opinions of Ridley and Cranmer on, 261; order for administration of, set forth in English, i. 118-9; to be given in both kinds, 99; argument in favour of this, 100-102; procla mation enforcing the order, 120; à Lasco advocates sitting at the re- ception, 193, 225; administered at marriages, 254; repeal of Act for administering in both kinds, ii. 205; dispute on, in the Convocation, 110; questions on, proposed to Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, 156; order as to bread for, 286; rubric as to kneel- ing removed from the Liturgy of Elizabeth, and restored with altera- tion, 286; propositions respecting in the Convocation of 1559, 292; the manner of the presence not defined by the Articles, 393. Excommunication disused, i. 198; La- timer urges its revival, 199. Exeter, see of, impoverished by Voy- sey, i. 213; some lands recovered for, by Turberville, ii. 173; Crediton again taken from, 174, 308. Exeter, siege of, i. 158. Exeter, Earl of, calls Heylyn a beg-
ging scholar," i. XXVII, LXXI. Exiles, Protestant, number of, and names of the chief, ii. 103; seditious writings of, 120, 178, 181; their places of refuge, 175; (see Frankfort). Expositions of Scripture imposed on parishes by Puritan ordinaries, ii. 359, 362.
Fagius, Paulus, ii. 197; his body taken up and burnt, ib.; solemnity in his honour, 200.
Falkland, Lord, visits Heylyn, and introduces Captain Nelson to him. i. LXXXI.
Farrar, consecrated Bishop of St. Da- vid's, i. 145; charges against him, 253-4; imprisoned, 255; his martyr- dom, ii. 153.
Fast Castle surprized, i. 129. Fasting-days not to be altered by pri- vate authority, i. 71; Glasier preaches against observance of, 80; proclama- tion for fasting, ib.; order to observe Lent, 117; Acts of Parliament as to fasting, 144, 267; the ancient fasts
restored by Mary, ii. 105; dispar- agement of fasts by Puritans, 359; not to be appointed except by public authority, 362; Jejunium Cæcilia- num, 390. See Lent. Featherstone, a pretender, ii. 174; is executed, 175.
Fecknam, dean of St. Paul's, endea- vours to convert Lady Jane Gray to Romanism, ii. 38; sent to dispute at Oxford, 156; made Abbot of West- minster, 189, 214; appears at the Westminster disputation, 288-290; anecdote of, on the dissolution of his order, 342. Fee-farms, i. 127.
Feoffees for buying up impropriations, i. LXXXIX; their practices, ib.; they are suppressed, XC11. Ferdinand, Emperor, ii. 193; advises Elizabeth to return to the Roman Church, 356; wishes to marry her to a son, and prevents her excommu- nication, 398; his death and obse- quies, 412.
Feria, Count, ii. 302, 331. Fetty, John, exaggerated story of his death, ii. 169.
Fever, ravages of a, ii. 222. Fiennes, Nathaniel, i. CLVIII. Filmer, Sir Robert, i. cxxxi. Firstfruits given to the King, i. 39; restored by Mary, ii. 162; again settled on the Crown, 278. Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, executed, i. 31; ii. 66.
Fitzpatrick, Barnabas, Prince Edward's proxy for correction, i. 27; Edward writes to him, 249.
Fitzwilliam, Earl of Southampton, ii. 249, 253.
Fletcher, Bishop of Bristol, (afterwards of London) ii. 387. Foreigners expelled from the kingdom, ii. 101.
Fortescue, excepted from the general pardon, i. 66.
Fox, Bishop of Winchester, ii. 49. Fox, Bishop of Hereford, i. 40; ii. 56. Fox, John, the martyrologist, i. 192,
194; his exaggerations in the story of Elizabeth, ii. 259; takes part with the Gospellers at Frankfort, 180; refuses to subscribe the Articles, 406.
France, appointment of Bishops in, i. 106-8; war with, under Mary, ii. 204-9; peace concluded, 304; reli- ous troubles in, ii. 471; Elizabeth assists the Protestants in, 374, seqq.; peace concluded, 402; Heylyn's tra- vels in, and account of the inhabit- ants, i. LI-LIV.
