liii)»HiWiii«!ii!l'" ' Hi!-:: HilK ii^l iifi Ml ife liiiliPi liillliiiliii: li I iiliHl Ml- iiiliiliii'^ :'i|i|: (ij Hi li'i l;,' w:v ;l ' lilii! :i''ii;: ■, :!i!ii;i' m ■! I i'ii l!!!ll I iP' i Pi'. AHV^Jl^l^o iV.iOi u.,jI| N0i33Niyd i ^'iim BR75b .S87 INDEX V.2 ' General index to the historic, AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS OF JOH: GENERAL INDEX HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS OF / JOHN STRYPE, A.M. IN TWO VOLUMES. ^ VOL. IL -^— OXFORD, AT THE CLARENDON PRESS. MDCCCXXVIII. INDEX HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS JOHN STRYPE, M. A. KaIRLIPHO, William, bishop of Durham, A. II. ii. 691. Karkek, see Carkyke. Karn, — one of those sent abroad by Henry VIII. about his di- vorce, C. 13. Karn, — knight, A. III. i, 399. 401. Katharine, see Catharine. Kay, — A. IV. 97. 98. Kay, Thomas, appointed master of University college, Oxford, by the crown, M. II. ii. 268. Kaye, Martin, fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. II. ii. 668. Keache, Henry, sent to the pope for aid for Mary queen of Scots against queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii. 384. Keamys, Robert, deprived of the prebend of Whetlakinton, M. in. i. 353. Keat, Ralph, a recusant, A. I. i. 415- Kechyn, Robert, beneficed by archbishop Parker, P. I. 303. notice of his ministry in cer- tain points, ib. Keilway, — a lawyer, A. I. i. 92. 149- Keilway, sir William, A. I. i. 55. see Kelloway. VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPK. Kele, — A. I. i. 10. Kelk, Roger, A. I. ii. 107. W. III. 18. I. 88.94. III. 27. 31. P. II. 175. A. II. i. 459- ii- 5.38. an exile at Frankfort for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 404. W. I. 118. fellow of St. John's college, Cam- bridge, ordained, G. 54. as master of Magdalen college, signed a letter to lord Burgh- ley to stop the qiieen's pro- clamation for enjoining habits, P. I. 386. III. 126. Whitgift's letter to lord Burghley recom- mending him as master of St.- John's college, W. 1. 3 1 . though he had most votes, yet Long- worth is elected, 32. P. I. 391. unsuccessful again againstShep- herd, G. 225. vice-chancellor, W. I. 49. his controversy with his college about the expulsion of a fellow, 52. succeeds Whit- gift in the rectory of Tever- sham, 98. much esteemed by lord Burghley, 118. Kell, — A. II. ii. 208. Kelle, AValter, ordained, G. 59- Kellet, Avery, A. II. i. 270. Kelloway, sir William, (hibbed a knight of the carpet at queen B INDEX. Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. i8i. see Keilway. Kelly, sir Edward, famed for making gold, A. III. ii. 131. invited into England by queen Elizabeth, ih. 617. his great abilities to serve his country, 132. the emperor of Germany makes him a baron, 133. is seized by the emperor's order, 134. 621. the cause thereof, ih. the queen interests herself in his behalf, 135. certain articles of the discovery of high trea- son made by him, IV. i. lord Burghley's letter to him in- viting him to return to his own country, 3. lordB.'s reply to his answer, 4. Keltridge, John, Ay. 39. formerly of Trinity college, Cambridge, a notable preacher, 22. notice of his sermon at bishop Ayl- mer's ordination, ib. which was printed, ib. Kelvedon, manor and rectory of, Essex, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Lon- don, M. II. i. 340. Kemberly, Francis, A. III. ii.413. Kemesmisford, or Kenysford, ad- vowson of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Kemp, — belonged to queen Mary's privy chamber, M. III. i-495- 513- Kemp, — a trusty servant of archbishop Whitgift,W. I. 427. Kemp, — utterbarister of the Temple, Ay. 125. Kemp, — A. III. ii. 516. Kemp, David, G. 52. archdeacon of St. Alban's, 87, 103. sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Kemp, John, a great traveller in Kent for furthering religion, detected and imprisoned^ temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 64. A. II. ii. 283. charged with being a freewiller, but vindicated by Fox, C. 502. 505. A. II. ii. 284. Kemp, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. Kemp, Richard, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. Kemp, Robert, a magistrate in Suffolk, bishop Scambler's no- tice of, A. III. ii. 460. Kemp, sir Thomas, A. I. i. 64. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 329. maintained a poor-house at Wye, P. I. 227. high sherift' of Kent, 379. III. 290. Kemp, sir William, present at Edward VI. 's christening, M. II. i. 9. Kemp, William, vicar of North- gate, complaints against, C. 145- Kemp, lady, attended queen Mary at her coronation, M. III. i. 55. Kempe, David, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Kempsey, manor of, Worcester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. the rectory given in exchange by the crown to the dean and chapter of Worcester, i. 118. had belonged to sir R. Sadler, ih. Kemsing, rectory of, granted to cardinal Pole by queen Mary, INDEX. M. Ill, i. 475. returned to the crown under queen Elizabeth, ib. Kena, Kennal, or Kennel, John, archdeacon of Oxford, in a commission to visit All Souls college, Oxford, P. I. 228. sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. votes a- gainst the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 5 1 2. in another for visiting the city and diocese of Oxford, G. 318. and again, W. II. 1 1 2. Kendal, — A. II. ii. 693. Kendal, — a puritan minister, inhibited from preaching by archbishop Whitgift, W. II, 34, lord Burghley intercedes for him, ib. 35. Kendal, Christopher, M. Ill, ii. 392- Kendryk, Hugh, A. II. ii, 527. III. ii. 473. see Kenrick. Kenilworth, lordshij), manor, and castle of, granted by Edward VI. to Dudley, duke of North- umberland, M. II. ii. 231. the earl of Leicester's magnificent reception of queen Elizabeth there, A, II. i. 580, Kennam, Nicholas, curate of St. Mary Aldermary, liOndon, G. 362. Kenne, advowson of, Devon, given in exchange to lord Darcy by the crown, M. II. ii. 234. Kenner, John, M. II. i. 587. Kennington, advowson of, Kent, annexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. Ill, ii, 121 . Kenrick, — M. III. i. 298. see Kendryk. Kensey, Robert, fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, and vicar of Ware, ordained, M. II. ii, 62. Kent, Richard, an Essex rebel, temp. Edward VI., M. II. i. 275- Kent, Henry Grey, earl of, bro- ther of Reginald, present at the execution of Mary queen of Scots, A. III. i. 557. 559. an executor to Frances, coun- tess of Sussex, ii. 117, Kent, Reginald, Grey, earl of, brother of Henry, present at the duke of Norfolk's trial, A. II. i. 121. Kent, countess of, a widow, mar- ried Abrincourt, a knight, C. ep. cled. ii, Kent, Susan, countess of, A, II. ii, 211. Kent, Joan of, see J. Bocher. Kent, county of, insurrection in- tended there, 1550, M. II, i. 343. sectaries there, 369. their tenets, 370. commission against certain heresies there, ii. 19. notice of W. Lambard's Per- ambulation of Kent, A. II. i, 44. Kenton, manor of, granted by Edward VI. to the earl of Westmoreland, M. II. ii. 75. Kepinge, Nicholas, M. III. ii, 398, Ker, — abbot of Newbottle, one of the Scotch lords of the ar- ticles, A. III. i. 440. Ker, or Kier, Henry, one of James VI. 's counsellors, A. II. li. 325. his character, ib. Kerkebie, Emma, public penance enjoined her for adultery, M, III. ii. 409, Kerrie, Thomas, G. 365. Kesteven, M. II. i. 361, Ket, Francis, condemned for he- resy by bishop Scambkr, A, III. ii. 73. burnt, "jt,. Ket, Robert, leader of the Nor- B 2 INDEX. folk rebels, executed, M. II. i. 271. his character, ib. Kete, William, a Norfolk rebel, temp, queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii. 365. 366. Kethe, — A. III. i. 442. Kethe, William, a Scot, an exile for religion temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 233. A. I. i. 152. specimen of his poetry, M. III. ii. 104. 132. answered Hog- heard's book, i. 442. notice of him, A. II. i. 150, concerned in the translation of the Ge- neva Bible, 151. notice of a printed sermon of his, ib. the earl of Warwick his patron, ib. was with him as minister at Newhaven, ib. one of the preachers with the queen's army in the north against the rebels, ib. Keverdly, manor of, Lancashire, sold awav from the crown, M. II. ii. 61'. Kew, messuage of, Surrey, be- longed to sir M. Partridge, M. II. i. 542. ii. 225. granted by the crown to sir H. Gates, ib. Key, Thomas, registrar of the university of Oxford, translated Erasmus's Paraphrase on St. Mark, M. II. i. 46. rewarded with the mastership of Uni- versity college, by letters re- commendatory from the king, ib. Keyes, — P. II. 433. Keyes, Thomas, sergeant porter, A. I. i. 70. married lady Mary Gray, II. ii. 210. see Cuius. Keyme, John and Richard, bought certain church property of the crown, M. II. ii. 404. Kicheman, Robert, A. I. i. 48. Kidd, George, M. III. ii. 404. Kiffin, Richard, presented to the parsonage of Bonnings in the marches of Calais, M. II. ii. 263. Kilburn, Peter, a dangerous priest, P. II.154. Kilburne, — author of a topo- graphy of Kent, C. 405. his character of Lambard, A. III. Kilcomen, impropriation of the vicarage of, Ireland, granted by Edward \T. for founding a col- lege in Galway, M. II. i. 463. Kildare, Gerald Fitzgerald, earl of, A. II. i. 577. (as lord Fitz- gerald, or Gerard,) has a grant of certain of his father's lands from the crown, M. II. i. 471. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, III. ii. 181. (as earl of Kil- dare,) active against the rebel O'Neale, A. I. ii. 212. sus- pected of favouring the earl of Desmond's rebellion, II.ii.330. Kildare, bishop of, see 7'. Lan- caster. Kildwing, — A. I. ii. 383. Kilkow, — A. I. ii. 22. Killeen, Joanna, married to James Aylmer, Ay. 216. Killigrew, sir Henry, A. II. i. 531. ii. 513. III. ii. 462. IV. 119. 179. brother-in-law to lord Burgliley, II. i. 175. mar- ried a daughter of sir A. Cook, ii. 87. sent ambassador by queen Elizabeth to the pala- tine of the Rhine, I. ii. 268. his advices from abroad con- cerning religion, 293. was a gentleman of the privy cham- ber, P. II. II. obtains a lease of certain lands belonging to Manchester college, 10. 11. A. II. ii. 68. sent ambassador into France, i. 67. 175. 216. S. 106. 116. his words to the French king about taking Mary queen of Scots into a league INDEX. with him and queen Elizabeth, A. II, i. 71. sent ambassador into Scotland, S. 129. sent am- bassador into Holland, A. III. ii. 23. 24. Killigrevv, John, in a commission for survey of the isle of Scilly, M. II. i. 466. ii, 203. Killigrews, two pirates, M. II. ii. .31- Kilpeck, advo\^'son of, Hereford- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M, II. ii. 5, 6. Kimberly, — A. II. ii. 693. 694. Kimberly, William, of the priory of Thurgarton, M. I. i. 397. Kimpton, — sheriff of London, concerned in interrupting mass at the Portuguese ambassador's house, A. II. ii. 26 — 30. King; power of a king during his minority according to sir W. Paget, M. n. i. 249. King's Book, the Erudition of a Christian Man so called, see Institution of a Christian Man. The King's Book, a book de vera Differentia inter regiam Po- testatem et ecclesiasticam, why so called, M. II. i. 41, when first published, ib. when and by whom republished in Eng- lish, ib. King, — burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary. M. III. ii. 6. King, Andrew, a puritan, W, II, 7, examined about Cartwright's book, which he by implication condemns, P, II, 239. 240. proceedings against him and others in the star-chamber, W. II. 81—96. Ill, 242—285. Ay. 205. their petition to be released from prison, W, III, 262. A. IV. 103. King, Eliza, widow of Alan King, married to H. Williams, dean of Litchfield, M, III. i. 168. King, Dr, Geoffry, W. II. 321, King, John, chaplain to queen Elizabeth, and canon of Can- terbury, P. II. 25, as arch- deacon of Nottingham, W. II. 492, chaplain to archbishop Piers, A, IV. 282. his account of the archbishop in his fune- ral sermon, ib. his notice of the plague and dreadful storms in a lecture, 293. his favour, as bishop of London, to the Dutch church in London, I. ii. 251. King, Richard, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 201. King, Robert, M. I. ii. 407. A. IV. 173. a monk of Rewley, or Royal-lieu, M. II. ii. 172. C, 136, abbot of Bruerne, ib. abbot of Thame, ib. abbot of Osney, ib. surrenders the two latter monasteries to the king, ib. suffragan bishop of Reon, ib. 52. preached against those who read the New Testament, 136. consecrated bishop of Ox- ford, ib. M. II. ii. 172, (as bi- shop of Oxford,) one that pre- sided at archbishop Cranmer's trial, C. 481. 1049. passed through all the changes under Henry VIII., Edward VI., M. II. ii. 172, a persecutor under queen Mary, C. 136. his death, ib. King, Robert, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 45°- King, Robert, M. HI. i. 541- Ay. 46. King, Thomas, married Joan Bures, Ay. 1 14. King, William, prebendary of Canterbury, G. 3 1 4. W. I. 596. King's college, Cambridge, A. IV. 616. favoured the gospel, C. 331. reprimanded for leaving off masses, ib. orders from the INDEX. crown respecting the appoint- ment of their officers, M. II. ii. 268. obedient as to the wearing of the ecclesiastical habits, A. I. ii. 161. disorders there owing to its provost, Dr. Baker, being popishly inclined, W. I. 32. visited, 33. articles of accusation against the pro- vost, 34. who absconds, 35. Goad elected in his stead, 36. why bishop Cooper declined to visit it, A. II. ii. 37. the na- ture of the disorders there, 38. King's evil, Q. Elizabeth touches several persons for it, A. II. ii. .585- . Kingsmill, — a lawyer and mem- ber of parliament, A. I. ii. 233. attorney of the court of wards, III. ii. 330. Kingsmill, Andrew, of All Souls college, Oxford, he, Sampson, and Humphrey, the only preach- ers in the university, P. I. 313. wrote to archbishop Parker a- gainst urging the habits, ib. Kingsmill, Dr., A. II. ii. 54. Kingsmill, sir John, a magistrate, M. III. i. 530. Kingsmill, Richard, in a com- mission for a royal visitation in the north, A. I. i. 245. Kingsmill, William, dean of Win- chester, C. 222. Kingsmill, sir William, A. III. ji- 330- Kingsnorth, manor of, belonged to Ann Cranmer, who married sir A. Harris, C. 601. had been bought by her father, ib. King's-norton, manor of, Wor- cestershire, granted by Edward VI. to Dudley, duke of North- umberland, M. II. ii. 107. 237. III. i. 44. Kingston, — commissary to bi- shop Boner, M. III. i. 553. Kingston, sir Anthony, M. II. ii. 423. III. i. 15. present at Ed- ward VI. 's christening, II. i. 9. one of Edward VI. 's council for the marches of Wales, ii. 16 T. was knight marshal, and a busy member of parliament, III. i.' 469. Kingston, sir William, constable or lieutenant of the Tower, M. I. i. 43T. a privy counsel- lor, 1540, 565, present at the christening of Edward VI., II. i. 9. Kingston, lady, present at Ed- ward VI.'s christening, M. II. i. 6. see Kinstone. Kingston, manor of, Somerset, granted by Edward VI. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 363. 542. had belonged to sir T. Arun- del, ib. Kingston upon Hull, town of, Edward VI.'s grant to, M. II. i. 547. who also devised a mart there, 592. King-street, Westminster, certain property there bought of the crown bv R. Audley and J. Rede, M.' II. ii. 408. Kingswel, sir William, married Ambrosia Mac Williams, Ch. 134- Kinlose, lord of, in a commis- sion to consider what coercion might be used instead of ex- communication, W. II. 504. Kinred, Thomas, A. I. ii. 54. II. '}• 495- Kinstone, George, a puritan in prison, A. IV. 130. Kirby, — a magistrate, bishop Cooper's unfavourable opinion of, A. III. ii. 462. Kirby, Luke, a priest, indicted with Campion, P. II. 1 67 . Crow- ley tried to convince him of his errors, I. 436. executed, A. III. ii. 495. Kirby, Richard, architect, S. 171. INDEX. Kirby, (East,) Lincolnshire, cer- tain property there bought of the crown by R. Goodrick and W. Breton, M.II. ii. 407. Kirford, Richard, has letters pa- tent for a collection for loss by fire, G. 397. 398. Kirk, Hugh, expelled Magdalen college, Oxford, as a favourer of the gospel, M, III. i. 82. afterwards an exile for his re- ligion, ib. Kirkaldv, George, A, II. i. 263. Kirkby,'— P. li. 432. Kirkby, John de, purchased Ely- house, in Holborn, and an- nexed it to the see of Ely, A. III. i. 487. ii. 373. Kirkeby^, Lancashire, the chantry there bought of the crown by T. Stanley, M. II. ii. 403. Kirkland, Christopher, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. i. 2. Kirkman, Richard, a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Kirton, — fellow of Eton col- lege, pronounced contuma- cious for not attending a vi- sitation, P. I. 206. Kirton, William, G, 605. see Kyrton. Kitchin, Anthony, alias Dunstan, C. 187. (as bishop of Lan- . daflF,) A. I. i. 435. made bishop of Landatf, C. 197. made grievous waste of his bishopric in Edward VI. 's reign, M. II. ii. 174. P. I. 294. does homage to queen Mary, M. III. i. 56. a commissioner in bishop Ho- per's trial, C. 332. present at the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. dissent- ed from the bill restoring the first-fruits, tenths, &c. to the crown, 83. 85. and from that for restoring the supremacy, 84. 85. 87. from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. and from that for uniformity of common prayer, 113. in the commission for consecration of arcli bishop Parker, P. I. 107. would not act, 117. i w). takes the oath of supremacy, A. I. i. 206. P. III. 272. the only bi- shop imder queen Mary that complied under queen Eliza- beth, M. II. ii. 174. Kitson, — patron of the living of Farnham Genefeva, P. II. Kitson, Richard, commissary to archbishop Grindal, G. 359. Kitson, lady, a recusant, A. III. ii. 597. see Kytson. KnatchbuU, sir John, knight of the shire for Kent, P. I. 7. married Monings, an heiress, ih. Knel, — h. II. ii. 83. see Bo- cher. Knevet, sir Henry, sent by Hen- ry VIII. ambassador to the diet at Ratisbon, M. III. i. 456. Knevet, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Marv's coronation, M. III. ii. 181.' Knevet, William, sergeant por- ter, present at Henry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 310. Knevets, two, concerned in Wyat's rebellion, M. III. i. 132. 137. 138. 149. see K7UJ- vet. Knewstubbs, Henry, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. ii. 417. Knewstubbs, John, W. II. 6. a favourer of Cartwright, A. I. ii. 376. notice of his confuta- tion of certain heresies of the Family of Love, II. ii. 302. and of his book against the assertion that the church of Rome was the true church, B 4 8 INDEX. 302. 711. he and Allen ap- pointed bj' the puritans to su- perintend in Suffolk, III. i. 691. ii. 478. appeared for the puritans at the conference of 1603, W. II. 493. 499. Knihbius, Paulus, his letter on the ill consequences of queen Elizabeth's making peace with Spain, A. III. i. 67 i. Knight, — M. I. i. 115. Knight, — his puritanical opin- ions, W. I. 245. is suspended, 249. intercession made in his behalf, 271. Knight, Catharine, of Thornham, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 123. Knight, Christopher, ordained, G.58. Knight, John, canon of Canter- bury, P. I. 103. Knight, Samuel, of Trinity col- lege, Cambridge, W. I. pref. ix. II. 519. Knight, Stephen, burnt as an he- retic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 332. Knight, William, Henry VIII. 's ambassador to Margaret, go- verness of the Low Coun- tries, M. I. i. 86. cardi- nal Wolsey's letter to him, ib. and to Rome, 136. pro- bably owed his advancement to cardinal Wolsey, 188. se- cretary to the king. III. i. 452. (as archdeacon of Richmond,) present at the christening of Edward VI., II. i. 9. concern- ed in the Institution of a Chris- tian Man, C. 77. consecrated bishop of Bath and Wells, Knight, William, assay-master of the mint, M, II. ii. 227. Knight, Williani, rector of St. Pancrase, and curate of Bow church, G. 362. Knight, William, fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 719. ii. 500. Knightly, Anne, daughter of sir Richard, A. III. i. 654. Knightly, Edmund, one of the royal visitors of religious houses, M". I. i. 394. Knightly, lady Elizabeth, second wife of sir Richard, and dciugh- ter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 8. A. III. i. 653. 654- Knightly, sir Richard, of Faus- ley, took for his second wife, Elizabeth, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 8. A. III. i. 654. examined for having Martin Marprelate's press at his house, ii. 102. 602. 603. pardoned from the fine and imprisonment impos- ed in consequence, AV. II. 5 1 1. Knightly, sir Valentine, made a knight of the bath, M. II, i. Knightly, Valentine, a magis- trate, A. III. ii. 452. Knightlys, family of, favourers of the puritans, W. I. 551. Knighton, lands there given by Edward VI. to lord Darcy, liable to a charge, M. II. i. 462. Knights of the carpet, made at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. and at queen Ma- ry's, III. ii. 181. Kniston, George, A. IV. 245. Kniveton, — A. III. i. 201. Knockfergus, an important place for curbing the Irish, S. 135. Knoll, in Kent, a residence there given up to Henry VIII. by archbishop Cranmer, C. 406. 625. KnoUys, see Knowles. Knoppert, Dr. Albert, a lawyer, sent by the king of Denmark INDEX. to England, to adjust some merchants' business, M. II. i. 432- Knottesvvorth, John, a magis- trate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. bishop Freake's notice of him, ib. vahiation of the subsidy charged on him, ib. Knowell, Lancelot, servant to the earl of Cumberland, M, III. i. 563. 564. Knowl, manor of, Warwickshire, given by the crown in ex- change to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. had belonged to the see of Westminster, ib. Knowles, — A. I. ii. 560. Knowles, Colding, captain of Edinburgh castle, A. III. i. 441. Knowles, or Knollys, sir Francis, S. 59. P. I. 92. A. II. i. 76. 177. 189. ii. 499. III. i. 363. W. I. 304. A. IV. 242. pre- sent at a private conference respecting the sacrament, C. 386. Ch. 70. 77. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, 95. resident at Frankfort, M. III. i. 231. 404. and at Strasburgh, G. 112. returns home on queen Elizabeth's ac- cession, A. I. i. 151. present at the celebration of the emperor's funeral at St. Paul's, G. 147. countenanced those who re- fused the ecclesiastical habits, A. I. ii. I 29. signed the queen's proclamation against excess in apparel, 195. 540. was trea- surer of the queen's household, and one of her privy-council, II. ii. 317. 707. 708. what other public offices he held, 708. one of the members ap- pointed by the commons to confer with the lords about the succession and the queen's marriage, I. ii. 233. 234. 236. a bill for rites and ceremonies referred to him (as treasurer of the household) and others, II. i. 185. P. II. 202. one of a committee of the commons to examine Wentworth for a vio- lent speech, A. II. i. 190. he and other privy counsellors write to the bishop of Nor- wich in favour of the exercises, 477. P. II. 361. his thoughts about depriving archbishop Grindal, G.354. his letter to lord Burghley and the earl of Leicester to be watchful a- gainst seminaries, A. III. i. 56. another to the court to stop the circulation of Castalio's books, 99. 100. his letter to archbishop Whitgift in behalf of certain ministers suspended for nonconformity, W. I. 308. III. 103. his opinions as to ecclesiastical equality, I. 309. speaks against a petition of sixteen articles presented to parliament in favour of the pu- ritans, 348. 349. brings in a bill for reformation of disor- derly ministers, 369. his notes in answer to archbishop Whit- gift's reasons against a bill to abolish pluralities, 381. sends archbishop Whitgift a syllo- gism of the puritans charging his courts with popish tyranny, which the archbishop answers, 390. supports the charge of the puritans imputing Babing- ton's conspiracy to the faidts and negligence of the church, 506. 507. his consequent ad- vice to the queen for her safety, 507. III. 199. supports a bill in parliament against pluralities, I. 533. circulates at court a puritanical tract touching the superiority of bishops, written in consequence of Dr. Ban- lO INDEX. croft's sermon on that subject, III. 121. desires Dr. Rainolds's judgment of this sermon, I. 559. A. TIL ii. 100. a paper delivered to him on the sub- ject, 601. his letter to lord Burghley against the supe- riority of bishops, IV. 6. and to the queen on her being dis- pleased with his opinions as to episcopacy, 9. excepts against certain articles of inquiry made by archbishop Whitgift in his visitation, as infringing the queen's authority, W. I. 597. 598. his reflections against the archbishop, II. 34. his ar- gument that the divine supe- riority of bishops over the clergy is derogatory to the queen's supremacy, 50. ad- vises some restraint upon this opinion, 51. his judgment of Marten's book in defence of episcopacy, 53. proposes a pub- lic disputation on this subject, 54. the queen angry with him for interfering with the bishops' power, ib. she had previously commanded him not to deal with the puritans, 55. shews his mind of the queen's danger from the bishops, 72. his re- flection on the queen's declara- tion, that she feared the puri- tans as much as the papists, 73. acquaints lord Burghley of certain speeches in parliament upon the bishops' courts, 123. his own speech against them, 124. signed various orders of the privy-council, G. 97. P. I. 253- 273- 44.3- 561. A. I. ii. 558. IV. 580. P. II. 347. G. 338. A. II. ii. 127. G. 586. 370. A. III. i. 225. 247.433. Henry Knowles his son and heir, Ch. 134. Knowles, Henry, M. II. i. 599. Knowles, Henry, son of sir Francis, G. 98. A. II. ii. 499. IV. 119. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, resident at Frankfort, M. III. i. 231. 404. signed the answer of the church of Frankfort to the church of Geneva about the Book of Common Prayer, and about ceremonies, A. I. i. 153. sign- ed certain resolutions concern- ing the ceremonies to be esta- blished in England, 263. one of those reconunended by bi- shop Grindal for the provost- ship of Eton, P. I. 209. queen Elizabeth's agent in Germany, G. 141. the difference of reli- gion ]3revented his going am- bassador into Spain, A. I. ii. 1 24. one of the challengers at a tournament before the queen, Ch. 134. a member of parlia- ment, A. I. ii. 238, in a «,com- mittee of that house to wait on archbishop Parker upon mat- ters of religion, II. i. 96. Knowles, William, A. III. i. 442. Knowles, William, signed the proclamation on the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, A. IV. 519- Known men, earnest professors of the gospel so called, P. I. 5- Knowsley-park, Lancashire, the seat of the earl of Derby, M. II. ii. 230. Knox, John, M. III. i. 183. P. I. 85. A. I. i. 2. 187.P. I. 297. 421. 479. A. I. ii. 173. 522. 544. 228. Ay. 168. 172. 211. he and others appointed to consider certain articles of re- ligion, C. 391. the council bare a great favour to him, 420. one of Edward VI. 's INDEX. II chaplains, but afterwards dis- continued, ib. 432. M. II. i. 522. lias an annuity, 524. ii. 275. notice of his preaching at Newcastle, 56. and in Bucks, 73. and of his last sermon at court, 69. the council apply for a living for him, 72. C. 420. why he refused it, M. II. ii. 72. summoned in conse- quence before the council, ib. notice of his sermon foreboding persecution from queen Mary, III. i. 19. an exile for religion under that queen, C. 450. M. III. i. 233. 404. notice of him, C. 517. notice of his Faithful Admonition, M. III. i. 236. opposes the use of the Book of Conmion Prayer among the exiles at Frankfort, 406. G. 15. A. I. i. 177. W. II. 158. censured in consequence by bishop Ridley, G. 28 certain of his political principles dis- allowed by his fellow exiles, M. III. i. 406. removes to Ge- neva, ib. signs the letter of the church of Geneva to that at Frankfort about the Book of Common Prayer and about ce- remonies, A. I. i. 152. con- cerned in the Geneva transla- tion of the Bible, P. I. 409. invited back into Scotland, M. III. i. 544. arrives there, A. I. i.176. notice of his First Blast against the monstrous Empire of Women, 178. how he makes queen Elizabeth an exception, I 79. Mary, queen of England, and Mary, regent of Scotland, the chief objects of this book, 1 80. notice of his Second Blast, which was not published in consequence of queen Mary's death, ib. his book answered by (bishop) Aylmer, 181. Ay. II. 148. the arguments of it, 157. generally disliked by pro- testants, A. I. i. 185. his an- swer to Fox's expostulation, 186. ii. 487. P. I. 409. ex- pelled Edinburgh by Mary queen of Scots, A. I. ii. 227. G. 492. his death, P. II. 147. the great instrument of the reformation in Scotland, ib. some account of him, ib. the papists' account of his death, 148. Knox, William, has a license to traffick, M. II. i. 525. pro- bably a relative of J. Knox's, ib. Knyvet, Anthony, present at the christening of Edward VI., M. II. i. 9. Knyvet, Henry, present at Ed- ward VI .'s christening, M. II. i. 6. 8. see Knevet. Kowte, Robert, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 597. Kyrton, John, M. II. ii. 11. Kyrton, Stephen, he and J. White bought of the crown Farnham chantry in Surrey, M. II. ii. 409. see Kirton. Kytson, — of Suffolk, a contri- butor to the Lovainists, A. I. ii. 261. see Kitson. h. Laburn, .Tames, a papist, execut- ed, A. III. i. 6] 2. ii. 495. why he refused to acknowledge queen Elizabeth as his lawful queen, IV. 618. Lacer, William, M. III. ii. 401, Lacock, manor and rectory of, Wilts, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharington, M. II. i. 192. 193. Lacon, Rowland, A. II. i. 270. Lactantius, C. 764. P. III. 81. Lacy, Alexander, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 20 j. Lacv, Andrew, M. III. ii. 409. la INDEX. Lacy, Dr. Thomas, a papist, A. I. i. 342. P. I. 141. Lacy, William, he and J. Ayle- worth bought certain property of the crown, M. IL ii. 405. Lacy, William, a priest, execut- ed, A. III. ii. 495. Ladies received a learned educa- tion, temp. Henry VIIL, P. L 357. instances, ib. Udal's cha- racter of them, temp. Edward VI., 358- Ladinijton, manor of, bought of the crown, by sir W. Sharing- ton, M. II. i. 192. Laet, John de, P. II. 515. Laiet, Jasper, A. IV. 574. Laighton, William, had the pre- bend of Uskel, M. II. ii. 265. Laing, count de la, governor, captain general, and grand bailly de Saynnau, sent ambas- sador into England by Charles V. to settle the marriage of his son Philip with queen Marv, M. III. i. 90. Laishford, or Warne, Joan, burnt as an heretic at Stratford Bow, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 359- 47°- Laishford, or Warne, Joan, daughter of the preceding, burnt at Smithfield as an here- tic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 470. Laity, Cranmer's articles con- cerning the, C. 260. orders issued regidating the apparel of the laity, P. I. 424. Lake, sir Lancelot, married Fran- ces Cheke, Ch. 147. Lakes, Stephen, one of the fel- lows of King's college, Cam- bridge, who complained a- gainst Dr. Goad, the provost, A. II. ii. 38. the provost's cen- suring his dress the cause of his enmity, 40. was of a haughty disposition, 39. com- mitted to the gatehouse, 40, his confession, 41. in a com- mission for the commissary- ship of Canterbury, G. 399. was a canon of Canterbury, W. 1.276. sends archbishop Whit- gift an account of certain puri- tans, ib. in a commission to visit certain hospitals, II. 145. Lamb, (Lame,) sir Robert, dub- bed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Lambard, William, C. 405. P. II. 506. 508. 515.519. A.m. i. 744. an ingenious, learned, and painful antiquarian, P. I. 553. a great acquaintance of archbishop Parker, ib. the arch- bishop's praise of him, II. 5 1 7. some notice of him, A. III. i. 723. his encomium of lord Burghley, IV. 470. notice of his Perambulation of Kent, II. i. 44. P. II. 243. III. 267. notice of his Eirenarcha, A. III. i. 108. edited again, 109. his letter to lord Burghley about his MS. description of Lincoln and Stamford, 415. another to him, thanking him for his kindness to him, 723. another, upon his being nomi- nated for a judge, or some other high place in the law, 725. ii. 501. Kilburne's cha- racter of him, i. 725. his letter to lord Burghley about lord Cobham's will, IV. 376. Lambert, — member of parlia- ment A. I. ii. 236. Lambert, the feigned name of Nicholson, C. 92. offers his reasons against transubstantia- tion, 93. which are disputed by the bishops, ib. is burnt, 92. 664. Lambertus, Fr,, his works pro- INDEX. 13 hibited, temp. Henry VIII., M. I, i. 254. Lambeth, chief or capital mese of, taken in exchange by the crown from the marquis of Northampton, M. II. ii. 228. A. I. i. 91. had belonged to the duke of Norfolk, ib. arch- bishop Parker's benefaction to the poor of Lambeth, P. II. 484. archbishop Grindal's, G. 428. see Articles. Lambeth, archiepiscopal library at, furnished fresh documents for the Oxford edition of Strype'sCranmer, C. adv. con- tains a MS. of the building, statutes, &c. of Trinity hospi- tal, Croydon, W. II. 420. Lafiiot, — A. IV. 392. Lamplugh, Thomas, archbishop of York, a benefactor to St. Bee's school, G. 432. Lampson, — secretary to the prince of Liege, A. IV. 380. Lampsonius, Dominicus, notice of, A. I. ii. 189. acquaints Ce- cil with his designed treatise for a composition of religious differences, 189. Lancashire, popery in, 1567, A. I. ii. 253. 257. 258. queen Elizabeth's letter thereupon, 254. what was done there by the ecclesiastical commission- ers, 257. abounds with pa- pists, 1587, III. i. 702. Fleet- wood's letter about the new justices there, 702. ii. 48B. Lancaster, — parson of Pluck- ley, C. 143. 154. 159. Lancaster, Charles, herald, Ch. 131- Lancaster, John, ordained, G. 72. Lancaster, John, why an unfit magistrate in bishop Godwin's opinion, A. III. ii. 462. was expelled (trays Inn, ib. Lancaster, John, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Lancaster, Justinian, archdeacon of Taunton, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i, 488. votes against the six ar- ticles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. presented to a prebend in the church of Wells, II. i. 351, Lancaster, Thomas, a priest, im- prisoned upon the .ibridge, W. 1. 21. 111. 8. shewing him some of Cartvvright's tenets, and the drawing up new statutes for the university, I. 39. III. 16. to Norton, in answer to his, dissuading Whitgift from an- swering the Admonition to Par- liament, I. 58. to archbishop Parker, acquainting him of the expulsion of Cartwright from Trinity college, 96. with the first part of his book against Cartwright, P. II. 140. 111. 207. to lord Burghley, with his book, II. 141. to archbi- shop Parker, about his reply to Cartwright, 253. to lord Burghley, about his Defence against Cartwright, W. I. 109. 111. 35. about a reported cen- sure of him and lord Bacon, by archl)ishop Parker, P. II. 431. clearing himself from misrepresentations at court, W. I. 169. in behalf of Phi- lipps, T78. to Dr. Aubrey, a- bout the prorogation of the visitation, G. 410. to lord Burghley, for stay of a par- sonage pretended to be con- cealed, W. 1. 218. III. 65. to the bishops, to put certain ar- ticles in force, I. 233. 239. to the privy-council, upon the E4 56 INDEX. complaints of certain puritan ministers, 250. to lord Burgh- ley, complaining of R. Beal's behaviour to him, 290. vindi- cating himself, with respect to Beal, 297. concerning the fa- vour of some great men to- wards certain who refused sub- scription, 304. in vindication of his twenty-four articles of inquiry, 31 1. 324. III. 107. 112. to the privy-council, in reply to their application in behalf of several suspended ministers, I. 33 1. to the queen, answering objections against the Liturgy, 333. tolordBurgh- ley, about the bishops, &c , 339. to the queen, upon occa- sion of some bills passed in parliament, 39 1 . to lord Burgh- ley, against a commission me- lius inquirendum, 405. to the queen, in defence of the liber- ties of the church, 411. III. 151. to Walsingham, concern- ing his advice about subscrip- tion, I. 432. to the university of Cambridge, to stay the printing of the Harmony of Confessions, A. III. i. 650. ii. 444. to require university preachers to subscribe the three articles, i. 651. ii. 445. to the earl of Leicester, who had writ to him in behalf of Dr. Whitaker, W. I. 5 19. from archbishop Whitgift and lord Burghley to St. John's college, Oxford, to receive Mr. Digby as fellow, 521. III. 209. from archbishop Whitgift to lord Burghley, giving his judgment upon a deprivation of a fellow- ship at Bene't college, Cam- bridge, I. 523. to the bishops, for the clergy's finding arms, 525. III. 211. about certain articles and canons, I. 531. to such clergy as had not paid the subsidy, 540. to the bi- shops, for the clergy to prepare their horse and foot against the Spaniard, 607. II. 66. to the justices in Kent, for the release of the clergy from com- position corn, A. IV. 74. to the chapter of Lincoln, stating what the ecclesiastical com- mission had done with their dean, W. II. 63. to the bi- shops, for the better observ- ance of catechising and con- firming, 106. III. 288. for cer- tificates of their clergy, II. 1 2 1. III. 292. to lord Cobham, about a wrong done to his daughter, lady Sandys, by her husband, II. 149. to the bi- shops, for contribution for con- verted priests, 155. to Beza, in defence of episcopacy, 160. to the university of Cambridge, in reply to theirs, complaining against Barret's sermon, 251. to lord Burghley, upon the heads appealing to that lord, 258. to Dr. Nevyl, with his private instructions, 284. to the vice-chancellor of Cam- bridge, respecting Dr. Baro, 295. to bp. Chaderton, touch- ing relief of the poor in the time of dearth, A. IV. 351. to the bishops, appointing a collection for the English in slavery under the Turks, W. II. 335. appointing fasting and prayer upon occasion of a dearth, 337. III. 348. for the regulation of times and places for marriage, II. 400. concern- ing such as took holy orders, 401. upon an invasion in Ire- land, 442. about regulating their courts, 447. 450. to the college of physicians, about a pretender to physic, 458. to INDEX. 57 the mayor of Canterbury, upon his encroaching upon the li- berties of the see, 461. to All Souls college, Oxford, for the redress of disorders, 462. to the bishops, to know the state of religion, 470. to keep the day of king James's deliver- ance from the Go wry conspi- racy, by the king's order, 474. for a collection for Geneva, by the king's order, 477. to the earl of Shrewsbury, concern- ing the endeavours of the puritans with the king, 485. III. 391. from dean Whitting- liam to Cecil, on the state of the church of Durham, I. 267. to the earl of Leicester, in be- half of the refusers of the ha- bits, 311. III. 76. from bishop Wickham to lord Burghley, on his translation to the see of Winchester, A. IV, 286. from Wierus to Cecil, giving him thanks for secondingthe French protestants' affairs with queen Elizabeth, I. ii. 553. from J. Wilsford to lord Burghley, to obtain pardon for having de- nied the queen's supremacy, II. ii. 188. 624. from M, Wil- son to Cecil, lamenting the spoliation of the revenues of schools, benefices, and hospi- tals, C. 592. 992. from T. Wylson to Dr. Clark, from the privy-council, G. 355. from Winchester college to queen Elizabeth, in answer to a re- quest of hers, A. III. i. 77. from lord Windsor to the earl of Sussex, giving the reason of his going out of England, II. i. 378. from G. Withers to archbishop Parker, promising to wear the habits, P. I. 375. about church controversies, and subscription to the Book of Common Prayer, A. III. i. 262. ii. 268. from sir J. Wol- ley to lord Burghley, by the queen's order, upon the death of his mother, i. 729. 730, from Wolsey to the ambassa- dors in France, M. I. i. 32. to the deputy at Calais, respect- ing an interview between the English and French kings, 39. to Henry VIII,, with respect to the French king, 41, and about the danger of his ships, 43. and about some English ships taken by the French, 48. concerning forces to be sent to the emperor, 80. to the bi- shop of Bath, 83, to Pace, to treat with the Venetians to aid the emperor against the French, 84. ii. 32, to Dr. Knight, the ambassador, with lady Marga- ret, i. 86. to Dr. Taylor, about a league with France, 98. to Gardiner, to inform him of the king's consultation concerning him, ii. 135. to draw up his pardon, granted by the king, ib. and praying to favour the cause of the provost of Bever- ley, and to intercede with the king for him and his colleges, 137. to be his friend in a suit with Mr.Strangwish, 138. from bishop Wolton to lord Burgh- ley, to favour his proceedings against Randal, one of the family of love, A. III. i. 32. ii. 180. from sir E. Wotton to lord Burghley, suing to be trea- surer of the queen's chamber, IV. 346. from Dr. Wylson to Cecil, with his translation of certain orations of Demos- thenes, II. i. 48. ii. 421. Dr. Yale to archbishop Grindal, about his courts, G. 307. from Dr. Yong to lord Burghley, to be set at liberty, A. II. i. 489. 58 INDEX. from J, Young to the lord keeper and others, with his confession, IV. 137. from the council at York to lord Burgh- lej', with their reasons for stop- ping all suits in chancery com- menced by those within their jurisdiction, 394. from bishop Yoimg to lord Burghley, in behalf of Chatham hospital, II. ii. 272. from bishop Young to lord Burghley, upon being slandered as covetous, IV. 315. from Zanchius to archbishop Grindal, on his translation to the see of Canterbury, G. 321. 557- Letters, their use in writing his- tory, P. I. ep. ded. v. Leur, John, van, A. IV. 575. Levant, Parry's notice respecting the English trade there, A. III. i. 117. Levenysh, Christopher, C. 145. Lever, Ralph, brought up at St. John's college, Cambridge, Ch. 5. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. assertions of, touching the canon law, the English papists, &c. with his petition to queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 533. canon of Durham, and afterwards dean, P. I. 546. succeeded his brother Thomas in the mas- tership of Sherburn hospital, A. I. i. 532. II. ii. 158. Lever, Thomas, Ch. 5. M. II. i. 100. A. I. i. 532. ii. 35. 147. 169. II. i. 8. P. II. 240. A. II. i. 565. one of the scholars of St. John's college, Cambridge, commended by Ascham, Ch. 49. holds a disputation there concerning the mass, Ch. 11. C. 232. 792. ordained, being fellow of St. John's, M. II. i. 403. notice of his preaching at Paul's Cross, 404. again on the Shrouds, 409. and before Edward VI., ih. extract from this last sermon, 427. appoint- ed master of St. John's college, ii. 267. in a commission to decide a controversy about the mastership of Clare-hall, P. I. 60. his letter, rejoicing at Cheke's recovery, Ch. 88. a great preacher, temp. Edward VI.» G. 274. P. I. 42 \. a let- ter to a nobleman in prison for the profession of the gos- pel, probably written by him, M. III. i. 167. ii. 204. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, Ch. 95. G. 274. C. 450. resident at Frankfort, M. III. i. 231. and Zuric, 233. 409. travels from place to place, 404. A. I. i. 192. afterwards minister to a congregation of English at Arrow, 232. C. 5t6. a. I. i. 154. his letter about Fox's tract in favour of the oppressed gospellers, C. 516. a married man, A. I. i. 1 1 8. returns home on queen Elizabeth's accession, 192. in a list of persons most deserv- ing of preferment, 229. made a prebendary of Durham, 371. being archdeacon of Coventry, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. one that signed a request to the synod con- cerning certain rites and cere- monies, 501. votes for the six articles, altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. his letter in favour of those that refused the habits, P. III. 138. allow- ed to preach in London with- out wearing the habits, G. 171. P. I. 445. 482. 483. com- plains to archbishop Grindal INDEX. 59 of the ill state of religion in ISherburn hospital, P. I. 545. deprived of his stall at Dur- ham for nonconformity, but retained the mastership of Sherburn hospital until his death, G. 252. 253. P. II. 66. one of the compilers of the Admonition to Parliament, W. I. 55. his care about Sher- burn hospital, G. 274. his let- ter to lord Bin-ghley in be- half of colleges and hospitals wronged by leases, A. II. i. 156. 157. his death, 156. no- tice of three of his sermons being published, 462. list of his works, P. I. 422. Leveresse, John, A. IV. 571. Leveroke, Hugh, a painter, burnt at Bow as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 489. Levers, — P. II. 157. 158. Leveson, or Luson, Anne, mar- ried to S. Fox, W. I. 487. A. 111.1.741.11.515. Leveson, sir John, A, III. ii. 516. IV. 377. Levingston, lord, A. II. i. 259. one of the Scotch commis- sioners in a treaty for the en- largement of Mary queen of Scots, I. ii. 384. II. i. 20. Lewen, — A. II. ii. 531. III. ii. 468. Lewin, — fellow of Christ's col- lege, Cambridge, A. II. ii. 666. Lewin, William, G. 356. S. 151. A. III. i. 225. W. I. 409. Ay. 97. W. II. 220. was tutor to Anne Cecil, countess of Ox- ford, A. III. i. 81. an eccle- siastical commissioner. Ay. 60. in a commission to visit the diocese of St. Asaph, W. I. 41 T. also certain hospitals at Saltwood and Hithe, 516. had a prebend of St. Asaph, A. II. ii. 525. III. ii. 472. present as a commissioner at the deposi- tion of Cawdry, Ay. 91. judge of the court of faculties, 130, his speech to Cartwright when before the ecclesiastical com- missioners, 207. 2 TO. W. II. 74. 76. his judgment, and that of other civilians, concerning the oath ex officio, 32. III. 235. his speech in parliament in behalf of the bishops, II. 127. Lewis XII., king of France, A. II. ii. 647. Lewis, king of Hungary, A. III. ii. 401. 402. 403. Lewis, — M. III. i. 510. Lewis, — Ay. 218. Lewis, Dr. — A. III. i. 191. ii. 429. archdeacon of Cambray, the pope's English factor at Rome, II. ii. 355. 356. Shel- ley's character of him, III. i. 276. bishop of Casan, and agent for the Scotch nation, IV. 141. jealousy between him and car- dinal Allen, 385. 386. Lewis, David, A. I. ii. 98. P. I. 405. II. 196. concerned in Cranmer's trial, C. 1070. 1072. an ecclesiastical commissioner, P. I. 443. C. 179. A. III. i. 225. G. 310. Ay. 60. judge of the admiralty, A. I. i. 40. a contest between him and the lord chief justice of the queen's bench, 46. in the ecclesiastical commission, P. 1. 451. present at abp. Parker's funeral, II. 432. consulted about punish- ing recusants by mulct, G. 345. 346. bishop Cox's legacy to him, A. III. i. 37. Lewis, Felix, in a commission to visit the church of Bristol, G. 314- Lewis, George, A. III. ii. 616. 617. Lewis, Griffith, chaplain to queen 6o INDEX. Elizabeth, had preferment in the diocese of St. Asaph, A. II. ii. 526. III. ii. 472. in a commission to visit the diocese of St. Asaph, W. I. 411. pre- bendary of Westminster, Wor- cester, and Hereford, A. III. ii. 415. 416. Lewis, John, notary public, C. 364- Lewis, John, a rebel, executed, M. III. ii. 68. Lewis, John, a magistrate in Not- tinghamshire, A. III. ii. 465. archbishop Sandys's favourable character of him, ib. Lewis, John, A. IV. 573. Lewis, Robert, engraver, G. 430. Lewis, Simon, M. III. ii. 408. Lewis, William, a recusant, A. I. i. 415. Lewis, William, commissary of the court of faculties, W. I. 162. 205. 224. in a commis- sion to visit certain hospitals, II. 145. Lewisham, Kent, a messuage there called Catford, bought of the crown by H. Polstede and W. More, M. II. ii. 402. had belonged to Corpus Christi college, St. Laurence Pount- ney, London, ib. Lewknor, Leckner, Edward, groom porter to Edward VI. and queen Mary, M. III. i. 494. condemned for treason, ib. 549. died in the Tower, 494. his children restored in blood, A. I. i. 468. Lewkncr, Lewkener, Richard, A. III. i. 482. Lewknor, Thomas, of Selsey, suspected as a papist, A. II. ii. 22. concerned in a petition against bishop Curtis, 116. Lewsham, Thomas, A. I. ii. 196. Lewyn, — year's mind of, M. m. ii. 9. Lexius, Dr., town recorder, or counsellor of Geneva, W. II, 323-. Ley, Richard, an Irishman, ob- tains money from the king of Spain at Madrid, A. II. ii. 551. imprisoned on suspicion of giving intelligence to Eng- land, IV. 251. see Lee. Leyborn, James, attainted of treason, A. III. ii. 368. Leycester, George, A. IV. i. 2. see Leicester. Leyke, — an auditor to queen Mary, put in the pillory for fraud, M. III. i. 489. see Leake and Leke. Leyson, Griffith, present, as arch- deacon of Carmarthen, at the convocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. made dean of the arches, C. 274. archbishop Cranmer's principal chancellor and offi- cial, 385. a commissary for the vacant see of Bangor, ib. in a commission against anabap- tists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. in another for French pirates, i. 433. in another for trial of bi- shop Gardiner, ii. J99. Ill i. 462. and of bishop Boner, 38. in another to assist in matters of chancery, II. i. 521. ii. 207. in another to examine the ex- ecutors of sir W. Bowyer, 61. 210. one of the council for the marches of Wales, 162. buys of the crown the manor of Tresberket in New Car- marthen, 232. Libels issued by the papists, C. 333. a specimen, 874. Liberius, banished by the empe- ror Constantius, A. III. ii. 588. Libertines, tenets of a certain sect of this cast, P. II. 287. A. II. ii. 287. III. i. 63. notice of their denying the obligation of the moral law, II. ii. 64. INDEX. 6i Library, catalogue of sir T. Smith's, S. 274. Licenses for chapels, C. 33. li- cense of the French king to print the English Bible in Pa- ris, 118. 750. Licenses for absence from church, P. n. 406. forms of licenses for preaching, IIL 121. 122. License for keeping hearses. Ay. .45- License granted by archbishop Grindal to J. Morrison, to preach and administer through- out his province, G. 402. 596. Licenses for teaching school, W. I. 468. to eat flesh in Lent, 469, to receive the sacrament in another church, ib. License of archbishop Whitgift to a person to teach school, W. IIL 384. Liddington, lord, A. 11. i. T19. 260. secretary to Mary queen of Scots, at the English court, I. i. 549. he and the earl of Murray treat with the earl of Bedford about her marrying the earl of Leicester, ii. 120. 124. sent to queen Elizabeth to make her favourable to the marriage of Mary queen of Scots with lord Darnley, 203. queen Elizabeth endeavours an accord between him and Grange with the Scotch re- gent, II. i. III. Randolph's letter to him and Grange to bring them off from the queen of Scots, 112. ii. 447, pro- mises to deliver up Edinburgh castle to the king for a reward, i. 263. Liddington, manor of, Rutland- shire, reversion of, granted to sir W. Cecil, after the death of Gregory, lord Crumwel, and his wife, M. II. ii. 222. Lidiard, manor of, Somerset, granted by Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth, M. II. i. 387. ii. 223. Lidley, John, a contributor to the atflicled professors of the gospel, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 224. Liel, Lyel, Richard, dean of cer- tain deaneries, ordered to search for shrines, C. 132. in a com- mission against heretics, 254. 258. in another against ana- baptists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. in another for a divorce, 203. in another for visiting the Sa- voy, 204. in another for trial of the bishops of Chichester and Worcester, ib. and of the bishop of Durham, 22. 208. in another to reform the eccle- siastical laws, C. 388. had a clerkship in the court of facul- ties, A. I. i. 228. Liggon, Arnold, W. II. 428. Liggon, Michael, A. I. ii. 34. see Lijgon. Light, — A. III. i. 200. 201, Ligons, — A. II. i. 118. 261. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii. 53. IL i. 495. Liless, Robert, fellow of King's college, Cambridge, concerned in the conspiracy against Dr. Goad the provost, P. II. 71. expelled the university, and why, A. III. i. 284. his cha- racter and behaviour after- wards, ib. Lilly, Peter, the famous gram- marian, and first master of St. Paul's school, M. II. ii. .41- Lilly, Peter, registrar and notary public, C. 209. 364. A. I. i, 249. Lilly, Richard, W. II. 465. III. 389. see Lyly. Limbert, — concerned in intro- ducing innovations into the 6% INDEX. cathedral of Norwich, A. II. i. .485; Limerick, — A. IV. 409. Limerick, bishop of, see J. Thorn- horongh. Linacer, Dr., A. III. i. 743. Linacre, — P. I. 499- Litich, William, of Kent, mar- ried Judith, daughter of bishop Aylmer, Ay. 122. one of his executors, 1 1 4. Lincoln, see of, revenues granted to it by Edward VI., M. II. i, 119. impoverished, ii. 168. certain rectories belonging to the see, III. ii. 407. Lincoln, chapter of, injunctions for, M. III. ii. 412. Lincoln, diocese of, present- ments, 1556, M. III. i. 482. Lincoln, bishop of, see J. Long- land, 15 2 1 — 1547. H. Hol- beach, 1547— 155 i. J. Taylor, 1552, 1553- J White, 1554— 1556. r.Wa^so/z, 1556— 1559. N. Bullingham, 1560 — 1570. T. Cooper, 1570 — 1583. W. Wickham, 1584 — 1594. see also W. Wake. Lincoln, dean of, see W. Wick- ham, 1577 — 1584. R. Griffin. ,^584— 1593- Lincoln, archdeacon of, see R. Pates, 1528 — 1554. J. Bare- foot, 1581 — 1595. Lincoln, earls of, see Edward and Henry Clinton. Lincoln, countess of, A. II. ii. .211.395- 541- Lincoln's Inn, see Cursitor office, Linda, town of, refused the In- terim, M. II. i. 172. Lindanus, Wilhelmus Damasus, P. III. 54. Linett, Thomas, precentor of St. David's, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. 490. Lingen, Edward, a seminary, A. IV. 237. 238. 239. pensioned by the king of Spain, 272. Linsey, Roger, a sectary in Kent, M. II. i. 370. see Lynsey. Linton, tithes of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 6. Linwood, William, compiled the Provincial Constitutions, W. II. 138. referred to, ih. Lion, William, ordained, G. 58. .59- Lions, Stephen, deprived from the vicarage of II Bruars, temp. queen Mary, M. III. i. 353. Lipsley, John, W. III. 378. Lisbon, archbishop of, the go- vernment of Portugal commit- ted to him and others, 1593, A. IV. 251. Lisle, Anthony, resigns the par- sonage of Bonings in the marches of Calais, M. II. ii. .263. Lisle, sir Arthur, lord admiral, dispute between him and the bishop of Chichester about a wreck on the coast of Sussex, A. II. i. 26. Lisle, (Arthur Plantagenet,) lord, his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. lord de- puty of Calais, C. 125. see J. Dudley duke of Northumber- land, and J. Dudley earl of Warwick. Lisle, lady, an inheretrix, Henry VIII. intended to have mar- ried her to Charles Brandon, but did not, A. II. ii. 446. List of recusants, which are abroad, and bound to certain places, 1 561, A. I. i. 411. of certain evil disposed persons, of whom complaint hath been made : which lurk so secretly, that process cannot be served INDEX. <53 upon them, 415. of those fled beyond sea, 416, of those im- prisoned, 417. of the great officers of queen Elizabeth, II. ii. 395. 707, of papists im- prisoned, 1579, 660. of all the recusants and priests in Eng- hmd and abroad in 1587, III. ii. 84. 597. Lister, see Lyster. Liston, manor of, restored by Edward VI. to the earl of Westmoreland, after he was pardoned for his treason, M. II. ii. 75. Litany, for the success of the Spanish armada, notice of, A. III. ii. 19. 539. Litchfield, — detects wrongful payments of pensions in the exchequer, P. II. 401. his own frauds afterwards detected, ib. Litchfield, Nicholas, translated out of the Spanish a treatise de re militari, by Gutierres de la Vega, A. III. i. 107. trans- lated from the Portuguese the History of the Conquest of the East Indies, &c. by Lopes de Castaneda, 227. Litchfield, state of the church and diocese of, W. I. 201 — 211. bishop Whitgift appointed visitor, 299. a divinity lecture established in the cathedral by his means, 211. the council's letter to the dean and chapter respecting its establishment, III. 64. conclusion of bishop Vf'hitgift's visitation, I. 212. Litchfield and Coventry, bishop- ric of, property granted to it by Edward VI., M. II. i. 118. value of the see, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Litchfield and Coventry, bishop of, see R. Lee, 1534 — 1542. R. Sampson, 1542 — 1554. R. Bayne, 1554— 1559. T. Ben- tham, 1559 — 1578. W. Over- ton, 1580 — 1609. see also R. de Molend. Litchfield, dean of, see L. Nowel, 1558—1576. G.Boleyn, 1577 — 1602. Lithal, — taken up for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 186. Littleston, — probably a spy in Spain, his intelligence of the English gentlemen there, A. II. i. 495. ii. 549. Littleton, Edmund, a puritan minister, fell into trouble, W. II. 13. examined. III. 271. Littleton, Edward, his part at Henry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 301. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation. III. ii. 181. Littleton, Guilleel, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. bishop Freake's character of him, ib. Littleton, sir John, lieutenant of the county of Worcester, A. I. ii. 363. a libellous letter sent out of Scotland to him and sir T. Russel, ib. 580. custos ro- tulorum of Worcestershire, III. ii. 457. bishop Freake's character of him, ib. Liturgy, see Common Prayer. Liturgy of Strasburgh, particu- lars of, M. II. i. 379. Liturgia Sacra Peregrinorum, published, M. II. i. 551. Liveley, Edward, fellow of Trin- ity college, chosen regius pro- fessor of Hebrew at Cam- bridge, in preference to P. Bignon, recommended by lord Burghley, P. II. 379. recom- mended by archbishop Whit- gift for the deanery of Peter- borough, W. I. 337. how far concerned in the translation of the Bible, 1604, II. 530. Livings, restrictions against farm- 64 INDEX. ing out, P. I. 377. scheme for augmenting small ones, by an- nexing to them impropriations, W. I. 144. Whitgift's opinion of the plan, ib. Livingsburn, see Bekesburn. Lixalde, Francis ole, treasurer of the king of Spain, A. I. i. 40. Lixens, Anthonius, A. IV. 570. Lloyd, — A. III. i. 744. Lloyd, — a puritan minister, W. I. 504. fell into trouble, II. 13. Lloyd, — a papist, A. IV. 261. Lloyd, Dr. GritBth, in a commis- sion to visit the diocese of Hereford, G. 316. Lloyd, H., of Denbigh, a retainer to the earl of Arundel, P. I. 418. Lloyd, Hugh, in a commission to exercise episcopal jurisdiction in the vacant see of Winches- ter, W. I. 261. Lloyd, Humphrey, translated from the Welsh sir J. Price's History of Cambria, A. III. i. 415- Lloyd, John, A. III. ii. 122. W. II. 332. had the care of the vacant see of Oxford, I. 234. in a commission to visit the diocese of Litchfield and Co- ventry, 244. his judgment of the oath ex officio, II. 32. III. 2.35- Lloyd, Rhodoric, subwarden of Ail Souls college, Oxford, W. II. 463. nominated one of the college officers by archbishop Whitgift, III. 299. Lloyd, Thomas, excites disturb- ance against queen Elizabeth's commission for myzes in Wales, A. I. i. 20. Lock, — son of sir William, bu- ried, M. III. i. 504. Lock, — G. 132. Lock, Nicholas, P. II. 341. Lockley, — a tailor and essen- tialist, his opinion as to sin, A. n. i. 563. Lockwood, — A. IV. 390. Lodge, Thomas, alderman, M. III. i. 499. S. 20. Lodge, Thomas, a prisoner in the queen's bench, A. III. i. 205. Lodovico, — M. III. i. 456. Lodovvic, coimt of Nassau, his conference with Walsingham about the tyranny of Spain, A, II. i. 84. ' Lodwic, — M. II. ii. 244. Loene, Peter de, son of Walter, minister with Hamstedius to the strangers' church in Lon- don, A. 1. i. 174. G. 62. Vel- sius's challenge to him, A. I. ii. 9. 10. given up to Satan by Velsius, 13. see Len. Loer, Theodoric, vicar of the Carthusian monastery at Co- len, wrought the epistle dedi- catory to Henry VIII., prefixed to Dionysius's Exposition of St. Matthew, M. I. i. 223. Loftus, Adam, A. II. ii. 330. (as abp. of Armagh,) applies to archbishop Parker for the re- moval of a bad Irish bishop, P. I. 221. archbishop of Dub- lin, and lord chancellor, A. HI. i. 580. his difference with sir J. Perrot, the lord lieute- nant, ib. his letter to lord Burghley about sir W. Her- bert, 274. another, about his troubles, IV. 289. another about Mr. Rider's case, 429. Logic, notice of Wylson's trea- tise of, A. I. i. 345. Loker, William, ordained, G. 54. Lollards, a commission against, in Essex, M. III. i. 552. in Norfolk and Suffolk, issued by cardinal Pole, 555. a suppli- cation of certain godly persons against it, ib. these comniis- INDEX. S5 sions examined into, temp. queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 156. Lomas, Ellis, M. II. i. 527. Lombardy, the richest soil, Ch. London, — a papist, A. I. ii. 196. London, Dr., dean of Walling- ford, M. II. ii. 53. London, George, a witness a- gainst archbishop Crannier, C. 535. 1079. 1087. 1090. 1092. London, Henry, imprisoned for heresy under queen Mary, re- leased under queen Elizabeth, A.Li. 55. London, John, in a commission to visit monasteries, C. 50. M. I. i. 319. his letter with the account of the surrender of the abbey of Reading, and about its relics, 390. warden of New College, Oxford, 570. in a commission against the gospellers in Oxford, ib. pre- bendary of Salisbury, canon of Windsor, dean of Osney, C. 156. a chief agitator in the plot against archbishop Cran- nier ; his practices against him, ib. 158. 160 — 163. 165. (73. 765. 767. 768. 773. censured, and sent to the Fleet, 174. 175. his death, 175. M. I. i. 581. and character, 581. London, Roger, a monk of Read- ing, inhibited by bishop Shax- ton from reading lectures, M. I. i. 333. ii. 222. London, the plague there, 1537, C. 72. 78. the freedom of, taken up by gentlemen not in trade, as a matter of credit, M. II. i. 549. regulations to relieve London during the dearth of provisions, 1550, 345. Edward VI. 's charitable donation to London, ii. 112. 219. state of London in the VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPK, reign of Edward VI., 147. pre- parations for queen Mary's coronation, III. i. 51. popish service at St. Paul's, 88. scrip- ture verses erased from the church walls, ib. preparation for the reception of king Phi- lip of Spain, 200. disturliances on account of the dearth, 1556, 502. required to furnish one thousand men for tiie war, 1557, ii. 13. raises men for the defence of Calais, 24. 25. 26. citizens muster before queen EHzabeth, A. I. i. 287. account of the visitation of London, G. 36. 37. an old custom re- lative to Bartholomew fair, 37. notice of the plague, 1563, A. I. ii. 88. 89. 94. ill state of London, 1563, P. I. 293. sir T. Row's certificate of strang- ers there in 1568, A. IV. 569. disorders and frays in, 1570, II. i. 28. the lord mayor's pro- clamation for preventing them, 29. plague of London, 1578. bishop Avlmer selects visitors of the sick. Ay. 29. most min- isters thought it their duty to suffer with their flock, ib. felt an earthquake, 1580, 51. new buildings there, the cause of increase of loose ])ersons, ac- cording to recorder Fleetwood, A. III. i. 212. account of the quarter sessions, 1584, 406. the liberty of Ely- house vindi- cated by bishop Cox against the city, 486. proofs for its li- berty, 487. ii. 373. citizens fearful their trade should be hurt by the strangers that came from abroad to escape persecutions. Ay. 8 1 . tlie queen's letter upon their joy at the de- tection of the conspiracy a- gainst her, A. III. i. 607. bi- shop Aylmer's bequest to the F 66 INDEX. poor of London, Ay. 1 14. com- plaints and libels against the foreigners, Flemish and French, in that city, A. IV. 234. ex- perienced a severe pestilence in 1625, Ay. 121. London, diocese of, accoimt of the visitation of, in 1527, M. I. i. 113. visited by bishop Ridley, IL i. 400. visitation of, 1559, A. L i. 249—256. the subscription of the clergy at this visitation, 255. articles of inquiry respecting the dio- cese, G. 1 01. answered by bi- shop Grindal, 103. London, bishops of, long cus- tomary for them to appoint the preachers at St. Paul's Cross, Ay. 201. their power over the press, W. III. 161 — 164. London, see of, an exchange of certain of its lands made by bishop Ridley with EdwardVL, M. II. i. 339. 514. ii. 234. no- tice of an act brought in con- cerning an alienation of cer- tain of its lands, A. I. i. 93. value of the see, 1559, 227. London, bishop of, see C. Ton- stal, 1522 — 1530. J. Stokesly, 1530—1539- -E. Boner, 1539 — ^549- ^553—1559- iV -Rirf- ^e?/, 1550— 1553. E. Grindal, 1559— 1570- £• Sandys, 1570 — 1576. J. Aylmer, 1576 — 1594. R. Fletcher, 1594 — 1 596. R. Bancroft, 1597 — 1604. R. Vaughan, 1604 — 1607. See also H. Compton. London, archdeacon of, see R. Giten^ 1534— 1543. J. Harps- Jield, 1554 — 1558. J. Mullins, 1559—1591- ^- Aylmer, 1591 — 1625. Long, or Lane, Dorothy, M. I. i. 116. 121. Long, sir Henry, present at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, M, II. i. 9. Long, Richard, his part at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 6. Long, William, A. IV. 464. Long Acre, London, belonged to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 540. ii. 9. 226. granted by Edward VI. to the earl of Bedford, ib. Longdon, manor of, Staffordshire, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Litchfield and Coventry, M. II. i. 1 18. Longe, Mrs., M. III. ii. 396. Longford, manor of, Gloucester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Longland, John, bishop of Lin- coln, M. I. i. 108. 234. con- fessor to Henry VIII., C. 4. M. I. i. 135. persuaded the king that his marriage with Catharine of Arragon was not lawful, C. 4. the most faithful friend and old companion of card. Wolsey, M. I. i.190. made king's confessor by him, ih. his new year's gift to the king, 211. consecrated archbishop Cranmer, C. 28. in the com- mission to pronounce the king's divorce, 29. assists at the con- secration of certain bishops, 42. 53. sets forth the king's supremacy, M. I. i. 286. his letter to Crumwel on the sub- ject, ii. 206. dispute between him and his archdeacon as to the right of synodals, i. 444. his judgment concerning con- firmation, ii. 347. and con- cerning pilgrimages, 388. one of those commissioned to com- pose the Institution of a Chris- tian Man, C. 77. present at the convocation of 1540, M. I. i. 556. his part at Edward INDEX. 67 VI. 's baptism, II. i. 8. his present to Erasmus, C. 577. Longland, John, lived obscurely, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 492. archdeacon of Bucks, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. one that signed a request to the synod con- cerning certain rites and cere- monies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Longolius, alias Leoninus, A. II. ii. 94. Longworth, or Langvvorth, John, A. II. i. 450. 451. Longworth, John, in a commis- sion to exercise episcopal ju- risdiction in the see of Chi- chester, W. I. 263. Longworth, Richard, fellow of St. John's college. Cambridge, W. III. II. P. II. 175. or- dained, G. 74. obtained the mastership of his college through Pilkington, his pre- decessor, P. I. 391. signs a letter to lord Burghley to stop the queen's proclamation for enjoining the habits, 386. III. 1 26. purposely absents him- self, when his college threw off the surplice, A. I. ii. 154. P. I. 391. summoned before Cecil, as chancellor of the university, A. I. ii. 156. P. I. 393. III. 130. before whom he recants, A. L ii. 157. the de- claration, drawn up by Cecil, for him to subscribe, P. III. 131. deprived of the master- ship, W. I. 29. 30. 31. see Langivorth. Loo, Andrew de, A. IV. 573. Lopez, Dr., A. III. ii. 585. Lopez, or Lopus, a Portugal phy- sician, A. IV. 281. employed by the earl of Leicester for poisoning. III. i. 521. was to have poisoned queen Eliza- beth, IV. 281. Lord, Edward, a leading puritan minister, W. II. 13. proceed- ings in the star-chamber a- gainst him, 81 — 96. III. 242 — 285. imprisoned, Ay. 205. signs a petition for his enlarge- ment, A. IV. 103. Lord, John, abbot of Colchester, deprived for an horrible act of incontinence, C. 1052. Lord chamberlain, see T. lord Wenlworth, 1 550. W. lord How- ard, 1557 — 1572. T. earl of Sussex, i57'2 — 1585. Lord chief baron of the exche- quer, see sir E. Saunders, 1559- 1577. R.Mauwood, 1 5 79-1 603. Lord chief justice of the king's bench, see sir C. Wray, 1574 ■ — 1603. sir J. Popham, 1603 — 1607. Lord chief justice of the com- mon pleas, see sir R. Brook, T554— 1558- sir J. Dyer, 1559 — 1582. E. Anderson, 1582 — 1592. sir J. Popham, 1592 — 1603. Lord high admiral, see J. lord Russel, 1540 — 1542. T. lord Seymour, 1547 — 1549- E. lord Clinton, 1550. 1556 — 1585. TV. lord Howard, 1554. C. lord Howard, 1585 — 1619. Lord high chancellor, see bishop Goodrich, 1534—1545. 155 i sir R. Rich, 1547 — 1551. bi shop Gardiner, 1553 — I5S5 archbishop Heath, 1 555 — 1559 sir T. Bromley, 1579 — 1587 sir C. Hatton, 1587 — 1592. Lord high treasurer, see W. mar- quis of Winchester, 1551 — 1566. W. Cecil, lord Burghley, 1572— 1589. K 2 68 INDEX. Lord keeper of the great seal, see sir N. Bacon, 1559 — 1579- sir T. Egerton, 1596 — 1603. Lord lieutenants, first institution of, M. IL i. 278. their duties, ib. their names, temp. Edward VL, 464. ii. 162. Lord mayor of London, see H. Hubarthorne, 1 546. G. Barnes, 1552. T. Mliite, 1553. W^. Ger- ard, ^SSS' T.Offley,isS^- T. Curtess, 1557- ^. Huet, 1559. W. Dixie, 1 5 85 . fT. Webb, 1 59 1 . S.Slamj, 1595. Lord president of the north, see Francis earl of Shrewsbury. Lord privy seal, see sir W. Paget. Lord warden of the cinque ports, see sir T. Cheney. Lord of misrule^ notice of, M. in. ii. 24. Lorkin, — A. IIL i. 645. Lorrain, Charles, A. II. i. 236. 365. cardinal of, a commis- sioner to draw up articles of marriage between Edward VI. and the French king's daugh- ter, M. II. i. 477. in a com- mission to make peace be- tween the emperor and French king, III. i. 346. maintained that Mary queen of Scots was the lawful queen of England, A. I. i. 13. advises her to marry the duke of Austria, I. ii. IOC. ici. recommended David Rizzio as her counsel- lor, 227. concerned in the po- pish league, 246. plots a re- bellion in Ireland, II. i. 87. 88. considered an union of Scotland and England preju- dicial to France, 196. in a pri- vate plot for rescuing Mary queen of Scots, 263. 376. 377. Lorrain, Lewis, cardinal of, arch- bishop and duke of Rhemes, A. III. i. 271. Lorrairi, duke of, A. I. ii. 245. II. ii. 422. III. ii. 164. em- ployed by the king of Spain to invade France, IV. 153. 175. 2i6. 217. Lorrain, duchess of, M. III. ii. 114. A. II. ii. 422. Lorrain, princess of, A. III. i. 696. Loud, — M. I. i. 536. Loud, — M. III. ii. 395. Loud, Edmund, his quarrels with the monks of Sawtry, M. I. i. 535 — 53^- ^^ murdered by their means, 538. Loud, John, bred up at Win- chester college, M. I. i. 595. and at Bene't college, Cam- bridge, ib. A. I. i. 380. one of those who promoted piety and learning at Cambridge, M. I. i. 568. tutor to sir R. South- wel, 596. A. I. i. 380. and to his son, M. I. i. 596. removed to the inns of court, ib. A. I. i. 380. his conduct at the burning of Ann Ascue, M. I. i. 596. narrowly escapes im- prisonment for his religion, 597. brings W. Ford off from popery. III. i. 276. 277. a companion of Philpot, A. I. i. 380. encouraged and assisted Fox in writing his Book of Martyrs, ib. Loud, Lionel, married Catharine Dudley, M. I. i. 536. Loud, Roger, married Mary of Henault, M. I. i. 536. Loud, Thomas, married Anne, heiress of sir E. Molso, M. I. i- 536. Loughborough, lord, see sir E. Hastings. Lougher, Robert, archdeacon of Totnes, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. 490. votes against the six ar- ticles altering certain rites and INDEX. 69 ceremonies, 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. son-in-law of Dr. Hatcher, II. ii. 704. in a commission to visit the dio- cese of Gloucester, G. 315. chancellor and vicar general to archbishop Sandys, A. I. i. 492. II. ii. 165. III. ii. 218. Lough ton, see Luc ton. Loup, Catharine, A. IV. 572. Loup, Peter, A. IV. 572. Louth, Lincolnshire, a grammar- school founded by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 280. Louther, Richard, a magistrate, A. IV. 413. see Lowther. Louvain, university of, not to be compared with Cambridge, Ch. 50. contributors to the Eng- lish refugees there, A. I. ii. 261. theses propounded in the uni- versity, II. i. 381. bishop Pil- kington's judgment of the con- clusions, 382. Love, — A. II. ii. 584. 585. Love, — a sectary, A. III. ii. Love, William, a priest, taught Parker singing, P. I. 8. A. IV. 611. the archbishop never for- got his harshness, P. I. 8. Love, family of, a new sect in Kent, probably of the family of Love, C. 418. notice of this sect, A. II. i. 487. 556. found- ed by H. Nicolas, 556. notice of an apology set forth by them, ib. their opinion of pre- destination, 560. they allowed going to mass, 561. other sub- divisions of this sect, 562. opinions of A. Randal, one of this sect, W. I. 421. III. 158. see Libertines. Rise of this sect in England, A. II. ii. 282. in- fected with Pelagianism, Arian- ism, and Anabaptism, 283. some of the doctrines of its founder, H. Nicolas, 286. an- swered by Wilkinson, 300. and by Knewstubs, 302. the danger of this heresy, 289. the sect continued to later times, 2QO. fomily of love in the diocese of Norwich, 266. 282. proceedings of the convo- cation respecting this sect, G. 383- 384- Lovel, Thomas, one of cardinal Wolsey's domestics, M. I. i. 194.^ Lovel, Thomas, one of the heirs of the duke of Suffolk, M. II. i. 493. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's corona- tion, III. ii. 181. Lovel, Thomas, a magistrate of Norfolk, popishly inclined, A. III. ii. 460. Lovel, lady, a recusant, A. Ill, "• 597- Lovelace, William, in a commis- sion for a royal visitation of certain dioceses, A. I. i. 248. a sergeant, P. II. 139. one of the counsel for bishop Boner against bishop Horn, 168. steward of the liberties of the church of Canterbury, ib, arch- bishop Parker's counsel at law, ib. the archbishop declines making him steward of his own liberties, though recommend- ed by lord Burghley, ib. pre- sent at the archbishop's fune- ral, 433- Lovelone, Augustin, A. IV. 574. Low, — A. I. i. 44. Low, Andreas de, a foreign pa- pist in London, A. III. i. 57. Low, sir Thomas, bought the estate of Dausington of J. Parker, P. II 389. Low Countries, Flanders, or Ne- therlands, matters with Eng- land, A. I. ii. 98. oppressed by Spain, solicit the aid of 70 INDEX. queen Elizabeth, II. i. 84. the cause explained of their taking arms, 85. propositions to be made to the queen, ib. argu- ments for her assistance of them, ib. Walsingham's ad- vice to that effect, 212. sir T. Smith's compassion for them, S. 125. Low Countries offered to queen Elizabeth by the prince of Orange, A. II. i. 573. their miseries imder the government of duke d'Alva, ii. 6. queen Elizabeth's embassies there, 7. her apprehension of the French aiding them, 12. reasons for taking them under her pro- tection, 15. matters there af- fecting England, 1577, 93. lord Burghlej's thoughts there- on, 97. lord Bacon's letter to the queen at this juncture, 98. 607. duke Casimir's declara- tion for assisting them, 161. queen Elizabeth deliberates about assisting them, III. i. 3o5.matters transacted between her and the Hollanders, 308. ii. 274. applications made to her to assist them, i. 418. a great sum offered her if she would, ib. lord Burghley's judg- ment for aiding them, 419. the queen's declaration for doing so, ib. a deliberation about the charge and forces to be sent, 420. the earl of Lei- cester sent over as general, ib. the queen grudges his expenses, ib. the earl's laws and ordi- nances for his army, ib. ii. 354. the Netherlanders vindicated in defending themselves, i. 421. notice of H. Archer's account of the English exploits in the Low Countries, 519. bishop Piers's answer as to a question of casuistry respecting the law- fulness of queen Elizabeth's assisting the Low Countries, W. I. 437. III. 165. resolution of the same case, probably by archbishop \\'liitgift, I. 439. a truce propounded by the go- vernor of the Netherlands in order to a peace between Eng- land and Spain, A. III. ii. 2.3. 