speech, 291; they still persist, 292 and note; the discussion dropped, and why, 293; forbidden to originate mat- ters of state, 375; pass bills for ref- ormation of religion, 393-395; peti- tion the queen for laws to reform the Church, 401; rebuked by her, 402; propose bills "for rites and ceremo- nies," and for relief of Puritan clergy, 435; contend for their liberties with the Lords, ii. 18, 19; petition for ref- ormation in the Church, 20; frame a bill for it, 174, 175; imposed upon by a false report of their committee, 176 -180; reject a bill for a new Book of Common Prayer, 463; resent the answers of the Lords to their petitions for church reform, 475; devise vari- ous bills relating to ecclesiastical mat- ters, 476-479; persist in face of a special inhibition from the queen, 477; maintain their own prerogatives, 494; their custom of proceeding, in grave matters, by requesting the Lords to join them in petition, 464 and note, 492, 493; their petitions for church re- form specified, 467-470; the answers to them, 470-473; the answers re- sented, 475; excluded from the Cham- ber of the Lords in Elizabeth's last Parliament, and why, iii. 607, 610; their discourtesy to the queen, 609; their prerogative defended, 627, note; their address of thanks to the queen for her promise to check monopolies, 633. Communion service, substituted for the Mass, i. 24.
Confession and absolution in the Eng-
lish Church, ii. 263, note; iii. 506, note 2. Conforming Puritans, i. 219-221; iii. 364; reasons for their conforming, i. 221, note, 332, 333; their quarrel with the Separatists, 332, 333; punished, Chap. XVIII. and p. 527; iii. 27 – 31, 67, 505.
Conformity, precise, not required by Ed- ward VI., i. 78, 84, 315 and note; stand- ard of, changed by Whitgift, ii. 379. Conscience, the queen declares that she
will not make inquisition of, i. 261 478; freedom of, asserted, 389, 390; inquisition of, made, 479, 480, 505- 512; iii. 463, 464.
Conspiracies against the life and throue of Elizabeth, i. 277 and note, 360 and
note, 342, 343 and note, 337; ii. 503, 508-510, 520-539; iii. 98, note, 141 - 145, 178-182. Conventicles forbidden by proclamation, i. 214, 486; first instance of, under Eliz- abeth, 304-306 and note; Popish, 340. Cooper, Dr. Thomas, his sermon in de- fence of the Church, i. 438; his "Ad- monition to the People of England," iii. 282.
Copping, John, ii. 282; tried and exe- cuted, 316-318.
Council, Privy, form of charge to, i. 122, note; object to punishing slight non-conformity, ii. 377, note, 435; dis- like the proceedings of Whitgift, 409; rebuke the toleration of vicious cler- gy, 434, 435; rebuke Aylmer for his wrong to Barnaby Benison, 439, note; why they did not check the High Commissioners, 444-446; opposed to the proceedings of the ecclesiastical courts, 409; iii. 22.
Court of High Commission, i. 142; their punitive powers, 152, 329, note; remonstrances against their proceed- ings by the Council, 535, 538; and by Bishop Parkhurst, 537; ii. 72; their mode of examination, 240–244, 401– 404; their proceedings disliked by the Privy Council, 409, 434, 435, 439; iii. 22; and by others, ii. 440; why not checked by the Council, 444 – 446; their sufferance of vicious clergy, 434, 435; public charges against, 448; es- tablished for good purposes, iii. 278; but abused, 316, 317; proceeded only by the civil and canon law, i. 384; amenable to the temporal courts, 385, 393, note, 398; might arraign by cita- tion only, 396; popular indignation against, iii. 398-400, 414; by decision of secular judges, released from abid- ing by statute law, 408, 409, 413; their lawless proceedings, 481, 486, 553; had no legal right to arrest, ii. 396, iii. 481, note 2; responsible for prison horrors, 498-502; abate their persecutions, and why, 578, 579, 580, 583; their judicial assumptions attacked, 582; and suppressed, 583.
Court of the Star-Chamber, i. 203, note. Courts of Common Pleas reverse judg- ments of ecclesiastical courts, ii. 393, note, 398.
Coverdale, Myles, i. 170-172 and note; refuses his former bishopric and other livings, 208; refuses the bishopric of Landaff, 212, 215; presented to the living of St. Magnus, 217; exempted from "first-fruits," 218; deprived, 238; continues to preach, 240; his death and funeral, 355 and note; his opin- ion of the Sabbath, iii. 584. Cox, Dr. Richard, i. 9; interferes with the church at Frankfort, 93–109; Elizabeth's threat to him, 152; dislikes the ceremonies and vestments under Elizabeth, 179, note; prejudices her against his Frankfort adversaries, 189, 190; his opinion of the rights of the clergy and of the religious province of the prince, ii. 61; his opinion of the prophesyings, 65, note 3.
