charles, French Protestant minister, [181].
Damasus, Pope, [130].
Danès, Pierre, “royal lecturer” in Paris, [96].
Daniel, Francis, correspondent of Calvin, [97] n.
Danube, River, [25].
Dathenus, Peter, metrical version of the Psalms in Dutch, [252].
Dauphiné, [39] n., [74].
Deventer, full of Anabaptists, [237] f.
Davidis, Francis, Anti-Trinitarian, [429].
Declaration of Bremen, The, [3].
Declaration of the Principal Articles of Religion (England), [411].
Decretals, The, [78].
Decretum pro Armenis, used at the Council of Trent, [583].
Defensor Pacis, The, of Marsiglio of Padua, [434].
Delft, Town of, [264].
Democracy and autocracy (Knox and Mary), [313].
Denck, Hans, Humanist and Anabaptists, [424], [435] f., [442].
Dendermonde, [255].
Dentière, Marie, wife of Froment, [74] n.
Device, The (England), [396].
Diane de Poitiers, [151], [173], [296].
Dieppe, John Knox at, [291].
Diet, The Swiss, at Luzern, [32];
at Baden, [47].
Dillenburg, The Synod of, [4] n.
[Discipline] de l’excommunication, [106].
Discipline, ecclesiastical, [108] ff., [305];
opposition to, in Geneva, [115];
how exercised in Geneva, [129];
to be exercised through secular authority, [8] f., [111] f., [489].
Discipline écclésiastique des églises reformées de France, [168], [305].
Discipline, First Book of (Scotland), [301], [304] ff.
Disputation, Public, at Zurich, [34] f.;
at Basel, [39];
at Bern, [40], [68];
at Geneva, [85] ff., [88];
at Lausanne, [103];
at Zurich on Baptism, [445] ff.;
at Münster, [454];
on Baptism, [457];
the Leipzig, [495].
Divara, wife of Jan Matthys, [467], [469].
Divorce, The (Henry VIII.), [324], [330] f., [340].
Dizennier, office in Geneva, [115].
Dogmatic Tradition and the Inner Light, [423].
Dorne, John, bookseller in Oxford ([152]0), [320].
Dufour, Louis, citizen of Geneva sent to persuade Calvin to return, [125].
Dundee, [17], [279], [293].
Dykes in the Netherlands, [245], [263].
Easter Day Communion in England, [398] ff.
Ecclesiastical organization, in Geneva, [128], [132];
in France, [164] ff.;
in the Netherlands, [270] f.;
in Scotland, [307] f.;
among the Anabaptists, [435].
Eck, Johann, the antagonist of Luther. See [Maier].
Economic changes in England, [345] f.; [359], [387].
Edicts, French, concerning the Reformation, of Fontainebleau, [147];
of Chateaubriand, [161] f., [169], [296];
of Compiègne, [163];
of Ramorantin, [177];
of Amboise, [192] f.;
of Saint-Germains, [195];
of Beaulieu, [204];
of Bergerac, [206];
of Nemours, [208];
of Nantes, [19], [221] ff.
Edinburgh, [293].
Edinburgh, University of, [307].
Edward VI. of England, [20], [367] f.; [370], [389].
Église plantée and église dressée, [165].
Egmont, Lamoral, Count of, [243], [247] f., [254] f., [258].
Egmont, Nicolas van, an Inquisitor, [230].
Eidguenots of Geneva, [62].
Einsiedeln, [28], [30].
Elders in the Scottish Church, appointed by the Congregation, [290].
Eléanor de Roye, wife of Louis of Condé, [172], [184].
Elizabeth, Queen of England, threatened excommunication, [1] n., [414] f.;
seizes Spanish treasure ships, [259];
and Knox’s Blast, [292], [296];
dislikes Calvin’s theology, [296];
carefully watched during the reign of Mary, [369];
her death recommended by Charles V., [371];
succeeds to the crown, [385];
declares herself a Protestant, [386] ff.;
looked on as a bastard and a heretic by the Romanist powers, [387];
threatened with the fate of the King of Navarre, [388], [414];
first Proclamation, [388];
exhibits her Protestantism to her people, [389];
difficulties of her government in the alteration of Religion, [390];
her first Parliament, [391];
shelters herself under the Peace of Augsburg, [397], [405] n., [414];
communicates in both “kinds,” [399] and n.; [406], [408], [413], [415], [418], [420].
Emden, meeting of the Netherlands Protestants at, [271].
Emden Catechism, [4] n.
Episcopal government in Switzerland, [23].
Episcopus Universalis, [332].
Epistolæ Obscurorum Virorum, [317].
Erasmians, the Spanish, [492].
Erasmus, and the Reformed Churches,

[9] ff., [152];
on Indulgences, [16]; [25], [27] f., [30], [96], [152], [226], [230], [316], [320], [334], [337], [353], [478], [492], [513].
Erasmus circle at Basel, [436].
Erastians, [123], [129].
[Escadron] volant de la Reine, [203], [309].
Esch, Johann, martyr in the Netherlands, [224], [230].
Este, Cardinal Hippolito de, [188].
Estienne, Robert, Parisian printer, [93], [148].
Excommunication. See [Discipline].
Excommunication among the Anabaptists, [443].
Exercitia Spiritualia. See [Spiritual Exercises].
Exhorters in the Scottish Church, [305].
Faber, Johann, Archbishop of Vienna. See [Heigerlin, Johann].
Faber, Peter, the Jesuit, [537], [545], [548], [557].
Face of a Church, the “Congregation” assumes the, [290].
Fagius (Büchlein), Paul, [358].
Farel, William, at Basel, [39];
early life, [39] n.;
called a Lutheran preacher, [16] n.;
at Aigle, [67] f., [69];
the apostle of French-speaking Switzerland, [67];
baptized his converts from Romanism, [68] n.;
organises a band of evangelists, [71] and n.;
at Villingen, [72];
sent by Bern to Geneva, [80];
in Geneva during the siege, [84];
attempt to poison, [84] and n.;
preaches in the cathedral at Geneva, [86];
induces the Council of Geneva to abolish the Mass, [88];
struggle against the evil morals of the town, [90];
character and marriage, [91];
joined by Calvin, [102];
at the Lausanne Disputation, [103];
his “congregation,” [105] n.;
banished from Geneva, [71] and n., [115]-[124];[12], [45] n., [97], [109], [118] ff., [143].
Feckenham, Abbot of Westminster [400] n.
Ferdinand of Austria, and the excommunication of Elizabeth, [1] n.;
on the Protestants in Vienna, [2];
and the Anabaptists, [447], [449].
Feria, Count de, Ambassador of Philip of Spain, [388], [400].
Ferrar, Robert, Bishop of St. David’s, [378].
[Ferrara], Renée, Duchess of, [101], [505].
Ferrière, Sieur de la, [165].
