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Leicester Abbey, death of Wolsey in,
iv. 160

Leo X. raised to the Papacy, iii.

158; inducements held out to him
by Fernando to accept a family
alliance against France, 172, 173;
sends Spinelli with a consecrated
sword and cap to Henry, 174;
calls a chapter to reconcile the
Conventual and Observant friars,
241; appoints Alessandro to the
bishoprics of Monte Corosino and
San Domingo, 261, 262; writes to
Henry and Catharine on behalf of
Alessandro, 263; his death, 320
Leze, Zuan da, organist, his death

caused by disappointment, iv. 5
Lisle, Viscount. See Brandon.
Longland, Henry's confessor, con-
sulted by the King as to the
validity of his marriage with Ca-
tharine, iii. 334

Longueville, defeats the Spaniards,
iii. 147; is captured by Henry at
the battle of the Spurs, 154; his
treatment by Henry, b.; induces
Henry to receive an agent from
Louis to treat of peace, 172; advo-
cates to Henry an alliance with
France, 182; reports to Louis fa-
vourably of the charms of Mary
Tudor, 183; arranges the terms of
alliance between Henry and Louis,
184; signs a truce with Henry,
188; acts as proxy for Louis in the
betrothal to Mary Tudor, 203
Louis XII. King of France, his igno-
rance of the designs of Fernando
on the Venetian states, iii. 7; his
designs against Pope Julius, 55;
Henry's proposal for the formation
of a league for the defence of
Venice how entertained by him,
58; his plan for the deposition of
the Pope, 103; Pope Julius seeks
aid against him from England, 104,
105; his designs on the Papacy,
106-108; results of his loss of his
minister Amboise, 108, 109; papal
censure issued against him, 122;
denounces Pope Julius at a coun-
cil of bishops at Tours, 122, 123;
calls a council of the church at
Pisa, 141; league formed against
him, 144-148; defeat of his army

VOL. IV.

by Henry, 154; Fernando's ma-
trimonial schemes for his daughters
Claude and Renée, 164; terms en-
tered into by him with Fernando,
166; loss of his wife Anne, 180;
makes an offer of his hand to
Mary, Henry's sister, ib.; his bodily
afflictions and character, 186, 187;
terms of alliance entered into by
him with Henry, 188, 189; his offer
to Mary accepted, ib.; is betrothed
to her at Greenwich Palace, 203;
induces the Duke of Norfolk to
reduce the number of Mary's at-
tendants, 210, 211; his death, 215
Lovel, Constable of the Tower, iii. 14
Luther, Martin, visits Rome, iii. 55;

his lowly birth, 326; his prede-
cessors in the Reformation, ib.; is
opposed by Erasmus, 328; is fa-
voured by Freidrich of Saxony,
ib.; reception of his works in Eng-
land, 328, 329; Henry writes his
'Defence of the Seven Sacra-
ments' against him, 329; his reply
to Henry, 329, 330; denounces
Henry's marriage with Catharine,

334

Madrid, treaty of, iv. 28

Manoel, King of Portugal, his mar-

riage to his wife's sister, Maria, iii.
2; at the death of Maria is mar-
ried to the Archduchess Elinor,
247; desires that his daughter
Isabel should be contracted to
Charles, 248; his death, 342
Manuel, Juan, Fernando's attempt to
capture him frustrated, iii. 159,
160, 205; his enmity to Fernando,
205, 206; thwarts Wolsey in his
ambition for the Papacy, 320
Margaret, Lady, promotes Fisher, iii.
12; appoints him one of the exe-
cutors of her will, ib.; Henry's
councillors at the beginning of
his reign selected by her, 14; her
death, ib.

Margaret of Salisbury ordered to be

arrested on the execution of Buck-
ingham, iii. 273
Marguerite, Archduchess. embassy to,
iii. 141; her character, ib.; her wager
with Boleyn, 143; persuades the
envoys to wait at the imperial

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court after her father refuses to
sign the treaty, 143; joins in the
league against France, 145; re-
ceives a visit from King Henry,
155; her anxiety that the contract
between the Archduke Charles
and Mary Tudor be observed, 180;
sends Pleine to England to report
on the personal appearance of Mary
Tudor, 180, 181; shields Juan
Manuel from the enmity of Fer-
nando, 205; invites Padre Ales-
sandro to her court, 261; obtains
for Alessandro the bishoprics of
Monte Corosino and San Domingo,
262, 263; Anne Boleyn accepts her
invitation to come to her court,
340: her high opinion of Anne's
qualities, ib.; appoints Anne one
of her maids of honour, 341; is
married to Henri d'Albret, iv. 45
Maria, sister of Charles, the low
opinion formed by her of Jane
Seymour, iv. 343

Maria d'Ara Coli, Santa, iii. 242
Marney, captain of the guard, iii.

