Acclamation, Acton on, [83];
Plantier on, [204];
fears of, at first session, [296];
Manning on, [302];
De Luca on, [358];
again suggested, [480], [481];
checked by American bishops, [490].
Acton, Lord, on counsel given by cardinals, [59];
on the seventeen questions, [119];
view of Antonelli, [231];
on the views of the Curia, [232], [233];
on secrecy, [365];
on how information leaked out, [367].
Antonelli, Cardinal, Newman's notion of as to Syllabus, [123];
answers Schwarzenberg, [181];
his position towards the Council, [340];
reply to Beust, [447];
reply to Daru, [448].
Aristocracy, in Papal States; old not to be restored in new theocracy, [353].
Armenians, in Rome, arrests, interdict, and flight from monastery, [516]-520.
Arnim, Count, to Bismarck; acts as mediator, [657].
Audu, Patriarch of Babylon, speech of, [377];
ordered alone to the Vatican, [377];
night scene with the Pope, [461]-464.
Austrian bishops refuse to keep the law, [207].
Babylon, Patriarch of, see Audu.
Baptism, political effects of, [87], [371], [372].
Bell, for Presidents, mystic symbols on, snake assailing bark of St. Peter, [237].
Bellarmine, on bishops opposing Pope, [396].
Beust, Count, Austrian minister, reply to Hohenlohe, [185];
despatch to Rome, [445];
reply to Antonelli, [447];
defines the position of the State, [453].
Bianchi, Procurator-General of the Dominicans, sermon in St. Peter's preceding the Council, [242].
Bishops, relation of, to the Pope, [77];
his prefects, [78];
bearing discordant testimony to the faith, i., [227];
disabilities of, in the Council, [322], [325], [333], [344], [367], [398], [399],
[400], [404], [418], [468], [470];
memoranda of, on proposed decrees, [534];
their oath, [604].
Bismarck, to Arnim on relations of Vatican and Germany, [378].
Blacas, Duke of, the Crusader, his death and exemption from purgatory, [150].
Bull, convoking Council, [143];
limiting censures (Apostolicae Sedis), [335];
hierarchical, fiscal, and political aspects of this Bull, [336]-339;
suspending Council, [663].
Campagna, the, [90].
Canon Law, the common law of a country with or without consent of its Parliament, [48];
ought to be the law of the State, [209].
Canons, the famous twenty-one published, and consequent alarm, [431] ff.;
new and all-important one, first proposed by guile and next forced through, [244].
Cardinals ordered to write secret notes as to the question of a future Council, [2];
contents of notes, [57]-59.
Catechism, changes in, [463] ff.;
vote upon the new, [533].
Cecconi, Archbishop of Florence, subject of his history, [2].
Church and State, subordination of State, [19] ff., [41], [42], [245], [340], [439], [451], [580];
ideal of such subordination realized in Papal States, [88].
Church, right of, to inflict pains and penalties, [20], [41], [50], [29];
Montalembert on, [155];
Lacordaire forced to profess, [162];
embodied in the Inquisition, [234];
consent of, to dogmas declared unnecessary, [615].
Civilization means the civil system, [15];
Christian civilization means Pope over all princes, [41].
Civiltá Cattolica, commencement of, [14];
its mission, [15];
first manifesto, [15] ff.;
on Syllabus, [43];
quoted, passim.
Clergy, morals and training of, [168], [412], [423], [424] ff.
Collingridge, Arthur, English Crusader, [140].
Comma, vote upon, [494].
Commissions, six secret ones at work, [180].
Communication of Pope with the faithful, what is meant by, [24], [340], [581].
Concordats, [201].
Council, Vatican, first formal preparations, [2];
notes of cardinals upon, [57]-59;
of selected bishops upon, [65] ff.;
preparations for, interrupted by Sadowa, [72];
postponed in 1867, [73];
publicly intimated, [113];
objects and composition of, [483];
fears of political effects, [170];
manifestoes preparatory to, [171], [192], [196];
first session, [271]-307;
second session, [379];
third session, [520];
fourth session of, [629];
see Procedure, Rules of.