Cranmer, i. 37-39; did not sign the death-warrant of Joan Boucher, ib. note; his views of the Sabbath, iii. 584. Creeds, iii. 475, note.
Criminal trials, iii. 437, 438, 443, 444. Cross, sign of, in baptism, i. 193, note.
Dee, Dr. John, ii. 93, note 3. Deering, Edward, his letter to Sir Wil- liam Cecil, i. 500-503; a conforming and peaceable Puritan, 502, 504, 505, 521; his address to the queen in 1569, how misrepresented, 503 and note; how esteemed at Cambridge and Lon- don, 504; persecuted for opinions, 505-512; his eloquent defence, 512- 523; no more allowed to preach, 523; his death, ib. "Demonstration of Discipline," iii. 256, 416, 418.
Deprivations, i. 404, 408, 457. Devil, the, his martyrs, i. 74; author of non-conformity, ii. 164; his amatory capacities asserted by the prelates, 357, 358.
Divine right of bishops, ii. 242, note; iii. 333-347; the doctrine rejected by the bishops themselves, 345. Dispensing power of the crown, iii. 615, 617, 622, 624; denied, or doubted, in the Commons, 625; admitted as an historical fact, 627. Domiciliary visits, i. 351-353; iii. 477, 479, note, 480, note.
Douglass Howard, Lady, her private interview with Leicester, i. 265-272; her legal marriage to him, 273, note; is poisoned by his direction, ib.; mar- ries Sir Edward Stafford, ib. Dudley, Robert, i. 157-159, 162-167; his interview with Coverdale and Whitehead, 182-197; his birth and marriage to Amy Robsart, 245 and note; made Master of Horse, Knight of the Garter, Baron of Denbigh, and Earl of Leicester, 248 and note. See "Leicester, Earl of.”
Ecclesiastical unity, i. 331; iii. 153. Edward VI., his person, i. 2; character and attainments, 8, 9, 59; his journal, 3, 4, note; accession to the throne, 22; death, 60, 61, 65; precise conformity not required by, 78, 84, 315 and note. Election of pastor, right of, claimed, i. 76, 80; thought essential by the Puri- tans, 416, 449, note, 522, note. Elizabeth, princess, her birth, i. 245,
note; her answer to Queen Mary's message, 117, 118. Elizabeth, Queen, her speech upon the announcement of Mary's death, i. 119, 120; her first Privy Council, 121; her form of charge to her Councillors, 122, note; her person and deportment, 122 -124; refuses to hear mass, 125, 126; suspends all preaching, 126; deter- mines the religion of the realm in private, 177, 191, 318-320; her policy therein, 186, 187; her first Parliament opened, 128-130; her title to the crown, 134, 135; requested by the Commons to marry, 136; answer, 137 – 140; retains Popish emblems in her chapel, 183; her prejudices against John Knox, 189, note; and Genevans, 192; her resolution against further change in religious matters, 193, 259; refuses to sanction the "Book of Advertisements," 228; policy at the Council Board, 229, note; dalliance with the Earl of Leicester, 248-251 (note); emotion upon hearing of the birth of James of Scotland, 275; conspiracies against her life, 277 and note (see "Con- spiracies "); cautions against her be- ing poisoned, 278 and note; addressed
by the Commons upon the succession of the crown, 279; and by the Duke of Norfolk, 282; her professed intent of marriage, 285; her anger about motion for the succession, 286, 287 and note; her answer to the Lords upon the same subject, 288; her mar- riage urged by a deputation, and her answer, 289; forbids the Commons to discuss the succession, 290; again for- bids it, 292; revokes her inhibitions, 293; desirableness of her marriage, 297-301; her speech at the close of Parliament of 1566, 294, 295; her probable opinion of the right of Mary of Scotland to the succession, 295, 296; her charge to her judges, 299; her compulsory system in religious matters and its influence, 325-329; the Pope incites to her assassination, 337; conspiracy of Catholic powers against her, 342, 343 and note; her excommunication by the Pope, 363; her contempt of it, 365; resumes the crucifix in her chapel, 369; her pro- gress to the Parliament house, 370- 373; her new mandate for uniformity, 408; conspiracy of the Pope and Philip of Spain for her murder, 421; disap- proves trying the Queen of Scots for high treason, 425, 433 and note; for- bids bills in the Commons touching religion, 435; her mysterious sickness and scandal against her, 460-465, note; pledges herself not to molest con- sciences, 261, 478; her pledge vio- lated, 479 – 481; her proclamation for enforcing uniformity, 485, 486; Samp- son's opinion of her piety, 491, note; dislikes Puritans more than Papists, 525; considered the vestments of the clergy and the ceremonies no trifles, 547-549; commands Archbishop Grin- dal to curtail the number of preachers and to stop prophesyings, ii. 53, 54; proposals for her marriage, 131 - 134; her susceptibility to flattery, 139, note; her reception of the Duke of Anjou, 141; forbids preaching against his pro- posals of marriage, 142; her proclama- tion against the book of John Stubbes, 145; refuses to sign the contract of marriage, 158; her parting with the Duke, 158 and note; her probable object in encouraging him, 159; her