Ficino, Marsiglio, and Marguerite of Navarre, [137].
Flag of the Swiss Confederacy, [21].
Flying Squadron. See [Escadron].
Fontainebleau, Edict of, [147]; [184] f.
Foxe, Edward, Bishop of Hereford, [340] f.
Foxe, John, the Martyrologist, [332].
Francis I. of France, alternately protects and persecutes the Reformers, [143] f., [145], [147] ff.;
Calvin’s letter to, [147];
founds the “Royal Lectureships” at Paris, [534] f.
Francis of Assisi, [506] ff., [527].
Franciscans and the Reformation, [305].
Franciscans, reformation among the, [508] f.
Frankfurt congregation of English exiles, [287]; [20].
Frankfurt Conference, [124].
Frankfurt Fair, [18].
Frederick, Elector of the Palatinate, becomes a Calvinist, [3], [4] n.
Fregoso, Fred., Archbishop of Salerno, [505], [510].
Freiburg, Swiss Canton, strongly Romanist, [43], [65], [75] n., [76], [84]; [21].
Frenchman, this (iste Gallus), [102] and n., [153].
Friesland, East, an Anabaptist place of refuge, [238].
Forest Cantons, and the Reformation, [41], [50];
at war with Zurich, [49]; [22].
Froben, printer at Basel, [27].
Froment, Antoine, at Villingen, [72];
in Geneva, [74] f.;
his wife a preacher, [74] n.;
contest with Furbiti, [78] f.;
during the siege of Geneva, [84].
Furbiti, Guy, Romanist preacher in Geneva, [78] ff.
Gallars, Nicholas des, minister of French Protestants in London, [186].
[Gallen], St., [22], [47], [48], [60], [122], [437], [440].
Gardiner, Stephen, Bishop of Winchester, [349], [352], [369], [371], [375].
Geelen, Jan van, an Anabaptist leader, [239].
Gemblours, [266].
Geneva, city of, history and constitution, [61] ff.;
parties in, [62];
Bern and Freiburg, [63];
“the gate of western Switzerland,” [63], [89];
town councils in, [63];
Luther’s writings in, [64] n.;
turbulent priests in, [77] and n.;
the affair of Furbiti in, [78]-[82];
plot to seize the town, [82];
besieged by the Bishop and the Duke of Savoy, [83];
attempt to poison the Reformed preachers in, [84] and n.;
Public Disputation in, [85] ff.;
Mass abolished provisionally in, [87];
completely, [89];
Disputation before the Council, [88];
becomes an independent republic, [89];
motto Post tenebras lux, [89];
evil living in, [90] and n.;
the Articles of [105] ff.;
adopts the ceremonies of Bern, [118] ff.;
banishes Calvin and Farel, [120] ff.;
begs Calvin to return, [125] ff.;
the ecclesiastical ordinances of, [128];
Consistory of, [128] f.;
the ministry in, [131] f.;
what Calvin did for, [130] ff.;
a city of refuge, [134];
“the dogs of Geneva,” [187];
sends missionaries to the Netherlands, [233], [249]; [6], [8], [45], [152].
Geneva, Bishop of, [61] f., [77], [116] f.;
Amadeus VIII. of Savoy, [62];
Pierre de la Baume, [77], [82] f., [85], [89].
Geneva, Vidomne of, [62], [117].
Gentili, Anti-Trinitarian, [426].
German National Council feared by the Pope, [565] n.
German Protestant opinion of Henry VIII., [341].
German Vulgate, [434].
Germany and the Counter-Reformation, [606] f.
Germany, name given to an Inn at Cambridge, [320], [330].
Gex, district of, [117].
Ghent, city of, [265], [267].
Glapion, confessor to Charles V. and Luther, [494].
Glareanus (Heinrich Loriti). See [Loriti].
Glarus, a Swiss Canton, [22], [27] f.
Goch, John Pupper of, [226], [230].
Goderick, English lawyer, and his Advice, [389].
Gonzaga, Elenore, Duchess of Urbino, [506].
Gonzaga, Ercole di, Cardinal of Mantua, principal Legate at the third meeting of the Council of Trent, [588].
Gonzaga, Julia, [506].
Grace, pilgrimage of, [346].
Grandson, in the Pays de Vaud, [43], [67], [72].
Granvelle, Antoine Perronet de, Cardinal and Bishop of Arras, [243], [519], [521].
Graphæus, Cornelius, [230].
Grassis, Matteo, founder of the Capucins, [507] f.
Graubünden, the (Grisons), [22], [49] f.
Grebel, Conrad, Humanist and Anabaptist, [436], [446] f.
Grey, Lady Jane, [371].
Gribaldo, Giovanni Valentino, an Anti-Trinitarian, [426].
Grindal, Edmund, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, [402] n., [404].
Groot, Gerard, and the Brethren of the Common Lot, [226], [228].
Guest, Edmund, letter to Cecil, [398] and n.
Gueux, Les. See [Beggars].
Guipúzcoa, the district in which Loyola was born, [525].
Guises, the family of the, [151], [173] and n., [180], [209], [283], [295], [297].
Guise, Francis, Duke of, [170], [173], [177] f., [187], [189], [191] f., [296].
Charles, brother of Francis, [Cardinal of Lorraine], [163], [170], [173], [177], [187], [312], [588].
Louis, brother of Francis, Cardinal of Guise, [189], [213].
Henry, Duke of, son of Francis, [198] f., [208], [212] f.
Charles, Duke of [Mayenne], son of Francis, [213] f., [218].
Haarlem, Town of, [236] f., [261].
Hagenau, Conference at, [124].
Hague, The, [236].
Haller, Berthold, Reformer of Bern, [40] f., [64] n., [68].
Hamilton, Patrick, [279] f.
Hanseatic League, [279].
Hapsburg (the place), [21].
Heath, Dr., Archdeacon of Canterbury, [340] f.
Hegius (Haag) Alexander, [226].
Heidelberg Catechism, [3], [4] n.
[Heigerlin], Johann (Faber), [26] and n., [30], [34], [512].
Helvetic Confession, First, [6] n.
Henry II. of France, consistently persecutes the Protestants, [151].
Henry III., [204], [214].
Henry IV. See [Bourbon].
Henry VIII. of England, his policy towards Scotland, [282] f.;
had defended curialist claims, [321];
real doubts about the validity of his marriage, [322] f.;
security of the kingdom demanded a male heir, [323];
expected the Pope to declare his marriage invalid, [324];
appeals to the Universities, [326];
Supreme Head of the Church, [327];
uses the annates to coerce the Curia, [328];
separates from Rome, [330] ff.;
and the German Protestants, [340] ff., [347];
his theological learning, [347];
his will, [352];
and Zwingli, [10], [315] f., [370], [417].
Henry of Condé. See [Bourbon].