Francis I., dominions of, i. 33; league made with by Henry VIII. ii. 237; death of, i. 59, 81; his obsequies at St. Paul's, ib.; his character, 82. Francis II. ii. 373; marries Mary
Queen of Scots, 298; his death, 344. Francis, Captain, i. cxcv. Frankfort, troubles at, i. xi; ii. 176- 184; evil results of them, 184. Free-chapels, see Chapels. French Protestants expelled from Eng- land, ii. 102; congregation of, esta- blished, 336. (See Huguenots.) Froschover, testimony of, to the supe- rior talents of the English reformers, i. 134.
Fuller, Thomas, Heylyn's controversy with, i. LXXI-LXXVIII, CLVIII; his subserviency to the usurping powers, CLVIII; his "Appeal of Injured Innocence," CLIX; his letter to Hey- lyn, ib.; they become friends, CLX.
Gage, Sir John, i. 56, 170; ii. 41,91,259. Gardiner, Stephen, Bishop of Win- chester, ii. 130, 136, 137, 141, 156, 390; meets Cranmer at Waltham, 56; writes "De vera Obedientia," i. 40; is active in the divorce, ii. 99; excluded by Henry VIII. from the regency, i. 66-7; opposes the visitors of Edward VI. and is committed to the Fleet, 82; is backward as to com- munion in both kinds, 122; remains in prison, 96; writes in favour of images, 116; complains of rhymes against the observance of Lent, 117; set at liberty, 130; confined to his house, ib.; is commanded to preach before the King and Council, and is imprisoned in consequence of his ser- mon, 130-1; deprived, 209-10; ap- peals to the King, 211; is released from prison, restored to his see, and made Lord Chancellor, ii. 88; re-
covers some property for his see, i. 214; his behaviour as to Elizabeth, ii. 258, 260-1; favours the escape of Peter Martyr, 102; wishes the papal system to be restored by degrees, 104; dislikes the Spanish match, 114; his speech on it, 115; marries Philip and Mary, 129; preaches on occasion of the reconciliation with Rome, 137; his opinions on persecution, 149; his controversy with Cranmer, 168; in- trigues against Pole, 114, 172; his death, 173, 263.
Garter, order of, i. LXIX, LXX; called
"The Order," 221; qualifications for, 253; ceremonies of, ii. 316; Cham- berlayne's account of it, i. LXXIII; Heylyn presents his History of St George to the Knights, LXXI; plan for remodelling it, 287.
Gates, Sir John, sent to pull down altars in Essex, i. 207; defeats a plan for conveying Mary out of Eng- land, 217; ii. 76; is a partisan of Dudley, i. 236; ii. 12, 29, 83, 85; is executed, 85.
Geofrys, fanaticism of, ii. 349. George, St, various opinions concerning, i. LXIX, LXX, LXXIII; Heylyn's history of him, LXIX.
German Congregation, see Dutch. Gerson, De Auferibilitate Papæ, ii. 60; on reformation per partes, i. 265. Ghinucci, deprived of the bishoprick of Worcester, i. 65.
Gilpin, Bernard, refuses the bishoprick of Carlisle, ii. 348-9.
Glasier, Dr, preaches against fasting, i. 80, 117, 144.
Glauberg, (or Clauburg), ii. 176. Gloucester, bishoprick of, founded, i. 37; suppressed, 216.
Glyn, Dr, ii. 156; made Bishop of
Bangor, 164; his death, 227. Godwin, Earl, story of, i. 170. Godwin, Francis, Bishop of Hereford,
author of the book De Prasulibus Angliæ, i. v. ; ii. 405. Godwin, Thomas, Bishop of Bath and Wells, ii. 405.
Goldwell, Thomas, made Bishop of St
Asaph, ii. 164; is deprived and goes into exile, 293; sits in the Council of Trent, 371; his death, ib.