14; succeeds Ruthal in the privy
seal, 315; his hostility to Wolsey,
ib.

Mary, sister of King Henry, her
feelings towards Viscount Lisle,
iii. 153; her contract with the
Archduke Charles, 178; feelings
of Fernando and Charles regard-
ing the match, 179; her personal
appearance, 180; receives an offer
of the hand of King Louis, 184;
accepts the offer, and formally re-
nounces her contract with Charles,
189, 190; selection of her house-
hold by Norfolk and Wolsey, 190;
is betrothed to Louis in Greenwich
Palace, 203; her numerous retinue
on her arrival in France, 210, 211;
after the dismissal of her attend-
ants retains near her person Anne
Boleyn and Lady Elizabeth Grey,
212; her life as queen, 213; re-
sides at the palace of Les Tour-
nelles, ib.; death of her husband,
215; takes up her residence in the
Hôtel de Cluny, ib.; is styled during
her days of mourning La Reine
Blanche,' ib.; attentions paid to
her by François, 216; her nume-

.

rous suitors, 217; her maids of
honour dismissed by François, 218;
reveals to François her feelings
towards the Duke of Suffolk, 219;
is privately married to Suffolk at
the Hôtel de Cluny, 227, 228;
effect of her marriage on the Duke
of Norfolk, 228, 229; reasons for
her sympathy with Catharine, iv.
100, 141, 142; her death, 195; her
daughters, ib.

Mary, daughter of Henry and Catha-
rine, her birth at Greenwich, iii.
233, 234; her christening, 235; her
establishment, 244, 245; her fa-
ther's fondness of her, 245, iv. 198;
her parents desire to contract her to
the Archduke Charles, 245, 246;
doubts raised as to her legitimacy,
246, 342; the contract with Charles
declined by his ministers, 247; se-
cret mission to Paris respecting a
match between her and the Dau-
phin, 249; sends an emerald ring
to Charles, 364; Charles breaks
his contract with her, 364-366;
Wolsey renews the scheme of her
contract with the Dauphin, 367;
her sickness, iv. 169; her stub-
born nature, 198, 202; refuses to
admit the justice of the laws de-
priving her and her mother of their
titles and position, 199; Anne
pays her a visit at Hatfield
Lodge, 200; is recalled to court
by the King, 203; lies suggested
to her by Chapuys, ib.; stoops to
court the favour of Jane Seymour,
217; defies Queen Anne, b.; her
jealousy roused by the question of
precedence between her and Eliza-
beth, 218; message forwarded to
her by Queen Anne when under
condemnation in the Tower, 332
Maximilian, Emperor of Germany,
his ignorance of the designs of
Fernando, iii. 7; suspects the de-
signs of France on Italy, 55; his
contention with Fernando respect-
ing the regency of Castille settled
by Amboise, 69; is invited by Louis
to send bishops to the council at
Pisa, 142; his distrust of Cardinal
Carvajal, ib.; his desire to be pope
and saint, ib.; his treatment of the

English ambassador, 141-143; his
love of money, 144; signs the arti-
cles of a league abandoning Louis,
145; is induced by Fernando to
break the treaty with Henry, 168;
his aversion to the match with
Henry's sister Margaret, 180; his
death, 265; his poverty, ib.
Medici, Giuliano de, father of Cle-
ment V., iii. 321, 322
Melancthon invited to England by
Anne, iv. 187

Melton, John, introduces Lord Percy

to Anne Boleyn, iii. 298; letter to
him from Lord Percy when ordered
by Wolsey to renounce his claim
on Anne, 315, 316

Mendicant friars, iii. 13, 27, 240, 343
Mendoza, agent of Charles in Lon-
don, instructions from Charles re-
specting Catharine, iv. 59, 60
Modeno, Rinaldo da, poisons Cardinal
Bainbridge, iii. 184

Moncada, Ugo de, incites Colonna to
take spoil from the Pope, iv. 15;
obliges the Pope to accept humili-
ating terms, 16, 97
Montagu, Lord, threatened by Henry,
iii. 270; is cast into the Tower from
his connexion with Buckingham,
272; reasons for his hostility to
Anne, iv. 303; one of the judges
of Norreys and the other conspira-
tors, 306
Montjoy, Lord, his noble qualities,
iii. 35; his friendship with Eras-
mus, b.; his marriage to Agnes
de Venegas, maid of honour to
Queen Catharine, 36; entreats
Catharine to obey the King's in-
structions, iv. 206; leaves Catha-
rine's service, 209
Moors, popularity of a sacred war
against, in England, iii. 129
More, Sir Thomas, effect on his mind

by the works of Luther, iii. 328;
endeavours to prevail on Henry to
modify some of his views in his
'Defence,' 330; is appointed chan-
cellor, iv. 137; his scholarship, ib.;
his love to his church and country,
ib.; his opposition to Tyndale, 138;
his zeal in buying up and burning
Bibles, b.; is favoured by Catha-
rine and Anne, ib.; his resignation

of the seals, 183; will not acknow-
ledge the King to be Head of the
Church, ib.; is tried and con-
demned, 216; is pardoned through
the intercession of Anne, 217; is
again lodged in the Tower, 226;
his execution, 227
Moriano, his description of the phy-
sical beauty of Henry, iv. 4, 5