Hesse Cassel becomes Calvinist, [3].
Hildegard of Bingen, [142] n.
Hoen, Cornelius van (sacramental controversy), [53].
Hoffmann, Melchior, [236] f., [438], [442], [444], [458].
Homilies, The Twelve (England), [353].
Hoogstraten, [249].
Hooper, John, Bishop of Gloucester, [318], [353], [359], [364] f., [377] f.
Hôpital, Michel de l’, Chancellor of France, [177], [181], [186].
Hopkins, Thomas, metrical version of the Psalms, [355].
Hübmaier, Balthasar, Anabaptist, [434] ff., [442].
Hulst, Francis van de, Inquisitor, [230].
Humanism and the Reformed Churches, [9];
and the Italian Reformers, [504], [507].
Humanism, Christian, [319].
Hus, John, [31].
Hussites, [92].
Hut, Hans, Anabaptist, [439].
Hymn-book of the Brethren, [435], [449] ff.
Iconoclasm in Switzerland, [72], [87];
in France, [145], [183], [191];
in the Netherlands, [253], [267];
in Scotland, [294];
in Münster, [453].
[Ignatius] Loyola, family and early life, [525];
on his sick-bed, [527];
at Manresa, [527] ff.;
his visions, [527], [529], [532], [552];
and Luther, [529], [532], [559];
his mysticism, [530];
at school at Barcelona, [532];
imprisoned for heresy, [533];
in Paris, [533] ff.;
considered doctrines as military commands, [536];
in Italy, [545] ff.;
his preachers in Italy, [546];
Society of Jesus founded, [548] f.;
elected General, [549] f.;
seeks to win back Germany, [556] ff.;
his home mission work, [559];
an educated clergy, [559].
Iles de Saintonge, Church at, [166]. See Saintonge.
Illiteracy of English clergy, [353] f.
Images, miraculous, destroyed, [344] and n.; [352], [409].
[Index of Prohibited Books], [602] ff.;
practice of burning books, [602] f.;
various list of, [603]; [231] f.;
effect on learning, [605].
Indulgence, in Geneva, [64];
long objected to in the Netherlands, [228]; [16], [28].
Injunctions in England, of 1536 (Henry VIII.), [334], [339];
of 1538 (Henry VIII.), [335], [340];
of 1517 (Edward VI.), [352];
of 1554 (Mary), [374];
of Elizabeth, [407], [410].
Inner Light, The, [423] f., [456].
Inquisition, three types of, [597];
the Spanish, [598];
proposed in France, [163], [169];
in the Netherlands, [229], [256];
in Italy, [470], [600] ff.; [489], [492], [497], [531].
[Institutio], Christianæ Religionis, based on the Apostles’ Creed, [100];
on ecclesiastical government, [129];
what it did for the Reformation, [156] f.; [99] ff., [147], [156], [159], [305], [514].
Instruction, Zwingli’s, [35].
Interim, The Augsburg, [567].
Irish missionaries in Switzerland, [23].
Isabella of Castile and the Spanish Reformation, [490].
Isoudun, [166].
Italian heretic Friars, [386] n.
Italy, religious condition of, [501] f.;
the peasants, [501];
in the towns, [503].
Ivry, Battle of, [218].
James V. of Scotland, [281].
Jarnac, Battle, [194].
Jay, Claude, Jesuit, [537], [556], [557].
Jeanne d’Albret, daughter of Margaret of Navarre, wife of Antoine de Bourbon and mother of Henry IV. of France, declares herself a Protestant, [185];
in La Rochelle, [194];
consents to the marriage of her son with Marguerite de Valois, the daughter of Catherine de’ Medici, [197];[172], [189], [195].
Jeanne de Jussie, chronicler nun of Geneva, [65] n.; [74] n., [79] and n., [83] n.; [117].
Jesuits. See [Company of Jesus].
Jesuits in France, [608];
in Germany, [606].
Jewel, John, Bishop of Salisbury, [391], [402] n., [404], [407], [413] and n.
John Casimir in the Netherlands, [266].
John Frederick of Saxony and Henry VIII., [340], [317].
John George of Anhalt, [3].
Joinville, Chateau of, [190];
Treaty of, [207];
Prince of, [213].
Jon, Francis du, [249].
Joyeuse entrée of Brabant, [246].
Jud, Leo,

[111].
Jurisdictionis potestas, [332].
Jus episcopale of Civil Rulers, [9].
Justification of the Prince of Orange, [258].
Justification, The Doctrine of, at the Regensburg Conference, [519] ff., [577];
at the Council of Trent, [568], [576] ff.
Kaiser, a Zurich pastor burnt as a heretic in Schwyz, [49].
Kampen, [237].
Kappel, First Peace of, [49];
Second Peace of, [51];
Battle of, [51];
Charter of, [51].
Kata-Baptists, [423], [434].
Kessler, Johann, [47].
Kibbenbroick, Gerard, Anabaptist burgomaster of Münster, [460].
Kinds, taking the communion in both, a sign of Protestantism, [20], [399], [405] n.
King’s Book, The, [10], [337], [349].
Kirkcaldy of Grange, Sir William, [284].
Kirk-Session, ecclesiastical court in the Scottish Church, [308].
Klein-Basel, [25].
Knipperdolling, Bernhard, Anabaptist, burgomaster of Münster, [460]; [425], [454] and n., [468].
Knox, John, early history, [285];
galley-slave in France, [286];
preaches in England, [286], f., [360], [362];
in Switzerland and Germany, [287];
marries Marjory Bowes, [288];
in Scotland, [293];
in Edinburgh, [299] ff.;
rapidity of his work, [308];
and Queen Mary, [309] ff.;
and the Duke of Somerset, [359].
Kolb, Francis, preaches in Bern, [42].
Krakau (Cracow), a Socinian centre, [472].
Kuiper, Willem de, a disciple of Jan Matthys, [459].
Lainez, Diego, Jesuit, [188], [537], [455], [548], [552], [556], [577] f., [595].
Lambert, Francis, [64] n.
Lasco, John à, Polish refugee in England, [358].
Latimer, Hugh, Bishop of Worcester, [371], [378], [382].
Laud, Archbishop, [355].
Lausanne, Bishop of, refuses to come to the Bern Disputation, [41], [44].
Lausanne, Bishopric of, [23], [67], [70].
Lausanne, part of the Pays-de-Vaud, [67], [113], [116], [152];
reformation in, [70], [89], [125].
League, The Perpetual (Forest Cantons), [21];
of Brunnen, [21];
of the House of God (Rhætia), [22];
The Grey (Grisons), [22];
of the Ten Jurisdictions, [22];
The Three perpetual, of Rhætia, [22];
Christian Civic, [48];
Borromean, [60];
The League against the Huguenots, how it arose, [205] ff.;
becomes disloyal, [207], [209], [212], [608];
The League of Paris, [207];
the Sixteen, [210].