Goodman, Christopher, ii. 176, 182, 297; his treatise "How far superior magistrates are to be obeyed," 120-1; his panegyric on Wyatt, ib. Goodman, Gabriel, Dean of Westmin- ster, ii. 391.
Goodman, Bishop of Gloucester, ex- cludes Heylyn from a benefice, i. LXXIV; defeated in a simoniacal at- tempt to get the bishoprick of Here- ford, XCVII; refuses to sign the Canons of 1640, LXXVI, CXXt; said to have died a Romanist, LXXV,
Goodrick, Bishop of Ely, i. 174, 222, 291; shares in composing the Li- turgy, 119; is made keeper of the Great Seal, and Chancellor, 252; puts the Great Seal to King Edward's settlement of the Crown, ii. 14; is deprived of it, 88; death of, 133. Gospellers, (see Puritans,) troubles
caused by, i. vii, 152; set on the imposture of the "Spirit in the Wall," ii. 125; hang a cat in mock- ery of a priest, and shoot at Pendle- ton, 149; their joy at Mary's disap- pointment of issue, 147; troubles raised by them at Frankfort, 184; obtain high preferments in the church, 296-7; rejoice over the burning of St. Paul's, 351.
Grammar-schools founded by Henry VIII. i. 37; by Edward VI. 300. Grammar, Lily's, i. 74. Grafton's Bible, i. 17, 18. Gray, Henry, Marquis of Dorset, i. 235; his descent, ii. 3; character of, 3, 4; his daughters, 4; is created duke of Suffolk, i. 239; marriages of his daughters, 293; ii. 7; pre- vented by his daughter Lady Jane from going against the partizans of Mary, 25-6; is ordered to break up the household of Lady Jane, 35; is imprisoned, 83; released, 84; makes an insurrection in Leicestershire, 37, 117; is taken and executed, 117-8. Gray, Lady Jane, descent and parent- age of, ii. 3; her character, 3; her studies and learning, 5; her inter- view with Roger Ascham, ib.; epi- gram on her by Parkhurst, 1; af- fection of Edward VI. for her, 5;
her religion, 5-6; is married to Lord Guilford Dudley, i. 235, 293; ii. 8; King Edward is persuaded to settle the Crown on her, i. 294; ii. 8-15; proceedings for establishing her as queen, 16-17; she is brought to the Tower, 21; her behaviour on hear- ing that she is queen, 21-3; is pro- claimed, 24; prevents her father from going against Mary, 26; deser- tions from her party, 32; is told that she is no longer queen, 36; her trial, and condemnation, 37; her death resolved on, 38; resists the attempts of Fecknam to convert her to Ro- manism, 38; her letter to her sister, 39; letter to Harding, 38; sentences said to have been written by her, 41-2; her execution, 42, 117; valid- ity of Acts naming her as queen, 43. Gray, Lady Katharine, marries a son of the Earl of Pembroke, i. 293; is divorced, ii. 117; letter to, from her sister Lady Jane, 39; marries the Earl of Hertford, 382, 415, 418; dies in the Tower, 384. Gray, Lord John, ii. 117. Gray, Lord Thomas, ii. 117. Gray, Lord of Wilton, i. 87; sup- presses riots in Oxfordshire, 156; and in Devon, 159.
Gregory, St., Epistle to Brunichildis, ii. 283.
Gregory VII., on lay investitures, i.
Griffin, Bishop of Rochester, ii. 128, 170, 293. Grindal, Edmund, (afterwards Arch- bishop) ii. 408, 412; an exile under Mary, 103, 178-9; a commissioner for revising the Liturgy, 273; is made Bishop of London, 313; cor- responds with Calvin, 336-7. Gualter, ii. 408.
Guest, Bishop of Rochester, ii. 289, 313. Guidotti, negotiates for the cession of Boulogne, i. 182, 221; is knighted and pensioned, 185. Guise, Duke of, i. 222; ii. 215, 344, 345, 372; visits England, i. 223; takes Calais, ii. 210-1; tries to get Elizabeth excommunicated, 345. Gustavus Vasa, commercial treaty
with, i. 231; proposes a marriage be- tween his son and Elizabeth, ii. 303.