Naples, Fernando applies to Pope
Julius for the fief of, iii. 59, 69
Navarre, Queen of, her blameless
life, iii. 53; Fernando's wicked de-
signs against her, 53, 54
Navarre, Fernando's unscrupulous
conduct towards it, iii. 136; is oc-
cupied by the troops of Alva, 137
Neville, Ralph, is supplanted in his
suit by the Earl of Surrey, iii. 192
Newgate Street, church of the Fran-
ciscan Order in, iii. 240

Norfolk, Duke of (1); his opposition
to the Spanish party surrounding
Catharine, iii. 169; is present at
the renunciation of the Archduke
Charles by Mary Tudor, 189; ap-
points Anne Boleyn to attend
Mary Tudor on her leaving Eng-
land for France, 190; is appointed
judge in the trial of Diego, 198;
conducts Mary and her attendants
to France, 210; is requested by
Louis to reduce the household of
Mary, 211; his feelings towards
Suffolk and Wolsey, ib.; presides
at the trial of the Duke of Buck-
ingham, 269, 270, 271; his death
and burial, 338

Norfolk, Duchess of (1), her opinion
respecting Catharine as the wife of
Prince Arthur, iii. 8, 9, 15, 169; is
chosen godmother to the Princess
Mary, 235

Norfolk, Duke of (2), his relations

with his family, iii. 338; his preju-
dice against the Boleyns, 339; his
annoyance at being deprived of
the manor of Hunsdon, ib.; his
persecution of Anne Boleyn, ib.;
his advice respecting the treat-
ment of the legates Campeggio
and Wolsey, iv. 125; his cold
reception of Wolsey at Grafton,
126; his altercation with Wol-

sey, 128, 129; succeeds Wolsey as
President of the Council, 135; his
enmity to Wolsey, 141; his oppo-
sition to Henry's match with Lady
Anne, 142-144; his jealousy of his
brother-in-law and family, ib.; his
plans with respect to his children,
143, 144; his conversations with
Chapuys respecting the appoint-
ment of Wiltshire as ambassador
to Charles, 144; his altercation in
the House of Lords with Bishop
Fisher, 147; induces Henry to
send Wolsey to York, 155; sternly
informs Chapuys that papal man-
dates cannot be put in force in
England, 165; his jealousy of
Anne Boleyn, 167; his dealings
with Bess Holland, ib.; receives a
bribe from Charles, 168, 170; joins
in a plot against Anne, 170, 171;
is required with his fellow-con-
spirators to announce to Catharine
the King's displeasure at her in-
trigues, 172; Catharine's scornful
answer to him, b.; changes his
line of conduct, 176; his daughter
Lady Mary married to the Duke
of Richmond, 197; his fresh mo-
tives for hating Anne, b.; pre-
sides at the trial of Dacres, 219;
threatens Cromwell, ib.; his retire-
ment from court, 223; his de-
sire to have the Duke and
Duchess of Richmond near his
person refused, 223; declines to
go to Ireland, ib.; his return to
court, 224; his haughty language
to Anne, 225; her scathing reply
to him, 226; his enmity to the
priesthood, b.; his rudeness to
Anne, 257; takes a part in the
arrest of Anne, 271; is present at
the trial of Norreys and the other
prisoners, 307; permission granted
to him to select Anne's judges
from her accusers, 310; pronounces
sentence on Anne, 314; and on
Rochford, 317; his visits to Roch-
ford and Anne in the Tower and
their result, 318, 319; his desire
that Anne should be executed pri-
vately overruled, 333