Creed, that of Pius IV. altered the decrees of Trent, [128];
a new one read at Vatican Council, [381];
old and new together, [382].
Crotti, Count, refuses to take the oaths to Italy, [82].
Crusade of St. Peter, efficiency of Crusaders, [132];
religious incitements to, [133];
tales of, [138];
the Pope in camp, [149];
preaching the Crusade, [150];
Crusaders exempt from purgatory, [151];
Allet's order, [172];
France commended for, [588];
to subdue the world, [653];
Crusaders leave Rome, [660].
Darboy, Archbishop of Paris, reprimand of, [78];
discusses whether a Liberal prince may or may not be absolved, [156];
refuted at Rome, [156];
his forecast of Perils in the Council, [215];
speaks, [416];
a speech of, in full, [555].
Daru, Count, minister of France, opinions of, [400];
threatens to withdraw French garrison, [442];
important despatch, [447];
reply to Antonelli, [450] ff.;
suddenly retires, [460].
Death, good hope in, for Cardinals, [372];
less hope for bishops, [373].
Decrees, purport of those of Vatican Council, [491];
conclusion to first imposed, [493];
Canon in second imposed, [597];
text of, Appendix C.
Directing Congregation, secret proceedings of, [165];
deprives bishops of right of proposing measures, enforces secrecy, holds fifty meetings, [385].
Direct power and indirect, doctrine of, [449].
Discussion not anticipated by the Curia, [342]-350.
Döllinger, his position and reputation, [180];
abused by Ultramontanes, [422], [472];
his first open manifesto, [425];
addresses to, [471];
declares that majorities cannot make dogmas, [484].
Dufournel, two brothers, Crusaders, their martyrdom and honours, [186] ff.
Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans, his manifesto, [215]-222;
lectured by Deschamps, [222];
reply to Deschamps, [427];
refused the imprimatur in Rome, [426];
personal attacks upon, [457].
Encyclical of December 8, 1864, [5].
Excommunication blasts the soul, according to Pius IX, [32].
Faculties, Quinquennial, [55], [77], [169].
Falcimagne, Abbé, contends that a Liberal prince may not be absolved, [159].
Florence abused by Veuillot, [85].
Free Church in a Free State, origin of the phrase, [33];
what Free Church means, [48].
Freemasons denounced, [79].
Friedrich, Professor, replies to Manning, [226];
his Tagebuch, [240];
his journey, [241], [242];
on program, [317];
on decrees on faith, [347];
on Jesuits, [365];
on Roman monks, [394];
on morals of the clergy, [412] ff.;
his internal conflict, [474];
on decree on infallibility, [476];
on the inevitable sunbeam, [547].
German bishops, ambiguous manifesto of, at Fulda, [204];
dismissed by Nardi, [346], [348];
on infallibility, [405].
German language, put out of priests' schools, [194].
German notables (Catholic), meeting of, in Berlin, [205].
Goldoni, the Crusader, his death and exemption from purgatory, [151].
Governments, proper place of, in education, [16];
warned by Manning, [225];
by Civiltá, [352];
their duty as to infallibility, [455].
Gratry, Father, letters of, [422].
Guidi, Cardinal, speech of, [583];
excitement caused by, [584];
scene with the Pope, [585];
votes Placet, [632].
Guillemin, the Crusader, anecdote of, [72];
death and posthumous honours, [139]-141.
Hefele, Bishop of Rottenburg, gives confused advice, [321];
on Pope Honorius, [500];
states the dilemma prepared by the Pope for the bishops of the minority, [604].
Hergenröther, among the men whom Schwarzenberg deemed weak, [181];
held up in England as an authority. id.;
asserts that bishops in Vatican Council had freedom of proposition, [320];
his Anti-Janus, [395].
History, official, how written, [592], [593].
Hohenlohe, Cardinal, his dinner parties, [417] ff.
Hohenlohe, Prince, minister of Bavaria, his circular to cabinets, [184].
Italians, excommunicated, [31];
abused, [188], [211], [402].
Italy in 1846, [8];
again in 1848, [9];
in 1854, [28];
in 1862, [34];
in 1867, [84], [85].