4. Copley's information re- specting Flanders, IV. 382. Lowdal, Robert, C. 456. Lowen, John, A. IV. 574. Loweraie, — A. IV. 574. Lowntney, Joseph, A. IV. 574. Lowth, — did not vote in the convocation of 1562, upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, A. I. i. 505. Lowth, — a puritan minister, slanders archbishop Grindal, G. 275. detected to have been never ordained, ib. P. II. 400. Lowthe, John, archdeacon of Nottingham. G. 279. Lowther, — A. II. i. 1 19. Lowther, sir John, of White- haven, gave a library and an annuity to the school of St. Bees, G. 432. see Louther. Loye, — curate of All Saints, Canterbury, reprimanded for improper preaching, A. 1. i. 62. Lucar, Elizabeth, daughter of P. Withipol, buried, P. I. 358. Lucas, — master of requests to Henry VIIL, buried, M. III. i. 500. Lucas, John, one of Edward VI. 's lawyers, M. II. ii. 223. in two commissions for reforming the ecclesiastical laws, C. 192, 388. M. 11.1.530.531.11. 205. 206. in another for collection of church stuff", 210. an an- nuity granted him, 223. bought of the crown the chantry of Si- ble Hedingham, 403. signed INDEX. 71 the instrument of the council, swearing and subscribing to the succession, as limited by the king, C. 912. Lucas, sir Thomas, A. IV. 413. Lucius, king of Britain, notice of his conversion to Christianity, P. L 467. n. 219. m. 247. Lucton, or Loughton, Essex, an estate belonging to the duchy of Lancaster, bought by sir R. Wroth, M. IL i. 389. Lucton, or Loughton, manor of, Devon, granted by Edward VL to lo'rd Darcy, M. IL i. 461. ii. 217. taken back again in exchange, 227. Lucy, — called by Latimer a right good gentleman, M. I. i. 562. Lucy, Edmund, Ay. 218. Lucy, sir Thomas, brings a pe- tition into parliament in favour of puritan ministers, W. 1. 347- Ludgarshal, manor of, granted by Edward VL to the duke of Somerset, M. II, i. 363. Ludlow, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Luft, Hans, printer at Witten- berg, printed A. IMarcort's De- claration of the Mass, M. II. i. 44. Lugbure, Elizabeth, one of queen Mary's chamberers, M. III. i. 55. attended at her coronation, ib. Luke, — a physician in London, wrote divers books against the papists, M. II. i. 181. Luke, Nicholas, in a commission of inquiry into a dearth, M. II. i. 494. ii. 206. Lumley, John, an act passed for his restitution, M. IL i. 102. Lumley, John, lord, A. II. i. 121. 440. ii. 469. made a knight of the bath at queen Mary's co- ronation, M. III. i. 53. present at the proceedings against Dr. Taylor, 290. one of the noble- men appointed to attend queen Elizabeth at her coming to London, A. I. ii. 391. present at the celebration of the em- peror's funeral at St. Paul's, 119. G. 146. a struggle be- tween the two universities for his library, he having been a scholar at Cambridge, but now high steward of Oxford, A. III. i. 500. the issue, ib. 501. the manor of Hayling, belonging to the earl of Arundel, with- held by him, ii. 392. signed the proclamation, on the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, IV. 519- Lumley, (.lane Fitz-Alan,) lady, attended at queen Mary's co- ronation, M. III. i. 54. chief mourner at the funeral of (Mary Fitz-Alan,) duchess of Norfolk, ii. 17. and at that of the countess of Arundel, 19. Lun, — rector of Elseworth, Cambridgeshire, P. I. pref. xi. Lunenburgh, Philip, duke of, C. 18. Lungport, — two monks of St. Austin's of Canterbury, gos- pellers at Oxford, M. I. i. 569- Lunnagh, Tirrelaghe, A. IL ii. 83- Lupset, Thomas, a great scholar, accompanied Pole to Rome, ]M. I. i. 461. Lupton, Dr., his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 21 I. Lusher, Richard, fellow of Bene't college, Cambridge, P. I. 29. Luson, votes in the convocation of 1562. against the six arti- cles altering certain rites and F4 n INDEX. ceremonies, A. I. i. 505. see Leveson. Lusty, William, prebendary of Hereford, A. I. i. 413. Luther, Martin, Cpref. xiii. 538. M. L i. 529. A. L i. no. ii. 434. i. 240. 54[. ii. 61. 278. 282. II. i. 160. III. i. 98. 381. ii. 339. i. 635. his books a- gainst indulgences answered by Henry VIII. , M. L i. 51. his opinions begin to spread in England, 1 521, 55. all books favouring his errors and here- sies ordered, by a legantine commission of cardinal Wol- sey, to be surrendered up, 56. ii. 20. his forty-two pretended errors, as stated in the pope's bull, i. 57. ordered to be stuck up on all churches, ib. Asser- tionis LiitherancE Confutatio pubhshed against him by bi- shop Fisher, 62. notice of king Henry's letter to him in an- swer to his, 91. his principles popular at Queen's college, Cambridge, S. 8. his works studied at St. John's, Ch. 5. search made for his works at Cambridge, S. 8. certain of his works prohibited as heretical, M. I. i. 254. his judgment of Henry VIII. 's divorce, ib. his works again prohibited in queen Mary's reign, III. i. 418. Oso- rius's aspersions on him an- swered by Haddon, A. I. ii. 72. his character defended by bishop Ponet against a false aspersion, M. III. i. 531. bi- shop Aylmer's opinion of him. Ay. 182. Lutherans would not receive the English refugees, C. 507. their animosity against sacramenta- ries, 508. Luton, Bedfordshire, a guild there bought of the crown by R. Burgh and R. Beverley, M. II. ii. 406. Lutt, — a priest, A. II. ii. 578. Lutton, manor of, Dorset, taken in exchange by the crown from Eton college, M. II. i. 119. S. 168. Luttrel, sir John, has a divorce against lady Mary his wife for adultery, M. II. ii. 204. Lycurgus, notice of his permis- sion to the Spartans as to pro- creation, C. 755. Lydd, advowson of, Kent, annex- ed by queen Mary, M. III. ii. 121. Lydes, M. 1. ii. 406. 407. Lydford, Thomas, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 201. Lydgate, Edmund, M. II. ii. 249. Lygon, Roger, allowed to have sixteen retainers by queen Mary, M. III. ii. 161. Lygon, William, A. I. i. 543. see Liggon and Ligons. Lyly, — employed by archbishop Parker to copy antique writ- ings, P. II. 500. see Lilly. Lymborn, Richard, ordained, G. 72; Lyn in Norfolk, loyal in the re- bellion of 1549, M. II. i. 275. Lyndley, Francis, one of the six preachers of Canterbury ca- thedral, W. I. 596. Lyndsev, — parson of Little 'Charte, W. I. 283. Lyndsey, — A. III. i. 683. see Linsey. Lyne, Richard, yeoman of archbi- shop Parker's household, P. II. 434. an engraver, 524. Lynford, — A. II. ii. 694. Lynford, Robert, A. II. ii. 415. Lyngyn, William, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Lynn, Gualter, printer, printed a Catechism of Christian doc- trine, C, 568. also R. Boner's INDEX. 73 book on the sacrament, M. II. i. 229. also, The Beginning and End of all Popery, out of high Ahnayn, 310. Lynne, George, a magistrate of Northamptonshire, A. III. ii. 452. his character according to bishop Howland, ib. Lyonel, — M. II. i. 276. Lyra, -P. III. 55. Lyster, sir Michael, or Richard, his part at Henry VIII. 's fu- neral, M. II. ii. 301. lord chief justice, i. 24. 113. concerned about Edward VI. 's corona- tion, 24. Lyster, sir Richard, son of the preceding, died of the sweat- ing sickness, M. II. i. 495. Lytton, sir Robert, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 37. Lyving, — a priest, and prisoner for the gospel, M. III. ii. 64. M. Mabb, John, bought certain estates belonging to Edward earl of Oxford, A. III. ii. 191. Mabion, Charles, in a commis- sion to fortify Jersey, M. II. i. 465. ii. 2or. Macarmuit, William, A. II. ii. 510. Macchabaeus, Dr. John, chaplain to Christiern king of Den- mark, M. III. i. 240. instru- mental in obtaining Cover- dale's release from prison, temp, queen Mary, ib. Macclesfield, Cheshire, a free grammar school founded there by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 281.503. Mac Donel, — captain of the Galloglas, M. II. ii. 107. Mac Gilmora, John, a bastard, has a dispensation from the pope to take orders, A. II. ii. 66. Machevillens, James, A. IV. 57°- Machiavello, Nicolo, M. I. i. 484. S. 256. Machil, John, as sheriff of Lon- don, M. III. i. 341. 499. his death and burial, ii. 115. Machin, — de, A. I. i. 407. Mackworth, — a gentleman of Rutlandshire, put into theMar- shalsea for having two wives, A. II. ii. 189. 190. proceedings and judgment of an ecclesiasti- cal commission against him. III. i. 169. Mackworth, Mrs., wife of the preceding, a maintenance or- dered for her and her family by the council, A. II. ii. igo. Macnellog, Hugh, lord of Clana- boy, M. II. ii. 107. Macuelos, Juana de, of Seville, burnt there by the inquisition, A. I. i. 356. Maculyn, — M, II. ii. 107. Mac Var, Nicholas, a bastard, has a dispensation from the pope to take orders, A. II. ii. 66. Mac Williams, Ambrosia, mar- ried to sir W. Kingswel, Ch. 134- . . Mac Williams, Cassandra, mar- ried to sir G. Cotton, Ch. 134. Mac Williams, Cicilia, married to sir T. Ridgeway, treasurer of Ireland, Ch. 134. Mac Williams, Henry, married the widow of sir J. Cheke, Ch. 133. his offspring by her, 134. concerned in a tournament be- fore queen Elizabeth, 133. a magistrate in Essex, 134. his death, 135. Mac Williams, Henry, the son, died without issue, Ch. 134. Mac Williams, Margaret, mar- ried to John lord Stanhope, Ch. 134. 74 INDEX. Mac Williams, Susan, married to E. Sandys, Ch. 134. and after- wards to sir T. Ireland, ib. Maddesly, G. de, P. III. 179. Maddi, Richard, fellow of Bene't college, Cambridge, P, I. 29. Maddocks, or Madox, — mar- ried a gentleman's daughter of Fulham, Ay. 97. his contest with bishop Ayimer, ib. his slanders of the bishop, 68. 134- Maders, — attempted to kill queen Elizabeth, P. II. 130, Madew, Dr. John, vice-chancellor of Cambridge, prevents Ascham from holding a public disputa- tion against the mass, Ch. 11. C. 233. 792. in the commis- sion for a royal visitation, 1547, M. II. i. 74. C. 209. concerned in a disputation at Cambridge before the visitors, 290. vice-chancellor of Cam- bridge for two years, P. I. 49. a favourer of the gospel, 60. Swinburn, a papist, gets pos- session of his mastership of Clare-hall, ib. reinstated by a commission, ib. displaced again by Swinburn, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 80. died dur- ing her reign, P. I. 87. Fuller's mistake respecting him, ib. Madowel, John, has a license to preach, M. II. ii. 276, Madox, see Maddocks. Magdalen college, Cambridge, formerly called Buckingham college, C. 3. still earlier. Monk's college, ib. archbishop Grindal's benefaction to the college, G. 427. controversy respecting the expulsion of a fellow, VV. I. 53. 118. an ir- regular practice of obtaining fellowships in that college, 53. 119. Magdalen college, Oxford, visited by the king's visitors, 1535, M. I. i. 323. ordered by Ed- ward V"I. to elect Dr. Haddon as their president, II. ii. 272. visited by bishop Gardiner, III. i. 81. names of persons ex- pelled by him, 82. some ac- count of its being visited, 1561, P. I. 210. opposed Hum- frey being president, 222. Magdalen hospital, near Win- chester, bishop Home's be- quest to, A. II. ii. 377. Magdeburg, zealous in defence of protestantism, Ch. 52. no- tice of its Confession, ib. Magenis, Eugenius, bishop of Down, M, II. ii. 107. assisted at the consecration of arch- bishop Goodacre and bishop Bale, C. 400. Magistrates, see Justices. Magnus, Thomas, chaplain to Henry VIII., C. 35. in a com- mission to take the value of beneBces in the diocese of York, M. I. i. 331. present, as archdeacon of the East Riding, at the convocation of 1540, 557. one of the committee ap- pointed by the convocation to investigate Henry VIII. 's mar- riage with Anne of Cleves, 553. 558. had the living of Bedal, II. ii. 258. his death, ib. Maguyer, -;- A. IV. 252. Magwyre, — lord of Farman- nagh, M. II. ii. 107. Maid of Kent, see Eliz. Barton. Maidstone, Kent, manor and pa- lace of, taken by the crown from the see of Canterbury in exchange, C. 405. the palace once a castle, according to Leland, ib. the advowson of the living annexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. INDEX. 75 Maillet, monsieur, agent for Ge- neva, in England, A. III. i. 127. ii. 201. 202. i. 232. ii. 250. Mainard, — secretary to lord Burghley, A. III. i. 85. 149. 435:588.1V. 2_i4.W. II. 3. Mainard, Mather, imprisoned for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 55. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Mainard, widow, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. see May- nard. Maine, marquis dii, a French hostage, sent to England, M. II. i. 358. kinsman to Mary queen of Scots, A. II. i. 263. concerned in a plot to invade England, ib. see Mayne. Maiscombre, tithes of, Glouces- tershire, part of the endow- ment of the united sees of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Maister, see Masters. Maitland, John, secretary to Mary queen of Scots, A. III. i. 4. forfeited, ib. restored, ib. lord chancellor of Scotland, and lord Maitland, IV. 44. lord Burghley's letter to him to persuade king James to sup- press the professed enemies of the gospel in his kingdom, ib. Major, — a seminary, A. IV. 237. Makebray, John, a Scot, vicar of Shoreditch, preaches at sir A. Wingfield's funeral, M. II. i. 588. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, resident at Frank- fort, C. 450. M. III. i, 232. at first a preacher there, then at a church in Lower Ger- many, ib. preaches at St. Paul's Cross, temp, queen Elizabeth, G. 38. A. I. i. 199. Malachi, an allusion in chap. iii. 16. explained, C. pre/, xii. Malby, — captain under the earl of Essex, in Ireland, S. 142. Malcolm, king of Scotland, A. IV. 594. married Margaret, daughter of Edward, the out- law, son of Edmund Ironside, king of England, II. ii. 437. JNIaldon, William, story respect- ing him, C. 91. Malingden, manor of, Kent, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, C. 405. Mallet, Francis, A. I. i. 66. 492. chaplain to princess Mary, M. II. i. 46. finished the transla- tion of Erasmus's Paraphrase of St. John, began by her, ib. indicted for saying mass, 447. sent to the Tower, 452. made dean of Lincoln by queen Mary, P. I. 65. A. IV. 613. who in- tended making him bishop of Salisbury, M. III. ii. 136. sub- scribed by proxy, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. Mallet, Thomas, committed to the Gatehouse for writing a lewd and untrue letter to his uncle. Dr. Mallet, A. I. i. 66. Mailing, manor and abbey of, Kent, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, P. 1. 161. Mallory, Richard, sheritt' of Lon- don,' M. III. ii. 9. Mallory, John, archbishop San- dys's answer to his slanders of him, A. III. ii. 223. his sub- mission, i. 155. Mallory, Richard, an officer of the queen's bench, temp, queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 55. Mallory, Robert, A. II. ii. 617. Mallory, sir William, in a com- mission to visit the church of Durham, A. II. ii. 169. Malone, Malachias, an Irish friar, .?$ INDEX. afterwards a convert, A. I. ii. 218. Malt, — an eminent English Je- suit at Madrid, A. I. ii. 273. Malta, prayers appointed to be said in its behalf, being be- sieged bv the Turks, A. I. ii. 190. thanksgivings for its de- liverance, 191. G. 152. the col- lect, A. I. ii. 191. Malter, — accused of witchcraft, S. 97. Maltravers, Henry Fitz- Alan, lord, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 36. Maltusse, Richard, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Malvern priory, application made by bishop Latimer for its con- tinuance, M. I. i. 399. Malvesier, or Mauvesier, French agent in England, A. I. ii. 95. 96. 97. II. i. 256. III. i. 3. 312. ii. 277. !. 606. has a chain of gold given him, and was well treated in England, I. ii. 116. returns from Scot- land, where he in vain tried to settle the differences be- tween the queen and her sub- jects, 2TI. applies for Mary queen of Scots to be sent into France, II. i. 72. part of a letter of his, ii. 242. displeased about the match between queen Elizabeth and Monsieur, III. i. 4. employed by the French king in behalf of the Scotch queen's deliverance, 443. Malyn, John, vice-admiral of the narrow seas, A. I. i. 8. 49. Man, — a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Man, Henry, has a license, as dean of Chester, to grant any lands, &c. to sir R. Cotton, M. II.' ii. 277. as bishop of Sodor and Man, his death and burial, III. i. 504. Man, John, of New College, Ox- ford, a gospeller, recants, M. Li. 581. Man, John, A. I. i. 48. Man, John, archbishop Parker's chaplain, P. I. 228. II. 460. made warden of Merton col- lege by the archbishop, ib. a popish faction against him there, ib. 230. published the Common Places of Musculus, in English, A. 1. ii. 87. P. I. 228. 299. II. 460. sent am- bassador into Spain, I. 228. 498. II. 460. A. I. ii. 51. 198. and made in consequence dean of Gloucester, 198. affronts offered him there, 253. III. ii. 246. 559- Man, Thomas, a Brownist, A. IV. 367. Manchester, Edward Montague, earl of, lord chamberlain to Charles II., married Essex Cheke, widow of sir R. Bevyl, Ch. 147. his offspring by her, ib. Manchester college, the state of, 1565, P. I. 407. two letters respecting it. III. 135. 137. its revenues diminished, II. 10. 1 1 . archbishop Parker's pro- posal respecting it, 10. founded anew by queen Elizabeth, 12. ill estate of the college, A. II. i. 515. its revenues in danger, ii. 68. dean Nowel's season- able intercession, ib. Manchester, New Fleet, a prison there for recusants, A. III. i. 243. a collection for these pri- soners, 244. disbursements for their diet, ib. the council's let- ter about the collections, 245. ii. 260. fines arising from the recusants, i. 246. Mandate of archbishop Grindal for the observance of the fif- teen articles of 1575, G. 291. INDEX. n Manering, John, driven ashore on the Scotch coast, and pil- laged, A. IV^. 412. Manering, Nicholas, servant to the countess of Derby, Ay. 46. has the keeping of hearses within the diocese of London, ih. Manering, Roger, rector of Whyt- for, A. II. ii. 527. III. ii. 474- , Mannering, — a great thief, A. III. i. 658. Manners of the different ranks of men, temp. Edward VI., M. II. ii. 131. Manners, — belonged to queen Elizabeth's court, A. II. ii. 136. son to the earl of Rutland, III. i. 209. sent by the queen to condole with lord Burghley on the death of his son-in-law, ih. Manners, sir Richard, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. bought church lands of the crown, 123. Manners, Robert, a recusant, A. I. i. 414. Manners, sir Roger, his loyalty suspected from his intimacy with the duke of Norfolk, A. II. i. 194. his letter to lord Burghley in vindication of him- self, ih. Manners, Roger, A. IV. 279. Mannewell, — P. III. 160. see Manivell. Manningham, Thomas, bishop of Chichester, A. III. i. pref. viii. Mannock, Francis, a recusant, A. III. i. 609. favourable cha- racter of him, ii. 421. Mannock, Giles, a recusant, W. II. 3. Mannock, Henry, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parlia- ment of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. indicted in conse- quence, ib. Mannock, Mannox, Henry, A. III. i. 38. Mannock, John, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parlia- ment of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. indicted in conse- quence, ih. Mannock, John, a recusant, W. II. 2. Mannock, Thomas, A. IV. 413. Mannyng, Thomas, prior of St. Mary's of Butley, consecrated suffragan bishop of Gipwich, C. 55. Mannyng, Thomas, a poor scho- lar,"M. III. i. 164. Mannyng, John, one of the con- tributors to the afflicted gos- pellers, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 224. Manrique, don John, one of the chief officers in the emperor Charles V.'s household, and in good estimation with him, M. II. i. 292. Mansel, lady, attended queen Mary at her coronation, M. HI. i. 55. Mansfeld, count, A. IV. 208. 231. Mansfield, lady Cecilie, buried, M. III. ii. 117. Mansfield, Henry, a recusant, A. HI. i. 705. Mansfield, sir Rice, buried, A. I. i. 283. Mantel, see Blosse. Mantels, the, committed as re- bels, M. III. i. 149. Manthorp, clerk of St. Stephen's, Norwich, taught Parker sing- ing, P. I. 8. the archbishop never forgot his harshness, ib, Mantua, council summoned at, by the pope, protested against by Henry VIII. and his clergy, M. I. i. 379. 78 I .N D E X. Mantyl, John, ordained, G. 53. Manuel, — prebendary of Can- terbury, P. III. 159. Manwaring, — carted through London for abominable living, M. III. i. 343. Manwell, Henry, M. I. ii. 407. see Mannewell. Manwood, sir Roger, A. III. i. 76. 333. Ay. 213. born and bred up at Sandwich, P. I. 274. his intended liberality to Sandwich school, ih. was stew- ard of the liberties to archbi- shop Parker, II. 168. present at his funeral, 433. 434. the archbishop's legacy to him, III. 337. 343. lord chief baron, A. II. ii. 709. an ecclesiastical commissioner, G. 310. present at the judges' conference about punishing recusants by mulcts, 346. charged with wrong deal- ing, A. III. i. 88. and with being bribed to overlook a murder, 391. present (as lord chief baron) at the judges' conference about the trial of Mary queen of Scots, 529. the vicarage of Hackington aug- mented at his solicitation, W. I. 542. left maintenance for certain poor people there, 545. among the ecclesiastical com- missioners that deposed Caw- dry, Ay. 91. his judgment in favour of Cartwright and others being brought into the star- chamber, W. II. 70. III. 241. his letters to lord Burghley, respecting his submission upon several abuses ; his committal and restraint, A. IV. 167. 170. his submission, 168. the case of T. Diggs against him, 170. Manwood, Thomas, mayor of Sandwich, P. I. 275. Manxel, or Mauxel, sir Richard, one of the council in the marches of Wales, temp. Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 162. al- lowed by queen Mary to have fifty retainers. III. ii. 162. Maplesden, John, archdeacon of Suffolk, A. II. ii. 266. Maptit, Laurence, master of Be- ne't college, Cambridge, his bequest to his college, P. II. 480. Mar, John Erskine, earl of, one of the protestant faction who seized James V^I., A. III. i. Maram, Lincolnshire, advowson and property there granted by Edward V^I. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 363. had belonged to the see of Carlisle, ib. Marbeck, .lohn, an excellent mu- sician, belonged to the choir at Windsor, M. II. i. 418. condemned on the six articles, C. 157. removed to the king's chapel, temp. Edward VI., M. II. i. 418. pubhshed prayers and anthems, ib. coniposed the first Concordance in English, Marberie, — A. III. ii. 204. Marborow, Mrs,, appointed to attend princess Elizabeth in the Tower, M. III. i. i 29. March, late earl of, manor of Clifford, Herefordshire, had belonged to him, M. II. i. 361. March, Edmund Mortimer, earl of, changed the priory of Be- nedictines at Stoke into a col- legiate church, P. I. 15. mar- ried the daughter and heir of Lionel, duke of Clarence, A. II, ii. 654. was declared heir apparent to the English crown by parliament, ib. March, — C. 246. March, John, A. I. i. 10. P. I. 116. INDEX. 79 March, Peter, P. II. 356. Marche, Robert de la, a French commissioner for settling arti- cles of marriage between Ed- ward VI. and the French king's daughter, M. II. i. 477. see Marsh, Marches, condition of the east and middle, 1556, M. III. i. 559. and west, 561. care taken of them, A. I. i. 26 — 29. a treaty concluded respecting them, I. ii. 104. Marcie, John, M. III. ii. 392. Marcot, Anthony, of Geneva, his Declaration of the Mass, trans- lated from the French, printed at Wittenberg by Luft, M. II. i. 44. Marden, — C. 152. Marden, manor of, in the county of Southampton, taken in ex- change by the crown from the see of Winchester, M. II. i. 483. granted by Edward VI. to sir P. Hoby, 484. ii. 220. Mare, Thomas le, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Margaret of Austria, duchess of Saxony, regent of the Low Countries, for what disliked there, M. II. ii. 85. Margaret, queen, S. 193. 257. Margaret, queen of Navarre, a translation of her Meditation of the Soul concerning Love towards God, &.c. published by (princess) Elizabeth, M. II. i. 229. Margaret, sister of Henry VIII., wife to James IV. of Scotland, A. II. ii. 404. present, as queen dowager, at the English court, M. II. i. 501. orders and let- ters for her reception, ib. her reception, 502, motherof James v., A. II. ii. 425. married again to the earl of Angus, ib. her offspring by him, ib. James VI. derived his claim to the throne of England through her, IV. 517- Margaret, sister of Charles IX. of France, A. II. i. 218. 219, her marriage with the king of Navarre, (afterwards Henry IV. of France,) promoted by the English ambassadors, 6y. Margenet, William, a priest, A. IV. 255- . . Margets, William, ordained, G. 58. Margrave, manor of, granted by Edward VI. to H. Nevyl, M. II. i. 485. ii. 220. Marguerite, — M. I. ii. 253. Marian, sir Amgel, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 37. Marilliac, — in a commission to compose a peace between the emperor and French king, 1555, M. in. i. 346. Mark, its weight, introduced into England by William the Con- queror, S. 270. Mark-piece, a Scotch silver coin, its English value, A. IV, 535. 536. 541- Markenfield, Markhamfield, or Markamvil, Thomas, A. I. ii. 320. pensioned by the king of Spain, 53. II. i. 495. a rebel, 578. ii. 468. III. i. 624. Markenfields, the, traitors, fled into Spain, A. I. ii. 345. Markham, — A. II. ii. 580. Markham, sir Arthur, M. II. ii. 247. Markham, Ellis, C. 440. 441. Markham, sir Griffin, proclaimed to be apprehended, A. IV. 14. Markham, Henry, chaplain to archbishop Cranmer, ordained, M. II. i. 403. Markham, sir John, lieutenant of the Tower, M. II. i. 177- »• 241. his part at Henry VIII.'s 8o INDEX. funeral, 301. sir A. Darcy suc- ceeds him at the Tower, 247. Markham, John, fellow of Pem- broke-hall, Cambridge, or- dained, G. 55. Markham, Robert, his letter to his father upon his departure beyond sea for his conscience, A. IV. 157. Markham, Thomas, his letter to lord Burghley upon his son's going beyond sea for his con- science, A. IV. 156. Markley, tithes of, Worcester- shire, given by Edward VI. to his free grammar school at Stourbridge, M. II. ii. 281. Marks, William, a papist, A. II. ii. 346. Markworth, castle and park of, granted by Edward VI. to Dud- lev, duke of Northumberland, M. III. i. 43. Marlborough, castle of, restored to the duke of Somerset after his pardon by Edward VI., M. II. i. 363. possessed also the town and manor, which had belonged to queen Catharine, Marley, Nicholas, a recusant, A. I-i-4'3- Marloratus Augustinus, a trans- lation of his Comment upon St. Matthew printed in Eng- land, P. II. 81. recommended to the clergy, ih. his Thesaurus edited by G. Feuguereius, 404. with archbishop Parker's re- commendation, ib. his Com- ment on St. John's Gospel translated into English, A. II. ii. 146. III. i. 410. Marmaduke, Dr., the same, pro- bably, that was called Mar- maduke Waldeby, C. 113. his judgment concerning confirm- ation, M. I. ii. 354. Marni, John, A. IV. 573. Marning, Lincolnshire, advowson and property there granted by Edward VI. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 363. Marnix, lord, M. I. i. 235. Marrel, William, presented to the rectory of St. Laurence, London, M. III. i. 591. Marriage, certain cases of, solved by archbishop Cranmer, C. 64. irregularities respecting it, com- mon in the country, 65. table of degrees published by act of parliament, wherein it was un- lawful to marry, ib. Cranmer's opinion of the act, 66. Henry VIII. 's proclamation against priests' marriages, 98. his short notes on the subject, M. I. ii. 392. he intended in time to tolerate such marriages, C. 98. opinion of the Germans on the subject, M. I. i. 529. the determination of the convoca- tion respecting them, C. 222. an act of parliament allowing them, temp. Edward VI., M. II. i, 209. notice of Dr. Mar- tin's book proving their un- lawfulness, III. i. 268. an- swered by bishop Ponet, 269. P. II. 446. completed and published anonymously byabp. Parker, I. 66. II. 446. some passages of this book, 449 — 454. no act passed allowing priests' marriages, init. queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 118. the queen being averse from them, P. I. 213. 217. archbishop Parker's observations on her dislike, III. 49. marriage for- bidden by the queen to all persons in cathedrals and col- leges, I. 212. Cranmer's opin- ion as to marriage after a di- vorce for adultery, C. 226. archbishop Parker's admoni- tion concerning matrimonv. INDEX. ' P. I. 174. marriage of two sis- ters successively declared un- lawful by bishop Jewel, 222. his letter on the subject, III. 55. incestuous marriages preva- lent, I. 555- 556. opinions of certain civilians respecting a particular case of marriage, A. II. i. 169. 170, a tract, shew- ing that it is unlawful for a protestant to marry a papist, 223. ii. 469, a tract of the law- fulness of marrying a papist, 470. regulations proposed by the bishops for restraining of licenses to marry without banns, W. III. 132. bishop Cooper's cogitations on this matter, I. 377. note of in- cestuous and unlawful mar- riages, III. 378. reasons for li- censes to marry without banns, II. 381. III. 380. archbishop Whitgift's orders for the ob- servance of the appointed times and places for marriage, II. 400. Marriage-licenses, decision of a point respecting the granting of them, P. I. 163. courts qua- lified to grant them. Ay. 130. proposed regulations respect- ing them, 131. Marriage, table of, chiefly fram- ed by archbishop Parker, A. I. i- 332. Marrow, — A. III. i. 109. Marsh, Edmund, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Marsh, George, a martyr for the gospel, M. II. i. 132. III. ii. 149- Marsh, John, in a commission of inquiry into enclosures, M. II. i. 147. Marsh, John, a priest, A. III. ii. 599- Marsh, Richard, rector of St. Pancrace, London, deprived VOL. II. INDEX TO STKYPE. for being married, C, 468. 469. 470. Marsh, Robert, has the rectory of Ickham, C. 24. 472. Marsh, Thomas, the reversion of the clerkship of the council granted him, M. II. ii. 216. Marsh, William, presented to the parsonage of St. Peter's in the marches of Calais, M. II. ii. 261. Marshal, Dr., a Scotch Jesuit, A. III. ii. 48. 553.554. Marshal, Cuthbert, archdeacon of Nottingham, puts forth King Henry's Primer, M. I. i. 335- C. 139. archbishop Cranmer probably had a great hand in it, M. I. i. 335. his judgment concerning confirmation, ii. 352. concerned in the Institu- tion of a Christian Man, C. 77. his death, 139. Marshal, John, an English pa- pist at Lovain, wrote a treatise ofthe Cross, A. I. i. 262. 493. ii. 200. II. ii. 710. G. 165. answered by Mr. Calfhil, ib. notice of his reply to Calfhil, G. 165. which was answered by Dr. Fulk, A. II. ii.7ri. Marshal, Richard, dean of Christ Church, Oxford, publicly re- tracted imder king Edward, and forward for the reformation, A. I. ii. 48. 49. a violent pa- pist under queen Mary, and sought to catch Jewel, 48. one of the disputants at Oxford, before whom Cranmer was brought, and a witness against him, C. 480. 535. 1071. 1079. 1080. 1085. 1090. 1091. M. III. i. 371. a most furious and zelotical man, C. 535. dug up P. Martyr's wife, and buried her in his dunghill, ih. P. 1. 1 99. A. I. ii 48. lurks about, being deprived of his deanery, i. 416. G 8a INDEX. ii. 48. apprehended, 49. his subscription, ib. prevented by death from a public recanta- tion, ib. Marshal, Richard, deprived of a prebend in St. Paul's, A. I. i. 253- Marshal, Robert, P. II. 335. Marshal, Thomas, a papist, arch- deacon of Lincoln, Ay. 12. Marshal, Dr. Thomas, preacher to the English at Dort, and afterwards rector of Lincoln college, Oxford, P. IL 503. reprinted at Dort the Saxon Book of the Gospels, ib. Marshal, William, a Barrovvist, A. IV. 245.. Marsham, — his slander of queen Elizabeth and the earl of Lei- cester, A. I. ii. 366. Marsham, William, his articles of accusation against Heton, a minister, A. IV. 74. Marshe, — P. II. 433. 434. Marsilius, Patavinus, pronounced the pope to be antichrist, A. I. ii. 67. Marten, — a papist, A. III. i. 270. Marten, Anthony, notice of his Exhortation to the People of England, at the time of the Spanish invasion, A. III. ii. 29. 137. his prayer for the occa- sion used in the queen's cha- pel, and elsewhere, 31. 546. publishes his Reconciliation of all the Pastors and Clergy of the Church of England in de- fence of episcopacy, W. II. 52. KnoUy'sjudgmentofit, 53. Martial laws, commission for putting in execution, M. II. ii. 207. Martin, — keeper of the ward- robe, M. II. i. I 29. Martin, Christopher, M, III. i. 564- Martin, Gregory, of St. John's college, Oxford, afterwards of Rheims, A. I. i. 492. III. i. 407. P. I. 413. notice of Fulk's defence of the English trans- lation of the scriptures in an- swer to him, 413. A. III. i. 288. notice of his treatise of schism, 407. IV. 54. Martin, Humphrey, mercer, A. II. i. 580. Martin, Richard, a suffragan bi- shop, guardian of the Grey Friars at Canterbury, parson of Ickham, and vicar of Lyd, C. 52. bequeathes a library to the convent, ib. Martin, Richard, A. III. i. 73 t. IV. 98. 178. of the mint, af- terwards lord mayor of Lon- don, entertained Cartwright, P. IL 241. Martin, Richard, the fine levied on, for recusancy, A. III. ii. 422, Martin, Robert, a monk of St. Andrew's, Northampton, M. I. i. 404. Martin, sir Roger, P. I. 481. Martin, Roger, a papist, impri- soned in Norwich, A. II. ii. 343. 677. the fine levied on him, III. ii. 422, Martin, sir Roger, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI.'s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Martin, Thomas, a civilian, M. III. i. 106. 131. 174. notice of his book against priests' mar- riage in answer to bishop Po- net, M. II. ii. 54. III. i. 267. C. 473. bishop Gardiner con- cerned in it, 474. a reply there- fore left incomplete by Ponet, and finished by archbishop Par- ker, 75. 473. M. 11. ii. 55. IIL i. 269. 524. P. I. 66. 111. 22. II. 446. A. IV. 613. Wharton INDEX. 83 declares Ponet was not the an- swerer, C. 1058, observations on his book, M. III. i. 269. tries to bribe Mountain to turn papist, 155. sent to exa- mine into the disputes among the gospellers in prison, C. 505. one of queen Mary's commis- sioners for the trial of Cran- mer, 532. 540. 547. 569. 600. 656. 1070. 1071. 1072. 1074. T076. 1079. acts as the queen's proctor, 533. present at Ho- per's trial, M. III. i. 286. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290. defends transubstantiation againstCard- maker, 433. carries letters from the council to king Philip, 505. notice of him, 433. Bale's cha- racter of him, 267. see Cot- ton. Martin Marprelate, P. I. 301. Ay. 97. 123. 148. 193. his abuse of bishop Cooper, P. I. pre/. XV. A. III. ii. 71. his slander of bishop Aylmer cor- rected, Ay. 68. his calumny against Whitgift refuted, W. I. 13. notice of Martin's answer to Dr. Bridges's book against the puritans, A. III. ii. 96. 151. Penry wrote under the title of Martin Marprelate, 71. Cartwright disavows all con- cern with the books published under this name, IV. 73. Martin Marprelate, written by a club, W. I. 549. the chief au- thors, 551, their attack on archbishop Whitgift's forbid- ding Cartwright to answer the Rheniists' Testament, 483. their libels against the bishops, 549. they threaten to put forth va- rious works against the bishops and clergy, 550. have a secret prlntiug press, ib. archbishop Whitgift empowered to search out the authors, 55 1, specimen of their abuse, 553. 570. III. 218. bishop Cooper urged by archbishop Whitgift to answer them, I. 572. title and account of his answer, 575. more par- ticularly of archbishop Whit- gift's defence of himself in- serted in it, ib. the printers of Martin Marprelate discovered, 601. A. III. ii. 102.602. arch- bishop Whitgift's opinion how they should be proceeded a- gainst, W. I. 602. Bancroft active against them, II. 386. Martinengo, abbot of, A. I. i. 340. the pope's nuncio, refus- ed admittance into England, 166. Martiques, monsieur, tries in vain to persuade the Scotch nobles to invade England, A. I. i. 30. Martyn, — parson of Totinge- beke, M. I. ii. 366. Martyn, — C. 334. see Martin. Martyr, Peter, C. pref. xiii. 278. 338. 355- 356. 37'- 375- 436. 477-507-583-630. 645. 1035. M. III. i. 225. ii. 163. Ch. 130. Ay. 7. G. 17. 21. A. I. i. 195. ii. 491. i. 240. 541. ii. 133- T37-.505- 507- H.I. 543- 279. II. i. 97. 426. ii. 103, 222. 687. III. i. 337. P. I. 323. 444. 570. appointed di- vinity professor at Oxford in the room of Dr. Smith, M. II. i. 63. 189. C. 574. Ch. 44. who attacks him in a work on the Celibacy of Priests and Mo- nastic Vows, M. II. i. 64. C. 245. archbishop Cranmer's de- fence of his character against Dr. Smith, A. I. i. 431. re- vised in part a new digest of the canon laws, C. 191. 192. affected to speak plainly of the sacrament, M. II. i. 190. C. 586. misrepresented by pa- u 2 84 INDEX. pists, M. II. i. 190. extract from his sermon against the rebellion, C. 267. disputes a- gainst the corporeal presence at Oxford, 283. 582. pub- lishes an account of it, 288. 852. notice of his book on the sacrament, M. II. i. 306. C. 279. 369. enlightened by Crannier on this subject, 370. notice of his sermon on fast- ing, M. II. i. 324. his ques- tions concerning the eucharist, 325. attacked in a poetical tract, called Diacosio- Marty - rion, written by White, 423. his judgment on a Lasco's marrying a second time, 377. he and Bucer employed in a recension of the Common Prayer, C. 301. Ch. 54. parti- culars respecting his judgment of the Book of Common Prayer, C. 361. Latin letter to Bucer on their review of the Book of Common Prayer, 898. his opinion of the episcopal vestments, 303. M. II. i. 350. his answer to bishop Hoper's objections against them, C. 305. his letter to Gualter about Hoper's conformity, 309. some account of his corre- spondence with Bucer, 358. 359. scheme of the papists at Oxford against him, 359. his Latin letter to Bucer on the subject, 896. sent for back to Strasburgh, M. II. ii. 18. Ed- ward VI. will not allow his re- turn, ih. answers the book bi- shop Gardiner published under the name of Constantius against archbishop Cranmer's answer respecting the sacrament, 37. C. 372. its contents, 377. his defence of his book on Mo- nastic Vows againstSmith,378. in a commission to reform the ecclesiastical laws, 388. 593. M. II. i. 530. 531. ii. 205. 206. P. II. 62. 63. G. 590. his intercourse with archbi- shop Cranmer, C. 593. 594. his character of the archbishop, 657. his Latin letter to J. Haddon to procure a license for a person to preach, 1002. his Latin letter to sir W. Ce- cil, that the divinity lecturer of Oxford might receive his sa- lary, T003. suffered to escape out of England, M.III. i. pre/. V. C.445. 454- nialice towards him, 455. his letter to Calvin about the sufferings of the gos- pellers, 445. visited by Horn at Strasburgh, M. III. i. pref. viii. his letter to the English exiles at Zuric, ib. considers Farrago Doctrince Lutherance a very foohsh book, C. 508. consulted as to the lawfulness of Lutheran baptism, 510. urges Fox to translate Cran- mer's book of the sacrament into Latin, 516. Fox's letter to him for advice, G. 22. in- vited by the English pro- testant exiles at Frankfort to go and read divinity to them, M. III. i. 407. Ay. TO. J. Fox's letter to him on the subject, M. III. ii. 311. did not go. Ay. 10. went to Zuric to be professor of divinity there, and took Jewel along with him, M. HI. i. 233. ii. 163, his works prohibited in England as he- retical, i. 418. his opinion respecting ecclesiastical gar- ments, A. I. i. 257. published, ii. 175. 216. P. I. 447. his letter to Utenhovius on the success of religion in England under queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 278. consulted by Grindal upon some scruples in ecclesiastical INDEX. 85 matters, G. 42. 44. 47. his advice, 43. 48. approved of by Bullinger, 46. invited into England, probably by the duke of Norfolk, at Fox's instigation, A. I. i. 381. his excuse, 382. consulted by the strangers' church in London about bi- shop Grindal's censure of their minister's doctrine, G. 64. his answer, ih. his letter to bishop Jewel concerning his Apology, A. I. i. 428. 429. P. I. 197. favourable to the discipline of the church of England, W. I. 86. notice of his death, A. I. i. 382, 430. his wife's body re- buried, P.I. 199. having been dug up and buried in a dung- hill in queen Mary's reign, ib. her character, 200. his affec- tion for and encomium of sir A. Cook, M. II. i. 14. dedi- cates his Comment on the Epi- stle to the Romans to him, A. II. ii. 88. Julius his friend and assistant, 105. a translation of his Comment on the Book of Judges published in England, 146. III. i. 411. his character, I. i. 431. vindicated from cer- tain aspersions of Saunders, C. 667. 668. Haddon's answer to Osorius's slander of him, A. I. ii. 30. 73. and character of him, M. II. i. 384. Fecken- ham's censure of him, A. I. i. no. ii. 434. Marulphus, Raphael, an Italian merchant, his high opinion of the pope's power, M. I. i. 247. Marvey, Stephen, A. IV. 573. Marwel, manor of, county of Southampton, taken by the crown in exchange from the see of Winchester, M. II. i. 483- Marwood, Nicholas, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Mary, queen, (as princess, M. II. ii. 112. 120. 177.) S. 7. 53. 54. 92. 175. 189. 215. 246. 249. 256. M. III. i. 360. ii. 352. i. 468. 474. 488. 510. 513. ii. 2. 5. 7. 8. 9. 21. 26. 71. 72. 109. A. I. i. 400. 415. 417. 418.419. 450.491. 527. 542. 543- 552- 553- "-i-iS- 26. 231. 577. II. i. 427. ii. 425. III. i. 87. ii. 484. 506. IV. 432. bred to learning, M. I. i. 621. 622. bishop Voysey her governor, II. ii. 168. (as princess) refuses to lay aside the title of princess after the divorce was pronounced be- tween king Henry and queen Katharine, her mother, I. i. 224. her father dissuaded by Cranmer from sending her to the Tower, C. 620. after three years, fearful of the king's anger, she acknowledges herself illegi- timate, M. I. i. 225. commis- sioners for diminishing her house and ordering, 235. makes overtures to be reconciled to her father, after queen Bolen's death, 439. certain articles sent in consequence for her subscription, ii. 268. which she subscribes, i. 439. pro- bable reason for her desiring a reconciliation, 440. some ac- count of the proposal of the French king to marry his son, the duke of Orleans, to her, 440. ii. 269. her part at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, II. i. 6. chief mourner at queen Jane Seymour's funeral, 1 2. what part she took in the transla- tion of Erasmus's Paraphrase on St. John's Gospel, 46. re- spect shewn her at court, 91. king Edward's invitation to her to visit him, 92. censures the proceedings in religion, ib. G 3 86 INDEX. and writes to the protector on the subject, 93. his vindication, ib. her justification for using the mass during Edward VI. 's minority, C. 272. 842. lands granted lier by the king, M. II. i. 155. required by the council to use the Book of Common Prayer, 238. her answer, ib. a proposition made by the Eng- lish government for her mar- riage with the infanta of Por- tugal, 242. 245. 246. 297. the emperor, Charles V., intercedes that she may not be molested in her religion, 254. charged with countenancing the dis- turbances in Norfolk, 276. her vindication, 277. an intention of the emperor of stealing her away from England, and then waging war, 344. desired in marriage by the marquis of Brandenburgh, 360. comes to London, 444. refuses to use the service of the communion and public prayers in English, 447. her chaplain indited for saying mass, ib. and commit- ted to the Tower, 452. the council's letter to her on the subject, 448. probably drawn up by archbishop Cranmer, 450. the emperor interposes again in her behalf, ib. Ch. 177. 178. comes to court, M. II. i. 450. her letter to the king respecting her religion, 453. the council determine that she shall not be allowed to hear mass, ib. contents of the king's letter to her on this subject, 454- further disputes between her and the council on the same subject, 455 — 458. embassy to the emperor con- cerning his intercession in her behalf, 468. goes to court, 586. visits the king, ii. 30, her let- ter to him on his partial reco- very, no. her legitimation supported by archbishop Cran- mer, C. 424. her ingratitude to him, 425. a prevalent o})inion at her accession to the throne, that her reign would be short, M. III. i.pref. vi. declared ille- gitimate in queen Jane Grey's proclamation, 5. a placard stuck up in her favour in Lon- don, 7. advised by the council to remain quiet, ib. applies to certain friends for aid, 14. her letter to sir E. Hastings, 15. ii. 171. aided by protestants, 16. from what motives, ib. ex- tolled by the papists, i. 18. letter of queen Jane's counsel- lors, acknowledging her as queen, C. 915. proclaimed queen, M. III. i, 20. C. 434. A. IV. 489. the proclamation joyfully received in London, M. III. i. 21. princess Eliza- beth comes to congratulate her, 22. proclaimed at Guisnes, ib. ii. 174. Dr. Haddon's con- gratulatory verses to her, i. 23. ii. 176. conies to Wansted- house, i. 25. to London, 26. notice of the emperor's cor- respondence with her, partly to propose a match between her and his son Philip, 29. 30. attends a mass performed for king Edward, 3 1, her first pro- clamation concerning religion, 38. remits part of a tax, 49. the proclamation, ii. 179. lays aside Edward VI. 's counsel- lors, S. 46. intrusts bishop Gardiner with all matters of the church, C. 445. scandal about her and him, 456. her coronation, ib. M. III. i. 53. her first parliament, 57. means used by her to form a parlia- ment suitable to her purposes. INDEX. 87 C, 457. consults cardinal Pole upon religious matters, 464. his advice, 465. 921. Harps- field's praises of her, M. III. i. 60. Weston's, 69. her inten- tions with respect to religion soon evident, 76. her Spanish match disliked by the people, 85. ularmed lest the people, being discontented, should set up princess Elizabeth as queen, I 26. her letter to her sister, in consequence, to come and re- side at court, ib. whose go- vernors excusing her, as being ill, slie sends her to the Tower, 128- her letter to the earl of Sussex to raise forces against the insurgents, 134. her de- claration to the city of London concerning her marriage, 135. her orders for musters in cer- tain counties, 148. and for pro- hibiting the ill treatment of Spaniards, 152. prophecies and bruits in Norfolk concerning her, 193. her letter to the jus- tices to search for the broach- ers, ii. 214. her match with Philip of Spain, i. 196. S. 225. much disliked by her people, M. III. i. 197. 199. S. 191. bishop Gardiner charged with planning the match, M. III. i. 198. her proclamation that all courtesy should be used to king Philip and his train, ii. 215. writes to the nobility to be present at her meeting of Philip, i. 202. her genealogy and Philip's pretended to be traced from John a Gaunt, 203. eight previous projects for her marriage unsuccessful, ib. this marriage unhappy, 204. the wedding celebrated at Win- chester, 205. bishop Aylmer's observation on this match. Ay. 189. their public entry into London, M. III. i. 205. La- timer's opinion of a foreigner becoming king of England, 206. the articles of marriage, 207. Charles V.'s congratu- latory letter to her, 209. her present to the Spanish ambas- sador, 210. her letter to the sheriff's to choose catholics for members of parliament, 245. leaves out of her writs the title of supreme head of the church, 246. her letter for bonfires and the Te Deum, in consequence of the king- dom's reconciliation with the see of Rome, 265. she, with the king, cardinal Pole, and bi- shop Gardiner, ill received in the city, 266. her supposed pregnancy, C. 526. 527. a pro- cession appointed in conse- quence, M. III. i. 325. restores the church-lands in her pos- session, 336. goes to Hamp- ton-Court for her supposed confinement, ib. releases the earl of Devonshire and prin- cess Elizabeth, ib. her instruc- tions to the justices and bi- shops against heretics, 338. 339. 345. report of her deli- very of a prince, 342. goes to Otelands, 357. passes through London, 359. three religions in her reign, 415. goes to parliament, 445. restores the tenths and first-fruits to the clergv, ib. her directions for the application of the church property that Henry VIII. had annexed to the crown, ib. A. I. i. 148. dissolves the parlia- ment, M. III. i. 469. her bounty to cardinal Pole, 474. disorders in the north, 490. 491. the emperor writes to her, excusing king Philip's ab- sence, 495. 502. removes to G 4 88 INDEX. Eltham, 498. removes to St. James's, 500. goes to the ab- bey to evensong, 508. removes to Greenwich, ib. pensioners muster before her, 509. did not press princess Elizabeth to marry the duke of Savoy, for which king PhiHp was anxious, 518. her letter to the king on the subject, 519. ii. 418. Strvpe's conjecture respecting this letter, i. 520. discontent against her government, 545. a conspiracy, 546. princess Elizabeth's name made use of in it, ib. the princess's letter to her, clearing herself, 547. spe- cial commissioners for this conspiracy, 548. her prepara- tions against disturbances, 558. removes to Westminster, ii. 3. goes to Richmond, 10. forbids any legate being brought into England in the room of car- dinal Pole, 30. her and king Philip's letter to the pope in his behalf, 3 1 . 474. writes her- self to the pope, 33. favours the Spaniards to the hurt of the English, 66. 516. feuds in the north, 69. men raised there, 71. in distress, makes use of a loan, 78. provides an extraordinary guard for her- self, 80.519. her instructions how to proceed against the in- vasion of the Scotch, 84. 522. wants money to carry on the war with France, 99. cardinal Pole's advice thereupon, ib. 534. removes to Greenwich, 109, her instructions to the earl of Bedford, as lord lieu- tenant of the west, 1 1 1. orders the state of every college at Cambridge to be inquired into, P. 1. 82. enjoins the old sta- tutes in the university, 83. had been ill, but gets better, M. III. ii. 1 17. devout in her sick- ness, 139. dies, 118. 119. 120. 139. her funeral, A. I. i. 45. bishop White's funeral sermon in her praise, M. III. ii. 139. 536. her burial, 141. report of her being poisoned denied by Haddon, 144. was learned and devout, ib. three prayers com- posed by her, 550. left the country impoverished, 145. cause of the evils in her reign, 146. Hale's invective against her, 150. lord Burghley's com- parison of those who suffered in her reign with those in the reign of queen Elizabeth, 153. a passage from abp. Bramhal, on the cruelties during her reign, 154. the evils of her reign, 156. granted too many retainers, 160, to whom grant- ed, and the numbers, 161. he- retics burnt without law in her reign, C. 501. bishop Ayl- mer's opinion of her counsel- lors. Ay. 178. extract from her letters to the sheriffs for elect- ing fit members of parliament, A. I. i. 47. she, and Mary of Lorrain, the chief causes of Knox's writing his Blast a- gainst the Empire of Women, 180. her Spanish marriage the cause of losing Calais, IV. 151. Mary, queen of Scots, A. I. i. 549- 550- i'- 206. 384. i. 24. ii- 433- i- 259. 265. 377. ii. 136. 191. 192. III. i. 211. 228. ii. 243. 246. i. 275. 364. ii. 338. W. I. 295. 297. III. 96. A. III. i. 552. 554. ii. 430. 431. 1.671. IV. 118. 149. 155. 580. 600. S. 226. 252. allowed a school of Jesuits in Scotland, A. II. ii. 336. comprehended in a treaty between England and France, M. II. i. 343. sick of a quartan. III. i. 569. some INDEX. 89 papists detected in plotting in her favour against queen Eli- zabeth at her accession to the throne, A. I. i. 9. 555. 556. resohitions at Rome in her favour, ii. 54. apprehensions from her, i. 1 1 . her assump- tion of the arms of England, ib. the dauphin of France's widow, and guided by the Guisian faction, ii. 99. cardi- nal Lorrain advises her to marry the duke of Austria, 100. to prevent which, queen Elizabeth sends an agent, 100, 10 1, her answer to queen Eli- zabeth, 102. the French pro- mise her largely, ib. advice a- gainst her matching into Eng- land, 103. her determination, 104. her claim to the succes- sion to the English crown de- nied in Hale's book, 117, queen Elizabeth favours her title, 1 20. lier title promised to be declared, 122. the earl of Le- nox's friends wish her to marry lord Darnley, 123. she dis- pleases queen Elizabeth by marrying him, 198. divers con- sultations of the English coun- cil about her marriage, 202. 204. she has an interview with queen Elizabeth, 202. sends lord Liddington to gain queen Elizabeth's consent to her marriage with lord Darnley, 203. who sends sir N. Throg- morton to break it off, ib. raises forces to prevent the earl of Murray from stopping her marriage, 205. a memorial sent to the English court upon her marriage, probably by him, ib. Tomworth's embassy to her, 206. dissension between her and her nobles, 207. 544. becomes unpopular, 208. the lords disaffected to her, make an unsuccessful attempt on Edinburgh, ib. they resort to Dumfries, 211. her army, 209. 211. her endeavours for the old religion in her kingdom, 227. Ritzio, the cause of her differences with her husband, ib. clause in the popish league in her favour, 245. earl of Shrewsbury's expenses in hav- ing her in custody, 301. the cause of detaining her, 302. her letter to queen Elizabeth, expostulating on her favouring her rebels, 558. a rebellion hatching in Norfolk to release her, 364. still remains in cus- tody in England, 383. treaties for her enlargement, ib. notice of a proposed marriage be- tween her and the duke of Norfolk, ib. G. 221. deposed in Scotland, A. II. i. 19. how queen Elizabeth was disposed towards her, thus dethroned, 20. foreign popish princes con- cerned for her deliverance, 68. conference between the French king and sirT. Smith concern- ing her, 70. and between him and the queen-mother, S. iii. 112. queen Elizabeth's inclina- tion towards her, A. II. i. 71. the French king moves for her to go into France, 72. she practices with Spain, ii. money, secretly sent her from France, is intercepted, 73. S. 106. is restrained upon this, but ho- nourably used, A. II. i. 73. so- licits Spain to invade England, ib. her letters seized, 74. their import, ib. queen Elizabeth orders the earl of Shrewsbury to expostulate with her, y6. her title to the English crown endeavoured to be set aside by parliament, 90. 91. bill enact- ed in parliament for security 90 INDEX. against her, 99. 100. pretends great fear of her life, i to. how queen Elizabeth acted with respect to her, in not suffering her to be restored, iii. 112. complains to queen Elizabeth of certain letters of Randolph, which had been intercepted, 115. her notes upon them, 116. the duke of Norfolk's transactions with her discover- ed, 117 — 121. queen Eliza- beth's verses respecting her, 131. was the cause of the duke of Norfolk's ruin, 190. twenty- five of the nobility ready to make her queen of England, 195. how queen Elizabeth re- ceived this intelligence, 196. the parliament resolve to touch the queen of Scots as well in life as title, 196. 204. I'. II. 206. which queen Elizabeth dislikes, and directs them how to proceed, A. II. i. 197. they notwithstanding bring in a bill of treason against her, 198. whereupon queen Eliza- beth prorogues them, ib. the judgment of divers noblemen concerning the proceedings with her, 199. archbishop Par- ker's opinion and advice con- cerning her, P. II. 123. is ac- cused under five articles, A. II. i. 202. ii. 467. her practice against queen Elizabeth, i. 202. how entertained in her con- finement, 203. how she had disobliged Q. Elizabeth, 204. the catholic princes move to restore her to her throne, 205. much talk that she must suf- fer, 206. the earl of Shrews- bury gives intelligence of her to court, ib. a plot in France for her rescue, 263. the exe- cution of the earl of Northum- berland increases her friends in England, 317. allowed to go to Buxton wells, 367. 368. S. 151. the fears at court of her escaping, A. II. i. 369. she considers the earl of Leicester as her enemy, 370. sends a present to queen Elizabeth, 499. Shetfield castle one of the places of her confinement, 578. letters and messages sent to her from Scotland, ii. 20. removed by the earl of Shrews- bury to Chatsworth, 99. re- ports of conveying her away alarm the court, ib. a French ambassador comes respecting her, 158. taken ill with the palsy. Ay. 28. 29. a French boolf detected, entitled. The Innocency of the Scottish Queen, A. II. ii. 271. her genealogy printed at Paris, shewing her title to England, 403. 566. notice of Glover's MS. against her title, 404. why queen Eli- zabeth breaks off treating with her. III. i. 112. her complaints against the queen, and her am- bassador's answers, 233. the bishop of Ross's consolatory letter to her, 237. ii. 252. IV. 593. her letter to lord Jiurgh- ley to favour her cause with the queen. III. i. 312. ii. 277. was privy to the holy league formed against queen Eliza- beth, i. 356. her letter to sir Francis Englefield on the sub- ject, 357. put under the care of sir A. Paulet instead of the earl of Shrewsbury, 358. the parliament move for her exe- cution, 434. sir A. Paulet's letter for an assistant in the custody of her, ib. ii. 361. the king of France intercedes for her, i. 443. it is resolved to bring her to trial, 524. queen Elizabeth grants a commission INDEX. 91 to try her, 526. the course of proceeding intended, 528. con- sultation of the judges about her trial, 529. deliberation about putting her to death, ib. objections against bringing her to trial, with answers there- unto, 530. ii. 397. Dr. Dale's judgment of punishing her by the law of nations, i. 530. considerations offered to queen Elizabeth to induce her to pro- ceed against her, 531. queen Elizabeth's message to parlia- ment about her, 532. the par- liament's petition in answer, 533. parallel drawn by the parliament between her and Joan of Naples, 536. ii. 400. their petition to queen Eliza- beth against her, i. 537. the sentence against her proclaim- ed, 538. queen Elizabeth's war- rant for her death how ob- tained, ib. some particulars relative to putting the warrant of execution in force, VV. I. 509. a relation of her execu- tion, 557. description of her person and attire, 558. Mel- vin's lamentations and words to her, 559. her answer to him, ib. how she heard the commission for her execution read, 560. the dean of Peter- borough's speech to her, ib. her words to him interrupting him, A. III. i. 564. notice of two books, one charging her with the nuirder of lord Darn- lev, the other exculpating her, 565- . Mary ot Guise, widow of James v., (jueen- dowager of Scot- land, M. II. i. 598. 599. III. i. 216. ii. 82. visits the Eng- lish court, II. i. 501. 503. in- tends an invasion of England, III. ii. 87. 93. 96. she and queen Mary of England the chief causes of Knox's Blast against the Empire of Women, A. I. i. 180. Mary, daughter of Henry VII., wife of Lewis XII. of France, and afterwards of C. Brandon, duke of Suffolk, A. II. ii. 404. Mary, daughter of Emanuel, king of Portugal, her letter to prin- cess Mary, M. I. i. 622. Mary Elizabeth, daughter of Charles IX. of France, the empress, and queen Elizabeth of England, her sponsors, A. II. i. 254. Mary, daughter of Charles duke of Burgundy, married Maxi- milian, afterwards emperor of Germany, S. 225. 252. Marv, vicarage of, Ireland, given by Edward VI. to endow a college in Galway, M. II. i. 463- Mask at court, M. III. i. 319, Mason, Francis, A. I. i. 205. er- rors in his book of the English Ministry corrected, C. 28. M. II. ii. 171. the occasion of his work, P. I. 1 10. 1 1 7. was arch- deacon of Norfolk, 117. Mason, sir John, M. II. i. 467. 485. 512. 559.0.414- M. II. ii. 42. 236. III. i. 515. Ch, 105. A. I. i. 48. 58. P.I. 222. A. II. ii. 430. one of the royal visitors, 1547, C. 209. he and Dr. Wotton appointed by arch- bishop Cranmer to examine certain articles of accusation against bishop Ferrar, 263. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. III. ii. 328. in a commis- sion about the frontiers in France, II. i. 299. ambassador for France, 359. 473. S. 44. in the commission to settle articles of marriage for Ed- 92 INDEX. ward VI. 's marrying the French king's daughter, M. II. i. 478. a privy counsellor, and secre- tarj' for the French tongue, ii. 161. 164. 191. in a commis- sion for collection of church stuff, 210. a grant to him of the manor of certain lands, 221. 223. 226. the office of clerk of the parliament granted to him and Francis Spelman, 222. has a license to eat flesh on fasts, 246. signed the order of queen Jane Grey's coun- sellors to the duke of North- umberland to lay down his arms against queen Mary, C. 434. sent ambassador to the emperor, M. III. i. 7. resigns the chancellorship of Oxford to make way for cardinal Pole, 475. one of queen Mary's privy-council, ii. 160. bishop Ponet charges him and lord Paget with betraying sir J. Cheke, Ch, 108. he, archbishop Heath, and sir W. Petre, ap- pointed to transact any urgent business before queen Eliza- beth's arrival in London, A. I. i. 9. ii. 390. he and the earl of Rutland appointed to exa- mine into a conspiracy against the queen, i, 10. as treasurer of the queen's chamber, ap- pointed to attend to the tem- poralities of certain vacant bi- shoprics, 19. he and others ap- pointed to audit the accounts of the vice-treasurer of Ire- land, 21. he and C. Throg- morton appointed to examine into a complaint of bishop Ridley's kinsmen against bi- shop Boner, 47. one of the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 90. one of the queen's visitors for the university of Oxford, P. I. 95. advises a peace with France, 292. in the commission to settle a commerce with France, A. I. ii. 1 19. Nudigate com- mitted to his custody, 118. and the earl of Hertford, 121. signed the queen's proclama- tion against excess in apparel, 195. 540. one of her privy- council, II. ii. 707. treasurer of the queen's chamber, and master of the posts, 708. sign- ed divers orders of the privy- council, C. 325. M. III. ii. 532. A. I. i. 58. G. 97. Mason, Margaret, M. III. ii. 398. Mason, Nicholas, deprived of the living of Chedsey, M. III. i. 353- Mason, Samuel, an Irish Jesuit, turned protestant, A. I. i. 341. ii. 221. part of his recantation, ib. sir H. Sidney, lord lieute- nant of Ireland, makes him his chaplain, ib. the archbishop of Dublin gave him the living of Finglas, ib. notice of his nar- rative of Paul IV.'s contriv- ances against protestantism in England, ib. i. 341. Mason, William, M. I. i. 117. Mass, doctrine of the, as taught in the Book of the Festival, M. I. i. 215. the judgment of certain German divines con- cerning it, 527. ii. 387. Cran- mer's queries and opinion re- specting it, C. 224. 810. pro- ceedings at St. John's college, Cambridge, respecting its dis- cussion, Ch. 1 1. C. 232. masses still used in St. Paul's, 1550, M. II. i. 338. 371. and in princess Mary's house, 447. mass begun in a church in London, in the reign of queen Mary, III. i. 34. the apostles' mass revived, 181. postil mass also, 188. the strangers' mass INDEX. 93 performed, 213. the sexton's, 2T4, letter of the council to prevent mass in certain houses, G. 472. frequenters of mass, near London, seized, P, II. 365. whether a protestant prince may tolerate mass : both the argument and the answer, A. II. i. 223. ii. 472. another discourse on the same, 474. Massacre of Paris, A. II. i. 225. P. II. 116. the English who fled to their ambassador's house escaped, A. II. i. 225. Wal- singham's message to the king of France upon the massacre, with the answer, 227. his dis- course with him, 228. his pre- tence for this act, P. II. 130. the queen-mother's dissimula- tion concerning the protestants, A. II. i. 228. that they shoidd have liberty of conscience, 229. the cruelties in Lyons, Bour- deaux, and Orleans, ib. brief account of those protestants that fled to Rye from Rouen and Dieppe, IV. 580. de la Motte's account to queen Eli- zabeth of the cause of this ex- ecution, 230. her prudent an- swer, 231. an account of the massacre, taken from a French historian, 235. the numbers killed, ib. the number and cruelty of the cutthroats, 236. the dissimulation previously used, 242. the resentment of these matters in the English court. 244. archbishop Parker's concern at it, P. II. 119. and the alarm of others, 128. 129. sir T. Smith's thoughts upon it, S. 119. copy of the pope's bull for a jubilee in conse- quence, P. III. 197. copy of the account sent into Ger- many, 202. prayers appointed in consequence in England, II. 131. 132. judgment upon the chief actors in the massacre, 133- Massam, James, P. II. 211. III. 235-. Massarime, priory of, Ireland, the Irish to be expelled, and it to be planted with English, S. 132. Masshender, William, chaplain, late canon regular of the order of Premonstre, deprived for being married, M. III. i. 169. Massingberde, Christopher, arch- deacon of Stow, C. 383. Massmongers and conjurers taken in the north, A. II. i, 269. massmongers taken at the Por- tuguese ambassador's, 315. Massy, — a courtier, archbishop Cranmer refuses him a dis- pensation for having married his wife's niece, C. 65. Massy, John, M. I, ii. 470. Massy, Robert, M. II. i. 374. Massy, Thomas, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, ib. Master, Richard, parson of Al- dington, concerned in the im- posture of the Maid of Kent, M. I. i. 278. Master of the horse, temp. Hen- ry VIII. and Edward VI., see sir A. Brown, temp, queen Mary, sir E. Hastings. Master of the rolls, see J. Beau- mont, 1549 — 1551. sir N. Hare, i553— ^557- ««r G- Ge- rard, 1580 — 1593. Masters, Richard, physician to queen Elizabeth, A. II. i. 538. 543. 544. III. i. 40. incorpo- rated at Cambridge, W. I. 45. his paper concerning the causes of diseases, A. IV. 506. a let- ter upon the queen's sickness 94 INDEX. and departure, probably writ- ten by him, 521, Masters, Thomas, presented to the church of Sutton Bingham, A. III. i. 40. a relative of Dr. Masters, the physician, ib. Masters, William, orator to the university of Cambridge, notice of his speech before queen Eli- zabeth at her visit there, A. I. ii. 108. Masters, William, chancellor to bishop Parkhurst, P. II. 82. 83. in a commission against papists in Norfolk, 137. Matchet, — chaplain to archbi- shop Parker, A. II. i. 479. Mather, — executed for design- ing lord Burghley's death, A. II. i. 123. P. II. loi. Matsal, or Mattishal, in Norfolk, Mrs. Parker's legacy to it, P. II. 28 — 31. the parishioners' letter of thanks to archbishop Parker, 3 i. archbishop Parker's benefaction to it, 486. Matthew, Frances, see Frances Barlow. Matthew, sir George, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Matthew, Richard, G. 436. 604. Matthew, Roger, ordained, G. 54- Matthew, Simon, prebendary of St. Paul's, a learned and good man, M. I. i. 265. notice of a sermon on Christian unity, which he preached and printed, ib. one of those commissioned to compose the Institution of a Christian Man, C. 77. Matthew, Thomas, M. I. i. 120. 121. Matthew, Thomas, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parlia- ment of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, 263. Matthew, Thomas, the Bible, so subscribed, printed, 1537, A. II. i. 324. is truly Tyndal's translation, ib. C. 84. 117. a proof of it, A. II. i. 324. this edition reprinted in 1549, 325. and in 1551, M. II. i. 552. Matthew, Toby, P. II. 50. A. II. ii. 530. (as dean of Christ Church, Oxford, Ay. 33.) first of St. John's college, Oxford, then of Christ Church, A. II. i 514. induced to take orders by his cousin, J. Calfhil, I. i. 493. preached a Latin sermon against Campion, P. II. 166. printed, 1638, ib. made a pre- bendary of Wells, A. II. i. 5 14. in a conmiission, as archdea- con of Bath, to visit the dio- cese of Bristol, G. 314. recom- mendeu by archbishop Sandys for the deanery of York, A. II. ii. 252. present, as dean of Christ Church, Oxford, at the convocation of 1580, G. 383. nominated by the council to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. removed from the deanery of Christ Church to that of Durham, A. III. i. 257. chiefly by the interest of lord Burgh- ley, ib. his letter to him, thank- ing him for his counsel upon his going to Durham, II. i. 5 15. III. ii. 266. notice of him, i. 259. dissension between him and archbishop Sandys, ii. 63. preaches bishop Barnes's fu- neral sermon, i. 680. Walsing- ham tries to make him Barnes's successor in the see of Dur- ham, 681. ii. 466. his letter to F. Mills about the state of the see, i. 681. 682. ii. 466. 470. his letter to Walsingham upon the earl of Leicester's efforts INDEX. 95 to have bishop Piers translated to Durham, i. 683. neither succeed, 684. why he declined the see of Durham, when no- minated to it at bishop Hut- ton's death, ib. an endeavour to disseize him of a corps of his deanery, ib. his letter to Walsingham upon a suit be- tween the archbishop of York and the chapter of Durham, 685. his letter to lord Burgh- ley about Scotch affairs, IV. 281. consecrated bishop of Durham, W. II. 333. his let- ter to lord Burghley about his having apprehended lady Ca- tharine Gray, A. IV. 4S0. his account of the conference at Hampton-Court, 1603, W, III. 402. one of the commissioners for the regulation of certain ecclesiastical matters, II. 504. was afterwards archbishop of York, A. II. i.5 14. married Fran- ces Barlow, widow of Matthew Parker, P. I. 571. II. 389. Matthews, see Rogers. Matuta, captain, A. III. ii. 144. Maud, empress, daughter of Henry I., S. 193. used to re- tire to Havering Bower, Es- sex, A. II. i. 316. Henry I. made the clergy and nobility swear to her succession, ii. 437. was queen of England de jure, though not de facto, ib. Ste- phen usurped the throne from her, 654. was married first to the emperor, and afterwards to Jeffery Plantagenet, earl of Anjou, 653. Maude, Bernard, servant to arch- bishop Sandys, A. II. ii. 165. in a plot against him, III. i. 142. ii. 220. i. 15c. 154. 155. the archbishop's answer to his accusations, ii. 224. Maunder, — one of the leaders of the rebellion in the west, M. II. i. 281. Maurice, coimt, A. III. ii. 25. 365. chief over affairs in Hol- land, i. 308. ii. 274. Mauvesier, see Malvesier. Mauxel, see Manxel. Maxey, William, M. III. ii. 392. Maxfield, Humphrey, a seminary scholar at Rome and Rheims, A. III. i. 611. 612. Maximilian, II., emperor, A. II. i- 365- ?>(>T- S. 251. 252. one of the confederacy of popish princes, 1567, A. I. ii. 244. Maximus Monachus, his Asce- ticum, translated into Latin, by Cheke, Ch. 171. Maxwel, — M. I. i. 116. Maxwel, John, A. I. ii. 209. warden of the west marches, in a commission for a treaty for the marches between Eng- land and Scotland, 104. Maxwel, Robert, lord, a pass through England refused him by the council, M. II. i. 365. Maxwel, lord, A. III. i. 441. Maxwell, — A. III. ii. 549. May, — P. II. 434. May, Alice, married to R. Bur- ton, A. II. ii. 57. May, Anne, married to R. Pil- kington, A. II. ii. 57. May, Dorothy, A. II. ii.57. May, Elizabeth, married to J. Tedcastel, A. I. i. 306. May, Elizabeth, married to R. Bird, A. II. ii. 57. May, Fortunata, A. II. ii. 57. May, Frances, A. II. ii. 57. May, George, alderman of Can- terbury, A. I. i. 66. May, H., fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, ordained, M. li. i. 4C2. May, Henry, A. II. ii. 57. May, Dr. John, A. I. ii. 107. VV. III. 18. 1.47. III. 27. 1.94. 96 INDEX. A. II. ii. 39. brother of Wil- liam May, P. I. 177.. elected master of Catharine-hall, Cam- bridge, ib. he, Parker, and Redman, appointed to inquire into the state of all the colleges, 30. 31. he and Parker appoint- ed to frame new statutes for Corpus Christi college,5 36. one of theLent preachers, 1565, III. 135. one of the commissioners to visit King's college, Cam- bridge, W. I. 33. concerned in reforming the university sta- tutes, III. 171. I. 38. P. II. 175. III. 221. vice-chancellor of Cambridge, A. III. i. 375. 376. P. II. 37. 38. archdeacon ofEastRiding, G. 279. interest made to get him a bishopric, A. II. ii. 52. 53. made bishop of Carhsle through the earl of Shrewsbury's interest, 55. in a commission to visit the church of Durham, 169. his coat of armour and family, 56. 57. his death and inscription, 57. IV. 446. May, John, of Shouldham abbey, Norfolk, son of bishop May, married Cordela Bowes, A. II. ii. 57. his offspring, ib. May, John, son of the preced- ing, A. II. ii. 57. May, John, in a commission to visit Merton college, Oxford, P. I. 232. May, INIargaret, married to R. Fawcet, A. II. ii. 57. May, Stephen, A. II. ii. 57. May, William, C. 261. M. II. i. 339. C. 319. 439. 445. S. 46. A.I. i. 228. P. I. 109. 110. G. 50. A. II. ii. 57. archbishop Cranmer's commissary in a vi- sitation of the see of Norwich, C. 41. one of those commis- sioned to compose the Institu- tion of a Christian Man, 77. in two commissions to reform the ecclesiastical laws, C. 192. 388. M. II. i. 531. ii. 206. P. II. 62. as dean of St. Paul's, one of the royal visitors, 1547, C. 209. present at the convo- cation of 1547, 221. in the commission for framing a book of common prayer, M. II. i. 134. in another to visit Eton college, ii. 9. in another to examine the executors of sir W. Bowyer, 6t. 210. in a commission against anabap~ tists, 254. S. 37. M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. in another for trial of bishop Boner, C. 269. M. III. i. 36. one of the royal visitors for the university of Cam- bridge, C. 290. G. 6. Ch. 40. in a commission to assist the lord keeper, M. II. i. 521. ii. 207. deprived, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 75. lived ob- scurely, ib. restored to the deanery, temp, queen Eliza- beth, P. I. 128. A. I. i. 287. one of the royal visitors for Cambridge and Eton, P. I. 86. A. I. i. 248. archbishop of York, elect, but died before his consecration, S. 56. A. I. i. 230. 306. P. I. 171. G. 56. bishop Grindal preaches his funeral sermon, 56. Mayer, J., of Jesus college, Cam- bridge, ordained, G. 53. Mayfield, manor of, Sussex, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, C. 403. 910. M. II. i. 119. May-game, notice of, M. III. i. 347. ii. 6. Maynard, John, sheriff of Lon- don, his burial, M. III. ii. 20. Maynard, — P. II. 432. Maynard, John de, St. Alban, one of those members who absented themselves from the first parliament of queen Mary, INDEX. 97 M. III. i. 263. indicted in con- sequence, ib. Maynard, William, a gospel preacher, M. III. i. 401. see Mainard. Mayne, Cuthbert, a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 494. r. II. 134- Mayne, Thomas, printer, printed The Unfolding of Sundry Un- truths, &c., A. III. i. 99. see Maine. Mayne, Little, Dorset, free cha- pel there bought of the crown by T. Boxley and R. Reve, M. II. ii. 408. Mayor, James, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. II. i. 451. Mayors, two leaders in the rebel- lion in the west, M. II, i. 281. Maysmore, manor and advowson of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Meade, — A. II. ii. 547. Measures, sir T. Smith's com- parison of English with Ro- man, S. 272. Meat, prices of, regulated, M. II. i. 588. Meath, William Brabazon, earl of. Ay. 115. Meath, bishop of, see W. Walsh, 1554—1563- H. Brady, 1563 — 1584. T. Jones, 1584 — 1605. Medbiirn, manor of, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharing- ton, M. II. i. 192. Mede, Joseph, A. I. i. 528. Medici, Catharine de, A. IV. 610. Medina, duke of, commander of the Spanish Armada, A. III. ii. II. 549. 550. 47. 551.591. IV. 39'- 392. 442. VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. Medina, Celi, duke of, a com- missioner about a treaty be- tween the emperor and French king, M. III. i. 346. high cha- racter of him, ii. 341- Medle, George, A. I. ii. 289. Medley, William, A. III. ii. 72. his project for transnmting iron into copper, II. i. 520. 521. 522. ii. 555- 557- SS'^- '« »•"'»- ed in consequence, S. 105. Medley, manor of, Oxford, an- nexed to the see of Oxford, M. II. i. 120. Medolph, fellow of Trinity col- lege, Cambridge, called to ac- count for some opinions, A. III. i. 71. lord Burghley's letter against his being deprived of his fellowship, 72. Medwel, John, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450- Medwinus, he and Elvanus sent into England by pope Eleu- therius, to convert king Lucius to Christianity, P. I. 467. II. 219. III. 247. Meek, — bailiff of Yarmouth, A. IL i. 467. Meggis, Thomas, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9- Meggs, Edward, A. II. ii. 582. 588. Meggs, Thomas, A. II. i. 54S. 549- Meilleiir, le, a French spy, S. 85- Meines, John, canon of Canter- bury, C. 159. Melancthoi% Philip, C. 340. 362. 5 1 8. 5 74. A. I. i. 240. 498. II. ii. 103. 147. 