Norfolk, Duchess of (2), Lady Eliz-
abeth Stafford, daughter of the

Duke of Buckingham, iii. 192;
her attachment to Ralph Neville,
ib.; her marriage to the Earl of
Surrey, 193; upholds the rights
of Catharine, 200; her feelings
towards her husband, iv. 167;
assists Catharine in her appeal
to the Pope, 168
Norreys, Henry, his birth and pa-
rentage, iii. 358; takes a part in
the embassy sent by François to
propose a match between the
Dauphin and Princess Mary, ib.;
honours and estates conferred on
him by Henry, ib.; his behaviour to
Wolsey at Grafton, iv. 126, 127;
Wolsey's gratitude to him for his
good news, 137; is, with Heneage,
best man at Henry's marriage to
Anne, 180; loss of his first wife,
254; Anne is desirous that he
should marry Madge Shelton, 254,
255; takes a part in the jousts at
Greenwich, 269; his conversation
with the King, b.; indignantly
refuses to perjure himself, ib.; his
arrest and committal to the Tower,
274; declares the Queen's inno-
cence, ib.; the King sends to him
a messenger, offering pardon if he
will confess, 320, 321; his reply,
321; his death, 323
Northumberland, Earl of, order given
for his arrest on the execution of
Buckingham, iii. 273; places his son
Percy as a hostage in Wolsey's
hands, ib.; contracts with Shrews-
bury a match between Lord Percy
and Lady Mary Talbot, 298; re-
ceives a peremptory summons from
Wolsey to come to London, 311;
is required by Wolsey to force his
son to renounce Anne Boleyn, 312;
his interview with his son and its
result, 313-317

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of, his claim to the earldom of Wilt-
shire, iii. 18; his royal ancestry,
b.; his relationship to the Boleyns,
18, 19; presents to Sir Thomas
Boleyn the white ivory horn, 251;
his death, 251, 252

Ormond, Earl of. See Sir Thomas
Boleyn

Ortiz, letters of Catharine to him, iv.
150, 175

Ossory, Lord. See Piers Butler.

Pace, Secretary, seeks from Wakfeld
and Stafileo their views as to the
validity of the King's marriage
with Catharine, iii. 336; takes up
his residence at Syon, ib.; his con-
versation with Henry as to the
power of kings in the matter of
marriage, 334, 335
Parker, chaplain to Anne, her kind-
ness to him, iv. 187, 188
Parre, Sir Thomas, iii. 64, 65
Parre, Catharine, daughter of Sir
Thomas Parre, sixth wife of Henry,
iii. 65

Passano, assistance given by him to
Gramont, iii. 27; sent by Louise
of Savoy on a secret mission to
England, 366

Paul III. (Alessandro Farnese), his
election, iv. 231; is an advo-
cate for the divorce, ib.; changes
his opinion after his accession to
the Papacy, ib.; his illegitimate
children, ib.; at the command of
Charles prepares to lay England
under an interdict, ib.; fears to
publish the interdict, 232
Pavia, François defeated and taken
captive in the battle of, iii. 348
Pembroke, Marchioness of. See Anne
Boleyn

Penshurst Park, Sir Thomas Boleyn

the ranger of, iii. 283
Percy, Lord Henry, his personal ap-
pearance, iii. 297; his father North-
umberland wishes him to marry
Shrewsbury's daughter, 298; his
opposition to this match, b.; is
left by Northumberland as a host-
age in the hands of Wolsey, ib.;
falls in love with Anne Boleyn,
299; his stormy interview with
Wolsey, 306-310; is ordered by

Wolsey to renounce his claim on
Anne, 310; his father summoned
to town by Wolsey, 311; his in-
terview with his father, 314; his,
letter to Melton, 315, 316; is forced
to marry Lady Mary Talbot, 317;
his hatred of Wolsey, iv. 7; loss
of his domestic happiness, 157;
separates from his wife, 158;
arrests Wolsey in Cawood Castle
on a charge of high treason, 158,
159; swears that Anne had never
pledged her troth to him, 263,
327; is present at the trial of
Anne, 311; leaves the court before
the sentence is pronounced, 314
Peterborough, Catharine buried in
the cathedral of, iv. 253

Peto, Father, his friendship with
Bishop Fisher, iii. 13; interrupts
a royal chaplain while preaching
before the King, iv. 179; is taken
into custody, b.; is created a car-
dinal, ib.

Plantagenet, Anne, her marriage to
Lord Howard, iii. 16; royal grants
bestowed upon her, 87; her death,
and burial in Thetford Priory, 192
Plantagenet, Margaret, is chosen go-
verness to Mary, iii. 244

Pleine reports to Marguerite on the
personal appearance of Mary Tudor,
iii. 180, 181

Pole, Catharine, appointed nurse to
the infant Mary, iii. 244
Pole, Reginald, on the number of the
children of Henry and Catharine,
iii. 331; asks Bishop Stokesley to
advise Henry to put away Anne,
iv. 261

Pole, Richard de la, heads a rebellion

in Ireland, iii. 353; his death at
the battle of Pavia, 363

Poles, their enmity to Anne, iv. 196
Pollard, one of the crown lawyers,

his boisterous conduct at the trial
of Anne, iv. 313, 314
Poynings, Sir Edward, sent by Wol-
sey on an embassy to the imperial
court, iii. 132

Poyntz, Bessie, nurse of the infant
prince, iii. 124, 126

Privy chamber, rules of the, iii. 360
Puebla, Gonsalvo, iv. 35; appointed
by Charles his household priest,

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