Habits, ecclesiastical, objected to by Hooper, i. 190; origin of the oppo- sition to, vii, 193; described, 196; ii. 314; the quarrel revived, 335, 404; nonconformists deprived, 404; correspondence with foreign reformers respecting, 408; advertisements pre- scribing, 410.
Hackett, Bishop, biographer of Wil- liams, i. LXXVIII; XCIX. Haddington, siege of, i. 127-8; aban- doned by the English, 128. Haddon, pronounces a panegyric on Bucer, i. 208; his share in translat- ing the Liturgy into Latin, ii. 332. Hakewill, (or Hackwell), Dr George, i. CLVII, xii; account of, LXXI; censures Heylyn's History of St George, ib.; withdraws what he had written against St George, LXXII; speaks slightingly of Hey- lyn, LXXIII; writes against him on the Eucharist, CXXXVII. Hales, Sir James, story of, ii. 15. Hales, John, ii. 415.
Hamilton, Duke of, i. CXVI. Hardiman, prebendary of Westminster, deprived for throwing down the altar, ii. 297.
Harding, Thomas, i. 100, 136; be- comes a Romanist, ii. 39; Lady Jane Gray's letter to him, ib. ; his commen- dations of Elizabeth, 316, 407; his controversies with Jewel, 330, 385. Harley, Bishop of Hereford, ii. 98, 133. Harman, (see Voysey). Harpsfield, John, i. 68; ii. 156, 214. Harpsfield, Nicolas, ii. 170, 291. Hastings, Lord, ii. 31, 90. Hayward, Sir John, his character of the Duke of Somerset, i. 3; his his- tory of Elizabeth, ii, 366. Heath, Bishop of Worcester, ii. 100,
202, 269, 288; deprived, i. 213; en- tertained by Ridley, 214; is restored to his bishoprick, ii. 92; confers with Northumberland in prison, and persuades him to profess Romanism, 85-6; is made Archbishop of York, 133; and Lord Chancellor, 173;
notifies Mary's death to Parliament, 265; is deprived of the Great Seal, 269; makes a speech against the royal supremacy, 290; is deprived of his see, 294.
Hecker, Dr, on the sweating sickness, i. 234.
Henry VII., negotiates the marriage of Katharine with his sons, ii. 47-8;
yet dislikes her marriage with Prince Henry, 48.
Henry, second son of Henry VII. (Henry VIII.), is contracted to his brother's widow, ii. 48; created Prince of Wales, ib.; protests against the contract, 48-9; succeeds to the crown, 49; marries Katharine, ib.; their issue, 50; writes against Luther, and is styled Defender of the Faith," i. 43; his marriage questioned, ii. 53, 236; matches proposed for him, 54, 56, 236; sets his affections on Anne Boleyn, 55, 233; makes a league with Francis I., 237; process of the divorce from Katharine, 55; the King's speech at Blackfriars, ib.; the case referred to foreign Universi- ties, 56; which decide against the marriage, 58; Henry issues a procla- mation against communication with Rome, i. 38; ii. 59; the convocation decides against the marriage, 62; Henry resolves to marry Anne Boleyn, 237; is acknowledged Supreme Head of the Church, i. 38; ii. 240; mar- ries Anne, 241; is divorced from Katharine, 63; seizes monasteries, i. 11; ii. 244-5; is excommunicated by the Pope, i. 20; ii. 65; settles the crown on his issue by Anne, 66; becomes jealous of her, 246; admires Jane Seymour, ib.; letter to him from Anne, i. 9; ii. 254; his mar- riage with her annulled, 252; he mar- ries Jane, i. 10; is authorized by parliament to dispose of the crown, 11; death of his natural son, the Duke of Richmond, ib.; slander a- gainst him in connexion with the birth of Edward VI. 13-14; mar- ries Anne of Cleves, and Lady Ka- tharine Howard, 21; settles the suc- cession to the crown, 29, 46; gets Acts passed against the power of
the Pope, 39; corrects the "Institu- tion of a Christian Man," 40; takes Boulogne, 25; holds the balance of power in Europe, 33; founds bishop- ricks, grammar-schools and profes- sorships, 37; confirms Christ-church, Oxford, and founds Trinity College, Cambridge, 38; changes the founda- tion of some cathedrals, 37; founds hospitals, 272; no richer for his spoliations, 34; gets lands of some bishopricks by exchange, 36; obtains a grant of chantries, &c. 25, 35; adds titles to the royal style, 43; altera- tions in religion during his reign, v, 37, 38, 40; falls sick, 29; proceeds against the Duke of Norfolk and his son, 30; makes his will, 46; provi- sion for his interment, 49; settles the succession, 50; list of executors and Council of Regency, 53-4; assistants to them, 57; legacies to his daugh- ters, ib.; question whether the will were signed by his own hand, 59; its provisions disregarded, 58; his feeling towards Gardiner, 67; on his death-bed recommends war with Scot- land, 80; his death, 31; his funeral, 59; obsequies celebrated at Paris, ib.; story of a consultation as to burn- ing his body, 297; characters of, by Naunton and Raleigh, 31; his vic- tims, ib.; his marriage with Katha- rine declared legal by Act of 1 Mary, ii. 106.