Immaculate Conception, effects of the proclamation upon polity, [3].
Immunity, purport of, [39], [48].
Indulgences, [186].
Infallibility, foreshadowed, [182];
address in favour of, [402];
counter address, [404];
opposed on principle, [405];
decision to bring it forward, [477];
new doctrine in many sees, [505];
danger of, to States, hinted by bishops, [508];
to be brought on out of order, [529];
responsibility for, disowned by many bishops, [530].
Inquisitor, a canonised, [73], [171].
Instruction, freedom of, illustrated, [16] ff.
Isabella, Queen of Spain, promises to Pope armed aid, [173];
receives the golden rose, [177].
Janus, [182], [197].
Jesuits, morals of, [415].
Jong, Peter, the Crusader, his martyrdom, [150].
Kenrick, Archbishop of St. Louis, on the committees, [334];
speaks, [360];
shows how the conclusion to the first decree was passed, [493];
on infallibility, [536];
questions catholicity of the Council, [538];
refutes Cullen, [549];
on why British government conceded Catholic emancipation, [566];
on oaths and declarations, [569];
describes first teaching of infallibility in Maynooth, [554].
Ketteler, Bishop of Mainz, his table talk, [420].
Kings, subordinate to ecclesiastical authority, [20], [21], [23], [39], [41],
[42], [46], [48], [136], [191].
Kings, subordinate to ecclesiastical authority, [20], [21], [23], [39], [41], [42], [46], [48], [136], [191];
not to be tolerated after Council, if they do not rightly govern, [268], [439];
two in every Catholic country, [48], [133], [191];
not to be convoked to the Council, [135], [183].
Kleutgen, the Jesuit, story of, [482].
Lay States deprecated, [88].
Ledochowski made Primate of Poland and representative of King of Poland, [483].
Liberal Catholics, first used and then cast off, [154];
policy of, [74];
denounced, [46], [47], [194], [210], [322];
condemned under the head of naturalism, [47].
Liberalism condemned, [43], [46], [47], [189], [590].
Liberty of the Press condemned, [30], [86], [158].
Liberty, religious, the Ultramontane view of, [25];
is a plague, [30], [160].
Liverani, Prelate and Protonotary of the Holy See, on Papal States, [9];
on morals of the Court, [108];
and of the City, [109].
Majority, as a rule of faith new, [469].
Manning, Cardinal, his account of the confirmation of the Syllabus, [108];
on the consequences to civil authorities, [121], [122];
his manifesto, [222];
he finds the Papal Church not narrow enough, [223];
replied to by Friedrich, [226];
Vitelleschi on, [302], [308], [403];
his testimony to the decorum and freedom of the Council, [495];
his speech on infallibility, [564];
confuted by Kenrick, id.;
on deputation to Pope to harden his heart, [613];
present from his fellow labourers the Jesuits, [641].
Maret, Bishop of Sora, his work, [198];
reviewed by Schulte, [200].
Margotti, Don, editor of Unitá Cattolica, on Ollivier, [400].
Marriage, a source of revenues and power, [55].
Menzel, Professor, forecasts of doctrinal change, [173].
Menzel, Wolfgang, cited in two or three places.
Michaud, Abbé, takes part in the debate on the lawfulness of absolving a Liberal prince, [158];
on changes of catechism, [464].
Military spectacle for bishops, [316].
Milton on Romish ceremonies, [304].
Minority, annoyances of, [458];
proposal that they should quit the Council after guile practised on July 5th, [599];
flight of, [389];
represented more Catholics than majority, [620].
Montalembert, on the reaction of 1852 and years following, [22], [74];
opposes Italy, [32];
on new Ultramontanism, [74];
his posthumous work, [153];
traces ruin of Spain to absolutism and the Inquisition, [178];
his strong opposition to infallibility, [192];
his dying manifesto, [484];
Pope forbids a high mass for him, [487].
Moreno Garcia, President of Ecuador, a model ruler, [236].
Mortal sin, a new one, [399].
Munich, replies of Faculties of Theology and Law to the questions of the king, [180].
Napoleon III, policy of, [233].