indifference to the spiritual wants of her people, 180, 181; her quarrel with Grindal, 344, 345; her charge to Arch- bishop Whitgift, 348; her dislike of preaching, 460; her message to the Commons not to deal in church mat- ters, 477; her second message, 481, 482, received too late, 482; her speech at the close of Parliament, 486; con- spiracies against her life, iii. 98, note, 141-145, 178-182; her reluctance to execute the Queen of Scots, 127, 131- 136, 148–151; her reply to the " pe- tition in behalf of a new model of the Church, 170; her treatment of the Queen of Scots considered, 174; her apprehensions on her account, 175, 176; in camp at Tilbury, 210 – 212; rejects counsels of severity against her Catholic subjects, 214; gives pub- lic thanks for the deliverance of her people, 220; craves license from her subordinate to eat meat, 419, note; forbids the execution of John Udal, 428; ignorant of the sufferings of her subjects in prison, 500; and of the principles and behavior of the Puri- tans, 532, 543; her lament for the deaths of Barrow and Greenwood, 541, 542; testimony of the Indepen- dents to her clemency, 543; her speech in the Parliament of 1592-3, 568; commissions the discharge of all pris- oners for ecclesiastical causes, 572, 575; her disregard of the Sabbath, 586, 587; rejects a bill for its better observance, 591; discourteously treat- ed by her Commons, 609; her bodily infirmity at the opening of Parlia- ment, 610; alarmed at the temper of the Commons, 628, 639; her message of apology and promise concerning monopolies, 628-630; her reply to the Commons touching monopolies, 634; the close of her life, 639–641; the causes of her melancholy, 641, note; how far implicated in the wrongs done to the Puritans, 642-646. Erasmus's paraphrase of the Gospels,
Essex, Walter, Earl of, his sickness and
death, ii. 114-130. Robert, Earl of, a patron of the Puritans, iii. 437; mediates for John Udal, 437, 438; beheaded for sedition, 641, note.
Establishment of the Church of Eng- land, its character, i. 176; how de- termined and by whom, 177 and note, 318-320; argument for, 467 473; comprehended the nation, 476. Evidence against the Crown not admis-
sible in court, iii. 422.
Exchequer, abuses in, iii. 314, 315 and note.
Exiles arrive at Frankfort, i. 57; pro- vided with a place of worship, 72; their order of religious service, 72, 73; elect their ministers, 76; their dissen- sións, 79–113; Calvin's letter to them, 89, 90; the original Church disperse,
Ex officio oath, iii. 156, 170. See "Oath ex officio."
Fever, jail, iii. 487–490.
Field, John, i. 414-418; imprisoned, 441; his conference with the Arch- bishop's chaplain, 441-444; his an- swer to Whitgift, 449, note; threatened with banishment, 481; again cited be- fore the Commissioners, ii. 161. "First-fruits," i. 217, note. Fletcher, Dr. Richard, Bishop of Lon- don, iii. 576.
Forcible establishment of their discipline falsely charged upon the Puritans, iii. 381, 391, 392, 395, 396. Form of prayer thought necessary by Puritans, i. 522, note.
Fox, John, his "Book of Martyrs," i. 52, 229, notes 2 and 4; his dislike of the vestments, 229; refuses to sub- scribe the "Book of Advertisements," ib.; intercedes for Anabaptists, ii. 15. "Fox's Ordinary," iii. 455, 474. "Frankfort, Troubles at," i. 65, note. See "Exiles.'
Freedom of speech, remarkable, in the House of Commons, i. 283; attempt in the House of Commons to check it, iii. 638.
Freke, Edmund, Bishop of Norwich, ii. 286, 287, 293, 294.
Gifford, William, iii. 76, 84, 94; Gilbert,
76, 84, 85, 105, 106. แ Gospellers," i. 158, note.
Government of the Church belongs to its spiritual officers, i. 195, 217; the Bible no rule of, 449; but tradition, 475.
Greenham, Richard, his treatise on the Sabbath, iii. 591.
Greenwood, John, iii. 456, 459, 464, 466, 467, 475, 476 and note, 504-513; his execution, why delayed and why ef- fected, 514, 515; executed for his opinions, 517, 518.
