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ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.

Page XVI.

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VOL. I.

Hayward's First Four Years of Elizabeth, ed. Bruce, (Camden Soc.)
Lond. 1840, 4to. (See Vol. 11. p. 266).

Heylyn's Aerius Redivivus, or History of the Presbyterians. Lond.
1670, fol.

XXVI, 1. 2, for they read it

CI, 1. 11, for stangers read strangers

CLIX,

1. 5 from bottom, There can be little doubt as to the correctness of the reading introduced in the late edition of Fuller's Appeal, &c. "Let me, therefore, tender you an expedient, in tendency to our mutual agreement."

vi, 1. 20, for happened read happeneth

31, 1. 2, The saying here quoted is in Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia, (p. 183 of the reprint in the Phenix, Vol. 1.)

108, 1. 19 of note, after 1214 add, And so it is stated in the Statute of Provisors, 25 Edw. III. c. vi. § 3.

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141. For note 6 substitute the following: Quasi non hodie quoque plurimi sacerdotes habeant matrimonia." Hieron. adv. Jovin. 1. i. (Opp. t. IV. ii. 165, ed. Paris, 1693-1706.) Jewel, ed. Park. Soc. ii. 393.

- 234, 1. 4. The young noblemen were students of Cambridge, but they died in the Bishop of Lincoln's palace at Buckden. See Nichols, note on Machyn's Diary, 318.

VOL. II.

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54, 1. 8, for Rhenee read Rhinee

96, all but the first line of note 1 ought to be transferred to note 2.
103, 1. 2, for 300 read 800

115, 1. 28, dele and

128, note 2, for Mar. read 1 Mar.

164, 1. 12, for lordships, read lordships'

219, 1. 5, Scambler's name was really Edmund

234, 1. 6, for style of title read style and title

269, note 8, for 136 read 13

335, note 1, Calvin's advice to Elizabeth was conveyed, not in a private letter, but in the dedication of his Commentary on Isaiah, (Opp. iii. pars 2.)

382, 1. 20, for levying a war read levying war

392, margin, dele Thirty-nine.

August, 1849.

414, 1. 1, The marginal caution Hic Magister non tenetur, (which Jewel ii. 177, ed. Park. Soc. translates Here our Doctor is no

66

Doctor"), was placed opposite to certain passages in the works of
Peter Lombard.

419, 3d line of notes, for Knox read Lenox.

INDEX.

The references in small Roman letters relate to the address "To the Reader,"
printed between the Life of Heylyn and the History.

A.

ABBESSES, jurisdiction of, ii. 282.
Abbeys, see Monasteries.
Abbey-lands seized by Henry VIII.,
i. xi, 21; restitution of them desired
by Mary and the Pope, i. xi; ii. 134,
162; difficulties hence arising to the
restoration of the papal power in
England, ii. 132, 134, 162; petition
of convocation that they may not be
meddled with, 138; message to par-
liament concerning, 141; confirmed
to the holders by Julius III. and
by Paul IV. i. xi; ii. 141.
Abbots executed for opposing Henry
VIII.'s measures,
i. 17, 21.
Abbot, Archbp., i. LXXV; opposes
Laud at Oxford, LVIII, LIX; takes
measures to refute the Nag's Head
fable, ii. 311; discourages Heylyn,
i. LXXI.

Abingdon, Christ's Hospital at, found-

ed, i. 301; Heylyn's residence at,
CLV; his exertions to preserve St
Nicolas' Church, CLXV.
Advertisements of 7 Eliz., ii. 409, 422;

the amount of their authority, 409.
Aldrick, Bishop of Carlisle, ii. 205.
Alençon, Duchess of, see Margaret
Queen of Navarre.

Aless, (Alesius), Alexander, translates
the Prayer-Book into Latin, i. 165;
ii. 332.

Alexander, P., i. 165.

Allen, Captain, i. CLXIII.
Alley, Bishop of Exeter, ii. 313.
Allibond, Dr, i. LXIV.
Alms-chest in churches, i. 73.
Alresford, i. LXXVI.

Altars, attacked, i. vii, viii; the Com-
munion to be celebrated at the high
altar only, 155; altars removed, 201;
Letter of the Council respecting, 202;
tables to be substituted, 203; reasons
for the change set forth, 304; Rid-
ley's proceedings in the matter, 204-

7; misconceived by Heylyn, 207; dis-
orders consequent on the change, 225;
mockery of Romanists, 226; minister
to stand at the north side of the table,
227; further change in St Paul's, 269;
demolition of altars an excuse for
plunder of ornaments, viii, 282; altars
restored under Mary, ii. 96; tables
ordered by Elizabeth to be set where
the altars stood, 286, 300; disorderly
proceedings of Puritans, 359; further
orders as to tables and their furniture,
361-2; profanations of the table, i.
CXI; judgment of Charles I. on the
subject, ii. 301; controversy between
Williams and Heylyn respecting, i.
CVIII-CXI; position of since the
Restoration, cx.