Nationalism a fault, [77].
Naturalism a heresy which includes two degrees of Liberal Catholicism, [47], [87].
Natural order and supernatural order, illustration of the terms, [58], [59].
Newman, Dr., on the Syllabus, [123] ff.;
declines invitation to Rome, [135];
his alarm at the prospect of the new dogma, [510];
rallied and exorcised by the Civiltá, [514];
retort of Veuillot upon, [515].
O'Connell on the doctrine of Papists properly so called, [122].
Ollivier, Emile, Prime Minister of France, policy of, [233], [234];
his proper course prescribed by Veuillot, [393];
changes the policy inaugurated by Daru, [460].
Opposition, the existence of, denied, [314];
its existence confessed, [315];
efforts to disorganize, [334];
found so grave that it must be put down, [409].
Orientals invited to Council, [144];
their response, [145]-148.
Papacy a universal monarchy, and over all princes, [37], [39], [41], [42], [119], [145], [192], [451], [452];
crimes of, against Italy, [662].
Papal States, the model state for the whole world, [87], [189], [589] ff.;
no wrong act can be done in them by authority, [88];
plains of, [91];
dwellings of, [91];
people of, [92];
villages of, [93];
implements, cattle, and towns, [93]-100;
classes, [101]-103;
moral character of capital, [106].
Parliamentary government decried, [188], [191], [210], [266], [401], [454].
Parliament, English and Irish members of, are to have obligations imposed, [689].
Perfect Society, the Church a, [39].
Petitions and protests of bishops of the minority, [317], [367], [369], [407], [408], [468], [504].
Pius IX., his States disturbed, [9];
witnesses general commotions, [9];
calls for armed aid, [10];
undertakes to reconstruct society, [11], [37], [38];
his first dogma, [31];
his jubilee of priesthood, [190];
his sayings previous to the Council, [231], [232];
his liberality, [239];
speech against the Opposition, [391];
refuses to receive address of 130 bishops, [406];
writes against bishops, [429];
excites their clergy against them, [458];
his chat, [472];
self-importance, [476];
further letters, [481];
forbids a High Mass for Montalembert, [487];
gives no access to the minority, [530];
approves of Saldanha for rebelling against his king, [564];
severity to bishops as to health, [576];
his tergiversation, [612];
offers to mediate between France and Prussia, [650];
how he likes to be addressed, [651];
appeals to King William for help, [656];
hoists white flag, [659];
foretells his restoration, [699];
re-opens the Roman question, [706].
Placet, royal, Tarquini's doctrine of, [24] ff.
Plantier, Bishop of Nimea; favours an acclamation and dogmatising of the Assumption of the Virgin, [204].
Politics included in morals, [17].
Pope, sitting as supreme judge of princes and of laws, [38], [41], [203], [298];
the Word of God, [238];
Abraham, Moses, and Christ, [266];
Cæsar, [389], [644];
head of statesmen, [456];
intercessor between God and the world, [582];
continues the work of Christ on earth, [591];
head of both spiritual and temporal power, [41], [42];
head of the human species, [86];
fountain of water of life, [651];
has the authority of God, [651].
Press, is Satan, [315];
correspondents of, lampooned, [352];
contradictions of, [355].
Priests, disfranchised, [184].
Procedure, Method of, in the Vatican Council, [344], [362], [363], [398], [467], [596], [605], [615], [629].
Pro-synodal congregations, [249].
Protestantism not a negation, [602].
Protestants, letters of invitation to, [149].
Pusey, Dr., valued as an ally by continental priests, [218], [430].
Quatrebarbes, Bernard, the Crusader, [622].
Quélen, Count, the Crusader, [139].
Rauscher, Cardinal, opens discussion, [359];
laughed at by the majority, [533];
his argument on infallibility, [534]-536, [582].
Reconstruction of Society, [37], [249].
Reform of Church in Head and Members, [171].
Regulars, uses of, to Papacy, [77], [78].
Reisach, Cardinal, head of commission, for ecclesiastico-political affairs, [131];
his proposed code, [132];
appointed President of Council, [250];
death, [348].