Leclerc, Jean, French Protestant martyr, [143].
Leclerc, Pierre, Minister at Meaux, [150].
Lecturers, Royal. See [Royal].
Lefèvre d’Étaples, Jacques (Faber Stapulensis) and Humanism, [11];
and Luther, [15], [74], [97];
wishes to restore the practices of the Church of the first three centuries, [109];
inspired the “group of Meaux,” [141];
anticipated Luther, [141];
translated the Bible into French, [142];
a mystic, [142] n.
Leib, Kilian, Salzburg chronicler, and the Anabaptists, [448].
Leith, [17], [279].
Lenten Fasting, [31].
Lesley, Norman, [284].
Lethington, William Maitland of. See [Maitland].
Leyden, Anabaptist attempt on, [239];
siege of, [263];
University of, [264].
Leyden, Jan of. See [Bockelson].
Libertines in Geneva, [116].
Lindau, [48].
Lindsay, Sir David, Scottish satirist, [278].
Lollards, in England, [316] f., [374];
and Anabaptists, [440] f.
Lords of the Congregation (Scotland), [289], [293], [299], [420].
[Loriti], Heinrich of Glarus (Glareanus), Swiss Humanist, [18] n., [25] n., [29].
Lorraine, The Cardinal of. See [Guise].
Louis of Condé. See [Bourbon].
Louis of Nassau. See [Nassau].
Louise of Savoy, mother of Francis I., [137], [141].
Louvain, University of, and list of Prohibited Books, [603].
Loyola, Ignatius. See [Ignatius].
Lupulus. See [Wölfflin].
Luther, on clerical marriage, [37];
influence on the Reformed Churches, [13] ff.;
anticipations of his teaching, [15], [141];
and Zwingli, [27], [50];
theory of the Eucharist, [56], [412] f.; [16] ff., [24], [53], [124], [141], [148], [154], [341], [354], [405] n., [421], [452], [473], [493], [507], [529], [570], [578].
Luther’s writings known in France, [142];
in England, [320];
in Geneva, [64] n.;
in Scotland, [279].
Lutheran theologians invited to France, [146].
Lutheran, a name applied to all Protestants, [16] and n., [65], [79] n., [150], [330], [600].
Lutherans lost part of Germany to the Reformed, [3].
Lutzern, [22], [47] f.;
Diet at, [32].
Lyons, Church at, [166].
Maçon, Jean le, first Protestant minister in Paris, [166].
Macronius, Martin, [364].
Madruzzo, Bishop of Trent and Cardinal, [567] ff., [574], [581].
Madruzzo, Ludovico, Bishop of Trent, [588].
[Maier], Johann, of Eck, [26].
Mainz, Archiepiscopal Province of, [23].
[Maitland], William, of Lethington, [19], [304], [310], [312].
Mamelukes (in Geneva), [62].
Mangin, Étienne, of Meaux, [150].
Manresa, Dominican Convent at, [527];
Ignatius Loyola at, [528].
Mantes, Assembly of French Protestants at, [221].
Manuel, Nicholas, artist in Bern, [40].
Manz, Felix, Swiss Anabaptist martyr, [446] f.
Marais-Saint-Germain, Rue de, [174].
Marburg Colloquy, the, [50].
Marcourt, Antoine, author of the Placards, [146].
[Margaret] of Parma, [242], [248], [250], [252], [257].
Marguerite d’Angoulême, sister of Francis I., married the King of Navarre, education and character, [136] ff.;
her Christian Platonism, [137];
relations with Briçonnet, [138];
with Luther and Calvin, [138];
the Heptameron, [140];
accused of heresy, [145];[11], [74] n., [97] n., [136] n., [143], [505] f., [534] f.
Marguerite de Valois, daughter of Catherine de’ Medici, married to Henry IV., [197].
Marignano, Battle of, [28].
Marnix, John de, [254].
Marot, Clement, his French Psalms in Geneva, [106] n., [148];
in Paris, [172]; [93], [146].
Marriage, regulations for, in Geneva, [105] f.;
of the clergy, [355];
“clerical,” [36]; [33], [42].
Marsiglio Ficino, [137].
Marsiglio of Padua, [434].
Martha Houses (Jesuit), [561].
Martyr Vermigli, Peter, [358].
Martyrs, in England under Queen Mary, [376] ff.;
in the Netherlands, [224], [230] f.;
in Scotland, [280] f.;
in France, [148] ff.
Mary of Burgundy, daughter of Charles the Bold and grandmother of Charles V., wife of Maximilian, [225].
Mary of Guise or Lorraine, sister of Francis Duke of Guise, and Queen of James V. of Scotland, [20], [290], [293] f., [386].
Mary of Hungary, Regent of the Netherlands, [233], [240], [518].
Mary, Queen of England, reaction under, [368] ff.;
marries Philip, prince of Spain;
Papal supremacy restored, [373];
Romanist legislation, [373] f.;
scruples about possession of ecclesiastical lands, [382];
death, [383] ff.; [292], [346], [380].
Mary, Queen of Scotland, educated in France, [283];
“the little Queen,” [283];
refuses to ratify the acts of the reforming Estates, [309];
in Scotland, [309] ff.;
her coming dreaded, [309]; [281], [292], [310].
Massacres, at Vassy, [190];
at Sens, [190];
at Toulouse, [190];
at Rouen, [190];
at Paris, [190];
of St. Bartholomew, [198] f., [261], [608];
at Zütphen, [261];
at Haarlem, [261].
Matthew, Thomas, of Matthew’s Bible, [339].
Maubert, Place, where the Protestants were burnt, [148].
Mayenne, Duke of. See [Guise].
Meaux, The group of, [11] f., [67], [97], [109], [137] ff., [145].
Meaux, the Fourteen of, [148], [150].
Meaux, Protestant Church in, [165] f.
Mechlin burnt by the Spaniards, [261].
Medici, Giovanni Giacomo de’, a condottiere, [50].
Meersburg, [47].
Melanchthon, [4] n., [148], [154], [340], [507], [519] ff., [557].
Melchiorites, The, [438];
in Münster, [458];
on separation, [465].
Mendoza, Pedro, Archbishop of Toledo and Cardinal, [490].
Mérindol, Arrêt de, [149].
Merlin, Jean Raymond, [184].
Meyer, Sebastian, Reformer of Bern, [40].
Michelet, Jules, on Calvin, [159].
Milhaud, a Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Milton, John, [13].
Ministry in the Reformed Churches, [131].
Mirabel, a Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Miroir de l’âme pécheresse, [97] n., [98].
Molard, The, in Geneva, [77].
Monasteries, The dissolution of the, [343].
Moncontour, Battle of, [195].
Monnikendam, [237].
Montauban, Huguenot stronghold, [195], [201] f., [223].
Monte Cassino, [509].
Monte, Gian Maria Giocchi, Cardinal del, later Pope Julius III., [566], [581].
Montmor, The family of, with whom Calvin was educated, [92].
Montmorency, The Constable de, [151], [170], [173], [178], [189], [191], [193].
Montpellier, Huguenot stronghold, [223].
Montpensier, Duchess of, a Leaguer, [210], [216].
Montrose, [279].
Morals, municipal legislation concerning, [108], [123] n., [129];
standard of, low in Western Switzerland, [113].
Morat, part of the Pays de Vaud, [43], [47].
Moray, James Stewart, Earl of, [291], [310].
More, Sir Thomas, [317], [319], [321], [325], [337] f.
Morel, minister in Paris, [186].
Morgarten, the battle of, [21], [26].
Mornay du Plessis, Madame, way she dressed her hair, [168] n.
Morone, Giovanni de Cardinal, [512], [516], [524], [586], [591], [595].
Mortal sin, Jesuits wary of charging their penitents with, [555].
Muète, Guérin, a leading evangelical in Geneva, [76].
Mühlhausen, [43], [60], [122].
Müller, Hans of Medikon, Anabaptist, [441].
Mundt, Dr. Christopher, Cecil’s agent in Germany, [296] and n.
Municipal life in the Netherlands, [225].
Münster, Bishop of, [453], [454].
Münster, city of, enrolled in the Schmalkald League, [455];
besieged during the whole period of Anabaptist rule, [462];
fall of, [468].
Münster, Kingdom of God in, [431], [438], [451] ff.
Mysticism, Spanish, [490], [530] ff., [547], [571].
Nacchianti, Bishop of Chioggia, on Tradition and Scripture, [574].
Nancy, [207].
Nantes, Edict of, [19], [221] ff.
Nassau Confession, [4] n.
[Nassau], William of, Prince of Orange, at the abdication of Charles V., [240];
member of the Council of State for the Netherlands, [243];
protests against the treatment of the Netherlands, [247];
not deceived by Philip’s duplicity, [253];
his Justification, [258];
chosen Stadtholder, [260];
Governor of the Seventeen Provinces, [266];
reward offered for his assassination, [267];
his Apology; [267];
assassinated, [268];
how he acquired the Principality of Orange-Chalons, [268] and n.;
his wives, [269] n.;
his character, [268] f.
[Louis of], [249], [252], [260], [263].
Nassouwe, Wilhelmus von, [261].
National characteristics reappear in the various Reformed Churches, [19].
Nemours, Duchess of, [216].
Nérac, capital of French Navarre, [139], [185].
Neuchâtel, [43], [73], [89], [125], [146].
Neuville, [89].
New Learning, The, [26], [137], [141], [359], [492], [515].
Nicene Creed, [130];
at the Council of Trent, [593].
Nimes, [165], [201], [202].
Nisbet, Murdoch, translated the New Testament into Scots, [277] n.
Northumberland, John Dudley, Duke of, [359].
Notables, Assembly of (France), [177].
Notables, Assembly of (England), [326].
Novara, Battle of, [28].
Noyon, Birthplace of Calvin, [92].
Nuns, in Geneva, [90];
none among the Jesuits, [561].
Ochino, Bernardino, [358].
Oebli, Hans, Landamann of Glarus, [49].
Oecolampadius, Johannes (Heusgen), at Basel, [39];
on excommunication, [112]; [149], [320].
Oldenbarneveldt, John of, [269].
Olevian, Caspar, [4] n.
Olivétan, Pierre Robert, translator of the Bible into French, [95].
Ollon, part of the Pays de Vaud, [67].
Orange, Prince of. See [Nassau].
Orange, Principality of Orange-Chalons, [268] n.
Oratory, Chambers of (Netherlands), [226].
Oratory of Divine Love, The, [505], [509] f.
Orbe, part of the Pays de Vaud, [67].
Ordinis Potestas, [332].
Ordonnances ecclésiastiques de l’église de Genève, [107], [128] f., [131].
Orléans, Calvin at,

[95];
church at, [166]; [146], [181].
Ormonts, part of the Pays de Vaud, [67].
Oxford, [17], [276], [320].
Pacification of Ghent, [265] f., [267].
Palatinate, becomes Calvinist, [3].
Pampeluna, Ignatius Loyola, at the siege of, [526].
Pane, Roletus de, Romanist in Geneva, [88].
Pantheist Mysticism, [422], [424].
Paraphrases, Erasmus’, in the Church of England, [353].
Paris, Luther’s writings in, [18] and n.;
affair of the Placards, [145];
prisons in, [164];
League of, [207] ff.
Paris’ students songs, [535] f.
Parker, Dr. Matthew, Archbishop of Canterbury, [404], [409], [417].
Parkhurst, John, Bishop of Norwich, [402] n., [416].
Parlement, of Paris and the Reformation, [142] f., [144], [146], [160], [162] f., [169], [170], [171], [174], [185], [213], [220], [535], [556].
Parlement, of Aix, [147], [149];
of Bordeaux, [147], [217];
of Dijon, [176];
of Rouen, [147];
of Toulouse, [147], [171].
Parlements, French, [163] n., [217].
Parliament for the enormities of the Clergy, [326], [327].
[Parma], Alexander Farnese, Duke of, [218], [220], [249], [266].
Parma, Margaret of. See [Margaret].
Patrick’s Places, [280] n.
Patrimony of the Kirk, [306].
Paul IV., Pope, [1] n., [163], [169]. See [Caraffa].
Paul, Martin, of the Graubünden, [50].
Payerne, [64], [89].
Pays de Vaud, [66], [84], [89], [103], [109], [116] f.
Peace of Monsieur, [204].
Peasantry, Italian, religious condition, [501];
devotion to Francis of Assisi and his imitators, [502].
Peasants’ War, The, [54].
Penance, Doctrine of, at the Council of Trent, [584].
Penney, [117].
Penz, Jörg, pupil of Albrecht Dürer, Anabaptist, [436].
Picards, [11], [92].
Picardy, character of the people, [92].
Pictures in Churches (Zurich), [35], [42].
Philip of Hesse and the Anabaptists, [447], [455], [458]; [58].
Philip II. of Spain, compared with Charles V., [240] f.;
policy of extirpation of Protestants, [241];
minute knowledge of Netherlands’ affairs, [243] n., [244].
Pius V., [196], [595].
Placards (manifestoes) in Geneva, [64] f.;
in Paris, about the Mass, [145].
Placards (Government proclamations against the Protestants) in the Netherlands, [242], [245], [247], [256], [265].
Platonism, Christian, [11], [137].
Poissy, Colloquy of, [20], [186] ff., [313];
Conference at, [188];
Edict of, [188].
Poitiers, Church at, [166] f.
Pole, Reginald, Archbishop of Canterbury, Cardinal, member of the Oratory of Divine Love, [505];
Legate at the Council of Trent, [566]; [372], [377], [381] f., [510], [524], [587] n.
Politiques, Les, [203].
Polonorum, Bibliotheca Fratrum, [472].
Polygamy, in Münster, [463] ff.
Post tenebras lux, [89].
Pope, the Primacy of the, [33], [492];
Swiss Bodyguard of the, [23];
power limited by the Peace of Augsburg, [1] and n., [405], [414];
and Bishops at the Council of Trent, [592] f. See [Curialism].
Popes mentioned:
Innocent III. (1198-1216), [597].
Julius II. (1503-1521), [322], [371].
Leo X. (1513-1523), [180], [319] f.
Adrian VI. (1522-1523), [494], [496] ff.
[Clement VII.] (1523-1534), [64], [324];
advises Henry VIII. to bigamy, [325], [510].
Paul III. (1534-1549), Reforms under, [510], [512]; [345], [357], [470], [500], [510], [548], [550], [581];
and the Council of Trent, [565] and n., [581].
Julius III. (1550-1555), Council of Trent under, [565] and n., [581].
Marcellus II. (1555), [585].
Paul IV.span> (1555-1559), Council of Trent under, [565] and n., [591], [594]; [245].
Pius IV. (1559-1565), his policy of reformation, [595].
Pius V. (1566-1572), [196].
Sixtus V. (1580-1590), [208].
Præmunire, Statutes of, [325].
Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges, [183].
Prayer-Book of King Edward VI., The First, [356] f., [361], [403] n.
Prayer-Book of King Edward IV., The Second, [287], [290] and n., [361] f., [395] f., [398], [401], [403] and n., [405].
Prayer-Book of Elizabeth, [396] ff., [401], [404], [419].
Praying Circles or Readings among the Brethren, [433].
Pre-aux-clercs, The, Psalm-singing at, [172], [183]; [165].
Presence of the Body of Christ in the Sacrament of the Supper, [411] ff.
Privas, a Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Privileges of Nobles in France in the Sixteenth Century, [171].
Processions expiatory, in Paris, [146].
Proclamations about religion, by Mary, [370];
by Elizabeth, [388].
Psalms, Calvin’s Commentary on the, [97], [101].
Psalms, Singing of the, in the vernacular, [106] and n., [183], [251] f.;
in the Netherlands, [251];
in England, [355];
Clement Marot’s, [172] and n., [252].
Pseaumes included religious canticles, [107] n.
Purgatory, The Doctrine of, attacked, [31], [33], [42].
Puritanism, the beginnings of, [364].
Puy, Cardinal du, Prefect of the Inquisition, [378].
Queen, The little, [282] f.
Quignon, Cardinal, a liturgist, [357].
Quintin, Dr., speaker for the clergy at the States-General of [156]0, [182].
Randolph, Sir Thomas, Elizabeth’s Ambassador in Scotland, [303], [311].
Ratisbon. See [Regensburg].
Readers in the Scottish Church, [305].
Readings, [433].
Re-baptism, [68] n.; [424], [447].
Reformation of the Mediæval Church demanded by all, [484].
Reformed Churches, Confraternity among the, [20];
Confessions. See [Confessions].
Reformers in Italy, [503] f.
[Regensburg], The Conference at, [519] ff.;
was the parting of the ways, [523].
Regents in the Netherlands, Margaret of Austria, [225];
Mary, widowed Queen of Hungary, [233], [242];
Margaret of Parma, [242], [248], [250], [252], [257];
the Duke of Alva, see [Alva];
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma, see [Parma].
Relics destroyed in England, [343], [344] and n.
Religion, Those of the, [160].
Religion, The alteration of, [396].
Renaissance, The, [6], [8].
Renan, Ernest, on Calvin, [159].
Renard, Simon, envoy of Charles V. in England, [377].
Renato, Camillo, [426].
Renaudie, Godefroy de Barry, Seigneur de la, [175].
Renée, Duchess of Ferrara. See [Ferrara].
Requesens-y-Zuniga, Don Louis, [262].
Request, The (Netherlands), [250].
Reservatio ecclesiastica, [2].
Restitution, The, defends polygamy in Münster, [467].
Rhætia, [22].
Richmond, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of, [323].
Ridley, Nicholas, Bishop of London, [318], [359], [360], [364] f., [371], [378], [382].
Riots in Geneva, [81], [87].
Rocco di Musso, on the Lake of Como, [50].
Rocheblond, Sieur de la, founder of the Paris League, [207] f.
Rochelle, La, Huguenot stronghold, [194] f., [201], [223].
Rodriguez, Simon, Jesuit, [537], [556].
Rogers, John, [339], [377].
Roll, Heinrich, Anabaptist, [456].
Roman Civil Law and ecclesiastical rule, [8].
Romanist reaction in Europe, [387].
Roser, Isabella, and Ignatius Loyola, [561] and n., [562].
Rothmann, Bernhard, Anabaptist leader in Münster, [452] ff.;
his Theses, [454];
doctrine of the Holy Supper, [455] f.;
accepts polygamy with difficulty, [465] f.;
death, [468].
Rotterdam, [11].
Rotuli Scotiæ, The, [276].
Röubli, William, first Swiss priest to marry, [37].
Rouen, Church at, [166].
Rough, John, Scottish preacher, [285].
Roussel, Gerard, [97], [109].
[Royal Lecturers] in Paris, [95], [98].
Rubric, The Black, on kneeling at the Lord’s Supper, [362], [405] n.
Rubric, Ornaments, of [155]9, [405] and n.
[Rule of Faith], Doctrine of the, at the Council of Trent, [568], [572] ff.
Ruysbroec, Jan van, the Mystic, [226].
Sacrament of the Holy Supper, ought to be celebrated weekly, [105] and n.;
both “kinds” partaken, [355], [394];
discussed at the Regensburg Conference, [522] f.;
Doctrine of, defined at the Council of Trent, [568], [582] ff.
Sacramental Controversy, Bern Theses and the, [52];
in the Netherlands and the Rhine Provines, [52];
Carlstadt’s views, [53];
Zwingli’s views permeate German cities, [53];
controversy complicated by political ideas, [54];
common thoughts about the Sacrament of the Holy Supper, [54];
Eucharist and Mass, [55];
Zwingli’s theory, [55];
Luther’s theory, [56];
Calvin’s theory accepted in Switzerland, [59];
and in part of Germany, [60].
Sacramentarians, name given to the followers of Zwingli, [146].
Sadoleto, Giacomo, Cardinal, [507], [510].
Saint-André, Marshal, [184], [190], [192].
Saint Andrews, [285].
Saint Bartholomew, Massacre of, [198];
medal struck in Rome in honour of, [200] and n.
Saint Denis, Henry IV. received into the Roman Church at, [219];
battle of, [193].
Saint Germains, [185].
Saint Jacques, Rue de, in Paris, [167], [171].
Saint Omer, [254].
Sainte Aldegonde, Philip de Marnix, lord of, [249].
St. Gallen. See [Gallen].
Salamanca, University of, [491].
Salic Law, in France, [206];
believed to hold in England, [323].
Salmeron, Alonzo, Jesuit, [537], [548], [556], [566], [595].
Salzburg, Anabaptists in, [448]; [48].
Sam, Conrad, of Ulm, [53].
Samson or Sanson, Bernhard, a seller of Indulgences, [29].
Sancerre, Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Sandilands, Sir James, [291].
Sandys, Edwin, Archbishop of York. [404].
Saunier, Antoine, Swiss evangelist, [82] n.
Savoy, [48];
Duke of, [62], [64], [66], [77], [89], [116].
Schaffhausen, Swiss Canton, [22], [46], [43], [48], [60], [122].
Schifanoya, II, Venetian agent in England, [392], [399] and n.
Schmalkald, [340], [347].
Schmalkald, Defender of the, [341].
Schmalkald League, The, and Münster, [455].
Schröder, Johann, Anabaptist preacher in Münster, [459].
Schwyz, Forest Canton, burnt Pastor Kaiser of Zurich as a heretic, [49]; [21] f., [48].
Scot, Bishop, [400] n.
Scotland, and Heidelberg Catechism, [4] n.;
preparation for the Reformation, [275];
influence of old Celtic Church, [275] f.;
Lollardy in, [276] f.;
Acts of Parliament to suppress Reformation, [281];
French or English alliance, [281] ff., [294];
place in the European situation, [295];
English invasion, [298];
Confession of Faith, Book of Discipline, Book of Common Order, [302] ff.
Scoto-Pelagian Theology, [474], [570].
Scottish Church and Civil supremacy, [8].
Scottish Liturgy and English alliance, [298]; [306].
Scripture, Holy. See [Rule of Faith].
[Sea-Beggars], The, capture Brielle, [260];
defeat Spanish fleet, [261], [263];
relieve Leyden, [264]; [201].
Secular control over ecclesiastical matters, [8], [129];
in Spain, [489].
Sempach, Battle of, [26].
Seneca, De Clementia, [12], [96].
Senlis, Battle of, [214].
Sens, The French Council of, [144].
Seripando, Girolamo, General of the Augustinian Eremites, on the Doctrine of Justification, [578].
Servede (Servetus) Miguel de, monument expiatoire to, [130] f.;[ 424] and n., [471].
Seville, College at, [491].
Signa exhibitiva and representativa, [59].
Simon, Preacher at Aigle, [69].
Simonetta, Luigi, Cardinal, duties at Trent, [590].
Simons, Menno, organised Baptist Churches, [422], [469].
Sin, Doctrine of, at the Regensburg Conference, [519] f.;
at the Council of Trent, [575] f.
Singing, congregational, [105].
Sion, The Bishop of, [68].
Sixteen, The, [211], [213], [218].
Sixtus V., Pope, [208] f.
Socinianism began with a criticism of doctrines, [473];
and Humanism, [474];
and Scotist theology, [474];
its idea of Faith, [475];
of Scripture, [476];
God is Dominium Absolutum, [477] ff.;
the Atonement superfluous, [478];
doctrine of the Church, [480] ff.
Socimians called the Polish Brethren, [473].
Soleure, [73].
Solothurn, Swiss Canton, [22].
Somerset, Edward Seymour, Duke of, Lord Protector of England, [283], [299], [352], [359].
Sommières, Huguenot stronghold, [201].
Sorbonne, The, the theological faculty in the University of Paris, drafts a series of articles against Calvin’s Institutio, [147];

its list of Prohibited Books, [148], [603]; [95], [139], [142], [144] f., [146].
Sozzini, Fausto, founder of the Socinian Church, [422], [429], [471];
found that the Polish Unitarians were Anabaptists, [472].
Sozzini, Lelio, [427] and n., [470] f., [473].
Space, Presence in, [57], [59], [412] f.
Spaniards and Luther, [18], [493] f.
Spanish Fury, The, [265].
Spanish treasure ships seized by Queen Elizabeth, [259].
Spanish troops in the Netherlands, [245], [265].
Spanish idea of a reformation, [488] ff.
Speyer, [41].
[Spiritual Exercises], The, [532], [537], [538]-[545], [548], [555], [561], [585].
Stäbler or Staffmen, The, Anabaptists, [441].
Stadt, Karl, on the sacramental controversy, [53].
Staffort Book, The, [4] n.
Staprade, Anabaptist preacher in Münster, [456].
States-General, The, of France, [177], [180] ff., [185] f., [206], [212];
of the Netherlands, [241], [266].
Stipends of clergy, [69].
Stoicism and the Reformed theology, [13].
Straelen, Anthony von, [255].
Strassburg, [20], [43], [48], [60], [101], [124] f., [129], [144], [152], [453].
Submission of the Clergy (England), [327].
Substance and Presence, [59], [412] f.
Superintendents in the Scottish Church, [305], [308].
Supper, Doctrine of the Holy, at the Regensburg Conference, [522] f.,
at the Council of Trent, [583].
Supreme Governor of the Church (England), [393], [418] f.
Supreme Head of the Church (England), [327], [331], [393] and n.
Swiss soldiers, [23] f., [32].
Switzerland, political condition, [21] ff.,
how Christianised, [23];
religious war in, [49].
Synod of the Brethren, [435].
Synod of the Socinians at Krakau, [472].
Synods of the Reformed Churches, at Bern, [73], [118];
at Lausanne, [118];
at Zurich, [121];
in the French Protestant Church, [167], [168];
at Mantes, [221];
in the Dutch Church, [271];
difficulties in the way of a National Dutch Synod, [272];
in Scotland, [304].
Talavera, Fernando de, Confessor to Isabella of Castile, [490].
Temples (churches), [184].
Ten Articles, The, of the English Church, [10], [333] ff.
Teresa, Saint, [506], [531], [543].
Testament and Complaynt of the Papyngo, [278].
Theatre, French, and the Reformation, [151].
Theses, Zwingli’s Sixty-seven, [33].
Theses of Bern, The Ten, [42], [45] f.
Thèses évangéliques de Genève, The, [85].
Thèses, évangéliques of Lausanne, [103].
Theses, Luther’s, [17].
Theses, Rothmann’s, [454].
Thirty-eight Articles, The. See [Articles].
Thirty-nine Articles. See [Articles].
Thirty Years’ War, [2].
Thomas Aquinas, St., [78], [82], [491], [575].
Thomas of Canterbury, St., [345].
Thomism, The New, arose in Spain, [491] f.;
at the Council of Trent, [571], [577], [580], [582].
Thorens, Seigneur de, his house used in Geneva by the Evangelicals, [83] n.
Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas, Elizabeth’s Ambassador in Paris, [296] f.
Thyez, The people of, and secular excommunication, [112] n.; [117].
Tiger of France, Epistle sent to the, [176].
Tithes, attacked, [31], [446].
Toggenburg Valley, [24].
Toledo, College at, [491].
Torquemada, Thomas de, Inquisitor, [598] f.
Tournelle, La, criminal court of the Parlement of Paris, [170].
Tournon, Cardinal de, [149], [187].
Tours, Church at, [166];
Battle at, [214];
Henry IV. at, [214], [216], [220].
Tradition, Dogmatic, [423], [573] f.
Transubstantiation, [333], [412].
Trent, City of, [564] f.
Trent, Council of; First Meeting, [564]-[581];
papal legates at, [565] f.;
differences among the Romanist powers at, [566] f.;
debates on procedure, [568] ff.;
Second Meeting, [581]-[587];
definition of the doctrine of the Sacraments, [582] ff.;
Third Meeting, [587] ff.;
varying views about the reorganisation of the Church, [588] ff.;
was to be a continuation of the former Council, [589];
procedure at, [589] f.;
work of Cardinal Simonetta at, [590];
what the Council did for the Roman Catholic Church, [594];
its list of prohibited books, [604]; [211], [247] f., [416], [517].
Triumvirate, The, Montmorency, St. André and Guise, [184], [190], [193].
Tschudi, Peter, a Humanist, [18] n.
Tulchan Bishops, [360] and n.
Tunstall, Cuthbert, Bishop of Durham, [371], [373].
Twelve Articles, The (The Apostles’ Creed), [518].
Twenty-one Articles, The, of the Anabaptists, [459], [465].
Tyndale, William, [279], [317], [319], [337] ff., [377].
Ubiquity, Doctrine of, [4], [7], [57], [412] f.
Udall, Nicholas, translated into English the Paraphrases of Erasmus, [353].
Ulm, [53].
Uniformity. See [Act of].
Unterwalden, a Forest Canton, [21] f., [47].
Uri, a Forest Canton, [21] f., [47].
Ursinus, Zachary, [4] n.
Utrecht protests against Alva’s taxation, [259].
Vadianus. See [Watt].
Valais, The, [22], [48];
the Bishop of the, [41].
Valladolid, University of, [491].
Val Tellina, The, [50].
Vargas, Juan de, [255].
Vassy, Massacre at, [189] f.
Vatable, Francis, a royal lecturer in Paris, [96].
Vax, Antonia, attempts to poison Farel and others, [84] and n.
Vermigli, Peter Martyr, [358].
Vestments (Ornaments), Controversy about, [364], [403], [405] and n.
Vicar-General (England), [332].
Vidomne of Geneva, [62], [117].
Vienna, University of, [25], [607].
Viret, Pierre, in Geneva, [81] ff., [112].
Visitation, Spanish Crown had the right of ecclesiastical, [491].
Visitations of the Church in England, [332]; [353], [407], [410].
Vlissingen (Flushing), seized by the Sea-Beggars, [260].
Voes, Heinrich, martyr in the Netherlands, [224], [230].
Volkertz, Jan, Anabaptist martyr, [236].
Vulgate, The Latin, and the Council of Trent, [573] f.
Wagner, Sebastian, [43] and n.
Walcheren, Island of, [254], [260].
Waldenses, [92], [148].
Waldshut, The Brethren met at, [434].
Wallen, Jan, Anabaptist martyr, [236].
War of Public Weal in France, [19];
Religious wars in France, [191] ff.;
in Switzerland, [49] ff.;
of the Moors and Christians in Spain, [488].
Warham, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, [18], [317], [320], [322], [329], [338].
[Watt], Joachim de (Vadianus), a Humanist, [25] n., [47].
Watteville, M. de, Advoyer of Bern, [44];
Nicholas de, [45] and n.;
J. J. de, Advoyer of Bern, [45] n., [73].
Weekly Exercise, The (Scotland), [308].
Welches, La Dispute de, [44].
Werly, Pierre, a turbulent canon of Geneva, [65], [76] and n., [77] n.
Wesen, [25].
Wessel, John of, [15], [226].
Westminster, Conference at, [20], [400] ff.
Wiclif, [19], [317] f.;
influence in Scotland, [277].
Wiclifites, [92], [317].
Wieck, van der, Lutheran Syndic of Münster, [456] f., [460].
Wied, Hermann von, Archbishop of Köln, [3], [558].
[Wild-Beggars], The, [257].
Wildermuth, a soldier of Bern, [91].
Wildhaus, Zwingli’s birthplace, [24].
Wilhelmus van Nassouwe, [261].
Willebroek, [255].
William of Orange. See [Nassau].
Wishart, George, Scottish martyr, [284].
Wittenberg, [6], [11], [453].
Wittenberg Articles, The, [341].
Wittenberg Concord, [60].
Wöl[fflin, Heinrich] (Lupulus), [25].
Wolmar, Melchior, taught Calvin at Bourges, [95].
Wolsey, Cardinal, [18], [319], [320], [324], [325], [343].
Works, Merit in, [33].
Worms, Conference at, [124], [125], [126].
Worms, Diet of, three forces met at, [495].
Würtemburg, [48].
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, [371].
Wyttenbach, Thomas, [10], [27], [38], [46].
Xavier, Francis, [537], [556], [559].
Ximenes de Cisneros, Francesco, Cardinal, [490] ff., [493], [497], [530].
Yaxley, Francis, agent of Mary of Scotland, [420] n.
Ypres, [254].
Zug, Swiss Canton, [22], [47].
Zurich, Great Council in, [29], [33] ff.;
Public Disputations in, [34] f.;
at war with the Forest Cantons, [49];
Consensus of, [60];
synod at, [122];
ecclesiastical discipline in, [129];
Anabaptists in, [441].
Zütphen burnt by the Spaniards, [261].
Zütphen, Heinrich of, [228], [230].
Zwickau Prophets, [431].
Zwingli, Bartholomew, Dean of Wesen, [25] f.
Zwingli, Huldreich, the Elder, [25].
Zwingli, Huldreich, youth and education, [24];
moral character, [37];
Humanism and, [10], [37];
and Luther, [27], [55] f.;
comes to Zurich, [28] ff.;
his Sixty-seven Theses, [6] n., [33];
and Anna Reinhard, [36];
theory of civil control over the Church, [8], [111], [112], [129];
on Indulgences, [16];
views on the Sacrament of the Holy Supper, [55];
on ecclesiastical excommunication, [111] f., [129];
and the Anabaptists, [445].
Zwinglianism, [411].
Zwolle, full of Anabaptists, [237].


Printed by
Morrison & Gibb Limited
Edinburgh