Anabaptists, troubles caused by, i. 152;
foreign, come to England, and are
driven out by proclamation, ii. 337.
Andrew, St, church of, why called
Under-shaft, i. 198; his festival made
a duplex majus in memory of the re-
conciliation with Rome, ii. 136-7.
Andrewes, Bishop, i. LXXV; ii. 186.
Antony, St, Hospital of, ii. 336; given
to a French congregation, 337.
Apostles' mass, i. 154.
Archbishops, see Bishops.
Arran, Earl of, i. 89, seqq.; ii. 317.
Arthur, Prince, marriage and death of,
ii. 47-8.

Articuli Cleri, i. 108.

Articles about Religion, A.D. 1536, i. 10.
Articles, Six, Act of, i. 21;
"the whip
with six strings," 97; its severity
moderated, 21; repealed, 97,
Articles of Religion (1552) drawn up, i.
229; ii. 436; Cranmer's share in,i. 229;
whether ratified by convocation, 257-
8; in force for the first five years
of Elizabeth, 259; Articles of 1562,
i. xiii; ii. 392-4; moderation shewn
in them, 393; difficulties as to sub-
scribing, 405; the XXIXth added in

1571, 453; the two books of Arti-
cles compared, 435-458; Article
xx, clause of, on authority of the
Church, 406; Heylyn's dispute with
Prideaux concerning, i. XCIII.
Articles, Visitation, generally founded
on those of Card. Pole, ii. 196; a
book of, drawn up by Heylyn for
general use, i. cxx.

Arundel, Earl of, i. 56, 170, 178, 221;

ii. 262, 269, 277; committed to prison
as an adherent of Somerset, i. 240;
takes leave of Northumberland when
setting out against Mary, ii. 29; his
speech against Northumberland, 33;
goes to Mary at Framlingham, 35, 81;
arrests Northumberland, 83; is re-
warded by Mary, 90; is employed
against Wyatt, 118.
Arundel, Humphrey, heads a rebellion,
i. 157; executed, 159.

Asaph, St. see of, plundered, ii. 133, 164.
Ascham, Roger, tutor to Elizabeth, ii.

256, 264; his interview with Lady
Jane Gray, 5.

Ashley, quarrels with Horn, i. 183.
Ashwell, Mr. i. CLIII.
Askew, Anne, i. 186.

Audley, Sir Thomas, Lord Chancellor,
ii. 248, 251, 253.
Augmentations, court of, i. 286.
Augsburg, Confession of, ii. 436.
Augustine, St, early proficiency of, i.
XXXVII; his respect for St Jerome,

CLXXXII.

Augustine Friars, church of, desecrated
i. 188; partly given to à Lasco, ib.
Aylmer, or Elmer, (afterwards Bishop
of London,) ii. 109, 289; tutor to
Lady Jane Gray, 5.

B.

Bacon, Sir Nicholas, ii. 278, 292; is
appointed Keeper of the Great Seal,
269; presides at the Westminster
Conference, 289–291.

Baden, Cecile Margravine of, visits
England, ii. 420).

Bale, Bishop of Ossory, ii. 309.
Ballads, rhymes, plays, &c. forbidden,
ii. 95, 122.

Bancroft, Archbishop, ii. 407.
Bangor, see of, plundered, ii. 164.
Baptism, to be administered by mid-

wives, ii. 197, 283; not to be admi-
nistered in basons, 361.

Barclay, Bishop of Bath and Wells, ii.
313.

Barlow, William, Bishop of St Asaph,
i. 110; of St David's, ib., 145; wishes
to remove the see to Caermarthen,
111; sent into Scotland, 40; preaches
up war with Scotland, 111; trans-
lated to Bath and Wells, 110, 145;
alienates manors, 112; is imprisoned
at the accession of Mary, ii. 99; is
deprived, 133; recants, and writes
against the Reformation, 99; goes
into exile, ib., 103; shares in the con-
secration of Parker, 308-9; is made

Bishop of Chichester, 312.
Barlow, Thomas, Bishop of Lincoln,
Heylyn's opinion of, i. CLVII; acts
as editor of the folio Life of Heylyn,

XXIII-XXV.

Barnabas's, St, day, first celebrated,
i. 206-7.

Barnard, or Bernard, John, account of,
i. XXI; his life of Heylyn and quar-
rel with Vernon, XXIII. seqq.
Bartholomew, St, Hospital of, founded,
i. 272.

Barton, Elizabeth, ii. 66.

Bastwick, Dr. i. LXXXVI, CXXIII.
Bates, Dr. i. cxv.