Grindal, Edmund, i. 82; once a Papist, 315; made Bishop of London, 201; his portrait, 209; his objections to the vestments overruled, 212, 213; his dis- like to them and to the ceremonies, 82, 220, 315; his view of the authority of the prince in religion, 312, 313; ii. 59, 60; a conforming Puritan, i. 220, 316, ii. 335, 339, note 6; his apology for con- formity, i. 213, 221, note; averse to se- verity against non-conformists,233, 239, 333; his charity for those who scru- pled the garments and ceremonies, 316; his dislike of separation, ib.; thought it worthy of punishment, 333; effects the liberation of separatists, 317; made Archbishop of York, 368; refuses to press canons for uniformity, 406; ad- vises banishment of Anabaptists, ii. 15, 342; made Archbishop of Canter- bury, 17; commanded to suppress the prophesyings, 54; refuses, 54-60; sus- pended, 66; in danger of being de- graded, 67; his constancy, 68, note; becomes blind, 68; his opinions, suf- ferings, death, and character, 326, 331, 335 - 345; slandered by Lingard, 343, note; in the High Court of Commission proceeded by jury, 393, note. Grue," meaning of, iii. 285, note 4. Gualter, i. 48.
Guillotine, in England, iii. 269–271.
Hell, Christ's descent into, iii. 34, note. Holidays, objections to, i. 179, note. Homilies, why constructed, i. 25, 210. Hooker, Richard, iii. 39–71. Hooper, i. 5-13, 27; his commission as bishop, 29, note; refuses consecration, 32 and note 1; before the Council, 33 - 46; controversy upon his case, 48-51; imprisoned, 51; consecrated, 52, 53; his labors and character, 54, 55. Howard, Charles, Lord High Admiral, a Catholic, ii. 215, note 2; assents to the conviction of the Queen of Scots, iii. 126, note, 138; his history, 198, note. Hume, David, his misrepresentations, i. 427 and note, 525; ii. 169, note, 464, note, 489, note, 494, note; iii. 315, note, 318, note, 327, note, 557, note 2, 632, note. Humphrey, Lawrence, refuses to con- form, i. 228; placed in custody, 234. Hutton, Matthew, his argument for the Establishment, i. 467-472; recom- mends conference with the Puritans, 487.
"I" written for “aye,” iii. 290 and note. "Imp," meaning of, ii. 144, note. Independents, their platform, ii. 302-
305; objections to the Establishment, 307-311; their dislike of Presbyterian- ism, 312-315; discard state patron- age, iii. 153; in prison, 403; unjustly called 66 Brownists," 449, note; their view of the national Church, 450; their affinities with the Presbyterians, 451; differences of the two upon ecclesias- tical relations to the State, 452; lay preaching among them, 451 and note, 529; without organization, 453; did not object to judiciary oaths in gen- eral, 465; their increase, 472; their places of meeting, 473; their organi- zation as a church, 474-477; many apprehended at Islington, 482; die in prison, 483, 496, 497; how many im- prisoned, 483; causes of their impris- onment, 484; their prison sufferings, 484 and note 5, 485-497, 499; their complaint against illegal imprison- ment, 485, 486; their testimony to the clemency of the queen, 543; had no designs against bishops, 532, 533; their heroism, 575; their exile, 577 and note 3.
"Inns of Court," iii. 44, note. Inquisition in England, i. 406, 468, 469, 479, 505, 506, 525; ii. 379, 401–407; Whitgift's articles of, denounced by Burleigh, 421, 422; inquisition of the good, and none of the wicked, rebuked by the Council, 434, 435. Insurrections, under Edward VI., i. 4, 26; northern, under Elizabeth, 359 361. Invasion of England planned, i. 420 – 422.
Jail fever, iii. 487 – 490. James VI. of Scotland, his birth, i. 275; its immediate influence in England, 276 ; intercedes for Thomas Cart- wright, iii. 399; his proclamation against John Penry, 522.
Jermin, Sir Robert, his counsel to Rob- ert Brown, ii. 289; intercedes for Brownists, but retracts, 316. Jesuits, their mission to England, ii. 183; their vow, 210, note; the true charac- ter of their mission, 221–231; their doctrine of the Pope's right to depose kings, 227, note.
Johnson, Francis, iii. 475, 476, note, 482; banished, 576.
Johnson, Robert, suspended and impris- oned for refusing subscription not re- quired by law, i. 527; his letter to Bishop Sandys, 527, 528; charges against him, 528; his trial, 529 – 533; his sufferings and death in prison, 535, 536.
Killing, in resisting the officers of the High Commission, no murder, iii. 482,
Kitchin, Anthony, Bishop of Landaff, i. 201, note, 212, note.
Knightley, Sir Richard, iii. 245, 246, 250, 263, 264, 296. Knollys, Sir Francis, his relation to the queen, i. 180, note; the author's mis- take on this point, iii. 344, note; an opposer of bishops, i. 197, 380, note; interview with Coverdale and White- "The head, 182-197; withstands Book of Advertisements," 228; pro- tects the ecclesiastical supremacy of the crown, 379; his remonstrance
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