Henry II. of France, admitted to the
order of the Garter, i. 222; his death and obsequies, ii. 304. Herbert, William, Earl of Pembroke,
i. 64, 242, 243, 252; ii. 31, 93, 269, 382; his rise, i. 237; ii. 34; one of Henry VIII.'s executors, i. 53-4; sup- presses an insurrection in Wiltshire, 156; created Earl of Pembroke, &c., 239; passes from the party of Jane to that of Mary, ii. 34; employed against Wyatt, 119, 120; commands the English forces in France, 205, 208; marriages of his son, i. 293; ii. 382. Heresy, statutes against, repealed, i. 97; ii. 100; revived, 149. Hermogenes, i. XXXVII. Hertford, Earls and Marquis of, see Seymour.
Heygate, Letitia, account of her family, i. LXI; becomes the wife of Heylyn,
Heylyn, meaning of the name, i.xxxII. Heylyn, Edward, i. LXXXI.
Heylyn, Henry, son of Dr. Heylyn, i.
Heylyn, Colonel, nephew of Dr. Hey- lyn, i. LXII, CLI.
Heylyn, Peter, lives of, by Barnaid and Vernon, i. xx1; life prefixed to his Tracts, XXII-XXIV; his birth, XXXI; account of his family, xxxII; his mother's pedigree, xxxv; his early progress at Burford school, XXXVI; admitted at Hart Hall, Ox- ford, XXXVIII; chosen a demy of Magdalen College, XXXIX; writes Spurius, a tragedy, XL; takes the de- gree of B.A.; ib.; reads lectures on geography, ib.; is admitted fellow, XLI; writes Theomachia, a Latin comedy, ib.; takes the degree of M.A., ib.; publishes his Geography, XLII; is confirmed, XLIII; and or- dained, XLV; his studies, ib.; gives undesigned offence to James I., XLVI; his apology accepted, XLVII -LI; visits France, LI; and writes an account of his travels, ib.; his character of the French, LII—LIV; disputes in the Divinity School at Oxford, on the visibility of the Church, LIV; becomes known to Laud, LVII; preaches before Charles 1. LIX; his Sermons on the Tares, ib.; unjustly charged with Roman- izing, LVI, LIX; marries Letitia Heygate, LXIV; his verses sent with a Bible to her, LXIII; vindicates his marriage, LXV; his circumstances, LXVI; accompanies Lord Danby to Jersey and Guernsey, LXVII, LXVIII; is rudely treated at court, LXVIII; is made chaplain to the King, ib.; proceeds to the degree of B.D., and preaches at Oxford against the prac- tices of the feoffees for impropria- tions, LXXXIX; writes the history of St. George, LXIX; account of its reception, LXX1; is criticised by Hakewill, LXXII; replies in second edition, ib. ; is presented to the living of Meysie Hampton, LXXIV; but
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