Baxter, Richard, i. XIX, XXVI,

CLVIII.

Bayne, Bishop of Lichfield, ii. 134,
170, 289, 294.

Baynton, Sir E., Letter of on the case
of Anne Boleyn, ii. 249.
Beads forbidden, i. 69.
Beaton, Cardinal, i. 22, 24.
Becket, Gilbert, i. 151.

Becket, Thomas, shrine of, destroyed,
i. 19; common error as to his name,
ib.

Becon, Thomas, i. 69.

Bedford, Earl of, see Russell.
Bedingfield, Sir H., joins the party of
Mary, ii. 25; has custody of Eliza-
beth, 260-2.

Bekesbourne, palace of, i. 42.
Bellamont, Lord, LXII.
Bellarmine, styled by Heylyn Nobi-
lissimus, i. LVI; his commendation
of Calvin, ib.; and of Melancthon,
CLXXXIII; why made a cardinal,

LVII; on translations of the Bible,
XXXIV; on Councils, 263.
Bellassere, Archdeacon, i. 85.
Bells of churches, order against selling,
ii. 341.

Benedictines established in Westmin-
ster Abbey, ii. 189; ejected, 342.
Benefield, Dr. Sebastian, i. LXXIV.
Benson, Abbot and Dean of Westmin-
ster, i. 125.

Bentham, Thomas, minister of a re-
formed congregation in London in
the reign of Mary, ii. 219; his beha-
viour at the execution of some mar-
tyrs, 218; made bishop of Lichfield,
219, 313.

Bermondsey, rood of, destroyed, i. 18.
Bernard, John, see Barnard.
Bernard, Dr. Nicolas, i. CLXX.
Bertie, Robert, ii. 103, 184, 384.
Best, Bishop of Carlisle, ii. 348.
Beza, translates the Psalms, i. 270;
interferes in the affairs of the Church
of England, ii. 408.

Bible, printed in English by Grafton,
i. 18; public reading of allowed, ib.;
account of translations, 41-2; set up
in churches, 22, 41, 70; acts against
reading repealed, 98; order for trans-
lating into Welsh, ii. 390; printed
in Welsh, i. XXXIV; Geneva ver-
sion, ii. 334; Irish versions, i. 160;
ii. 434.

Bidding prayer, form of, i. 75.
Bird, Bishop of Chester, is deprived,
recants, and becomes a suffragan to
Bonner, ii. 134.

Birkenhead, Sir John, i. CXL.
Birth of Princes announced by letters,
i. 14; ii. 147, 233.

Bishops, Act for nominating without
election, i. 104; Divine appointment
of bishops acknowledged in it, 105;
precedents for it, 106-108; repealed
by Mary, 106; ii. 105; how the
church is now exempt from it, i. 109;
consecration of ratified by Act of
8 Eliz., i. xiii, 173; ii. 425; how
appointed in Ireland, i. 261; ii. 326.
Bishops, injunctions for, i. 74; take
commissions from the king, 105; re-
strained from conferring orders with-
out license, ib.; impoverished state
of, i. 127; ii. 388; restrained from

[HEYLYN, II.]

excommunicating, 199; peerage of,
defended by Heylyn, cxxIv; dress
of, scrupled at by Hooper, 190; also
their oath, which is altered, ib.; Act
for their exercising jurisdiction in
the sovereign's name repealed, ii.
105; treatment of those deprived by
Elizabeth, 294, 356; story of the
Nag's Head Consecration, 309; Act
for exchange of lands with the Crown,
&c. 307.

Bishopricks founded by Henry VIII.
i. 37; confirmed by the Pope, ii.
141; impoverishment of them, 388.
Blackwell, (or Blucknall) Mr., leaves
benefactions to Abingdon, i. CLXVI.
Blount, Elizabeth, i. 11; ii. 235.
Body, stabbed by a priest, i. 116.
Boleyn, or Bollen, Anne, her birth and
descent, ii. 233; accompanies Queen
Mary to France, 234; time of her
return to England, 234-5; appears
at the English court, 54, 235; enters
Queen Katharine's service, 235; at-
tracts the notice of Henry VIII., ib.;
inclines to Protestantism, 56; Lord
Percy's affection for her, 237-9; her
dislike of Wolsey, 239; is created
Marchioness of Pembroke, 61, 240;
and receives a pension of £1000 out
of the revenues of Durham, 240; is
privately married to Henry, 241;
date of the marriage, ib.; appears
publicly as queen, 242; is crowned,
243; patronises Cromwell, 244; the
succession entailed on her issue, 67;
declines in favour with the King,
246; her behaviour on the death
of Katharine misrepresented, ib.;
charges against her, 247-250; her
behaviour in the Tower, 250; is
tried and executed, 250-1; her letter
from the Tower, i. 9; ii. 254; her
marriage annulled, 252; no Act for
ratifying it temp. Eliz., 278; compa-
rison of her with Jane Seymour, i. 9.
Boleyn, Mary, sister of Anne, ii. 234.
Boleyn,
Viscount Rochford, ac-
cused of criminal intimacy with his
sister, ii. 247; executed, 251.
Boleyn, Sir Thomas, account of, ii.
234; created Earl of Wiltshire and
Ormond, ib.; ambassador in France,
54, 235; sent to Rome, 58; wrongly

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said to have sat on his daughter's | Bridges, or Bruges, Sir John, constable

trial, 250.

Bonner, Edmund, Bishop of London,
ii. 92, 142, 145, 166, 253, 292; active
in reformation, 99; takes commission
for his episcopal jurisdiction from
Henry VIII. i. 165; ambassador to
the Emperor, 81; summoned before
King Edward's visitors, 83; protests,
and afterwards submits, 83-4; im-
prisoned, 84; letter of Cranmer to,
113; writes to the bishops, 113; suf-
fers masses to be kept up in St.
Paul's, 154; is admonished to sup-
press them, 155; preaches at St.
Paul's Cross, 162; is deprived, 163;
released from prison by Mary, ii. 91;
presides in Convocation, 108, 138, 163,
291; shews zeal for restoration of the
Romish system, 111-112; his cruelty,
i. x; ii. 150-1; exaggerated by Fox
and others, 151, 168-9, 170; is urged
on by the Council, 169; unfavour-
ably received by Elizabeth, 266; his
robes used at her coronation, 275; is
deprived and imprisoned, 295; suit
with Bishop Horn on being asked to
take the oath of supremacy, i. xiv ;
ii. 424.

Books, heretical, to be suppressed, ii.
122, 217.

Botteler, family of, i. 7.

Boulogne taken by Henry VIII. i.
25; attacked by the French, 168,
181; negociations respecting, 182-5;
ceded to France, 182-3.
Bourne, Gilbert, archdeacon of Bed-
ford, i. 85; a gun shot at him while
preaching at St. Paul's Cross, ii. 92,
106; Act passed in consequence,
ib.;
is made Bishop of Bath and
Wells, 133; is deprived, 294.
Boxley, rood of, destroyed, i. 18.
Bradford, John, exerts himself to save
Bourne at St. Paul's Cross, ii. 93;
is martyred, 154.

Bramhall, Archbishop, his treatise on
the Nag's Head Fable, ii. 311.
Brandon, Charles, Duke of Suffolk, ii.
3, 64, 253, 384; death of, i. 30; death
of his sons, 235.

Brass found at Keswick, ii. 341.
Bridewell, palace of, given for a house
of correction, i. 274.

of the Tower, ii. 41, 259; created
Lord Chandos of Sudeley, i. 7; ii

127.

Bridges, Bishop of Oxford, ii. 388.
Bristol, bishoprick of, founded, i. 37;
spoliation of, ii. 387.

Bromley, Justice, executor of Henry
VIII. i. 53-4; his concern in Edward
VI.'s settlement of the succession, ii.

13.

Brooks, James, ii. 199; appointed Bi-
shop of Gloucester, 128; in a com-
mission against Cranmer, 159, 160;
his death, 227.

Browne, Sir Antony, i. 67; ii. 202, 235,
249; executor of Henry VIII. i.
53-4; created Viscount Montacute,
143; his mission to Rome, 143-5.
Bucer, Martin, invited to England, i.
135, 164; arrives, 165; Calvin writes
to him, ib.; desires Calvin's interest
with the Protector, 160; is appointed
professor of Divinity, and holds a
disputation at Cambridge, ib.; ap-
proves of the Liturgy and Homilies,
165, 168; is against Hooper in the
matter of vestments, 191, 195; ii. 408;
death and funeral of, i. 166, 208; his
body taken up and burnt, ii. 198-9;
solemnity in honour of him, 200.
Buckner, Mr, i. XLIV.
Bulkeley, (or Buckley,) Bishop of
Bangor, ii. 165; Godwin's account
of him questioned, ib.
Bullinger, i. 189; ii. 409.

Bullingham, Bishop of Lincoln, ii.
313.

Bullingham, Bishop of Gloucester and
Bristol, ii. 387.

Burford, i. XXXVI, LXXIII.
Burgundy, English money spent for, i.

182.

Burges, Cornelius, publishes "No sa-
crilege nor sin to purchase Cathe-
dral-lands," i. xii; buys the palace
and deanery of Wells, ib.
Burnet, Bp. i. cxvI; his unfair
character of Heylyn's History,
CXIII; his interview with James II.,

CLXXIII.

Burton, Henry, i. LXXXVI, CXXII.
Bush, Bishop of Bristol, deprived, ii.
134.

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