Renan, his view of intolerance as essential to the Church approved at Rome, as against that of the Liberal Catholics, [153], [159], [163].
Rome, changes in, [84];
street lighting a ceremony, [84];
midday in, [84];
as seen by Veuillot, [85];
city of the saints, [106];
moral condition of, [107];
is modern to Orientals, [149];
is the city of three devotions, [494].
Rosary, its military virtues, [243];
it destroyed the Albigenses, [243].
Saints, new, [117].
Segesser, his plan of reform, [331].
Senestrey, Bishop of Regensburg, speech of, at Schwandorf, [188];
tales of, [420];
Manning's comrade on the deputation to harden the Pope's heart, [614].
Schoolmen, their methods for all time, [44].
Schrader, Father, the Jesuit, his propositions, [713].
Schwarzenberg complains of the theologians selected, [181];
his reception of Sepp, [205];
interrupted while speaking, [496];
on infallibility, [547].
Sibour, Archbishop of Paris, on new Ultramontanism, [74].
Society, the Pope the saviour of, [145], [190], [456], [647].
Soglia, his doctrine according to Newman, [126];
his real doctrine, [129].
State, subordinate to Church, [40], [41], [42], [46], [88], [340], [439], [451].
Stimmen aus Maria Laach on religious liberty, [193].
Strossmayer, attempts to speak on the Rules, [333];
called to order, [362];
extract of speech, [363];
on the official reports, [364].
Stumpf on religious liberty and on the freedom of the lawgiver from the command of the priest, [210]-213.
Subjects more the subjects of the Pope than of their own sovereign, [191].
Sunbeams, doctrinal value of, [3], [264].
Sword, doctrine of, [244];
see also Crusade of St. Peter.
Syllabus, issue of, [8];
contents of [43] ff.;
summary of its effects, [51];
confirmed by Pope, [110];
accepted by collective episcopate, [114];
Manning's account of its confirmation, [121];
cited by Civiltá, [101];
not the work of the Pope according to Dr. Newman, [124].
Table-talk, during the Council, [417].
Taigi, Anna Maria, the new guardian of the Capitol, [247].
Tarquini, Cardinal, a Jesuit, when a Professor hailed by Pius IX., [22];
his doctrine of king and Pope, [23] ff;
his doctrine of the sword, [244] ff.
Temporal power of Pope necessary to his spiritual office, [35], [115].
Theiner, Augustine, Prefect of the Vatican Archives, forbidden to show documents to bishops or theologians, [377];
his unsuccessful attempt to see Lord Guildford's MSS., id.;
his dismissal, [340].
Theocracy, contrast between the Mosaic and the Papal, [21].
Theologians, excluded from Vatican Council, [311];
forbidden to meet or consult together, [313];
attainments of Roman, [344].
Third party, attempt to form, [459].
Toleration, when to be allowed, [31].
Tribunals, the internal, external, and supreme, [38], [544], [675].
Ultramontanism, difference between old and new, [74], [75].
Unitá Cattolica, abuse of Italy, [188].
Unity, Romish notion of, [189].
Veuillot, Louis, editor of Univers, a layman, on the grand results to be expected, [85], [86];
on the press, [86];
wants bishops for Prefects of Provinces, [267];
sees in the future only 'the Pope and the People,' [268];
would not have ancient aristocracy restored, [352], [353];
abuses correspondents of papers, [353];
lays down a policy for France, [393];
gives glory to M. Ollivier, [460];
his true account of the scene between the Pope and the Patriarch of Babylon, [462];
watches the minority, [625].
Vicar of Christ, the office described, [591].
Virgin, the letter of, on infallibility, [547].
Vitelleschi, origin of his book, [356];
attacked in vain by the Civiltá, [356];
his view of the practical scope of infallibility, [509].
War, anticipations or threats of, [82], [208], [210], [341], [349], [389], [445], [454], [500], [539], [610], [669].
Watts-Russell, the Crusader, [588].
Youth, Catholic, manifestoes of, [354], [441].
Butler and Tanner, The Selwood Printing Works, Frome, and London
Transcribers note:
Original spelling has been retained.
The book cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain