ii. 320. 373. 428. iv. App. 403.
Clemens Romanus, ii. 401. his five epistles spurious, iii. 221. Cleves, Anne of, received by Cran- mer at Canterbury, i. 297. at- tempt to reconcile her to Hen. VIII, 311.
that of the papists, iii. 95.
&c. Confession, ii. 39. Confirmation, ii. 18. 48. 98. 101. Confusion of natures, iii. 467. Consecration, defined, ii. 413. Constantius, Marcus Antonius, (i. e. Gardyner,) ii. 284. iv. 60.
Cobham, Geo. Brook, lord, i. 131. Controversies prevailing in Eng-
Cobham, Thomas, i. 175. Cobham, College and Hall, i. 314. Cocks, Dr. John, Cranmer's Chancellor, i. 107. Cole, Dr., disputes with Cranmer, iv. 26. his sermon at St. Mary's Church before Cranmer's death, 131.
Collman, Cranmer's bailiff at Wingham, i. 55-
land in 1536, ii. 16. to be de- termined not by the Church, but the Scriptures, iv. 165. Corbet, Henry, a Dutch priest, i. 276. 288. Corell's Wood, i. 59. Cornethwaite, Simon, i. 236. Coronation of Edward VI. Cran-
mer's speech at it, ii. 118. Corporal, Corporally, the words discussed, iii. 212, &c. 235, &c. 244. 265. 271. 286. 345-
Comb Abbey, Warwickshire, i. Corpus Christi College, Oxford,
Comet, 1532, i. 13.
Commandments, the Ten, ii. 48. the Second, 49. the Fifth, 55. Common Prayer, Book of, iii. 171. 217. 346. 379. 417. 494. 498. its excellence, 164. iv. 3. 164. defended by Cran- mer, 3. misrepresented by Gar- dyner, iii. 96. 99. 101. 114. 117. 145. 146. not under- stood by Gardyner, 289. trans- lated into French, i. 354. Pre- face to it, iv. App. 363. Commonalty, insolence of, ii.
258. unfit to govern, 259. Commons, enclosure of, ii. 258. 261.
Communion under both kinds, ii. 405. order for it, iv. App. 352. Communion how to be received, ii. 463. iii. 12. Communion of saints, ii. 31. Comparison between the true doctrine of the Eucharist and
complaint from a scholar there of the support given by its mem- bers to popery, i. 268. Corruption of the world, iii.
Councils General, ii. 12. 203.
Charles V.'s proclamation re- specting a General Council, i. 7. 8. consultations at Rome for holding one, i. 176. Judg- ment of the Convocation re- specting them, iv. App. 258. opinion of certain bishops and clergy on them, App. 264. General Councils liable to er- ror, iv. 155. not of sufficient authority to make Articles of Faith, iv. 191. Council of Basle, iv. App. 306. of Carthage, the sixth, iv.
Council, of Ephesus, iii. 3. 5. 69. 548. iv. App. 428.
of Florence, iv. App. 307. of Gangra, iv. 196. of Laodicea, iv. 196. fourth General Lateran, iii. 17. 363. iv. App. 439.
of Neocæsarea, iv. 196.
of Nice, ii. 460. iii. 531. 533. iv. 195. App. 304. Council, the Privy, their letter
concerning Homilies and In- junctions, iv. App. 341.concern- ing Communion in both kinds, App. 352. of instruction to preachers, App. 354. three let- ters from the Lords of the Council at Windsor to the Lords in London, 1549. App. 369. letter from the Council to Ridley, for the taking down of altars, App. 377. to the Princess Mary, on her nonconformity, App. 378.
Court of Street, our Lady of, i. 79. Coverdale, Miles, Bishop of Ex- eter, Cranmer's application re- specting his homage and his first fruits, i. 342. Craiford, John, Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, i. 115. Cranmer, Edmund, Archdeacon
of Canterbury, i. 131. Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop of of Canterbury, his first mar- riage before he took orders, iv. 100. his second marriage after ordination, ibid. lived with his wife secretly under Hen. VIII, openly under Edward VI, 100, 101. his appointment to the Archbishopric of Canterbury, 100. 114. came to it un- willingly, 92. 114. disclosed at that time to Henry VIII. the usurpation of the Pope, 115. his oaths and protesta- tion at his consecration, App. 247. oath to the King for
his temporalities, App. 251. protested against the oath at his consecration under legal advice, 115. his plan for fill- ing up vacancies in religious houses, i. 20. his house over- charged with servants, 34. his poverty, 34. 54. 57. his debts, 54. 63. 74. 189. his ap- peal from the Pope to a Gene- ral Council, 1533, i. 72. 1556, iv. 121. defends his visitation of the diocese of Winchester against Gardyner, i. 138. his claim on lands belonging to the dissolved priory of Davington, 147. 150. draws articles a- gainst the supremacy of the Pope for the assistance of preachers, 152. reports to Henry VIII. his sermons gainst the papal supremacy, 167. intercedes for Anne Bo- leyn, 163. refuses to grant a dispensation for Massey's marriage to his niece, 173. his opinion on prohibited de- grees of matrimony, 174. ii. 77. obtains license from Crumwell to visit his diocese, i. 189. his exchange with the King, 189. 203. his judgment on the Eucharist in 1537, 195. re- pels the charge of using spies, 217. his Annotations on the King's Book, 226. 227. ii. 65. his Disputation with the sacra- mentary Lambert, in 1538, iv. 95. his directions for the pro- per use of the English Bible, i. 284. his opinion of preben- daries, 292. his remarks on the new foundation at Can- terbury, 291. 294. maintains the propriety of opening the school at Canterbury to all ranks, 294. intercedes for Crumwell, 298. his inter- view with the ambassador of
Cleves, respecting the recon- ciliation of the Lady Anne to Henry VIII, i. 312. his opin- ion on the music fit for reli- gious purposes, 315. his opin- ion that alteration should not be made, without declaring the reasons of it, 318. ap- plies to Hen. VIII. to check the alienation of lands belong- ing to the Cathedral Church of Canterbury, 319. his pro- posal for abolishing certain superstitious practices, 318. fails through the intrigues of Gardyner, 320. charged with adding a "not" to his Cate- chism during printing, iv. 97. letter of dedication prefixed to it, i. 326. his plan for a union of the reformed Churches, i. 330. 337. 344-349. applies for license to publish his An- swer to Gardyner, 343. de- fends himself against the charge of covetousness, 351. suffers from an ague, 353. his un- willingness to sign Edward VI.'s will, 361. 366. contra- dicts the report of his having restored the mass, iv. 1. his praise of the doctrine and wor- ship established under Edward VI. 3. attainted of treason, i. 360. condemned for heresy, 367. applies to Queen Mary to pardon his support of Lady Jane Grey, 360. desires to ut- ter his mind to her on the state of religion, 363. applies to the Lords of the Council to inter- cede for him to Queen Mary, 365. his Disputation at Ox- ford with Chedsey, iv. 4, &c. his Answer to the three arti- cles proposed to him at Oxford, 12. his Explication on the presence of Christ, on tran- substantiation, on the sacri-
fice of the Mass, 14. accused of corrupting Hilary, 48. Jus- tin, 62. Emissenus, 63. Duns Scotus, 64. his condemna- tion by Weston, 1554, 77- 103. complains of the unfair- ness of the Disputations at Oxford, i. 366. examined be- fore Brokes, iv. 79. 99. refuses to admit his authority as the Pope's Subdelegate, i. 369. iv. 81. 109. argues before him against the papal supremacy, iv. 83. III. questioned by Martyn on the papal supremacy, 97. 116. defends the use of the English tongue in the public service, 84. justifies his doc- trine of the Eucharist, 85, 127. asserts the Pope to be Anti- christ, 85. 112. charged with perjury, 91. 104. 115. with schism, 103. with teaching three contrary doctrines on the Eucharist, 95. 97. with pub- lishing heretical books, 101. 103. with compelling subscrip- tion to the Articles of 1552, 102. with taking on him the authority of the See of Rome, 104. with persisting in error, after the reconciliation of the rest of the realm, 105. his oath to the King asserted by Story to be invalid, 108. witnesses against him before Brokes at Oxford, ibid. his defence be- fore Brokes, 112. complains of not being allowed, as was pro- mised, to correct his answers before Brokes, i. 368. states to Queen Mary his reasons for not acknowledging the author- ity of the Pope, 369. cited to appear at Rome, ibid. the strictness of his imprisonment, 383. the irregularities of his trial, iv. 123. consults a law- yer on his appeal to a General
Council, i. 384. his Appeal to a General Council, iv. 121. his degradation, 128. his recanta- tions, 129. App. 393. retracts his recantations, iv. 139. his Prayer, Exhortation, and Con- fession of Faith before his death, 130. 135. 137. App. 398. his death, 142. Cranmer, his Common Place books, iv. 147. his gradual con- version from error, iii. 13. glad to acknowledge his former ig- norance, 117. reported by the papists to be unlearned, 470. iv. 67. exercised in divinity from his youth, iii. 338. accus- tomed to examine all weighty matters for himself, ibid. ready to take advice, ibid. long in darkness on the Eucharist, 368. convinced of his errors by Rid- ley, iv. 97. desirous that his countrymen should know the truth, iii. 339. needed little study to answer Gardyner, 361. his arguments founded, not on the scholastical writers, but on God's word, 391. accused of framing part of his book to maintain Luther's opinion on the Eucharist, 440. his reason for citing in English, 535. Creed, The Apostles', ii. 65. Creke, John, Cranmer's servant, i. 47. 71. 75. candidate for a bedell's place at Oxford, 35.42. Creke, Mrs., i. 132. Crispin, Dr., ii. 238. Crofts, George, rector of Shep-
ton Mallet and chancellor of Chichester, i. 274. Crokesden, Abbey of, i. 265. Crome, Dr., recommended by Cranmer for the deanery of Canterbury, i. 294. Cronkehorne, Dr., i. 281. Cross, proposal for abolishing creeping to the cross, and ado-
ration of it, i. 318. 321. Crowland, i. 144. Crumwell, appointed Steward of the Archbishop's Liberties, and Master of his Game, i. 277. 280. receives a fee of 20l. from Cranmer, 179. 298. Culpeper, John, i. 230. Curry Mallet, Somerset, i. 47. Custom, of no strength to prove
articles of faith, iv. 212. Cyprian, iii. 68. 75. 151. 160. 179. 198. 200. 283. 327. 421. 450. iv. 175. 198. 213. 225.
Ad Cæcilium, ii. 322. 374. 382. 404. iii. 246. 411. iv. App. 406.
Serm. de Lapsis, ii. 323. Ad Magnum, ii. 374. iv.
Testimon. ad Quirin. iii. 249. iv. App. 407.
De Coena Domini, ii. 323. 339 427. 429. iii. 69. 177. 476.478. 480. iv. App. 407.
De Unctione Chrismatis, ii. 383. iii. 431. iv. App. 407. Cyril, iii. 69. 73. 76. 110. 327. 356. 447.451.474. 549. 552. iv. 188. 212.
Anathematism. ii. 410. iii. 64. 260. 267. iv. App. 428. Ad Calosyrium, iii. 107. 218. 224. iv. App. 428.
In Joan. ii. 364. 375. 410. 411. 435. iii. 10. 258. 262. 264. 475. iv. App. 425. 426.
De Trinit. ii. 366. iv. App.
Dale, chaplain to Rugge, Bishop of Norwich, i. 186. Damascene, ii. 420. iii. 309. 310. iv. 69. 189. App. 433. Damplip, Adam, i. 250. 257. Dantiscus, Bishop of Warmia, his letter to Cranmer, i. 300. Darcy, Thomas, lord, his rebel- lion, i. 234. Darcy, George, lord, i. 361.
Davington, Priory of, i. 147. 150. Davison, question respecting his marriage, i. 89.
Day, George, Bishop of Chiches- ter, i. 318.
Dean of the Arches, letters to
him, i. 44. 45. 50. 59. Death, Extracts from the Fathers concerning the fear of, iv. App. 316.
Defence of the True and Catholic Doctrine, &c., ii. 274. the ef- fect of its publication, ii. 283. reasons for its translation, 284. Denham, i. 150. Denis, Friar, i. 177. Derham, Francis, the paramour of Queen Catharine Howard, i. 310. Dering, John, a monk concerned in the impostures of the Nun of Kent, i. 78. 88. Detection of the Devil's Sophistry by Gardyner, quoted, ii. 339. iii. 87. referred to, iii. 7. 119. 123. 179. 180. 305 366. 475. Devenyshe, Cranmer's kinsman, i. 92.
Devonshire rebels, Cranmer's An-
swer to them, ii. 202. Didymus, De Spiritu Sancto, ii. 366. iv. App. 412. Dionysius Pseudareopagita, De Eccles. Hierarch. ii. 320. 403. iii. 235. 535. iv. App. 425. Discussion not feared by the truth, iii. III.
Divorce of Hen. VIII. from Ca- tharine of Arragon, i. 1. 16. 21, &c. 49. 86. 226. iv. App. 253. Donatists, iii. 105. Donkester, Thomas, Subprior of
Newesham, i. 109. 111. Doria, Andrew, his successes a- gainst the Turks in 1532, i. 15. Dorset, Marchioness of, i. 84. Downes, Dr., i. 58.
Durmeryght, John, complaint a- gainst him by his wife, i. 92.
Eatings, three manner of eatings, iii. 129. 319. the eating and drinking of Christ's flesh and blood, ii. 427. iii. 5. 65. 68. 79. 82. 130. 140. 162. 316. 319. eating and drinking un- worthily, 332.
Ecclesiastical laws, plan for re- forming them, i. 318. Education of youth, Cranmer's opinion respecting it, i. 326. Edward VI, letters to him, i. 316. 326. 349. iv. App. 388. Edwardes, i. 44. 59. Egerton, i. 107.
Elect, the elect people of God, ii. 74. 85. iii. 17. not known to the world, 19. Elizabeth, Queen, the date of her birth, i. 83.
Elyot, Sir Thos., i. 142. 179. Elyston, i. 35.
Enchiridion in English, i. 105. English language, agreed to be used in the Church Service by learned men of all parties, 375. Ephesus, Council of, iii. 3. 5. 69. 548. iv. App. 428. Epiphanius, Ancoratus, ii. 374. iii. 75. iv. App. 409.
Contra Hæreses, ii. 324. iii. 419. 420. iv. 226. App. 409. Erasmus, his opinions on the Eu-
charist, iii. 56. suspected the genuineness of Ambrose De Mysteriis and De Sacramentis, 282. quoted by Gardyner, 332. Essex, Henry Bourchier, Earl of, his correspondence with Cran- mer, i. 67. Eton, Jeffry, i. 67. Eton, Thomas, i. 67.
St. Dunstan's, in the East, i. 63. Eucharist, ii. 20. 40. 48. 100. iv.
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