148. present at the diet of Augsburgh, C. 581. his works prohibited in Eng- land, 1534, M. I. i. 254. hia opinion of the English ambas- sadors at Smalcald, 351. his II 98 INDEX. judgment of the divorce of Henry VIII., 355. inclined to own the pope's sujjreniacy, 354. Henry VIH. endeavours to prevent his going into France to confer with the French king, ib. the king's opinion of him, ib. who sends for him, 357. the king's letter to him, ib. his letter to Henry VIII., 507. ii. 383. another, i. 511. ii. 393. part of his letter to Edward VI. on the reforma- tion, II. i. 188. sent for by Edward VI. to succeed Bucer as lecturer in divinity at Cam- bridge, but is prevented com- ing over by the king's death, 383. ii. 76. the city of Wit- tenburgh with him blamed by some for admitting the interi- mistical and adlaphorical doc- trine, Ch. 52. composed the Instauratio Ecclesianim, &c. with Bucer, C. 412. M. II. i. 42. interceded for the English refugees at Wesel, C. 507. sends a book to archbishop Cranmer, 577. the deference he had for the archbishop, 578. recommends Aless to the arch- bishop, 577. 578. four others reccnunended also by him to the archbishop, 579. divers me- morable passages between him and archbishop Cranmer, 582. — 587. approves of Cranmer's scheme of a general confession of faith for all protestant churches, 585, his advice as to ambiguous expressions, i6. 586. his death, A. I. i. 350. his opin- ion respecting the corporal pre- sence in the sacrament, 351. his endeavour for a union among the protestant churches, ib. in favour of episcopacy, ib. his monumental inscription, 352. his works prohibited as heretical, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 418. Feckenham's censure of him, A. I. i. no. ii. 43 1 . a tract of his published in England in a volume of learn- ed foreigners' judgments of the ecclesiastical habits, 1 74. P. I. 441. bishop Aylmer's charac- ter of him. Ay. 159. Melford, Suffolk, the manor of Bowerhall belonging to Mills chantry there, bought of the crown by sir T. Paston, M. II. ii. 408. a hospital founded there by sir W. Cordel, P. I. 46. Melhews, John, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, 263. Melito, A. I. i. 426. Melius inquirendum. Dr. Drury's propositions to abp. Whit- gift for his preventing a com- mission of, A. III. i. 333. Melleroy, — governor of Nor- mandy, A. II. ii. 18. Mellye, Roper, secretary to the earl of Bedford, A. IV. 488. Melvil, sir James, A. II. i. 196. Melvil, sir Robert, sent in an embassy to England, A. II. i. 195. 196. Melvin, — his lamentations and words to Mary queen of Scots at her execution, A. III. i. 559. her answer to him, ib. Melvin, John, a Scot and preacher, sent to Newgate for his religion, temp, queen Ma- ry, M. III. i. 77. Mendoza, Bernardine de, A. III. i- 375- 554- "• 402. 20. 21. 76. 585. 140. Spanish ambas- sador detected in conspiracies against queen Elizabeth, and sent out of the country, i. 228. 314, 358. the queen's declara- INDEX. 99 tlon upon sending him away, ii. 241. his unwelcome coming to France, i. 316. ambassador there, 554. 606. spreads re- ports that the Spanish armada was victorious, ii. 33. 139. see Copy. Menir, Nicholas du, a French minister, fled his country from persecution, pensioned by Ed- ward VI,, M. II. i. 497. ii. 220. Menius, Eusebius, son of Justus, Melancthon recommends him to archbishop Cranmer, C.580. Menius, Justus, notice of, C. 580. Mennel, Robert, sergeant-at-law, one of Edward VI. 's council in the north, M. II. ii. 161. Mentaly, Alexander, A. IV. 571. Mentz, bishop of, A. I. ii. 56. Menvile, Vivian, C. 414. M. II. ii. 21. 22. Merbury, Charles, notice of his Discourse of Royal Monarchy, A. III. i. 104. some account of him, 105, Mercers' chapel the same as the church of St. Thomas of Aeon, M. III. i. j6o. A. IV. 570. Merchants of the Stilyard, or, of the Haimse, put down, M. II. i. 518. Merchants, English, oppressed at Antwerp, M. II. i, 602. 603. 604. Merchant tailors' procession, M. III. i. 360. Merchant tailors' feast, M. III. ii. 9. 16. Merchant tailors' school, the pre- mises formerly belonged to the duke of Buckingham, and were called the manor of the Rose, M. III. i. 225. Mercury is not made of every ivood, a proverb, S. 238. Merden, advowson of, Kent, an- nexed to the see of Canterbury by queen Mary, M. Ill, ii. 121. Mere, Wilts, Barkeley's chantry there bought of the crown by sir J. Thynne and L. Hyde,M. II. ii. 406. Mere, John, beadle to the uni- versity of Cambridge, P. I. 35. II. 481. see Edmunds. Meredith, — a popish priest, ap- prehended. Ay. 23. Meredith, Jonas, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Meredith, William, A. III. ii. 38. Meres, Anthony, M. III. i. 483. ii. 390. Merick, — curate of Aldington, W. I. 281. Merick, (IMeyrall, or Merril,) Edmund, archdeacon of Ban- gor, G. 318. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes in the convocation of 1562. against the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. had a living in the diocese of St. Asaph, II. ii. 526. III. ii. 472. residen- tiary of Litchfield, i. 591. 592. W. I. 244. in a commission to visit the diocese of Litchfield and Coventry, W. I. 244. and that of St. Asaph, 411. Merick, sir Gilly, son of the bi- shop, came to an untimely death, by being in the business of the earl of Essex, C. 262. Merick, John, consecrated bishop of Sodor and Man, G. 313. his letter to lord Burghlcy complaining of being charged above his ability, A. IV. 18. Merick, Blary, A. II. ii. 211. Merick, Rowland, present at the convocation of 1547^ t'. 232. canon of St. David's, 262. he lOO INDEX. and Young spoiled the cathe- dral, when acting as commis- saries, ib. M. III. i. 424. a com- missary for the vacant see of Bangor, C. 385. in the confede- racy against bp. Ferrar, M. III. ii. 355. 362. in a commission to visit certain dioceses, A. I. i. 248. consecrated bishop of Bangor, 230. 232. G. 49. P. I. 124. 126. III. 283. ordains, A. I. i. 234. P. I. 129. has a commission to visit his dio- cese metropolitically, 152. sub- scribes, as a member of con- vocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 487. Merick, William, abp. Whitgift's vicar-general, W. I. 244. see Meyrick and Myrrick. Meringe, sir William, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182.' Meriwether, Joanna, C. 145. Meron, Robert, A. IV. 572. Merril, see Merick. Merry, — A. IV. 307. see Mery. Mershe, John, an ecclesiastical commissioner, P. III. 184. see March and Marsh. Merton college, Oxford, visited by the king's visitors, 1535, M. I. i. 323. an act for the corporation of, passed, 1553, III. i. 84. visited, P. I. 228. articles of inquiry, ib, the re- sult, 230. character of the col- lege, 498. a suit refused to it by archbishop Parker, 499. certain controversies there de- cided by him, 500. a party formed against him there, ib. his treatment of it, 501. dis- ~ pute respecting a fellowship being vacant settled by arch- bishop Grindal, G. 370. visited by the archbishop, 396. Mervin, — A. III. i. 482. Mervyn, Thomas, porter to Hen- ry VIII., M. II. ii. 299, pre- sent at his funeral, ib. Mery, Agnes, M. III. ii. 404. see Merry. Meryl, William, M. II. i. 368. Meryng, — M. III. i. 223. Meschines, William de, erected a priory at St. Bee's, G. 432. Messengers, proclamation against such as took upon themselves to be so, A. IV. 396. Metcalf, — a papist, A. I. i. 416. ii. 366. Metcalf, Gregory, ordained, G. 58. Metcalf, Nicholas, master of St. John's college, Cambridge, pa- tronises Ascham notwithstand- ing his apparent conduct to the contrary, M. I. i. 260. 261. Metcalf, Robert, bought lands in North AUerton that belonged to the see of Durham, A. II. ii. 529- 530- Metham, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Metham, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 660. Metham, lady, a recusant, A. III. i'- 597- Metre, Petro de, A. I\. 571. Mettingham, John de, A. IV. 329- Mettingham, advowson of, grant- ed by Edward VI. to lady Denny, M. II. ii. 233. had be- longed to the duke of Norfolk, ib. Meurick, see Merick. Meverel, — proclaimed a traitor, M. III. i.487. Mewtas, sir Peter, M. II. i. 359. A. I. i. 65. present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 8. Mevnil, — A. II. ii. 616. INDEX. lOI Meyrel, see Merick. Meyric, Dr., chaplain to the earl of Essex, A. IV. 341. that earl's letters for preferment for him, 34T. 342. see Merick and Meurick. Mezzy, M. de, one of the French king's council, A. IV. 456. .457- Miche, — a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. see Mitche. Michel, Alice, imprisoned for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 56. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Michel, John, printer, printed Beck's translation of two dia- logues of Erasmus, M. II. i. 313. see Mitchel. Micronius, Martin, M, II, i. 378. Middlemore, Henry, A. I. i. 42. Middlemore, Humphrey, execut- ed for denying the king's su- premacy, M. I. i. 305. Middlesex, archdeacon of, see A. Squire. Middleton, — burnt as an here- tic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. }' 356. Middleton, Anthony, A. I. ii. 366. Middleton, Humphrey, a teacher of a sect in Kent, M. II. i. 570. Middleton, Margaret, a papist, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Middleton, Marmaduke, bisliop of Waterford, confirmed bishop of St. David's, G. 401. A. III. i. 247. visits his diocese, ib. his unfavourable account of it, ib. signs certain articles agreed upon by the bishops for the regulation of the church, W. I. 232, assists at the consecra- tion of bishop Wickham, 409. his controversy with sir J. Per- rot about the stewardship of his courts, A. III. i. 584. sus- pended, W. II. 147. his death, ib. Middleton, Richard, appointed one of the governors of Ed- ward VI. 's grammar school at Sedbergh, M. II. ii. 280. Middleton, Robert, M. III. ii.405. Middleton in Lancashire, a school founded there by Nowel, dean of St. Paul's, A. II. i. 353. and endowed by him with certain scholarships at Brazen-nose col- lege, Oxford, 353. 354. Middleton Cheny, manor of, Northamptonshire, bought of the crown by archbishop Cran- mer for his see, C. 403. 910. Midgely, — vicar of Ratchdale, A'^ li. ii. 548. Midley, advowson of, Kent, given in exchange by lord Windsor to the see of Canterbury, C. 261. Mid wives, dangerous practice of, A. I. ii. 242. Milan, Philip, viscount of, mar- ried the wife of Fantino Cane, S. 190. what possessions he obtained by her, ib. Milan, dukedom of, to be restor- ed to the French king, one of the articles of the popish league, A. I. ii. 245. Milborn Beck, manor of, Dorset, taken in exchange by the crown from the college of Eton, M. II. i. 119. S. 1^68. Mildapet, Francis, defended Ra- ni us's Unica Methodus against W. Digby, A. II, ii. 405. Mildenhal, manor of, Wilts, granted by Edward VI. to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 538. Mildmay, Henry, in a comnns- sion for taking the value of the first-fruits and tenths in Lon- don, M. I. i. 426. Mildmay, John, he and William "3 102 INDEX. bought of t!ie crown Coggeshal clumtry in Great Badow, Es- sex, M. II. ii. 403. Milclniay, Thomas, one of the royal visitors to take surren- ders of the religious houses, M. I. i. 404. in a commission for examination of the officers of the treasuries, II. ii. 209. in another to inquire into lead, plate, bell-metal, &c. of the dissolved religious houses, 210. auditor of certain of Edward VI. 's revenues, 234. one of the governors of Edward VI. 's grammar school at Chelms- ford, 279. a magistrate in Es- sex, III. i, 440. a persecutor of protestants, temp, queen Mary, ib. under treasurer to the queen, ii. 19. he and his wife buried, ib. Mildmay, Thomas, A. II. i. 124. M. I. i. 36. high sheriff of Essex, 38. 63. an eminent courtier, ii, 349. instrumental in making Essex well affected in religion,. ii. his proposal for a register of all strangers com- ing into the realm, IV. 296. why hitherto refused, ib. Mildmay, sir Walter, M. III. i. 279. 'a. I. ii. 304. 363. 581. W. I. 60. G. 270. A. II. i. 339. 354- 477- ii. 91- 311- 667. P. III. 137. A. III. i. 76. 300. he and two others in a commis- sion to hear and determine all accounts of the king's mints, M. II. i. 425. examined the articles for the establishment of a mint at York, 518. in a commission for sale of the king's lands, ii. 32. in another for survey of the king's courts, 207. 247. in another for exa- mination of the officers of the treasuries, 209. in another to inquire into the lead, plate. bell-metal, &c. of the dissolv- ed religious houses, 210. in another for collection of church stuff, ib. appointed one of the governors of Edward VI.'s grammar school at Chelms- ford, 279. employed by Cjueeu Elizabeth to examine into her revenue, having long belonged to the augmentations, A. I. i. 18. in a commission to under- stand what lands had been granted from the crown in queen Mary's reign, 19. 36. in another to audit the accounts of the vice-treasurer of Ireland, 21. in another to survey the office of the treasury of the chamber, 35. in another for exchanges of bishops' lands, 149. lived in St. Bartholo- mew's, London, G. 94, in a commission for repayment of loans, A. II. i. 152. a friend of Walsingham, 154. married his sister, ii. 91. one of the Eng- lish commissioners to treat with those from France about Mary queen of Scots, i. 199, III. i. 112. 113. chancellor of the exchequer, II. i. 331. ii. 709. a great friend of bishop Parkhurst, 510. in a commis- sion to examine into the cir- cumstance of mass being dis- turbed at the Portuguese am- bassador's house, 24. 26. he and the lord treasurer appoint- ed to examine lord Vaux and sir T. Tresham, entertainers of Campion, III. i. 180. a matter respecting the revenues of the cathedral of Norwich referred to him and the lord treasurer, 492. ii. 57. 59. under trea- surer, II. ii. 709. a privy coun- sellor, 317. 707, signed various orders as such, I. ii. 558. P. I. 561. II. 361. G. 370. INDEX. 103 Mild may, William, see John Mild- may. Miklmay, ( — Walsingham,) lady, A. II. ii. 91. Mildmays, the, A. II, ii. 499. Miles, — P. II. 434. Miles, widow, C. 456. Millain, — of Christ's college, Cambridge, disaffected to the constitution of the church, A. II. i. 278. heads of his sedi- tious doctrine, W. I. 98. III. 27. expelled the university, I. 99. Miller, alias Fawkener, John, M. III. ii. 409. 410. Miller, Peter, A. IV. 574. Millers, — preacher at St. An- drew's Undershaft, London, A. IV. 244. Millet, J., A. I. i. 253. Millicent, John, recommended as burgess for Yarmouth, C. 494. Millington, William, born at Pockington, Yorkshire, A. II. ii. 309. elected from Clare-hall by Henry VI. to be the first provost of King's college, ih. Mills, — A. I. ii. 298. Mills, Francis, A. III. i. 681. ii. 471. IV. 233. Mills, John, M. II. ii. 248. Mills, John, canon of Canter- bury, C. 146. 159. 160. 777. 471. M. III. i. 478. P.I. 103. 144. in a commission against heretics, M. III. ii. 1 20. Milton, manor of, Kent, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, P. I. 1 60. had formerly belonged to the crown, ib. Minehead, parsonage of, Somer- set, a lease for twenty-one years granted to J. Belmain, Ch. 35- Mines, see Cumberland and De- vonshire. Minge, — his puritanical opin- ions, W. I. 245. is suspended, 249. intercession made in his behalf, 271. Minister, origin of the use of this term, P. I. 127. Ministers, proposals for certain reformations respecting, A. I. i. 312. articles to be subscrib- ed by them, 323. declaration of faith to be read by them, 325. proposals in the convocation of 1562. of an act for the relief of poor ministers, 513. an act to reform certain disorders in ministers, II. i. 104. petition of the house of commons re- specting the ordination of min- isters, with the answers to the articles, W. I. 187. III. 47. a schedule of conformists and nonconformists in the province of Canterbury, 1584, 99. no- tice of Sampson's Supplication to the Queen and Parliament for a learned Ministry, A. III. i. 320. the thirty-four arti- cles into which it is digested, ii. 278. petition to parliament for ecclesiastical causes, &c., i. 319.321. the bishops' answer to this petition of sixteen arti- cles, ii. 302. orders for, made for ministers, in the convoca- tion, 1585, W. I. 400. re- formation of certain things respecting ministers proposed by the convocation, 1586, G. 591. a note of divers incestuous and unlawful marriages made by vagrant ministers, W. III. 378. see Clergy. Minn, Nicholas, his case of mar- riage brought before bishop Parkhurst, X. II. i. 168. 170. Minories, a nunnery without Aid- gate so called, the residence of bishop Knight, M. II. ii. 168. granted to the duke of Suffolk, 229. II 4 I04 INDEX. Minors, Richard, a magistrate of Herefordshire, A. III. ii. 454. thought to favour recusants, ib. Minstrew Well, manor of, Oxon, given in exchange by the crown to Dudley duke of Northum- berland, M, III. i. 42. Mint, established at York, 155 1, M. II. i. 518. Mint, visited by queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 403. Miracle, a pretended one, detect- ed, C. 1 26. a pretended weeping crucifix, P. I. 90. 91. Mirfeld, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Mirfin, — A. III. i. 202 — 206. Misrule, a lord of, M. III. ii. 24. Missenden, Jane, a nun, divorced for being married, M. III. i. 485. ii. 408. Missenden, monastery of, Bucks, granted by Edward VI. to princess Elizabeth, M. II. i. 366. lately in the occupation of R. Greenway, ib. Mitche, Richard, a commission to admit him advocate of the court of arches, P. I. 87. see Miche. Mitchel, — a seminary priest, A. IV. 261. Mitchel, — secretary to lord Burghley, A. IV. 485. Mitchel, Humphrey, S. 158. Mitchel, Ralph, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parlia- ment of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. Mitchel, Robert, constable of Tournay, M. I. ii. 12. Mitchel, Thomas, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. see Michel. Mitton, sir Adam, one of the council in the marches of Wales, M. II. ii. 162. Moccully, vicarage of, Ireland, given by Edward VI. as part of the endowment of the col- lege he founded in Galwav, M. II. i. 463. Mocket, Timothy, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53- II. i. 495. ii. 549. IV. 229. notice of him, IV. 230. 390. Mockyng, manor of, Essex, given in exchange by the crown to the dean and chapter of St. Paul's, M. II. i. 120. Modetj Herman, one of the min- isters of the Dutch congrega- tion at Norwich, A, II. ii. 205. Modrevius, Fric, a learned no- bleman of Poland, quoted, P. I. pre/, ix. Modye, Richard, he and T. Bart- let bought of the crown cer- tain tenements in Fetter-lane, M. II. ii. 404, Mokgile, James, one of the Scotch commissioners to treat about the liberation of Mary queen of Scots, A. I. ii. 384, Molend, Richard, M. I. ii. 253. Molend, Roger de, archbishop of Litchfield and Coventry, has a coadjutor appointed for him, being old, by archbishop Peck- ham, P. III. 177. Molesworth, Anthony, entertain- ed by the king of Spain, A. II. "• 55°- Molevery, sir Edmund, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Molineux, — Ulster king of arms, Ay. 215. Molineux, Alice, Anne, and Jane, daughters of sir Richard, swear to the pope's supremacy, A. I. ii. 260. Molineux, sir Edmund, made a knight of the bath at Ed- ward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 36. one of that king's coun- INDEX. 105 cil in the north, ii. 162. a ser- geant at law, ib. Molineux, John, son of sir Ri- chard, swears to the pope's su- premacy, A. I. ii. 260. Molineux, (Molines,) sir Richard, M. III. ii. 92. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen INIary's coronation, 182. swears to the pope's supremacy, A. I. ii. 259. 260. Molins, Adam, bishop of Chi- chester, Henry VI. 's charter to him for wrecks on the coast of Sussex, A. II. ii. 418. Molins, John, fellow of Magda- len college, he and others ex- pelled by bishop Gardiner, M. III. i. 82. afterwards an exile for religion, ib. Molins, see Mulllns. Molinus, an exile from Spain for religion, G. 160. 497. applies to bishop Grindal in a case of danger, ih. MoUerus, Henricus, A. II. ii. 375- Mollin, John, swears to the pope's supremacy, A. I. ii. 260. Molso, Ann, married to T. Loud, M. I. i. 536. Molso, sir Edmund, M. I. i. 536. Molso, Bennet, M. I. i. 537. Molton, South, advowson of, De- von, given in exchange by the crovv'n to the dean and chapter of Windsor, M. II. i. i 20. Momory, — A. II. i. 365. Momperson, — A. IV. 140. Monasteries dissolved for cardinal Wolsey's college at Oxford, M. I. i. 169.11. 132. others dissolv- ed for his college at Ipswich, i. 170. visited, 318. rules for the visitors, 319. the continuance of the monasteries promised by the king, 320. ii. 2 14. the vi- sitors' reports of their irregula- rities, C. 51. Thomas's and Noel's statement of their de- pravities, M. I. i.385. account of the visitation and dissolu- tion of various monasteries, 388 — 427. reasons why the continuance of some was de- sired by many, 399. compensa- tion made to the discharged monks and friars, 402. various suitors for the revenues of the monasteries, 405. some mo- nasteries question the author- ity of the visitors, 415. deli- beration about suppression of abbeys, 417. an opinion "on the subject, probably drawn up by Cox, ib. a project for increas- ing the king's revenues out of those of the church, 422. how Cranmer and other bishops wished the property of monas- teries to be applied, C. 103. the greater monasteries dissolved, 1539, M.I. i. 532. liked by the common people for their hos- pitality, ib. what inducement was held out to make the peo- ple satisfied with their dis- solution, 531. 533. the evil of monasteries set forth in the homily of Good Works, 533. the monks' ill behaviour, 535. revenues of monasteries and chantries abused, as stat- ed by Lever, II. i. 409. reckon- ed by papists beneficial to the dead to be laid within the walls of a monastery, III. ii. 26. see Abbeys. Monberneau, M. a Frenchman, his bad character, A. II. ii. 324. to dance in Monberneau's breeches, a proverb, ib. Moncada, don Hugo de, a cap- tain in the Spanish armada, killed in battle, A. III. ii. 544- 34- Monday, Anthony, sometmie of the English college at Rome, io5 INDEX. A. II. ii. 355. turns protestant, ib. discovers the names of the pope's factors, ib. notice of his English Roman Life, ib. III. i. 95. publishes bishop Home's translation of two sermons of Calvin in exile, II. ii. 376. no- tice of his Discovery of Cam- pion, III. i. 95. Monetarius, an heretic, would have all the world to be go- verned by the judicial law of Moses, W. III. 393. Money ; the practice of borrowing it of foreign merchants begun by Henry VIII., M. II. i. 547. Money, reduced to its true value by queen Elizabeth, 1561, A. I. i. 395. the several gold and silver pieces then current, and their values, 397. sir T. Smith's discourse on money, S. 165. 268. see Coin. Monies coined in Dublin, M. II. i. 600. Monford, Thomas, P. III. 265. W. II. T45. appointed by arch- bishop Whitgift to preach at the dedication of the hospital founded by the archbishop at Croydon, 418. absolved from his suspension for having ille- gally married the earl of Hert- ford, 453. Monger, John, ordained, G. 53. Mongey, Mrs., sister of bishop Boner, C. 298. Moning, John, lieutenant of Do- ver castle, married Jane Cran- mer, C. 602. Monins, Alice, mother of archbi- shop Parker, P. I. 6. Monins, Thomas, patron of the living of Charleton, Kent, W, II. 461. Monins, William, several times knight of the shire for Nor- folk, P. I. 6. Monins, sir William, P. I. 7. Monins, or Monings, some ac- count of the family of, P. I. 6. 7. II. 466. Monkery, opinion of the Ger- mans respecting, M. I. i. 528. Monluc, — A. II. ii. 508. go- vernor of Guien, I. ii. 93. Monmouth, Elizabeth and Grace, M. I. ii. 370. Monmouth, Humphrey, some ac- count of, M. I. i. 487. favours Luther's opinions, ib. gives pe- cuniary aid towards translat- ing and printing the scriptures, 488. a benefactor to various individuals, ib. committed for heresy, ib. articles ministered against him, ib. his petition to the coimcil, 491. ii. 363. his last will, i. 492. ii. 368. Monmouth, Margaret, M. I. ii. 370- Monnes, John, provost of all the moneyers of the mint, M. II. 1.5 18. Monnington, advowson of, an- nexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Monona, Francisco de, A. III. ii, H3- Monona, John Antonio de, A. III. ii. T43. Monoux, sir George, alderman of London, endowed a free school and hospital atWaltham- stow, C. 70. his benefactions to the parish and church, ib. Monoux, Thomas, son of the preceding, C. 70. Monpensier, M. de, A. II. ii. 18. Monpensier, duke of, A. III. i. 309. 310. ii. 276. Monsieur, see duke of Anjou. Monson, R., an ecclesiastical commissioner, P. II. 69, Monster, born at Middleton Stony, M. II. i. 587. INDEX. 107 Montacute, Montague, see Moun- tague. Montanus, Reginald Gonsalvo, a translation of his History of the Inquisition of Spain published by V. Skinner, A. I. ii. 305. Monte, cardinal de, how far con- cerned about Henry VIII. 's divorce, M. I. i. 146. 153. ii. 80. 82. 96. Monteagle, — Stanley, lord, A. II. ii. 616. one of the noble- men appointed to attend queen Elizabeth at her coming to London, I. ii. 391. dissented at first from the bill in parlia- ment for consecration of bi- shops to be good, 230. Monteagle, — Stanley, lord, A. II. ii. 445. Montesiaston, bishop of, A. IV. 148. Montfurth, see Mornford. Montgomery, count, lieutenant to the admiral at Caen, A. I. i. 550. a protestant French noble, II. i. 176. driven from Belle Isle, ii. 506. fled into England after the massacre at Paris, P. II. 230. 231. Montgomery, lord, married the daue;hter of lord Brabazon, Ay.^115. Montgomery, Philip Herbert, earl of, married Susan de Vere, A. III. i. 85. Montgomery, Robert, archbishop of Glasgow, A. Ill, i. 374. one of the lords of the articles, 440. Month's Mind, what, M. II. i. 496. Montmorency, Anna, duke of, constable of France, M. II. i. 255. 358. in a commission to draw up articles of marriage between Edward VI. and the French king's daughter, 477. in another for a treaty between the emperor and French king. III. i. 346. Montmorency, M., son of the preceding, one of the French hostages sent to England, M. II. i. 358. Montmorency, Jean de, one of the ambassadors sent by the emperor, Charles V., about the marriage of queen Mary with his son Philip, M. III. i. 90. Montmorency, Francis, duke mar- shal, French ambassador in England, A. I. i. 285. II. i. 52. S. 108. in a commission for a treaty between England and France, A. II. i. 211. sent to England to sign the league, 214. his reception, ib. the king of Navarre takes arms against him and marshal Byron, ii. 320. 669. III. i. i6. a catho- lic, 574. urges the king of Navarre to make peace with the house of Guise, ih. Montpensier, see Monpensler. Montrose, John Graham, earl of, A. II. ii. 672. one of James VI.'s counsellors, 325. his cha- racter, ib. in confinement at Kinsaile, III. i. 441. Monuments, notice of queen E- lizabeth's proclamation for their preservation, A. I. i. 279. W. II. C. 168. — A. III. i. 67,y. 345- Christopher, M. II. ii. Moor Moor, 341- Moor, 117. Moor, John, vicar of St. Giles's, London, M. III. i. 578. Moor, Thomas, de Hambleton, Bucks, one of those members who absented themselves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. indicted in consequence, ib. Moor, William, one of those members who absented them- io8 INDEX. selves from the first parlia- ment of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, 263. Moore, — P. II. 432. Moore, — minister of St. An- drew's, Norwich, a learned man, stuck at wearing the sur- plice, P. II. 340. bishop Park- hurst's favourable character of him, ib. confutes a sermon of Dr. Perne, A. II. i. 41 7. 418. Moore, Francis, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. went to Spain to sue for a pension, I. ii. 54. II. i. 495. Moore, George, went to Spain to sue for, a pension, A. 1. ii. 54. II. i. 495. Moore, John, bishop of Ely, A. III. i. pre/, viii. IV. 549. made a large collection of MSS. which were referred to by Strype, M. I. i. pre/, xi. had a copy of the form of prayers of the English church at Geneva, P. I. 479. and of Barker's edi- tion of the Geneva Bible, 1578, A. II. ii. 211. and a volume of original letters from lord Burgh- ley to his son, sir R. Cecil, now in the Cambridge library, IV. 480. see More. Mope, a name assumed by C. Paget, A. III. i. 314. Moptyde, Laurence, master of Bene't college, Cambridge, P. I. 64. III. 21. Morant, — burnt for heresy, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 6. Morby, Lincolnshire, property there passed from the see of Carlisle to lord Clinton, M. II. i- 363- Morchard Bishop, advowson of, received in exchange from lord Darcy by Edward VI., M. II. . ii. 234. Mordaunt, John lord, in a com- mission to inquire into a dearth, M. II. i. 494. ii. 206. Mordaunt, sir John, one of queen Mary's council, M. III. ii. 160. 414. put aside by queen Eliza- beth, 160. Mordaunt, lord, one of the lords who at first dissented from the bill in parliament for conse- cration of bishops to be good, A, I. ii. 230. Mordaunt, sir Lewis, A. IV. 575- Mordaunt, lady, attended queen Mary at her coronation. M. m.i.54. Mordaunts, the. Ay. 115. Morden, — of Peter- house col- lege, Cambridge, declaims a- gainst Monsieur, A. III. i. 69. 70. Morden, John, M. III. ii. 400. More, — an harbourer of Cam- pion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 359. More, — P. II. 358. More, — A. III. i. 744. More, Edmund, M. III. ii. 391. More, George, a Romanist, no- tice of, W. II. 367. his letter to lord Burghley for toleration in religion, 368. More, Hugh, of Gray's Inn, ex- ecuted for being reconciled to the see of Rome, A. IV. 275. More, John, M. I. ii. 144. More, John, probably a suffragan, imprisoned, temp, queen Ma- ry, M. III. i, 353. had the liv- ing of Chuddon Fitzpain, in the next reign, ib. More, John, M. III. ii. 398. More, John, a favourer of Cart- wright, A. II. i. 2. ii. 417. More, Margaret, M. I. ii. 144. More, Margaret, daughter of sir Thomas, notice of her learn- ing, P. I. 357. INDEX. 109 More, sir Thomas, C. 370. 577, 660. M. I. i. 621. II. ii. 67. A. III. i. 92. 566. IV. 604. P. I. 12. 61. 76. III. 166. W. II. 138. bred up in archbishop Morton's family, M. II. i. 549. educated at St. Anthony's school, London, W. I, 7. speaker of the house of com- mons, A, III. ii. 50. he and Tonstal bought up and burnt the New Testament, C. 116. made lord chancellor on his return from an embassy at Cambray, M. I. i. 282. refuses to swear to the act of succes- sion, C 37. Cranmer's argu- ment with him on the subject, ib. offers to swear to the act without the preamble, 38. , which was against the pope's supremacy, 36. Cranmer inter- cedes in his behalf with Crom- well, 39. reasons of his impri- sonment. M. I. i, 268. Henry VIII. offended with him for three things, 276. how far con- cerned with the Maid of Kent, ib. his letter to Cromwel ex- cusing his communication with the Maid of Kent, ii. 195. stat- ing his conduct as to the king's marriage, 196. and as to his supremacy, 200. speaks his mind openly as to the king's supremacy after his condemna- tion, i. 310. executed, 309. A. III. ii. 495. had been a great persecutor himself against the professors of the gospel, M. I. i. 310. some instances, 312. 315. apt to slander the gos- pellers, 311. the French king's censure of his execution, 360. directions to the English am- bassador how to defend the measure, ib. bred up his daugh- ter in ingenuous literature, P. I. 357. his Dialogue of Com- fort against Tribulation, print- ed at Antwerp, 1573, II. 392. an anecdote respecting him. Ay. 21. his Utopia translated by Robynson, M. II. i. 549. Fox the martyrologist's cha- racter of him, I. i. 311, cardi- nal Pole's eulogium of him, III. ii. 490 — 496. 499. More, Thomas, burnt as an he- retic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 483. ii. 390. More, Thomas, a recusant, A. IV. 276. 604. More, William, consecrated suf- fragan bishop of Colchester, C. 72. More, William, he and H. Pol- stede bought of the crown, Catford, a tenement in Lewis- ham, Kent, M. II. ii. 402. and the chapel of Arley White- knights in Sonyng, Berks, 409. More, sir William, A. II. ii. 378. IV. 34. More, Mrs., A. II. ii. 359. More, manor of, Devon, given in exchange by the crown to sir J. Cheke and P. Osborn, Ch. 129. More, in Ireland, vicarage of, granted by Edward VI. to en- dow the college he had found- ed in Galway, M. 11. i. 465. see Moor and Moore. Morecraft, — P. I. 481. Morehouse, — A. II. ii. 616. Morell, Roger, A. III. i. 721. Morellio, — C. 352. Moreman, — Aylmer disputed with him against transubstan- tiation. Ay. 6. 146. Moreman, John, notice of, C. 265. 834. archbishop Cran- mer's ill character of him, ib. made dean of Exeter, temp, queen Mary, 266. and coad- jutor to bishop Voisey, ib. M. II. i. 424. 110 INDEX. Moren, alias Morwin, John, fel- low of Corpus Christ! college, morose, and addicted to drink, but learned in Greek, P. II. 357. his estimation of Jewel, ib. see Morwen. Mores, Michel de, A. IV. 251. Mores, see Griffijn. Moreton, Dr. Nicholas, indicted with Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. Morgan, — a commissioner for prosecution upon the six arti- cles in London, M. I. i. 565. Morgan, Henr)', concerned in a disputation on transubstantia- tion before the king's visitors at Oxford, C, 286. 287. A. I. i. 116. Morgan, — a dicer, M. II. i. 180. Morgan, — P. II. 432. Morgan, captain, A. IV. 143. Morgan, Dr., M. III. i. 437. Morgan, sergeant, sent to the Fleet for hearing mass, C. 334. M. II. i. 451. as judge, P. I. 317. condemned lady J. Grey, A. I. i. 378. died mad, ib. M. III. i. 94. buried;, ii. 117. Morgan, Henry, C. 465. conse- crated bishop of St. David's, 459. M. III. i. 180. present at archbishop Cranmer's trial, C. 481. and at bishop Hoper's, M. III. i. 286. absent from the first parliament under queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. Morgan, Hugh, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes against the six ar- ticles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. Morgan, Philip, present at bishop Hoper's trial, M. III. i. 288. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290. Morgan, Philip, of Oxford, a pa- pist, A. I. i. 415. Morgan, Polydore, A. IV. 263. Morgan, sir Richard, judge, M. III. i. 78. one of queen Mary's privy-council, 493. dubbed a knight of the carpet at her coronation, ii. 181. Morgan, Thomas, A. III. i. 374. ii. 338. i. 383. 606. 696. IV. 140. 141. 389. 390. see Ro- bins. Morgan, Dr. William, had the living of LlanruUin, Montgo- meryshire, A. II. ii. 526. III. ii. 473. IV, 342. consecrated bishop of LandaflF, W. II. 332. translated to the see of St. Asaph, 457. see Goughe and Williams. Morice, — W. I. 168. Morice, — supported a bill in parliament against pluralities, W. I. 533. speaks against the bishops' power, II. 121. Morice, James, M. II. ii. 229. the advowson of Ongar be- longed to him. III. i. 182. fa- ther of Ralph, C. 611. clerk of the kitchen, and master of the works to the countess of Rich- mond, ib. he and his son Wil- liam receivers of certain lands, ib. his property, 613. his death, ib. Morice, James, a favourer of the puritans, wrote against the oath ex officio mero, W. II. 28. answered by Dr. Cosin, ib. arch- bishop Whitgift confers with him about his reply to this an- swer, 29, his treatise is among the Cotton MSS., 30. his con- clusions against this oath, 31. Morice, James, attorney of the court of wards. Ay. 86. a friend to Cawdry, ib. 94. Morice, John, imprisoned for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 55. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. INDEX. Ill Morice, Ralphs secretary to arch- bishop Cranmer, C. 97. 129. 176. 394. 1054. A. I. i. 380. some account of him, C. 61 r. M. I. i. 596. 11. i. 368. III. i. 181. 373. a friend of Latimer, and patron of the gospellers, I. i. 249. his account of bi- shop Latimer, IIL i. 368 — 378. his declaration concern- ing archbishop Cranmer, C. 615. his supplication to queen Elizabeth for a pension, 1018. Morice, Roger, M. I. i. pref. xii. A. I. i. pref. xii. 197. 378. Morice, William, of Chipping Ongar, Essex, M. IL ii. 229. gentleman usher to Mr. Pace, and afterwards to Henry VIIL, I. i. 596. a prisoner for reli- gion, ib. 598. n. i. 368. father or brother to Ralph Morice, L i. 596. H. i. 368. m. i. 181. 373. made a purchase of the crown, II. i. 368. patron of Chipping Ongar, III. i. i8i. his death, ib. see Morris. Morison, Fynes, fellow of Peter- house college, Cambridge, A. III. ii. 498. Morison, sir Richard, M. I. i. 64. II. ii. 18. C. 1009. 1015. his letter to Crumwel concerning printing the king's answer to the pope's calling of a council at Mantua, M. I. i. 379. ii. 258. one of the royal visitors, 1547, C. 209. 286. ambassa- dor to the emperor Charles V., Ch. 19. 48. had Ascham for his secretary, ib. instructions sent to him, M. II. i. 576. his address to the emperor, 577. effect of his embassy, recalled, 468. private conference upon the eucliarist at his house, 535. Ch. 69. jj. C. 386. sent out again as ambassador, M. II. ii. 78. III. i. 7. recalled, II. ii. 68. 103. III. i. 28. an exile at Strasburgh for religion, temp, queen Mary, G. 12. M. III. i. pref. vi. 232. C. 477. died there, P. II. 446. his widow married the earl of Rutland, C. 209. either he or bishop Ponet the author of A Defence of Priests' Marriages, &c., P. II. 446. his encomium of bi- shop Latimer, M. III. i. 378. his character of archbishop Cranmer, 389. bishop Park- hurst's epigram to him, A. IL ii. 498. Morison, Thomas, rector of Hen- ley upon Thames, deprived for nonresidence, A. I. i. 432. had fled, being a papist, 433. Morison, Mrs., A. II. ii. 211. Morley, Francis, P. II. 338.339. Morley, Edward, or Henry, Par- ker, lord, his part at Edward VI. 's christening, M. II. i. 6. and at Henry VIII.'s funeral, ii. 291. 308. buried. III. i. 509. Morley, Henry Parker, lord, a fu- gitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 551. 596. signed a proclama- tion, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, IV. 519. Morley, William Parker, lord, an ambassador to present arch- duke Ferdinand with the order of the garter, M. I. i. 65. Mprley, William Parker, lord, A. I. ii. 348. 366. one of the no- blemen appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her com- ing to London, A. I. ii. 391. dissented in parliament from the bill for uniformity, i. 87. at first dissented also from the bill for consecration of bishops to be good, ii. 230. Morley, lady, persons taken at mass in her chamber, P. II. 365. A. IL i. 497- 498. 112 INDEX. Morleyn, James and William, A, I- i- 559- Mornford, or Montfurth, John, a Scot, taken prisoner at Scar- borough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Morocco, see Fez. Morpeth, Northumberland, a grammar school founded there by Edward VI., BI. II. ii. 51. , 280. 503. Morrante, — P. II. 432. see Morant. Morraut, — P. II. 432. Morren, see Moren and Mor- wen. Morres, Edmund, a sectary in Kent, M. II. i. 370. Morrey, Nicholas, rector of Rol- leston, deprived for being mar- ried, M. III. i, 169. Morris, Dr., rector of the Eng- lish college at Rome, A. II. ii. 355- 356; _ Morris, William, merchant of London, a receiver of the col- • lections for the repair of St. Paul's, charged with embezzle- ment, G. 339. see Morice. Morrison, John, a Scotchman, G. 403. his license to act as a minister in the province of Canterbury, 596. Mors, Henry, ordained, G. 54. Mortier, M. de, one of the mas- ters of the requests, and a member of the council in France, M. II. i. 255. one of those appointed to treat with the English ambassador Wot- ton, ih. 299. Mortimer, lord, founder of Stoke college, P. I. 45. his coat of arms, ib. Mortimer, lady, wife of Brandon, duke of Suffolk, A. II. ii. 444. 445- Mortlake, property there, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, C. 405. Morton, — M. III. ii. 116. Morton, Dr., a popish rebel, A. II. ii. 675. 676. 356, III. ii. 188.340.341. Morton, Charles, of Bantree, his three wives, A. II. i. 578. his offspring, ih. Morton, Daniel, A. II. i. 578. Morton, John, abp. of Canter- bury, sir T. Mores character of him, M. II. i. 549. Morton, Nicholas, one of the six preachers of Canterbury ca- thedral, M. III. i. 478. a busy factor of the pope, A. II. i. 577. stirred up the rebellion in the north, 1569, ib. son of Charles, 578. Morton, Robert, son of Charles, A. II. i. 578. his sons, ib. Morton, Sampson, A. II. i. 578. Morton, Thomas, chaplain to bi- shop Boner, M. III. ii. 125. in a commission against here- tics in Essex, 128. Morton, T., fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 719. ii. 500. Morton, Thomas, bishop of Dur- ham, bred in a school at York, Ch. 145. publishes a declara- tion denying his having owned the English bishops' consecra- tion at the Nag's Head, P. I. 119. where he lived during the commonwealth, ib. Morton, James Douglas, earl of, M. III. ii. 96. A. II. i. 114. ii. 450. i. 1 15. 1 16. lord chan- cellor of Scotland, I. ii. 123. he and other nobles joined to- gether in defence of them- selves and the laws, 209. one of the Scotch king's commis- sioners in a treaty with Eng- land for the liberation of Mary queen of Scots, 384. II. i. 21. queen Elizabeth advised to re- INDEX. 113 concile him to lord Lidding- ton, 260. made regent of Scot- land, S. I 29. charges brought against him by a faction, A. II. ii. 325. 327. 671. notice of his execution, III. i. 236. Morton, lord Maxwel, earl of, A. III. i. 441. 442. ii. 549. Morvillier, — bishop of Orleans, in a commission for a treaty between the emperor and French king, M. III. i. 346. for another between the French king and queen Elizabeth, S. Morving, INIorwin, Peter, of Mag- dalen college, Oxford, A. Ill, i. 590. expelled by bishop Gar- diner, M. III. i. 82. afterwards an exile for religion, ib. or- dained, G. 54. Morwen, Morren, or Murryn, John, a learned man of Ox- ford, M. III. ii. 2. preaches at Paul's Cross on Good-Friday, ib. one of the visitors for Ox- ford appointed by cardinal Pole, 29. parson of Ludgate, and chaplain to bishop Boner, A. I. i. 60. committed to the Fleet for preaching, init. queen Elizabeth, ib. set at liberty upon his submission, 61. de- prived, 253. wanders seditious- ly in certain counties, 416. cast abroad a libel upon the burn- ing of St. Paul's, which was answered by bishop Pilking- ton, ib. Morwent, Robert, president of Corpus Christi college, Ox- ford, committed to the Fleet for allowing other service than that appointed by the Book of Common Prayer, M. II. ii. 52. liberated on bail, ib. concern- ed in the disputation against Cranmer at Oxford, C. 480. 1080. VOL. II, INDEX TO STRYl'E. Morvvin, — M. III. i. 574. see Moren. Mosco, don Francisco de, over- seer-general to the king of Spain's army, A. IV. 443. Moses, the law of, two questions as to its binding Christians answered by Whitgift, W. I. 152. Moss, Miles, pastor of Combes, Suffolk, notices queen Eliza- beth's faith on her death-bed, in a sermon at St. Paul's on justifying faith, W. II. 468. Mostyn, Henry, chancellor of Bangor, has the rectory of Skeiviog, A. II. ii. 525. III. ii. 472, Mostyn, Piers, A. II. ii. 527. III. ii. 473. Motston, in the Isle of Wight, ancient residence of the Cheke family, Ch. 2, long continued in David Cheke's descendants, ib. Motte, M. de la, French ambas- sador in England, A. II. ii. 424. i. 72. 206. 227. S. 121. A. II. ii. 541. 542. governor of Graveling, III. ii. 248. Moukl, — A. III. i. 206. Moulin, — A. IV. 504. Moulton, advowson of, bought of the crown by J- Whiting and T. Freeman, M. II. ii. 16. Mounday, Sacary, A. IV. 574. Mnunson, — A. I. ii. 197. Mounson, Gilbert, employed as a notary by archbishop Cran- mer at his trial, C, 483. Mounson, Robert, a lawyer, and member of parliament, A. I. ii. 233. consulted, as a justice of the common pleas, about pun- ishing recusants about pecuni- ary mulcts, G. 346. Mount, Christopher, a German, employed in embassies by Hen- ry VIII,, M, I. i. 355- 359- 114 INDEX. 507. 522. also Edward VI. 's agent at Strasburgh, II. i. 167. 504. ii. 18. 87. also queen Elizabeth's, S. 75. A. II. i. 63. 64. urged Zancby to write to the queen against her enforc- ing the ecclesiastical habits, 143- Mount, family of the, notice of this sect, A. II. i. 562. 563. Mount Dragon, seignor, A. III. ii. 39. governor of Antwerp castle, IV. 231. Mountague, Montague, or Mon- tacute, a daughter of, married R. Cheke, temp. Richard II., Ch. 2. Mountague, sir Edward, lord chief justice of the common pleas, M. II. i. 520. in a com- mission to ascertain the claims at the coronation of Edward VI., 24. one of Edward VI. 's privy-council, ii. 160. 161. one of those appointed by the king to examine into the proceed- ings of the commissioners a- gainst bishop Boner, III. i. 38. signs an instrument of the council, swearing and subscrib- ing to the succession as limited by the king, C. 912. he and some other judges had been consulted about drawing it up, 421. his character vindicated against sir J. Hayward's charge of supporting the duke of Northumberland's views as to the settlement of the crown, M. II. ii. 194. 195. imprisoned as an adherent of lady J. Grey, III. i. 24. discharged, 34. bu- ried, 513. Mountague, James, signs certain letters as master of Sidney Sussex college, Cambridge, A. IV. 322. W. II. 437. conse- crated bishop of Bath and Wells, 1608, IM. 484. A.m. i. 719. (afterwards bishop of Winchester.) Mountague, Henry Pole, lord, his part at Edward VI. 's chris- tening, M. II. i. 6. 7. and at queen J. Seymour's funeral, 12. Mountague, Anthony Brown, se- cond viscount, lived at Battel, and caused the growth of po- pery in that neighbourhood, A. IV. 401. see sir A.Brown, first viscount. Mountague, lady, A. IV. 401, 403- Mountague family, doubtful whe- ther a barony belonged to them so early as the time of Richard II,, Ch. 4. Mountain, Thomas, rector of St. Michael's, in Rio Lane, his troubles on account of reli- gion, temp, queen INIary, M. III. i. 103. C. 468. several pa- pist divines visit him in pri- son, M. III. i. 155. his own account of his removal from the Marshalsea to Cambridge gaol, to be tried for treason, 292 — 309. converts the gaoler, 303. discharged upon finding sureties, 308. reasons of his fresh persecution, 309. flies from place to place, 310. his escape to Antwerp, 312. C. 450. returns to England after queen Mary's death, M. III. i. 315- Mounteagle, see Monteagle. Mountford, — an officer in Ed- ward VI. 's mint at York, M. II. i. 518. Mountford, — commissary to bishop Watson, A. I. i. 65. Mountford, — A. II. i. 477. Mountford, — chaplain to lord Burghley, A. II. ii. 257. that lord's unsuccessful application to archbishop Parker for a be- nefice for him, ib. INDEX. "5 Mountford, — A. III. i. 284. Mountford, John, fellow of Peter- house, Cambridge, A. III. ii. 498. Mountford, Thomas, prebendary of Westminster, A. III. ii. 415. 416. Mountgomery, see Montgomery. Mounthaw, or Mounthault, sir T. Smith's favourite manor, S. pre/, ix. 151. 171. 174. de- scended to sir E. Smith, ib. 150. now Hill-hall, 150. the house there built by sir Tho- mas, 164. Mountjoy, Charles Blount, lord, lord lieutenant of Hampshire, A. IV. 314. Mountjoy, James Blount, lord, A. I. i. 56.11. ii. 499. S. 104. made a knight of the bath at queen Mary's coronation, M. lU. i. 53. one of the nobles appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her coming to London, A. I. ii. 391. signed queen Elizabeth's proclamation against excess in apparel, 195. 54°- Mountjoy, William Blount, lord, lord lieutenant of Tournay, M. I. i. 9. 18. his new year's gift to Henry VIII., 211. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 8. Mountjoy, lady, S. 10 1. Mouse, — A. II. ii. 522. see Mouse. Mowbray, John, M. II. ii. 217. Mowden, see Mugden. Mowdy, — a traitor, A. IV. 229. Mowe, Thomas, ordained, G. 54- Mowlre, — a Scot, A. IV. 166. Mowse, William, a civilian, A. I. ii. 98. probably an officer of archbishop Cranmer, C. 574. the archbishop a great bene- factor to him, ib. 575. had the good-will also of sir J. Cheke, 574. made master of Trinity- hall, Cambridge, 575. M. II. ii. 14. his letter of thanks to Ce- cil, C.990. turned papist under queen Mary, 575. P. I. 87. be- comes reader of civil law at Ox- ford, C. 576. made advocate of the court of Canterbury, M. III. i. 482. vicar-general in the see of Canterbury, P. I. 87. constituted official of the court of Canterbury, ib. and dean of the arches, ib. a good scholar, and a good benefactor to Tri- nity-hall, 88. C. 576. had a stall in the cathedral of York, ib. Moyar, John, his letter to J. Boulton, concerning the lat- ter's book of his sufferings under queen Mary, M. III. ii. 427. Moyl, sir Thomas, M.III. i. 156. A. I. i. 64. in a commission for visiting Eastbridge hospi- tal, Canterbury, W. III. 352. in another for search of here- tics, M. III. i. 476. Moyle, Walter, he and sir J. Cheke bought of the crown Stoke college, Suffolk, Ch. 36. M. II. ii.402. P. I. 44. Moyles, — a magistrate in Kent, how far concerned in a con- spiracy against abp. Cranmer C. 158. 160. 162. 769. Moyne, John, one of those mem- bers who absented themselves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. Muckleton, see Mugden. Mudd, John, A. II. i. 182. Mudd, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Muffyn, lord, married Margaret, widow of James IV. and daughter of Henry VII. of England, after she was divorc- I 2 ii6 I N D E X. ed from the earl of Angus, A. 11, ii. 442. Miigden, or Mowden-hall, or Muckleton, in Hatfield, Essex, the family seat of the Aylmers, Ay. T13. purchased by bishop Aylmer, ib. Mugg, Walter, a recusant, A. I- i. 413. Mulcaster, Richard, A. III. i. 76. an eminent learned gramma- rian and schoolmaster at Mer- chant Taylors' school, ii.515. removed to St. Paul's school, ib. notice of his Positions, &c. respecting education, i. 103. and of his Elementary, 222. Mullings,Mullins, Mollens,John, G. 50. 53. 103. P. II. 41. Ay. 29. G. 383. Ay. 33. A. III. i. 214. an exile at Zuric for reli- gion, temp. Q. Mary, M. III. i. 409. A. I. i. 49 1 . Greek reader at Frankfort, M. III. i. 543. signs the letter of the church there about ceremonies, A. I. i. 153. also certain resolutions, 263. archdeacon of London, 300. preaches at St. Paul's Cross, ib. 369. chaplain to archbishop Parker, P. I. 209. one of those recommended by the archbi- shop for the provostship of Eton, ib. present at the convo- cation of 1562, G. 87. sub- scribed the articles there, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a re- quest to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501 . did not vote upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. Ay. 13. preaches a Lent sermon, 1565, P. III. 135. he and Dr. Still deputed to visit the deanery of Bocking, G. 344. 359. and again, W. I. 245. an ecclesias- tical commissioner. Ay. 60. appointed by the council to confer with any papist, VV. I, 198. canon residentiary of St. Paul's, and rector of Bocking, 245- MuUins, — A. I. ii. 346. Mully, John, P. I. 5. Muncton, Christopher, M. III. i. 564- Mundeford, Dr., A. III. ii. 496. W. II. 350. Munden, manor of, Essex, given in exchange by Edward \ I. to sir J. Gates, M. IL i. 481. ii. 219. Mundin, John, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 495- Munds, John, provost of the mint, M. II. ii. 62. 225. Munsey, — of St. John's college, Cambridge, W. II. 238. Munster, Sebastian, negligent, and sometimes mistook the Hebrew in translating the Bi- ble, P. I. 414. Murders frequent in the reign of Edward VI., M. IL ii. 137. 138. Murdock, John, a Scotch priest, A. III. i. 665. Murgatrode, Michael, secretary to archbishop Whitgift, A. III. i. 620. W. II. 418. Murhnch, manor of, Somerset, bought of the crown by sir W. Pelre, M. II. ii. 235. Murmere, William, prebendary of St. Paul's, deprived, A. I. i. 253- Murphet, William, master of Eastbridge hospital, Canter- bury, P. I. 574. Murray, earl of, see lord James Stewart. Murren, see Morwen. Muscovy, grand duke of, A. IV. 221. makes preparations a- gainst Polonia, II. i. 366. 367. Musculus, Wolfgang, P. II. 198. A. II. ii. 146. III. i. 410. ii. INDEX. 117 102. 602. professor of divinity at Berne in Switzerland, P. I. 298. A, I. ii. 87. his character, ib. notice of his Common Places, ih. translated into English by J. Man, lb. P. I. 228. 298. II. 460. Musgrave, Leonard, one of the council at Tournay, M. I. i. II, Mush, — a priest, cardinal Al- len's letter to him, to pacify the disagreements among the priests in England, A. IV. 273- Muske, — a seminary priest, A. IV. 481. Muster before Edward VI. on Blackheath, M. II. i. 583. Musters ordered in all counties, S. 59. Myconius, Fredericus, one of the German ambassadors sent to acquaint Henry VIII. about the Augsburg Confession, M. 1. i. 507. dangerously sick, 508. his letter to lord Crum- wel for the dismission of the ambassadors, ii. 384. they de- part, i. 510. Myle, M. van der, president of the states at the Hague, A. III. ii. 24. 25. Mylford, — taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 41. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Myllenchop, John, part of his will, M. II. i. 538. Mynster Lovel, manor of, Oxon, given by Edward VI. to sir A. Dudley, M. II. ii. 230. Myrrick, — an unlearned Welsh doctor of law, G. 266. see Me- rick. Mytton, rectory of, Yorkshire, given by Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth, M. II. i. 388. Myzes, what, A. I. i. 19. N. Nallard, — A. I. ii. 366. Nantoillet, — a French histage, A. I. ii. 116. Napier, expelled Corpus Christi college, Oxford, as a papist, P. I-529- Naples, the inquisition introduc- ed there, S. 237. see queen Jane, and Joanna, and king Robert. Naples, archbishop of, A. III. i. 275. ii. 272. Napper, George, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Napper, sir Ralph, A. \Y. 290. Napton parsonage, Warwickshire, given by the earl of Leicester to Warwick hospital, A. IV. 42. Narde, Nardy, Jacques de la, of the blood royal of France, married Jane, the second queen of Naples, S. 190. 212. 255. removes her from the adminis- tration, 191. shut out of Na- ples by her, ib. Nash, the poor of, bishop Cox's bequest to, A. III. i. 38. Nasing, manor of, Essex, bought of the crown by lady Denny, M. II. ii. 233. Nassaburgh, hundred of, obtain- ed from the see of Peterbo- rough by sir W. Cecil, M. II. i. 386. Natton, manor of, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharington, M. II. i. 192. Nau, — French secretary, A. III. i. 113. Navarre, Anthony de Bourbon, king of, A. I. i. 555. Navarre, prince and king of, af- terwards Henry IV. king of France, A. II. i. 218. 219. 247. ii. 18. 375. 401. 648. III. i. 16. 126. ii. 48. 554. (as king of France,) IV. 78. 91. iii. ii8 INDEX. supported the cause of the re- formed religion, II. i. 9. III. i. 14. his marriage with Marga- ret de Valois promoted by the English ambassadors, 67. their treaty of marriage concluded, S. 115. queen Elizabeth's aid solicited in behalf of him and the other protestants, A. III. ii. 319. 320. 669. 670. 321. lord Burghley's letter to him, i. 310. the concern of the Eng- lish for him, 574. lord Burgh- ley's discourse about him, ib. the miserable condition of his army, 576. a letter of lord Burghley in vindication of him- self from a slander of hinder- ing the newtiation between queen Elizabeth and him, ii. 384. a prayer for his good suc- cess as king of France, IV. 57. assisted by queen Eliza- beth in his struggles for the French crown, W. II. 109. considerations of a motion for a treaty of peace with the king of Spain, upon a motion of the French king, drawn up by lord Burghley, 451 — 464. Navarre, queen of, S. 1 16. A. II. i. 254. Navarre, natural son of the king of, conies to England, 1563, A.I. ii. 88. Navigation, art of, by Cortes, translated by R. Eden, S. 20. Navye, John, A. II. ii. 22. Nayshe, John, a puritan, released from prison, G. 201. Neal, — A. II. ii. 576. IV. 345. Neal, — a seminary priest, A. IV. 426. Neale, William, chaplain of the Savoy, G. 238. A. IV. 582. see Nele. Nece, — an infidel, captain of a Turkish fleet, M. II. i. 396. Necessary doctrine of a Christian man, see Institution. Necton, — P. II. 432. Necton, Thomas, his confession about buying and selling New Testaments in English, M. I. ii. 63. Nedeham, Christopher, he and W. Chester bought of the crown certain messuages in Totehil-street, Westminster, M. II. ii. 409. Needham, — a priest, A. IV. 445- Neffield, Lancelot, M. III. i.564. Negelinus, Mattheus, a guest of archbishop Cranmer's, C. 279. afterwards a minister of Stras- burgh, ib. Negroo, sir Perjn, dies of the sweating sickness, M. II. i. 493-. Nehemiah, notice of bishop Pil- kington's Exposition of, A. I. i. 345- Nele, Thomas, the king's Hebrew reader at Oxford, A. I. i. 48. was of New college, and chap- lain to bishop Boner, ib. see Neal. Nelson, — A. II. ii. 616. Nelson, — A. IV. 487. 488. Nelson, John, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 494. 599. Nelson, Martin, a priest, reclaim- ed whilst in prison, A. IV. 354. archbishop Hutton's letter to lord Burghley for a pardon for him, ib. Nelson, William, W. II. 298. Nemours, duke of, M. III. i. 569. slain in battle in Italy, ii. 70. Nemours, duke of, a report of his marrying the princess of Lor- rain, A. III. i. 696. Neper, William, a burgess of Edinburgh, A. IV. 266. Nesse, — a clergyman, bishop Parkhurst's letter to him about INDEX. T19 his contentiousness, A. II. i. 326. Nestorius, A, II. i. 160. Nethercompton, advowson of, and other property there, grant- ed by Edward VI. to lord Clin- ton, M. II. i. 363. Netherlands, see Low Coun- tries. Netheroxlinch, tithes of, Glou- cestershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Wor- cester and Gloucester, M. II. Neve, William, archbishop Par- ker's grammar schoolmaster, P. I. 8. his gentle disposition, lb. Neville, — steward to archbishop Crannier, C. 610. 622. 625. Neville, Alexanu^r, W. I. 435. A. III. i. 744. his character of archbishop Grindal, P. I. 125. G. 292. archbishop Parker his patron, P. II. 436. present at his funeral, 432. his heroic verses upon the archbishop's death, 436, assisted by the archbishop in his Kettus, and in his Norwicus, 441. G. 292. his letter to the archbishop, giving some account of the order of his family, &c., P. III. 346. Neville, sir Anthony, one of Ed- ward VI. 's council in the north, M. II. ii. 161. Neville, Christopher, a magis- trate in the north, M. III. i. '54- Neville, sir Christopher, pension- ed by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53. II. i. 495. Neville, Edmund, A. III. i, 272. 362. ii. 337. considered him- self to be lord Latimer, i. 300. 458. confined in the Tower for being concerned in Parry's conspiracy against the queen. ib. 460. saved his life by divulging the plot, 458. his correspondence with lord Burghley, 459. 461. his letters to Ramberd, containing in- formations against the lieute- nant of the Tower, IV. 332. 333- 334- "otice of him, 335. ordered to be examined touch- ing the lieutenant, ib. Neville, sir Edward, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 6. Neville, Gervace, a magistrate in Nottinghamshire, A. III. ii. 465. archbishop Sandys's fa- vourable character of him, ib. Neville, George, archbishop of York, a MS. account of his enthronization in the library of the church of Canterbury, P. I. 347. notice of the feast, G. 254. the archbishop was brother to the great earl of Warwick, temp. Edward IV,, ib. Neville, sir Henry, M. II. i. 507. A. II. i. 121. ii. 430. obtains the manor of Margrave, parcel of the lands of the see of Win- chester, M. II. i. 484. 485. ii. 220. 244. knighted, 499. Ch. 66. nominated by Edward VI. as knight of the sliire for Berks, M. II. ii. 65. one of the gen- tlemen of the king's privy chamber, 164. has a grant of the prebend of South Cave, Yorkshire, with the advowson of South Cave, Waddisworth, and Ottley, 229. a bill brought into parliament for him and the other patentees of the bi- shop of Winchester's lands, A. I. i. 90. one of those appoint- ed to remedy certain abuses about the sale of corn in Berks, P. III. 121. an ecclesiastical commissioner, G. 310. married 14 120 INDEX. Elizabeth Bacon, widow of sir R. Doyle, A. 11. ii. 210. Neville, John, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53. II. i-.495- ii- 550- Neville, lady, Margaret, A. II. ii. 211. bishop Hiitton's applica- tion to lord Burghley in her favour, IV. 278. 352. her sub- mission, 280. Neville, lord, A. III. i 300. 301. Neville, Ralph, bishop of Chi- chester, built a town residence for his sea in Chancery-lane, A. II. 1.359. Neville, sir Thomas, of Hold, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. s coronation, M. II. i. 36. ii. 328. Neville, Thomas, senior proctor of the university of Cambridge, A. III. i. 71. vice-chancellor, ii. 119. 121. as head of Tri- nity college, 274. 496. W. II. 145. P. III. 265. A. IV. 229. 322. W. II. 235. 284. dean of Peterborough, 317. dean of Canterbury, 469. sent by arch- bishop Whitgift to king James in Scotland upon his accession to the English throne, ib. his present to Trinity college li- brary, P. II. 507. Nevilles, the, A. 1. ii. 338. 345. Nevinsfeld, portion of the rent of the rectory of, part of the en- dowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 6. Nevinson, Christopher, one of the royal visitors, 1547, C. 209. 286. M. II. i. 74. in a com- mission against anabaptists, 385. ii. 200. Nevinson, Stephen, P. I. 520. II. 22. 84. III. 186. 316. G. 286. 314. born at Carlisle, 73. lived obscurely in queen Mary's reign, A. I. i. 492. ordained. G. 73. in a royal commission to visit certain dioceses, A. I. i. 247. in another commission to visit the church of Canter- bury, P. I. 144. commissary- general to archbishop Parker, 186. in a conjuiission to visit Eastbridge hospital, near Can- terbury, 202. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning cer- tain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. prebendary of Can- terbury, P. I. 270. archbishop Cranmer's writings in his pos- session, ib. ordered by the privy-council to deliver them up to archbishop Parker, 272. Nevyl, see Neville. New college, Oxford, visited by the king's visitors, M. I. i. 323. 324. popery prevalent there, 1568, G. 196. New Haven, now called Havre de Grace, M. I. i. 563. notice of its becoming a town, ib. why an important situation, ib. II. ii. 495. taken from the English by the French, i. 279. intrusted to the English by the French protestants, A. I. i. 547. preparations for holding it, 548. prince Conde, upon making peace with France, sends an ambassador into Eng- land about its surrender, ii. 92. attempts to betray it, 93. is surrendered, owing to the plague being in it, ib. S. 71. New Testament, see Bible. Newal, — presented to the liv- ing of Hadley upon Dr. Tay- lor's deprivation, C. 603. ex- tract from his sermon grossly slandering that martyr, 604. INDEX. I3T Newal, — a messenger of queen Elizabeth's chamber, sent by the privy-council into Derby- shire to apprehend certain seminary priests, A. IV. 307. Newark, Richard, a monk of Thurgdrton, M. I. i. 397. Newbury, — a stationer, A. IV. 105. ■ Newcastle, mayor and burgesses of, have a grant of the manor, town, and borough of Gates- head, which had belonged to the see of Durham, M. II. ii. 66. 236. Newce, Mary, married to arch- deacon Theophilus Aylmer, Ay. 114. Newce, Thomas, high sheriff of Herefordshire, probably son of William, Ay. 116. Newce, William, Ay. 114. 1 16. Newcomen, — fellow of Magda- len college, Cambridge, W. I. 53- 118. Newdigate, Sebast., executed for denying the king's supremacy, M. I. i. 305. see Nudigate. Newel, Maurice, ordained, G. 54, Newel, Thomas, A. II. ii. 355. Newenham, Bucks, M. I. ii. 406. Newfoundland, see Report. Newhal, manor of, Middlesex, granted by Edward VI. to the see of Norwich, M. II. i. 367. had belonged to the see of Westminster, iL. Newman, — A. I. i. 228. Newman, — a puritan minister, condemned for sedition, W. II. 96. Newman, Elizabeth, M. I. i. 116. Newman, Humfrey, alias Brown- bread, the chief circulator of Martin Marprelate, W. I. 55 1 . A. III. ii. 602. 604. 605. Newman, James, C. 147. Newman, John, a pewterer of Maidstone, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 360. Newman, Robert, M. III. ii. 405- Newman, Roger, a minister, pre^^ends to cast out devils, A. II. i. 484. Newman, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Newport, Roger, footman to Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 282. Newport, county of Wenlock, Wales, parsonage of, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Glouces- ter, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Newport, Essex, boys from thence free of Walden school, S. 6. Newsham, lordship of, Lincoln- shire, given in exchange by Dudley duke of Northumber- land to the crown, M. III. i. 43- Newthorp, manor of, Oxon, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Lincoln, M. II. i. 119. Newthorp, prebend of, York- shire, M. II. i. 539. Newton, — took part in the di- vinity act at Cambridge before queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii. 107. Newton, Theodore, P. I. 144. 366. ordained, G. 54. pre- bendary of Canterbury, P. I. 144- Newton,Thomas, his Latin verses to archbishop Whitgift, W. I. 3. and to secretary Davison, A. III. i. 658. notice of his poems, 744. Newton, manor of, annexed by Edward VI. to the see of Nor- wich, M. II. i. 121. 122 INDEX. Newton, manor of, Somerset, granted by Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth, M. II. i. 388. Neylond, Suffolk, a messuage belonging to our Lady's chan- try there, bought of the crown by W. Morice and E. Isaac, M. II. i. 368. Nicholas, St., the boy-bishop, notice of his anniversary, M. III. i. 326. 507. Nicholas, — a minister of the Dutch church in London, no- tice of his preaching on re- generation, A. I. ii. 8. 9. 10. Nicholas, — chaplain to bishop Cox, A. I. ii. 528. Nicholas, Edward, S. 262. Nicholas, Henry, founder of the sect called the famihj of love, A. II. i. 556. 563. notice of a translation of his Epistles, ii. 148. notes of Young, bishop of Rochester, on his Evange- lium Regni, 184. 273. some of the doctrines in this book, 286. answered by Wilkinson, 300. and by Knewstubs, 302. Nicholas, John, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. i 29. Nicholls, Josias, parson of East- well, A. III. i. 691. ii. 478. his puritanical opinions, W. I. 245. suspended, 249. inter- cession made in his behalf, 271. his misorders against the Book of Common Prayer, 277. notice of his Plea for the In- nocent, II. 479. answered by Dr. Covel, 482. see Nicolls. Nicholls, John, a Jesuit, W. III. 157. recants, and becomes a preacher, G. 390. A. III. i. 61. a contribution raised from the bishops for his maintenance, G. 391. archbishop Grindal's letter to this effect, ib. Nicholson, — rector of South- church, A. III. i. 180. Nicholson, William, bishop of Carlisle, his censure of arch- bishop Parker in his Histori- cal Library answered, S. pref. vii. viii. Nicholson, Segar, of Gonville- hall, Cambridge, one of the early professors of the gospel at Cambridge, P. I. 13. M. I. i. 568. ordered to be appre- hended, 487. in prison, ii. 179. Nicholson, see Lambert. Nicolls, — chaplain to lord Burghley, A. II. ii. 178. 180. Nicolls, Dr., has a license to have dead bodies after execu- tion for dissection, M. II. ii. 63. 229. being, probably, the king's chirurgeon, 229. Nicolls, George, A. I. ii. 348. recorder of Walden, S. 57. .151- 157- Nicolson, Dr., a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Nicolson, Edmund, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Nicolson, James, P. III. 153. Nicolson, Thomas, G. 604. 436. Niger, Simon, bishop of London, his constitution for the paying of tithe in London, P. III. 181. Nigri, Philip, counsellor, and or- dinary' master of requests of the emperor's household, M. III. i. 90. Nix, Richard, bishop of Nor- wich, M. I. ii. 84. S. 2. P. I. 23. M. III. i. 571. when made a bishop, C. 41. 1042. his let- ter to archbishop Warham for suppressing certain books com- ing from beyond sea, 694. a pramunire brought against him, 40. old and blind, 41. his death, ib. 1042. a great persecutor of the reformers, 41 . Nix, Thomas, a priest, M. III. i. 482. ii. 389. INDEX. 123 Nixon, — P. I. 481. Noa, Jaques de, the Scottish queen's secretary, A. IV. 233. Nobis, Peter, master of Bene't college, Cambridge, gave many books, among other charitable gifts, to his college, P. I. 28. Noblemen created by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 157. creations or re- storations of noblemen in the reign of queen Mary, III. i. 186. ii. 158. Nodes, John, M. II. i. 481. Noel, — A. I. i. 92. see Nowel. Noller, Anthony, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Nolworth, — pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. '• 495- Nonconformists clamoured much against archbishop Parker for enforcing conformity, P.I. 437. " A brief and lamentable Con- " sideration of the Apparel " now used by the Clergy," &c. III. 144. other books for and against conformity, I. 441. bi- shop Cox's judgment concern- ing it, 455. arguments used against nonconformists, 457. Church of Scotland's letter to the bishop in behalf of the nonconformists. III. 150. first- fruits remitted to deprived ministers, I. 458. the warrant to that effect, III. 153. the re- fusers of the habits withdraw from the national church, I. 478. and use the English Ge- neva Book of Service, 479. commencement of the separa- tion, 480. several seized, 481. bp. Grindal's speech to them, ib. they dislike wafer-bread, 482. the learned nonconform- ists will not separate, ib. Beza's judgment in favour of the ha- bits, 483. Nonconformity prevalent in Lon- don, P. I. 420. 426. intended measures against it, 427. Non-Eton, Warwickshire, a gram- mar school founded by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 281. 503. None, Francis, M. II. i. 286. Noote, John, in a commission for taking the value of first- fruits and tenths in London, M. I. i. 426. Norbrook, — a preacher, A. I. ii. 277. 281. 282. 283. Norden, — a seminary priest^ A. IV. 262. 275. Norden, Samuel, parson of Ham- sey, susj)ended for refusing subscription to the Book of Common Prayer, W. I. 225. Norfolk, — a papist, deprived,. A. I. ii. 24. 27. Norfolk, Thomas Howard, duke of, M. I. i. 235. Ay. 21. M. II. ii. 241. 247. present at princess Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. an enemy to queen Anne Bolen, 434. the king's lieute- nant in the north, C. 58. sup- ported the six articles in par- liament, 104. he and others sent to console archbishop Cranmer on the passing of this act, ib. one of the king's commissioners about his mar- riage with Anne of Cleves, M. I. i. 554. ii. 452. lord trea- surer and a privy counsellor, i, 565. a great friend of bishop Gardiner, C. 177. one of the confederacy in the council a- gainst archbishop Cranmer, ib. 180. countenances the perse- cution against the gospellers, M. I. i. 597. godfather to Ed- ward VI., II. i. 7. the monas- tery of Thetford, founded by one of his ancestors, given back to him by the king, P. I. 124 INDEX. 25. 26. his intention of turn- ing it into a college, ib. in a commission about a marriage' between princess Mary and Charles son of Francis I. of France, M. III. i. 204. why sent to the Tower and attaint- ed, 58. A. III. i. 456. remained in prison till queen Mary's reign, M. III. i. 58. part of his property granted away, II. i. 361. ii. 233. also the office of high marshal of England granted away from him to the earl of Warwick, 217. his at- tainder reversed under queen Mary, III. i. 84. assists, as earl marshal, at her coronation, 54. 57. sent against Wyat and his rebels, 133. present at bishop Hoper's trial, 286. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290, his funeral, 318. 319- Norfolk, Thomas Howard, duke of, grandson of the preceding, M. II. ii. 7. A. I. i. 198. ii. 210. 309. 314. 366. II. i. 24. 73. 131. 179. P. II. 68. A. II. i- 265. 575. III. i. 235. 292. 457. ii. 559. had Fox for his tutor, I. i. 160. P. I. 368. made a knight of the bath (as earl of Surrey) at queen Mary's co- ronation, M. III. i.53. his part at the coronation dinner, 57. present at the proclamation of queen Elizabeth, 118. A. I. i. I. one of the noblemen ap- pointed to attend her upon her coming to London, ii.39T. acts as earl marshal, i. 12. II. ii. 707. lord lieutenant of the north, I. i. 24. in a commis- sion for visiting the dioceses of Norwich and Ely, 248. elected a knight of the garter, 284. P. Martyr invited to re- turn into England, probably by him, 381. his wife buried, ii. 44. had a house at Rygate, 46. invested with the French order of St. Michael, 89. the favourite of the court and peo- ple, 197. goes into his country to keep Christmas, ib. honour- ably escorted out of the city, ib. godfather to the son of the margrave of Haden, P. I. 380. loved the earl of Sussex earn- estly, A. I. ii. 211. his letter to him upon himself being counted a papist, 242. impri- soned for listening to a match with Mary queen of Scots, 220. 364.383. II. i. 112. G. 221. P. I. 47. A. II. ii. 468. 469. S. 106. account of the disco- very of his transactions with her, A. II. i. 117. 76. 77. 78. his plea for himself, 119. his servants confess the treason, 120. the first proceedings with him, ib. his words at his con- demnation, 121. queen Eliza- beth defers his execution, 122. the queen of Scots was the cause of his ruin, 190. his ex- ecution judged necessary by the parliament, and so pro- pounded to the queen, 191. beheaded, P. II. 101. his con- fession at his death, A. II. i. 191. ii. 461. his ambitious designs, i. 192. was religious, ib. letter of his chaplains to him con- cerning a book of prayers com- posed by his command for the use of his children, 193. ii. 465. Philip, earl of Arundel, his son by his first wife. III. i. 454. christened, ii. 9. reasons to prove him a papist, IV. 603. had one hundred retainers, M. III. i. 161. signed various or- ders of the privy-council, G. 102. A. I. ii. 44. P. I. 256. 523. A. I. ii. 558. Norfolk, duke of, A. IV. 575. INDEX. 125 Norfolk, Agnes, duchess of, pre- sent at princess Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. Norfolk, (Elizabeth Stafford,) duchess of, munificent to Be- ne't college, Cambridge, P. I. 28. attends queen Mary to London, M. III. i. 27. and at her coronation, 54. 55. god- mother to her grandson Phi- lip earl of Arundel, ii. g. Norfolk, (Mary Fitz-Alan,) duchess of, daughter and heir of the earl of Arundel, M. III. ii. 16. A. III. i. 454. seemed to have died in childbed, ib. her funeral, ib. Norfolk, (Margaret Audley,) duchess of, buried, A. I. ii- 44. Norfolk, rebellion in, appeased, M. II. i. 271. Ket the chief rebel, ib. youth of Norfolk, commonly studied in Bene't college or Gonville-hall, Cam- bridge, Ay. 2. Norgate, — a relation and chap- lain to archbishop Parker, P. II- 433- 457- Norgate, Robert, master of Be- ne't college, Cambridge, P. I. 506. A. II. ii. 312. III. i. 496. 645. ii. 274. 477.496. archbi- shop Parker his uncle, P. II. 279. preaches at a visitation at Ely, W. I. 260. vice-chancel- lor of Cambridge, A. III. i. 498. run his college deep in debt, W. I. 522. Norice, otherwise called Butcher, or otherwise Fisher, A. I. ii. 260. Norley, — did not vote in the convocation of 1562, upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, A. I. i. 505. Norman, Joan, M. I. i. 133. Norreys, lord, lord lieutenant of Oxfordshire, W. I. 604. and Berkshire, A. IV. 314. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, 519. see Norris. Norrington, Alice, A. II. i. 484. Norrington, Mildred, pretends to be troubled with a devil, A. II. i. 484. Norris, — M. I. i. 433. Norris, — pursuivant, A. II. ii. 504- Norris, — a priest, A. III. ii. 599- Norris, — an English captain in the Spanish king's service, A. IV. 350. Norris, Henry, one of those ap- pointed to remedy abuses in the sale of corn in Oxford- shire, P. III. 121. concerned in a tournament before queen Elizabeth, Ch. 134. sent am- bassador into France, S. 94. 95. A. II. i. 9. 16. Norris, sir John, A. III. ii. 366. IV. 156. he and sir F. Drake commanded an expedition a- gainst the king of Spain, III. ii.45. Norris, sir William, M. III. ii. 92. A. I.ii. 259. Norrvs, — groom of the stole to Henry VIII., C. 25. 68 r. ex- ecuted about queen Anne Bo- len's business, 25. Norrys, John, gentleman usher of the outer chamber to Henry VIII. and Edward VI., M. III. i. 100. loi. made chief usher to queen Mary's privy cham- ber, being a rank papist, ib. A. I. i. 8. see Norreys. North, — concerned in a tilting before queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 288. North, sir Edward, C. 320. (as lord North,) M. III. i.323. C. 527. A. II. ii. 499. the con- 126 INDEX. vent of the Charter-house given to him, M. I. i. 428. which he converted into his residence, ih. one of the aiders to the ex- ecutors of Henry VIII., II. i. 19. chancellor of the courts of augmentations and revenues of the crown, ii. 160. a privy counsellor, 161. signed cer- tain orders as such, C. 316. 317. made a peer, M. III. ii. 159. in a commission for de- tection of conjurers, i. 349. one of the peers appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her coming to London, A. I. ii. 391. in a commission for lands, to understand what lands had been granted away from the crown in queen Mary's reign, i. 19. 36. dissent- ed from the bill in parliament for uniformity, 87. and from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. the queen visits him at his residence at the Charter-house, 403. father to Roger lord North, M. III. ii. 159. North, sir John, a pupil of arch- bishop Whitgift's, at Pe- ter-house, Cambridge, W. I. 14. North, Roger, lord, (as sir Ro- ger, P. I. 133.) II. 386. A. III. i. 29. Ay. 143. son of Ed- ward lord North, M. III. ii. 159. signed queen Elizabeth's proclamation against excess in apparel, A. I. ii. 195. 540. particulars of his dispute with bishop Cox about certain ma- nors, and his accusations a- gainsthim, II.i.533.534.535. 538- 540- 542. 543- 544- ii- 588. 591. 594. i. 547. 548. 550, ii. 259. 260. 262. W. I. 147. lord lieutenant of Cam- bridgeshire, A. IV. 314. made treasurer of the queen's cham- ber, 347. North, sir Thomas, translated Plutarch's Lives into English from the French translation of Amiot, A. II. ii. 307. North, lady, one of the chief mourners at the funeral of the countess of Arundel, M. III. ii. ig. North, rebellion there, 1538, M. I. i. 471. rebels executed, 472. how affected in religion, III. i. 154. fears of stirs there, 1556,558. supplies sent there, ib. rebellion there, I557;» ii. 67. 513. 519. names of prisoners taken at Scarborough castle, 518. orders sent about the traitors, 67. execution of twenty-seven in Yorkshire, 68. things look gloomy in the north, 69. feuds there, ib. Northam, rectory of, Devon, given in exchange by the crown to the dean and chapter of Windsor, M. II. i. 120. Northampton, William Par, earl of Essex, marquis of, Ch. 20. C. 236. M. II. ii. 47. 73. A. I. i. 76. 198. ii. 89. 95. P. I. 298. 428. A. IV. 573. his cre- ation of, M. II. ii. 158. (as earl of Essex,) signed a letter of Henry VIII. 's privy-coun- cil, C. 185. one of those ap- pointed to investigate the claims at Edward VI. 's coro- nation, M. II. i. 24. (as mar- quis of Northampton,) bought church lands of the crown, 123. sold to sir T. Smith the manor of Yarlington, Somer- set, which had been given him at the coronation of queen Catharine his sister, (Henry mil's last wife,) S. 3 1 . 169. a patron of learning and a pro- fessor of religion, C. 278. di- INDEX. 127 vorced from his first wife, Anne, daughter to the earl of Essex, 293. marries Elizabeth, daughter to lord Cobham, ib. an act passed to make his mar- riage lawful, M. II. i. 554. ii. 248. sent against the rebels in Norfolk, but is unsuccess- ful in a battle, i. 272. (he is here called by mistake mar- quis of Nottingham,) he and others appointed to conduct the French hostages honourably to London, 359. one of the fa- vourites in Edward VI.'s reign, 428. lord high chamberlain, ib. other offices granted to him, ib. 445. one of Edward VI.'s privy-council, C. 316.317. M. II. ii. 159. 160. in a commis- sion to prorogue parliament, 199. 200. in another for exa- mination of the officers of the treasuries, 209. in another to inquire into church goods, 211. a grant to him from the king for the foundation of an hospi- tal at Boston, 224. makes an exchange of property with the crown, 228. concerned in a private disputation respecting the sacrament, C. 386. Ch. 70. 77. goes with the order of the garter to the king of France, S. 44. M. II. i. 473. ii. 242. 243. 244. one of the commissioners to treat about a match between the king and the French king's daughter, i. 478. knight of the garter, ib. lord lieutenant for divers coun- ties, 465. ii. 163. 202. captain of the band of pensioners, i. 501. appointed to receive the dowager queen of Scotland, 502. 503. his part in a great muster before the king, 510. in another, 584. brother-in- law to the duke of Northum- berland, ii. 74. signed the in- strument of the council, swear- ing and subscribing to the suc- cession, as limited by the king, C. 912. sent into Norfolk to keep it obedient to queen Jane, M, III. i. 8. imprisoned as one of her adherents, 24. con- demned for treason, 33. his divorce, granted in the late reign, disallowed, 84. pardon- ed, 154. restored to his peer- age by queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 42. appointed high steward of England, 38. one of queen Elizabeth's privy-council, 47. signed various orders as such, P. I. 253. 273. 523. 561. A. I. ii. 558. one of the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, i. 90. probably instru- mental in getting an act pass- ed in their favour, ib. one of the commissioners for visiting certain dioceses, 247. elected knight of the garter, 284. re- ceives the prince of Sweden, 291. the queen gives him a piece of gold, coined by her- self, 403. signed the queen's proclamation against excess in apparel, ii. 195. 540. has the degree of M. A, conferred on him per gratiam at Cambridge, W.I, 45. Hayward's indifferent character of him, M. II. ii.192. Northampton, earl of, see lord H. Howard. Northampton, (Anne Crumwel, daughter of the earl of Essex,) marchioness of, A. II. ii. 541. divorced from the marquis, C. 293- Northampton, (Elizabeth Brook, daughter of lord Cobham,) marchioness of, M. II. ii. 112. A. I. i. 292. II. ii. 149. mar- ried to the marquis after his divorce from his first wife, C. 128 INDEX. 293. an act passed to make the marriage lawful, M. II. i. 554. accompanies princess Mary in her visit to Edward VI., ii. 30. greatly concerned in the marriage between lord G. Dud- ley and lady J. Grey, A. IV. 485- Northampton, dissolution of St. Andrew's monastery there, M. I. i. 403. orders for religious worship in the church there, A. II. i. 133. and for the ex- ercises called prophesyings, 136. the confession to be sub- scribed in the exercises, 138. the ])arishes of St. Mary and All Saints united by archbi- shop Whitgift, W. I. 617. Northborn, site of the manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. 160. Northbroke, — A. II. i. 145. his ordination, 146. minister of Redcliff, Bristol, ib. North-Creak, benefice of, its va- lue, A. I. i. 228. North-east passage, adventure of, M. II. ii. 76. Northerek, manor of, Norfolk, annexed by Edward VI. to the see of Norwich, M. II. i. 368. Northfolk, William, late pre- bendary of Worcester, A. I. i. 415. notice of his deprivation, P.m. 41. North-hall, manor of, Middle- sex, granted bv Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth, M. II. i. 387. Northleach, advowson of, Glou- cestershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Wor- cester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Northlode, manor of, granted by the crown to sir J. Cheke and P. Osborn, Ch. 129. had be- longed to the monastery of Glascon, ib. North seas, expedition to, M. II. ii. 231. Northumberland, John Dudley, viscount Lisle, earl of War- wick, duke of, (as earl of War- wick,) M. II. i. 32. C. 236. 317. M. II. i. 123. 387. 476. 490. 497. ii. 215. 216. III. i. 455. 462. A. II. ii. 419. (as duke of Northumberland,) i. 503- 512. 513- 561- •'• 30- 45- 499.47. 72.75. C.419.M. II. ii. 1 1 7. 194. 196. Ch. 95. M. III. i. 4. C. 920. 664. M. III. ii, 107. 352. A. I. ii. 16. 18. 25. 35- II- •• 534- ij- 565- III- i- 505. ii.389. (as viscountLisle,) one of Henry VIII.'s executors being then lord admiral, M. II. i. 19. does homage to Ed- ward VI., 22. made a knight of the bath at his coronation, 36. (as earl of Warwick,) one of the king's privy-council, ii. 159. 160. made earl marshal, 157. 217. supported at court the gentry's cause of enclosures against the people, 150. 152. sent against the rebels in Nor- folk, 274. 426. selected as governor of the east and mid- dle marches, i. 359. 360. pre- sident also of the marches of Wales, ii. 51. bore no good- will to the earl of Arundel, i. 364. in a conmiission to determine the accounts of the king's mints, 425. head of a party oppo.sed to the duke of Somerset, 436. writes to arch- bishop Cranmer not to bur- den bishop Hoper with the oath of canonical obedience, C. 302. lord lieutenant of cer- tain counties, M. II. i. 464. 465. ii. 162. 163. warden of the north, i. 498. created duke I N D E X. 129 of Nortluiinberlaiul, 499. ii- i^7.Ch.66. high chamberlain, M.II.ii.157. takes part in a great muster before the king, i. 510. president of the council, 511. Bullinger sends an address to him, 533. he and his faction brought about the death of the duke of Somerset, 535. 537. 585. goes into the north, 586. ii. II. reports upon his not accompanying the king in a progress, 1 2. not safe to deny him any thing, ib. the king endeavours to forward the match between his son Guil- ford and the earl of Cumber- land's daughter, ib. his son marries lady J. Grey, 13. Bale dedicated one of his works to him, 39. in a commission to examine the officers of the treasuries, 60. 209. surrenders the office of chief carver in fa- vour of his son Robert, 63. Durham made a county pala- tine, probably for the purpose of giving him the title of earl of Durham, 66. he and the marquis of Winchester ruled the court, 69. the marquis of Northampton, his brother-in- law, 74. grants made to him by the king, as earl of War- wick and duke of Northumber- land, 107. 218. 221.223.224. 227. 231. 236. 237. 407. his greatness, 1 08. his cares for the realm, ib. his letter to Ce- cil, blaming the carelessness of some courtiers, &c., 505. in a commission to prorogue par- liament, 199. 200. in another to inquire into the lead, bell- metal, plate, &c. of the dis- solved religious houses, 2 to. attends the king in a progress, C. 406. his proceedings dis- liked by archbishop Cranmer, VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPR, who therefore absents himself from the council, 421. his set- tlement of the crown on lady J. Grey opposed by the arch- bishop, 424. and by Cecil, Ch. 91. archbishop Cranmer would not crouch to him, C. 652. hated the archbishop and sought his ruin, 425. 453. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and subscrib- ing to the succession as limited by the king, 912. one of queen Jane's counsellors, 433. goes into Norfolk to keep it obe- dient to queen Jane, M. III. i. 8. 16. the council write to him to lay down his arms against queen Mary, C. 434. seized, M. III. i. 21. condemn- ed for treason, 33. tries to save his life, C. 452. his speech at his execution, 451. execut- ed, 450. M. III. i.41. whether he was always a papist, C. 453. his arms, M. II. ii. 158. his lands, III. i. 41. Wylson's character of him, A. I. i. 347- of whom he was a great pa- tron, ii. 285. Northumberland, (Jane Guild- ford,) duchess of, accompanies princess Mary in a visit to Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 30. her funeral, III. i. 331. Northumberland, Henry Percy, sixth earl of, M. I. i. 233. de- nies any contract of marriage between him and Anne Bolen, C. 69. M. I. i. 437. p^rt of his property given to Dudley, duke of Nortliumberland, III. i- 4.3- Northumberland, Henry Percy, eighth earl of, see H. Percy. Northumberland, Henry Percy, ninth earl of, signed the pro- clamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- K 130 INDEX. cession of king James, A. IV. 518. Northumberland, Thomas, Percy, seventh earl of, A. I. ii, 206. II. i. 87. ii. 468. restored in blood, M. II. i. 210. made a knight and a baron, and created earl of Northumberland, III. ii. 4. 159. employed on the borders against the Scotch, 2 1 . 80. 83. 84. 88. 533. 97. al- lowed by queen Mary to have one hundred retainers, 162. lord warden of the east and middle marches, 159. A. I. i. 23. 26. orders for him, 26. 29. the council's letter to him, 27. ordered to discharge many of his forces, 29. 30. one of the royal visitors for the north, 245. bears the sword before queen Elizabeth going to par- liament, 435. dissented at first from the bill for consecration of bishops to be good, ii. 230. he and the earl of Westmoreland headed the re~ bellion of the papists in the north, 312. 383. III. i. 385. ii. 340. 586. their declarations, I. ii. 313. 314. proclaimed traitor, 315. his character, taken from a tract on the re- bellion, 337. was executed, 344. II. i. 317. III. ii. 495. M. III. ii. 159. considered by the papists a martyr and a saint, A. III. ii. 345. notice of a True Report of the Declara- tion of the Earl of N.'s Trea- son, i. 512. Northumberland, (Anne Somer- set, daughter of the earl of Worcester,) countess of, A. II. ii. 468. i. 255. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii. 53. II. i. 494. ii. 551. one of the chief stirrers of the rebellion in the north against queen Elizabeth, i. 75. North-west passage, Davis's ac- count of his discoveries, A. III. i. 509. Northwike, manor house of, be- longing to the see of Worces- ter, A. I. ii. 38. Norton, — C. 769. Norton, — takes part in an in- cursion into Scotland, INI. III. ii. 97. Norton, — a public spirited mem- ber of parliament, A. I. i. 440. P. II. 63. A. II. i. 97. 98. Norton, — A. I. ii. 320. Norton, — P. II. 434. Norton, — A. II. i. 578. Norton, — wrong done by him to the hospital of Herbaldown, W. II. 328. 329. Norton, Baldwin, late chaplain to archbishop Heath, an evil disposed person, A. I. i. 416. Norton, Dr. E., had the living of Little Walden, S. 5. Norton, Francis, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53. II. i. 495. Norton, sir George, M. II. i. 448. C. 335. made a knight of the bath at Edward VI, 's co- ronation, M. II. i. 37. ii. 327. high sheriff of Essex, 164. ob- tained the manor of Leigh, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Bristol, i. 525. ii. 173. Norton, sir John, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. and at Henry VIII. 's fune- ral, ii. 328. accompanies lord Clinton, sent ambassador to France, i. 507. Norton, John, of Dedford, intro- duction to his will, M. II. i. 557- Norton, John, presented to the living of Morley, P. II. 87. refused institution by bishop INDEX. 131 Parkhurst for his bad charac- ter, ib. Norton, Nicholas de, friar, P. III. 179. Norton, Richard, one of Edward VI, 's council in the north, M. II. ii. 161. Norton, Richard, A. I. ii. 345. II, i, 273. 578. ii. 378, III. i. 300. 624, a fugitive beyond sea, II. ii, 596. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii, 53. II. i, 495. ii. 468. Norton, sir Richard, A. III. ii. 330, 461. an officer of bishop Cooper, i, 300. slanders the bishop as being covetous, ib. the bishop's vindication of himself, ib. ii, 261, Norton, Robert, a learned man, and a good preacher, P. II, 157, presented to the vicarage of Aldborough, ii. 159, Norton, Samuel, A. Ill, ii. 462. Norton, Thomas, a fugitive rebel, A. I. ii. 345. II. i. 578. Norton, Thomas, A, III. i. 92. Norton, Thomas, sohcitor to the city of London, A. III. i. 104. Norton, Thomas, a minister, sets himself right with archbishop Parker, as no disturber of the church's peace, P. II. 142. 143. his advice for proceeding with Campion in disputation, 165. III, 212. employed to take down the arguments at the last day's conference, Ay. 199. A. II. ii. 363, tries to dissuade Whitgift from answering the Admonition to Parliament, W. I. 57. Ay. 13. Whitgift's an- swer to him, W. I, 61. Ay, 14. which convinces him, W, I, 65. according to Mr. Baker, he was the author of the book to the Queen s Poor Deceived Sub- jects, &c. and not sir T.Smyth, as Strype supposes, A, IV, 603. Mr. Baker's notice of him, ib. Norton, Walter, a recusant, A. III. i. 609. ii, 422. Norton, Mrs,, bred up in sir T. More's femiiy, A. Ill, i, 92. practised necromancy, ib. drowned herself, ib. Norton manor of, Worcester- shire, granted by Edward VI. to sir P. Hoby, M, II, i, 434. Norwich, — imprisoned as a pa- pist, A, II. ii. 661, Norwich, lord, a judge, M, III. i, 498. Norwich, lady, wife of the pre- ceding, her death and burial, M. III. i. 498. Norwich, chantry of St. Michael Coslam's there, bought of the crown by sir E. Warner and R, Catlin, M. II, ii, 402, arch- bishop Parker's benefactions to the town, P, I. 577. II. 484. his endowments at Cam- bridge for the benefit of Nor- wich school, I. 9. 503. 575. 576. II. 95. 414. his ordi- nances respecting these en- dowments, I, 504. 575. and respecting certain sermons ap- pointed by him to be preached there, 504, 505, Norwich, bishopric of, the aug- mentation to its endowment made by Edward VI„ M. II, i. 368. value of the see, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Norwich, bishops of, see R. Nix, — 1549. T. Thirlby, 1550— 1554. J. Hopton, 1554— 1558. J. Parkhurst, 1560 — 1574- Edm. Freake, 1575 — 1584, Edm. Scambler, 1584 — 1594' J.Jegon, 1602 — 1 61 7, Norwich, cathedral of, Edward VI. 's grant for the refounding of the cathedral, M. II. i. 121. and to the dean and chapter, K 2 132 INDEX. ib. disorders in the cathedral, P. II. 36. how in danger of losing its revenues, A. II. i. 312. dean Gardiner's good service to it, 450. its revenues struck at, III. i. 488. petition of the dean and chapter, 489. Popham's judgment in this cause, 490. articles of agree- ment propounded, 492. Down- ing's statement respecting the church, ii. 376. a plat for a new establishment of the ca- thedral, 56. disallowed by the dean, 57. his letters to lord Burghley on the subject, ib. 60. and to sir T. Shirley, 59. articles of agreement be- tween the chapter and pa- tentees, 61. 574. the chapter refer their cause to lord Burgh- ley, 61. 575. the conclusion of the suit, 62. 577. Norwich, dean and chapter of, grants of lands to, by Edward VI., M. II. i. 121. Norwich, dean of, see J. Salis- bury, 1560 — 1573. G. Gardi- ner, 1573—1589- Norwich, diocese of, statement of the number of churches and chapels within it, 1562, A. t. i. 539. many leave off coming to church, II. i. 161. the bi- shop's letter thereupon, ib. complaint of disorders in the diocese brought into convo- cation, 1586, W. I. 496. par- ticularly in the archdeaconry of Suffolk, 497. see Prophe- syings. Norwich, monastery of, founded by William Rufus, changed by Henry VIII. into a dean and chapter, M. I. i. 504. his pa- tents for the same, ib. the pa- tent void for want of the bi- shop's consent, 506. the con- sequence, ib. Nostredame, Michael, P. I. 76. Note, Thomas, P. II. 433. Note, William, P. II. 434. Nothrel, John, alias J. Spicer, M. II. i. 117. Nottingham, archdeacon of, see J, King. Nottingham, Thos. Howard, earl of, took the degree of M. A. at Cambridge, W. I. 45. see C. lord Howard of Effingham. Nove, M. de la, A. II. i. 363. November, seventeenth festival of, called by some the birth- day of the gospel, celebrated in queen Elizabeth's reign, A. I. ii. 354. II. ii. 65. a prayer for the occasion, 65. notice of cer- tain prayers for this day pub- lished by E. Bunny, III. i. 515. an account of the institution of this day is contained in a ser- mon published by Dr. Holland, IV. 604. Novvel, — A. III. i. 612. Nowel, Alexander, excluded from parliament luider queen Mary, although lawfully chosen, C. 457- Nowel, Noel, Alexander, (as dean of St. Paul's,) G. 87. P.I. 196 250. A. I. ii. 46. P. II. 56. W I. 60. 7y. A. II. i. 428. P. II 399. G. 276. A. II. ii. 214 392. 588. III. i. 48. 74. Ay 29. 33. 41. A. III. i. 337 master of Westminster school M. II. i. 527. Ch. 67. set forth a book of Redman's judgment of certain disputed points in religion, ib. charged by the pa- pists with forgery in this book, M. II. i. 528. obtains a pre- bend of Westminster, ii. 267. has a license to preach, 277. supposed by Dr. Ward to be the author of the Catechisjnits Brevis Christiance DisdplincE, &c., C. 423. Strype's reasons INDEX. ^33 for considering him the author, M. II. ii. 25. published by Ed- M'ard VI. 's authority, i, 590. an exile for religion under queen Mary, C. 450. Ch. 95. resident at Argentine, M. III. i. 232. and at Frankfort, 404. signed the letter of the church at Frankfort about ceremonies, A. I. i. 153. 263. in a list of persons to be preferred, 228. 229, in a commission to visit certain dioceses, 247. chap- lain to bishop Grindal, G. 49. preaches at the consecration of him and other bishops, ib. P. I. 1 26. prebendary of Canter- bury, 144. in a commission to visit that church, ib. archdea- con of Middlesex, G. 56. made dean of St. Paul's, ib. A. I. i. 306. preaches at St. Paul's Cross, 297. his sermon mis- represented, 352. preaches be- fore queen Elizabeth, 369. G. 71. preaches again on St. Paul's being burnt, A. I. i. 401. and before the queen again, 407. also a Spital sermon, 408. and again before the queen, who is offended at his having a Prayer Book with cuts placed before her, ib. P. I. 193. her conversation on the subject, A. I. i. 409. one of those recom- mended by archbishop Parker for the provostship of Eton, P. 1. 208. and by bishop Grin- dal, 209. recommended by the archbishop as prolocutor of the convocation of 1562, 240. is chosen, 241. A. I. i. 473. one that signed a request to this convocation concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 504. his Catechism al- lowed by this synod, 474. 525. P. 1.403. which he had drawn up by the advice of secretary Cecil, A. I.i.525. his letter to him with a copy of it, 526. the Cate- chism published in 1570, 527. taken from king Edward's La- tin Catechism, ib. Whitgift's judgment of it, 528. and bi- shop Cooper's, ib. preaches a Spital sermon, ii. i. as- sists in drawing up a form of prayer and fasting in conse- quence of the plague, P. I. 261. completes his Catechism, G. 138. present at the celebration of the emperor's funeral at St. Paul's, 146. preaches a Lent sermon before the queen at court, P. I. 31 8. offence taken at it, ib. his letter to Cecil in justification of himself, 319. III. 94. confutes part of Harding's book against bishop Jewel, in a sermon at Paul's Cross, A. I. ii. 113. answers also Dorman's book against the bishop, ib. P. I. 359. his answer reviewed by bishop Grindal, G. 164. his pacifica- tion respecting ecclesiastical habits, P. I. 343. one of the Lent preachers, 1565,111.135. notice of his confutation of Dorman's Disproof, A. I. ii. 247. II. ii. 710. in which he also answered Dr. Sanders, I. ii. 248. II. ii. 710. the esteem due to his book, I. ii. 249. jjreaches against popery in his native county, Lancashire, 258. his letter to bishop Grindal, on the public state of religion, G, 202. confers with sir J. Southworth, a papist, P. I. 527. who for a time was plac- ed in his custody, ib. G. 205. applied to lord Burghley in behalf of Manchester college, P. II. II. his Catechism pub- K 3 134 INDEX. lished, 17. founds a school at Middleton in Lancashire, A. II. i. 353. endowing certain scholarships for it at Brazen- nose college, Oxford, ib. pre- sent at the execution of the duke of Norfolk, ii. 461. an ecclesiastical commissioner, i. 419. G. 310. one of those ap- pointed at Rome to be de- stroyed by a plot there carry- ing on, A. II. ii. 357. notice of his and the dean of Wind- sor's conference with Cam- pion, 361. one of those no- minated by the council to con- fer with any papist, W. I. 198. archbishop Grindal's bequest to him, G. 428. his Catechism vindicated, A. III. i. 411. his letter to lord Burghley against Mr. Rogers, a layman, being made treasurer of St. Paul's, W. I. 444. preaches a thanks- giving sermon on the defeat of the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 27. he and Dr. Andrews sent to confer with Udal, W. II. 97. married, P. I. 208. bro- ther to Laurence Nowel, M. 11. i. 403. some account of him, A. I. i. 306. his benefac- tions to Brazen-nose college, Oxford, 307. quoted, M. III. ii. 158. A. I. i. 266. 499. ii. 58. P. I. 282. Nowel, sir Andrew, one of the commissioners against semina- ries in Rutlandshire, W. II. 107. Nowel, John, vicar of Gyggles- wick, appointed one of the go- vernors of the free school founded in his parish by Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 505. Nowel, (or Newal,) John, has a commission to visit the deanery of Bocking, M. III. i. 481. and again, P. I. 70. rector of Hadley and dean of Bocking, ib. Nowel, Laurence, P. II. 514. brother of Alexander, ordained, M. II. i. 403. an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. A. I. i. 491. dean of Litchfield, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. one that signed a request to the convocation concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501, votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for disci- pline, 512. Nudigate, Francis, or John, stew- ard to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 442. imprisoned with the duke's adherents, 497. in- dicted, ii. 247. committed to the custody of sir J. Mason for his part in the business about the succession of lady Catha- rine Grey to the throne, A. I. ii. 1 1 7. steward to the duchess of Somerset, III. i. 89. dies, ib. his will, ib. see Neivdigate. NuUent, Lisken, A. IV. 572. Numa Pompilius, S. 193. Nuncio of the pope, refused ad- mittance into England, init. queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 166. Nunnez, Elvira, burnt at Seville by the inquisition, A. I. i. 356. Nuns of Sion, enclosed in, M. III. ii. II. Nutbrone, John, M. III. ii, 399. Nuttal, — parson of Sheston, A. II. ii. 547. Nutter, Anthonie, W. III. 271. 282. Nutter, John, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Nutter, Robert, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. INDEX. "^35 Nyckson, William, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 201. O. Oath imposed upon all that com- menced degrees of divinity in Cambridge, M. III. i. 573. Oath ex officio mero required of the clergy^ account of some treatises against, W. II. 28 — 32. the judgment of certain ci- vilians respecting it, 232. Oatlands, one of Edward i^VL's residences, M. II. ii. 9. Obedience, the protestants' prin- ciples of, in the reign of queen Mary, M, III. i. 230. O'Bengil, Patrick and Terence, have a dispensation from the pope to be ordained, though bastards, A. II. ii. 66. Obespyn, M. I', secretary of France, in a commission to treat of a peace, between the emperor and French king, M. III. i. 346. Obignie, baron d', A. II. ii. 8. 9. 10. Obhgations of him that had cure of souls, A. I. ii. 132. Obrien, Maurice, an Irish gen- tleman, placed at Magdalen college, Cambridge, by lord Burghley, P. II. 234. bishop of Killalow, ib. his letter to lord Burghley concerning the hypocrisy of Malachias, an Irish bishop, ih. III. 265. O Brien, sir Tirlogh, A. III. ii. 542. Ochinus, Bernardinus, C. 1057. a learned Italian, accompanied P. Martyr into England, M. II. i. 309. received by archbi- shop Cranmer into his family, ib. C. 279. pensioned by Ed- ward VI., 574. notice of Po- net's translation of his Dia- logues against the pope's pri- macy, M. II. i. 309. a transla- tion (probably by Anne Cook) of his sermons on the predes- tination and election of God, published, 415. deprived of his prebend at Canterbury, init. queen Mary, C. 472. his works prohibited as heretical, M. III. 1.418. notice of his sermons translated by W. Whiston, A. III. i. 287. Ockham, — active in indicting persons itpon the six articles, C. 157. why and how punish- ed, 175. Ockland, Christopher, master of the free school in South- wark, afterwards of Cheltenham school, A. III. i. 223. notice of his ElpYjvapx'°<'> sive Elizabetha, &c., ib. ii. 130. appointed to be read in schools, 224. verses in it in praise of lord Burgh- ley, 237. and of the earl of Huntingdon, IV. 375. O'Clier, Dermic, the instrument of cardinal Sanctorius conse- crating him bishop of Maion, A. II. i. 383. ii. 508. O'Conor, — concerned in dis- turbances in the north of Ire- land, M. II. i. 598. 599. Odicknol, manor of, Devon, sold away from the crown, M. II. ii. 61. Odognerty, sir John, the town of lilagh in the north of Ireland belonged to him, A. III. ii. 22. G^colampadians, statement re- specting, M. I. i. 529. QEcolampadius, Joannes, C. 95. 741. 583. A. I. i. 240. his works prohibited as heretical, temp. Henry VIII., M. I. i. 254. and again in the reign of queen Mary, III. i. 418. Officers of state in Edward VI. 's reign, M. II. ii. 163. Offley, Hugh, A. III. i. 203. 205. K4 136 INDEX. Offley, sir Thomas, as lord mayor of London, M. III. i. 499. he and the aldermen wait on queen Elizabeth, 510. is knighted, ib. Offly, — an English rebel, har- boured in France, M. III. i. 566. laboured to atone for his disloyalty by giving informa- tions, ib. Ogilby, the master of, one of James VI. 's counsellors, A. II. ii. 325. his character, ib. Ogilly, alias Bourne, alias In- gram, a Jesuit, notice of his being taken up, A. IV. 236. and of his examination, 237. Ogle, Robert, lord, M. II. i. 502. appointed deputy warden of the middle marshes, ii. 223. creation of the title, 159. Oglethorp, Andrew, A. IV. 212. Oglethorp, Owen, C. 285. as bi- shop of Carlisle, A. I. i. 73. P. I. 118. base born, M. III. i. 173. in a commission for dis- cussion of certain questions in religion, C. iio. recants, 244. president of Magdalen college, Oxford, M. II. ii. 14. dealt with to resign in favour of Dr. Haddon, ib. replaced in the headship by bishop Gardiner, III. i. 81. concerned in the disputation against archbishop Cranmer at Oxford, C. 480. made bishop of Carlisle, M. III. i.488. present at queen Eli- zabeth's first parliament, A. I. i. 82. dissented from the bill for restitution of first-fruits and tenths to the crown, 83. 85. from that for restoring the su- premacy to the crown, 84. 85. 87. from that for exchange of bishop's lands, 86. and from that ioY uniformity , 87. present at the disputation at West- minster, I 29. required to give bail to appear before the privy- council, 139. 140. all the pop- ish bishops but him refused to crown queen Elizabeth, 204. 214. summoned before the queen, 206. deprived, 210. his death and burial, 214. founded an hospital and school in the north, IV. 212. Oglethorp, Robert, A. IV. 212. O Hanlon, — lord of Oriet, M. II. ii. 107. Okel, manor of, granted by Ed- ward VI. to the duke of So- merset, M. II. i. 539. Oking, Robert, commissary to bishop Salcot, M. I. i. 368. C. 248. one of those commis- sioned to compose the Institu- tion of a Christian Man, C. 77. one of those appointed, by the convocation of 1547, to draw up a form of a statute for pay- ing tithes in cities, 221. nmr- ried, 223. Old, John, a teacher of youth, as well as of the gospel, M. II. i. 47. presented by the ducliess of Somerset to the vicarage of Cobington, Warwickshire, ib. translated, at the desire of bi- shop Latimer, Erasmus's Pa- raphrase upon all the canoni- cal Epistles, ib. concerned in the royal visitation of 1547, C. 209. has a prebend of Here- ford, M. II. i. 47. ii. 273. Be- con's character of him, C. 397. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, 450. notice of his Acquittal of Edward VI. a- gainst all such as infamed him, or the Church in his Reign, of Heresy or Sedition, 511. Oldenburgh, Christopher, count of, his character, A. I. i. 549- ort'ers his service to queen Elizabeth, G. 97. a commis- sion sent to him, A. I. i. 549. Oldernay, see Alderney. INDEX. -^31 Olevian, Gaspar, professor of di- vinity at Heidelberg, A. III. i. loi. an Exposition of the Sym- bol of the yipostles, gathered out of his sermons, and trans- lated by Field, ib. Olift', sir John, chinirgeon to Henry VIH. and sheriff' of London, M. HI. i. 504. would have been lord mayor, had he lived, i6. his death and burial, ii. Oliphant, lord, one of the lords of the articles, in Scotland, A. ni. i. 440. Olivanus, — a pastor, A. II. i. 470. Olivarez, — Spanish ambassador at Paris, A. II. i. 13. Oliver, John, an eminent lawyer, C. 24. consulted by Henry VIII. how to make Cranmer archbishop, salving his con- science, ib. and by the convo- cation respecting the king's marriage with Anne of Cleves, M. I. i. 560. in a conimission against anabaptists, II. i. 385. ii. 200. in another for trial of bishop Gardiner, 199. III. i. 462. in another for visiting the Savoy, II. ii. 204. in another for trial of bishops Day and Heath, ib. C. 330. in another for trial of bishop Boner, M. III. i. 38. sent with an em- bassy into France, II. i. 473. 478. ii. 244. in two commis- sions for despatching chancery business, i. 497. 521. ii. 205. 207. Olyver, — pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i. ,495- O'Molana, Malachias, imprison- ed as a papist, P. II. 234. bi- shop of Ardagh, as he pretend- ed, ib. O'Brien's letter con- cerning his hypocrisy, ib. HI, 265. his submission to the privy-council, 266. Omphalius, Jacobus, a learned civilian, and dependant upon Herman, archbishop of Co- logne, M. II. i. 318. dedicated his treatise De Usurpatione Le- gum, &c. to Edward VI., ib. sent by the archbishop of Co- logne to England, 318. 479. has a passport to return to Flanders, ii. 279. O'Neal, O'Neyle, James, taken prisoner by his brother Shan O'Neal, A. J. ii. 204. O'Neal, John, son of the earl of Tyrone, M. II. ii. 107. O'Neal, Shan, takes his brother prisoner, A. I. ii. 204. evil ap- prehended from him, 212. the chief prince in Ulster, S. 13 t. called himself earl of Tir Oen, ib. e.xpelled Sarleboy and his Scots from Clandeboy, ib. slain by Sarleboy and his party, ib. Onely, John, in a commission to value the first-fruits and tenths in London, M. I. i. 426. Oporinus, Joannes, printer of Ba- sil, employed J. Fox as cor- rector of the press, C. 514. 515. A.I. i. 151. printed Ger- manicE ad Angliam restituta Evangelii luce, Gratulatio, 156. and Humphrey's tract, De Religionis Conservatione et Re- formaiione Vera,i6\. also Fox's writings, ib. list of Bucer's pieces printed by him at Ar- gentine, G. 298. Oquendo, don Michael de, gene- ral of all the fleet of Guipusque in the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 144. 536. drowned, 144. Orange, William of Nassau, prince of, A. II. i. 28. 85. 519. ii. 398. 610. III. i. 179. 553. ii. 346. IV. 54. 117. he and the reformed party in the Ne- 138 INDEX. therlands struggling for their liberty and religion, II. i. i6. 17. reasons of Walsingham's advice that queen Elizabeth should aid him in support of the Netherlands, 212. offers the Low Countries to the queen, 573.11. 17. the queen's reason to the king of Spain for assisting him, 8. endea- vours made to bring him over to the Roman religion, 94. notice of his being murdered, III. i. 116. 130. 309. the as- sassin hired by king Philip, 130. queen Elizabeth's letter about his daughters, 309. ii. 276. Oraylie, Molmor, lord of Breflfyn, M. II. ii. 107. Order for serving of cures now destitute, purport of archbi- shop Parker's scheme for that purpose, P. I. 130. Orders to the bishops concerning the supremacy, M. I. i. 259. and to the sheriffs, ih. for preaching, and the beads, ib. for the foreigners' church in London, II. i. 376. and for the strangers' at Glastenbury, 381. for remedying the dearth in Cornwall, 439. ii. 477. to the bishops for prayers against the sweating sickness and dearth, i. 494. about the new revised Common Prayer Book, ii. 20. Orders of council in Edward VI.'s reign, M. II. ii. 174. Orders to the ambassadors with the emperor, M. III. i. 8 for musters, 148. against de- parting from the parliament in Christmas,32 8. for apprehend- ing such in Harwich as met at secret conventicles, 552. or- ders to bishop Boner concern- ing them, ib. orders to him to proceed with others, ih. orders to the earl of Shrewsbury, lord lieutenant in the north, 558. orders sent into the north about traitors, ii. 67. for rais- ing the bishopric of Durham, 79- Orders for serving the vacant cures, A. I. i. 274. orders and resolutions for uniformity, 329. queen Elizabeth's orders a- gainst women's living in ca- thedrals and colleges, P. I. 212. Orders for bishops and the clergy drawn \ip by bishop Sandys, and submitted to the convo- cation of 1562, A. I. i. 506. orders for readers and dea- cons confirmed in the convo- cation of 1562, 514. for vaga- bonds and rogues in the north, ii. 295. the effect thereof, 296. for religious worship in the church of Northampton, II. i. T33. and for the exercises called prophesyings, 136. or- ders to the vice-admiral of the fleet, III. i. 422. Orders for the cathedral of Can- terbury, W. II. 384. III. 382. that laymen be not admitted into, unless properly qualified, A. II. i. 429. Ordination, office of, reformed, C. 273. notice of the new book of ordination, M. II. i. 290. 318. Ordinations, C. 273. M. II. i. 402. 403. 553. ii. 62. A. I. i. 233. 234. P. I. 129. G. 53. 72. Ay. 21. Ordnance, commission to inspect, M. III. i. 49. Oreton, Ann, married to J. Gar- leke, M. III. i. 168. see Orton. Origen, C. 328. Orkney, bishops of, see R. Reid, 1540 — 1562. J. Bothivell, 1562 — 1606. INDEX. 139 Orkney, earl of, see lord Robert Stewart. Orleans, bishop of, one of the French commissioners to treat about a peace between the em- peror and French king, M. III. i. 346. Orleans, duke of, gives a noble salary to the professor of Greek and Latin at Orleans, S. 15. Ormanet, — an Italian, the pope's datary, one of the commis- sioners appointed by cardinal Pole to visit the universities, M. III. ii. 28. W. I. 12. Orme, Humphrey, keeper of the standing wardrobe at the Tower, M. II. ii. 11. Ormond, — Butler, earl of, as lord Butler, his part at EdwardVI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 7. made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, 36. Ormond, — Butler, earl of, A. II. i. 14. 15. ii. 83. III. ii.542. 616. one of the challengers at a tilting before q\ieen Eliza- beth, A. I. i. 288. Ormond, countess of, married to sir F. Brian, her saying about childbirth, S. 202. Orrel, — a coiner of false money, taken up, A. III. i. 303. Orset, Essex, Hotost's chantry there, bought of the crown by C. Cysley and J. Leeds, M. II. ii. 40*7 . Ortel, — Dutch agent in Eng- land, A. III. i. 308. ii. 274. 275- Orton, Henry, a civilian, indict- ed with Campion, P. II. 167. condemned but not executed, A. II. ii. 355. see Oreton. Orvieto, incommodiousness of, M. Li. 138. Orwel, Edward, public notary, W. I. 263. Orwin, Thomas, printer, set up by archbishop Whitgift, W. I. 581. III. 219. calumniated as having printed popish books, ib. Orwin, widow, notice of a book printed by her, W. II. 305. see Osiven. Osborn, — vicar of Whalev, A. H. ii. 548. Osborn, — a seminary priest, and Franciscan, A. III. i. 125. 197. Osborn, — A. IV. 378. Osborn, Peter, Ch. 132. A. I. ii. 31. G. 98. A. III. i. 491. 492. ii. 379. 58. a friend of sir J. Cheke, Ch. 39. has the office of clerk of the faculties, M. II. ii. 220. has a pardon for all arrears of accounts, 238. a grant by queen Mary to him and Cheke, Ch. 1 29. Cheke re- tired to his house, and died there, after his release from the Tower, 131. M. III. i. 516. remembrancer of the exche- quer, A. III. i. 92. in the ec- clesiastical commission, P. I. 451. III. 184. A. III. i. 225. one of archbishop Parker's ex- ecutors,P.III.339. present at his funeral, II. 433. his daughter married to sir T. Cheke, 146. Osborn, Thomas, his contest about king Edward's fellow- ship at Christ's college, Cam- bridge, A. II. ii. 313. III. i. 217, the decision, 220. Osborn, William, ordained, G. 59- Osel, M. d',Dos, or Docel, French ambassador in Scotland, M. III. ii. 71. 96. present at an incursion into the English frontiers, 83. Osiander, Andreas, C. 560. 567. persuaded by Cranmer that Henry VIII. 's marriage was unlawful, 14. is encouraged by 140 INDEX. him to complete his Harmony of the Gospels, 15. his niece becomes Cranmer's wife, ib. kept up a great correspond- ence with Cranmer, ib. his character of him, 656. Osius, P. III. 54. Osmond, — burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 346. Osney, Oxfordshire, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Osney, abbot of, see R. King. Osorius, Hieronymus, afterwards bishop of Sylva, C. 670. M. II. i. 384. ii. 1 18. A. I. i. 124. 427. 486. ii. 146. maintained that queen Mary and cardinal Pole were poisoned, M. III. ii. 143. his book De Nobilitate well esteemed, A. I. i, 541. no- tice of his letter to queen Eli- zabeth persuading her to turn Romanist, 541, notice and some account of Haddon's an- swer to it, ii. 69. III. i. 96. S. 76. 90. 166. which he answers, A. I. ii. 84. Haddon's reply to this answer, being incomplete at his death, is continued by Fox, 86. Ostia, Julian, bishop of, P. I. 383. 384. III. 121. Ostinghanger, see Hostinghanger. Oswald, — A. IV. 445. Oswell, — P. II. 434- Oswen, John, printer, printed at Worcester Verou's transla- tion of Zuinglius's Pathway to the Understanding of Scripture, M. II. i. 445. also Verou's translation of Bullinger's De- fence of the Baptizing of Chil- dren, &c., 551. Otby, William, divorced from a nun, whom he had married, M. III. i. 486. ii. 408. Otford, Kent, a residence there taken from the see of Canter- bury by Henry VIII., C. 405. 406. 625. granted by Edward VI. to Dudley, duke of North- umberland, M. II. ii. 218. 231. lands there given by queen Mary to cardinal Pole, III. i. 475-' Otherey, lordship of, Somerset, sold away from the crown, M. II. ii. 61. Ottley, advowson of, Yorkshire, granted to sir H. Neville, M. II. ii. 229. Otto, duke of Brunswick, see Brunswick. Oucwain, Darby, appointed to be a singing vicar of the college in Galway, M. II. i. 463. Ousthorp, warren and parsonage of, bought of the crown by Spainy and Baspole, M. II. ii. 239- Outred, — A. III. ii. 170. Overal, John, of Trinity college, Cambridge, (afterwards bishop of Litchfield and Coventry, and subsequently of Norwich,) W. II. 437. how far concern- ed in the dispute with Barret on predestination, &c. at Cam- bridge, 275. and with Dr. Baro, III. 343. II. 303. 304. elected regius professor of divinity, 317. archbishop Whitgift's let- ter concerning him, ib. his judgment of such as are justi- fied, 318. dean of St. Paul's, A. IV. 552. succeeds Dr. Ra- vis, as prolocutor of the con- vocation, 554. in a commis- sion for suppression of books published without authority, W. II. 504. Overbury, William, his letter to lord Crumwel praising him for his zeal for religion, M. I. i. 316. Overcompton, advowson and he- reditaments of, Lincolnshire, INDEX. 141 passed from the see of Car- lisle to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 3^3- Overoxlinch, tithes of, Glouces- tershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Overston, or Oveston, manor of, Northamptonshire, bought of the crown by sir T. Smith, S. 44. a rent charge out of it given by him to Queen's col- lege, Cambridge, 168. Overton, John, printer, printed at Ipswich Bale's work of the WTiters of Britain, M. II. i. 228. Overton, William, of Magdalen college, Oxford, P. I. 537. (as bishop of Litchfield and Coven- try,) G. 391. A. III. i. 61. 589. ordained, G. 54.59. one of those recommended by bishop Grindal for the provostship of Eton, P. I. 209. residentiary of Chichester, II. 19. married a daughter of bishop Barlow, 474. consecrated bishop of Litchfield and Coventry, G. 381. A. II. ii. 378. notice of his previous life, 378. Cecil and the earl of Leicester his friends, ib. 379. lost when bi- shop, the favour of the latter, 379. defamed in a sermon at Chichester, ib. his case with a justice of the peace. III. i. 33. his letter to lord Burghley on the subject, ib. sends informa- tion to court of the recusants in his diocese, 62. his contest with Dr. Beacon about the chancellorship of his diocese, 131. G. 485. W. I. 199. 209. the case put to learned lawyers, A. III. i. 132. the case as drawn up by him, 133. Ba- bington's petition to the privy- council on the subject, 134. the bishop's reasons for refiis- ing Beacon, 135. Beacon's an- swers to his reasons, ii. 202. the ground of his troubles with his dean and chapter, i. 136. W. I. 201 — 206. his letter to lord Burghley concerning the hard dealings with liim and the earl of Leicester his adver- sary, 137. A. III. ii. 207. his own account of his previous preferment, 209. his letter to the privy-council, with a certi- ficate of convicted recusants, and concerning the ill state of his diocese, 211. his letter to lord Burghley on the same subject, i. 141. his troubles ended by an ecclesiastical com- mission, 138. his letter to lord Burghley acquainting him of the circumstance, ib. desires an ecclesiastical commission for papists, 139. his speech to the queen on the subject, 140. his complaint against Dr. Beacon, 483. writes to lord Burghley in his own vindication, ib. his troubles by the receivers of the queen's subsidies, 485. sus- pended for departing from the convocation without leave, W. I. 539. restored, i6. his letter to the privy-council complaining of an abuse in the loan and subsidy, and his advice how to reform it, A. IV. 75. and to lord Burghley on being slan- dered as a maker of incestuous marriages, 430. assisted at the consecration of bishops Goldes- borough. Cotton, and Row- land, W. II, 405. and of bi- shop Heton, 423. Overton, manor and rectory of, Wilts, taken by the crown in exchange from the dean and chapter of Winchester, M. II. 142 INDEX. i. 119. the rectory granted to the see of Oxford, 120. Oviedo, Matthew de, A. II. ii. 194. Owen, — A. III. i. 449. Owen, Dr., physician to Henry VIII., Edward VI., and queen Mary, M. II. i.46. III. ii. 118. buried, 1 18. Owen, Hugh, A. IV. 13, 92. 93. 94. 142. 143. 207. 229. 383. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii. 53. II. i. 495. ii. 550. he and Holt had the sovereign dealing of all Englishmen's matters in the Flander court, IV. 390. Owen, John, a priest, A. IV. 256. Owen, Robert, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i- 495- Owen, Thomas, notary public, C. 1080. 1 100. Owen, William, a scholar in the English college at Rome, A. IV. 270. Owens, Owen, archdeacon of Anglesea, G. 318. Owin, Richard, prebendary of Bangor, G. 318. Owin, Richard, A. IV. 94. Owinele, Gregory, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Owyn, Richard, notice of his im~ 'prisonment as a papist, W. I. 528. 529. Oxenbridge, — G. 320. Oxenbridge, Andrew, his acknow- ledgment of the queen's su- premacy, A. III. i. 276. for disowning which he had been imprisoned, ib. Oxenbridge, sir Robert, lieute- nant of the Tower, M. HI. i. 494.512. present at the cele- bration of the king of Den- mark's funeral at St. Paul's, ii. ' 15- Oxenden, William, in a commis- sion for search of heretics, M. III. i. 476. Oxendene, sir J., certain lands of Eastbridge hospital, Canter- bury, in his possession, W. HI. 352- Oxford, John Vere, fifteenth earl of, M. I. i. 235. his new year's gift to Henry VIII., 211. Oxford, John Vere, sixteenth earl of, M. HI. ii. 128. 346. A. I. i. 57. S. 57. Ch. 94. present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 8. one of the twelve mourn- ers at Henry VIII. 's funeral, ii. 291. 307. made a knight of the bath at Edward VI.'s co- ronation, i. 36. one of the lord lieutenants for Essex, 464. ii. 163. 202. an indenture made by him to the duke of Somer- set, for the marriage of his daughter to the duke's son, cancelled by parliament, i. 540. 554. one of the twelve mourn- ers at Edward VI.'s funeral, ii. 123. lord Abergavenny has a pardon for striking him in the king's chamber of presence, 224. he and T. Almote bought of the crown Depden chantry in Kent and another in Tading- ston, 408. attended, as lord great chamberlain, queen Ma- ry's entry into London, III. i. 54. in a commission against Lollards, 553. patron of El- misthor, ii.401. one of the no- blemen appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her coming to London, A. I. ii. 39 1 . he and lord Robert Dudley conduct the prince of Sweden from Colchester to London, i. 291. S. 59. Oxford, Edward Vere, seven- teenth earl of, P. I- 471. A. II. i. 61. ii. 204. 209. 226. IV. INDEX. H5 117. sir T. Smith his tutor at Cambridge, S. 19. B. Clerk also his tutor, P. II. 183. 184. a ward of sir W. Cecil, S. 19. queen Elizabeth delighted much in his personage, his dancing and his valiantness, A. II. i-457. marries Anne Ce- cil, 178. IV. 471. 472. 473. his indifferent character, II. i. 178, sent for home, having gone abroad without leave, ib. a surmised cause of his prodi- gality falsely attributed to lord Burghley, 179. lord B.'s vin- dication of" himself to him, ib. discontented about some suit with the queen, 500. lord Burghley's letter to the queen about his behaviour to his wife, lord B.'s daughter, ii. 602. 70. 71. lord great chamberlain, 395. 707. reasons of his de- serting his wife. III. i. 82. her letter to him, ib. why kept a prisoner in his own house, 83. sells lands to lord Darcy and sir W. Waldgrave, ib. why highly offended with lord Burghley, 84. tries to get into his own hands the lands left to his daughters by lord Burgh- ley, 85. list of his sales and the names of the purchasers, ii. T91. his debts to the queen, ib. a letter of sir VV. R.aleigh to lord Burghley, concerning the earl of Oxford, under a cloud at court, IV. 590. dis- contented with lord Burghley, III. i. 726. goes beyond sea, ib. lord B.'s letter to him, ib. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, IV. 518. Oxford, countess of, see A. Cecil. Oxford, Robert Harley, earl of, erected a library at his house in York-buildings, M. I. i. pre/. xi. Strype made much use of the MSS. there, ib. Oxford, bishop of, see J. Under- hill. Oxford, see of, revenues granted to it by Edward VI., M. II. i. 120. vacant the rest of Eliza- beth's reign after 1592, Ay. I 1 1. Oxford university, account of a visitation by the king's vi- sitors, M. I. i, 323. its con- gratulatory letter to Henry VIII. on reforming some cor- ruptions in religion, ii. 338. names of the principal gospel- lers there, i. 569. P. Martyr challenged publicly to a dis- putation on the sacrament there, C 284. 285. M. II. i. 324. 325. particulars of the disputation held there against Cranmer, Ridley, and Lati- timer, C. 479—488. M. Ill, i. 182. a visitation of the univer- sity, 220. visited again by a commission from cardinal Pole, ii. 28, 29. Jewel's account of the state of the university, init. queen Elizabeth^ A. I. i. 195. Latin prayers allowed to be used there, 333. 337. orders as to apparel there, P. III. 126. queen Elizabeth visits the uni- versity, S. 167. dispensed from observing the Wednesday fast, P. I. 352. popery prevalent there, 1568, G. 196. corn act passed for the benefit of the imiversities, A. II. ii. 69. S. 144. 145. state of the univer- sity, 1580, A. II. ii. 390. the controversy decided about the oath of the sheriff of the county being made to the university, III. i. 74. their letter of thanks to lord Burghley for his assist- ance in the business, 75. ii. 144 INDEX. 1 88. their letter to him con- cerning swearing the new she- riff, i. 75. the charter of Ed- ward III. on this point, ii. 190. a printing press given to the university by the earl of Lei- cester, their chancellor, i. 499. notice of the first book printed by it, ib. an attempt of the queen's purveyors to infringe their privileges, W. I. 459. A. III. i. 722. their supplication to lord Burghley on this sub- ject, W. III. 176. another, thanking him for his favours, A. III. ii. 500, they are sued about their privileges, W. I. 460. their contest with the townsmen about their oath, 461. reasons why the oath should be taken without any salvo, III. 177. notice of its decay in learning, I. 610. cen- sured by bishop Aylmer for suf- fering an abusive book against the king of Spain to be print- ed there. Ay. 103. the univer- sity disclaims the petition of the thousand ministers for ec- clesiastical reform, W. II. 483. letter from the university of Cambridge to it on its answer to the petition of the thousand ministers, A. IV. 522. notice of a right of the archbishops of Canterbury to visit the uni- versity, taken out of the rolls of parliament, anno 1411,?. I. 529. 530, archbishop Par- ker's account of the university, III. 110. III. notice of cer- tain publications respecting the relative antiquity of Ox- ford and Cambridge, A. I. ii. 108. Asserus Menevensis, in his Life of king Alfred, does not notice his having founded the university, II. i. 465. see Com- mendation. Oxforth, Thomas, of Bene't col- lege, Cambridge, ordained, G. 54- Oy, Hannibal d', a French host- age in England, M. II. i. 358. P. P. (E.,) translated Cranmer's Confutation of Unwritten Ve- rities, &c., C. 228. Pace, Lewis de, a foreign papist, A. m. i. 57. Pace, Richard, secretary of state, M. I. i. 461. praised by Eras- mus for his learning and wit, 53. first brought forward in life by cardinal Wolsey, 188. 194. imprisoned through Wol- sey's means, 191. his letter to king Henry concerning the state of his army in Italy a- gainst the French, ii. 27. Pace, Richard, dean of St. Paul's, had a coadjutor, being a luna- tic, W. III. 390. Pacheco, see Gromo. Pachet, Herald, fellow of Mer- ton college, Oxford, ordained, G.73- Pachingham, Patrick, burnt as an heretic at Uxbridge, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 360. Packard, Thomas, dean of South Mailing, Pagham, andTerring, has a commission to visit those deaneries, M. III. i. 481. P. I. Packington, sir John, one of Ed- ward VI.'s council in the marches of Wales, M. II. ii. 161. Packington, John, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. a good wise gentleman according to bishop Freake, ib. his valuation in tlie subsidy book, ib. Pacy, Thomas, mayor of South- ampton, A. I. i. 64. Paddington, manor of. Middle- INDEX. 145 sex, given in exchange by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. had belonged to the monastery of Westminster, ih. Fade, Raimond, dean of Salis- bury, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Padilla, don Martin de, admiral of the Spanish galleys, A. IV. 59. 61. governor of Castile, captain-general of the Spanish army, 441. his commission Englished, ib. Padlesworth, site of the manor of, Kent, lands there passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. 159. Padye, David, G. 88. Page, — had his hand chopped off for publishing Stubbs' book, A. II. ii. 239. Page, John and Catharine, brought before the ecclesiastical com- mission for adultery, A. II. i. 180. 181. 182. Page, Thomas, scholar of Mag- dalen college, Cambridge, G. 53. see Paige. Paget, — concerned in the re- bellion of the west, M. II. i. 281. Paget, — G. 320. Paget, — W. I. 419. III. 154. I. 550- Paget, Charles, A. III. i. 238. 315. 446. 696. IV. 92. 93. T40. 207. 229. 384. 389. 390. busy to do service to Mary queen of Scots, and engaged in Babington's conspiracy. III. i. 196. 314. 605. 606. ii. 243. brother of Thomas lord Paget, i.196. notice of his letter to se- cretary A^'alsingham, ib. went under the name of Mope, 314. 315. some account of him, IV. 231, Paget, Henry lord, son of Wil- VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. liam, first lord Paget, M. II. ii. 159. died without issjie, ib. made a knight of the bath at queen Mary's coronation, III. i- 53- Paget, Thomas, under treasurer of the Inner Temple, a papist, P. I. 567. 568. interrogatories put to him, 569. Paget, Thomas lord, A. IV. 489. in. ii. 208. 215. 2x6. i. 141. 314. 315. 696. ii. 560. sepa- rated from his wife, i. 87. de- voted to Mary queen of Scots, 196. fled abroad in conse- quence, 88. 196. 358. Paget, Thomas, A. III. ii. 452. Paget, sir William, C. 111. n. 185. 236. M. II. i. 160. C. 294. M. II. i. 436. Ch. 87. M. III. i. 94. ii. 346. i. 4.50- 474- 515. ii. 3. (as lord privy seal, 110.) A. II. ii.707. bred up at St. Paul's school, M. II. ii. 41. a scholar of Gardiner, III. i. 45 1. 466. supported at the uni- versity by queen Anne Bolen, lord Wiltshire, and lord Roch- ford, I. i. 430. one of Henry VIII. 's agents for subscriptions of foreign doctors to the le- gaHty of his divorce, 219. sent with instructions to the king's ambassador in Germany, C. 16. 680. made clerk of the council, M. I. i. 582. secretary of state, II. i. 17. his high cha- racter, ib. one of those con- sulted by the king in making his will. III. i.45S. the earl of Hertford (the protector) has a conference with him on the king's death, II. i. 17. one of the king's executors, 19. sends the protector a letter of advice, as a new year's gift, 34. his thoughts as* to England enter- ing into a league with the Ger- man protestants, 87. made a L 146 INDEX. peer and knight of the garter, ii. 159. Beaudesert given to him, III. i. 3 16. bought church lands of the crown, 1 23. a great friend to the university of Cambridge, and an eminent patron of learning, C. 238. comptroller of Edward VI.'s household, M. II. i. 242. sent ambassador to the emperor, 242 — 249. his reply to the emperor's answer, 249. gets reputation in the emperor's court, 253. his letter to the protector, ii. 416. the pro- tector's and council's answer, 418. considers certain mea- sures taken against insurrec- tionists as too mild, i. 261. his letter of advice to the protector how to proceed against the re- bels, 264. ii. 429. his letter to him on his rough usage of some gentlemen, 427. reproves him, i. 285. rebukes him for courting popularity, ib. his let- ter concerning Bologne, ii. 437. lord lieutenant of Staf- fordshire, i. 464. and Middle- sex, ib. 465. ii. 202. 203. mas- ter of the rolls, 44. grossly wronged the king, ib. brought into the star-chamber for cor- ruption, 45. pardoned and re- stored to favour, 46. his coat of arms confirmed to him by patent as lord Paget, ib. notice of his having been deprived of the order of the garter, 75. in a commission for proroguing parliament, 199. he, arch- bishop Cranmer, and sir T. Smith write to the lords who had separated'themselves from the council, against the pro- tector, C. 275. S. 41, 42. in- vited by those lords to desert him, C. 276. one of the royal visitors for Cambridge, G. 6. Ch. 40. committed to the Tower as an adherent of the protector, M. II. i. 497. yet afterwards accused of being a party to his death, 535. 536. 537. was a papist, 536. se- questered from his office of chancellor of the duchy, 541. was chief secretary, ii. 160. and a privy counsellor, ib. signed various orders as such, i. 374. C. 252. 317. 319. pre- sent with queen Jane Grey's council, 433. 913. he and the earl of Arundel sent by them to acknowledge queen Mary, 434. 915. one of queen Mary's privy-council, M. III. i. 28. restored to the order of the garter, 52. assists at the queen's coronation, 56. he and lord Hastings sent to conduct car- dinal Pole over to England, C. 494. M. III. i. 248. 323. in a commission against protest- ants, 330. accompanies cardi- nal Pole to Calais, 346. made lord privy seal, 469. sent to king Philip abroad, 489. laid aside from the privy-council in queen Elizabeth's reign, ii. 160. allowed by queen Mary to have one hundred retainers, 161. his death and burial, A. III. i. 87. Paget, (Anne Preston,) lady, wife of the preceding, attended queen Mary on her entry into London, M. III. i. 54. Pagit, Ephraim, son of Euse- bius, a godly and learned min- ister, and a writer, W. II. 105. suffered much in the great re- bellion, ib. Pagit, Eusebius, a good and quiet preacher, his troubles for re- fusing to subscribe to uni- formity, W. II. 102. his let- ter to the lord admiral in be- INDEX. 147 half of his conformity, 103. III. 285. instituted rector of St. Anne's, Aldersgate, II. 105. was bred up at Christ Church, Oxford, ib. his writings, ib. where and when buried, ib. Paige, sir Richard, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Pain, — concerned in the rebel- lion in the west, M. II. i. 281. Pain, — A. 11. i. 269. S. 128. Pain, Dr., minister of White- chapel, London, W. I. i5- Pain, John, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Pain, Thomas, A. I. i. 67. Paine, — A. III. ii. 173. Paine, John, a puritan minister, W. I. 504. II. 13. III. 245. imprisoned. Ay. 205. signs a petition for his enlargement from prison, A. IV. 103. see Payn. Paington, manor of, Devon, pass- ed from the see of Exeter to sirT. Speke, M. II. ii. 169. Painter, — C. 210. Painter, William, ordained, G. 58. Paintings in churches defaced, A. I. i. 410. Pakeman, Richard, ordained, G. 72. Pakenton, sir Thomas, made a knight of the carpet, M. III. ii. 181. Palatine, see Rhine. Palentarius, Alexander, proctor of the pope's treasury, C. 537. Palingenius, (Marcellus,) Stella- tus, his Zodiac of Life, trans- lated into English verse by B. Googe, A. II. ii. 81. Pallady, Richard, he and F. Fox- hal bought of the crown the chantry of Aston and manor of Yngton, M. II. ii. 407. im- prisoned as an adherent of the duke of Somerset, S. 42. n. Pallavicino, Horatio, A. III. i. 57. an Italian merchant, 273. Palmer, — a conjurer, detected, A. II. i. 270. Palmer, — A. III. i. 471. Palmer, sir Henry, appointed master of the ordnance going into Ireland, M. II. i. 435. Palmer, sir Henry, admiral, A. IV. 164. 166. 354. buried at Bekesborn, P. II. 463. Palmer, sir John, called Buskin Palmer, a gambler, M. II. i. 180. died by the hands of justice, 181. Palmer, John, A. I. i. 20, Palmer, John, A. Li. 64. Palmer, John, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. III. ii. 606.607. concerned in depriv- ing the master of the college, II. i. 451. and in the expul- sion of a fellow, W. I. 517. Palmer, John, A. IV. 307. Palmer, Julius, or Joscelin, of Magdalen college, Oxford, A. III. i. 737. ii. 511. M. III. i. 82. some account of him, 574. betrayed and burnt, 574. 575. Thackham charged with trea- chery towards him, 575. 576. Thackham's relation of his seizure, 577. Perry's opinion of its truth, 584. informa- tion gathered at Reading touch- ing Palmer, ii. 430. Palmer, Lennard, P. III. 161. Palmer, Peter, G. 604. 436. Palmer, Simon, M. III. i. 173. Palmer, sir Thomas, M. II. i. 123. in a commission con- cerning the debatable land be- tween England and Scotland, ii. 207. has a pardon for all treasons, 248. obtains of the crown the priory of Snelleshal, Bucks, and the manor of Har- lington, 407. imprisoned as an h 2 148 INDEX. adherent of lady J. Grey, III. i. 24. condemned for treason, 33. executed, 41. his speech at his execution, C. 45 x. Pahner, sir Thomas, A. I. i. 64. II. ii. 22. 1 16. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Palmer, Thomas, son of sir Hen- ry, married Margaret Parker, widow of T. l3iggs, P. II. 463- Palmer, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Palmer, William, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Palmer, William, chancellor of York, G. 279. A. II. ii. 42. W. I. 499. Palmes, George, M. III. i. 171. Pamphilus, Josephus, A. II. ii. 508. Panel, — A. III. i. 695. Pannel, Thomas, resigns the liv- ing of St. Dionys, Lime-street, London, M. II. ii. 261. Pantry, William, C. 565. Papacy, see Pope. Papeworth, Richard, the living of St. Mary de Axe, London, granted to him, M. III. i. 59f- Papists glad of queen A. Bolen's death, M. I. i. 440. their be- haviour towards Edward VL, II. i. 37. strive to stop king Edward from promoting a re- formation in the church, 52. upbraid the protestants for al- terations made in the Book of Common Prayer, 337. main- tain that the laws made during Edward VI. s minority were invalid, C. 272. the papists' op- position to the reformation, A. I. i. 390. popish questions and cases dispersed, 392. answer- ed by bishop Piikington, 393. his reason for answering them, 395. the solutions made to some of the questions by the papists, 394- what course was taken with the popish clergy, 410. list of recusants bound to certain places, 41 1. a law pass- ed, 1562, sharpening the laws against papists, 469. the part they took in the divisions in the protestant church, P. I. 460. notice of Pius V.'s bull ana- thematizing heretics, A. I. ii. 218. many disguise themselves for protestants to sow false doctrine, 2 19. instructions for these emissaries, ib. a confe- deracy of the popish princes, 243. a brief abstract of their secret contract, 244. papists in Lancashire, 253. the submis- sion required of papists, 260. papists banished the court by order of queen Elizabeth, P. I. 533. suspected of plotting a rebellion, 1569, G. 203. pa- pists of the better rank gene- rally placed in the private cus- tody of some of the higher clergy, 206. protestation of al- legiance framed for them, P. II. 64. papists bring traitorous books into England, A. I. ii. 361. favourers of popery in Cirencester, 369. papists' con- sciences not to be sifted, 370. the queen's declaration about it, 371. insolent behaviour of papists in England after the massacre of Paris, P. II. 122. Mary queen of Scots the cause of it in archbishop Parker's estimation, 123. sober papists abhorred the massacre, 130. orders from the council to the ecclesiastical commission re- specting papists, 1 24. increase of papists caused by the puri- tans, ib. many of the judges in INDEX. 149 their favour, 138. proclama- tion against their seditious books, 314. papists abroad call- ed home, 1573, A. II. i. 378. Aylnier advises greater severity to be used against papists, Ay. 24. a list of papists imprisoned, i579,A.II. ii. 660. proceedings against papists, 339. 352. pop- ish cases of conscience resolved, 347.348. dangers apprehended from those English papists who had studied at Doway, W. I. 180. a proclamation, in conse- quence, recalling persons from beyond seas, ib. the council's directions for making a certi- ficate of such as absented them- selves from church, 181. and for recalling such youth as went beyond seas, 183. the danger of the queen and realm from papists, 185. search for pa- pists in London, A. III. i. 57. some particulars respecting An Act to retain the Queens Sub- jects in their clue Obedience, W. I. 190. the council's directions in pursuance of this act, 191. another letter of the council respecting popish recusants, 195. rules of the council for conference with the priests and Jesuits, 196. persons nominat- ed by the council to confer with any papist, 198. more laws made against them, A. III. i. 182. the queen against punishing them with death. Ay. 69. notice of a tract, prov- ing that those papists, who were executed, were executed as traitors, A. III. i. 385. ii. 339. W.I. 511. danger from papists by means of the Scotch queen, 505. priests and Jesuits remaining forty days within the realm, guilty of high trea- son, 510. discourses written against the papists, ib. list of all recusants and priests in England and abroad in 1587, A. III. ii. 84. 597. names of certain papists of rank that were imprisoned, 1588, 529. on what grounds, 528. refuse to sign a bond for their good behaviour, 529. some account of the papists tried at Oxford, 1589, 603. a list of papists executed under queen Eliza- beth, taken from the Theatrum Crudel. HcBret., &c., A. III. i. 705. ii. 494. the council's let- ter respecting seminary priests and Jesuits, W. II. 107. no- tice of the evidence against popish prisoners in several counties, 1593, A. IV. 254. names of prisoners in the Tower, 272. names of recu- sants, 276. king James's pro- clamation against priests and Jesuits, W. II. 519. see Pope, Popery, Rebellion, and Recu- sants. Par, Alan, fellow of King's col- lege, Cambridge, W. I. 35. an adherent of Cartwright, A. I. ii. 376, II. i. 2, ii. 415. 416. Par, queen Catharine, M. II. i. 58. 60, Ch. 22. A. II. i. 346. S. 2. 31. 169. 187. 244. in danger for her religion, M. I. i. 598. learned and godly, 621. P. I. 357. prevents, by her in- tercession, the confiscation of colleges at Cambridge, S. 27. M. li. i. 207. her good advice to the university, 208. her let- ter to princess Mary, ii. 330. another to Henry VIII., 331. present at his funeral, 306. was at the charge of having the Paraphrase of Erasmus translated, 45. what part she perhaps did herself, 48, her L3 150 INDEX. letter to the university of Cam- bridge in answer to their re- quest, that she would intercede with king Edw;ird respecting the dissolution of chantries, &c., 337. another to lady Wriothesly, comforting her for the loss of her only son, 339. marries lord Seymour, i. 196. whom she had long loved, 206. her marriage displeasing to the protector, but approved of by the king, 208. died in child- bed, 200. suspicion of her being poisoned by her hus- band, ii. 188. a favourer of learning and religion, C. 236. bishop Park hurst's epigram to her, A. II. ii. 495. Udal's cha- racter of her, M. II. i. 203. no- tice of her psahns and prayers, 204. 205. specimen of one pra3'er, ii. 398. foretold to be born to a crown, i. 206. the manor of Marlborough part of her possessions, 538. Paracly, la dame du, A. III. i. 310. Parady, Abraham, a refugee French minister pensioned by Edward VI., M. II. i. 497. ii. 220. Pardon, general, persons except- ed out of, 1552, M. II. ii. 67. Pardy, John, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Parfeu, John, fled beyond sea, A. I. i. 416. see Warton. Parham, de, M. III. ii. 408. Paris, Ferdinand, a recusant, A. IV. 276. Paris, George, an Irishman, M. II. i. 59 K 598. Paris, George van, a Flemish chirurgeon, M. II. i. 482. burnt for denying the divinity of Christ, ib. C. 258. Paris, Matthew, P. I. 220. III. 54. 11.96.517. account of arch- bishop Parker's edition of his History, I. 552. 553. II. 500. Paris, two persons tried for the pretended conspiracy, and exe- cuted, A. II. i. 246. books set forth to cover the massacre, 258. see Massacre. Paris, provost of, sent to the Tower for treason against queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 5.47- Paris gardens in London, acci- dent at, A. III. i. 202. Parish, necessary ecclesiastical of- ficers of, A. I. ii. 13 2. Parish registers, articles brought into the convocation of 1597, for keeping of, W. II. 378. Parke, John, chaplain and fellow of the Savoy, A. IV. 582. Parker, — A. I. ii. 366. bribed to decoy Dr. Story, Ch. 106. P. II. 366. the papists' revenge upon him, 367. Parker, — solicitor, P. II. 432. Parker, — A. IV. 34. Parker, Alice, mother of the arch- bishop, P. I. 3. III. 19. A. IV. 611. Parker, Anne, M. III. i. 225. Parker, Botolph, brother of the archbishop, P. I. 3. was in or- ders, 6. Parker, Cecilia, M. III. i. 225. Parker, Charles, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Parker, Edmund, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 596. pen- sioned in Spain, I. ii. 53. II. i. 495. ii. 551. Parker, Elizabeth, A. IV. 615. Parker, Frances, see Frances Bar- low. Parker, George, parson of St. Pancrase, London, imprisoned on the six articles, M. I. i. 567- Parker, sir Henry, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. made a knight of the bath INDEX. 151 at queen Mary's coronation, III. i. 53. Parker, James, A. IV. 615. Parker, Jane, P. II. 388. 463. A, IV. 615. Parker, Joanna, A. IV. 615. Parker, John, grandfather of the archbishop, P. I. 3. Parker, John, son of the arch- bishop, P. I. 7. II. 386. 387. 389. 466. III. 285. A. I. i. 435. VV. 1.409. II. 418. when born, A. IV. 614. actuary of the court of audience, P. I. 571. principal registrar, ib. keeper of the prerogative court, II. 26. the advowson of Hol- lingborn given to him by his father, 46. grants made to him by the same, 355. married Joanna Cox, 462. III. 286. A. IV. 614. his family, P. II. 391. 463. A. IV. 6 1 5. his possessions, P. II. 405. 471. a remarkable license granted to him by his father, ib. his father's bequests to him, III. 337. 338. 339- 343. one of his executors, 339. 340. abp. Whitgift's grants to him, W. I. 46. knighted by king James, P. II. 463. Parker, John, son of the preced- ing, A. IV, 615. Parker, John, archdeacon of Ely, A. III. i. 38. ii. 477. Parker, John, of Newark, knight- ed by king James, P. II. 463. Parker, Joseph, son of the arch- bishop, died an infant, A. IV. 614. Parker, Margaret, Ay. 127. P. I. 4-5- Parker, Margaret, sister of the archbishop, P. I. 3. Parker, Margaret, wife of the archbishop, A. III. i. 38. her death, P. II. 27. her com- mendations, ib. 28. Parker, Margaret, P. II. 386. 463. A. IV. 615. Parker, Matthew, archbishop of Canterbury, C. 158. 208. 359 376. 444. 1056. 615. G. 468 P. I. pre/, iv. 59, M. II. ii 169. III. ii. 156. (as archbi- shop of Canterbury,) G. 47 A. I. i. 151. 178. 185. 228 229. 234. 320. 373. 455.460 471. 499. 527. 529. G. 93 120. A. I. ii. 31, 43. 126. 129 C. 343- 355- 609. P. I. 443 476. 478. W. I. 24. A. I. ii 272- 305- 355- II., i. 99. 141 W. 1.46. P. III. 184. II. 63 66. 193. A. II. i. 269. 275 335- 351- 394-4U-II-ii-5i6 Ay. 15. G. 267. 277. A. II. i 477. 479. P. II. 386. 387 472. A. II. ii. 118. 216. 217 III. i. 40. 171, 659. 686. 712 744. G. 316. quoted, C. 443 born at Norwich, 1 504, P. I. 3 educated there, ib. his masters, 8. his ancestry, 3. 4. probably related to bishop Aylmer, 5. his coat of arms, 6. entered at Bene't college, Cambridge, 9. contemporary with Bacon and Cecil at Cambridge, ib. made Bible clerk at his college, ib. chosen fellow, 10. studied the fathers, ib. declines going to Wolsey's new college at Ox- ford, 1 1 . becomes a famous preacher, ib. and is licensed by archbishop Cranmer, ib. went to see Bilney's martyr- dom, 12. M. I. i. 311. and af- terwards gave an account of his last days, P. I. 12. preaches often at court, 13. made chap- lain to queen Anne Bolen, 14. in great fovour with her, ib. charged by her at her death with the care of princess Eli- zabeth, ib. Cheke writes to him to obtain a favour of the queen, ib. appointed by her L4 152 INDEX. dean of the college of St. John Baptist de Stoke, i6. adds a school to it, ib. Ch. 37. his new statutes for it, P. I. 17. which were used by the duke of Norfolk in founding a college, 25. consults Bacon upon some legal points touch- ing its revenues, 18. allowed to preach at Cambridge co- operto capite, on account of a pain in his head, 20. intimate with bishop Latimer, ib. made one of the king's chaplains, 21. 50, accused for his preach- ing, 21. the articles with his answers, ib. acquitted by the lord chancellor, 23. Dr. Stokes sent by the ])opish party to Clare to preach against him, ib. his letter to Stokes in con- sequence, III. 3. appointed by lord Crumwel to preach at Paul's Cross, I. 25. becomes D. D., ib. made prebendary of Ely, 26. and rector of Ashen, ib. made master of Bene't col- lege, Cambridge, by the king's letters commendatory, ib. III. g. the king's character of hiin, I. 26. wfis ever after a great benefactor to this college, 27. his first acts as master, ib. 29. had a history of the college compiled, 30. compiles new statutes for the college, 3 r. bi- shop of Ely's letter to him to preach up the king's supremacy, 32. bishop Boner writes to him for preachers at Paul's Cross from Cambridge, 33. re- signs Ashen, and is presented to Birlingham St. Andrew's,34. chosen vice-chancellor of Cam- bridge, 1 544, ib. becomes rec- tor of Landbeach, ib. ordered by the chancellor, bishop Gar- diner, to inquire into an inter- lude played at Christ's college, in exposure of certain ceremo- nies, 35. the result of his in- vestigations, 36. 37. his mi- nutes of things to be reformed, 40. labours to preserve Stoke college against the act grant- ing all colleges, chantries, &c. to the king, 41. his letter to the queen's council on the sub- ject, III. 10. succeeds for a time, I. 42. at its suppression receives a pension instead of the deanery, 44. 45. partly through Cheke, Ch. 37. who pledges himself to further his views, 38. marries Mary Harle- stone, 1547, P. I. 46. has a son, John, 49. rechosen vice- chancellor at Cambridge, ib. Cranmer appoints him to preach before the king, 50.55. and at Paul's Cross, 55. ap- pointed one of king Edward's chaplains, 50. his discourse a- gainst alienation of the reve- nues of the church. III. 12. preaches against the supporters of Ket's rebellion, I. 5 1 . even in their camp, 52. his great danger, 53. his stratagem to preserve his horses, ib. con- cerned in the disputation be- fore the royal visitors at Cam- bridge, C. 290. in a commis- sion for reformation of the ec- clesiastical laws, Ch. 44. re- signs Birlingham, P. I. 54. a commissioner against anabap- tists, 55. M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. very intimate with Bucer, P. I. 56. M. II. i. 284. preached his funeral sermon at Cam- bridge, P. I. 56. M. II. i. 282. Ch. 61. which is in Bucer's Scripta Anglicana, P. I. 57. one of Bucer's executors, C. 356. 357. importuned by bi- shop Ridley to preach again at Paul's Cross, P. I. 58. has INDEX. ^S3 another son, Matthew, 59. in- timate with Tremellius, ib. in another commission to re- form the ecclesiastical laws, C. 388. a commissioner in the business between Madew and Swinburn, P. I. 60. made ca- non and dean of Lincoln, ib. M. II. ii. 70. intimate with bi- shop Good lick, P. I. 60. who yet was not forward in ad- vancing him, ib. his opinion of the bishop, 61. nominated to preferments, ib. his friends, ib. his credit at Cambridge, ib. his rules for the order of the ministers of the foreign churches in England, III. 16. concealed himself during; the reign of queen Mary, I. 62. deprived of all his preferment for being married, 63. 64. 65. how he lived during this period, ib. hurt for life by a fall from his horse in a flight, 64. his own account of himself, 64 — 67. his Defence of the Mar- riage of Priests, 66. his journal, from his birth to the year wherein he was made archbi- shop, III. 19. his observation on sir J. Cheke's recantation, M. III. i. 517. Ch. 128. 181. his remarks on queen Mary's reign, P. I. 67. emjiloyed in the settlement of religion in the beginning of Elizabeth's reign, 70. S. 56. 'G. 99. A. I. i. 75. absent part of the time from sickness, 120. preaches before the queen, 60. P. I. 70. G. 35, selected by Cecil and Bacon as archbishop of Can- terbury, P. I. 71. advises what sort of man should be made archbishop, 74. and declares he would rather be imprisoned than accept any bishopric, 75. his mean conceit of himself. 76. desired an university life above all, 72. his letter to the queen excusing himself from being archbishop, 78. is fixed upon, 79. his directions for the bishoprics, 80. his advice concerning Cambridge, 82. one of the queen's visitors at Cambridge, 86, buried bishop Thirlby, who had previously lived with him, M. II. ii. 170. A. I. i. 220. his letter to him, P. I. 280. performed the ser- vice at the obsequies of Henry II. of France, P. I. 88. G. 38. A. I. i. 188. 189. tries to pre- vent exchange of the tempo- ralities of the bishoprics, P. I. 88. 89. 90. his address to the queen on this subject. III. 24. adviseth the queen to remove the crucifix out of her chapel, I. 92. in commission upon ministers deprived, 93. bishop Tonstal committed to his cus- tody, 94. A. I. ii. 358. G. 40. and prevailed upon by him to rechange some of his opinions, P. I. 94. buried him, M. II. ii. 167. G. 40. other persons committed to his custody, P.I. 95. his solicitation in favour of Dr. Smith, 96. overreached by him, 97. addition to his coat of arms, 98. verses upon them, 100. the patent, 99. particu- lars respecting his election to the archbishopric, loi — 117. A. I. i. 230. 231. the papists' account of it, P. I. 117 — 120. their objection to it, 120. 121. his own reflections upon it, 122. his oath of allegiance, 123. ordinations by him or his license, 129. A. I. i. 234. his order for serving of destitute cures, P. I. 130. A. I. i. 274. consecrates certain bishops, 231. Charles lord Howard ac- 154 INDEX. knowledges himself of kin to him, P. I. 117. obliged to get his son Matthew legitimated, as the queen would not allow king Edward's act for the mar- riage of priests to be revived, A. I. i. 118. his answer to the letter of the popish bishops, anathematizing the reformed clergy for renouncing the pa- pacy, P. I. 134. Calvin writes to him about a union of pro- testants, 138. he imparts it to the council, 139. their opinion of it, ib. his reasons for delay- ing his metropolitan visitation, 142. his inquiries into the state of the clergy, ib. 143. vi- sits, by commission, the church of Canterbury, 144. and the diocese, 150. his articles of inquiry for the cathedrals, 145. and for the dioceses, III. 28. his statutes for two hospitals near Canterbury, 32. the oath and subscription he enjoined the clergy, I. 153. some par- ticulars of the metropolitan visitation, 151 — 155. differ- ence between him and bishop Sandys, 156. a commissioner to draw up statutes for Christ Church college, Oxford, 158. his exchange of land with the queen, 159. his directions of reform to his court of audience and arches, 161. decides a point of granting marriage li- censes, 163. a secret letter to the queen persuading her to marry, signed by him, bishop Grindal, and bishop Cox, 164. III. 44. G. 60. in a commis- sion for appointing proper les- sons, and for the better keep- ing of churches, P. I. 164. G. 57. A. I. i. 336. further acts of this commission, P. I. 170. queen Elizabeth dines with hinij 171. solicits that the northern bishoprics might not be kept vacant, 172. sets forth an admonition concerning ma- trimony, 1 74. intercedes for some protestants in Flanders, 178. orders a prayer against unseasonable weather, 1 79. forbids the bishops to ordain mechanics, 180. chiefly con- cerned in the declaration en- joined on spiritual persons for the preservation of unity of doctrine, 182. A. I. i. 329. and in the resolutions and or- ders for the clergy, P. I. 183. A. I. i. 329. and in the table of marriage, 332. copy of the declaration, 325. and of the orders, 329. sends to bp. Grin- dal for the names of his clergy, G. 60. preaches at court, A. I. i. 299. and at Newington, 369. his orders for an ecclesiastical contribution for the rebuilding of St. Paul's church, P. I. 185. his inquiries respecting the names, qualities, &c. of the clergy, 187. 188. he and the other bishops address the queen against erecting images, 191. concerned in certain articles for the regulation of the clergy, 1 94. and in the reburial of P. Martyr's wife, 199. restores the hospital of Eastbridge, Can- terbury, 203. one of a commis- sion to visit Eton college, 205. and to frame new statutes for it, 209. reminds the council of a synod to be called, 210. his letter to Cecil upon some speeches of the queen against the marriage of the clergy, III. 49. prevails with Rice to sub- scribe to the supremacy, I. 2 1 8. supports L. Humfrey in obtain- ing the headship of Magdalen college, Oxford, 222. S. Hop- INDEX. 155 kins placed in his custody, A, I. i. 415, his certificates of the schools and hospitals in his diocese, P. I. 224. a|)plied to by the university of Cambridge to dissuade sir VV. Cecil from resigning the chancellorship, 233. applies and succeeds, 234. appoints bishop Cheny his commissary at Bristol, A. I. i. 419. soon after withdraws his commission, and why, ib. 420. whom else he apjjointed as commissioners, 420. sends his mandate, summoning the convocation of 1562, P. I. 236. his pains in the Thirty-nine Articles, 237. his directory for the synod, ib. repairs to the synod, 239. 241. 242. his marginal notes to certain mat- ters to be propounded in the convocation, A. I. i. 474. 477- 479. his emendations of the Articles of Religion decreed in 1552, 485. subscribes the Ar- ticles, 487. propounded articles for government and order of the church, which were not al- lowed, 507. ii. 562. signs the orders for readers and deacons, i. 515. paper of articles of re- ligion laid before this synod, emended by him and bishop Grindal, 522. his directions to the bishops as to the oath of supremacy, P. I. 248. which he had submitted to Cecil, ib. 249. and to which the queen also was privy, ib. grants divers commissions, A. I. i. 420. de- prives Morison, 432. 433. takes no procuration of his clergy at his visitation, P. I. 254. the council's articles of inquiry re- specting his diocese, 255. his answers, 257. concerned in the form of prayer in consequence of the plague, 259 — 262. col- lects many ancient writings, 270. his search after archbishop Cranmer's writings, 270 — 273. his letter to sir W. Cecil about the recovery of certain of them, C. 988. instrumental in the founding of a free school at Sandwich, P. I. 273. a friend to pious foreigners, 276. dean Boxal placed with him, 277. Boxall's letter of thanks to him, 281. tries to obtain Bale's Antiquities, 284. punctual in keeping the ecclesiastical laws, ib. judges a cause of contract of marriage, 286. writes to court about the French pre- parations for war, 289. case of the bishop of St. Asaph refer- red to him, 293. his opinion of pluralities, 294. probably add- ed the Admonition to the trans- lation of Musculus's Common Places, 299. publishes, or causes to be published, A godly Admonition of the Decrees of the Council of Trent, A. I. ii. 59. 114. tries to reduce the clergy to uniformity, P. I. 300. the queen writes to the arch- bishop to promote uniformity, blaming him for remissness, 307. his letter in consequence to the bishop of London, III. 73. concerned in framing the Advertisements on certain ec- clesiastical matters, I. 313. displeased at the council's not sanctioning them, 317. his proceedings for uniformity, 3 20. against Sampson and Hum- frey, 322 — 328. whom he tries to persuade to wear the ha- bits, A. I. ii. 132. his queries to them on conformity, and their answers, P. I. 329. his subscription to a proposition on ecclesiastical habits, 344. repairs his palace at Canter- 156 INDEX. terbiu-y, 346. 347. his letter to lady A. Bacon on her trans- lation of bishop Jewel's Apo- logy, 354. her translation set forth by his order, A. II. ii. 89. a tract on the government of the church added to this translation, probably by his pen, P. I. 356. copy of it, III. 108. concerned in a previous trans- lation of the Apology in 1562, I. 357. founded a school at Rachdale, 363. one of the mourners at the celebration of the emperor's funeral, G. 146. would not allow Dering to be lecturer of an hospital in Lon- don, being a puritan, A. I. ii. 151. intercedes for Sampson with his college, and with Ce- cil, to get him released from confinement, 152. 153. P. I. 371. 372. 373. a volume of learned foreigners' judgments concerning the habits publish- ed by him, or by his order, 174. 175. the declaration of the London ministers, against the habits, answered probably by him, 213. 214. the enforc- ing of uniformity his chief trouble till his death, P.I. 367. recalls his licenses for preach- ing, and grants new licenses, 376. his regulations respecting curates, 377. and fiirming out livings, ib. his letter on these points. III. X13. gives enter- tainments at Canterbury, I. 378. 379. appointed by the queen a sponsor to the son of the margrave of Baden, 380. published a dietary for the pre- vention of dearth, ib. copy of it. III. 1 14. his opinion of the privilege of Cambridge to li- cense preachers, I. 384. aids Cecil in reforming the statutes at Cambridge, 388. his advice to him as to the opposition a- gainst the new statutes, 389. appealed to by Caius college, 369. his judgment, 397. pro- vides Lent preachers, 401. his recommendations of persons for the sees of Landaft' and Bangor, 405.hisjudgmentoftheintend- ed salt works in Kent,4o8. fur- thers by his recommendation a reprint oftheGenevaBible,4[2. his scheme for a new transla- tion of the scriptures, 414. conversant in antiquities and ancient books, 417. his rea- sons for delay in pressing uni- formity, 423. tender of de- priving nonconformists, 424. and why, 425. his and bishop Grindal's intended plan of en- forcing conformity in London agreeably to the queen's pro- clamation, 427. corrects the Advertisements, 430. and re- solves to enforce them, 431. his letter to the bishop of London on the subject, III. 141. much clamoured against by the nonconformists, I. 437. his letter to Haddon concern- ing the puritans, 444. his treat- ment of the London noncon- forming clergy, 450. ordered by the queen to enforce uni- formity, 451. not supported by the council, 452. disliked the task, ib. his reasons for enforc- ing conformity, ib. inquires into the state of his province, 461. recommends a thanksgiv- ing for the success against the Turks at Malta, G. 152. pro- bably composed the collect for the occasion, A. I. ii. 191. P. I. 462. makes certain histori- cal inquiries of Grafton, 467. gains a suit respecting the ma- nor of Fleet, belonging to his see, 471. publishes a Saxon INDEX. ^57 homily and two epistles of Mli'ric, with a preface, 472. 473. his examination of Cum- min, 485. visits the diocese of Norwich, 489. his reasons for visiting it, 495. his articles of inquiry, 491. subject to the disease of the stone, 498. re- fuses a suit respecting Merton coll. Oxford, 499. decides cer- tain controversies there, 500. a party formed against him there, ib. his treatment of it, 501. founds three scholarships for Norwich at Bene't college, Cambridge, 503. appoints four sermons to be preached, ib. his ordinances for the scholars, 504. and sermons, 505. urges and aids Dr. Caius to vindi- cate the antiquity of Cam- bridge, 511. the queen and lord keeper offended with him, 514. his advice respecting Spain, 518. grants a license to a person to be a midvvife, A. I. ii. 242. recommends bishop Jewel to dedicate to the queen his Answer to Harding, 250. commanded by the queen to make inquiries respecting strangers who had fled to Eng- land from d'Alva's persecution in the Netherlands, P. I. 521. III. 168. has authority from the council to search after an- tiquities, I. 522. concerned, as a commissioner, in a dispute with Cambridge, 531. gives the advowson of Abchurch, London, to Bene t college, Cambridge, 537. how far con- cerned in the Bishops' Bible, 540. 541. his rate of arms to be provided by his diocese for the queen's service, 543. 544. recommends Aylmer being made bishop of London, 547. Ay. 16. and Grindal archbishop of York, P. I. 547. G. 234. often thwarted in recommend- ing Aylmer to a bishopric. Ay. 13. maintains the rights of the court of arches, P. I. 549. his judgment as to the regal power of dispensation, 550. urges the filling up the vacant bishoprics, 551. favours Binneman, 552. his care in preventing incestu- ous marriages, 555. orders of the council for an account of his diocese, 558 — 561. his vi- sitation in consequence, 561. a difference in the chapter of Canterbury, 564. his statutes for the hospital of St. Thomas, Canterbury, III. 1 69. W. III. 354. prevails on Dr. Pory to resign the headship of Bene't college, Cambridge, P. I. 572. founds two scholarships at Be- ne't college, Cambridge, for Canterbury school, 573. and three others for Norfolk, Suf- folk,, and Lincoln, 574. also two fellowships and two scho- larships for Norwich, 575. his ordinances for them, ib. his present to Norwich, 577. he and bishop Sandys recommend Cavallerius as professor of He- brew at Cambridge, A. I. ii. 289. 552. he moves the bi- shops, deans, and chapters for contributions towards the French protestants, 290. caus- ed a sermon and prayer to be framed upon the rebellion in the north, 322. probably in- strumental to the publication of the quarto edition of the Bible in 1569, II. ii. 81. lord Henry Howard committed to his custody, G. 234. urges again the filling up the vacant bishoprics, P. II. 5. his judg- ment as to the see of London, 16. and of Oxford, 6. his pro- 158 INDEX. posal respecting Manchester college, lo. wishes to do away with the court of faculties, I3. his rules for this court, 15. his argument in its defence, W. I. 385. III. 133. refuses to allow a boy to hold a prebend, P. II. 12. 13. 14. and thereby offends the earl of Leicester, 13. in- strumental in the publication of Nowel's Catechism, 17. 18. orders and injunctions at his visitation, 21 — 24. his decree concerning a contest among the canons, 25. his repairs at Lambeth, 26. 79. loses his wife, 27. reasons why he en- joined wafer-bread in the sa- crament, 34. 35. falsely charg- ed with being concerned in re- placing the crucifix in the queen's chapel, 35. reviews the new statutes for Cambridge, 38. his conduct with respect to the Precisians, 40. 41. his let- ter to the queen on the state of the clergy, 41. one of the visitors of the Savoy, A. IV. 584. Whitgift submits his an- swers to Cartwright's asser- tions to his inspection, W. I. 40. sued for felling the queen's wood, P. II. 43. his letter to the queen excusing himself, 44. requests Humfrey to write bishop Jewel's life, 50. signed the English articles sanctioned by the convocation of 15 71, 54. chiefly concerned in fram- ing the canons passed in the convocation, 1571,60. which he signed, ib. active as an ec- clesiastical commissioner, 65. 77. procures an order from the council to reform the inns at court, which were popishly affected, 74. the queen's let- ter, pressing uniformity, en- courages him in the commis- sion, 76. procures Bullinger's answer to the pope's bull a- gainst queen Elizabeth to be printed in Latin and English, 78. defends the mention of St. Augustin in the twenty-ninth article, 79. consulted by the bishop of Norwich about his diocese, 88. procures a charter of mortmain for Bene't col- lege, 89. gives plate to Bene't, Gonvil, and Caius colleges, and to Trinity-hall, ib. his regard for these colleges, 91. his other benefactions to Bene't college, 93. founds a scholarship at Gonvil and Caius college, and Trinity-hall, 95, edits Matthew Paris, 1 57 1, 96. his pains therein, 97. I. 552. 553. the publisher censured, 554. 555. vindicated, ib. grants Whitgift a dispensation to hold certain preferment, W. I. 46. a com- mittee appointed by parliament to wait on him on matters of religion, A. II. i. 96. sends archbishop Grindal a book of canons of discipline, G. 246. published the Reformatio Legum Ecclesiasticarum, from a new digest of canon laws revised by Cranmer and P. Martyr, C. 191. P. 11.455. edited 'Mat- thew Westminster, 97. con- cerned in framing statutes for the cathedrals, erected by Hen- ry VIII., 99. lord H. Howard committed to his custody, 104. his impartial decision respect- ing a fellow of All Souls col- lege, Oxford, 105. 106. 107. he and bishop Horn settle the dispute between bishop Coo- per and archdeacon Aylmer, 108. Av. 15. his order about their jurisdictions, P. III. 189. his concern at the massacre of Paris, II. 119. 120. 121. and INDEX. 159 advice to the lord Burghley, 121. his opinion and advice concerning Mary queen of Scots, 123. probably compos- ed the prayers appointed in consequence of the massacre of Paris, 131. Whitgift's An- swer to the Admonition sent in MS. for his revisal, 140. W. I. 65. 85. whom he had chosen to answer it, 54. finishes Belces- born palace, P. II, 144. pur- chases a house in Bekesborn, 145. his friend Haddon dies, 146. recommends bp. Jewel's book for the churches in the diocese of Norwich, 151. opin- ion of the bishop of Norwich as to this measure, 153. his handwriting forged by the con- cealers, 151. an umpire in a private case, 156. his discreet decision, 157. yet complained of, 158. his proceedings as a commissioner with one that had two wives, 160. which of- fend the earl of Leicester, 161. his resolute behaviour in this matter, 162. 163. defers the case, 163. upon what grounds, lb. employs Clerk to answer Sanders's book, 177. what parts of his answer he disap- proved, 179. ordered by the queen to remove Clerk from his post of dean of the arches, 185. his conduct on this oc- casion, ib. writes to the queen in his behalf, 186. III. 226. his account of the progress of the puritans, 192. 193. at- tempts made to prejudice the queen against him, 200. his interview with Wentworth, 202. substance of his speech in the convocation, 1572, 207. the speech itself in Latin, 232. form of a protection granted by him to a servant during the convocation, 235. procures a new edition of the Bible of 1568, II. 212. A. IL i. 320. account of his Prolego- mena, P. II. 212. his preface to the Old Testament, III. 236. and to the New, 253. a note, probably his, in this Bi- ble on the variation of the translation of the Psalms there and in the Book of Common Prayer, A. II. i. 322. his arms prefixed to one of the prefaces, 320. what his part was in the translation, P. II. 223. Stow's statement of his part, 224. his intended alterations at Bekes- bourn frustrated by his ene- mies at court, 227. 228. 229. clears himself from the charge of covetousness, 230. his kind- ness to refugees, ib. and to two Irish bishops, 233. lord John Stourton committed to his cus- tody, 236. his Antiquitates BritanniccE, 243. his apology for it, 244. his letter to lord Burghley concerning this and some other books. III. 267. his own life omitted in the An- tiquitates, II. 246. though writ- ten, ib. copy of it. III. 269. found in some few copies, ib. variations in the Antiquitates Britannicce, II. 247. specimen of the once intended method of the book, 250. what assist- ance Josselyn gave to this work, 251. urges Whitgift to defend his answer against Cart- wright, 253. his advice con- cerning the puritans, 255. vin- dicates himself against Cart- wright's charges, 258. why backward to notice Cart- wright's tenets, 262. his state- ment of his yearly expenses, 263. his contest witli Aldrich, a puritan, 272. his remarks on i6o INDEX. an appeal of Bene't college to their chancellor respecting Al- drich, 275. and his advice thereupon, 277. issue of the business, 279. his letter on the church's danger from the puri- tans, 280. his defence of the bishops' title of lords, 285. the queen stays at his house at Croydon, A. II. i. 465. enter- tains her at Canterbury, P. II. 292 — 295. A. II. i. 467. ii. 539. his own account of her reception, 296. his consola- tion to lord Burghley against a libel, 298. visits the church of Canterbury, 299. his injunc- tions to that church, III. 309. Battely's observations upon them, II. 302i intended new statutes for that church, 305. visits Eastbridge hospital, 306. his orders respecting appari- tors, 313. regulates the court of arches, 3T5. his observation that the puritans aimed at a popular government, 323. his judgment of a puritan's letter, ib. his judgment as to the dan- gers of popery, 329. recom- mends Still for the deanery of Norwich, 331. his opinion as to the use of wafer-bread, 343. grants to his sons, 355. 391. his letter to lord Burghley, when ill, 356. he and archbi- shop Grindal old friends, G. 267. forbids prophesyings in the diocese of Norwich, P. II. 359. not without dispute,359 — 362. recommends bishop Coo- per's book of Exposition of the Lessons, 367. a plot discover- ed to take off him and lord Burghley, 368 — 371. troubled with the stone, 372. discovers a pretended possession with a spirit, ib. earl of Sussex his friend with the queen, 374. his orders about preaching at Canterbury, 375. publishes a new edition of some ancient historians, 380. defamed by Chaterton, 386. his conduct towards Cartwright's brother, insane, 391. the earl of Lei- cester's designs against him, 393. his behaviour, 394. 395- the bishops shrink away from him, 395. his letter concern- ing the earl of Leicester and the puritans, who were work- ing his ruin, III. 323. his ene- mies strive to make him odious at court, IT. 395. the chapter of Norwich oppose his visita- tion, 398. his license for his son's chapel. III. 325. makes University-street at Cambridge, II. 406. ill. 327. gives books to the library there, II. 406 — 410. the university's letter of thanks to him, 411. his fur- ther donations to Bene't col- lege, 413. and founding of a Bible clerkship there for Nor- wich, 414. reflections upon him in a certain work pubhsh- ed by some puritans, ib. 415. 416. and upon the Antiquita- tes Britannicce, 417. disap- proves of conniving at the pu- ritans, 423. why he urged conformity, 424. his letter to lord Burghley against innova- tions in the church. III. 330. applies to Aylmer to answer the book T)e DiscipUna, who declines it, Ay. 15. his death, 1575, P. II. 427. prepared his tomb whilst alive, 429. wrote to the queen on his deathbed, 430. the order of his funeral, 432. his epitaph by Dr. Had- don, 435. his body taken up and tomb destroyed in the time of the commonwealth, ib. his bones reinterred, and his mo- INDEX. i6i nument restored by archbi- shop Sancroft, 436. his epi- taph, ib. Nevyl's verses on his death, ib. his will, 437. III. 333. his books given to Bene't college, II. 439. his order for the exequies, III. 340. a brief of his goods and chattels, with prices, 342. list of bequests, &c., ib. his executors, II. 440. his family, 441. learning en- couraged in his house, ib. Ne- vyl's account of the order of his family. III. 346. his table and hospitality, II. 443. thrifty, 444. his custom at home, 445. his habit, ib. his study and writings, ib. patronised Wolfe, the printer, A. II. i. 530. pub- lished the answer to Martin's against Priests' Marriage with additions of his own, P. II, 445. 448. M. III. i. 524. C. 475. his additions only insert- ed in a few copies, 1058. pub- lished the Psalms in English metre, P. II. 455. his study of antiquities, ib. a charter insert- ed by him in the black book of the archdeacons of Can- tuar. 456. his chaplains, 457. his posterity, 462. his bene- factions, 475 — 487. an instru- ment of his gifts to three col- leges in Cambridge, III. 350. Strype's observations and en- comiums on his character, II. 489 — 496. C. ep. ded. v. W. I. ded. iv. his courage, P. II. 489. the earl of Leicester his great enemy, ib. the inconveniences of his roughness, 490. his bashfulness, 492. his letter to lord Burghley declining a con- ference with the bishop of Aquila, III. 355. unmoveable in distributing justice, II. 495. his high regard for the queen, ib. allowed by her to have forty VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. retainers, M. III. ii. 161. a great antiquarian, P. II. 497. historians in MSS. caused by him to be published, 500. the Saxon gospels published by his means, 502. some account of his Saxon MSS., 505. Cam- den's and bishop Godwin's judgment of him as an an- tiquarian, 522. his style of living, 523. his care of the church, 527. 530. his endea- vours for conformity, 528. the charges of the puritans against him, 529, contume- liously treated in the Admo- nition, VV. I. 78. his diary, A. IV. 611. Strype's sources for writing his life, P. I. ep. ded. v. viii. his reason for writing it, vii. the advantage to be derived from reading it, ib. what mat- ters are related besides Par- ker's life, viii. Parker, Matthew, son oftheabp., died an infant, A. IV. 614. Parker, Matthew, son of the arch- bishop, A. IV. 614. offices con- ferred on him by his father, P. I. 571. married Frances Bar- low, A. IV. 6.14. P. III. 286. Parker, Matthew, son of the pre- 'ceding, A. IV. 615. Parker, Nicholas, principal re- gistrar of the archbishop of Canterbury, P. I. 3. Parker, Peregrine, M. III. i. 226. Parker, Ph., a magistrate in Suf- folk, A. III. ii. 421. Parker, Richard, son of the arch- bishop, P. II. 463. notice of him, 465. Parker, Richard, son of John, P, II. 465. Parker, Robert, and Anne his wife, contributors to the af- flicted gospellers, temp, queen Mary, M. Ill, i, 224. retired into Germany, 225. M l62 INDEX. Parker, Robert, W. II. 333. Parker, Wentworth,M. III. 1.2 26. Parker,Thoinas, a weaver, an early professor of the gospel, M. I. i. 121. 132. P. I. 5. Parker, Thomas, brother of the archbishop, P. I. 3. 6. 52. 53. mayor of Norwich, 6. 539. Parker, Thomas, chancellor of Worcester cathedral, A. I. ii. 198. 199. Parker, Thomas, servant to bi- shop Home, A. II. ii. 378. Parker, William, bought of the crown the chantry of Swyn- ford, Leicestershire, M. II. ii. 406. Parker, William, citizen of Nor- wich, father of the archbishop, P. J. 3. his death, III. 19. A. IV. 6ii. Parkhurst, Anthony, P. II. 358. Parkhurst, John, A. I. i. 194. 258. 306. (as bishop of Nor- wich,) 309. P. I. 382. 477. 496. 506. A. I. ii. 141. 142. 222. 543- 544- 271. II. i. 149. 150. 177. P. II. 112. 113. III. 194- 335- 357- A. II. i. 390. 391. 425. 426. 462. 467. 468. 530. chaplain to the duke and duchess of Suffolk, 346. and to queen Catharine Par, ib. M. II. i. III. fellow of Merton college, Oxford, and an earn- est professor of the gospel, 325. tutor to Jewel, A. II. i. 347. had the rich rectory of Cleve, Gloucestershire, ib. M. II. i. 325. a friend of P. Mar- tyr, ib. has a license for preach- ing, ii. 277. an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, Ch. 95. C. 450. A. II. i. 347'. 348. resident at Zuric, M. III. i. 232. 409. P. II. III. laboured against the papistical habits and ceremonies on his return from exile, A. I. i. 264. pro- bably preached at court, 298. consecrated bishop of Nor- wich, 230. 308. P. I. 133. III. 284. thought to be remiss, and to wink at schismatics, I. 212. 2 14. present at the convoca- tion of 1562, 240. subscribes the articles passed in that synod, A. I. i. 487. his return of his diocese, 539. preaches at the funeral of the duchess of Norfolk, ii. 44. applied to by Gesner concerning MSS. of ancient ecclesiastical authors, 45. his opinion of Dionysius, ib. has the degree of D. D. con- ferred on him by the university of Oxford, 145. portion of the Bible sent to him for his notes and advertisements upon it, P. I. 416. archbishop Parker's mandate to him about his metropolitan visitation, 489. writes to the visitors, 493. and to the archbishop, 494. the reason of this visitation shewn in his letter to lady Bacon, 495. why he refused Walker a prebend, 497. signed the book of canons in the convocation of 1 57 1, II. 60. too remiss as to the Dutch churches in Nor- wich, 77. his jurisdiction re- fused by them, 83. his order respecting Marlorate's Com- ment on St. Matthew, 82. will not accept of one to a second benefice, 84. put into the arch- bishop's court, and why, 87. applies to archbishop Parker for his advice respecting his diocese, 88. had a great friend- ship with bishop Jewel, whose tutor he formerly had been, A. II. i. 149. Jewel's letter to him, ib. his letter to his commissa- ries upon many in his diocese leaving off coming to church, 161. and to Mr. Townsend, a INDEX. 163 papist, 162. and to sir T. Corn- wallis about Mr, Hare, a pa- pist, 164. offence taken by certain puritans against a ser- mon of his, 165. the articles into which they digested their exceptions, ii. 4.^4. his letter to certain civilians for their judgment in a case of matri- mony, i. 168. their answer, 169. informeth concerning a simoniacal patron, 172. the earl of Sussex writes to him about selling an advowson, 173. his endeavours to prevent it, ib. interposes in the contest among the ministers of the Dutch church in Norwich, 1 74, his letter, allowing the exer- cise of prophesying at Bury, 326. ii. 494. his dealing with two of his clergy, i. 326. his letter of admonition to Mr. Nesse who was contentious, 326. he refuseth to admit a person to a living for insuffi- ciency, 327. his orders about a disturbance in prayer time in a church at Norwich, 328. a great debt due to the exche- quer falls upon him, owing to the fraud of his receiver, 330. to prevent similar frauds he moves two acts which are pass- ed in parliament, 333. 334. writes to archbishop Parker about the business, 335. other cheats put upon him by his re- ceiver, ib. Gualter and Zuing- lius, the sons, visit him, 336. his care of Gualter at Oxford, 337. prepares to go up to the next parliament, 358. his no- tice of Mary queen of Scots in a letter to BuUinger, P. II. 206. sends his epigrams as a new year's gift to Dr. Wilson, 180. who publishes them, A. II. i. 344. copy of them, ii. 495. m a commission against recusants at Norfolk, P. 11. 137. his testimonial for Bal- kius a foreign minister, 150. fears an inconvenience in bi- shop Jewel's book being placed in all churches, 153. restrains a woman from conjuring, 154. deprives Dr. Willoughby for not subscribing to the articles, 158. his letter to the earl of Leicester upon the queen's being offended at it, 159. the Apocrypha his portion of the translation of the Bible, 1572, 222. his letter to his chancel- lor to bring in informations to the commissioners for uniform- ity, A, II. i. 386. he permits some suspended ministers to catechise and prophesy, 387. a letter from one of the com- mission to him against this per- mission, i6. his letter to his chan- cellor to restrain them, 388. his letter to one who favoured these ministers, 389. his cor- respondence with Gualter in consequence of his letter about the puritans, 423. 424. has a quarrel with Mr. Heydon for refusing to ordain a person, 430. Heydon's letter to him desiring reconciliation, ib. ii. 521. his answer, i. 431. ii. 523. refuseth to admit Harri- son, a puritan, master of the school of Aylsham, and why, i- 433- 434- 435- P-. I^-. 335- 336. afterwards admits him, A. II. i. 434. and subsequently ejects him, and why, 433. his controversy with Gardiner a- bout the archdeaconry of Nor- wich, 444. 446. Gardiner's an- swer to an angry letter of his, ii. 533. recommends tlie court to make Gardiner dean of Norwich, and why, i. 447- the M 2 164 INDEX. earl of Leicester writes to him in Gardiner's favour, 448. 449. who refers himself to him, 448. the queen orders him to dispossess Gardiner, 449. he is reconciled to him, ib. his let- ter to archbishop Parker about a rood-loft in Norwich, P. II. 338. another to the same about the state of his diocese, 342. archbishop Parker for- bids prophesyings in his dio- cese, 358. his letter to the archbishop thereupon, 359. forbids them in his diocese, A. II. i. 477. 478. 479. is written to in their favour by some privy counsellors, 477. P. II. 360. con- sidts abp. Parker and some bi- shops, A. II. i.47 7.47 8. has them suppressed, 479. the abp.'s ad- vice to him, P. II. 362. his ac- count of two children being pos- sessed, A. II. i. 484. his censure of certain innovations in the or- der of service in the cathedral at Norwich, 485. 486. his death, 507. P. II. 362. some account of him, A. II. i. 507. his house- hold and servants, 508. thought tofavourthepuritans,509.P.II. 399. his plea for his lenity, A. II. i. 509. his temper and Christian disposition ib. his friends at court, 510. his housekeeping and hospitality, ib. his regulation of his courts and officers, 511. list of their fees with his notes, ii. 555. allowance to his successor for dilapidations, i. 514. a friend of Fox, I. ii. 44. and of bishop Berkley, III. i. 41. his verses on Becon's works, C. 609. and in praise of the divines of Zuric, A. II. i. 426. and of the town itself, ib. Parkhurst, Richard, canon of Canterbury, C. 146. 159. 160. 170. 471. M. III. i. 478. Parkins, — P. II. 434. Parkins, — a Jesuit, A. III. ii. 599. IV. 220. report from sir E. Kelly against him, i. Parkins, James, P. II. 434. see Perkins. Parkinson, — A. II. ii. 693. Parkinson, Francis, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Parlafen, Richard, a conjurer, taken up, A. I, i. 10. Parliament of 1547, C. 220. S. 29. sessions of 1548, M. II. i. 210. bills put into this parlia- ment for the relief of the poor commons, ib. parliament of 1549, constitute laws for reli- gion, 288. a commission to prorogue the parliament, 1550, ii. 199. 200. a bill brought into the house of lords, 155 i, to attaint bishop Tonstal, C. 415. not proceeded upon in the commons, ib. its private acts, M. II. i. 554. this par- liament prorogued, 505. by commission, ii. 204. 205. Ed- ward VI. 's care for an able parliament, 64. persons no- minated for knights of the shire, 65. writs made out for a new parliament, 114. queen Mary's interference in the elec- tions, C. 457. its opening, M. III. i. 57. one public act ex- plaining treason, 58. a branch of this act for incurring prcE- munire, 59. king Henry's laws inveighed against, ib. two pri- vate acts, 60. why its session was short, 85. labour used to get fit parliament men, 1554, 244. the queen's letter to the sheriffs to choose catholics, 245. names of those who re- fused to sit, 262. who are in- dicted, 263. why the indict- ment was invalid, 264. king INDEX. 165 Henry's statutes relating to the pope repealed, 251. C. 477. the alienated church-lands con- firmed to the present posses- sors, M. III. i. 252. the resti- tution of the church's jurisdic- tion petitioned for, 253. the address to king Philip, and his answer, 260. the king and queen go to parliament, 323. order against its adjourning at Christmas, 328. parliament of 1557, ii. 25. vote the queen a subsidy, 105. its private acts, 106. end of its session, 109. lord keeper Bacon's speech at its opening, 78. bills brought in, 82. for restitution of first- fruits,^tenths, &c., 83. 85. for recognition of the queen, ib. for declaring treason, 68. 83. against slanderous words, ib. for queen Ehzabeth to be in- heritable to her mother, 84. A. I. ii. 398. for restoring the supremacy, i. 84 — 87. 100. for taking away certain pe- nalties, and for making ec- clesiastical laws, 85. for ad- mitting and consecrating bi- shops, ib. for exchange of bi- shops' lands, ib. 98. for keep- ing holydays, and restoring to the crown the ancient juris- diction, 86. 88. bill of uni- formity, and for bishop Rid- ley's leases, 86. 87. 93. 94. 98. 104. bill against witch- craft and enchantments, 87. against rebellious assemblies, 88. to examine the causes of spiritual persons' deprivation, ib. to annex to the crown cer- tain religious houses, 89. 99. for the subsidy, 89. for the pa- tentees of the bishop of Win- chester's lands, 90 — 93. for restoring such as had been de- prived, 97. 99. for making cer- tain deprivations lawful, 97. in favour of those that \ised king Edward's religion, ib. private acts, 104. an adjournment for ten days, 98. the lord keeper's speech at the conclusion of this parliament, 99. five acts proclaimed, 286. parliament of 1562, A. I. i. 435. lord keeper Bacon's speech, ib. 436. notice of the speech of T. Wil- liams, speaker of the house of commons, to the queen, 437. Cecil probably concerned in drawing it up, 439. notice of bills brought in this parlia- ment, ib. petition for the suc- cession, ib. unanswered by the queen at first, 440. her short answers afterwards, 468. bill for assurance of bishops' lands, 440. laid aside, 441. for assur- ance of the queen's royal power, ib. passed into an act, ife. 463. lord Mountague's speech against the penalty of treason in the bill for assurance of the queen's power, 441. 442. and Mr. Atkinson's, 446. speech in favour of it, 455. a bill for the restitution in blood of archbishop Cranmer's children, 459. passed into an act, ib. 468. for a subsidy granted by the clergy of the province of Canterbury, 459. passed, ib. the hospital of St. Catharine's, near the Tower, might be a parish church, 460. sent from the commons to the lords, ib. for uniting churches in towns corporate, ib. sent from the lords to the commons, ib. for the due execution of the writ De excommunicato capiendo, ib. passed into an act, ib. 466. the rise of this bill from the upper house of convocation, 460. for translating the Bi- u 3 i66 INDEX. ble and other divine service into Welsh, 462, passed into an act, ib. 468. that chancel- lors, commissaries, and of- ficials in ecclesiastical courts shall be graduates, 462. read twice, ib. for an annuity out of lands belonging to the archbi- shop of York for a school in Guilford, ib. passed, ib. for an- nexing the county of Dorset to the see of Salisbury, ib. read once, ib. object of it, ib. against sanctuary for debt, ib. proceeded not, ib. parliament prorogued, ib. notice of some other proposed laws, most of which only passed the com- mons, 470. parliament of 1566, ii. 228. moved for the puri- tans, P. I. 439. bill against sanctuaries thrown out, A. I. ii. 229. for the validity of the consecration of bishops, passed into an act, ib. 230. sub- stance of it, 232. motion for an address to the queen to de- clare her successor, ib. argu- ments to move her thereto, 233. 575. transactions con- cerning this matter, 233. 236. the queen's answer to parlia- ment, 235. bill of articles for religion not passed, 237. bills for religion not passed, ib. bill read for the new deaneries, 238. and against fairs on Sun- days, ib. alms gathered in the house, ib. parliament of 1571, II. i. 90. succession to the crown moved, 90. ii. 425. a speech in favour of the lady Frances, i. 91. and for annul- ling the title of Mary queen of Scots, ib. bill for attending church debated, 92. further re- formation of religion urged, 93. Strickland, the mover, stay- ed from the house in conse- quence, 94. debate upon this step, ib. is allowed to return, 95. bill for security of queen Elizabeth against the Scotch queen passed, 99. an act a- gainst bringing pope's bulls, Agnus Dei's, crosses, &c. into the country, loi. against such as fled beyond sea without li- cense, 102. against frauds for dilapidations ; and about leases for collegiate churches, 103. touching leases of benefices, not to injure hospitality, 104. to reform certain disorders in such leases, ib. for making woollen caps for the employ- ment of the poor, 108. par- liament of 1572 opens, 183. contents of the lord keeper's speech to both houses, ib. bill for rites and ceremonies, 185. the queen's message to the house thereupon, ib. reported, ib. substance of ^yentworth's undutiful speech, 186. seques- tered the house, ib. 189. exa- mined by a committee of the house, 190. restored to his seat by the queen's favour, ib. the parliament resolve to touch the queen of Scots as well in life as title, 196. 204. which the queen dislikes, and directs them how to act, 197. their answer, 198. the bill of trea- son against the Scottish queen, ib. parliament prorogued, ib. parliament of 1575, 532. a bill about religion, ib. parliament prorogued, ib. parliament of 1580 petition the queen for a reformation of abuses in the church, ii. 332. W. I. 186. her answer, A. II. ii. 332. the thirteen articles offered to par- liament with the answers of the bishops, W. I. 187. III. 47. parliament of 1584, 1.347. INDEX. 167 A. III. i. 317. lord Burghley's direction as to the usage of parliament, 318. petitions in favour of puritan ministers 319. W. I. 347. petition of the com- mons of sixteen articles for ec- clesiastical matters to the lords, 348. III. 118. answers to its articles I. 349. Ill, 124. other bills brought into parliament, I. 368. parliament of 1585, A. III. i. 425. enter into an association for the queen's safe- ty, ib. bills against the ecclesi- astical state, ib. the speaker's, sergeant Puckering, speech to the queen, ib. 427. III. ii. 356. acts prepared by them for the queen, i. 428. refuses to sign the bill for the better observing of the sabbath-day, 429. a petition to the parlia- ment in behalf of papists, 432. they move for the execution of the queen of Scots, 434. par- liament of 1586. a bill and book for alteration of the ec- clesiastical government and worship, W. I. 487. a speech in the commons against them, 489. III. 1 86. the queen's an- swer to the petition of parlia- ment for the new model of church government, I. 494. motion in parliament against supposed abuses in the church, 532. a bill against pluralities, ib. what was done about it, 533. the queen's message about the Scottish queen, A. III. i. 532, the petition in answer, 533. 537. their parallel be- tween Mary queen of Scots, and Joan of Naples, 536. ii.400. parliament of 1 5 88, 49. speeches against the subsidy 50. 51. 561. a bill forbidding strangers and aliens to retail wares, 52. a speech in their behalf, ib. 568. a bill against pluralities and nonresidences, 53. decla- ration of the lords to assist the queen against Spain, 55. par- hament of 1592. lord Burgh- ley's speech containing the causes of the queen's entry into a defensive war against Spain, IV. 149. the parlia- ment are against the bishops' power, W. II. 121. Morice's speech against the bishops' courts, ib. Dalton defends them, 122. speeches of others, 123. sir F. Knollys's against them, 1 24. Dr. Lewin's in their behalf, 127. bills brought in, 1597, against abuses in spi- ritual courts, 374. a note of grievances in the church com- plained of in this parliament, ib. a bill put in against com- missaries' three week courts, 376. III. 374. parliament of 1 60 1, II. 443. bills brought in respecting the clergy, 444. ob- jections in the house against pluralities answered, ib. these bills touched on the queen's prerogative, 445. a bill against commissaries' and officials' courts, ib. complaints in par- liament against the spiritual courts, 449. proclamation for calling the parliament in 1603, A. IV. 536. see Jets, and Church of England. Parliaments, of the Authority, Form, and Manner of holding, a tract said to be by sir T. Smith, S. 165. Parma, duke of, A. I. ii. 344. III. i. 330. 382.11. 11.24.35.549. 550. 38. 78. 85. 138. IV. 13. 52. 92. 175. 456. chosen go- vernor of the Netherlands, II. ii. 159. Roan taken by his forces, III. i. 5. 6. ii. 164. Ant- werp surrendered to him by M 4 i68 INDEX. treachery, i. 435. 436. ii. 364. 367. propounds a treaty be- tween queen Elizabeth and the king of Spain, 2. in show ra- ther than reaHty, ib. 5. 6. be- sieges Bergen, 25. beaten off by the English garrison there, ib. polled Flanders daily for Italy's sake, IV. 380. slow in his proceedings against France, 387. gave little countenance to the armada against England, 382. 391/ Parma, d\ichess of, governess of the Low Countries, A. I. ii. 120. 1 22. 204. II. ii. 398. forbid English cloths to be brought into the Low Countries, I. ii. 118. Parnel — one of the early gos- pellers at Cambridge, M. I. i. 568. P. I. 12. Parpalio, Vincentio, Pius IV.'s nuncio, A. I. i. 340. Parre, William, M. I. i. 404. see Par. Parreis,sir Philip, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Parret, — A. I. i. 381. Parret, Denis, a papist, A. II. ii. 346. Parris, — A.II. 1.534.11.565.573. Parrival, see Perrival. Parrot, John, A. II. ii. 550. see Perrot. Parrot, sir Thomas, account of his marriage with lady D. De- vereux. Ay. 217. see Perrot. Parry, — A. I. i. 228. Parry, — M. III. i. 406. Parry, — father of Dr. Parry, some notice of, A. III. i. 365. one of king Henry's guard, ib. his wife, family, estate, and death, ib. Parry, — nephew of Dr. Parry, executed for murder. A, III. i. 381. Parry, Henry, in a commission to visit certain dioceses, A. I. i 248.314. Parr)% sir Thomas, A. I. ii. 390 (as comptroller,) i. 35. had been a servant to princess Elizabeth 8. made by her, when queen comptroller of her household and one of her privy council ib. II. ii. 707. what other pub- lic offices he held, 708. 709 dead in 1575, i. 575. Parry, Dr. William, A. III. i 113. 272. 382. 458. ii. 437 600. IV, 64. has leave to tra- vel abroad as a spy for queen Elizabeth, II. ii. 279. returns home, 280. goes privately a- broad again, and is reconciled to the Romish church, 280. his protestation of loyalty, 365. recommends some papists fu- gitives to lord Burghley, 366. III. i. 371. his intelligence from abroad, 114. 118. 272. 370. his treason discovered, 360. his speech at his execu- tion, 362. his letter about his family and quality, 364. a true account set forth of what he was, 366. tried to get the mas- tership of St. Catharine's, 367. went abroad on being pardon- ed by the queen for a burglary, 369. some account of him there, 369. 370. his debts, 375. his confession, 380. ii. 337. Parson, Clement, A. II. ii. 420. see Person. Parsonages to be impropriated unto Cardinal college, Oxford, M. I. ii. 130. Parsons, George, A. IV. 207. Parsons, Robert, a Jesuit, C. 668. 669. M. III. i. 278. ii. 1 29. A. I. i. 184. II. ii. 353. 360. G. 380. A. III. i. 54. ii. 78- 598- IV. 54. 186. 383. 390. 505. 609. archbishop Abbot's refu- INDEX. 169 tation of his calumny against Martyr and Bucer, M. II. i. 191. his slander of archbishop Crannier, C. 654. 659. 662. charged Fox with spoiling re- cords, A. I. i. 376. indicted with Campion, P. II. 167. at- tainted of treason, A. IV. 267. comes into England, W. I. 180. his letter to cardinal Allen about the success of his secret mission into England, A. III. i. 600. ii. 418. excited the king of Spain's malice against England, W. II. 367 — 369. a chief writer and transactor on the papists' side, A. III. ii. 76. IV. 138. 139. 141. 144. 145. 148. 264. 266. 269. 271. 503. set forth his Ward-word in an- swer to sir F. Hastings'sWatch- word, P. II. 324. corrected, C. ep. cled. ii. M. III. i. 1 7. quoted, C. pref. xiii. see Persons. Parton, Robert, a priest, notice of, A. IV. 259. Partridge, lady Jane, widow of sir Miles, has a grant of the manor of Kenne, Devon, for life, M. II. i. 542. Partridge, sir Miles, M. II. i. 181. a gambler, 180. committed to the Tower as an adherent of the duke of Somerset, 497. a commission for this trial, ii. 247. warrant for his execution, 248. his property at Kew con- ferred on sir J. Gates, i. 542. ii. 225. his daughters restored by act of parliament. III. i. 84. Partridge, Robert, W. I. 473. Parva Harveld, see Harveld Parva. Passenham, benefice of, its value, A. I. i. 228. Paston, Clement, has a lease of the prebend of Horton, Glou- cestershire, M. II. ii. 270. a magistrate in Norfolk, suspect- ed, and reckoned backward in religion, A. III. ii. 460, Paston, sir Thomas, M. II. i. 1 23. his part at the funeral of Henry VIII., ii. 30 T. bought of the crown the chantry at Acton, Suffolk, and the manor of Bow- erhal, Essex, 408. Paston, sir WiUiam, bought of the crown the free chapel in Caster S. Trinity, Norfolk, M. II. ii. 403. a magistrate in Nor- folk, A. III. ii. 460. bishop Freake's notice of him, ib. Pastrana, duke of, A. IV. 382. - Patchet, Robert, M. III. i. 170. Pate, Pates, Richard, (as bishop of Worcester,) C. 481. A. I. ii. 36. 38. his contest, as arch- deacon of Lincoln, with bishop Longland about synodals, M. I. i. 445. ii. 275. present at Edward VI.'s baptism, II. i. 9. bishop of Worcester, ii. 67. present at the council of Trent, ib. attainted under Henry VIII. for taking the bishopric of Worcester from the pope, III. i. 257. excepted out of the ge- neral pardon of Edward VI., ib. II. ii. 67. an act passed for repealing all attaints against him, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 257. restored to the see of Worcester, ib. (as bishop of Worcester,) concerned in the trial of archbishop Cranmer, C. 1072. 1093. 1094. 1096. and of bishop Hoper, M. III. i. 290. in a commission against heretics, 330. assisted at the consecration of abp. Pole, 473. 474. attends his funeral, A. I., i. 53. present at queen Eliza- beth's first parliament, 82. dis- sented from the bill to restore the first-fruits, tenths, &c. to the crown, 83. from that re- storing the supremacy to the crown, 84. 87. from that for lyo INDEX. exchange of bishops' lands, 86. from that for uniformity of common prayer and service of the church, 87, 113. from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchesters lands, 93. cer- tain lands of his see alienated 96. summoned before the queen, 206. confined in the Tower, 211. 215. P.I. 177. 178. 279. died in exile, A. III. i. 94. Patent of Henry VIII., turning the church of Norwich into a dean and canons, M. I. i. 504. of Edward VI. granting a church to certain foreigners, II. i. 376. of queen Mary al- lowing cardinal Pole to use his legantine power in England, III. i. 248. cardinal Pole to hold a synod, ii. 446. Pates, Richard, lawyer, in a com- mission for the dioceses in Wales, A. I. i. 248, Patmore, Thomas, a merchant, punished for dispersing Tin- dal's New Testament, C. 116. Patmore, Thomas, parson of Had- ham, Herts, a learned and godly man, condemned to im- prisonment for life for per- suading his curate to marry, C. 643, M. I. ii. 179. Patney, manor of, Wilts, taken in exchange by the crown from the dean and chapter of Win- chester, M. II. i. 119. Paton, Owen, A. IV. 270. Patrick, Richard, W. I. 592. III. 219. Patrick, Simon, (bishop of Ely,) answered Bristow's Motives unto the Catholic Faith, repub- lished in his time as The Touchstone of the New Gospel, A. II. i. 499. Patrons, ecclesiastical, their con- duct in the reign of Edward VI., M. II. ii. 146. Patslow, hundred of, Worcester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Patten, William, A. III. i. 744. his account of the duke of So- merset's expedition into Scot- land, transcribed into Holin- shed, M. II. ii. 1 80, Pattison, — a priest, executed, A. III. i. 695. IV. 481. Paul III. pope, made a prisoner by the emperor, M. 1. i. 105. a requisition made in his favour, 106. makes cardinal Wolsey his vicar-general, 107. particu- lars of an embassy to him, about dissolving Henry VIII.'s marriage with Catharine of Ar- ragon, 135 — 164. 169. ii. 92. 112. the king begins to be highly offended with him, i. 165. a book published upon his rejection of the king's ap- peal, 225. books against him, 229. the king's book against him, ib. the result of a delibe- ration of the privy-council con- cerning his authority, 231. called Antichrist, 252. procla- mations and acts against him, 256. declared by the convoca- tion to have no jurisdiction in England, 257. sends for Pole to Rome, 458. makes him a cardinal, 461. 477. employs the bishop of Verona to recon- cile Henry VIII. to this ap- pointment, 464. sent the car- dinal as legate into the Low Countries, 477. excommuni- cates Henry VIII., 511. Paul IV., pope, deprives cardinal Pole of his legantine authority, M. III. ii. 30. reason of his displeasure, ib. king Philip's and queen Mary's letter to him in Pole's behalf, 31. 474. and INDEX. 171 two^from the council, 31. 476. 480. Pole's letter to him, 34 — 39. issue of the matter, 39.' grants an indulgence to an Irish gentleman, S. 47. Paul v., pope, A. IV. 504. Paul, Father, A. I. i. 554. ii. 68. Paul, sir George, comptroller to archbishop Whitgift, W. I. 414. II. 418. 507. a date in his Life of archbishop Whitgift corrected, I. 18. referred to, 136. 157. quoted, P. I. pre/. xii. his praise of archbishop Whitgift, G. 447. Paulet, — son of the marquis of Winchester, A. IV. 488. Paulet, sir Amias, A. III. i. 546. sent on an embassy into France, G. 3 2 2 . Mary queen of Scots re- moved from the earl of Shrews- bury's custody to his, A. III. i. 358. his letter to lord Burgh- ley for an assistant in the cus- tody of her, 434. ii. 361. the queen's letter thanking him for his safe custody of the Scottish queen, i. 525. present at her execution, 557. 559. has Wal- singham's place, 6g6. Paulet, lord Chydiock, his part, as man of arms, at Henry VIII. s funeral, M. II. ii. 308. governor of Portsmouth, A. I. i. 32. Paulet, sir George, brother to the marquis of Winchester, goes over sea with the English army, M. III. ii. 10. married Mrs. Lark, once a mistress to car- dinal Wolsey, 117. buried, ib. Paulet, sir Henry, captain of Jer- sey, M. II. i. 465. ii. 201. Paulet, sir Hugh, M. II. i. 381. present at Edward VL's bap- tism, 9. governor of Calais, C. 416. orders the Book of Com- mon Prayer to be translated into French, ih. 1035, appoint- ed vice-president of Wales, A. I. i. 34. sent with the earl of Warwick to Havre de Grace, 548. Paulet, John, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. Paulet, lord, one of the mourners at the celebration of the French king's funeral, G. 38. Paulet, Richard, his part at Hen- ry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii, 308. Paulet, lord Thomas, his contest with bi.shop Berkley about im- propriating West Monkton, A. II. ii. 184. 623. 624. III. i. 41- . . Paulet, William, (afterwards third marquis of Winchester, A. IV. 473.) made a knight of the bath at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. i. 53. Paulet, William, (afterwards fourth marquis of Winchester,) married Lucy Cecil, daughter of the earl of Exeter, A. IV. 473. see marquis of Winches- ter. Paulet, lady, of Borly, a recusant, A. III. ii. 597. Paulet, lady, of Hampshire, a re- cusant, A. III. ii. 597. Paxton, — A. II. ii. 694. Payden, — A. IV. 179. Payn, Andrew, appointed a com- missary for the diocese of Lan- daft', VV. II. 6"]. see Paine. Paynel, Nicholas, of Yorkshire, elected fellow of Pembroke- hall, Cambridge, M. I. i. 75. public mathematical lecturer, ib. a great scripture man, ib. Paynel, Thomas, he and Mount sent by Henry VIII. agents to the German princes, M. I. i. 522. notice of his Pith and most noble Sayings of Scripture, IL i. 415. Li. 75. Payton, sir John, a magistrate in 172 INDEX. Norfolk, and a favourer of reli- gion, A. III. ii. 460. Peace concluded between Eng- land and France, 1549, M. II. i. 301. 342. with Scotland, 1558, A. I. i. 30. and with France, 37. Peace-makers, canons so called by sir T. Smith, S. 178. Peacock, — A. II. ii, 694. Pead, Eleanor, has a license to practise as midwife, A. I. ii. 242. Pead, Thomas, public notary, P. II. 469. the office of the court of audience granted to him and archbishop Parker's sons by the archbishop, ib. Pearl for a Prince, notice of this tract, S. 76. Peck, Thomas, mayor of Nor- wich, P. II. 336. A. II. i. 433. Peckham, sir Edmund, M. II. ii. 282. III. ii. 532. cofferer, II. i. 429. ii. 160. treasurer of the mint, 246. stood up for queen Mary in Bucks, III. i. 195. present at the funeral of Anne of Cleves, ii. 11. and at the celebration of that of the king of Denmark, 15. a privy coun- sellor, 160. laid aside in the next reign, ib. his son Henry executed as a traitor, i. 489. Peckham, sir George, A. III. i. 375. a recusant, ii. 597. Peckham, Henry, son of sir Ed- mund, M. III. i. 489. sent to the Tower for a plot against queen Marv, 472. executed, 489. Peckham, John, archbishop of Canterbury, appoints a coadju- tor to the bishop of Litch- field and Coventry', P. III. 177. when consecrated, 178, other of his archiepiscopal acts, ib. 182. Peckham, sir Robert, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. a privy counsellor, 160. laid aside in queen Elizabeth's reign, ib. Peck sal, lady, daughter of the marquis of Winchester, and wife of sir Richard Pecksal, dies, M. III. ii. 118. Peddar, John, A. I. i. 228. 229. an exile for religion, temj). queen Mary, C. 450. A. I. i. 491. dean of Worcester, sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. sign- ed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Pedder, Richard, ordained, G. 74. Pede, —P. II. 153. Pedro, don, general of the Span- ish galleys, A. III. i. 664. Peers, Richard, ordained, G. 72. 73. see Piers. Peerson, — M. III. i. 174. Peerson, Pierson, Andrew, P. I. 106. 258. 366. II. 294. 300. G. 3 14. W. I. 596. fellow of Bene't college, Cambridge, P. I. 29. proctor of the university, II. 460. chaplain to archbishop Parker, 1. 98. read the service at the archbishop's consecration, 114. preaches at the consecra- tion of certain bishops, 127. in a commission to visit East- bridge hospital, Canterbury, 202. archbishop Parker's al- moner, 208. recommended by him for the provostship of Eton, ib. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes against the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. obtains a prebendary at Canterbury through archbishop INDEX. 173 Parker, P. I. 284. in a com- mission to visit the city and diocese of Canterbury, 562, a portion of the translation of the Bible of 1572, probably assigned to him, II. 222. pre- sent at archbishop Parker's fu- neral, 433. the archbishop's le- gacy to him. III. 336. 343. one of his executors, 339. 340. much confided in by the archbi- shop, II. 460. was the archbi- shop's commissary of facul- ties, lb. his three parsonages, ib. Peerson, Roger, a priest, con- cerned in the rebellion of Nor- folk, 1549, M. II. i. 275. Peerson, Walter, a monk of the Charter-house, M. I. i. 429. see Pierso7i. Peeters, — A. III. i. 695. see Peters. Peg, in a commission for the de- tection of conjurers, S. 128. A. II. i. 269. Pegge, Thomas, ordained, G. 54. Pekins, John, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. Pelagius, C. 502. Pelham, Edmund, a magistrate in Sussex, A. IV. 402. very backward in religion, ib. Pelham, sir Nicholas, a magis- trate in Sussex, A. I. i. 70. Pelham, sir William, A. III. i. 299. Pelles, William, recommended for a suffragan bishop, C. loi. Pellicanus, Conradus, A. II. i. 426. his works prohibited in England as heretical, temp. Henry VIII., M. I. i. 254. a minister at Zuric, hospitable to the English exiles, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 232. con- sidered it lawful to marry two sisters successively, P. III. 55, Pelling, John, of Lewis, Sussex, ordained, M. II. i. 402. Pemberton, sir Goddard, mar- ried Susan M*^. Williams, wi- dow of E. Sandys, Ch. 134. Pemberton, Thomas, ordained, G.73. Pembroke, earl of, see sir W. Her- bert and H. lord Herbert. Pembroke, (Anne Par,) countess of, buried, M. II. i. 552. Pembroke-hall, Cambridge, letter of the fellows to bishop Grin- dal on their election of Whit- gift to be their master, and on the departure of Dr. Hutton from them, W. III. 6. license of mortmain obtained for it by archbishop Grindal, G. 240. the archbishop's benefaction to the college, 427. 428. 462. 601. copy of the Compluten- sian Bible bequeathed to it by abp. Whitgift, W. IL 518. Pemford, — destroyed himself, A. II. ii. 580. 581. Pen, — minor canon of St. Paul's, G. 88. P. I. 425. Penance, archbishop Grindal's form of, proposed to the con- vocation, G. 387. commutation of, bishop Aylmer's advice con- cerning. Ay. 70. Pencavel, Peter, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Pencavel, Thomas, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Pence, see Three halfpence. Pendleton, Dr., a great professor of religion, temp. Edward VI., M. III. ii. 18. recants under queen Mary, C. 519. he and others try to persuade Moun- tain to recant, M. III. i. 155. shot at whilst preaching at St. Paul's Cross, 213. preaches there again, 321. applauded for his sermon, ib. preaches at the funeral of Mr. Locke, 504. 174 INDEX. preaches a Spital sermon, which had praise, ii. 2. buried at St. Stephen's, Walbrook, where he was parson, 18. Pendred, — A. II. ii. 142. Pendred, William, he and J. Htdson bought of the crown Holme's college in the parish of St.Gregory, London, M. II. ii. 407. Penicha, taken by the English fleet, A. III. ii. 45. Penkrich, Staffordshire, scite of the college there bought of the crown by J. earl of Warwick, R. Forset, and others, M. II. ii. 407. Penne, Mrs., S. 136. Penny, Dr., a puritan, dealt gently with, being peaceable, P. I. 483. once a preacher, af- terwards a physician, II. 241. G. 269. 448. had a prebend in St. Paul's, P. II. 241. W. I. 445. promoted Cartwright's doctrine and books, G. 269. Penny, device of, M. II. i. 488. halfpenny, ib. its value, III. i. 41. penny and halfpenny of king James, A. IV. 543. Penruddock, sir George, obtained a lease of Broxburn parsonage from bishop Grindal, G. 257. 258. Penry, John, A. IV. 244. 246. a chief author of Martin Mar- prelate, III. ii. 71. W. I. 13. 551. II. 42. notice of his book to prove readers no ministers, I. 565. brought before the ec- clesiastical commission, A. III. ii. 94. notice of his answer to Bancroft's sermon on the di- vine right of episcopacy, 98. extracts from his Supplication to Parliament, 148. and from his Appellation, 150. evidence against him in examinations concerning Martin Marprelate's books, 102. 602 — 605. notice of A Defence of such Points in Dr. Some's last Treatise as M. Penry hath dealt against, 153. specimen of some of his books, W. II. 43. his abuse of abp. Whitgift, 46 — 50. an- swered Dr. Bancroft's sermon upon trying the spirits, 48. expressions taken out of his books against England, the bi- shops, judges, &c., A. IV. 246. observations upon his tracts and writings, 248. his contemptu- ous and seditious speeches, 249. hanged for seditious writ- ings, W. 11. 175. 176. his cha- racter, 177. his petition to the queen, 178. his declaration, 181. his letter to lord Burgh- ley, 185. his protestation. III. 304. Bancroft active against him, II. 386. Penshurst, honour and park of, Kent, belonged to sir R. Fane, M. II. i. 542. ii. 225. granted to sir W. Sidney, ib. chantry there bought of the crown by sir G. Harper and R. Frye, ii. 405. see Wald. Pensions : regulations respecting pensions to stipendiary and chantry priests, &c., M. II. i. 153. 184. Pensioners, English, in Spain, 1574, A. I. ii. 53. II. i. 494. ii. 549. Pentecost, alias Rowland, Tho- mas, abbot of Abingdon, his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. Pepingbury, Kent, chantry there, bought of the crown by J. Re- vers, M. II. ii. 408. Pepper, Elizabeth, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 471. signed a confes- sion of faith with her fellow- sufferers, ib. INDEX. 175 Perambulations regulated by bi- shop Grindal, G. 55. Percy, Dr., preaches a Lent ser- mon before queen Elizabeth, P.m. 135. Percy, sir Henry, A. I. i. 26. (as earl of Northumberland,) A. II. i. 440. III. ii. 381. takes part in repelling an invasion of the Scots into the English borders, M. III. ii. 82. 83. 597. his letter to the earl of Shrewsbury concerning the success of the English, 520. his activity in the marches praised by queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 29. one of the royal visitors for the north, 245. died in prison, III. ii. 495. Percy, John, incumbent of St. Edmund's,Lombard-street, de- prived by attainder, M. II. ii. 274. Percy, Thomas, see seventh earl of Northumberland. Percys, the, A.I. ii. 338. Perez, Diego, postmaster of Lo- gronno, his letter declaring the Spanish armada to be victo- rious, A. III. ii. 548. Periam, sir William, justice, A. III. i. 529. chief baron, IV. 465. 466. Peristerus, Wolfgang, a Prussian, the letter of the university of Rostock recomn^ending him to Edward VI., iVi. II. ii. 48. 500. Perkin, Warbeck, S. 222. Perkins, Dr., a civilian, in a com- mission for suppressing books published without authority, W. II. 504. Perkins, Humphrey, sub-dean of Westminster, present at a con- vocation, 1571, P. II. 52. Perkins, William, fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 649. 719. ii. 500. W. II. 6. of the puritanical faction, 58. III. 271. wrote a book on the Apostles' Creed, II. 236. where- in he denied the descent into hell, ib. attempts to confute Overal who preached that Christ died for all, 305. see Parkins. Pern, Andrew, M. III. i. 365. P. I. 178. W. III. II. A. I. ii. 376. W. I. 47. 51. 88. III. 27. I. 94. A. II. i. 459. ii. 538. W. III. 31. I. 140. P. II. 430. (as dean of Ely, Ay. 33.) W. 1.409. Ay. 6i. A. 'ill. i. 496. 686. 687. ii. 477. i. 710. 712. 713. ii. 498. i. 721. ii. 80. 81. 1 19. 274. 446. W. III. 219. concerned in the disputa- tion before the royal commis- sioners at Cambridge, C. 290. G. 7. one of Edward VI. 's six chaplains, P. I. 349. M. II. i. 521. 524. ii. 269. C. 432. G. 10. certain articles of religion submitted to the consideration of him and the other chaplains, C. 391. has a prebend of Westminster, M. II. ii. 52. 273. incorporated at Oxford, C. 576. inconstant in religion, lb. A. I. i. 492. retaining the mastership of Peter-house col- lege, and the deanery of Ely, both under queen Mary and queen Elizabeth, P. I. 349. vindicates himself in a disputa- tion, ib. Bucer maintains cer- tain theological points against him and others, C. 583. a great friend to Whitgift, whilst a fellow of that college, in an illness, and in screening him from the popish visitation, W. I. 8. 10. 12. Whitgift's gratitude to him in after-life, 9. declared against transubstantiation in the convocation, temp, queen Mary, Ay. 146. vice-chancel- 176 INDEX. lor of Cambridge, 1560, P. I. 170. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the arti- cles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes against the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. concerned in the theological disputation before queen Eli- zabeth at Cambridge, ii. 107. gave the queen some offence by pressing the church's power of excommunicating too warm- ly, ib. his letter to archbishop Parker vindicating himself a- gainst the charge of favouring the Romish errors, P. I. 349. an excellent preacher, but re- moved from the list of Lent preachers, 1565, being under some dislike, 404. vice-chan- cellor of Cambridge, 1568, A. I. ii. 263. his letter, as such, to Cecil, the chancellor, upon the queen's letter to excite the stu- dents to the study of divinity, 264. 546. employed to allay a contest in Corpus Christi col- lege, P. I. 534. concerned in reforming the university sta- tutes, II. T74. 175. III. 221. W. I, 38. III. 17. consulted by Whitgift in his Answer to the Admonition to Parliament, P. II. 140. III. 207. W. I. 85. a libel against him and Whitgift stuck up in Cambridge, P. II. 194. W. I. 87. what portion of the translation of the Bible in 1572. was assigned to him, P. II. 222. a sermon preached by him at Norwich, confuted by Moor, A. II. i. 417. parson of Balsham, Cambridgeshire, 556. P. II. 382. his letter to archbishop Parker recommend- ing Dr. Styward to be chan- cellor of Cambridge, 398. again vice-chancellor of Cambridge, 1574, 407. his letter to arch- bishop Parker thanking him for his benefactions to the uni- versity, ib. present, as dean of Ely, at the funeral of archbi- shop Parker, 432. one of the commissioners to settle the disputes and to regulate the statutes at St. John's college, Cambridge, A. II. i. 553. W. I. 142. concerned in printing A Description of the Founda- tions and Privileges of the Uni- versity, 158. obtained many privileges and benefactions for his university, A. II. ii. 70. 200. III. i. 500. 501. attended sir T. Smith's funeral, S. 151. the success of his conference with Feckenham, A. II. ii. 177. 354. I. ii. 187. his good go- vernment of Peter-house col- lege, Cambridge, 197. advises the university of Cambridge to apply to their chancellor a- gainst the puritans there. Ay. 45. concerned, as vice-chancel- lor, in deciding a contest in Christ's college, A. II. ii. 312. favoured P. Baro, W. I. t88. still vice-chancellor. III. i. 69. his letter to lord Burghley about an invective against the duke of Anjou, 70. concerned in deciding another contest at Christ's college, A. III. i. 218. commissioned to visit the dio- cese of Ely, W. I. 260. one of those recommended by arch- bishop Whitgift for the bi- shopric of Bath and Wells, or Chichester, 337. his letter to lord Burghley concerning Mr. Wliitaker, and in vindication of himself, 455. petitions to be allowed to grant certain pa- tronage to his college, 568. his letter to lord Burghley INDEX. 177 about granting a lease, A. III. ii. 72. his death, W. I, 618. his epitaph, 9. 618. his cha- racter, 9. his coat of arms, 618. said by Mr. Clerk to have been the contriver and procurer of the statute respecting corn rents, A. IV. 609. the credit due to sir T. Smith according to Baker, ib. Pern, Christopher, a grant to, M. II. ii. 278. Pernam, Laurence, burnt as an heretic at Bow, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii.471. signed a confession of faith with his fel- low sufferers, ib. Perottus, Carolus, G. 193. Perpoint, — A. III. i. 204. Perpoint, sir George, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. lived at Wedhouse, III. i. 277. queen Mary borrows money of him, ii. 78. Perpoint, George, presented to a prebend of Lincoln, P. I. 65. A. IV. 613. Perpoint, Henry, brother of Jer- vis, harboured Campion the Je- suit, P. II. 166. A. II. ii. 358. Perpoint, Jervis, brother of Hen- ry, harboured Campion the Je- suit, P. II. 166. A. II. ii. 358. sent to the Tower a second time. III. i. 613. his confes- sion, 614. ii. 422. 423. Perrenot, Anthony, see bishop of Arras. Perrilius, Joannes, G. 193. Perrin, — P. II, 434. Perrin, Hugh, in a commission to fortify Jersey, M. II. i. 465. ii. 201. see Peryn. Perrival, or Parrival, Anthony, a rebel, taken at Scarborough castle, M, III, ii. 518. execut- ed, 68. Perrot, Parrot, sir John, S, 104. VOL. II, INDEX TO STRYPK. A. II. ii. 558. Ay. 109. A. IV. 141. sent to the Tower for treason, M. III. i. 488. one of the challengers in a tilting be- fore queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 288, had a grant of concealed lands. III. i. 490. lord lieute- nant of Ireland, difference be- tween him and the council there, 579. the bishop of Meath's letter about it, 580. recalled, 583. and imprisoned for treason, ib. controversy be- tween him and bishop Barlow about the stewardship of the bishop's courts, 584. his con- duct towards the bishop of Meath respecting his first- fruits, 585. 587, Perrot, Leonard, has a lawsuit against the university of Ox- ford about their privileges, W. I. 460. Perry, — a notorious papist, A. n. i. 550. Perry, George, F. S. A. presented the MS., entitled Processus contra Cranmerum, to the Lambeth library, C. adv. vi. Perry, Thomas, minister of Be- verton, Gloucestershire, his letter to Fox about Palmer, M. m. i. 584. Perse, James, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450- Perse, Thomas, he and W. Alex- ander bought of the crown certain property in Newgate- street, London, M. II. ii. 404. _ Persecution, 1546, exceeding hot, even in the court itself, M. I. i. 597. some particulars of the persecutions, temp, queen Ma- ry, C. 523. M. III. i. 400, Persely, — A. IV. 207. Pershore, tithes of, Worcester- shire, bought of the crown by N I7B INDEX. Margaret Brown, M. II. ii. 16. Persians, their custom of record- ing good actions, C. pref. xii. Person, John, ordained, G. 53. Person, Richard, M. III. ii. 362. Persons, Anthony, a good preacher at Windsor, burnt upon the six articles, M. II. ii. 53. C. Perwich, — he and Cosin obtain a lease for two hundred years of the property of the Savoy, G. 236. Peryn, Dr., a black friar, preaches at Paul's Cross, M. III. i. 471. and at the funeral of Mrs. Heys, 507. master warden of the black friars, preaches at Bow church, ii. 2. buried, 1 16. a stiff opposer of the reformed religion, ib. had been a volun- tary exile, temp. Henry VIII., published four sermons on the eucharist, extolling the mass, ib. Pesserowe, John de, A. IV. 574. Peterborough, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Peterborough, abbot of, see J. Chambers. Peterborough, bishop of, J. Cham- bers, 1541 — 1556. D. Pole, 1557—1559- -E. Scamhler, 156^ — 1584- R- Howland, 1584 — 1600. T. Dove, 1600 — 1630. Peterborough, cathedral of, bi- shop Scambler's letter to the queen for confirmation of its statutes, A. III. i. 159. Peterborough, see of, the hun- dred of Nassaburgh obtained from it by sir W. Cecil, M. II. i. 386. value of the see, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Peter-house college, Cambridge, a bible clerkship founded by (archbishop) Whitgift and Mrs. Fultnetby, W. I. 20. copy of the deed, III. 7. bishop Cox's letter to this college about the throwing off of the surplice in many colleges in Cambridge, A. I. ii. 159. the good govern- ment of this college under Dr. Perne, II. ii. 197. bishop Cox's bequest to it, III. i. 38. a mandamus for one to be fel- low, complained of, 221. queen Elizabeth's letter to the col- lege to admit J. Tenison fel- low, 716. their letter to lord Burghley thereupon, 717. ii. 496. Peterkin, see Petsokin. Peters, Jan., condemned as an anabaptist, A. II. i. 564. re- cants, ib. burnt according to Rymer, IV. 608. see Peeters. Peterson, — P. II. 432. Petham, site of the manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. 160. its value, ib. Pethebrige, John, absented him- self from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in conseqiience, ib. Petherton, (South,) parsonage made over to the see of Bris- tol in exchange, M. II. i. 525. Petit, — a lawyer, C. 767. Petit, Catharine, daughter of Pe- tit of Piersetown, county of Meath, married to Richard Aylmer, Ay. 215. Petit, Cyriac, in a commission against heretics, M. III. i. 476. Petit, George, son of John, M. III. i. 277. Petit, John, some account of, M. I. i. 312. persecuted as a fa- vourer of the new religion, and sent to the Tower by sir T. More, ib. some remarks on him, 313. died in consequence INDEX. 179 of his hard usage, ib. had a son, George, III. i. 277. Petit, Thomas, Matthews's trans- lation of the Bible, folio, 155 1, printed for him, M. II. i. 552. Petition of Humphrey Monmouth, committed to the Tower for heresy, to the king's council, M. I. i. 491. ii. 363. Petition of certain schismatics to the privy-council against bishop Grindal, G. 227. Petition of the clergy to queen Elizabeth to stop an act in- tended against pluralities, W. I. 383. Petition of Udal to lord Burgh- ley against his execution, W. "•.39- Petition of divers prisoners, puri- tans, for their enlargement, A. IV. 101. 127. Petition of the students of Christ Church, Oxford, for their com- mons, W. II. 339. III. 350. of the thousand ministers, to king James, II. 479. Petition, see Articles. Petitions of the duke of Saxony and landgrave of Hesse, M. I. i. 348. ii. 234. bishop Gardi- ner's opinion upon them, i. 349. ii. 236. the answer of the king's ambassadors, i. 349. ii. 239- Peto, Peyto, friar Peter, or Wil- liam, preached in favour of Ca- tharine of Arragon, in the pre- sence of Henry VIII. M. I. i. 257. P. I. 508. fled for his ad- herence to queen Catharine, M. III. i. 257. attainted with car- dinal Pole, 477. his attainder reversed under queen Mary, 257. the queen's confessor, I. i. 257. the pope's legate in the room of cardinal Pole, ib. III. ii. 30. 39. made cardinal for that purpose, ib. the bishopric of Salisbury offered him by the pope, and by the queen, whicli he refused on account of age, i. 257. ii. 136. Petrarch, pronounced the pope to be Antichrist, A. I. ii. 67. Petre, Peter, John, probably the father of sir William, bought of the crown the possessions of sir T. Arundel, M. II. i. 542. ii. 229. 402. Petre, sir William, secretary of state, C. 208. M. II. i. 373. 512. ii. 73. 245. III. i. 25. 336.52T.C.563.M. III. ii.iio. 527. P. I. 158. A. IV. 488. 489. appointed by Henry VIII. one of the administrators to Catharine of Arragon's will, M. I. ii. 253. and by Crumwel one of his deputies to visit mo- nasteries, C. 50. present at the convocation of 1536, M. I. i. 378. master of the faculties to Crumwel, C. 79. sent by Crum- wel to visit the clergy through- out Kent, M. I. i. 471. in a commission about the validity of Henry VIII. 's marriage with Anne of Cleves, 560. made master of the requests, and a privy counsellor, 582. as secre- tary of state in a commission to deprive bishop Boner, C. 269. S. 37. in another to set- tle a treaty with France, M. II. i. 299. in another against ana- baptists, 385. ii. 200. in an- other to try bishop Gardiner, C. 319. 320. 322. M. II. i. 199. S. 43. 71. in another to reform the ecclesiastical laws, C. 388. his wise saying to bishop Gar- diner, M. III. i. 462. he and two others sent to princess Mary to forbid her using the mass, II. i. 457. in a commis- sion for inquiry into the king's revenue, 526. ii. 207. in an- N 2 i8o INDEX. other to treat with French com- missioners about sea affairs, i. 575. S. 45. n. in another for martial law, ii. 31. 207. one of Edward VI. 's privy council, 160. secretary of state, 164. in a commission for a divorce, 204. purchases certain property of the crown, 235. 237. 253. III. ii.397. "' ^ commission to ascertain the state of the king's courts, 247. one of the go- vernors of the free school at Chelmsford, 279. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and subscribing to the succession, as limited by the king, C. 912. one of queen Jane Grey's council, 433. 913. signed the order of council to the duke of Northumberland to lay down his arms, 434. has the church-lands he had ob- tained confirmed to him by the pope's bull, M. III. i. 256. 448. chancellor of the order of the garter, ii. 3. chief mourn- er at bishop Griffith's funeral, 119. A. I. i. 44. one of queen Mary's privy-council, M. III. ii. 160. allowed by her to have sixty retainers, 161. continued secretary of state by queen Eli- zabeth, S. 65. he and two others appointed to transact any ur- gent business before the queen's arrival in London, A. I. i, 9. ii. 390. one of those appointed to audit the accounts of the vice-treasurer of Ireland, i. 21. concerned in arranging a com- mercial intercourse with France, ii. 119. lady Catharine Grey committed to his custody, 121. one of queen Elizabeth's privy- council, II. ii. 707. probably the son of John Petre of Exe- ter, M. II. i. 542. vindicated from Hayward's censure, yet allowed to have fluctuated in religion, ii. 190. signed various orders of the privy-council, C. 316. 317. M. III. i. 358. 559. ii. 414. P. I. 273. Petre, (Anne Browne,) lady, wife of the preceding, attended queen Mary on her entry into London, M. III. i. 55. Petre, lady, a recusant, A. III. ii. 597- Petroche, Barbara, A. IV. 570. Petroche, Gabriel, A. IV. 570. Petsokin, or Peterkin, Mary, A. IV. 571.574. Pett, — A. II. ii. 551. Pett, Arthur, A. II. i. 526. ii. 404. Pett, Thomas, ordained, G. 59. 73- Pett, Thomas, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Pett, William, ordained, G. 54. Petworth, honour of, Sussex, the seat of sir A. Broune, lord Montague, Ch. 90. Petyt, William, of the Inner Tem- ple, and keeper of the Tower- records, his MSS. used by Strype, C. pre/, xvi. M. I. i. pref. xi. P. I. 313. G. 289. 309. A. II. i. 107. see Petit. Peyle, otherwise called Pyck, A. 1. ii. 260. Peyton, Christopher, one of the commissioners to dissolve Stoke college, P. I. 44. Peyton, sir Henry, married Mary Seimour, daughter of the duke of Somerset, and widow of sir R. Rogers, M. II. ii. 8. Peyton, sir Robert, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Pezelius, Christopherus, an emi- nent German divine, A. II. ii. 375- Phaer, Edward, condemned for coining, A. II. ii. 142. his let- INDEX. I8l ter to lord Biirghley offering to discover coiners, &c. 6t6. Phaganus, see Faganus. Phagius, see Fagius. Pharasie, John, A. IV. 570. Phelps, William, his recantation, C. 902. a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 597^ Philip II. king of Spain, C. 441. Ch. 106. M. II. ii. 85. III. i. 266. 320. 323. 324.325. 326. 331- 335- 341- 357- 359-361. 468. 488. 506. 514. 521. ii. 2—5. 7. 8. 9. 71. 72. A. I. ii. 228. 544. 246. 294. 346. 354. II. i. 12. 21. 45. 72. 77. 203. 207. 517. 573. ii. 18. 19. 608. 648. 338. III. i. 2. 7. 10. ii. 168. i. 106. 115. 203. 228. 23T. 358- ii- 380. 402. 403. i. 55^- 554- ii- 484- 39- 584- 585. 85. IV. 2. 11.23.83.87. 92. 1 10. J41. 144. 216 — 219. 223. 251. 253. 266. 270.379. 384. 389. S. 52. 189. 191. 225. his match with queen Mary of England, much dis- liked by her people, M. III. i. 197 — 199. S. 130. made a knight of the garter, M. III. i. 188. his arrival in England, 200. his titles, 201. his genea- logy from John of Gaunt, 203. his intentions towards England, ib. would probably have intro- duced the inquisition, S. 237. 249. 250. 25 I. his wedding ce- lebrated, M. III. i. 205. the articles of marriage, 207. bi- shop Aylmer's character of him, Ay. 179. and observation on his marriage, 189. the parlia- ment's address to him, and his answer, M. III. i. 260. his and the queen's commission to the justices, 339. goes abroad to visit his father, 360. nothing done at court without him, 469. defers his return to England, 495. his absence excused to queen Mary by a letter from the emperor, ib. letters sent to him from the privy-council, 505. arrives at Greenwich, 513. proposes the duke of Savoy as a husband for princess Eliza- beth, 517. the French have an ill opinion of him, and why, 569. returns again to Flan- ders, ii. 9. 10. writes to the council, 13. apprehensions of his aiming to get England wholly under his own power, 66. his and the queen's letter to pope Paul IV, in behalf of cardinal Pole, 474. his an- swer to the council respecting the proceedings against Scot- land, 85. induces the English to make war on France, 80. 98. why his offer of aid for the re- covery of Calais was declined by the English, 10 1. his re- turn to England expected, 1 13. offers himself as a husband to queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 141. marries the French king's daughter Elizabeth, 289. ap- plies to queen Elizabeth in be- half of sir J. Englefield, ii. 51. her answer, ib. 52. English- men pensioned by him in Spain, 53. II. i. 494. one of the confederacy of popish princes against the reformed religion, I. ii. 244. 290. 309. his designs against England, 367. receives Steukley honour- ably, II. i. II. 13. his confer- ence with the archbishop of Cashel about him, ib. solicited by Mary queen of Scots to in- vade England, 73. 74. his am- bassador in England chsmissed, 76. a treaty between England and France against him, 81. 82. endeavours to establish ty- ramiy by the inquisition in the N 0. l82 INDEX. Low Countries, 84. at the head of the popish league a- gainst queen Ehzabeth, 375. III. i. 356. that queen sends an ambassador to him about the Netherlands, II. ii. 7. 93, the pope minded to place the crown of'Ireland upon his head, 330. a way to divert and hum- ble him proposed by Hitch- cock, 370. queen Elizabeth minded to assist the king of Portugal against him. III. i. 6. ii. 166. whom he had driven out of his country, ib. pro- mised money to any who would kill the prince of O- range, who was in consequence assassinated, i. 130. consulta- tion of peace between him and queen Elizabeth, 229. that queen apprehensive of him, 304. Hawkins's advice for an- noying him, 305. king James declines his aid for revenging his mother's death, 547. the king of Denmark interposes between him and queen Eliza- beth, 578. he and the rest of the league enter into arms a- gainst Geneva, 596. Deventer in Holland betrayed to him by sir W. Stanley, 622. a motion of peace in England with him, 671. ii. 2. the ill consequences thereof, i. 671. articles to be treated on, ii. 5. the treaty breaks off, 6. his consultation about an invasion of England, ib. 7. catholics in England fa- vour him, 8. concludes a treaty with the Turk, ti. how he bore the news of the defeat of the Spanish armada, 26. in- telligence of his fresh prepara- tions, 45. intended, if victori- ous, to send queen Elizabeth to the pope, 47. his purposes, 48. 49. 551. an account of the proceedings between Spain and England, beginning at the ac- cess of queen Elizabeth to the crown, 554. the duke of Flo- rence offers to mediate a peace between him and queen Eliza- beth, IV. 46. report of his having fallen out with the duke, and why, 59. his malice against England, 78. his vast preparations against it, 79. ex- cited by English fugitives, 80. 81. note of his Indian fleet be- ing cast away, 107, 110. lord Burghley's speech containing the causes of the queen's enter- ing into a defensive w-ar against the king of Spain, 149. continu- ance of his malice, 150. his fleet ready to invade England, 162. 163. 174. his formidable pre- parations, 224. greatly afflicted with the gout, 264. apprehen- sions of his invading England, 3°9- 355- 362. notice of a tract containing a discourse of his manner of government, and the injustice of many of his late dishonourable practices, 348. considerations for a treaty of peace between him and queen Elizabeth, upon a mo- tion of the French king: drawn up by lord Burghley, 451. see Spanish armada. Philip, Robert, a French min- ister, A. IV. 573. Philip, Thomas, M. I. i. 116. Philippo, Francisco, M. 1. ii. 253. Philips, — M. I. ii. 179. Philips, A. IV. 233. Philips, Avery, A. II. ii. 131. Philips, Ed., a puritan preacher of St. Mary Overy's, suspended for not observing the orders for fasting, W. II. 337. Philips, Fabian, A. III. i. 172. one of the council in Wales, W. I. 178. honest and stout INDEX. 183 in the discharge of his duties, ib. bishop WhitgifVs letter in his behalf, ib. Philips, Francis, an inmate of cardinal Wolsey's family, M. I. i. 194. translated the Book of Common Prayer into French, II. ii. 37. Philips, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. Philips, Morgan, C. 1092. PhiHps, Morgan, bishop Lesly published a tract in support of INIary queen of Scots' title to the English crown, under this feigned name, G. 222. Philips, Nicholas, M. III. ii. 405. Philips, Nicholas, common ser- geant of Cirencester, A. I. ii. 37°- Philips, Oliver, his letter to bi- shop Freake, about his being reviled by the justices of Bury for preaching obedience to the queen's laws, A. III. i. 24. the bishop prefers articles against the justices, 28. 29. their an- swers, ii. 177. 178. 179. Philips, Richard and Thomas, two of the members who refused to sit in queen Mary's first par- liament, M. III. i. 262. 263. indicted in consequence, 263. Philips, Walter, dean of Roches- ter, P. I. 151. A. I. ii. 275. one of the six who owned king Ed- ward's reformation in the con- vocation under queen Mary, C. 461. Philips, William, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Philles, Robert, clerk, in a com- mission to visit the city and diocese of Hereford, G. 316. Philo, A. I. ii. 146. Philosopher's stone, notice of Charnock's MS. treatise upon, A. IV. 508. Philpot's book of Kent referred to, C. 405. corrected, ib. 406. Philpot, John, archdeacon of Winchester, C. 522. A. I, i. 527. ii. 380. boldly maintained the reformation in the convo- cation under queen Mary, M. III. i. 73. 436. C. 423.461. in prison, M. III. i. 165. C. 490. he and others refuse to dispute except before the queen and council, or the parliament, M. III. i. 165. 185. C. 489. 490. signed a letter to Cran- mer, Ridley, and Latimer a- bout free-willers, 959. his letter to Careless about them, 504. the confession of faith signed by him and others, M. III. i. 223. burnt as an he- retic, 434. 469. account of his trial, translated into Latin, and published by Fox, C. 515. Grindal's judgment of his ex- aminations, G, 29. was the son of sir Peter Philpot, M. III. i. 438. educated at Winchester school, 436. travelled abroad, ib. his apology for spitting on an Arian, with a statement of their tenets, 435. ii. 363. his letter to a lady, encouraging her under queen Mary's evil times, 380. his writings in pri- son, i. 437. supplied therewith money by lady Vane, ib. his justice, 438. his parts when young, ib. his vindication of his character against bishop Gar- diner, ib. his difference with bishop Ponet, 439. Philpot, John, of London, or- dained, G. 54. Philpot, Thomas, a lunatic, or idiot, committed to the custody of lord R. Dudley,M. II. ii.255. Physicians, college of, where, in London, A. III. i. 742. Pickaret, Robert, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, A. IV. 338. N 4 1 84 INDEX. Pickering, sir William, marshal to Henry VIII,, fiither of the succeeding, A. II. i. 529. Pickering, sir William, M. 11. i. 574. ii. 18.78. adopted Cheke's new pronunciation of Greek in Cambridge, Ch. 18. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. sent ambassador into France, i. 440. 467. 473. 478. S. 44. steward and constable of the lordship of Sheriff-Hut- ton, M. II. i. 493. ii. 220. he and lord Clinton commission- ed to arrange the match be- tween Edward VI. and the French king's daughter, i. 506. 507. ii. 206. his answer con- cerning Stenkley, III. i. 574. a commissioner to arrange a peace between the emperor and French king, 93. 103. re- called by queen Mary, C.435. one of queen Elizabeth's suit- ors, P. I. 164. A. I. ii. 491. dies, II. i. 529. where buried, 530. his executors, ib. the fin- est gentleman of his age in learning, arts, and warfare, ib. served four princes, ib. son of sir W. Pickering, marshal to Henry VIII., ib. Pickring, Lewis, of Emanuel col- lege, Cambridge, libelled arch- bishops Whitgift and Bancroft, W. II. 509. Picorinus, C. 1005. Piedmont, prince of, arrives in London, M. III. i. 328. visits the Tower, 329. goes to St. Paul's. 331. Piemental, don Diego, captured in the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 544. Pierce Plowman, Vision of, notice of the second etlition, 1550, M. II. i. 417. Pierpoint, see Perpoint. Piers, John, (as bishop of Salis- bury,) G. 391. W. 1. 223. 224. 256. A. III. i. 397. 658. IV. 432. as dean of Christ Church, Oxford, one of the three recommended by archbi- shop Parker for the see of Norwich, P. II. 422. conse- crated bishop of Rochester, G. 312. in the ecclesiastical commission, 310. assists at the consecration of bishop Aylmer, Ay. 19. queen Eliza- beth's almoner, A. II. ii. 83. a matter between him, as bi- shop of Salisbury, and the earl of Shrewsbur)^ about deodands, ib. signed the articles for the regulation of the church, W. I. 232. has a commission to visit his diocese for the me- tropolitan, 245. his answer to the question, whether a prince may defend the subjects of an- other prince from being forc- ed to commit idolatry : pro- pounded with respect to the queen's assisting the oppressed Netherlands, 437. III. 165. his kindness to the sons of Fox the martyrologist, I. 485. A. III. i. 396. 742. the earl of Leicester tries for his transla- tion to Durham at bishop Barnes's death, 682. without success, 684. preaches before the queen at St. Paul's upon the defeat of the Spanish ar- mada, ii, 28. translated to the see of York, W. 1. 548. his death, A. IV. 282. his charac- ter, W. I. 549. some account of him from Dr. King's ser- mon at his funeral, A. IV. 282. had been dean of Ches- ter, Oxford, and Salisbury suc- cessively, ib. see Peers. Pierse, Balthazar, A. IV. 574, Pierson, — dismissed from his INDEX. 185 cure in Cambridge for refus- ing to say mass, M. III. i. 80. Pierson, Thomas, A. I. i. 65. see Peer son. Pigeon, Edmund, clerk of the wardrobes, temp. Edward VI., M. II. ii. 2 1 1. Pigg, — A. III. i. 691. ii. 479. Pighius, Aibertus, C. 241. 474. .PI- 359- Pightesly, rectory of, North- amptonshire, given in ex- change by the crown to the see of Coventry and Litchfield, M. II. i. 1 19. Pightley, see Pitley. Pigot, captain, an English fugi- tive under the king of Spain, A. IV. 350. Pigot, William, M. I. i. 544. a butcher, burnt for disavowing transubstantiation, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 332. 344. his bones carried about, for what purpose, ib. see Pygot. Pike, Edmund, M. III. ii. 394. Pike, Thomas, A. I. i. 69. Pilcher, — a priest, e.xecuted, A. III. i. 695. Pilgrimages, the judgment of cer- tain bishops concerning, M. I. ii. 388. Pilgrym, John, imprisoned under queen Mary, liberated under queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 55. Pilkington, — A. IV. 94. Pilkington, Edward, has a li- cense of preaching, M. II. ii. 271. Pilkington, James, C. 352. M. III. i. 522. Ch. 49. A. I. i. 201. 269. (as bishop of Dur- ham,) P. I. 425. 437. 477. A. I. ii. 142. 515. 222. 543. P. I. 545. II. 113. A. II. i. 462. ii. 107. brought up at St. John's college, Cambridge, Ch. 5. P. I. 421. concerned in the dis- putation at Cambridge before the royal visitors, 1549, M. II. i. 329. C. 290. G. 7. pre- sented to the vicarage of Ken- dal, Westmoreland, M. II. ii. 258. resigns the vicarage of Kirby in Kendal, 268. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. Ch. 95. resident at Zuric, M. III. i. 233. after- wards at Basil, 232. where he lectured on Ecclesiastes, ib. C. 395. supported by T. He- ton, W. II. 424. encouraged and aided Fox in translating Cranmer's second book on the Sacrament, C. 375. G. 19. signs the answer of the church at Frankfort to that at Geneva, and also certain resolutions about the Book of Common Prayer and Ceremonies, A. I. i. 153. 263. his prayer for queen Elizabeth and the church, upon her first coming to the crown, M. III. ii. 165. newly return- ed from exile, A. I. i. 75. one of those employed in the re- formation of religion, ib. S. 56. in a list of persons to be pre- ferred, A. I. i. 229. in a com- mission to visit the university of Cambridge and Eton col- leges, 248. P. I. 86. preaches at court, being now master of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. I. i. 297. subject of his sermon, ib. G. 71. consecrated bishop of Durham, A. I. i. 230. 308. P. I. 127. 33. preached at the reinterment of Bucer and Fagius, 170. and at Paul's Cross, A. I. i. 368. and at court, 369. G. 71. holds an ordination, 74. and of his ser- mon respecting St. Paul's ca- thedral, which was burnt, 391. 80. P. I. 186. 187. notice of his tract in vindication of this 1 86 INDEX. sermon, A. I. i. 391. 339.416. II. ii. 710. notice of his Ex- position of Haggai, I. i. 343. and of Nehemiah, 345. an- swers certain popish questions and cases, that were dispersed, 393. his reason for so doing, 395. subscribes, as a member of convocation, the articles of 1562, 487. his account of the ill state of the universities, 537. his comparison of the state of the country under queen Mary and queen Eliza- beth, 561. his letter to the earl of Leicester in behalf of the re- fusers of the ecclesiastical habits, P. I. 308. III. 69. his unfavour- able account of the state of the north, I. 361. preaches before the queen at Greenwich, A. I. ii. 196. one of the committee appointed to wait on the queen about the succession and her marriage, 234. hisjudgment of the conclusions to certain theses at Lovain against the civil power in ecclesiastical matters, II. i. 382. signed by proxy the book of canons for discipline in the convocation of 157 1, P. II. 60. gives some books to the public library at Cam- bridge, 413. his letter desiring leave to go to London for his health, A. II. i. 438. these lands restored by his means, paying a yearly rent to the queen, 441. applies to lord Burghley for a favour to his see, 568. his death, ii. ib. three prayers of his, ib. 597. 599. 600. his Exposition upon Ne- hemiah edited by Fox, III. i. 515- Pilkington, John, brother of the preceding, bred up at St. John's college, Cambridge, Ch. 49. an exile for religion, temp. queen Mary, C. 450. chaplain to his brother, A. I. i. 371, who gives him a stall in Dur- ham, ib. and makes him arch- deacon, ib. the cause of irregu- larities in the church of Dur- ham, II. ii. 107. 175. Pilkington, John, of Pembroke hall, Cambridge, born in Lan- cashire, ordained, G. 55. pre- bendary of St. Paul's, 87. Pilkington,Leonard, brother to the bishop and the archdeacon of Durham, A. I. i. 371. bred up at St. John's -college, Cam- bridge, Ch. 49. an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. obtains the headship of St. John's college, for R. Long- worth upon his own resigna- tion, P. I. 391. Pilkington, Richard, married Anne, daughter of bishop Mey, A. II. ."•.57- Pilkington, Mrs., wife of the bi- shop, her dispute with bishop Barnes about dilapidations, A. II. ii. 54. 55. Pillis, Anne, A. III. ii. 616. Pinaldus, Joannes, G. 193. Pinart, — secretary to the prin- cess of Lorrain, A. II. i. 227. III. i. 696. Pinchin, John, and his wife, im- prisoned as papists, A. II. ii. 661. Pindar, Rachel, does penance for pretending to be possessed with a spirit, P. II. 373. Pinot, — an ignorant preacher at Geneva, W. II. 323. Pinzon, — the barony of Eresby given him by William the Con- queror, A. II. ii. 398. Pipe, Richard, sheritf of London, concerned in seizing the mass- mongers at the Portuguese ambassador's, A. II. i. 315. Piperton, Herefordshire, pre- INDEX. 187 sentations to the chapel there, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Pipho, Cicely, married to B. Ayl- mer, Ay. 216. Pipho, Robert, father of the pre- ceding, married Jenet, daugh- ter of viscount Gormanston, Ay, 216. Pipin the Short, married Bertha, daughter of the king of Al- main, S. 113. Pirates, proclamation against, &c., A. II. i. 26. Pirry, Martin, treasurer of the mint in Dublin, M. II. i. 600. ii. 253. his death, i 600. Piscator, — W. Temple wrote against him in defence of Ra- mus, A. IV. 610. Rising, a parcel of the abbey of St. Radigund's given in ex- change by the crown to the see of Canterbury, C. 405. Pistolet, a Portuguese gold coin, its value in England, M. III. i. 189. Pistols, act against carrying, S, ,143- Pitley, alias Pightley, manor of, Essex, taken in exchange by the crown from sir J. Cheke, Ch. 129. Pitte, Edward, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii.458. of no great account, ib. his va- luation in the subsidy book, ib. Pitts, — his intelligence of the king of Spain's preparations against England, A. III. ii. 45- Pius IV., A. I. ii. 66. 221. his negotiations to bring back queen Elizabeth to the Roman religion, A. I. i. 339. grants in- dulgences to several orders of Rome, seemingly to set up new tenets of religion, to the detriment of protestants, and to prevent a general union among them, 342. P. I. 141. stirred up by the duke of Feria to excommunicate queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. ii. 53. resolutions taken at Rome under him a- gainst that queen, 54. 55. the council of Trent held by him, 59. 61. 62. Pius v., pope, A. I. ii. 273. 384. II. i. 21. 76, 81. 206. 207. ii. 468. 338. 673. III. i. 385. ii. 340. IV. 504. 580. notice of his bull anathematizing here- tics, I. ii. 218. answered by bishop Jewel, 302. 307. and by Bullinger, 354. has a pri- vate agent in England, 220. what he effected through him, ib. one of the confederacy of popish princes against pro- testantism, 244. 309. why he rewarded Cummin, P. I. 488. the chief cause of a rebellion of papists in the north of Eng- land, A. I. ii. 324. his bull against queen Elizabeth affixed to the palace gates of the bi- shop of London, 354. set up in Paris, II. i. 23. his mandate at Bononia, III. ii. 347. useth vehement persecution against the Lutherans in Italy, 349. his saying respecting Spanish catholics, 589. Place, — G. 243. Placy, lordship and manor of, Essex, bought of the crown by sir R. Cholmely, M. II. ii. 232. had belonged to the monas- tery of Stratford Langton, ib. Plague, the, 1547, M. II. i. 95. 1548, 185. .563, G. 104. means to prevent its breaking out afresh, 121. 124. receipt against the plague, S. 160. i88 INDEX. 139- Plaisted, — A. III. 142. Plankney, Edward, one of the royal visitors, 1549, C. 209. Plankney, Henry, M. I. i. 582. Plantin, Christopher, printer at Antwerp, A. III. i. iii. ii. 198. Bi/arus's History of the Persian Affairs printed by him in folio, i. 660. Plater, William, and his wife, papists, P. II. 342. Platform of discipline, a new one set forth by the puritans, 1585, W.I. 470. Plato, C. 241.755. Ch. 171. S. 10. 13. 61. 90. 91. 150. 159. 213. quoted in Latin, C. 242. notice of a Latin commentary on his Timeeus, Ch. 50. his works recommended by Cbeke to be studied, 153. Playfer, — A. I. i. 3 10. Plays forbid during the rebellion in 1549, M. II. i. 270. Pleas, common, chief justice of, see Ed. Anderson. Pleedsted, — W. III. 378. Plessis, — A. IV, 504. Pleuvre, Joannes de, G. 193. Plough, — a preacher, an exile at Basil for his religion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 232. wrote an Apology for the pro- testants, ib. against Hogheard, 442. Plough-land, its measure, S. 132. Plowden, Edmund, G. 366. de Tibmersh, Berks, one of the members who refused to sit in the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, M. III. i. 262. pleaded against the in- dictment in consequence, 263. an eminent lawyer, ih. P. II. 168. employed to defend the right of sanctuary at West- minster, A. I. ii. 229. Ployden, see Plowden. Plucket, Oliver, his high opinion of Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 166. Ay. 200. Plumbe, Robert, bought some of the property of Edward, earl of Oxford, A. III. ii. 191. Plume, John, a sectary in Kent, M. II. i. 370. Plumley, — P. II. 434. Phnnpton, — married to Charles Morton, A. II. i. 578. Plumpton, Gilbert, rector of Flitte, M. II. ii. 407. Plunket, Matthew, lord of Lowth, had a daughter married to Chr. Aylmer, Ay. 216. Pluralities, archbishop Parker's opinion of, P. I. 294. phirali- ties frequent, II. 84. petition of the house of commons re- specting pluralities, W. HI. 123. archbishop Sandys's ob- servations on it, I. 353. and archbishop Whitgift's, 360. regulation drawn up by the bishops concerning pluralities, III. 133. bishop Cooper's co- gitations on the subject, I. 376. archbisho]) Whitgift's rea- sons against a bill for abolish- ing pluralities, 380. sir F. Knollys's notes in answer to these reasons, 381. petition of the clergy to the queen that the bill against pluralities might not pass, 584. 383. and again, 1588, another bill against plu- ralities lost in the house of lords, 1588, 533. reasons urged against this bill supposed to be archbishop Whitgift's, ib. another bill proposed in par- liament against them, 1601, II. 444. the observations of certain members upon it, ib. Plutarch, S. 13. his tract De Sti- pcrstitlone translated into La- INDEX. 189 tin by sir J. Cheke, Ch. 171. his remark on the different success of war when the em- peror Augustus was present or absent, S. 193. 219. his Lives translated into English by sir T. North from tlie French translation of Amiot, A. II. ii. 307- Plympton, manor of, Devon, given in exchange by Edward VI. to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 539. had belonged to the marquis of Exeter, ib. Pockington, an act for founding a grammar school there, M. II. i- 554- Poems. A popish rhyme fastened upon a pulpit in king Edward's reign, C. 333. 874. The An- swer to the Enemy, 875. an Old Song of John Nobody,876. A pore Help, the Buckler of holy Mother Kijrke, pretend- ed to be written against the preachers, M. II. ii. 333. no- tice of a rhyme set up upon the wall of the Dutch church- yard, A. IV. 235. see Song. Poland, king of, see Sigismond III. and Henry duke of Anjou. Pole, Arthur, condemned for treason, A. I. i. 546. 555. par- doned, M. II. ii. 67. Pole, David, M. III. i. 473. (as bishop of Peterborough,) P. I. 106. A. I. ii. 26. present, as chancellor of Litchfield, and archdeacon of Salop, at the convocation of 1540, M. 1. i. 553. 557. in the commission for the restitution of bishop Boner, III. i. 36. vicar-gene- ral, and principal official to the bishop of Litchfield, 168. present at the trial of bishop Boner, 288. and of Dr. Tay- lor, 290. has a commission to exercise episcopal jurisdiction in the vacant see of Litchfield, C. 459. in a commission a- gainst heretics, M. III. i. 476. appointed vicar-general to arch- bishop Pole, 477. consecrated bishop of Peterborough, ii. 26. sent his proxy in the first par- liament of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. summoned before the queen, 206. one of the de- prived bishops who signed a letter to her, 217. how treated, 214. 41 1, his death, 214. Pole, Edmund, condemned for treason, A. I. i. 54O. 555. par- doned, M. II. ii. 67. Pole, sir Jeffrey, brother to the cardinal, M. I. i. 521. except- ed out of Edward VI.'s gene- ral pardon, II. ii. 67. Pole, Jeffrey, a magistrate, A. II. ii. 22. Pole, Reginald, cardinal, C. 228. 441. M. III. i. 331.468.474. 498. 506. 508. 510. ii. 21. 62. P. I. 1. one of Henry VIII. 's agents for subscriptions of fo- reign doctors respecting his divorce, M. I. i. 219. did him small service, ib. the king jea- lous of him, and desirous to gain him over, 361. Thomas Starkey, his great friend, or- dered by the king to write to him upon his opinion concern- ing his divorce and supremacy, 362. Crumwel's message to him as to the king's request, ib. his and Starky's corre- spondence on these points, 363 —367- . 444- 445- "• 279. wrote his book De Unione Ec- clesiastica in consequence, i. 445. C. 63. bp. Latimer's opin- ion of it, M. I. i. 446. answer- ed by the bishops' book, C. 63. his relations disapprove of it, M. I. i. 448. Starky's letter to him about it, ii. 2S2. refuses 190 INDEX. to come over to the king who had sent for him, i. 455. his let- ter, stating the reason of not obeying the king's summons, and defending himself, ii. 295. bishop Tonstal, being ordered by the king, reads his book and disapproves of it, i. 456. his letter to the bishop in defence of himself, ii. 306. declared a rebel, i. 476. repairs to Rome at the pope's invitation, 458. 461. Starky's letter to him upon the report of his going to Rome, and of his being about to be made cardinal, 459. made a cardinal, 461. bishops Tonstal and Stokesley write to him, expressing their sorrow at this event, ib. sent by the pope to excite the king of France against king Henry, 463. king Henry applies to the French king to deliver him up, and he is obliged to retire from France, ib. owing to bi- shop Gardiner, IH. i. 453. his letter to Crumwel relative to these circumstances, I. ii. 326. recalled to Rome, i. 477. Throgmorton's discovery to Crumwel concerning him, 478, and Legh's, 481. is censured by bishop Tonstal, 519. one of the articles of the Devon rebels respecting him, C. 266. 835. answered by archbishop Cran- mer, 835. talked of for the pa- pacy, M. n. i. 298. finished his book De Summo Pontijice, &c., but it was not printed until 1569, 419. excepted out of Edward VI. 's general par- don, ii. 67. consulted by queen Mary upon religious matters, C. 464. his advice, 465. 931. his instructions for his mes- senger to the queen, 921 — 935. supplement, T115. his defence of himself, 925. his opinion of the act of legitima- tion of the marriage of queen Katharine, 932. and of the act concerning the sacrament, 933. appointed legate for Eng- land, M. HI. i. 211. 246. pro- vision for his household, 247. ii. 241. conducted into Eng- land, i. 248. C. 494. notice of Harcius's account of his re- turn, M. HI. ii. 242. his charac- ter, C. 494. how altered, 499. Latimer's opinion of him, 494. his measures for reconciling the realm to the pope, 495 — 499. his commission to the chapter of Canterbury, deput- ing them to absolve the clergv and laity, 946. his instructions to the bishops about absolving their clergy and laity, 950, a severe persecutor, 498. an Ita- lian's letter concerning him, 953. his letters patent to use the legantine power, M. III. i. 248. the effect of his mission as described by Fox, 249. his dispensation respecting the church-lands, 254. ii, 251. re- stored from his attainder for treason, temp. Henry VIII., i. 257. not without opposition, 258. how became to be thought a favourer of protestants, ib. ill received in the city, 266. goes to court, 323. pronounces absolution on the parliament, 324. attends the king to St. Paul's, 326. partial to sir W. Cecil, 346. Ch. 98. goes to Calais, as the pope's com- missioner to settle a peace be- tween the emperor and French king, M. III. i. 346. one of archbishop Cranmer's recanta- tions probably drawn up by him, 395, his answer to Cran- mer's letter to the queen, C. INDEX. 191 972. wrote also to him on the sacrament, 549. suspected by Strype to have urged the queen to put Cranmer to death, 560. on what grounds, ib. the fact doubted by Wharton, 1059. goes to Calais, M. III. i. 346. has a patent for holding a con- vocation, ib. C. 528. his decrees for the reformation of England agreed to therein, C. 528. is- sues his commission for trial of Ridley and Latimer, 532. con- secrated abp. of Canterbury, M. III. i. 473. queen Mary's bounty to him, 474. made chancellor of Oxford, 475. his commissions and visitations in his diocese, 477. his articles of inquiry, 478. his metropoliti- cal visitation of the diocese of Lincoln with the articles of vi- sitation, ii. 389. his patronage, 394 — 406. sends his commis- sioners against heretics and Lollards in Norfolk and Suf- folk, i. 555. a supplication of certain godly persons against them, ib. his absolution of three who revoked their heresies, ii. 467. his harsh behaviour to Tremellius, W. L 1 1 . bigoted towards popery on his return from abroad, ib. ordered a vi- sitation against heresy at Cam- bridge, 10. sir J. Cheke brought before him, Ch. 1 1 1. whom he absolves and admits into the Roman catholic church, 113. the recantation drawn up by him for Cheke, 1 17. the queen dines with him, M. III. ii. 10. preaches at court, 22. gives a mandate for processions on account of the wars in Chris- tendom, 27. a privy counsellor, 160. Saunders's panegyric of him, 472. requires bishop Bo- ner to inform him of heretics before their condemnation, 29. deprived by the pope of his le- gantine authority, 30. reason of his displeasure against him, ib. king Philip's and queen Ma- ry's letter to the pope in his be- half, 3 1 . 474. and two from the council, 31. 476.480, his own letter to the pope, 34 — 39. continues legate, 39. his speech to the citizens of London for the restoration of abbeys, 40. 482. his advice to the queen in her want of money to carry on the war with France, 99. 534. reported to have been concerned in the loss of Calais, 1 01. causes five heretics to be burnt, 123. his letter to prin- cess Elizabeth, A. I. i. 72. the object of it, ib. thought of by the papists as a successor to queen Mary, M. III. ii. 138. report of his being poisoned refuted by Haddon, 144. the bodies of Bucer and Fagius dug up at Cambridge by his order, P. I. 170. and that of P. Martyr's wife, at Oxford, 199. never or- dained any, according to his register, 486. dies, M. III. ii. 1 18. 1 19. 143. A. I. i. 45. 69. P. I. 69. 102. of a quartan ague, C. 408. his funeral, A. I. i. 52. 53. debts to him order- ed by the council to be paid, 53. 54. commissions issued by him, M. III. ii. 120. several advowsons in Kent given to him as archbishop of Canter- bury, 121. his constitution re- specting the dress and diet of the clergy, P. III. 1 18. his life written by Bacatellus, C. 9. Cranmer's account of his book against king Henry dissolving his marriage, ib. and his opin- ion of it, 10. declaration of the repeal of his attainder, A. 192 INDEX. I. i. 117. 11.457. his book of Justification published, 304. Pole, Richard de la, M. I. i. 22. ii. 40. see Pool. Pole, the town of, backsliders, M. U.i. 115. Polecros, manor of, Devon, taken in exchange by the crown from lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234- Poley, — M. III. i. 540. Pollanus, Valerandus, M. II. i. 123. preacher and superintend- ent of the strangers' church at Glastonbury, C. 346. of great learning and integrity, ib. turn- ed into Latin the disputations held at the beginning of queen Mary's reign, 347. very ser- viceable in settling the manu- facture of his congregation, 351. his three letters to sir W. Cecil on the subject, 887. pub- lished the Liturgy used by his congregation, M. II. i. 378. 379. 551. made a free denizen of England, 382. Pollard, — concerned in the disputation at Cambridge be- fore the royal commissioners, C. 290. preaches in favour of purgatory at Cambridge, M. III. i. 81. Pollard, John, A. I. i. 41. one of the council in Wales, M. II. ii. 162. present at archbishop Cranmer's trial, C. 1080. dub- bed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. sent to the Tower for treason, i. 488. Pollard, Mrs., an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 360. Polliac, M., slain at the seige of Rochelle, A. II. ii. 506. Polsted, Henry, one of the com- missioners to visit religious houses, M. I. i. 402. bought certain of their lands from the crown, II. ii. 402. 409. Polsted, Dr. Henry, physician of Guilford, A. II. i. 345. Polston, Henry, M. II. ii. 238. Polydore, — A. I. ii. 125. Pomeranus, Joannes, (Bugenha- gius,) his works prohibited in England, temp. Henry V^IIL, M. I. i. 254. and again, temp, queen Mary, HI. i. 418. Pomery, sir Thomas, concerned in the rebellion in the west, temp. Edward VI., M. II. ii. 424. surrendered himself, ib. executed, i. 281. Pomfret castle, surrenders to the rebels by archbishop Lee and lord Darcy, M. I. i. 294. Pond, Thomas, a papist, in pri- son. Ay. 30. Ponder, — G. 605. Ponet, Poynet, John, C. 99. M. II. i. 65. 536. C. 444. 513. 631- 955- 1056. A. II. ii. 500. quoted, Ch. 108. a Kentish- man, and of Queen's college, Cambridge, C. 607. bred up under sir T. Smith at Cam- bridge, S. 20. 159. adopted Cheke's mode of pronouncing Greek, 13. Ch. 18. chaplain to archbishop Cranmer, S. 20. C. 240. 607. translated Ochin's Dialogues against the pope's primacy, M. II. i. 309. con- secrated bishop of Rochester, C. 363. M. II. i. 403. parti- culars of the ceremony, C. 363. the first bishop consecrated ac- cording to the new form of or- dination, 274. assisted at the consecration of bishop Hoper, 364. allowed a benefice in com- mendam, and why, M. II. i. 343. in a commission against anabaptists, 385. ii. 200. made bishop of Winchester, i. 483. INDEX. J 93 ii. i66. 260. 263. 264. 266. C. 323. one of the commissioners to reform the ecclesiastical laws, 388. consulted about al- lowing princess Mary to have mass, M. II. i. 451. notice of his book in favour of the mar- riage of priests, ii. 54. an- swered by Martin, 55. notice of the answer to Martin's an- swer to this book of his, III. i. 233. 524. P. I. 67. II. 446. C. 75- 473- 474; 1058- Day has a license to print his works, M. II. ii. 114. cordially favoured religion, 166. his chaplains, ib. has a license to preach and to license preachers, 262. a dif- ference between him and arch- deacon Philpot, caused by Cook, his registrar, III. i. 439. deprived and imprisoned, temp, queen Mary, C. 443. fled a- broad, 449.' M. II. ii. 166. Ch. 95. resident at Argentine, M. III. i. 232. his character of bi- shop Gardiner, 450. notice of his book of Politic Power, 535. died in exile, P. I. 67. A. II. i. 350, bishop Parkhurst's epi- gram to him, ii. 501. devised the summer-house at Lambeth palace, P. II. 26. 79. conjec- tured by some to be the author of Catechismus Brevis Cliris- tian(E DisciplincE, 8ic. C. 422. Pontacus, — A. I. ii. 146. slan- dered Bucer, M. II. i. 384. Pontanus, — a counsellor to Fre- deric, elector of Saxony, C. 18. Pontius, Diaconus, A. I. ii. 509. Ponyngs, sir Nicholas, his part at the funeral of Henry VIII., M. II. ii. 301. see Pmjnings. Ponyngton, manor of, Dorset, taken in exchange by the crown from Eton college, M. II. i. 119. S. 168. Pookethorp, manor of, granted VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. by the crown to the dean and chapter of Norwich, M. II. i. I2T. Pool, — C. 221. Pool, Thomas, A. IV. 252. 390. see Pole. Pooly, — a servant to princess Mary, M. II. i. 276, Pooly, — A. II. ii. 266. Pooly, — W. I. 473. Pooly, sir John, A. IV. 52. Poor : their oppressed state in the time of Edward VI., M. II. ii. 132. notice of a MS. of sir T. Smith about maintaining the poor, S. 166. Pooss, notice of a disease so called, A. I. ii. 89. Pope, propositions and resolutions of the English council about casting off the pope's authority, M. I. i. 237. Sampson's Latin oration in favour of the king's supremacy, ii. 162. translation of it, i. 237. mostof the bishops and clergy in favour of the pope, 244. certain persons who went about the countrj- preach- ing up the papacy, 245. the people's veneration of the pope, 247. the pope called Anti- christ, 252. a popish discourse on Antichrist, ib. ii. 182. pro- clamations and acts against the pope, i. 256. a friar preaches at Exeter in favour of the pope's supremacy, ib. papal bulls and dispensations annul- led by parliament, 381. notice of two books shewing the pope to have no power in England by law, 512. and of another against the papal superiority, 514. and of bishop Tonstals sermon against the pope, 518. opinions of the Germans con- cerning the pope, 526. names of persons thought likely to succeed as pope, 1549. H. i. o 194 INDEX. 298^. his power restored in England, temp, queen Mary, C. 477. cardinal Pole's mea- sures for that purpose, 493 — 499. Henry VIII. 's statutes against the pope repealed, M. III. i. 251. a tract exposing the popish clergy for saying the nation was perjured in re- nouncing the pope, 414. ii. 334. Abdisn, patriarch of the eastern Assyrians, swears obe- dience to the pope, A. I. i. 554. the pope's nuncio refused admittance into England, init. queen Elizabeth, 166. Pope, — M. II. i. 51. Pope, Ge;Orge, and Joanna his wife, M. I. ii. 144. Pope, John, chancellor of Lin- coln, the spiritualities of the see of Lincoln deputed to him, C. 383. has a commission to visit the see, M. III. i. 48 r. Pope, Richard, has a license to beg within the county of He- reford, M. II. ii. 248.' Pope, Richard, a priest, one of archbishop Parker's masters in reading, P. I. 8. A. IV. 611. Pope, Simon, rector of Warming- ton, deprived for being mar- ried, M. III. i. 169. appeals to the queen, 170. ii. 272. Pope, sir Thomas, of Tittenhan- ger, bought church-lands of the crown, M. II. i. 123. high- sherift' of Essex, ii. 164. placed as a guard and a spy over princess Elizabeth, III. i, 131. 518. a great man with queen Marj% A. I. i. 46. notice of his burial, ib. Popery, the people's opinion of, 1533, M. I. i. 247. the popish clergy's practice, 244. a decla- ration how far the German protestants agreed in the doc- trines of the Romish church. 526. Henry VIII. 's declaration to king James V. of Scotland, exciting him to cast off popery, ii. 230. popery prevails in the latter part of Henry VIII.'s reign, C. 1 86. relics of it still continue 1549, 291. the act for uniformity of service, &c. the greatest blow to popery, M. II. i. 133. why the people readily returned to popery, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 86. reestablished, 590. a discourse in favour of the pope, and the unity of the church of Rome, A. I. i. 113. ii. 451. archbi- shop Parker's judgment of the dangers of popery, P. II. 329. list of popish books seized, 392. a project to prevent the falling away to popery, A. III. i. 278. popery fostered by ig- norance, Ch. 13. Popes: see Clement VII., 1523. Paul III., 1534 — T549. Julius III., 1550— 1555. Paul IK, 1555—1559- P^^s I^" 1559 — 1565. Pius v., 1566— 1572. Gregorij XIII., 1572 — 1585. Sixtus v., 1585 — 1590. Gre- gory XIV., 1590. Innocent IX., 1 591. Clement VII I., 1592 — 1605. Popham, sir John, W. II. 416. his judgment about the priory of Norwich, A. III. i. 490. his plat for reestablishing the ca- thedral, ii. 56. his correspond- ence with lord Burghley about Mary queen of Scots, i. 526. 528. 529. his opinion about the conjuration of Mrs. Dier, IV. 9. ID. acts as an ecclesi- astical commissioner in the case of Cawdry, being then at- torney-general, Ay. 91. 206. his opinion as attorney-general, concerning Cartwright and his party, W. II. 70. acts as an ec- INDEX. 195 clesiastical commissioner in his case also, 74. liis speech to him, 75. his judgment of the puritans, 82, acts also as an ecclesiastical commissioner in Darrel's case, being then lord chief justice of the common pleas, 346. in a commission, as lord chief justice of the queen's bench, to consider what coer- cion should be used instead of excommunication, 504. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, A. IV. 519. Population in England, very low, temp. Edward III., S. 255. Porrage, William, ordained, G. 54- Portbury, William, public no- tary, W. II. 333. Porte, sir John, of Derbyshire, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 37. in a commission against heresy in Staffordshire, III. ii. 15. queen Mary's letter to him to receive the loan in Derbyshire, 78. Porter, — P. II. 434. Porter, John, a recusant, A. I. i. 4H- Portman, sir William, appointed by Henry VIII. an administra- tor to Catharine of Arragon's will, M. I. ii. 253. made a knight, II. i. 24. in a commis- sion for despatching chancery matters, 497. ii. 205. and to assist the lord-keeper, i. 521. ii. 207. he and bishop Day per- suade judge Hales to abjure protestantism. III. i. 274. ii. 261. was chief justice of Eng- land, i. 511. notice of his bu- rial, ib. Portsmouth, Edward VI, 's obser- vations upon, M. II. ii. 9. Portugal, advertisements out of, 1593, by one Gray, A. IV. 251. Portugal, king of, see Antonio and Sebastian. Portus, Franciscus, G. 193. Pory, — prebendary of Stoke college, P. I. 18. III. I. 3. Pory, John, fellow of Bene't col- lege, Cambridge, P. I. 29. 35. master of Bene't college, 233. 234. II. 94. 475. III. 162. in a commission to visit the city and diocese of Peterborough, I. 152. in another to visit the sees of Bristol and Ely, 258. his part in the theological dis- putation before queen Eliza- beth at Cambridge, A. I. ii. 107. preaches at Windham, P. I. 506. his college ill go- verned, 530. prevailed upon to resign his headship, 572. was minister of Lambeth, and pre- bendary of Westminster, ib. present at archbishop Parker's funeral, II. 432. Possovino, — Jesuit, A. III. i. 184. Postellus, — his absurd notion about salvation, A. III. ii. 348. Postils, what, A. I. ii. 304. Postling, manor of, came into the possession of Robert Cranmer, C. 601. inherited by his daugh- ter Anne, who married sir A. Harris, ib. Potkin, — A. II. i. 477. Pott, John, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 597. Potter, Ambrose, of Gravesend, has a license to eat flesh in Lent, W. I. 469, Potterspury, see Piiry. Potts, family of, M. III. i. 49T. Pound, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 669. see Pownde. Pournel, Antosin, A. IV. 573. o 2 jg6 INDEX. Powche, Elizabeth, M. III. ii. 404. Powdrel, — an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 359- Powel, — pensioned in Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i. 495. Powel, David, A. III. i. 744. re- ferred to, II. ii. 51. resident on his living in the diocese of St. Asaph, 526. III. ii. 473. no- tice of his History of Wales, i. 415. extract from its dedica- tion to sir P. Sidney, 403. Powel, Edmund, present at arch- bishop Cranmer's trial, C. 1072. 1080. Powel, Dr. Edward, an emissary, preaches up the pope at Bris- tol, M. I. i. 246. attainted, ib. Powel, Giffin, of Jesus college, Oxford, A, III. i. 519. Powel, John, fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 221. 719. ii. 500. Powel, friar Thomas, M. I. i. 246. Powel, Thomas, has a commis- sion to visit the city and dio- cese of Gloucester, P. I. 152. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. did not vote upon the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 506. Powel, widow, daughter of sir W. Thomas, married to Dr. W. Parry, III. i. 365. Powes, Thomas, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, W. II. 463- Powis, Richard, C. 349. 887. 888. Powis, Edward Grey, lord, one of the council in Wales, M. II. i. 463. ii. 161. died of the sweating sickness, i. 493. Powis, lady, A. II. ii. 446. Powis, lady, daughter of C. Bran- don, duke of Suffolk, M. III. ii. 25. notice of a lawsuit be- tween her and the duke of Suffolk, II. ii. 44. buried. III. ii. 25. Powle, Thomas, A. I. ii. 348. comptroller of the hanaper, M. II. i. 512. clerk to the crown, A. III. i. 199. Powlet, Thomas, M. I. ii. 253. see Paulet. Pownal, Robert, minister at Ar- row, A. I. i. 154. 491. one of the six preachers at Canterbury, P. II. 25. Pownal, Robert, an exile, or- dained, G. 59. born at Bar- wick, Somerset, ib. Pownde, Robert, an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, (if he were the same as Pownal, minister at Arrow, and after- wards one of the six preachers at Canterbury,) A. I. i. 491. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 490. votes against the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. see Pound. Powting, William, a sawyer of Thornham, an Arian, abjured, M. III. i. 540. Powtrel, Nicholas, of Gray's Inn, made a sergeant at law, A. I. i, 42. Poynes, — his release from the inquisition obtained by sir R. Shelly, A. III. i. 187. Poynet, see Ponet. Poynings, sir Adrian, accompa- nied lord Clinton in his em- bassy to France, M. II. i. 507. was marshal of New Haven, A. I. i. 551. Poynings, Edward, lord, as comp- troller of Henry VIII. 's house- hold, M. I. i. 235. 434. Poynings, sir Thomas, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. INDEX. 197 i. 9. the manor of Hosting- hanger had belonged to him as lord Poynings, III. i. 41. see Ponyngs. Poynter, — C, 246, Poyntz, — a great officer and favourite of Henry VIII., A. I. ii. 90. father of sir Nicholas, ib. Poyntz, sir Nicholas, son of the preceding, A. I. ii. 90. jjresent at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i, 9. queen Jane Grey thought herself sure of him, C. 434. her letter to him and sir J. Bridges, 913. Poyntz, lady, mother of the pre- ceding, A. I. ii. 90. married Dyer, as a second husband, ib. ill-treated by him, ib. queen Elizabeth's kindness to her, ib. notice of a peculiar circum- stance preceding her death, ib. Practice of Prelates, notice of this tract, A. III. i. 291. Pranel, Frances, widow of H. Pra- nel, clandestinely married to Edward earl of Hertford, W. II. 453- Prastals, John, A. II. ii. 617. Prat, — fellow of Eton college, expelled for contumacy in not attending at a visitation, P. I. 206. Prat, John, A. I. i. 309. P. III. 265. W. II. 145. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 491. a great friend of Fox, 492. his letter to him about Calfhill, 354. another to him advising him to omit the account of the controversy between bishop Ferrar, Young, and others out of his Acts and Monuments, 370. M. HI. i. 430. one of the six preachers at Canterbury, P.I. 144. arch- deacon of St. David's, sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ce- remonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 5 1 2. Prat, William, of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 646. Prayers, occasional, become more usual, C. 181. prayers enjoined against immoderate rain, 182. the council's letter concerning a form of prayer for victory, 253. archbishop Cranmer's prayer upon the Devon rebel- lion, 269. the duke of Somer- set's prayer for God's assist- ance in his high office of pro- tector, M. II. i. 23. ii. 311. prayer of queen C. Par in short ejaculations, i. 205. ii. 398. prayer used at the public fast for a great dearth, i. 345. ii.442. prayer of Underbill against the papists. III. i. 103. prayer of Mountain before his trial, 293. Prayers ; notice of the prayers of the gospellers in England, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 411. form of prayer used by the English at Geneva, 538. Prayer of queen Mary against as- sault of vices, M. III. ii. 145. 550. another to be read at the hour of death, 552. Hancock's prayer for queen Elizabeth at her first coming to reign, 164. bishop Pilkington's prayer for her, 165. prayer of Bradford that God would shorten the persecution, 281. prayer used in the time of persecution, 315. another for the same occasion, 319. Spurge's prayer for the use of the persecuted, 319. prayer of dean May for bishop Grindal at his installation, G. o 3 198 INDEX. 51. bishop Pilkington's prayer suited to the beginning of the reformation under queen Eli- zabeth, A. II. ii. 52. 597. an- other of his for faithful preach- ers to be sent out, 599. another of his against error and po- pery, 600. a prayer for the festi- val of queen Elizabeth's acces- sion, 65. private prayers at first printed with the Common Prayer, P. I. 168. public form of prayer in Latin allowed to be used at the two universities, and at Winchester and Eton, 1560, A. I. i. 333. 337. prayer for the present estate in the churches, 1562, 423. prayers appointed for three days for the success of the English army against the duke of Guise, 545. form of prayer appointed in conse- quence of the plague, ^563, P. I. 259 — 262. G. 104. 108. some account of it, P. I. 262. the queen's letter authorizing the form. III. 59. a thanks- giving apjjointed on its cessa- tion, I. 268. G. 477. that used in the diocese of Ely, ib. P. III. 60. prayers appointed to be said in behalf of Malta, be- sieged by the Turks, A. I. ii. 190, thanksgivings for its deli- verance, 191. the collect, ib. probably composed by archbi- shop Parker, ib. form of prayer against the Turks, P. I. 462. 463. prayer for queen Eliza- beth, being taken with a dan- gerous sickness, A. I. ii. 549. a thanksgiving for her recovery, 551. a prayer, sermon, and thanksgiving about the rebel- lion" in the north, 322. prayer for the queen, another for the persecuted and persecutors, both framed after the massacre of Paris, P. II. 131. 132. no- tice ofPreces privates in Studio- sorum Gratiam, &c. A. II. i, 461. prayer of J. Ei^x after a sermon at St. Paul's, ii. 215. 636. an order of prayer ap- pointed for Wednesdays and Fridays in consequence of an earthquake, 396. G. 368. a prayer of the puritans against episcopacy, ceremonies, &c. A. III. i. 66. a prayer of Wilcock and Field against Antichrist, 6y. prayers appointed to be used on the discovery of Parry's treason, 376. ii. 330. bishop Cooper's on the same occasion, i. 377. copy of another prayer, 379. ii. 334. prayer of archbi- shop Sandys upon the queen's escape from Babington's con- spiracy, i. 475. ii. 370. prayer of thanksgiving and anthem on the queen's day, i. 516. prayers and fasting enjoined upon the Spanish invasion, ii. 15. a prayer for the occasion, ib. a prayer or thanksgiving for the victory, 28. Martin's prayer used in the queen's chapel, 31. 546. prayer, used in the queen's chapel, for the success of the French king against the re- bels, IV. 57. prayer of queen Elizabeth upon the going forth of her armjf, 302. prayer of thanksgiving by lord Burgh- ley for the queen's success against Spain, 364. prayer of queen EHzabeth for the suc- cess of her forces and navy, 440. of Thompson for lord Burghley, the night before he died, 468. two offices of prayer, one upon queen Eliza- beth entering a new century of years, the other upon deli- verance from the rebellion of the carl of Essex, appointed to be used, AV. II. 441. A. IV, INDEX. 199 495. 496. archbishop Whit- gift's prayer for the sick queen, W. II. 461. archbishop Hut- ton's prayer for king James and the church, 490, see Com- mon Prayer and Horarium. Preacher, qualifications of, ac- cording to bishop Aylmer, Ay. 173- Preachers licensed in the west, M. II. i. 262. Preachers at St. Paul's, 1559, A. I. ii. 198. a list of the Lent preachers, 1565, P. III. 135. Preachers' licenses, recalled and renewed on certain occasions, P. I. 376. mode of appointing preachers in Lent before the queen, 404. the number of preachers ordered by queen Eli- zabeth to be abridged, G. 329. archbishop Grindal's expostu- lations with her on the subject, 560, abp. Whitgift's schedule of the numbers and degrees of the puritan preachers, W. I. 308. III. 99. Preaching, a book of the order for preaching, and of the form for the beads sent to all the bishops, C. 35. a specimen of popish preaching, 604. orders for preaching, M. I. i. 259. preaching regulated by certain instructions sent to the bishops by Henry VIII., 466. what was done in the diocese of York in consequence of these instructions, 469. ii. 332. pro- clamation against such as preached without license, II. i, 130. 141. ii. 346. who only could license, i, 183. preach- ing suspended, ib. orders from the council to preach against covetousness, 495. preaching prohibited by queen Elizabeth in the beginning of her reign, and why, A. I. i. 59. her proclamation, ii. 391. preach- ing urged as highly useful, i. 271. papists against it, 272. an order concerning' preach- ing, P. I. 176, Precedence, curious question re- specting, Ch. 135. Precedents of resignations of bi- shops, G. 599. Precisians, see Puritans. Predestination, differences re- specting, among the imprisoned protestants, temp, queen Mary, C. 502. a letter in favour of predestination, M. III. ii. 325. notice of predestination in the protestant declaration of doc- trine exhibited to queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. i. 172. note re- specting the seventeenth Article upon predestination, as drawn up in 1562, 494. a petition of some concerning predestina- tion, 495. questions and an- swers touching the doctrine of predestination, annexed to a Bible printed in 4to in 1582, III. i. 226. according to Prin always pi-inted with the Bible till 1615, 226. doubted by Strype, ih. copy of them, ii. 238. controversy concerning predestination at Cambridge, W. II. 227. occasioned by Dr. Whitaker and Dr. Baro, ib, certain heads of colleges fa- vour CaWin's explanation of it, 228. Calvin's scheme opposed by Barret, 229. certain of his tenets, &c. III. 317. archbishop Whitgift's opinion of them, II. 239, 240. Saravia's judgment of them, 241. III. 321. the true doctrine reduced to six points according to the heads of the colleges, II. 249. (see Barret and Baro.) copy of the Lambeth articles (in favour of this doctrine), 280. notice 04 200 INDEX. of archbishop Mutton's trea- tise on this subject, 312. see Freewill. Preferment void, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Prelates, bishop Latimer's letter to king Henry against them, M. III. i. 379. Premunire, Henry VIH.'s laws of, annulled by queen Mary, M. III. i. 59. Prerogative court, Dr. Jones's opinion respecting its reforma- tion, G. 304. Dr. Harvey's, 305. Dr. Yale's, 307. see Court. Presentations to vacant churches, 1556, M. III. i. 591. Presentments made at Cranmer's visitation at Canterbury, C. 143- Prestal, John, A. I. i. 10. con- demned for treason, 546. 555. a fugitive beyond sea, II, ii. 596. his letter suing for liberty from prison. III. i. 452. Prestend, advovvson of, Hereford- shire, granted by the crown to J. Bradshaw, M. II. ii. 16. Preston, — married to sir W. Paget, M. III. i. 466. Preston, Thomas, rector of Mel- lis, 1400. has two coadjutors appointed him, being non com- pos mentis, W. III. 390. Preston, Thomas, fellow of King's college, Cambridge, W. I. 35. took part in the philosophical disputation at Cambridge be- fore queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii. 106. the queen, most pleased with him, made him her scho- lar, 107. Preston, Thomas, master of Trin- ity-hall, Cambridge, A. III. ii. 496. 119. 121. IV. 105. 229. 322. W. II. 230. 284. A. IV. 435- Preston, manor of, Gloucester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Preston, manor of, Sussex, taken in exchange by the crown from sir J. Cheke, Ch. 1 29. Pretewel, alias Pritelwel, priory of, Essex, its house and scite granted by Edward VI. to lord Rich, M.II. i. 514. Previdellus, — one of Hen. VIII. 's agents in Germany for sub- scriptions of foreign doctors relative to his divorce, M. I. i. 219. Price, — an harbourer of Cam- pion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 360. III. i. 434. Price, Eliseus, present in the convocation of 1547, C. 222. has a commission to visit the vacant see of St. David's, 274. Price, captain H., his account of the capture of Cales, A. IV. 398- Price, J., fellow of Catharine- hall, Cambridge, ordained, G. .53- Price, John, subscribed, as a member of convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes against the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 505. Price, sir John, A. III. i. 744. notice of, and object of his British History, M. II. i. 500. A. Ill.i. 415. one of the coun- cil in Wales, M. II. ii. 162. Price, Oliver, A. IV. 389. Price, see Cook. Price of provisions, 1555, C.S63. Prideaux, — pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. '}■ 495- Priestland, Lancelot, ordained, G. 55- Priests, see Marriage. Priests, popish, P. Martyr's opin- INDEX. 201 ion as to their treatment, G, 45- Priests, stipendiary and chantry, regulations respecting their pensions, M. II. i. 153. 184. Prim, — sent by queen Elizabeth as her agent to the emperor of Fez and Morocco, A. III. i. 8. 9. Primasius, A. I. i. 519. Prime, — A. III. ii. 157. Prime, John, A. III. i. 519. Primer, the Goodly, or Book of Prayers, and called the King's Primer, Cranmer concerned in the second edition, 1535, C. 139. M. I. i. 336. put forth by Dr. Marshal, 335. some ac- count of it, C. 139. M. I. i. 335- 337- its design, 336. its use allowed, C. 142. Primers, exclusive privilege of printing them granted to Seres, M. II. ii. 40. Prin,— P. II. 358. Prin, John, sub-dean of Lincoln, C. 383. one of those commis- sioned to compose the Institu- tion of a Christian Man, C. 77. Prin, William, Ay. 148. A. III. i. 226. Prince, or Prime, Edward, a mer- chant-adventurer of Bristol, he and others have a license to form a corporation there, M. II. ii. 251. Prince, Edward, A. III. i. 662. Prince, John, a constable of Tour- nay, and yeoman of Henry VIII.'s guard there, M. I. ii. 12. Pringel, Alexander, bought of the crown Farnacre's chantry in Wickham, county of Durham, M. II. ii. 403. Printer, see Printost. Printing, most famous at Basil, about the middle of the six- teenth century, C. 511. abuses of, W. I. 422. abp. Whitgift anxious for its restriction, ib. rules drawn up by him for its regulation, 423. III. 160. and set forth by the star-chamber, I. 423. the preface to them, ib. Printost, or Printer, — presented to the church of Dunkerton, A. II. i. 277. Prioli, seignior, executor to car- dinal Pole, A. I. i. 40. 53. 54. Prior, John, of Merton college, Oxford, subscribed the Articles of Religion in the convocation, 1536, M. I. i. 217. two MS. discourses perhaps written by him, ib. Prior, William, clerk of St. Bene- dict's, Norwich, P. I. 8. A. IV. 611. Prisoners for religion, their pri- sons and numbers, A. IV. 308. Privy-council, their deliberation about throwing off the pope's authority, M. I. i. 230. their letter to Crumwel, giving or- ders for the despatching cer- tain persons into Germany and France, ii. 243. their order to the university of Cambridge about an abusive interlude, P. I. 40. the names and order of the privy-council, 1540, M. I. i. 565. certain privy counsel- lors made, 1543, 582. they ac- cuse archbishop Cranmer, C. 177. he comes before them, 179. the king rebukes them on the archbishop's account, 180. their letters to the arch- bishop to appoint processions for the king's expedition, 185. about church ornaments being embezzled, 251. with a form of prayer for peace, 253. to archbishop Cranmer for taking away images, M. II. i. 124. to the bishop of Westminster, or- dering prayers upon the tidings of war, 166. they require prin- aoa INDEX. cess Mary to use the Common Prayer, 238. 239. their answer to Paget's letters, ii. 418. their letter to the lord privy seal for taking down the bells in Devon and Cornwall, i. 270. they con- firm the Book of Common Prayer, C. 276. they order the justices to enforce the laws concerning religion, 292. their orders concerning a contro- versy between bishop Hoper and two canons of Worcester, 314. they allow bishop Hoper to attend the duchess of So- merset in the Tower, ib. their other orders relating to him, ib. their proceedings with bi- shop Gardiner, 316. they se- quester him, 319. their orders for his confinement, 322. their proceedings with other bishops, 323. they assist the foreign weavers who had settled at Glastonbury, 349. 350. M. II. i. 381. to the bishop of Lon- don, forbidding sermons on the week days in Essex, 342. their message to lord Arundel, 364. they deny a pass to lord Max- vvel, 365. their order respect- ing the strangers' church in London, 376. the form of the commission by Edward VI. to his council in his minority, ii. 473. their letter to princess Mary to deliver up her chap- lain, i. 448. and about the new communion book, 449. their resolution concerning her, 453. they order prayers to be used against the sweating sick- ness and the dearth, 494. and to preach against covetousness, 495. they write to the lord deputy and council in Ireland, recommending certain persons as Irish bishops, C. 400. their letter to the ambassador in France about Steukley's dis- coveries, M. II. i. 571. their consultations about breaking with France, 572. their letter to the ambassador with the emperor, with a memorial, 582. they commit to the Fleet some of Corpus Christi college, Oxon., ii. 52. they summon Knox before them to know why he refused a living, 72. their directions to the ambas- sadors with the emperor not to mention the French de- mands, 98. their letter unto them, 100. their letter to sir p. Hoby, reporting the king's death, 1 19. names of the coun- cil at Edward VI.'s accession, 159. and, 1552, 160. catalogue of orders of council in Edward VI.'s reign, 174. made great use of archbishop Cranmer, C. 421. their sittings, at which he was present, 430. their in- strument, swearing and sub- scribing to the succession, as limited by Edward VI., 426. 911. privy-council of queen Jane Grey, their proceedings with respect to princess Mary, M. III. i. 7. their orders to the ambassadors with the em- peror, 8. their letter to lord Rich, C. 433. 913. their letter to |)rincess Mary, acknowledg- ing her as queen, 434. 915. privy- council of queen Mary examine Underbill fur writing a ballad, M. III. i. 94. their letter to the lord president of the north against some players of interludes in those parts, 488. ii. 413. their letter pro- hibiting rose-pence, i. 501, they acquaint princess Eliza- beth of her name being made use of in a ])lot against queen Mary, 546. their letters and INDEX. 203 orders about heretics, ii. 43. their advice as to proceedings against the Scots, 88. their letter to the earl of Shrews- bury on the same subject, 91. 96. 524. 527. they recall Ched- sey, acting as a commissioner against heretics, 125. their names towards the end of queen Mary's reign, 160. their reasons for imprisoning arch- bishop Cranmer, C. 439- the first privy-council of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 8. their let- ter to divers of the nobility to conduct the queen to London, ii. 390. their orders to the lord warden of the east and middle marches, i. 27. their orders to stop persecution of the professors of the gospel, 36. their favour to cardinal Pole's executor, 53. they write to the registrars of certain commissions, 57. and to the sheriffs of Devon and Corn- wall concerning preachers, 62. their proceedings against cer- tain popish disputants, 138. they send letters to the bi- shops, inquiring into the num- ber of churches and chapels in the realm, 539. their letters to bishop Grindal, ordering queen Elizabeth's recovery to be de- clared at St. Paul's Cross, G. 96. to disturb certain masses in London, 98. 472. for an account of his diocese, loi. their letter to archbishop Par- ker, about the delay in the re- pairs of St. Paul's, P. I. 252. and for an account of his dio- cese, 255. and allowing him to search Nevinson's study for Cranmer's writings, 272. their orders concerning printing se- ditious books, 441. their letter to archbishop Parker empower- ing him to search for antiqui- ties, 522. and about ecclesi- astical matters, 558. they di- rect the inns of court how to proceed against papists, 570. their message to bishop Grin- dal about a petition of certain schismatics against him, G. 228. his answer, 229. their letter to the queen's officers at Chester, to stop all ships, on apprehension of some seditious persons passing that way, A. IV. 579. another to archbishop Parker, for the reformation of the inns of court, P. IL 74. they order the ecclesiastical commissioners to look to their charge, 124. A. IL i. 385. and to certify the names of all pa- pists, P. IL 124. they restore Mr. Dering to his lecture, 332. bishop Cox's letter thereupon, 333. their letter to the bishops for a parochial visitation, 345. abp. Grindal's letter about their letter, 347. and bishop Cox's, 348. their letter to bishop Parkhurst to continue the pro- phesijings in his diocese, 360. they write to the bishops con- cerning the proclamation for observing orders in the church, G. 268. new persons admitted, 1575, A. II. i. 574. their letter about a complaint of the Por- tuguese ambassador, ii. 24. their letter to archbishop Grindal for the observance of Ember days and Lent, G. 336. their conduct as to appointing per- sons to act tor archbishop Grindal during his sequestra- tion, 355. their letter to the university of Cambridge for in- formation of such as went not to church, A. II. ii. 126. their letter to bishop Whitgift about popish delinquents, W. 1. 167. 304 INDEX. and to the same with thanks, upon his ceasing to be vice- president of Wales, 177. III. 45. their letter for the observ- ance of Lent, A. II. ii. 298. their letters to abp. Grindal about a libel against the queen's marriage, G. 360. 584. and about some preachers that re- fused to celebrate the commu- nion, 362. and about prayers in consequence of an earth- quake, 369. and about some that fell off from religion, 377. they send to archbishop Whit- gift for the names of such as ab- sented themselves from church, W. I. 181. their directions to him how to make his certifi- cate, ib. their letter to him for recalling such youth as went beyond sea, 183. and about such as refused to come to church, 191. and to inform them what recusants still re- mained, 195. their letters to archbishop Grindal to search for recusants, G. 392. and that their dwellings be certified, 399. their letter to the bishops in behalf of Geneva, 415. their rules for conference with priests and Jesuits, W. I. 196. their letter to bishop Wliitgift, di- recting him to urge the Ad- vertisements, 200. and to the dean and chapter of Litchfield to establish a divinity lecture, 212. III. 64. Babingtons pe- tition to them concerning the chancellorship of Litchfield, A. III. i. 134. their letter to the earl of Derby and bishop of Chester, about a collection for recusants in their parts, 245. ii. 260. they send for some disaffected persons up from those parts, i. 245. their kind letter to the earl of Derbv, 246. their letter to the judges of assize about puritans, 268. their letter to archbishop W^hit- gift in favour of several sus- pended ministers, W. I. 328. his answer to them, 331. they recommend to him a collection to be made for a fire, 413. their examination of R. Shelley, A. III. i. 432. their letters to search for dangerous persons coming over by sea, 444. their orders to employ young gentle- men in musters, 447. their letter to the nobility to repair to the queen in their arms upon the Spanish invasion, ii. 13. another to Mr. Winter a- gainst de Valdez, a prisoner, being exchanged for him, 38. another to the lord lieutenants for a loan to the queen, 40. their letter to archbishop Whit- gift, to require the clergy to prepare their horse and foot against the Spaniard, W. I. 606. their letter to him for the clergy's providing alms, II. 65. another to the ecclesiastical commissioners for fit men as new commissioners, 107. an- other to archbishop Whitgift about recusants, 151. they de- vise against a dearth in Kent, 329. their letter to the high sheriff about it, 330. another to the lord mayor of London, in behalf of the strangers for- bidden to exercise their trades in the city, A. IV. 492. another to archbishop Whitgift to keep the day of king .James's deli- verance from the Gowry con- spiracy, W. II. 472. privy- council often committed per- sons of quality and learning, when charged with treason or breach of laws, to the custody of some of the bishops. Ay. 106. INDEX. 205 Processions and prayers, on pub- lic occasions, appointed to be said in English, M. I. i. 593. Processions appointed for Henry VIII/s expedition, C. 184. 185. processions forbidden through Cranmer's means, 226. pro- cession on St. Catharine's day, M. III. i. 78. on St. Andrew's, 79. ii. 21. on St. Pauls, i. 92. 330. procession of the fellow- ship of clerks, 189. 347. of fishmongers, 190. ii. 6. Corpus Christi procession, i. 190. ii. 8. procession for queen Mary's great belly, i. 324. procession of the conception, 327. West- minster procession, 331. ii. 9. 22. a general procession, i. 335- 344- 347; 358- "; 107. on St. George's day, i. 341. several processions, 349. Mer- chant Tailors' procession, 360. procession by Spaniards, 493. of the abbot of Westminster, 507. procession on St. Cle- ment's day, ii. 7. at St. Paul's with the buck, 9. for the taking of St. Quentin, 14. 17. 18. Proclamations of Henry VHI. a- gainst bringing seditious books into the country, C. 685. a- gainst priests' marriages, 98. for an uniformity in religion, and about reading the Bible in English, with the king's own emendations of the draught, M. I. i. 547. ii. 434. against the English Testament, C. 197. proclamation of Edward VI. M. II. i. 19. asking for claims at his coronation, 24. against reports of innovations in reli- gion, 57. for the payment of Henry VIII. 's debts, i6. about the exportation of corn, 58. and of bell-metal, butter,cheese, &c. 7 T . about the payment of pensions, 91. respecting the plague, 95. concerning the ir- reverent talkers of the sacra- ment, 127. ii. 340. for the ab- staining from flesh in Lent, i. 129. ii. 343. against such as innovate any ceremony, or preach without license, i. 131. ii. 346. against enclosures, i. 145. about the pensions of stipendiary and chantry priests, 153. about the coin, 230. 486. against abuses in the army, 232. about teston money, 233. fixing the price of provisions, 236. 349. 486. against the re- bels, 1549, 266. for execution of martial law, 267. against seditious persons, 344. about French crowns, 429. against melting down the coin, 488. for calling in testons, ib. de- claring the several values of gold and silver coin, ib. against false rumours of the new coin, 489. against buying and sell- ing it, 490. for discontinuing the cessing of the prices of provisions, 505. against frays in churches, 524. about horses, 588. for tillage, ii. 15. pro- clamations issued in Edward VI. 's reign, 198. proclamation of Mary as queen. III. i. 20. about religion, 38. C. 447. about the coin of the realm, M. III. i. 40. ii. T77. for the remission of a part of a tax granted in king Edward's time, i. 49. ii. 179. for the popish usages, i. 79. for taking Wyat, 136. for settling the value of Spanish gold, 189. for the no- bility to meet the queen, 200. that all courtesy should be used to king Philip and his train, coming into England to marry the queen, 202. ii. 215. against certain books, i. 417. ii. 130. against certain traitors, 206 INDEX. i. 487. for beer, ii. 14. against T. Stafford and his adherents, 513. his proclamation, exciting the English to deliver them- selves from the Spaniards, 515. proclamation of queen Eliza- beth upon her access to the crown, A. I. i. 6. ii. 389. to forbid preaching, i. 59. ii. 391. for preserving old monuments, and the bells and leads of churches, i. 279. against excess of apparel, 281. II. ii. 563. about peace with France, I. i. 283. for settling the price of provisions, 293. for keeping Lent, 368. for the reverend usage of churehes and church- yards, G. 83. for uniformity, P. I. 427. against excess in ap- parel, signed by several of the nobility, A. I. ii. 194. 533. for keeping fish-days, 273. and against seditious books, 274. against anabaptists, G. 181. proclamation of the earl of Sussex, lord president of the north, against the rebels there, A. I. ii. 317. of the queen, pardoning those concerned in Dacre's rebellion, 325. against traitorous books and bulls, 361. commending the loyalty of the subjects, and to discover the seditions, 364. against pi- rates, &c. II. i. 26. of the lord mayor of London, against dis- orders and frays in London, 29. for observing Lent, 307. for calling in the commissions for concealed lands, 309. 310. against papists and puritans, 377. for observing orders in the church, G. 267. caUing in the Admonition to the Parlia- ment, and for the use of the Book of Common Prayer, P. II. 256. against popish libel- lers, 316. and against noncon- formists, 320. against excess of apparel, A. II. i. 528. against the slanders published against the duke of Anjou, ii. 232. against abuses in commissions for concealments, 292. for the length of certain weapons, 294. against carrying dags, 295. the occasion of it, 297. for apparel, ib. to take up se- minaries, &c. III. i. 57. for recalling such as were sent abroad for education, ib. against Jesuits and seminaries, 120. against retainers, 240. ii. 255. respecting the dearth in 1586, i. 640. against seditious books brought in from Rome, ii. 87. against seditious and schismati- cal books, W.I. 566. III. 216. against such as took upon them to be messengers, IV. 396. proclamation of the nobles, upon queen Elizabeth's death, of the succession of king James, 516. for the king's coming from Berwick, 523. proclama- tion of king James for all ma- gistrates and officers under the late queen to keep their places, 524. for uniting both king- doms, 527. against monopolies and protections, 528. com- manding all Jesuits and semi- nary priests to quit the realm, 532. W. II. 519. declaring at what values certain monies of Scotland shall be current in England, A. IV. 535. touching a meeting for determining things pretended to be amiss in the church, 536. W. II. 485. for calling a parliament, A. IV. 536. for the use of the Com- mon Prayer, as explained at the Hampton Court confer- ence, W. II. 520. authorizing commissioners concerning the union of both kingdoms, A. INDEX. 207 IV. 540. for coins, 541. for Jesuits to depart the realm, after the gunpowder plot, 557, against retainers, 577. Procter, John, notice of The Way Home to Christ, 8^c. his trans- lation from Vincentius Leri- nensis, M. III. i. 271. Proctor, — A, IV. 353. Proctor, Gabriel, M. III. i. 563. 564- 565- Proctor, James, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 504. signed the peti- tion of the lower house for discipline, 512. Proctor, or Prowter, John, a Frenchman, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. arraigned and cast as a traitor, 5. hanged and quar- tered, 6. 67. 68. Proctors, reduced in number by Cranmer, being troublesome to the public, C.67. this measure petitioned against in parlia- ment, 68. the petition, 717. Professorships, regius, established at Cambridge by Henry VIII., about 1540, at 40?. a year, Ch. Prohibitions to stop proceedings in ecclesiastical courts, and in that of the high commission : points propounded to the judges concerning them, W. II. 397. 430. divers cases unjustly stop- ped in ecclesiastical courts by prohibitions, 427. Project for increasing the king's revenues out of the church, M. I. i. 422. for preventing the falling away to popery, A. III. i. 278. Pronunciation of Greek, tract upon, by sir T. Smith, S. 165. Prophecies, fond and fantastical, an act of parliament passed against, A. I. i. 441. an act against pretended prophecies, P. II. 136. Prophecies appointed by king James in Scotland, G. 440 — 443. enjoined by archbishop Sandys in his province of York, a year or two after they had been forbidden by the queen, 444. Bacon's judgment of them, lb. A. III. i. 480. a discourse concerning prophesy- ing, from I Cor. xiv. 29, G. 579- Prophesyings, certain exercises expounding the scriptures, so called, P. II. 358. A. II. i. 133. orders respecting their use in the church of Northampton, 136. G. 260. this exercise set up at Bury, A. II. i. 325. bi- shop Parkhurst's letter of per- mission, ii. 494. generally used by the clergy, i. 472. bishop Cooper's regulations and allow- ance for them in Herefordshire, ih. 476. bishop Parkhurst stops them in the diocese of Nor- wich, 477 — 480. P. II. 358 — 362. some privy counsellors write to him in their favour, ib. he communicates with arch- bishop Parker and some bi- shops upon the matter, ib. they are suppressed, ib. the conten- tions of the ministers the oc- casion thereof, ib. directions for this exercise in the diocese of Chester, A. II. i. 481. ii. 544. III. i. 476. the permis- sion of bishop Chaderton, II. ii.546. HI. i. 477. bishopCox's opinion of them, II. ii. 13. the queen's letter to the bishop of Lincoln to stop them in his diocese, 114. 612. abuses of these exercises, G. 326. arch- 208 INDEX. bishop Grindal's orders for their reformation, 327. the queen orders the archbishop to put a stop to them, 328. his expostu- lations with her on the sub- ject, 329. 558. the queen's let- ter for their suppression, 574. W. I. 163. Propositions, see Articles. Protector, see Duke of Somerset. Protestants, foreign, their offer to Edward VI., C. 296. plan to defeat it, 297. how treated, temp, queen Mary, 502. Cran- mer's scheme for the union of all protestant churches, 584. approved of by Melancthon, 585. A. I, i. 351. frustrated, C.588. protestants' declaration of doctrine exhibited to queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 167. notice of predestination, and of the civil magistrate therein, 172. Calvin's scheme of a general union of protestants, P. I. 138. A. I. i. T42. Pius IV. 's endea- vours to prevent it, ib. another proposal, P. I, 176. protestants massacred in France, S. 119. T23. Protestation to be subscribed by ministers, A. I. i. 224. pro- testation to be taken by pa- pists, P. II. 64. another by pu- ritans, ib. a protestation of the puritans, 283. Proudlove, Edward, minister of Weeden, W. II. 7. proceed- ings against him in the star- chamber, 81 — 96. III. 242 — Proudlove, William, a puritan, in prison. Ay. 205. signs a peti- tion of enlargement, A. IV. 103. Provisions, price of, fixed by a writ of Edward II., P. III. 114. dearth of, M. II. i. 236. 345. 346. also in foreign parts, 260. their prices fixed by proclama- tion, 236. 237. 348. forbidden to be exported, 346. 486. a prayer against the dearth, ii. 442. orders for fixing the prices of provisions in Cornwall, i. 439. II. ii. 473. proclamation for discontinuing the cessing of the prices of cattle and pro- vision, i. 505. ii. 213. a fresh proclamation fixing the prices of provisions, i. 585. Provost, Stephen le, deacon of the strangers' church at Glas- tonbury, C. 349. 889. Prowd, Richard, ordained, G. 58. parson of Dunsmore, and a puritan, A. I. ii. 148. his letter to lord Burghley, exciting to speak to the queen in behalf of religion, II. ii. 291. 662. Prowdehew, castle of, granted by Edward VI. to Dudley, duke of Northumberland, M. III. i. 43- Prowdeloe, see Proudlove. Prowet, Stephen, a popish poet, M. I. i. 572. Prowter, see Proctor. Prynne, John, curate of Quat- ford, Shropshire, deprived for having married T. Holt, a wi- dow, M. III. i. 168. see Prin. Psalm cv. 28. various interpreta- tions of, W. I. 590. 591. Psalm compiled by bishop Grin- dal upon the abatement of the plague, G. 1 19. 473. 474. 475. another upon its cessation, 1 24. 475- . Psalm-singing authorized, M. II. i- 135- Psalms, a note (probably arch- bishop Parker's) in the Bi- shops' Bible, on the variation of the translation of the Psalms there, and in the Book of Common Prayer, A. II. i. 322. Proper Psalms, when first ap- INDEX. 209 pointed, P. I. 168. Psalms, au- thors of the old metrical ver- sion of, M. II. i. 136. ii. 115. Psalms published in English metre, by archbishop Parker, P. II. 455-. Psalter, a curious and old, P. II. 515. Ptolomy, S. 163. Puckering, sir John, W. II. 98. 102. A. IV. 137. 146. 147. (as lord keeper,) 236. 238. 265. 271- 336. 337- 483. his speech to queen Elizabeth as speaker of the house of commons, III. i. 425. 427. ii. 356. the earl of Essex's lofty letter to him, for having been counsel (when a sergeant) against a retainer of his, i. 656. 657. queen Eli- zabeth's solicitor, 656. in a commission for search of Mar- tin Marprelate's printing press and books, ii. 102. Cartwright's letter to him, IV. 27. Udal tried before him and baron Clark, 28. 32. his letter to lord chancellor Hatton about the proceedings against Udal, 34. Udal's letter to him, 38. his opinion in favour of Cart- wright's being brought before the star-chamber, W. II. 70. III. 241. lord keeper of the great seal, II. 102. sir T. He- neage's letter to him, relating the queen's kind expressions concerning him, A. IV. 160. 161. probably drew up the paper about two kinds of puri- tans, and the danger of their opinions, 197. note of the evi- dence of all the prisoners for popery in the several counties, taken down by him, 254. letter of Whitfield, a spy, to him, offering service, 268. lord Es- sex's letter to him for his re- tainers, 340. his petition to VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. the queen for a lease of part of the possessions of the see of Ely, 343- 345- 346- Puckering MSS., quoted by Strype, should have been quoted MSS. Hurley, being in lord Oxford's library, A. IV. 619. Puckring, Mrs., A. IV. 27. Pudsey, Hugh, bishop of Durham, built an hospital for lepers at Sherborn, G. 274. Puisguillarde, M. de, governor of Angiers, severely hurt, if not killed, at the siege of Rochelle, A. II. ii, 506. Puleston, Lancashire, tithes of, given by the earl of Leicester to Warwick hospital, A. IV. 42. Pullan, John, presented to the parsonage of St. Peter's, Corn- hill, M. II. ii. 272. A. I. i. 492. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, 491. 492. resident at Geneva, M. III. i. 233. signed the letter of that church to the rest of the churches of exiles, about the Book of Common Prayer and ceremonies, A. I. i. 152. pun- ished for preaching without a license, contrary to queen Eli- zabeth's proclamation, 63. in a list of persons to be preferred, 229. archdeacon of Colchester, G. 87. 103. subscribed, as a member of convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 50 1. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. PuUeon, Anthony, M. I. i. 279. PuUeyn, alias Smith, a gospeller, detected in Essex, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 64. aio INDEX. Pulnian, — A. III. ii. 6i6. 617. Pulmer, sir Henry, P. II. 144. Punt, William, a gospeller, temp, queen Mary, who wrote books concerning some pious confes- sors and martyrs, M. III. ii. 64. A. I. i. 378. 379. also a book against the errors of ana- baptists, M. III. ii. 64. de- tected, ib. Purefoy, Humphrey, one of the council in the north, Ch. 87. Purefoy, John, Ay. 125. married Magdalen Cheke, widow of — Eresby, Ch. 3. Purefoy, Luke, expelled Magda- len college, Oxford, by bishop Gardiner, M. HI. i. 82. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, ib. Purefoy, Michael, he and W. Gyes bought of the crown the chantry at Harrow, and other lands, M. II. ii. 403. Purefoy, Thomas, of Barwel, Leicestershire, son of Hum- phrey, Ch. 87. Purfey, John, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, A. IV. 338. see Warton. Purfoot, Thomas, printed Tre- mellius's articles of faith, P. I. 539- Purgatory, bishop Latimer's judg- ment of, with the annotations of Henry VIII., M. I. ii. 388. the king's confutation of two places of scripture alleged a- gainst purgatory, 391. archbi- shop Cranmer's opinion of pur- gatory, C. 829. Puritans, who so called, P. II. 65. their resistance to conformity, I. 382. two sorts of puritans, G. 168. the Geneva Prayer Book used by one sort, 169. some of these seized, ib. par- ticulars of their examination before bishop Grindal, 170 — 176. their rude behaviour, and slander of the bishop, 1 76. cer- tain puritans released from prison at the bishop's interces- sion, 200. archbishop Grindal's general conduct towards them considered, 447. his labours to reclaim them, 448. some secta- ries arise, called puritans, A. I. ii. 349. danger apprehended from the Precisians, as arch- bishop Parker styled them, P. II. 40. the archbishop writes to one of them, 41. some of them put up for Lent sermons, ib. their form of worship, 65. the queen orders the ecclesi- astical commissioners to inter- fere, ib. their orders to all churchwardens, III. 183. pro- testation of allegiance for pu- ritans, II. 64. disciplinarians busy for further reformation of the church, A. II. i. 274. their feeling towards the bishops, P. II. 109. and the church of England, iio. An Admonition to . the Parliament, circulated by them, ib. puritans, disowned by Gualter, 112. III. 193. and byBullinger, II. 112. III. 196. archbishop Parker's account of their progress, II. 192. 193. an attempt to bring into parlia- ment two bills respecting the articles, and rites and ceremo- nies, 201. 202. stopt by the queen, 203. five articles pro- posed to certain puritans at their examination, 239. their aversion from the Prayer Book, and bishops, 255. proclamation against them, 256. had little effect, 257. archbishop Parker's and bishop Sandys's letter on the church's danger from them, 280. a protestation of the pu- ritans, 283. puritans great ene- mies to the order of bishops. INDEX. 211 285. especially their title of lords, ih. archbishop Parker's defence of this title, ib. pro- clamation against such as con- formed not with the orders in the Book of Common Prayer, 320. puritans offended with the fonts and brasen eagles in churches, 332. the queen much offended with the puritans, 345. the bishops blamed for being backward in punishing them, ib. the council order pa- rochial visitations to detect nonconformity, ib. the queen's command for the execution of the laws against them, 350. propositions for the restraint of puritans, 354. a book De DiscipUna put forth by them, 399. answered, 400. contents of the sermon printed bv Dr. Whitgift against them, W. I. 120. conspiracy of puritans, P. II. 420. III. 328. doubtful whether true, II. 421. set up theirdiscipline, G.320. opposed by bishop Aylmer, Ay. 36. his advice concerning certain of them, ib. puritanism overran the university of Cambridge, 1579, 44. their prayer against episcopacy, ceremonies, &c. A. III. i. 66. puritans in Suffolk persecuted, 264. address here- upon of some gentlemen to the privy council, ib. the privv- council's letter, in consequence, to the judges of assize, 268. their practices dangerous to the church, \\M.228. opinions and doctrines of certain puri- tans, 245. 246. communica- tions with archbishop Whitgift respecting the subscription of certain Kentish ministers to the Book of Common Praver, 272. summary of Mr. Beal's book in behalf of the puritans. 283 — 288. archbishop Whit- glfl's animadversions on some of its absurdities, 288. III. 87. a new platform, and book of public prayer, prepared by the puritans, in case of the church government being changed, I. 348. petition, in sixteen arti- cles, from the house of com- mons to the house of lords, in favour of puritans, 349. an- swer of the lords, ib. archbishop Sandys's answer to these six- teen articles, ib. and archbishop Whitgift's, 354. III. 154. an expostulatory letter to the pu- ritans, written by J. Fox or Dr. Humphrey, A. III. i. 743. ii. 517. the puritans establish classical and provincial assem- blies, VV.I. 554. questions pro- pounded in them, ib. notes out of certain of their papers, which were seized, 555. questions discussed by them about mak- ing ministers, 556. about ma- gistrates, 557. and about first- fruits, tenths, and the revenues of bishops, 558. a tract Touch- ing the Superiority of Bishops, with a Syllogism, S^c. written by this party in consequence of a sermon of Dr. Bancroft, 559. their syllogism against the superiority of bishops, and Dr. Bancroft's answer, 560. another, charging archbishop Whitgift with tyranny, with his answer, 563. notice of Penry's book to prove readers no ministers, 565. and of the subject of The Cobler's Book, ib. articles and proceedings charged against the disciplina- rians, II. 6 — 20. danger of pu- ritanism shewn bv the author of the Remonstrance to Udal's Demonstration of Discipline, 41. opinions of the justices on p 2 212 INDEX. the doctrine and some prac- tices of certain ministers, tend- ing to erect a new ecclesiasti- cal discipline, TIL 235. the queen considers herself in as much danger from the puritans as from the papists, II. 73. the bill of prosecution against Cart- wright and other puritans in the star-chamber, with their answer, III. 242. interrogato- ries ministered to them by archbishop Whitgift, II. 85. their answer, 87. they address the council and archbishop Whitgift for their liberty, 88. copy of the submission ac- knowledging the supremacy, which they refuse to sign. III. 261. their application to lord Burghley, that they might be bailed without conditions, 262. abp. Whitgift grants their li- berty, II. 90. a letter in their behalf from certain doctors of Cambridge, III. 265. a peti- tion of divers puritans for their enlargement from prison, A. IV. 10 1, their letter to the queen in vindication of their innocence, 120. a petition to lord Burghley from another rank of puritans, that were se- paratists, imprisoned, 127. the humble supplications of the faithful servants of the church of Christ in behalf of their ministers, imprisoned, 131. a paper about two kinds of schis- matics, and the danger of their opinions, probably drawn up by lord keeper Puckring, 197. the disciplinarians nearly quiet- ed by the exertions of archbi- shop Whitgift, W. II. 226. the puritans pretend to cast out devils, 340. 341. the discipline nearly given up by the puritans through archbishop Whitgift's exertions, 395. the hopes of the disciplinarians great at king James's accession, 478. certain books put forth by them, 479. 481. notice of the petition of the thousand min- isters for ecclesiastical reform, 479. the petition disclaimed by the two universities, 483. notice of king James's pro- clamation against them, 520. see Church of England, Epi- scopacy, and Synod. Purkas, Francis, W. I. 470. Purkas, Richard, W. I. 470. Purseglove, Robert, M. I. ii. 407. a recusant, A. I. i. 412. Purvey, — A. II. i. 463. Pury, alias Potterspury, parson- age of, Nottinghamshire, bought of the crown by T. Reve and G. Cotton, M. li. ii. 16. Puteo, James, cardinal, the trial of archbishop Cranmer com- mitted to him by the pope, C. adv. vi. vii. 532. 1069. 1072. 1073. 1093. 1096. 1099. Putley, tithes of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Putto, — a tanner of Colchester, probably an anabaptist, recants, and does penance, M. II. i. 336. silenced for his lewd preaching, C. 430. Pyck, see Peyle. Pye, — A. I. i. 413. Pye, — his information of poperj' in Sussex, A. IV. 401. Pye, William, dean of Chichester, present at the convocation of 1553, C. 462. M. III. i. 65. one of those appointed to dis- pute with Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, atOxford,C.48o. Pygot, Francis, in a commission for inquiry into a dearth, M. II. i. 494. ii. 206. INDEX. 213 Pygot, Robert, burnt as an here- tic, M. II. i, 517. Pygot, Thomas, present at arch- bishop Cranmer's trial, C. 107 2. 1080. see Pigot. Pykas, Agnes, John and William, gospellers, proceeded against, M. I. i. 115. 118. 119. 121. 123. 1 25. 126. 132. 133. Pylson, sir Edward, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. . 182." Pyne, — delivered out of the in- quisition, A. III. i. 274. Pynenes, M., A. I. i. 548. Pynner, manor of, taken in ex- change by the crown from the see of Canterbury, C. 405. Pynning, Henry, chamberlain to cardinal Pole, C. 466. 928. A. I. i. 53. ii. 305. Pynnock, William, in a commis- sion of inquiry about enclo- sures, M. II. i. 147. Pynoke, — a fishmonger, mer- chant of Muscovia, and a bro- ther of Jesus, buried, M. III. ii. 108. Pynson, Richard, printed Henry VIII. 's book against Luther, 1521, M. I. i. 51. Pyrgo, an estate in the liberty of Havering, Essex, bought of the Grays by sir T.Cheke, Ch. 146. Pyrrye, Thomas, ordained, G. 54. 55- . . . Pyrton, sir William, in a com- mission to receive the surren- der of religious houses, M. I. i. 408. Pysany, marquis, a counsellor of France, A. IV. 153. Pyttis, parson, one of those pa- pists who visited Mountain to induce him to recant, M. III. i- 155. Q. Quadratus, A. I. i. 426. Quakers, Ay. 1 76. Quarry, — a popish poet, M. I. i. 572. Quarry, John, A. IV. 573. Queen's college, Cambridge, fa- voured the reformation, S. 8. sir T. Smith leaves his Greek and Latin books to this col- lege, having been a member of it, ib. 156. Queen's college, Oxford, visited by the king's visitors, M. I. i. 323. dispute about admitting Th. Francis as provost, G. 92. archbishop Grindal's benefac- tions to this college, 427. 428. 601. 462. Quekere, Christian, seized by the inquisition in Flanders, and burnt, P. I. 178. 179. Quercetanus, Dr. John, a phy- sician, C. 598. 1017. Questions, popish, dispersed, A. I. i. 392. answered by bishop Pilkington, 393. Quinby, — of New college, Ox- ford, detected as a gospeller, M. I. i. 581. persecuted to death, 582. R. Rachdale, rectory of, Lancashire, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Canterbury, C. 403. 910. M. III. i. 119. had belonged to the monastery of Whalley, C. 403. a free school founded there by archbishop Parker, P. I. 363. II. 486. the vicarage augmented by arch- bishop Juxon, I. 364. Rache, James de, A, IV. 574. Rach^, Mary de, A. IV. 574. Raculver, a suppressed abbey, C. Radbert, William, deprived from the vicarage of Somerton, M. III. i, 353. Radcliff, — exhibits articles a- gainst bishop Cox, A. II. ii. 592. 214 INDEX. Radcllff, — W. II. 339. RadcliflF, Anthony, alderman of London, A. III. ii. 18. Radcliff, Egremond, A. II. i. 66. ii. 550. IV. 349. fled abroad, being concerned in the rebel- lion of the north, II. ii. 127. his desire to be employed in the service of the queen, 130. 132. put into the Tower on his return to England, 127. 133. his letter thence, and re- quests, 127. the queen requires him to depart the realm, 129. his letter thereupon, ib. goes into the service of don John, who puts him to death, 130. IV. 349. Radclififj Frances, married to H. Cheke, Ch. 141. Radcliff, sir Henry, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Marv's coronation, M. III. ii. i8i." Radcliff, lord Henry, his letter to the earl of Sussex, A. II. ii. 18. Radcliff, sir Humphrey, present at Edward VI. s baptism, M. II. i. 9. lieutenant of the band of pensioners, III. i. 101. Radcliff, sir John, dubbed a knt. of the carpet at Edward VI. s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Radcliff, John, P. III. 138. Radcliff, Richard, comptroller to archbishop Grindal, G. 366. 604. 436. Radcliff, Roger, gentleman of Henry VIII. 's privy-chamber, his part at Edward VI. 's bap- tism, M. II. i. 6. 9. Radcliff, sir William, M. III. ii. 92. Radcliffs, the, A. II, ii. 499. see Ratecliff. Radley, — of Christ Church col- lege, Oxford, one of the early gospellers in that university, M. I. i. 569. Radulphis, cardinal de, M. I. i. 140. Rafe, — C. 146. Railton, Gregory, one of the clerks of the signet, has a li- cense to eat flesh in Lent, M. II. i. 130. Rain, excessive, 1544, C. 182. 1555, M. III. i. 361. Rainbow, Martin, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Rainesford, sir John, A. 1. i. 48. Rainsford, Hercules, A. I. i. 67. in a commission to remedy abuses in the sale of corn, P. III. 121. Rainsford, sir William, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Rainsforth, sir John, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. Raleigh, sir Walter, A. III. i. 696. warden of the stannery, II. ii. 709. his contest with the uni- versity of Cambridge about wine licences. III. i. 497. de- cided against him, 498. his remembrance for Portland cas- tle, 665. held the castle and manor of Sherburn, of the see of Durham, 684. bore a good- will to Udal, and tries to mo- derate his disciplinarian prin- ciples, W. II. 98. Udal's letter to him, 100. his letters to lord Burghlev, concerning the cap- tured Spanish carack, A. IV. 377. lieutenant of Cornwall, 314. his letter to lord Burgh- ley about the earl of Oxford, 59°- Raleigh, honour of, Essex, bought of the crown by lord Rich, M. n.i.515. Rambares, — A. IV. 94. Ramberd, N., steward of the Tower, A. IV. 332. 333. his INDEX. 215 letter to the lord chamberlain, 336. Ramelius, Henry, Danish ambas- sador in England, A. III. i. 578. Ramesbury, tithes of, Wilts, given in exchange to the crown by the duke of Somerset, M. II. i- 539- Ramesden, archdeacon, A. 11. ii. 172. Ramridge, John, a recusant, A. I. i. 413. Ramsden, — chaplain to lord Burghley, and had the parson- age of Spofford, G. 280. 281. a learned and godly man, P. II. 39. Ramsden, — A. III. i. 470. Ramsden, Thomas, A. I. i. 70. Ramsey, Laurence, a sectary in Kent, M. II. i. 370. Ramsey, Laurence, a poet, ex- tracts from his Practice of the Devil, A. II. i. 125. 268. 269. Ramsey abbey, Bedyl's observa- tions on its charter granted by king Edgar, M. I. i. 411. and on another granted by king Edward, 412. his commenda- tions of the abbey, 414. Ramus, Peter, S. 89. his Uriica Methody.s written against by Ev. Digby, A. II. ii. 405. and defended by Fr. Mildapet, ib. this answer was written by W. Temple, IV. 610. Randal, — W. I. 486. Randal, — ambassador in Scot- land, S. 130. Randal, Anne, wife of J. Fox, A. III. ii. 514. Randal, Anthony, A. II. ii. 290. III. i. 63. one of the family of love, deprived by bishop VVol- ton, 32. W. I. 421. his opin- ions. III. 1 58. complains against him, A. III. i. 32. the bishop's letter to lord Burghley on the subject, i6. ii. 180. his sentence is confirmed, i. 32. Randal, Francis, ordained, M. II. i- 403- Randal, Philip, principal of Hart- hall, Oxford, present at arch- bishop Cranmer's trial, C. 1080. Randal, Richard, bought of the crown the manor of Bettis- comb, Dorset, M. II. ii. 406. Randal, Richard, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Randes, — A. III. i. 349. 350. Randol, William, one of the members who absented them- selves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. HI. i. 263. indicted in consequence, ib. Randolph, Edward, a reversion- ary lease, for twenty-one years, of the demeans of the abbey of Connel, in the comity of Kildare, granted to him by the crown, M. II. ii. 241. Randolph, Richard, a professor of the law, imprisoned, A. IV. 233- Randolph, Thomas, queen Eliza- beth's agent in Scotland, A. I. ii. 120. II. i. 70. 264. 267. ii. 15T. 619. 620. 321. 328. 329. III. i. 4. IV. 374. went as am- bassador to Russia, II. ii. 202. chamberlain of the exchequer, and master of the posts, ib. 708. employed to prevent Mary queen of Scots from marrying the duke of Austria, I. ii. 100. confined at Edinburgh, loi. end of his embassy, ib. letter from him to the lords Graunge and Liddington, exciting them to leave the party of Mary queen of Scots, II. i. 112. ii. 447. becomes in favour with the Scotch king's party, i. 114. challenges the French ambas- sador, ib. his letters intercept- ed, and complained of by the P4 2l6 INDEX. Scotch queen, 115. copies of them, 1 1 6. disliked the defer- ring of the duke of Norfolk's execution, 122. his letter to the lord chancellor concerning the Scottish affairs, 317. 671. his answers to the Scottish queen's complaints, III. i. 233 — 236. sent ambassador again . into Scotland, 441. one of the English commissioners for a league between England and Scotland, 567. his letter con- cerning some noblemen in Scotland discontented, 568. Randolph, Thomas, fellow of St, John's college, Cambridge, A. II. i. 451. Rands, see Holbeach. Randulphus, Robert, A. IV. 572. Raner, Adam, M. III. i. 315. Rantzow, Rauntzow, sir John, M. II. i. 544. 593. Ranwich, tithes of, Gloucester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Raper, Christopher, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Rastal, John, a learned man, and a printer, M, II. ii. 67. mar- ried sir T. More's sister, ib. Rastal, John, a recusant, A. I. i. 412. II. ii. 711. wrote against bishop Jewel's Apology, I. i- 302. 428. II, i. 125. P. I. 360. his Return of Ufitruths an- swered by Jewel, A, II, ii. 709. his tract against Jewel's Chal- lenge answered by Dr. Fulk, 710. Rastal, William, son of John, of Lincoln's Inn, his property for- feited, M. II. ii. 218. excepted out of Edward VI. 's general pardon, 67. lived at Louvain, ib. returned imder queen Mary, and became one of the justices of the common plcavS, ib. Ratecliff, — opposes Cheke's and Smith's pronunciation of Greek at Cambridge, S. 22. counte- nanced by bishop Gardiner, ib. see Radcliff. Ratisbon, notice respecting the diet of, C. 18. Rauntzow, see Rantzow. Raven, Edward, of St. John's col- lege, Cambridge, Ch. 5. 49. Raven, William, of St. Ives, A. II. ii. 284. Ravens, Christopher, a gospeller, M. I. i. 114. Ravens, Rodolph, A. III. i. 519. Ravesbury, manor of, Surrey, given in exchange by the crown to sir T. Darcy, M. II. ii. 227. Ravis, Thomas, W. II. 350. (as dean of Christ Church,) 492. case of Christ Church college, Oxford, refusing to admit him a Westminster scholar, A. II. i. 554. as dean of Christ Church, prolocutor of the convocation in 1603, IV. 552. 553. made bishop of Gloucester, 554. (af- terwards bishop of London.) Rawleigh, see Raleigh. RawlinSj Hugh, as a preacher in the Welch tongue, concerned in the royal visitation, 1547, C. 209. his ill character, M. III. i. 425. concerned in the conspiracy against bishop Fer- rar, ib. 427. ii. 356. 362. Rawlins's, the two, sent to the Tower, M. III. i. 473. Rawlyn, 1'homas, a gospeller, M. I. i". 116. Rawson, Richard, archdeacon of Essex, present at the convoca- tion of J 540, M. I. i. 557. Rawyn, impropriation of the vi- carage of, given by Edward VI. to endow a college in Galway, M. II. i. 463. Raves, Dragute, an infidel, com- INDEX. 217 mander of a Turkish fleet, M. II. i. 296. Raylond, Henry and William, gospellers, M. I. i. 117. 118. 119. 128—133. Rayner, — C. 223. Raynolds, see Reynolds. Rayson, John, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Re Gomez, — M. III. ii. 18. Read, — fellow of St. John's col- lege, Oxford, jirebendary of Westminster and Windsor, A. III. ii. 415. 416. Read, father, A. IV. 263. Read, Giles, a magistrate in Wor- cestershire, A. III. ii, 458. wise and religious, ib. Read, John, A. III. i. 519. Read, Martin, A. III. i. 519. Read, Morgan, mayor of Pool, M, II. i. 1 17. Read, Rede, sir Richard, a judge, in a commission for trial of bishops Heath and Day, C. 330. M. II. ii. 204. in another for the controversies with the French about the borders, i. 428. 429. in another for French pirates, 433. in another for despatching chancery matters, 497. ii. 205. in another to as- sist the lord keeper, i. 521. ii. 207. in another for trial of bi- shop Tonstal, 22. 208. in an- other for a divorce, 204. in an- other for visiting the Savoy, ib. in another for trial of bishop Boner, III. i. 36. in another for detection of conjurers, 349. Read, Robert, bishop of Orkney, one of the commissioners for the borders of England and Scotland, M. II. i. 467. Read, William, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i, 263. indicted in consequence, ib. Read, William, M. III. ii. 397. see Rede. Readers, theiroffice in the church, A. I. i. 265. 515. the church reproached for them by pa- pists, ib. Rogers's advice con- cerning them, 266. only a tem- porary expedient, 267. orders for them and deacons con- firmed in the convocation of 1562, 514. Reading, Thomas, a monk of the Charter-house, M. I. i. 429. Reading, abbot of, see H. Far- ringdon. Reading, grey friars of, their relics, M. I. i. 389. the mon- astery dissolved, ib. Reagh, see Gibbon. Real Presence, see Corporeal Pre- sence. Rebellion in the north, 1538, notice of, M. I. i. 471. rebels executed, 472. rebellion in Devon, C. 264. the rebels' ar- ticles, with Cranmer's answers, 799. rebellion in Cornwall, 1548, M. II. i. 143, in the west, 1549, 264. the protector blamed about it, ib. Paget's advice to him upon the matter, ib. proclamations respecting the rebels, 266. 267, rebellion in Norfolk quelled, 271 — 276. Ket the chief rebel, ib. charges of the rebellion there, and in Devon and Cornwall, 278. the leaders of the rebellion in the west, 281. letters respecting the rebellion in the west, and in Norfolk, ii. 422 — 427. re- bels brake out in most coun- ties in England in 1549, Ch. 40. notice of Wyat's rebellion, M. III. i. 132. 133. 135. 136. English rebels harboured in France, 566. certain rebels brought to the Tower, ii. 4. rebellion in the north, 1557, 2l8 INDEX. ^7- 5^3- 5 '8. 519. rebellion of the papists in the north, P. I. 542. A. I. ii. 312. headed by the earls of Northumber- land and Westmoreland, ib. their declarations, 313. 314. the two earls proclaimed trai- tors, 315. queen Elizabeth's declaration, ib. proclamation of the earl of Sussex, lord presi- dent of the north, against the rebels, 3x7. their abuses, ib. the oath to be taken by them in order to their pardon, 321. they cut and tear in pieces the Bible and Common Prayer, 322. a sermon and prayer framed for this occasion, ib. and a thanksgiving on its being quelled, ib. a character of the rebels, and the mischiefs done by them, extracted from the sermon, ib. notice of two tracts written on this rebellion, 328. 341. another rebellion by Leo- nard Dacres, 324. quelled by lord Hunsdon, ib. the queen's proclamation of pardon, 325. another rebellion intended in Suffolk, 345. and in Norfolk, 364. a letter about it to the earl of Shrewsbury, 365. Recantation, temp, queen Mary, C. 519. 520. Receivers of ecclesiastical tenths, subsidies, &c. appointed by the bishops, two acts passed to make their property answer- able for their receipts, A. II. i. 334- Rechelinge, Wolf, M. II. i. 593. Record, — a doctor of physic, and learned in divinity, M. II. i. 177. visits Underbill, III. i. 99. Record, Robert, constituted sur- veyor of the mines and money in Ireland, M. II. i. 473. ii. 203. Record, William, parson of St. James's, South Elmeham, P. II. 341. Recorder of London, 1551, one of those appointed to reform the ecclesiastical laws, C. 388. recorder, 1603, one of those commissioned to suppress all books published without au- thority, W. II. 504. see W. Fleetwood. Records, note of, concerning Henry VIII. 's divorce from queen Catharine, M. I. ii. 128. Recusants, list of, bound to cer- tain places, 1 56 1, A. I. i. 411. recusants punished by mulcts, G. 345. the judges' opinion of that kind of penalty, ib. the council's letter respecting them, 377. archbishop Grindal's ar- ticles of inquiry respecting them, 379. the council's letter to archbishop Grindal to make search for them, 392. his arti- cles of inquiry in consequence, 394. ecclesiastical commission against them, A. III. i. 6t. their residences required by the council to be certified, G. 399. abp. Whitgift's directions for proceeding against them, W. I. 234. recusants in Kent, 245. in Suffolk, 250. in Sussex, 255. in the diocese of Ely, 302. and of Norwich, 307. and of Pe- terborough, ib. list of recusants and priests in England and abroad in 1587, A. III. ii. 84. 597. proceedings against re- cusants in the high court of commission, W. II. 2. consi- derations for security against them, 3. directions of inquiry from the council respecting them, 152. occasioned by a let- ter of the attorney-general to lord Burghley, 153. articles annexed to a commission a- INDEX. 219 gainst recusants, A. IV. 419, notes taken out of the new commission, 423. see Man- chester. Rede, John, he and R. Audeley bought of the crown the inn called 77ie Helmet in King- street, Westminster, M. II. ii. 408. Rede, sir Robert, the mastership of Sherburn hospital granted to him, M. II. ii. 276. see Read. Redford, John, alias Tanfield, a seminary priest, A. IV. 307. Redlegg, Adrian, A. IV. 574. Redman, — a Norfolk rebel, condemned to be hanged, A. I. ii. 365. Redman, — A. tl. ii. 551. Redman, — W. I. 153, Redman, John, C. 222. 261. Ch. 151, A. I. i. 1 16. master of Trinity college, Cambridge, but formerly of St. John's, S. 9. studied abroad, ib, M. II. i. 530. public professor of divinity, S. 13. of great honour and defe- rence, for his learning and in- tegrity of life, ib. adopts the new pronunciation of Greek, ib. Ch. 18. attended sir T. Smith's Greek lectures, S. 14. in a commission to discuss certain questions of religion, C. 110. in another to make a view of the state of the uni- versity, P. I. 30. prebendary of Westminster, M. II. i. 134. concerned in drawing up the Book of Common Prayer, ib. 526. preached a funeral ser- mon on Bucer, 382. 529. Ch. 61. although no friend to him, M. II. i. 384. 529. commission against anabaptists, P. I. 55. M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. dean of Westminster, i.527. his death, ib. ii. 367. C. 386. his opinions of great weight, Ch. 67. M. II. i. 527. owned transubstantia- tion and justification of works during his life, but denied them at his death, ib. P. I. 94. C. 1054. related to bishop Ton- stal, M. II. i. 530. his charac- ter, ib. Redman, John, of Haslingfeld, concerned in the royal visita- tion, 1547, C. 209. Redman, William, archdeacon of Canterbury, W. I. 162. G. 359. Ay. 33. W. I. 409. 413. 500. 543. P. III. 265. bred up un- der Whitgift at Trinity college, Cambridge, W. I. 156. fellow of that college, A. IV. 586. chaplain to archbishop Grindal, G. 312. made archdeacon of Canterbury, ib. his angry an- notations on a note of archbi- shop Parker concerning a grant to the archdeaconry, P. II. 456. one of those nominated by the council to confer with any pa- pist, W. I. 198. archbishop Grindal's legacy to him, G. 429. one of his executors, 605. prolocutor of the lower house of convocation, 1584, W. I. 398. and 1586,496. in a com- mission to visit the hospitals of Saltwood and Hith, 516. II. 145. one of the ecclesiastical commissioners before whom Cawdry appeared, Ay. 91. con- secrated bishop of Norwich, W. II. 218. assisted at the consecration of bishop Morgan, 332. Redman, Thomas, a recusant, A. I. i. 413. Redman, Thomas, notary public, G. 605. W. II. 417. Redmore wood, Kent, given by queen Mary to cardinal Pole, M. III. i. 475. Redshaw, Anthony, M. III. ii. 39 1 . 220 INDEX. Redshaw, Miles, M. III. ii. 396. Reeder, Henry, A. III. i. 694. Reeve, Thomas, a puritan, in pri- son, A. IV, 129. see Reve. Reformation of religion, a ten- dency towards, in 1 5 23, M. I. i. 74. greatly increased in 15 17, 113. visitation of the diocese of London against heretics, 113 — T34. the confessions of certain that were examined, ii. 51 — 65. certain of the first promoters of the reformation, i. 221. propositions and reso- lutions of the English council about casting off the pope's authority, 23 I. howthe bishops were affected as to a reforma- tion, 332. protestation of the convocation of 1536, (in favour of the existing religion,) against sixty-eight errors and abuses, 380. ii. 260. papal bulls and dispensations annulled by par- liament, 1536, i. 381. clergy in the north stick to their old superstitions, 382. the opinions of those in convocation on cer- tain articles, ii. 266. reformed religion favoured by queen Anne Bolen, i. 430. supporters of a reformation persecuted after her death, 440. the bi- shops generally backward in countenancing any reforma- tion, 473. Crumwel's letter to them, blaming them for their negligence, 473. a combination of bishops Tonstal, Gardiner, Stokesly, and Sampson, to pre- serve the old religion, 503. conference between certain fo- reign and English divines, 508. the sum of it, as to the sacra- ment de utraque specie, mass, and the celibacy of the clergy, ii. 386. Henry VIII. 's pro- clamation for an uniformity in religion, i. 547. ii. 434. a com- mission of divines appointed, 1540, to examine the doctrines and ceremonies retained in the church, i. 550. C. 110. what was done by them, M. I. i. 551. certain articles of faith drawn uj) by them, with some notes of the king upon them, ii. 442. errors sprung up, i. » 552. Theodore Basil's state- ment of the progress of the reformed religion, 590. an act for the advancement of true religion passed, 1542, C. 141. the reformation favoured by St. John's college, Cambridge, 231. how far it had proceeded in 1547, 249. new opinions broached, 253. bishop Gardi- ner's letter upon the reforma- tion, 780. account of certain books published about 1547 to forward the reformation, M. II. i. 41 — 45. 52. religion not altered at the beginning of king Edward's reign, 56. a proclamation against false re- ports of innovations, 57. arch- bishop Cranmer and others in favour of a league with the German protestants, 87. Pa- get's thoughts on the subject, 87 — 90. the sacrament ordered by parliament to be adminis- tered in both kinds, 96. pro- vision made that the people might learn in English the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, and the Ave, 112. proclamation against such as innovate any ceremony, or preach without license, 130. ii. 346. the act for the uniformity of service, &c. the greatest stroke against popery, i. 133. notice of a committee for the reformation of religion, S. 36. certain laws in its favour passed by parlia- ment, 1549, M. II. i. 288. INDEX. 221 priests comply outwardly only, 319. the reformation makes slow progress in Wales, 357. sectaries in Essex and Kent, 369. their tenets, 370. the re- formation disgraced by loose professors, C. 334. and re- tarded by the spoliation of church property, 590. BuUin- ger's advice concerning the re- formation in England, M. II. i. 531. the king's devices for religion, 589. its change back again under queen Mary, C. 447. the dismal prospect on the accession of queen Mary, M. III. i. pref. v. the fears of the protestants for the reform- ed religion, 19. queen Mary's first proclamation concerning religion, 38. many gospellers taken up, 77. the acts in fa- vour of the reformation passed temp, king Edward, repealed, 83. why the people readily re- turned to popery, 86. 147. re- formation under Henry VIII. and Edward VI. vindicated by Mountain, 107. misrepresented by Dr. Weston, 182. the re- formed bishops and preachers removed, 221. the confession of those imprisoned for reli- gion, 222. ii. 224. names of those who relieved the dis- tressed professors, i. 224. 227. the principles of the protest- ants as to obedience, 230. many flee abroad, pref. viii. 231. C. 450. the names of se- veral, M. III. i. 231. 232. 233. the reasons why some would not join with the congregations abroad, 243. misfortunes and lamentable ends of some emi- nent professors of the gospel, 274 — 315. instructions sent by the queen to the justices and bishops against heretics, 338. 339. 345. persecutions against the protestants, 404. S. 46. account of the protestant exiles abroad, M, III. i. 404 — 410. see Exiles. The persecutions produce protestants, 470. some abjure, 539. various sects a- mong the professors of reli- gion, 586. the numbers that suffered for religion under Q. Mary according to Cooper, ii. 151. and bishop Burnet, 152. and Speed, ib. lord Burghley's estimate probably most cor- rect, ib. copy of it, 554. lord Burghley's comparison of those that suffered in the reign of queen Mary, with those in the reign of queen Elizabeth, 153. a passage from archbishop Bramhal on the cruelties in queen Mary's reign, 1 54. Bern- her's observations on the con- stancy of those who thus suf- fered for religion, 155. the af- fairs of the church unaltered at the commencement of Eli- zabeth's reign, A. I. i. 74. re- formation of religion left for the most part by her to Cecil and Bacon, P. I. 71. secret deliberation for the reforming of religion, A. I. i. 74. the de- vice drawn up for bringing it about, ib. ii. 392. many in fa- vour of the Confession of Augs- burg, i. 76. the queen forbids any alteration before the meet- ing of parliament, 77. lord Bacon's speech at the opening of parliament concerning laws to be made for the settling of religion, 78. proceedings of the parliament with respect to religion, 82. a bill to examine the causes of spiritual persons' deprivation, thrown out, 88. 97. 99. the great change in re- ligion caused by this parlia- 222 INDEX. nient, 105. those bishops and clergy deprived who refused to take the oath of supremacy, ib. their numbers, io6. a discourse framed to compare the two re- ligions, 1 1 3 . ii. 45 1 . lord Burgh- ley's service in promoting the reformation, i. 119. 120. pa- pists clamour against the re- formation, I 24. Dr. Haddon's statement of what was done in the reformation, 125. the mistaken policy of the popish clergy, 154. a declaration of doctrine exhibited by the pro- testants to the queen, 167. be- haviour of some of the new clergy, 268. hinderers of the reformation censured by bishop Pilkington, 269. the progress of the reformation, 274. copy of notes for some reformation of the ministry, &c. 312. fur- ther progress of the reforma- tion, 388. the papists' ojiposi- tion thereto, 390. state of the churches abroad, 1563, ii. 57. some account of Haddon's an- swer to Osorius's letter against the English reformation, 69. bills for religion brought into the parliament of 1566, but not passed, 237. dangerous state of the reformation, G. 201. a further reformation urged in the parliament of 157 I, A. II. i. 93. seven bills for regulation and reformation of the church moved between the eighth and thirteenth of Elizabeth, 96. the disciplina- rians busy for further reforma- tion, 274. extract from the Admonition to the Parliament, containing slandero\is terms a- gainst the church, ii. 476. many in Cambridge disaiTected to the constitution of the church, i. 278. the answer of some puritan to bp. Cooper's sermon in vindication of the church of England and its Li- turgy, 286. reformation set about in church and state, 305. lord Burghley's list of certain things to be better ordered, ib. Sampson's letter to lord Burgh- ley for a reformation in church government, 392. 393. what answer it received, 395. the judgment of the divines of Zu- rich concerning the innovators in the church of England, 469. the diligence of the disaffected to the church, 481. parliament petition for reformation of abuses in the church, ii. 332. W. I. 1 86. some of the bishops concur with them, A. II. ii. 332. the queen's answer, ib. bishop Whitgift's answer to the article about ministers, W. I. 187. a catalogue of all the English popish books writ against the reformation from the begin- ning of queen Elizabeth's reign till 1580, A. II. ii. 403. 709. archbishop Sandys's description of the reformation, III. ii. 65. books set forth, 1593, iigainst the disciplinarian model of church government, IV. 194. archbishop Abbots Defence of the Reformation, M. II. i. 137. bishop William's encomium of it, P. I. pref. XV. bishop Ayl- mer's project for compiling its history, Ay. 33. not pursued, ib. what alone is wanting to perfect the reformation, M. I. i. (led. vi. see Abuses y Church of England, Confessions, Gos- pellers, Recusants. Refugees, see Exiles. Rege, M. de, a French spy, S. 85. Regeneration, new opinions broached concerning, C. 253. 254- INDEX. 223 Register of all strangers coming into the realm, sir T. Mild- mav's proposal for, A. IV, 296. why hitherto refused, ib. of all christenings, marriages, and burials, in England, a proposal for, 62. Registers, parish, proposals in the convocation of 1597 for a new way of keeping, W. II. 378. Regius, Ludovicus, an historian, S. 89. Regnault, Francis, printer at Paris, inhibited from printing a Bible in English, which he had com- menced, C. 119. Reignolds, — A. I. i. 65. made a sergeant at law, 42. Reinolds, — a monk of Sion, executed for disowning the king's supremacy, M. I. i. 303. famed for his piety, 304. Star- kv's account of him, who had been sent to confer with him. Reins, — A. II. ii. 134. Relics found in various monaste- ries, M. I. i.-389. 390. 391. Religion benefited by good learn- ing, Ch. 13. three religions, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 415. progress of religion in Scotland, A. I. ii. 227. advices from abroad concerning reli- gion, 293. see Church of Eng- land, and Reformation. Religious houses, notice of an act for annexing certain to the crown, 1558, A. I. i. 89. 99. Relinger, Rentleger, Anthony and Conrad, M. II. i. 544. 545. 565- 593- Remigius, — P. II. 434. Remys, — A. IV. 570. Rencomb, a payment from this rectory for the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 6. Reneses, — a gospeller, M. III. ii. 149. Renialme, Ascanius de, an Italian, licensed by archbishop Whit- gift to import popish books under restrictions, W. I. 512. 5!3- Reniger, James, ordained, G. 72. 73- Reniger, Michael, A. III. ii. 330. expelled Magdalen college, Ox- ford, by bishop Gardiner, M. III. i. 82. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, ib. C. 450. A. I. i. 491. one of those re- commended by bishop Grindal for the provostship of Eton, P. I. 209. chaplain to queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. i. 406. preaches at Paul's Cross, ib. also a Spi- tal sermon, 408. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 490. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. prebendary of Winchester, W. I. 263. Reniger, Thomas, ordained, G. 54. Renilius, Rouilius, Peter, C. 1 095 . 537. Rente, William, A. III. i. 38. Rentleger, see Relinger. Repindon, alias Repton, mo- nastery of, notice of immorali- ties there, M. I. i. 396. Report of the Discoveries, &;c. of the Newfoundlands S^c, by G.P., notice of, A. III. i. 299. Reppes, John, A. III. ii. 460. Reps, see Rugge. Repton, see Repindon. Residence, copy of a proposition in the convocation, 1555, a- gainst, &c. C. 970. 324 INDEX. Resignations made by bishops, precedents of, taken from Mat- thew Paris, G. 599. Resimsford, Herefordshire, pay- ment from the rectory of, for the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Glouces- ter, M. II. ii. 6. Retainers, to whom granted by queen Mary, and how many, M. III. ii. 161. proclamations against them, A. III. i. 240. ii. 255. IV. 577. Retford, (East,) Nottinghamshire, a grammar school founded there by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 280. Retz, count, A. II. ii. 506. Reve, Nevil, A. III. i. 303. Reve, Richard, one of those re- commended by bishop Grindal for the provostship of Eton, P. I. 209. subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for disci- pline, 512. Reve, Robert, he and T. Boxley bought certain church lands of the crown, M. II. ii. 408. Reve, Thomas, he and G. Cotton bought certain church lands of the crown, M. II. ii. 16. Revel, — a seminary priest, A. III. i. 611. 612. Revel, John, A. II. i. 270. Revenues, royal, project of in- creasing them out of the church, M. I. i. 422. Revenues of the church injured at the reformation, M. II. i. 137. 409. C. 354. Calvin's ad- vice on the subject, 892. sir P. Hoby's reasons for dimin- ishing them, M. II. i. 138. Revers, John, bought of the crown the chantry of Peping- bury, in Kent, M. II. ii. 408. Reyner, William, a minor, his wardship and marriage com- mitted to princess Elizabeth, M. II. ii. 240. Reynham, advowson of, Kent, given by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Reynold, Dr., C. 247. Reynold, Thomas, printer, printed archbishop Cranmer's book of Unwritten Verities, M. II. i. 212. Reynold, Thomas, A. I. i. 80. Reynold, William, W. I. 581. of the college of Rhemes, notice of his disputation de Ecclesia, &c. A. III. i. 271. Reynolds, — a papist, expelled Corpus Christi college, Oxford, P. I. 529. Reynolds, — P. II. 432. Reynolds, — A. III. i. 79. Reynolds, — a priest, A. III. ii. 598- Reynolds, Henry, an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450- Reynolds, Dr., sent into the .west to preach, in consequence of insurrections there, M. II. i. 263. Reynolds, John, president of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, A. I. i. 256. III. ii. 157. IV. 106. 242. nominated by the council to confer with any pa- pist, W. I. 198. sir F. Knollys desires his judgment as to epi- scopacy being jure divino, 559. his letter to sir Francis on the subject, A. III. ii. 100. his controversy with Mr. Brough- ton about sacred chronology. INDEX. 22.5 W. II. 113— 1 18. III. 360. his opinion as to Christ's de- scent into hell, II. 220. ap- peared for the puritans at the conference of 1603, 493. moved that the Lambeth assertions should be inserted in the XXXIX. Articles, 318. Reynolds, Robert, his submis- sion, A. I. i. 255. 256. his re- lations, 256. Reynolds, Roger, proclaimed a traitor, M. III. i. 487. taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, ii. 518. executed, 68. Reynolds, Thomas, excepted out of a general pardon, M. II. ii. 68. Reynolds, Thomas, persecuted to death at Rome,' A. I. ii. 226. Reynolds, Thomas, warden of Merton college, Oxford, and dean of Exeter, A. I.i. 21 5. 256. Reynolds, William, A. I. i. 256. Rhemists' Testament, notice of, W.I. 482. A.m. i. 290. Cart- wright urged bv some to an- swer it, but forbidden by arch- bishop Whitgift, W. I. 482. A. III. i. 287. 289. his confuta- tion was privately printed, 161 8. some few chapters in the Revelations having been finished by Dr. Fulk, W. I. 484. A. III. i. 290. notice of Bulke- ly's Answer to the Reasons of the Rhemish Translators, ii. 156. Rhetoric, notice of Wylson s trea- tise on, A. I. i. 347. Rhine, Frederick III., elector pa- latine of, A. II. ii. 15. 103. 372. 679. queen Elizabeth sends an embassy to him, I. ii. 268. reported to be dead, II. ii. 161. Rhine, George Gustavus, elector palatine of, visits England, A. III. i. 126. 311. VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. Rhodes, Robert, A. II. ii. 416. see Rodes. Rial, a gold coin, value of, M. II. i. 230. Riario, cardinal, the pope's le- gate, A. III. ii. 560. Ribadencyra, translation of his letter to don J. de Idiaques, A. IV. 378. Ribera, Anna de, burnt by the inquisition at Seville, A. I. i. .356. Ricalda, Juan Martines de, cap- tain-general of the army of Biscay in the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 536. Rice, — wrote a tract about a devil being cast out of a boy, W. II. 341. Rice, Bastion, A. IV. 571. Rice, Elize ap, one of the com- mittee appointed by the con- vocation of 1547. to draw up a statute for paying tithes in cities, C. 221. Rice, E., P. III. 299. Rice, Henry, gentleman usher to queen Ehzabeth, A. III. ii. 577. a lease assigned him by her, ib. which he sold to sir T. Shirley, i. 490. Rice, John ap, he and Legh the royal visitors, 1535, M- I. i- 321. their letter to Crumwel about the inhibition of bishops, ii. 216. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's corona- tion, II. ii. 329. see Rijce. Ricebank, — created BUiemantle, M. III. ii. 1 19. Riceborough, rectory of, Bucks, obtained in exchange by lord Windsor from the see of Can- terbury for ninety-nine years, C. 261. Rich, — A. IV. 289. Rich, friar, his confession con- cerning the Nun of Kent, M. I. i. 271. warden of the friars Q. 226 INDEX. observants at Canterbury, 279. executed for treason, 281. Rich, Essex, daughter of Robert earl of Warwick, married to sir T. Cheke, Ch. 146. her off- spring, ib. Rich, sir Hugh, made a knight of the bath at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. i. 53. son and heir of lord Rich, 323. his obsequies, ib. Rich, Richard, A. III. ii. 233. a prisoner in the Fleet, Ay. 56. 60. his supplication to the privy-council, A. III. i. 213. charges against him, ib. is set at liberty, 214. his letter of thanks to Mr. Hicks, ib. Rich, sir Richard, C. 127. M. II. i. 123. C. 253. 258. 277. M. II. i. 388, (as lord chancellor, 436.) 512. ii. 190. 193. III. i. 553- <^h- 93- A. I. i. 70. S. 173. A. II. ii. 499. his opinion and advice as to Henry VIII. 's right to queen Katharine's pro- perty at her death, M. I. i. 375. ii. 254. chancellor of the exchequer, and a privy coun- sellor in 154a, i. 565. chan- cellor of the court of aug- mentations, C. 127. why de- sirous that Morice should be burnt for heresy, M. I. i. 596. instrumental to the persecu- tions at court, 597. created a peer, II. ii. 159. a privy coun- sellor, ib. 160. lord chancellor, C, 258. his speech to the jus- tices of peace, 292. M. II. ii. 175. the manor of Brankr tree, and the advowson of Coggeshal, granted him by Ed- ward VI,, i. 340. confirmed by act of parliament, 341. 102. one of bishop Gardiner's wit- nesses at his trial, 374. ad- vanced the privilege of not be- ing sworn according to the common form, which was al- lowed, 375. 515. sent, with others, to princess Mary to for- bid mass in her house, 457. in the commission to decide bi- shop Boner's appeal, III. i. 38. one of the lord lieutenants for Essex, II. i. 464. ii. 163. 202. a commission to act for him in chancery, by reason of his sickness, i.497. ii. 205. resigns the great seal for the same rea- son, i. 511. 512. in a commis- sion to prorogue parliament, ii. 199. 200. 205. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and subscribing to the succession as limited by the king, C. 912. queen Mary tarries some days at Wansted house, his property, before her entry into London^ M. HI. i. 25. one of her privy-council, 28. ii. 160. laid aside in queen Elizabeth's reign, 160. a severe persecutor of protestants, i. 440. one of the lords ap- pointed to attend queen Eliza- beth upon her coming to Lon- don, A. I. ii. 391. in a com- mission to understand what lands were granted by the crown in the late reign, i. 19. 36. a great man in the county of Essex, 48. dissented from the bill in parliament for uni- formity, 87. an act for the assurance of certain lands to him and others, 93. 104. his town residence in St. Bartho- lomew's, G. 94. his son and heir, M. II. i. 515. an ancestor of the earl of Warwick, I. i. 375- Rich, Richard, or Robert, lord, son and heir of the preceding, M. n. i. 515. ii. 159. A. I. ii. 348. travelled to Rome, M. II. i. 515. violence offered to him INDEX. 227 riding in the streets^ A. II. ii. 209. Rich, Robert lord, son of the preceding, A. III. i. 213. 214. bp. Aylmer's contention with him as a leader of the puri- tans, Ay. 54. A. III. i. 177. 178. 179. ii. 229. 230. 236. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of K. James, A. IV. 519. (afterwards earl of Warwick.) Rich, (Elizabeth Jenks,) lady, wife to the first lord Rich, at- tended queen Mary in her tri- umphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 54. buried, A. I. i. 46. Richard I., son of Henry II., A. III. i. 487. ii. 373. appointed Arthur of Britain his heir, A. II. ii. 654. Richard II., A. I. i. 449. 463. 464. II. ii. 654. 655. the issue of the Black Prince extinct in him, S. 221. was born atBour- deaux, A. II. ii. 437. let his whole realm to farm, IV. 329. Richard III., (as duke of Glou- cester, S. 248.) S. 52. 221. A. II. ii. 655. Richard, David ap, of Bettus, a perjured and adulterous person, M.'lII. ii. 362. Richard, William ap, of Conwey, A. II. ii. 527. 528. III. ii. 474. 475- Richardot, — A. IV. 457, Richards, — chaplain to princess Mary, M. II. i. 451. Richardson, — rector of Char- tham, Kent, C. 1054. Richardson, — a Scot, reader of Whittington college, notice of his recantation sermon, M. III. .'• 356. Richardson, — convicted for mur- der, A. III. i. 381. Richardson, Laurence, a priest, indicted with Campion, P. II. 167. executed, A. III. ii. 495. Richardson, Michael, A. IV. 94. Richardson, Peter, goldsmith, M. II. ii. 284. 286. Richardson, Thomas, a recusant, A. 111. ii. 600. Richardson, Walter, ordained, G. Richley, Thomas, signed the pe- tition of the lower house of convocation, 1562, for disci- pline, A. I. i. 5 12. Richmonfi, — herald, made Nor- roy, M. III. ii. 1 19. Richmond, Alien Niger, earl of, co-founder of the priory of Romeburgh, M. I. i. 170. ii. 133- Richmond and Derby, Margaret, countess of, (mother of Henry VII.,) C.611. founded Christ's college, and St. John's, at Cambridge, ib. Richmond, archdeaconry of, M. I. ii. 406. Rickmansworth, manor and rec- tory of, Herts, given in ex- change by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. had belonged to the monastery of St. Alban's, ib. Ricoard, Nicholas, A. II. ii. 616. Riddel, William, printed lord Stafford's translation of two of Erasmus's epistles, M. III. i. 180. Riddleston, — C. 523. Rider, — cofferer, has the pre- bend of Uskel, M. II. ii. 265. Rider, — has a mandamus for the deanery of St. Patrick's, A. IV. 429. Rider, Elizabeth, M. 111. ii. 409. Rider, John, M. III. i. 578. Ridge, John, W. I. 410. Ridgelev, John, M. III. ii. 403- Ridges,*John, M. III. i. 578. Q 2 228 INDEX. Ridgeway, sir Thomas, treasurer of Ireland, married Cicilia Mac Williams, Ch. 134. Riding masters mostly Italians, S. 20. Ridley, — A. IV, 373. Ridley, Lancelot, G. 1 1. P. I. 20, one of the six preachers at Canterbury, C. 134. 158. 159. 229. pronounced contuma- cious, temp, queen Mary, 472. again one of the preachers, temp, queen Elizabeth, P. I. 144. Ridley, Nicholas, bishop of Ro- chester, and afterwards of Lon- don, C. pref. xiii. J58. 159. 187. 229. P. 1.48.56. Ch.47. 175. 88. as bishop of London, C. 424. M. II. ii. 15. 69. 1 14. 167. III. i. 202. 228. 229. 365. 366. C. 945. 489. 501. 511. 519. 1053. A. Li. 240. 241. 504. II. i. 412. ii. 177. 222. 286. 310. 500. 690. S. 56. G. t6. 460. P. I. 421. 466. II. 27. III. 294. takes the degree of B. A., P. I. 10. one of the gospellers of Pem- broke-hall, 13. chaplain to Henry VIII., M. II. ii. 165. preached before him, ib. his character, ib. instrumental in changing archbishop Cranmer's opinion upon the real presence, C. 97. 368. made vicar of Heme and prebendary of Can- terbury, 134. accusations a- gainst a sermon of his, 152. 153. he, archbishop Cranmer, and bishop Tonstal, are said to have overseen the edition of the Bible of 1540, A. II. i. 325. tried in vain to reclaim Joan of Kent, C. 258. M. II. i. 335. one of the preachers in the royal visitation, 1547, C. 209. preaches before the king against the pope's authority, M. II. i. 40. consecrated bi- shop of Rochester, C. 250. preaches, as bishop of Roches- ter, at the celebration of the French king's funeral, 225. as- sists at the consecration of bi- shop Ferrar, 261. his opinion of the sacrament misrepre- sented by Gardiner, M. II. i. 108. depositions in this matter against him, 109. his vindica- tion, ib. concerned in drawing up a proclamation against ir- reverent talking about the sa- crament, 126. and in the Book of Common Prayer, 134. chose Grindal as his chaplain, G. 7. one of the king's visitors for the university of Cambridge, S. 37. G, 6. Ch. 40. deter- mined, as moderator, the dis- putation on transubstantiation, held before them, C. 290. 582. M. II. i. 328. Langdale pub- lishes his Confutatio Determi- nationis N. Ridlei, III. i. 538. in the commission for trial of bishop Gardiner, C. 317. 318. 320. 322. M. II. ii. 199. III. i. 462. and of bishop Boner, i. 36. S. 37. C. 269. translated to the see of London, M. II. i. 338. C. 297. his kindness to Boner's famil}', 298. Boner's ingratitude to him, ib. ex- changes certain lands with the king, M. II. i. 339. orders altars to be removed from all churches in his diocese, 355. in a commission against ana- baptists, 385. ii. 200. import of his injunctions to his dio- cese, i. 400. holds an ordina- tion, 402, his opinion as to the lawfulness of allowing princess Mary to have mass, 451. Ch. 177. he and bishop Hoper confer about the habits, C. 303. the deprived bishop Heath INDEX. 229 placed in his custody, 330, as- sisted at the consecration of bishop Ponet, 363. and of bi- shop Hoper, 364. and of bi- shops Scory and Coverdale, 389. preferred Bradford, his chaplain, to a prebend of St, Paul's, M. III. i. 363. 365. A. III. ii. 193. his letter to (arch- bishop) Parker, urging him to preach at Paul's Cross, P. 1. 58. a friend of his, 6x. in the com- mission for framing ecclesi- astical laws, C. 388. M. II. i. 530. ii. 205. omitted in a fresh commission, i. 531. ii. 205. his letter to sir J. Cheke to pre- vent W. Thomas from getting a prebend in his church, III. i. 281. 495. ii. 264. his ordi- nations, II. i. 553. in a com- mission against heresies in Kent, ii. 19. C. 297. the Cate- chism that passed the convo- cation, 1552, falsely ascribed to him by some, M. II. ii. 24. his ordinations, 62. probably aided Cranmer in drawing up the forty-two articles of reli- gion, C. 390. the first that celebrated the new service at St. Paul's, 416. and preached also, on the occasion, in its defence, ib. assisted at the con- secration of bishops Harley and Taylor, M. II. ii. 171. C. 432. one of the visitors of Eton college, M. II. ii. 9. fell under the displeasure of the duke of Northumberland, for opposing the spoliation of church pro- perty, C. 653. fixed on for the see of Durham, 1056. his cha- racter of the Catechism, set forth by archbishop Cranmer, M. II. i. 5 I. notice of his ser- mon against Q.Mary, preached during queen Jane's reign. III. i. 6. why he supported queen Jane, 17. deprived and impri- soned, 24. 77. C. 443. he, Cranmer, Latimer, and Brad- ford, confined in the same room in the Tower, 463. no- tice of his treatise on the change of religion under queen Mary, 476. his employment in prison, 491. his writings, 492. the cause of his writing his treatise of God's Election and Predestination, 502. Edward VI. 's zeal for the reformation attributed to him, Cranmer, Hoper, and Latimer, 636. his letter to ^Vest, who had re- canted, 964. his care for the tenants of his see after his de- privation, 298. disputes at Ox- ford, 479— 488. M. Hi. i. 182. 183. the questions of dispute, C. 479. M. III. i. 75. writes an account of his disputation, C. 487. condemned as an he- retic, 488. his condition after condemnation, 491. his letter out of prison to Grindal about his disputation at Oxford, G. 27. and about the religious contest among the exiles at Frankfort, 28. burnt, M. III. i. 361. C, 529. Dr. Turner's character of him, M. III. i. 385. dean Noel's vindication of his using gunpowder at his burning, 387. account of his diet in prison, C. 562. and of the expenses of burning him, 563. his opinion upon tem- porizing, in a case submitted to him, M. III. i. 416. his ac- count of the state of the church under Edward VI., A. I. i. 389. esteemed dean Sampson, ii. 147. unjustly censured by Feck- en ham, i. 1 1 1, ii.435. Parsons's calumnies against him an- swered, C. "665. 666. 667. 669. an act passed confirm- « 3 230 INDEX. ing his leases, A. I. i. 86, 94. Ridley, Thomas, W. II. 332. Ridolphi, cardinal, M. II. i. 298. Ridolpho, Randolpbo, Rudolpho, — Pius V.'s private agent in England, A. I. ii. 220. P. I. 526. A. II. i. 77. 119. ii. 468. Rifford, priory of, immoralities practised there, M. I. i. 397. Rigby, — a magistrate in Lan- cashire, his ill character, A. III. ii. 491. Rigby, — married a daughter of lord Brabazon, Ay. 115. Rilev, — vice-provost of Eton, M. II. ii. 9. Riley, Edward, incumbent of St. Andrew Undershaft, London, G. 79. Riman, John, A. II. ii. 22. Ringout, — A. III. i. 672. Ring wood, granted by Edward VI. to sir J. Gates, with the privilege of having one market and two fairs, M. II. i. 482. ii. 236. Riple, site of the manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canter- bury to the crown, P. I. 160. Rippon, Roger, a Barrowist, in prison, A. IV. 130. inscription on his coffin, 186. Risby, friar observant of Canter- bury, concerned with the Maid of Kent, M. I. i. 279. executed, 281. Rishton, Edward, his Challenge answered by Dr. Fulk and O. Carter, A. II. ii. 710. Rites and ceremonies of the church of England debated in the convocation of 1562, A. I. i. 499. a request of certain of the synod concerning some of them, 500. six articles for al- terations proj)osed and reject- ed, 502. 503. 504. Rith, Richard, proclaimed a trai- tor, M. III. i. 487. Rither, .James, his letter to lord Burghley, consoling him on the death of his mother, A. III. i. 731. ii. 508. notice of him, i. 733. a magistrate in Yorkshire, ii. 465. archbishop Sandys's unfavourable charac- ter of him, lb. Rive, — one of the Lent preach- ers, 1565, P. III. 135. Rivers, Elizabeth, daughter of sir John, the second wife of G. Howland, A. III. i. 336. Rivers, sir John, father of the preceding, A. III. i. 336. lord mayor of London, II. i. 419. signs, as an ecclesiastical com- missioner, an order to seize Cartwright, ib. Rivers, Rich. Widville, or Wood- ville, earl of, temp. Edward IV., why beheaded, S. 248. Rivet, William, one of the com- mittee appointed by convoca- tion to investigate the business of Anne of Cleves, M. I. i. 553- 558. Rizzio, David, sent over to Mary queen of Scots by cardinal Lorrain, A. I. ii. 227. 228. his influence with her, 227. was the cause of the differences be- tween her and her husband, lb. account of his death, G. 492. Roathe, Roth, John, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 18. 471. he and his fel- low martyrs signed a confes- sion of faith, 471. Robert, king of Naples and Si- cily, A. III. i. 531. ii. 400. 401. Roberts, Francis, alderman of Norwich, A. II. i. 433. Roberts, Morice, W. II, 333. Roberts, Thomas, in the com- INDEX. 231 mission for taking the value of benefices in London, M. 1. i. 426, Roberts, Thomas, lived obscurely in the reign of queen Mary, A, I. i. 491. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 5 1 2. presented by bishop Parkhurst to the archdeaconry of Nor- wich, II. i. 336. his dispute with Rugg about it, 443. 444. "• 533- 534- and with Dr. Gardiner, i. 445. 447. 449. in a commission, as archdeacon, against papists in Norfolk, P. II. 137. concerned in intro- ducing an innovation into the cathedral of Norwich, A, II. i. 485. Robertson, — the famous gram- marian, bishop Parkhurst edu- cated under him, A. II. i. 345. Robertson, or (Robinson,) Tho- mas, C. 261. one of those commissioned to compose the Institution of a Christian Man, 77. one of those commissioned to discuss certain questions in religion, 110. 113. his judg- ment concerning confirmation, M. I. ii. 356. one of the com- mittee appointed by convoca- tion to investigate the business of Anne of Cleves, i. 553. 558, one of those employed in fram- ing the Book of Common Prayer, II. i. 134. popishly in- clined, 529. late dean of Dur- ham, evilly disposed, A. I. i. 416. Robins, Thomas, alias Morgan, M. II. i. 178. Robinson, friar, M. I. i. 257. Robinson, Henry, provost of Queen's college, Oxford, W. II. 115. one of archbishop Grindal's chaplains, G. 436. the archbishop's bequests to him, ib. 603. consecrated bi- shop of Carlisle, W. II. 405. Robinson, Henry, one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathe- dral, W. I. 596. Robinson, John, parson of Tad- ston, Suffolk, concerned in the Suffolk rebellion, M. II. i. 275. Robinson, John, precentor of Lincoln, commissioned to ex- ercise episcopal jurisdiction in the vacant see of Lincoln, W. I. 41 1. Robinson, John, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. excepted out of queen Elizabeth's pardon, IV. 256. Robinson, Nicholas, (as bishop of Bangor,) P. I. 477. A. II. i. 141. G. 391. his character, P. III. 291. II. 457. educated at Cambridge, ib. suffered much in queen Mary's reign, ib. one of those recommended by bi- shop Grindal for the provost- ship of Eton, P. I. 209. chap- lain to archbishop Parker, ib. II. 457. preaches at Paul's Cross, I. 209. archdeacon of Merioneth, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. votes against the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 503. 505. sub- scribed the bishops' pro[)Osi- tions concerning ecclesiastical habits, P. I. 344. one of the Lent preachers, 1565, III. I35' selected as bishop of Bangor, I. 406. consecrated, 464. III. 291. specimen of a sermon of his, I. 465. his account of the Q 4 232 INDEX. slate of his diocese, 509. writes to archbishop I'arker about antiquities, ib. signed the Eng- lish translation of the articles in the convocation of 1571, II. 54. also the book of canons, 60, he and Dr. Yale have a commission to visit the diocese of Bangor, G. 315. another granted to him and Dr. Me- rick, W. I. 244. Robinson, Ralph, citizen of Lon- don, and scholar of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, trans- lated sir T. More's Utopia, M. II. i. 549. ii. 129. Robinson, Robert, A. IV. 260. Robinson, Thomas, see Robertson. Robinus, — A. II, ii. 454. Robotham, Robert, yeoman of the robes to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 164. 283. 285. Robsert, sir John, M. II. ii. 238. one of the lord lieutenants for Norfolk, i. 464. ii. 162. 202. he and sir R. Dudley have the stewardship of the manor, and constableship of the castle of Rising, 215. Roccartalia, Sebastian, born at Genoa, G. 72. ordained, ib. Roch, — M. I. i. 48. Rochdale, see Rochdale. Roche, sir \^'illiam, lord mayor of London, one of the com- missioners to enforce the six articles in London, M. 1. i. 565- Roche, M. de la, commanded a party of French, who made an attempt against Ireland, A. II. i. 15. 16. without success, 15. a knight of the order, and gen- tleman of the French king's " chamber, 89. 90. Rochefoucault, count, A. II. i. 216. Rochelle, the French protestants flv there, and hold it, after the massacre at Paris, A. II. i. 255, some English go to assist them, 256. several defeats on the side of the besiegers, ib. ii. 505. the place holds out, i. 257. queen Elizabeth will not suffer the English to come to its assistance, 258. description of the town, 361. the besieged miraculously supplied with food, 362. queen Elizabeth instru- mental to the peace between the two parties, 364, Rochepot, M. de, one of the French commissioners to treat with England, M. II. i. 255. 299. 300. ii. 439. Rochester, John, a monk of the Charter-house, removed to a religious house at Hull, M. I. i. 428. executed for being con- cerned in a rebellion in the north, ib. Rochester, Robert, sergeant of the pantry to Henry VIII., M. III. ii. 22. Rochester, sir Robert, son of the preceding, comptroller, M. III. J- 133- 336. 358; 359- 474- comptroller to princess Mary, II. i. 451. summoned before the privy-council, 454. 455- 456. sent to the Tower, 457. released, 458. continued comp- troller to her as queen. III. i. 27. one of her privy-council, 28. made a knight of the bath at her coron;ition, 53. present at bishop Hoper's trial, 286. attended, as comptroller, the duke of Norfolk's funeral, 319. and bishop Gardiner's, 471. in a special commission to inves- tigate a conspiracy, 549. cho- sen a knight of the garter, ii. 4. 22. allowed by the queen to have sixty retainers, 162. bu- ried, 22. Rochester, M. I. ii. 406. 407. INDEX. 233 Rochester, archdeacon of, see J. Bridgwater. Rochester, bishop of, see J. Fisher, 1504—^535- J- Hildesly, 1535 — 1538. N. Heath, 1540 — 1543. H. Holbeach, 1544 — 1547. N.Ridley, 1547 — 1550. J. Ponet, 1550. J. Scary, 155 i, 1552. i>/. Grj2^^/M554— T558. E. Gheast, 1559 — 1571. E. Freake, T571 — 1575- J. Piers, 1576. 1577- J- Voung, 1577— 1605. see also Fr. Atterbury. Rochester, dean of, see W. Phi- lips. Rochester, see of, its vahie, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Rochford, — an Irishman, of Gray's or Lincoln's Inn, Ay. 27/ Rochford, George Biillen, lord, M. I. ii. 246. a favourer of learning, i. 430. Rochford, lady Jane, M. I. ii. 462. Rochford, Thomas Bullen, lord, see Earl of IViltshire. Rochford, hundred of, Essex, bought of the crown bv lord Rich, M. II. i. 514. Rockbie, — A. IV. 374. Rocke, Christopher, an Irishman, imprisoned as a priest, A. IV. 260. examined, ib. Rockrey, Edmund, of Queen's college, Cambridge, a favourer of Cartwright, A. I. ii. 376. II. ii. 415. 416. incompliant in the ecclesiastical habits, 58. Rodes, justice, A. III. i. 529. see Rliodes. Rodney, Maurice, Somerset, had the presentation of the living of Winford, A. II. i. 351. Rodolph II., emperor of Ger- many, A. IV, 2. queen Eliza- beth's letter to him, answer- ing slanderous reports, 213. Rodrigues, Hernand, burnt at Seville by the inquisition, A. I. i- 356. Rodulphs, Anthony, A. IV, 570. Roffe, Hugh, M. III. ii. 398. Rogation week, 1554, how kept, M. III. i. 188. Rogers, — arraigned as a rebel, M. III. i. 149. Rogers, — A. II. i. 88. Rogers, — P. II. 432. Rogers, — arraigned for hearing mass, A. III. i. 125. Rogers, — a puritan, A. III. i. 691. ii. 479. Rogers, Andrew, married lady Mary Rogers, A. III. i. 653. 654- Rogers, Arthedox, (perhaps Or- thodox,) ordained, G. 59. Rogers, Bernard, steward of Gray's Inn, A. III. i. 125. Rogers, Daniel, son of John, W. I. 443. queen Elizabeth's agent in the Netherlands, A. III. i. 392. 671. a captive in the duke of Parma's hands, 330. his letter concerning his trou- bles, 393. some account of him, 394. notice of intelligences sent by him to Cecil, ib. ii. 346. ambassador to Denmark, 25. his appointment to the treasurership of St. Paul's op- posed, as he was a layman, W. I- 443 •.444- Rogers, sir Edward, A. I. ii. 390. (as vice-chamberlain, i. 34.) 439. ii. 233. 235. P; I. 443. A. Ill.i. 189. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI.'s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. of the privy chamber, i. 305. se- questered to his house, ib. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, Ch, 95. vice-chamber- lain to queen Elizabeth, cap- tain of her guard, and a privy- counsellor, A. I. i. 8. II. ii. 707. 708. comptroller of the 234 INDEX. household, I i. 198. II. ii. 708. attended the celebration of the emperor's funerals at St. Paul's, G. 147. one of those appointed by the house of commons to confer with the lords about the succession and the queen's marriage, A. I. ii. 234. dead, n. i. 575- Rogers, Honora, married Edward lord Beauchamp, A. III. i. 507. Rogers, John, C. pref. xiii. 424. 446. 451. G. 7. A. I. ii. 43. an exile for religion, temp. Henry VIII., M. I. i. 545. how far concerned in Grafton and Whitchurch's Bible, C. 83. 84. 117. vicar of St. Sepulchre's, London, 590. preached at St. Paul's Cross, on the abuse of abbeys, ib. his advice as to lay readers, A. I. i. 203. 266. fore- tells a change in religion, ih. reader of St. Paul's, M. II. ii. 278. preaches there. III. i. 6. confined a prisoner to his bouse, 77. an intention of sending him and others to dis- pute at Cambridge, 165. C. 489. brought before commis- sioners and condemned, M. III. i. ]66. 288. 330. 331. C. 495. he and others sign a con- fession of fixith, M. III. i. 223. burnt, 332. C. 955. the father of Daniel, W. I. 443. A. III. i- 394-. Rogers, sir John, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. released from prison. III. i. 33°- Rogers, lady Mary, A. III. i.653. Rogers, Nicholas, presented to the living of Pryston, A. II. i. -77- Rogers, sir Richard, of Brianslo, married Mary Seymour, daugh- ter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 8. his daughter Ho- nora married lord Beauchamp, A. III. i. 507. 653. Rogers, Richard, of Dorset, mar- ried Anne Cheke, Ch. 147. Rogers, Richard, W.I. 282. 596. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 491. arch- deacon of St. Asaph, subscribed, as a member of the convoca- tion, the articles of 1562, 490. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. did not vote upon the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 506. signed the peti- tion of the lower house for discipline, 512. prebendary of Canterbury, consecrated suffra- gan bishop of Dover, P. I. 477. 521. III. 291. recom- mended by archbishop Whit- gift for the deanery of Canter- bury, W. I. 337. dean of Can- terbury, A. II. ii. 526. III. ii. 472. has the living of Llanar- mon, ib. commissioned by abp. Whitgift to confirm children and confer orders, W. I. 263. III. 69. in a commission to visit the hospitals of Saltwood and Hith, I. 516. II. 145. in another to inquire into the vi- carage of Hackington, I. 543. his letter about a dearth in Kent, II, 331. n)aster of East- bridge hospital, Canterbury, 353. his letter to Mr. Bois about the validity of his leases, A. IV. 431. Rogers, Robert, fellow of Christ Church, Oxford, ordained, G. 59- Rogers, Robert, presented to the rectory of St. Nicholas, Cold Abby, London, M. III. i. 591. Rogers, Thomas, chaplain of archbishop Bancroft, G. 453. INDEX. 235 notice of Faith, Doctrine, and Religion, professedin the Realm, ib. Rogers, Mrs., arraigned for hear- ing mass, A. III. i. 125. Rogerson, — of Christ Church, Oxford, preached at the re- burial of P. Martyr's wife, P. I. 200. Roghan, or Rowghane, sir Denys, quartered by the council on bishop Aylnier, Ay. 106. who he was, 108. pretends to give important intelligence of trai- tors in Ireland, ib. proves an impostor, 109. Rohan, M. de, admiral of France, A. I. i. 548. 550. Rokeby, — A. III. i. 367. Rokeby, — a magistrate, A. III. i. 612. Rokeby, John, of the arches, one of Edward VI.'s council in the north, M. II. ii. 161. in a com- mission to visit Ail Souls col- lege, Oxford, C. 130. Rokeby, JoVin, prebendary of York, temp. Edward VI., G. 244. vicar-general to Grindal, whilst archbishop of York, ib. Rolinger, Guolphang, M. II. i. 545- 546- Rollocke, Peter, bishop of Duu- keld, a lord of the articles in Scotland, A. III. i. 440. Rolston, — concerned in an at- tempt for Mary queen of Scots' escape, A. II. ii. 469. IV, 142. 143. 148. 272. Roman, Dr., A. IV. 574. Roman coins, sir T. Smith's ta- bles for reducing them to the English standard, S. 163. 268 —273- Rome, see of, Henry VIII. 's acts against repealed bj^Q. Mary's parliament, M. III. i. 25 i. 328. its motive for allowing the im- propriation of the church lands in England, 256. embassy to Rome supposed to be about the restoration of abbeys, 334. the pope's plenary indulgence to England on its reconcilia- tion with the apostolic see, 355. resolutions taken at Rome against queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii, 54. an Englishman perse- cuted to death there, 226. Romeburg, priory of, in the dio- cese of Norwich, an appendant to the abbey of York, M. I. i. 170. dissolved, for cardinal Wolsey's college at Ipswich, ib. a letter of Edmund, abbot of York, to the cardinal, a- gainst its dissolution, ii. 133. Romford, lady Burghley's bene- faction to, A. Ill, ii. 127. Roo, George, an exile at Wezel for religion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 233. Rookeby, John, an harbourer of Cartwright, P. II. 167. A. II. ii- 359- Rookesby, John, M. III. i. 171. Rookesby, Ralph, made a ser- geant at law, M. II. ii. 7. 250. see Rokeby. Rookley, — an English commis- sioner for a treaty about the English and Scotch marches, A, I. ii. 104. Rookwood, Edward, a recusant, A. III. ii. 422. IV. 276. Rookwood, Robert, a recusant, A. III. i. 609. ii. 421. IV. 276, Roper, — C. 168. Roper, — M. III. ii. 109. Roper, John, M. III. i, 45, Roper, John, a puritan, released from prison, G. 201. Roper, John and Thomas, pa- pists, recommended by Parry to lord Burghley, A. II. ii. 365. 366. III. i, 372. Roper, William, A. I. ii. 262. in 336 INDEX. the commission for bishop Bo- ner's restitution, M. III. i. 36. in another for search of here- tics, 476. Ropley, manor of, Surrey, grant- ed by Edward VI. to sir J. Gates, M. II. i. 481. 484. ii. 220. had belonged to the see of Winchester^ i. 481. Roscan, impropriation of the vi- carage of, Ireland, granted by Edward VI. to endow his col- lege in Galway, M. II. i. 463. Rose, John, of the monastery of St. Andrew, Northampton, has the vicarage of St. Giles, North- ampton, assigned to him, M. I. i. 404. Rose, John, of Lewes, ordained, M. II. i. 402. Rose, Rosse, Rosey, Thomas, some account of him, C. 395. suffered for religion, temp. Henry VIII., M. II. i. 523. presented to the vicarage of AVest Ham, Essex, ib. ii. 267. recommended by archbishop Cranmer for the see of Ar- magh, i. 523.^ C. 393. 906. endured much in queen Mary's time, but escaped, M. III. i. 329. 401. ii. 147. see Rosey and Rosse. Rose-pence, coined for the use of Ireland, M. III. i. 500. pro- hibited in England, 501. Rosel, Harold, of Radcliff, mar- ried Dorothy Cranmer, C. 602. Rosel, John, grandson of the preceding, married a Cranmer, C. 602. Rosenburgh, Peter, earl of, the town of Prague his propertv, A. III. ii. 624. Rosenburgh, William, earl of, A. III. ii. 622. 624. 625. viceroy of Bohemia, IV. 2. Rosewell, William, present, as solicitor-general, at the cele- bration of the emperor's fune- ral, A. I. ii, 1 19. Rosey, Rosse, — keeper of the star-chamber, sent to the Tower for conspiring against queen Mary, M. III. i. 473. turns accuser, 488. condemned and executed, 493. see Rose and Rosse. Rosier, James, vicar of W^ynston, suspended for nonconformity, P. II. 341. Rosogan, — one of the leaders of the rebellion in the west, 1549, M. II. i. 281. Ross, — imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Ross, bishop of, see J. Leslie. Ross, bishop of, in Ireland, one created by Gregory XIII., A. III. i. 275. ii. 272. Rosse, Robert, M. III. ii. 405. Rosse, lord, P. I, 471. see Rose, and Rosey. Rostock, university of, its letter to Edward VI., recommending Peristerus to him, M. II. ii. 48. 500. Rotl), see Roathe. Rothbury, manor of, granted by Edward VI. to Dudley, duke of Northumberland, M. III. i. 43. Rotheram, sir Thomas, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Rothes, Andrew Lesly, earl of, opposes the marriage of Mary queen of Scots with lord Darn- ley, A. I. ii. 207. he and other nobles join together in defence of themselves, and the laws of the land, 209. Rothoric, — his puritanical opin- ions, W. I. 245. suspended, 249. intercession made in his behalf, ttyi. Rouen, t.aken by the forces of the duke of Parma, A. III. i. 5. massacre there, S. 121. 122. INDEX. 237 Rough, or Ruff, John, M. III. ii. 132. 147. a Scot, formerly a black friar in Stirling, M. II. ii. 44. chaplain to the earl of Arran, ib. pensioned by Henry VIII., ib. and by the protector, ib. employed as a preacher, 45. presented to the living of Hull, ib. an exile for religion temp, queen Mary, ib. C. 450. resi- dent at Wezel, M. III. i. 233. and Norden, ii. 45. supported himself by knitting, ib. returned to England for yarn, and ap- prehended at Islington, cele- brating divine service, ib. 22. burnt as an heretic, 23. 45. bishop Watson's ingratitude to him, 45. Ilouillius, see Renilius. Roulart, — a catholic, canon of Notre Dame, Paris, a coun- sellor in the parliament, mur- dered in prison, A. II. i. 238. Roumvvel, manor of, Essex, taken in exchange by the crown from the dean and chapter of St. Paul's, M. J I. i. 120. Rouse, — a contributor to the Louvainists, A. I. ii. 261. see Roase. Row, — M. III. ii. 16. Row, George, chaplain to arch- bp. Grindal, Ay. 19. W. I. 162. Row, sir Thomas, his answer and certificate to the privy council about the strangers in Lon- don, A. IV. 569. Row, William, fellow of Merton college, Oxford, enters into a conspiracy against archbishop Parker, P. I. 500. the com- bination, 501. Row, widow, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Rowe, sir William, lord mayor. Ay. 109. Rowland, — a puritan minister, P. I. 481. Rowland, Henry, consecrated bi- shop of Bangor, W. II. 405. Rowland, Oliver, A. IV. 575. Rowland, Robert, ordained, G. 73- Rowland, see Pentecost. Rowle, Nicholas, Ch. 157: Rovvlet, Rad , M. III. ii. 401. Rowlet, Ralph, under-treasurer of the mint, M. II. i. 425. Rowlet, sir Ralph, son of the preceding, M. II. i. 425. mar- ried one of the daughters of sir A. Cook, III. ii. 22. 115. Rowlet, lady, daughter of sir A. Cook^ buried, M. III. ii. 22. Rowliff, John, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, W. II. 463. Rows, John, a magistrate in Wor- cestershire, A. in. ii. 458. ho- nest and peaceable, ib. his va- luation in the subsidy book, ib. Rowse, Henry, has letters dimis- sory for ordination, G. 398. see Rouse. Roy, — his works prohibited as heretical, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 418. Royal, a gold coin, value of, A. I. i. 397. Royden, — A. IV. 3. Royden, manor, belonged to J. Morice, C. 613. Roye, — concerned in the trans- lation of the Bible, M. 1. i. 488. Royle, Thomas, A. III. i. 590. Royston, Dr., supported at the university by H. Monmouth, M. I. i. 488. ii. 364. chaplain to bishop Tonstal, ib. Ruben, Abr., some account of his Hebrew epistle to Brough- ton, requesting him to prove by the prophecies of the Old Testament that Jesus Christ was the Messiah, W. II. 324. 406. 238 I N D E X. Rud, John, made prebendary of Winchester, M. II. ii. 267. has a license to preach, 277. recants under queen Mary, III. i-317- Rudbroke, alias Hampton upon the Hill, Warwickshire, grant- ed by Edward VI. to Dudley duke of Northumberland, M. III. i. 42. had belonged to Richard earl of Warwick, ib. Rudd, Anthony, recommended by archbishop Whitgift for the deanery of Peterborough or Gloucester, W. I. 337. conse- crated bishop of St. David's, II. 314. assisted at the conse- cration of bishop Bancroft, 385. Rudd, see Dudd. Ruddz, Jem. ab, of Kynnarlh, M. 111. ii. 362. Rudhal, — a magistrate in He- refordshire, A. III. ii. 454. Rudston, Robert, concerned in Wyat's rebellion, M. III. i. 132. a reward offered for his apprehension, 136. arraigned, 149. restored in blood, A. I. i. 468. in a commission for re- stitution of money unjustly taken under queen Mary, 33. 559- Ruff, see Rough. Ruffinus, — A. I. ii. 62. Ruge, manor of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Rugeley, manor of, Staffordshire, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Litch- field and Coventry, M. II. i. 118. Rugg, John, made archdeacon of Wells, A. II. i. 351. and pre- sented to the living of Win- ford, ib. Rugg, William, alias Reps, C. 566. why called Reps, M. II. ii. 170. abbot of St. ]Jenedict de, Hidmo, ib. consecrated bi- shop of Norwich, C 71. 1045. concerned in the Institution of any Christian Man, 72. 77. M. I. i. 504. in a commission against the gospellers, C. 125. assisted at the consecration of bishop Chambers, 136. sup- ported the six articles in par- liament, 743. resigns his bi- shopric,, 274. Rugg, William, A. II. i. 331. contest between him and Ro- berts about the archdeaconry of Norwich, 335. 336. 443. ii. 534. i. 445. 449. Rugg, William, a magistrate in Norfolk, A. III. ii. 460.* sus- pected, and backward in reli- gion, ib. Ruiz, Francisca, burnt by the in- quisition at Seville, A. I. i. 556. Rule, Edmund, one of a sup- ])osed new sect, signs a de- claration, P. II. 385. RuU, Ludolph, M. II. i. 459. Runcorn, Thomas, archdeacon of Bangor, present at the convo- cation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. Runsse, alias Child, Robert, M. III. ii. 127. Rural deans, bishop Freake's pro- posal to convocation concern- ing, A. II. ii. 382. 695. Rush, Anthony, prebendary of Canterbury, G. 314. P. II. 22. Rushbrook, — a puritan minis- ter, W. II. 13. Rushbrook, — has a mandamus to be fellow of Peter-house college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 221. 222. Rushbrook, William, minister of Byldeston, A. I. i. 378. Rushton, Edward, indicted with Campion, the Jesuit, P, II. 167. INDEX. 239 Rushton, Thomas, in a commis- sion for taking the value of benefices in London, M. I. i. 426. Russel, — a gospeller, temp. Q. Mary, M. III. ii. 149. Russel, Anne, daughter of Fran- cis, second earl of J3edford, married Ambrose Dudley, earl of Warwick, Ch. 133. Russel, Anne, daughter of lord John Russel, married lord H. Herbert, A. II. ii. 89. Russel, lady Elizabeth, daughter of sir A. Cook, A. II. ii. 87. III. ii. 389. 390. married to lord John Russel, II. ii. 89. III. i. 402. W. II. 13 T. trans- lated into English a tract on the sacrament, A. II. ii. 89. her dedication of it to her daughter, lady Herbert, ib. her verses on her husband's death, III. i. 402. Cartwright's letter to her, from whom she had undertaken to intercede with lord Burghley, IV. 68. 72. H. Saville's letter to her, for her interest with lord Burghley for the provostship of Eton, 319. Russel, sir Francis, (afterwards earl of Bedford,) made a knight of the bath at Edward Vl.'s coronation, M. II. i. 36. in a commission of inquiry about enclosures, 147. (as lord Rus- sel,) confined as a favourer of the gospel, C. 643. 1038. chief mourner at the funeral of the earl of Bedford, his father, M. III. i. 335. his heir, II. i, 358. see Earl of Bedford. Russel, lord Francis, son of the preceding, treacherously slain by the Scots at a treaty upon the borders, A. III. i. 442. 443- Russel, Jane, attended Q.Mary in her triumphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 55. Russel, sir John, (as lord Russel,) C. 180. 252. 253. M, II. i. 359. C. 420. (as lord privy seal,) M. II. i. 436. ii. 195. as earl of Bedford, 47. 73. III. i. 94. (as lord privy seal,) 329. general, chief captain, and de- puty of Tournay, I. i. 11. his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 4. as lord admiral, in the commission about Henry VIII. 's marriage with Anne of Cleves, I. i. 554. his deposition re- specting her, ii. 455. loved archbishop Cranmer, C. 165. a favourer of the reformation, 208. one of Henry VIII. 's ex- ecutors, M. II. i. 19. bought church lands of the crown, 123. seat against the rebels in Devon, C. 264. 382. defeats them at Exeter, 265. M. II. i. 281. has the government of the west, 262. 424. made earl of Bedford, and lord privy seal, ii. 158. 163. a privy counsellor, 159. 160. in a commission, as lord privy seal, for a treaty of peace with France, 299. in an- other, as earl of Bedford, about the mines of steel and iron in Devon, 431. as lord privy seal, one of those appointed to re- pair to bishop Gardiner, C. 315. signs certain orders of council respecting him, 316. 317. 319. 321. in a commis- sion to prorogue parliament, M. II. ii. 199. 200. present at a private conference concern- ing the sacrament, C. 386. Ch. 69. 70. 77. M. H. i. 535. lord lieutenant of certain coun- ties, 465. ii. 162. 163. 202. warden of the stanneries of Cornwall, i. 485. obtained lands from the see of Exeter, 490. ii. 169. 260. escorted the 240 INDEX. queen of Scots from Hampton Court to London, i. 503. takes part in two musters before the king, 511. 584. in a commis- sion for inquiry into the king's revenue, ii. 207. Covent Gar- den and Long Acre, parcel of the duke of Somerset's posses- sions, given to him, i. 539. ii. 9. 226. escorts princess Mary to the king, 30. in a commis- sion for martial law, 31. 207. in another for examination of the officers of the treasuries, 209. in another to inquire into the lead, bell-metal, plate, &c. of the dissolved religious houses, 210. certain manors given to him, 238. in a con)mission for trial of sir M. Stanhope and others for treason, 247. pre- sent at the king's making his will, IIL i. 455. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and subscribing to the succession, as limited by the king, C. 912. one of queen Jane Grey's counsellors, 433. 913. signed the council's order to the duke of Northumber- land to lay down his arms a- gainst queen Mary, 434. pre- sent, as lord privy seal, at her proclamation, M. III. i. 21. sent on an embassy to the em- peror, 144. one of the Russia company, 520. buried, 335. Francis, his heir, II. i. 158. Aylmer dedicated his Harbo- rowe, &c. to him and lord Dudley, Ay. 149. owned the tithes of Wooburn, M. III. ii. 397- Russel, lord John, married Eliza- beth, daughter of sir A. Cook, A. II. ii. 89. notice of his death, III. i. 402. his wife's verses on him, ib. Russel, John, of Streashani, no- tice of his suit with T. Hand- ford about the course of the Avon, W. I. 217. Russel, John, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. commended for forwardness in religion, but not for discretion, ib. his valuation in the subsidy book, ib. Russel, Lgetitia, daughter of Ed- ward, second son of Francis earl of Bedford, married to Thomas Cheke, Ch. 147. her issue, ib. Russel, sir Thomas, A. I. ii. 23. queen Elizabeth's lieutenant in Worcestershire, 363. 580. Russel, William, a gospeller, M. Li. 116. Russel, William, a recusant, A. Li. 415. Russel, sir William, A. IV. ago. Russels, the, A. II. ii. 499. Russia, emperor of, sends an am- bassador to England, M. III. i- 511- 512. 521. ii. I. 3. 4. Russian company incorporated 1556, M. III. i. 520. Rutland, Edward Manners, third earl of, a ward of sir W. Cecil, S. 19. travels into France, A. II. i. 154. his noble lineage, 155. one of the English com- missioners to settle a league with Scotland, III. i. 567. Rutland, Henry Manners, second earl of, M. II. i. 359. 390. III. ii. 4. A. I. i. 10. 198. his part at Henrj- VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 308. one of the lord lieutenants for Lincoln and Nottingham, i. 464. ii. 163. 202. captain of a company in two musters before Edward VI., i. 511. 585. present at a pri- vate conference about the sa- crament, Ch. 70. 77. C. 386. imprisoned as an adherent of lady Jane Grey, M. IIL i. 25. INDEX. 241 musters the pensioners, ii. 109. one of the head officers in the army preparing against France, 114. one of the lords appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her coming to London, A. I. ii. 391. one of those commis- sioned to visit certain dioceses, i. 247. elected a knight of the garter, 284. lord president of the north, ii. 709. Rutland, Thomas Manners, first earl of, M. I. i. 236. his new year's gift to Henry VIII. 211. Rutland, (Eleanor Paston,) count- ess of, wife of the preceding, her deposition respecting Anne of Cleves, M. I. ii. 462. at- tended the funeral of queen Jane Seymour, II. i. 1 2. Ruytinck, Simeon, a minister of the Dutch church in London, made a journal of that church, A. II. i. 574. Ryce, Griffith, an act for his re- stitution, M. II. i, 102. Ryce, William, a courtier under queen Mary, P. I. 218. com- mitted to the Tower, temp, queen Elizabeth, for refusing to take the oath of supremacy, ib. prevailed upon by arch- bishop Parker to subscribe, ib. see Rice. Rychman, — a puritan minister, A. III. i. 691. ii. 479. Ryel, Richard, in the commis- sion for trial of bishops Heath and Day, C. 330. Rygmaiden, — an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 359. P. II. .67. Ryngsted, William, a reconciled recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Rynkin, — an English Madeira merchant, apprehended, and sent to Madrid, A. IV. 251. Rytie, — of Windsor, one of those reconmiended by bishop VOL. II. INDKX TO STRYPK. Grindal for the provostship of Eton, P. I. 209. 8. Sabbatarian doctrine, notice of, W. II. 415. checked, 416. Sabbath, form of an act for the better observation of, G. 478. amusements on that day, Ay. 142. Sabcots, — A. I. i. 65. Sabellius, A. II. i. 160. Sabryn, Anthony, a recusant, A. I. i. 414. properly Salvin, IV^. 601. Sacheverel, sir Henry, Q. Mary borrows money of him, M. III. ii. 78. Sacheverel, Henry, an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 358. Sacheverel, John, imprisoned for recusancy, A. I. i. 416. 417. a fugitive beyond sea, II. ii. 596. Sacheverel, Ralph, put out of the commission of the peace in Derbyshire, and why, A. II. ii. 139- ' Sackfield, see Sackvile. Sackford, — P. II. 433. Sackford, Thomas, of Gray's Inn, A. I. i. 10. sworn one of the masters of requests in ordinary, 47. II. ii. 708. steward of the Marshalsea, ib. an ecclesiastical commissioner, G. 310. Sackforth, — A. III. i. 449. Sackvile, lady Catharine, daughter of the marquis of Dorset and lady Frances Gray, A. II. ii. 426. her title to the English crown, 444. 447. Sackvile, John, father of sir Ri- chard, buried, M. III. ii. 19. Sackvile, lady Margaret, sister of Philip earl of Arundel, A. III. ii. 391. Sackvile, lady Mary, daughter of the marquis of Dorset and 242 INDEX. lady Frances Gray, A. II. ii. 426. Sackvile, sir Richard, A. I. i. 58. 70. 139. P. II. 45. son of John, M. III. ii. 19. in a com- mission for sale of chantry lands, II. ii. 20S. had Derby- place, London, in tenure, 229. one of queen Mary's privy- counsellors, III. ii. 160. and continued as such under queen Elizabeth, ib. A. II. ii. 707. present at queen Elizabeth's first council at Hatfield, I. i. 8. one of those appointed to audit the accounts of the vice- trea- surer of Ireland, 21. one of the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 90. II. ii. 430, in a commission for ex- change of bishops' lands, I. i. 149. present at the celebra- tion of the French king's fu- neral at St. Paul's, 188. G. 38. and of the emperor's, A. I. ii. 119. G. 147. dead, A. II. i. 575. was under-treasurer of the exchequer, ii, 709. and chancellor of the augmenta- tions, M. III. ii, 19. Sackvile, Robert, (afterwards earl of Dorset,) A. III. i. 86. Sacrament, opinion of the Ger- mans concerning the real pre- sence, M. I. i. 527. and con- cerning administering it in both kinds, ib. ii. 386. Henry VIII. 's proclamation concern- ing it, C. 689. ordered by par- liament to be received in both kinds, M. II, i. 96. probably owing to archbishop Crannier, 97. notice of the act, ib. pro- clamation against irreverent talking about the sacrament, 1 26. ii. 340. Martyr's and Bu- cer's diflerent opinions as to the way of speaking on this subject, i. 190. notice of three private conferences concerning it, 535. Ch. 69. 77. C. 386. kneeling at the sacrament of- fensive to many, M. II. ii. 33. declaration set forth on the subject, C. 416. argument con- cerning the sacrament between abp. Cranmer and Harpsfield, 484. Cranmer's opinion of the sacrament, 815. 816. Bucer's sententious sayings upon the sacrament, 855. four points re- specting it defined in the upper house of convocation, 1553, M. III. i. 73. T. Sampson's discourse concerning it, ii. 227. bishop Latimer's protestation, 288. an old custom of receiv- ing it at funerals, A. I. i. 334. all magistrates ordered to re- ceive it, init. queen Elizabeth, S. 59. Melancthon's opinion respecting the corporal pre- sence, A. I. i. 350. Calvin's opinion as to the using certain words to each communicant, 386. as to the number of times the sacrament should be yearly celebrated, ib. and as to com- municating with the sick, 387. the form of sacramental bread various, P. II. 32. archbishop Parker enjoined wafer-bread, 33. his reasons, 34. 35. notice of a license granted by arch- bishop Whitgifl to certain per- sons to receive the sacrament in another parish in conse- quence of some contention with their own minister, W. I. 469. see Corporeal Presence. Sacraments discussed by certain commissioners, C. 1 1 1. solution to the seventeen questions on them, 744. supposed to be bi- shop Tunstal's, 1 1 1 . another solution, 749. supposed to be Thirleby's, bishop elect of Westminster, 112. cardinal INDEX. 243 Pole's opinion of the act re- storing tliein as they were temp. Henry VIII, , 933. Sacramentaries, declarations a- gainst them in Henry VIII. 's proclamation, C. 686. 688. Sadelius^ Antonius, a minister of Geneva, W. II. 105. considered the superiority of bishops a human institution, A. HI. ii. 602. W. III. 221. encomium on him, ib. Sadleir, sir Ralph, M. II. ii. 282. III. i. 462. A. I. i. 99. ii. 558. P. I. 561. A. II. i. 121. W. I. 60. A. II. i. 575. ii. 202. 449. secretary, and a privy coun- sellor, 1540, M. I. i. 565. sold a house in Channon-row to sir T. Smith, S. 31. one of the administrators to the v\'ill of Catharine of Arragon, appoint- ed by Henry VIIL, M. I. ii. 253. certain of his property given up to Edward VI., II. i. 118. a purchaser of church lands, 123. a witness in bishop Gardiner's trial, C. 320. or- dered to escort the queen of Scots through Hertfordshire, M. II. i. 502. master of the great wardrobe, ii. 160. 164. and a privy counsellor, 161. in a commission to inquire into the lead, bell-metal, plate, &c. of the dissolved religious houses, 210. in another to take account of the apparel in the wardrobe, 211. present at queen Eliza- beth's first council at Hatfield, A. I. i. 8. one of her privy counsellors, II. ii. 317. 707. in a commission for visiting the dioceses of Norwich and Ely, I. i. 248. chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, S. 97. A. II. ii. 709. libelled, I. ii. 363. 581. in a commission to visit Savoy hospital, IV. 584. one of the English commis- sioners to treat with the French commissioners about Mary queen of Scots, II. i. 199. a friend to the puritans, P. II. 191, chancellor of the exche- quer, A. II. i. 500. a letter from him and the attorney- general to the earl of Shrews- bury about knights' fees, 579. dead. III. i. 696. Sadlington, Mark, fellow of Pe- ter-house, Cambridge, A. HI. ii. 498. Saffron, this medicinal plant much grown at Saffron Walden, S. i. first brought into England in the reign of Edward HI., ib. Saffron Walden, see Walden. Saias, secretary, A. II. ii. 9. Sailiard, William, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. St. Abbe's hospital near Win- chester, bishop Home's be- quest to, A. II. ii. 377. St. Alban, M. II. ii. 47. St. Alban's, abbot of, see R. Cat- ton. St. Alban's, viscount, see F. Bacon. St. Alban's, Albonys, Herts, M. I. ii. 406. a grammar school founded there by Edward VI., II, ii. 51. 235. 281. also the corporation of the town, ib. the abbey church granted by him for a parish church, ib. St. Alban's, monastery of, part of its possessions given in ex- change by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. another parcel to the dean and chapter of Windsor, ii. 275. St. Andre, le marechal, Claude la Val, French ambassador, M. II. i. 474. St. Andrew Undershaft, and St. Mary Axe, parishes of, united, G. 78. St. Andrew's, Holborn, certain 244 INDEX. property belonging to the fra- ternity of St. Sithe there bought of the crown by T. Bartlet and R. Modye, M.'ll. ii. 404. St. Andrew's, archbishop of, see P. Adamson. St. Andrew's, cardinal of, see D. Bethune. St. Anthony's school, Broad-street, London, formerly a school of great note, W. I. 6. three of its famous scholars, 7. St. Asaph, bishops of, see H. Standish, 1 5 1 8 — 1 5 3 5 . i?. fVar- ton, 1536 — 1554. -R. Davies, 3559. 1560. 1561. T. Davies, 1562—1573- '^- Hughes,! S73 — 1600. St. Asaph, see of, its value, 1559, A. I. i. 227. its condition, 1587, II. ii. 524. III. i. 686. ii. 471. St. Bartholomew's Spittal, M. I. i. 410. St. Begh's, Cumberland, archbi- shop Grindal's benefaction to the poor of, G. 4 2 8. and to the parish church, ib. St. Begh's free school, founded by archbishop Grindal, G. 420. certain regulations respecting it, 421. the archbishop's bene- factions to it, 427. the most remarkable of the archbishop's statutes for it, 463. its ancient and modern state, 43 i. St. Benedict, William, abbot of, his judgment concerning pil- grimages, M. I. ii. 388. St. Botolph, without Aldersgate, Trinity-hall and Trinity-ally there bought of the crown by W. Hawy, alias Somers, M. II. ii. 402. St. Botulph, alias Boston, Lin- colnshire, the property of the chantry of Corpus Christi there granted by Edward VI. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 362. St. Catharine, Cree-church, cer- tain chantry property there bought of the crown by G, Harrison, M. II. ii. 405. St. Catharine's, London, foreign- ers settled there, C. 339. St. Catharine's hospital, near the Tower, a bill for making it a parish church, sent from the commons to the lords, 1562, A. I. i. 460. St. Christopher's, London, value of the benefice, A. I. i. 228. St. David's, bishops of, see Bohert Fcrrcir, 1548 — 1553- H. Mor- gan, 1553 — 1559- T. Young, 1559, 1560. B. Davies, 1561 — 1 58 1. M. Middleton, 1582 — 1590.^-/. Budd,ic,g^ — 1614. St. David's, see of, an effort for its removal to Carmarthen, M. II. ii. 173. its value, 1559, A. I. i. 227. its ill condition, 1582, III. i. 175. ii. 226. G. 401. St. Dunstan's in the East, Lon- don, property there, that did belong to the see of West- minster, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Lon- don, M. II. i. 339. the church suspended. III. ii. 328. hal- lowed again, ib. St. Edmund, archbishop of Can- terbury, confirmed certain pri- vileges to the prior and chap- ter of Canterbury, C. 1047. St. Frideswide, college of, (called also Cardinal's college, and afterwards Christ Church,) Oxon, first founded by W'olsey, new founded by Henry VIII., Ch. 25. St. George's day solemnly kept, M. III. ii. 3. A. I. i. 400. St. George, sir Henry, Claren- cieux, afterwards garter king at arms, P. I. 8. 99. A. II. ii. 377. IV. 610. descended from bishop Home, II. ii. 377.378. INDEX. 245 St. German, — author of The Doctor and Student, W. III. 394- St. Gregory's, London, Holmes college there bought of the crown by J. Hulson and W. Pendred, M. II. ii. 407. St, James's, London, library at, contains some of Edward VI. s writings, Ch. 22. St. John, admiral, A. III. ii. 33. St. John, sir John, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. in a commission of in- quiry into a dearth, 494. ii. 206. recommended by Edward VI. as one of the knights of the shire of Bedford, 65. in a commission to inquire into church goods in Bedfordshire, 21T. St. John, John, A. III. ii. 165. St. John, of Bletso, lord, A. III. i. 178. St. John, lord, lord lieutenant of Huntingdonshire, A. IV. 314. St. John, Oliver, M. III. ii. 4 to. appointed for a baron by queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 42. St. John, William Paulet, lord, see Marquis of IVinchester. St. John's of Jerusalem, priory of, manor and rectory of Wink- bourn, part of its property given in exchange by the crown to W. Burnel, M. II. ii. 405. St. John's college, Cambridge, favoured religion and learning temp. Henry VIII., C. 231. Ch. 5. P. I. 421. its chief scholars about that time, Ch. 5. P. I. 42 1, flourishes through Cheke, 7 . applies to archbishop Cranmer upon fear of a dan- ger, C. 231. a dispute there about the mass, 232. Edward VI.'s bequests to it, M. II. ii. I2T. from what inducements, ib. disorders there respecting conformity, A.I. ii. 153. P, I. 390. apology of the members, ib. the chancellor's directions as to their conduct, 392. dis- turbances in the college, W. I. 30. Longworth, the master, expelled, 31. Dr. Kelk recom- mended by (abp.) Whitgift as his successor, ib. but Mr. Shep- herd elected, 32. some of its members puritanically inclined, 87. contest respecting their master caused by a puritanical party, 140. Mr. Shepheard re- moved, and Dr. Still appointed master, 142. A. II. i. 450. bi- shop Cox visits the college, 452. what he did, 453. the dispute how settled, 454. letter of bishop Cox to lord Burghley about making new statutes for the college, 551. ii. 390. 706. another about some troubles in the college, i. 552. factions there owing to the imperfect state of their statutes, G. 296. A. II. ii. 389. the statutes re- gulated by a commission, G. 297. W. I. 142. A. II. i. 553. Whitaker's account of the state of the college, 1587, III. i. 714. lord Burghley's letter to the college, forbiddmg them to elect a new master, IV^. 324. and to the university, to enjoin the fellows of St. Johns to elect either Dr. Claiton or Mr. Stanton, 325. report of a pres- bytery in this college inquired into, W. II. 56. articles drawn up by archbishop Whitgift, to be signed by the fellows, in order to clear themselves from the charge of puritanism, 59. two exhibitions founded there by lady Burghley, A. III. ii. 126. books given to their li- brary by her, 128. notice of a book in its library, P. II. 249. 246 INDEX. St. John's college, Oxford, books given to its library by lady Burghlev, A. III. ii. 128'. St. Laurence Pountney, London, part of the property of Corpus Christi college there, bought of the crown by H. Polstede and W. More, M'. IL ii. 402. St. Leger, sir Anthony, C. 127. M. n. i. 359. m.i."io5. ii. 3. recalled from the government of Ireland, IL i. 470. 471. 472. assists at queen Mary's corona- tion, III. i. 56. sent by her ambassador into France, C. 435. called upon by queen Elizabeth to furnish his ac- counts as lord deputy of Ire- land, A. Li. 21. 34. having consulted his own profit more than the good of that king- dom, 34. St. Leger, lady, attended the bu- rial of the countess of Arundel, M. III. ii. 19. St. Leger, Sentleger, Arthur, canon of Canterbury, C. 159. M. III. i. 478. P. L 103. 144. 520. concerned in a combination against archbishop Cranmer, C. 170. St. Leger, sir John, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. IL i. 9. St. Leger, sir John, A. II. ii. 617. St. Leger, sir Warhani, A. II. ii. 617. St. Leonard's, Foster-lane, pro- perty there that had belonged to the see of Westminster, given in exchange by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 339- St. Lo, Loo, or Lowe, sir John, M. II. i. 381. III. i. 15. pre- sent at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 9. St. Loo, Santlowe, sir William, one of princess Elizabeth's gentlemen, committed to pri- son, M. III. i. 149. captain of her guard, when queen, A. IL ii. 708. St. Martin's, vicarage of, near Charing Cross, given in ex- change by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. St. Mary's Aldermary, London, certain property of St. John's chantry there bought of the crown by W. and E. Young, M. II. ii. 402. St. Mary Axe, and St. Andrew Undershaft, parishes of, Lon- don, united, G. 78. St. Mary Spittal, M. t. i. 410. St. Mary Woolnoth, London, a sermon there appointed by sir M. Bows to be preached yearly, M. II. i. 424. St, Mary's, convent of, York, copy of a charter of lands granted by J. Fitz-Adam de Whitgift, W. Ill, 5. St. Michael's, Pater Noster, Lon- don, Whittington college there bought of the crown bv A. Wade, M. II. ii. 406. St, Michael in the Querne, Lon- don, certain property that had belonged to the see of West- minster, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Lon- don, M. II. i, 339. St. Olave's day, M. III. ii. it. St. Paul's cathedral, masses still used there, 1550, M. II. i.338. 371. burnt by lightning, G. 79. P. I. 184. A. I. i. 401. the pa- pists' opinion of this conflagra- tion, 390. P. I. 186. queen Elizabeth orders a contribution on the clergy for its repair, G. 81. P. I. 184. 185. 252. the rate of contribution, G. 82. the city also provides for its repair, A. I. i. 402. bishop Aylmer's plan for raising money for the INDEX. 347 purpose, Ay, 70. bishop Pil- kington preaches on the event, P. I. 186. notice of his sermon, A. I. i. 390. and of a tract in its defence, 391. concourse at St. Paul's for business forbid- den, G. 83. St. Paul's Cross, preachers there, init. queen Mary, M. III. i. 32. the preachers there appointed by the bishops of London, Ay. 201. St. Paul's, dean and chapter of, revenues granted to them by Edward VI., M. II. i. 120. their claim of the temporalities of the see of London during a vacancy, Ay. 214. St. Paul's, deans of, see W. May. 1545—1553- 1559- 1560. J. Feckenham, 1553 — 1556. A. Nowel, 1560 — 1 60 1. J. Overal, 1602 — 1614. St. Peter's, Gloucestershire, M. I. ii. 406. St. Saviour's, abbot of, present at queen Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. St. Stephen's, Westminster, col- lege there given by Edward VI. to sir J. Gates, M. II. i. 480. manor of Bettiscomb, Dorset, belonging to the college there, bought by R. Randal, ii. 406. St. Stephen's, dean of, see J. Chambers. St. Swiihin's, convent of, at Win- chester, dissolved, C. 50. in- ventory of its treasures, 709. St. Tedd, college of, part of its property given by Edward VI. to endow his grammar school at Shrewsbury, M. II. ii. 502. St. Thomas of Aeon, or Acres, church of, the same as Mer- cer's chapel, M. III. i. 160. A. IV. 570. St. Thomas's hospital, South- wark, M. I. i. 410. given up in exchange by sir J. Gates to Edward VI., M. II. i. 481. given by the king for the poor of London, ii. 113. Sainton, parsonage of, Salop, bought of the crown bv sir R. Hill, M. n. ii. 17. Salcot, alias Capon, John, C. 566. (as bishop of Salisbury,) M. I. ii. 468. consecrated bishop of Bangor, C. 42, concerned in The Institution of any Christian Man, 72. 77. assisted at the consecration of bishop Hol- gate, 87. his judgment con- cerning confirmation, M. I. ii. 348. C. 113. consecrates bi- shop Bradley suffragan, 101. (as bishop of Sarum,) conse- crates bishop Bulkeley, 136. he and Goodrich, bishop of Ely, appointed to examine the corrected service-books, M. I. i. 580. concerned in reviewing The Institution, 583. dead. III. i. 481. a papist, and bigotted in religion, II. ii. 168. C. 247. spoiled the see of Salisbury, M. II. ii. 168. Sale, — W. I. 203. 204. Sale, Richard, A. III. i. 590. Sale, Will., prebendary of Litch- field, A. III. i. 592. Sale, see Saul. Salhowse, chapel of, annexed to the vicarage of Wroxham, A. L i. 540. Salisbury, sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI.'s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Salisbury, John, A. IV. 431. of St. Edmund's Bury, a gospeller, at Oxford, M. I. i. 569. con- secrated suffragan bishop of Thetford, C. 55. dean of Nor- wich, and archdeacon of An- glesea, A. I. i. 489. subscribed, as a member of the convoca- tion, the articles of 1562, ih. K4 248 INDEX. did not vote upon the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. signed the j)etition of the lower house for discipline, 512. confirmed bi- shop of Sodor and Man, G. 260. assisted bishop Davies in translating the Bible into Welsh, P. I. 417. very learned in British antiquities, ib. his account of an old British MS., 418. has a dispensation for holding his various preferments, II. 80. held the livings of Thorp and Dys, besides his bishopric, deanery, and arch- deaconry, ib. his death, A. II. ii. 447. Salisburj^, William, M. III. ii. 403- Salisbury, William, of Llanroast, he and J. Waley have an ex- clusive patent of printing the Bible, Prayer Book, and other religious books, in Welsh, for seven years, A. I. ii. 88. Salisbury, bishops of, see N. Shaxton, 1535 — 1539- J.Sal- cot, 1539—1557- J' J^wel, 1559—1571- -E. Gheast, 1571 — 1576. J.Piers, 1577— 1588. Salisbury, Margaret Plantagenet, countess of, M. III. i. 58. A. III. ii. 495. Salisbury, dean of, see J. Bridges. Salisbury, Richard Neville, earl of, temp. Henry VI., A. IV^. 33°- Salisbury, earl of, see R. Cecil. Salisbury, formerly called Shir- burne, according to Stow, A. II. i. 465. Salisbury, a prebend of, granted to a layman, M. II. i. 443. value of the prebend of Rus- comb, 1559, A. I. i. 228. Salisbury, see of, impoverished by bishop Salcot, M. II. ii. 168. its value, 1559, A. I. i. 227. see of, a proposition in parhament, 1562, to annex the county of Dorset to it, 462. for what purpose, ib. Salkeld, — a Jesuit, A. IV. 504. Sail, tithes of, Gloucestershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Sallust, Cheke's opinion of, Ch. 152. Salmiston, advowson of, Kent, annexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Salomez, Jean de, seized by the inquisition in Flanders, and burnt, P. I. 178. 179. Saloway, Arthur, A. III. ii. 458. Salt works in Kent, scheme of, P. I. 408. Sake, Robert, a monk of the Charter-house, M. I. i. 429. Saltmarsh, — G. 605. Salto, Melchior de, burnt at Se- ville by the inquisition. A, I. i. 356. Saltonstal, alderman, A. IV. 189. Saltwood, manor of, Kent, passed away from the see of Canter- bury to the crown, C. 405. had formerly a magnificent castle and park, ib. this manor given by Edward \ I. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 361. given back in exchange to the crown bv Dudley duke of Northum- berland, III. i. 42. bought by Rt. Cranmer, C. 601. and in- herited through his daughter by sir C. Harris, ib. Salvation, curious doctrine con- cerning, A. III. ii. 348. Salviati, cardinal, IM. II. i. 298. Salvyn, Anthony, presented to the living of Highani, M. II. ii. 276. see Sabryn. Salvyn, John, a lawver, in a com- mission to visit the dioceses of INDEX. 249 Norwich and Ely, A. I. i. 248. and the cathedral of St. Paul's, 249. Samford, John, draper, has a li- cense to eat flesh in Lent, M. II. i. 129. Sammes, Mary, daughter of John, of Toppingshal, married to T. Aylmer, Ay. 122. Samoski, Joannes, captain-gene- ral of the king of Poland, A. IV. 225. Sampal, sir George, A. IV^. 370. Sanipford, Great, Essex, the chantry there bought of the crown by T. Tyrrel, M. II. ii. 404. Sampson, Dr., physician, M. I. i. pref. xii. Sampson, John, son of Thomas, A. I. ii. 151. Sampson, Nicholas, father or bro- ther of the bishop, one of the council of Tournav, M. I. i. i i. Sampson, Richard, M. I. ii. 16. i. 347. ii. 244. C. 125. P. II. 454. A. II. ii. 500. bred in St. Clement's hostle, Cambridge, M. II. ii. 168. an inmate of cardinal Wolsey's family, I. i. 194. chaplain to him, 10. and his chancellor in the diocese of Tournay, ib. his letter to Wol- sey, about objections to the pope's breve appointing him bishop of Tournay, 26. another letter to him for preferment, and why, 28. made dean of St. Stephen's, and chaplain to Henry VIII., 29, sends the cardinal a piece of tapestry, ib. another letter of his to the same about the profits of the see of Tournay, 3 I. and upon the cardinal's resigning the see, 35. 36. 37. notice of his Latin oration published in favour of the king's supremacy, 236. copy of it, ii. 162. noticed in Pole's letter to the king, 300. translation of it, i. 237. elected and confirmed bishop of Chi- chester, 1045, C. 71. present at Edw. VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 8. and queen J. Seymour's burial, T 2. concerned in Tlie Institu- tion of any Christian Man, C. 72. 77. his declaration con- cerning the sacrament, against Lambert, 94. 736. in a com- mission against anabaptists, 99. his short instruction to his clergy, respecting the injunc- tions of 1538, M. I, ii. 374. favourably disposed towards the old superstitions, i. 499. Crumwel offended with him, 501. his vindication of him- self, 502. ii. 378. sent to the Tower, i. 502. his confession of certain bishops combining together to preserve the old religion, 503. ii. 381. released from the Tower, i. 504. sup- ported the six articles in par- liament, C. 743. assists at the consecration of bishop Boner, 123. 129. and of bishop Heath, 129. at first supported archbi- shoj) Cranmer in procuring an act for the advancement of re- ligion, but afterwards fell off from him, 141. president of Wales under king Henry, but removed by king Edward, M. III. i. 316. A. II. ii. 50. (as bishop of Litchfield and Co- ventry,) excused from acting as a commissioner for the borders of England and Scotland, M. II. i. 467. does homage to queen Mary, III. i. 56. his death, C. 459. M. II. ii. 168. III. i. 316. some account of him, ib. Sampson, Richard, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. III. ii. 600. IV. 262. 250 INDEX. Sampson, Susan, an heiress, of Suffolk, married to sir J.Ayl- mer. Ay. 121. Sampson, Thomas, C. 343. M. III. i. 417. G. 11.3T.P. I. 56. A. I. i. 328. (as dean of Christ Church, 473. P. I. 241.) A. I. i. 526. ii. 45. 135. T36. 141. 169. G. 155. P. I. 482. 483. G. 171. A. II. i. 8. G. 252. M. III. i. 225. A. II. i. 429. ii. 65. born at Playford, Suf- folk, M. II. i. 403. fellow of Pembroke-hall, Cambridge, ib. some account of him, A. I. ii. 143. 146. married bishop La- timer's niece, 147. esteemed by bishop Ridley and archbi- shop Cranmer, ib. memorable sermons preached by him, ib. ordained, M. II. i. 403. C. 273. excepted, at his ordination, a- gainst the habits, 273. parson of Alhallovvs, Bread-street, Lon- don, ib. M. II. ii. 72. III. i. 591. has a license to preach, II. ii. 168. made dean of Chi- chester, 276. C. 419. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, 450. resident at Frankfort, M. III. i. 231. 404. his letter to his old parish of Alhallows, 234. ii. 227. C. 512. returns from exile, A. I- i. 15 i. preaches at Paul's Cross, 60. in a list of persons to be preferred, 229. preaches at Paul's Cross, 299. G. 71. concerned in the trans- lation of the Geneva Bible, A. I. i. 343. preaches before the court, 369. G. 71. burns su- perstitious utensils at Oxford, A. I. i. 404. preaches at Paul's Cross, and before the queen, 408. how made dean of Christ Church, Oxford, ii. 147. sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, i. 489. one that signed a request to the convocation concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. sign- ed the petition of the lower house for discipHne, 512. he, Kingsmil, and Humphrey, the only three preachers at Oxford, 1563, P. I. 313. applies to bi- shop Grindal about his college having no fixed statutes, G. 118. 119. performed the fune- ral service of the duchess of Norfolk, A. I. ii. 44. cited be- fore the ecclesiastical commis- sioners for refusing the ecclesi- astical habits, 132. once of an- other judgment, 133. changed by his intercourse with Calvin, ib. his and Humphrey's ques- tions to Bullinger concerning the habits, 137. BuUinger's let- ter in answer, 138. 505. pro- ceedings against him, P. I. 321. his letter of defence to the commissioners. III. 95. his an- swers to archbishop Parker's queries on conformity, I. 329. his subscription to a proposi- tion on the subject, 345. de- prived, 368. A. I. ii. 133. and confined, P. I. 371. A. I. ii. 152. archbishop Parker's in- tercessions in his behalf with his college and with Cecil, ib. P. I. 373. his letter of thanks to the archbishop, 372. allowed to read lectures at Whittington hospital, London, though de- prived, A. I. ii. 150. P. I. 445. II. 377. his services there, A. I. ii. 150. the habits urged upon him by Cecil, 148. his answer, ib. writes a supplica- tion to parliament for reforma- tion of ecclesiastical discipline, 151. one who charged bishop Cheney with false doctrine, INDEX. 251 II. i. 158. one of the com- pilers of the Admonition to Parliament, W. I. 55. cited before the ecclesiastical com- mission, P. II. 66. his letter to the lord treasurer for a re- formation in church govern- ment, P. 11. 324. III. 316. A. II. i. 392. 393. what answer it received, 395. intercedes for Heton, a merchant that had relieved the exiles, now re- duced to straits, 397. I. ii. 151. his answer to archbishop Grindal about his lordly state, P. II. 376. III. 319. afflicted with palsy, II, 377. resigns his lectureship at Whittington col- lege, in consequence, ib. en- deavours that Dering may suc- ceed him, ib. his letter to lord Burghley upon abp. Parker's refusing Dering, 378. retires to the hospital at Leicester, A. I. ii. 150. his letter to lord Burghley against setting pa- pists at liberty, II. i. 490. his good service to the hospital at Leicester, 396. 565. his letter to lord Burghley in its behalf, 566. an act in consequence passed for the hospital, ib. pub- lishes two sermons of Brad- ford's, III. i. 102. his preface to them, giving an account of their author, ii. 192. notice of his Supplication to the Queen and Parliament for a learned Ministry, i. 3 20. 321. the thirty- four articles into which it is digested, ii. 278. drew up the petition of sixteen articles which w^as presented by the house of commons to the house of lords for certain al- terations in ecclesiastical mat- ters, W. I. 362. his letters on the subject to lord Burghley, ib. his death, A. I. ii. 151. his writings, ib. an old acquaint- ance of archbishop Grindal, G. 446. his censure of arch- bishop Parker, P. II. 529. Sampson, Thomas, a priest, does penance, M. IIL i. 471. Samvvel, Francis, he and J. Bill bought of the crown certain chantry land at Dorchester, M. II.* ii. 403. Sanchie, Baltliazar, A. IV. 573. Sancroft, William, archbishop of Canterbury, C. 1050. P. II. 25o-435-'A- III- i- 565- Sanctorius, Joannes Baptista, Ali- phan. episcopus, A. IL ii. 508. Sanctorius, Julius Antonius, car- dinal, his instrument conse- crating O'Clier bishop of Maion, A. II. i. 383. ii.508. Sanctorum Quatuor, cardinal, employed by the pope in the negotiations about Hen. VIII.'s divorce, M. I. i. 143. 145. 148. 153- 156. ii- 74- 77- 82. 96. 102. refuses a present from king Henry, i. 143. Sanctuaries, bill brought into par- liament against, but thrown out, A. I. ii. 229. Sanctuary allowed to one that broke prison, M. III. ii. 17, Sandburne, Nicholas, of Barke- ham, has a license to beg in consequence of a fire, M. II. ii. 249. Sanders, see Saunders. Sanderson, — minister of Lynn, impugned the Book of Com- mon Prayer, P. II. 342. Sanderson, — fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. II. ii. 666. Sanderson, Dr., A. IV. 94. Sanderson, William, in a com- mission against papists in Nor- folk, P. II. 137. Sandes, see Sandys. Sandiland, sir James, A. IV. 561. 252 INDEX. Sandon, rectory of, given by Ed- ward VI, to sir J. Cheke, Ch. 66. M. II. ii. 218. Sandwich, — canon of Canter- bury, C. 146. 147. Sandwich, sir John, founded the hospital of St. Bartholomew, near Sandwich, P. I. 226. Sandwich, Robert, G. 604. 436. Sandwich, the founding of a free- school there, P. I. 273. four scholarships at the universities given to it, 275. Sandys, Sands, — P. I. 76. Sandys, Sandes, — one of the committee appointed by the house to wait on archbishop Parker on matters of religion, A. II. i. 96. Sandys, Sandes, — a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. i. 695. Sandys, Bridget, A. III. ii. 65. Sandys, Edward, married Susan Mac Williams, Ch. 134. Sandys, Edwin, C. 576. G. 467. A. I. i. X94. 228. P. I. 49. 116. 177. (as bishop of Wor- cester,) A. I. i. 545. ii. 142. 515. Ch. 180. P. I. 400. 477. A. I. ii. 222. 543. 261. (as bi- shop of London,) P. II. 66. 69. III. 184. II. I 13. 225. 226. 257. 268. G. 269. A. II. i. 394. 462. 478. G. 286. 287. (as archbishop of York,) A. II. ii. 214. 278. 338. 673. 693. III. i. 224. IV. 544. 607. born in Lancashire, P.I. 125. his edu- cation, A. III. ii. 65. Bland, his schoolmaster, M. III. i. 356. intimately acquainted with Bucer, P. I. 55. 56. a prebend of Carlisle granted to him, M. II. ii. 272. why he supported lady Jane's ])retensions to the crown. III. i. 17. imprisoned as her adherent, 24. displaced from the headship of Cathe- rine-hall, Cambridge, 80. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C.450. Ch. 95. resident at Strasburgh, C, 513. M. III. i. 232. attended Martyr's di- vinity lectures there, C. 5x3. resident also at Frankfort, M. III. i. 404. returns home, A. I. i. 151. in a commission for re- forming the Book of Common Prayer, and other matters of the church, G. 33. A. I. i. 122. 166. one of the Lent preach- ers, 1558, G. 35. A. L i. 60. his name misadded to those concerned in the public dispu- tation at AVestminster, 129. IV. 600. preaches at St. Paul's, I. i. 198. 287. his encomium of queen Elizabeth, 222. in a list of persons to be preferred, 229. one of the royal visitors for the north, 245. preaches at Aukland, 246. one of those that laboured against receiving certain habits and ceremonies into the church, 264. conse- crated bishop of Worcester, 230. 232. P. I. 125. III. 282. G. 49. takes the oath and does homage, P. I. 124. preaches at court and at St. Paul's, A. I. i. 298. an eloquent man, ib. his difference with archbishop Par- ker, P. I. 156. his letter to him. III. 41. in a commission to visit the cathedral of Here- ford, I. 205. has a commission to visit his own diocese, ib. a matter about bishop Dowidiam committed to him and certain other bishops, 210. a Lent preacher, 1561, A. I. i. 407. one of the persons chiefly em- ployed in the reformation of religion, G. 99. subscribes, as a member of convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 487. his advice to the convocation concerning rites and ceremo- INDEX. '^53 iiies, 500. orders for bishops and the clergy drawn up by him, and submitted to the con- vocation, 506. sir J. Bourne complains against him, ii. 15. the charge, ib. his answers, i 8. Bourne is committed to the Marshalsea, 37. his information against the bishop for wronging bis see, 38. his submission to him, 40. still vexatious to him, 42. one of the translators of the Bishops' Bible, P. I. 415. his letter on the subject, ib. his letter to Bullinger, thank- ing him for his Comment on Daniel, A. I. ii. 221. 540. he and archbishop Parker recom- mend Cavallerius as professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, 289. 552. his account of his diocese of Worcester, 328. made bishop of London, P. I. 549. II. 7. 25. III. 293. G. 242. A. II. i. 37. why selected, P. II. 7. chiefly through Cecil, A. II. i. 37. his imvvillingness to change, ib. P. II. 7. his letter of assent to Cecil, A. II. i. 38. his primary visitation, 40. his four articles explanatory of the proposition about submission to governors in the articles of the Dutch church in London, G. 195. he and archbishop Parker recom- mended Humphrey to write bishop Jewel's life, P. II. 50. 358. present at the convoca- tion of 157 1, 5r. signed the book of Canons in that synod, 60, ordered to assist archbishop Parker in the ecclesiastical com- mission, 75. insisted too much on his jurisdiction over the Dutch church in London, 77. his letter to Parkhurst, bishop of Norwich, about Marlorate's Comment on St. Matthew be- ing used in his diocese, 81. his concern upon the massacre of Paris, 128. what portion of the translation of the Bible, 1572, was allotted to him, 222. his zeal against the mass- mongers at the Portuguese ambassador's, A. II. i. 315. obligingly re- ceives Gualter, and Zuinglius the younger, 336. signs, as an ecclesiastical commissioner, the order to seize Cartwright, 419. his account of seditious preach- ers at St. Paul's Cross, and of the favour Cartwright met with in London, W. III. 32. Dering restored to his lectureship at St. Paul's by his means, P. II. 265. reproved by the queen in this business, 267. ordered to displace him, 270. misreported by Dering to lord Burghley, 271. his advice concerning the city of London, 269. and arch- bishop Parker's letter concern- ing the church's danger from false brethren, 280. he and other bishops confer at Lam- beth for the good of the church, 282. vindicates the bishops from the clamour of seeking their own wealth, 287. advises for a national council, 288. foully and falsely aspersed, 290. desires to be vindicated by the council or star-chamber, ib. signed an order of the privy- council to continue the pro- phesyings in the diocese of Norwich, 361. assisted at the consecration of bishop Blethin, 42 1, principal mourner at arch- bishop Parker's funeral, 433. 434. the archbishop's bequest to him, III. 335. assists at the consecration of bishops Piers and Merrick, G. 312. 313. preaches a farewell sermon at St. Paul's on his translation to the see of York, A. II. ii. 42. 254 INDEX. his protestation concerning the discharge of his duty, ib. his encomium of his successor Ayl- mer, 44. Ay. 17, his reasons for refusing to alienate Bishop- thorp, A. II. ii. 45. confirmed archbishop of York, G. 339. Ay. 17. his dispute with bishop Grindal about dilapidations, G. 285. refers the matter to lord Burghley, ib. his difference with the archbishop about Battersea, 364. bishop Aylmer contends with him about the revenues of the see of Loudon, 47. Ay. 1 7. appeals to lord Burghley against him, A. II. ii. 47. his letter to that lord in his own behalf, 48. he vindicates him- self, and reflects on Aylmer, 49. too severe in his language against him, Ay. 18. termina- tion of the dispute imknown, ib. had recommended Aylmer to the queen, and otherwise served him, 18. 19. ill requited by him, 19. visits the church of Durham, A. II. ii. 106. his right of visiting disputed, 107. continues the visitation of his province, 164. what he did, 165. slandered for this visita- tion, 166. called the dean of Durham's orders in question, 167. of which information was made against him at court, 1 68. his letter to lord Burghley in consequence, 620. difference between him and the dean of York, 169. in another com- mission to visit the church of Durham, ib. sends an account of the visitation to the privy- council, 170. his letter to the earl of Shrewsbury about the French match with the queen, 228. bishoj) Aylmer contends with him about dilapidations, 245. he writes to Walsingham thereupon, 246. the suit de- cided against him, Ay. 50, 74. why a commission was desired, II. ii. 247. his reasons for qua- lifying the sentence against him, 248. difference between him and the earl of Hunting- don, and dean Hutton about dean Whittingham, 169. 172. 250. 251. his suit for the re- moval of dean Hutton, and why, 252. sets forth the queen's abilities and virtues in a ser- mon, 255. promised no pre- sentation before vacant, and permitted no resignation, 257. his diligence against papists, 340. his letter of the commis- sioners' proceedings, ib. writes also of these things to the queen, 341. another letter of his to lord Burghley about pa- pists, 342. enjoins prophecies, or religious exercises, in his province of York, G. 444. a horrible scandal plotted against him by sir R. Stapleton, A. III. i. 142. because he had re- fused a lease of Southwel, which the queen had requested for sir Robert, 143. his letter to lord Burghley, stating the reasons of his refusal, ib. an- other, revealing sir R.'s villainy towards him, 146. another, thanking him for establishing his innocency, 148. another, requiring public punishment of sir R. and his abettors, 151. the judgment given in the star- chamber in his behalf, 153. the public confessions of sir R. and others, at York, and his answers, ii. 220. his letter in- forming lord Burghley of their misbehaviour at their confes- sions, i. 154. sir R. is in con- sequence fined, and committed to the Tower, 157. writes to INDEX. ^55 the bishops of his province to exert themselves with vigi- laucy, 242. his letter to the bishop of Chester, ib. ii. 257. why he succeeded not arch- bishop Grindal in the see of Canterbury, W. I, 2. recom- mended Hooker for the mas- tership of the Temple, 344. his answer to the sixteen arti- cles in the petition (drawn up by Thomas Sampson, 361.) from the house of commons to the house of lords, for certain alterations in ecclesiastical mat- ters, 349. endeavours to reform usury, practised in his diocese, A. III. i. 464. his letter to lord Burgh ley upon it, 465. his articles of accusation against dean Hutton, 467. his letter to lord Burghley, justifying himself against the accusations of the dean of York, IV. 596. preaches at Paul's Cross, III. i. 475. his prayer at the end of the sermon, upon the queen s escape from the conspiracy against her, ib. ii. 370. com- plains of a commission against concealments, i. 588. his letter to lord Burghley about the justices in his diocese, 670. ii. 463. his letter to the same to prevent the alienation of South- wel church from the see of York, i. 678. seldom attended the council of the north, and why, 679. lord Burghley's let- ter to him in consequence, ib. has a suit with the chapter of Durham about his right of vi- siting them, 685, attempts made to get his London house from him, ii. 62. his letter to lord Burghley upon the sub- ject, 63. dissensions between him and Matthew, dean of Durham, ib. his death, 64. W. I. 545. extract from his will, A. HI. ii. 579. account of his monument, W. I. 545. the in- scription, III. 215. his family and posterity, A. III. ii. 65. his character, P. III. 282. his deserts towards the see of York, W. I. 545. lord Burghley his great friend, 546. what was considered to be instrumental to his death, ib. his testimony in favour of the church of Eng- land, 547. his description of the reformation, A. III. ii. 65. his judgment of puritan prin- ciples, W. I. 547. his descrip- tion of the family of love, A. III. ii. 106. his notice of dissi- mulation dispensed with by the pope, 107. Sandys, sir Edwin, son of sir Samuel, A. III. ii. 65. Sandys, Elizabeth, an attendant on princess Elizabeth in the Tower, M. III. i. 1 29. mar- ried sir M. Barkley, ib. Sandys, George, father of the archbishop, A. III. ii. 65. Sandys, George, son of the arch- bishop, A. III. ii. 65. Sandys, Henry, heir of lord San- dys, dies of the sweating sick- ness, M. II. i. 494. Sandys, Hester, daughter of the archbishop, A. HI. ii. 65. Sandys, Margaret, wife of George, daughter of ■ — Dixon, A. HI. ii. 65. Sandys, Miles, brother of the archbishop, A. II. ii. 246. HI. ii. 65. of Latymers, Bucks., ib. clerk of the crown to queen Elizabeth, ib. a magistrate in Worcestershire, 458. wise, ho- nest, and religious, ib. died, 1601, 65. Sandys, sir Miles, knight and ba- 256 INDEX. ronet, son of the archbishop, A. III. ii. 65. of Wilberton, Cambridgeshire, ib. Sandys, sir Richard, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. Sandys, sir Samuel, son of the archbishop, A. III. ii. 65. of Ombersley, Worcestershire, ib. married Mary Colpepper, ib. his offspring, ih. Sandys, sir William, son of the archbishop, A. III. ii. 65. Sandys, sir William, A. III. ii. 65. proposed by cardinal W^olsey as captain of the archers, to be sent to the emperor, M. I. i, 79. the earl of Essex proposed in his stead by Henry VIII., ih. (as lord Sandys,) lord cham- berlain, and a privy counsellor, 565. present at Edward V'l.'s baptism. II. i. 8. Edward VI. visits him at Wotisfunt, ii. 10. a son of his executed for rob- bery, III. i. 494. Sandys, lord, A. III. i. 11. Sandys, lady, daughter of lord Cobham, Q. Elizabeth speaks to archbishop Whitgift about a wrong done her by her hus- band, W. II. 149. the arch- bishop's letter to lord Cobham thereupon, ib. Sandys, of St. Bees, coat of arms of," A. I. ii. 35. Sandyses, the, W. II. 313. Sanford, — an exile for religion at Frankfort, temp. Q. Mary, M. III. i. 231. Santa Cruz, marquis of. A, IV. 141. Santon, — A. I. ii. 90. Sapinton, manor of, Petham, Kent, belonged to — Cran- mer of Canterbury, C. 601. Sarausse, John de, A. I. i. 39. Saravia, Hadrian, P. III. 265. W. II. 145. 159. III. 369. 373. prebendary of Canterbury, no- tice of, A. I. ii. 223. 224. IV. 603. Chamberlain endeavours to retain him in Jersey on ac- count of his usefulness, A. I. ii. 224. his own reasons for staying there stated in a letter to Cecil, 225. his letter to lord Burghley, moving him to coun- sel the queen to aid the Low Countries, III. i. 418. ii. 351. published a work in defence of episcopacy, I. ii. 224. W. II. 202. answered by Beza, A. I. ii. 224. W. II. 207. to whom he replies, ib. this defence re- printed in Germany by A. Her- troge, 209. his judgment of Barret's tenets resjjecting pre- destination, &c. 241. III. 321. Sarcerius, Erasmus, chaplain to prince William of Nassau, M. I. i. 525. his letter to Henry VIII., ii. 404. his works pro- hibited as heretical, temp. Q. Mary, III. i. 418. notice of his Common Places, A. II. ii. 147. translated by Taverner, 147. I. i. 498. Sarleboy, an Hebridean Scot, set- tled in Ulster, S. 131. taken prisoner by Shan O'Neal, ib. released, ib. he and his party kill Shan O'Neal in revenge, ib. brought to terms by sir T. Smith, 134. Sarrat, — P. II. 434. Sartor, Theodorus, A. I. ii. 272. Sassie, M. de, otherwise called the secretary Boucheter, one of the French commissioners for a treaty with England, M. II. i. 299. Saul, Arthur, fellow of Magdalen college, Oxford, expelled by bishop Gardiner, M. III. i. 82. an exile for religion, C. 450. INDEX. 257 A. I. i. 491. resident at Ar- gentine, M. III. i. 232, sub- scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. commis- sioned by the bishop of Litch- field and Coventry to visit his diocese, ii. 188. the bishop's instructions to him, ib. in a commission to visit the diocese of Gloucester, G. 315. Saunders, — a rebel, sent to the Tower, M. III. ii. 5. Saunders, — P. II. 434. Saunders, — A. III. i. 90. Saunders, Besse, A. III. i. 90. Saunders, sir Edward, (as lord chief baron,) P. II. 139. A. IV. 171. one of those recom- mended by Cecil for the mas- tership of the rolls, M. II. i. 524. contest between him, as lord chief justice, and the judge of the admiralty, A. I. i. 46. chief baron of the exchequer, II. ii. 709. Saunders, Erasmus, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 660. Saunders, Henry, a recusant, A, I. i. 415. Saunders, Hugh, taken up for preaching against queen Mary, M. III. i. 77- ^ ^ Saunders, Joan, imprisoned for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 56. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Saunders, John, M. II. ii. 117. Saunders, Laurence, M. IH. i. 185. preferred to the living of Alhallows, Bread-street, Lon- don, by archbishop Cranmer, VOL. II. INDEX TO STRVPE. C. 420. 468. M. II. ii. 72. de- prived for being married, C. 468. bishop Gardiner's proceedings against him, M. III. i. 146. 291. 331. C. 495. condemned as an heretic, and delivered over to the secular power, ib. one of those who signed a con- fession of faith, M. III. i. 223. sent to Coventry to be burnt, 332- Saunders, Nicholas, A. I. 1. 383. ii. 146. 259. II. i. 360. P. II. 366. A. II. ii. 193. 194- ^95- 356. III. i. 191. ii. 78. 340. 341. Ay. 108. W. II. 177. IIL 309. his bad character, M. II. ii. 180. first gave out the story that Edward VI. was cut out of his mother's womb, 181. his slanders against archbp. Cran- mer, C. 95. 654. 659. 661. and bishop Latimer, M. II. ii. 190. and P. Martyr, C. 668. makes an oration before queen Mary's visitors at Oxford, M. III. ii. 29. part of it, 472. an assertion of his refuted, A. I. i. 205. 215. wrote against Jewel's Apology, 302, 428. no- tice of his book on the Lord's Supper.ii. 248. partly answered byNowel, ib. II. ii. 710. P. I. 360. and fully by Dr. Fulk, A. II. ii. 711. care taken for an- swering his book de visibili Mo- narchia, P. II. 172. answered by Clerk, 177 — 181. and by Ackworth, 181. I. 250. resi- dent at Madrid, A. II. ii. 551. his death, 196. some account of him, P. II. 168 — 172. III. 214. 217. his Rock of the Church, and Defence of Images, answered by Dr. Fulk, A. II. ii- 710. Saunders, Ninian, in a commis- sion for fortifying Jersey, M. II. i. 465. ii. 201. s 258 INDEX. Saunders, Richard, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Saunders, Richard, A. III. i. 90. 91. Saunders, Thomas, P. I. 119. Savage — of Exeter college, Ox- ford, popishly affected, A. II. ii. 196. Savage, — employed to assassi- nate queen Elizabeth, A. III. i. 446. 605. Savage, Elizabeth, married to — Goldenstocks, M. III. i. 173. Savage, George, probably bastard brother to bishop Boner, A. I. i. 492. yet thoroughly sided with the protestants in the con- vocation of 1562, ib. signed the articles there, 489. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Savage, Helene, married to — Hais of Litley, M. III. i. 173. Savage, sir John, knight of the garter, and of Henry VII. 's privy-council, slain at Bulloign, M. ill. i. 172. his offspring, ib. Savage, sir John, son of the pre- ceding, M. III. i. 172. ii. 91. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, II. ii. 328. one of his council in the marches of Wales, 161. Savage, John, or George, base brother of the preceding, M. III. i. 172. parson of Danham, Leicestershire, ib. his offspring, 173. the supposed father of bishop Boner, ib. II. ii. 165. A. I. i. 492. ii. 300. Savage, John, alias Wimsley, son of the preceding, archdeacon of London and Middlesex, and parson of Tarporley, Cheshire^ M. III. i. 173. Savage, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Savage, Margaret, married to Clay- don of the Wall, Cheshire, M. III. i. 173. Savage, Randolph, of the Lodge, Cheshire, M. III. i. 173. Savage, Thomas, M. III. i. 173. Savage, sir Walter, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Savage, family of, in the Ardes, Ireland, S. 135. Savernake, forest of, Wilts, re- stored to the duke of Somer- set, M. II. i. 363. Savery, Christopher, A. I, i. 65. Savile, — G. 242. Savile, sir Henry, one of Edward VI. 's council in the north, M. IL ii. 161. Savile, Henry, fellow of Merton college, Oxford, in a combina- tion against archbishop Parker, P. I. 501. recommended by lord Burghley for the head- ship of Merton college, Ox- ford, and elected, W. I. 465. his letter to lady Russel, pray- ing her interest to procure him the provostship of Eton, A. IV. 319. see Savyl. Savoy, Emanuel Philibert, duke of, talked of for pope, M. II, i. 298. king Philip proposes a match between him and princess Elizabeth, III. i. 505. 517. Savoy, duke of, one of the popish confederacy against protestant- ism, A. I. ii. 244. endeavours to get possession of Genera, G. 412. 414. A. III. i. 127. ii. 201. i. 129. 231. 595-596. IV. 23. held Marsailles in right of his wife, 110. son-in-law of the king of Spain, 153. em- INDEX. 259 ployed by that king to invade France, ib. 175, 216. 217. Savoy, a grant made by Edward VI. to the city of London, touching a commission for vi- siting the hospital, M. II. ii. 121.204. dean Goodman's let- ter to Cecil about an exchange of certain of its lands, A. I. ii. 201. some account of the hos- pital, G. 234. a commission to visit it, 235. Thurland, the master, deprived, and why, ib. the abuses found by the visitors, 236. two temporary governors, 237. archbishop Grindal's letter about a new master, 238. the old master restored, 239. their petition to lord Burgh ley to help them in their miserable condition, and that Mr. James might be ap- pointed their master, A. IV. 581. relation of their condi- tion, 1575, 582. Savyl, William, A. IV. 464. 465. 466. see Savile. Sawer, Christopher, M. III. ii. 409. Savvier, Thomas, C. 144. Saxe, duke of, A. III. ii. 135. Saxlingham, manor of, Norfolk, given by Edward VI. to lord Robert Dudley, M. II. ii. 237. Saxon homily on the Paschal Lamb, and two epistles of ^1- fric, published with a preface, by archbishop Parker, P. 1. 47 2. 473. its genuineness vouched by several of the bishops, 476. Saxon MSS. of archbishop Par- ker, some account of, P. II. 505. the advantages of under- standing Saxon, 513. Saxony, John Frederick, duke of, Cranmer sent ambassador to him by Henry VIII., C. 18. his proposals to Henry VIII. in or- der to a league, M. I. i. 234. the king's answer, 349. ii. 239. his answer to king Henry con- cerning certain matters of ne- gotiation, 395. his letter to king Henry on his marriage with Anne of Cleves, wherein he censures the six articles of religion set forth by him, i. 548. ii. 437. notice of a prayer of his, C. 294. will not pro- mote the Interim, M.II. i. 173. a Spaniards communication with Hoby about him, 174. set at liberty by the emperor, 561. Edward VI. writes to congra- tulate him, ib. Saxony, Augustus, elector of, A. II. i. 63. 64. II. ii. 104. III. i. 660. signed the Formula con- cordiiE, drawn up at the synod of Frankfort, II. ii. 372. 679. Saxto, — A. III. i. 744. Saxy, William, A. I. i. 250. 251. 252. G. 87. Say, Robert, A. I. i. 250. Say, William, notary public, an actuary at bishop Hoper's trial, M. III. i. 286. a proctor of the arches, A. I. i- 57. a registrar to certain commissioners against Lollards, ib. Saye, — P. I. 370. Saye, William, prebendary of Winchester, W. I. 263. II. 332. in a commission to exercise episcopal jurisdiction in the va- cant see of Winchester, I. 261. Sayer, — P. I. 434. Sayer, John, a recusant, A. IV. 276. Scaliger, Josephus, why he pre- ferred Baronius to Bellarmine, A, III. i. pre/, ix. Scambler, Edmund, (as bishop of Peterborough,) G. 391. W. I. 223. 224. (as bishop of Nor- wich,) A. III. ii. 460. one of the ministers to the gospellers in London, temp, queen Mar\% S 2 26o INDEX. M. III. ii. 132. 147. chaplain to archbishop Parker, P. II. 458. III. 284. consecrated bi- shop of Peterborough, A. I. i. 230. 308. P. I. 133. III. 284. preaches at Paul's Cross, A. I. i. 300. and before queen Eliza- beth, 369. G. 7 1 . preached lady Jane Seimour's funeral sermon, A. I. i. 400. present at the con- vocation of 1562, P. I. 240. subscribed the articles there, A. I. i. 487. has the degree of D. D. conferred on him at Cam- bridge per gratiam, P. I. 366. one of the Lent preachers, 1565, III. 135. writes to arch- bishop Parker about ministers, I. 509. signed the book of ca- nons in the synod of 157 1, II. 60. allows exercises for the in- terpretation of scripture to be set up at Northampton, G. 260. A. II. i. 133. his kindness to the poorer inhabitants of Pe- terborough, ii. 269. his letter to the queen for the confirma- tion of the statutes for the ca- thedral of Peterborough, III. i. 159. P. II. 100. III. ]86. sign- ed certain articles agreed upon for the regulation of the church, W. I. 232. confirmed bishop of Norwich, 409. his complaint against his predecessor, bishop Freak, A. III. i. 480. the same complaint might have been made against himself, 481. his letter to lord Burghley a- bout the justices in his dio- cese, 670. ii. 459. condemns Ket for heresy, 73. concerned in impoverishing both the sees he held, according to Wharton, C. 1055. Scarington, sir William, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 37. Scarlet, John, ordained, G. 54. Scarlet, Richard, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Scarloke, Elizabeth, attended Q. Mary in her triiunphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 55. Scarsbrick, — A. III. ii. 491. Scepperius, Shepperius, admiral to the emperor Charles V., S. 35. M. II. i. 344. Schaviger, — concerned in the massacre of Paris, A. II. i. 257. killed at the siege of Rochelle, ib. Schetz, Jasper, M. II. i. 544. 545. 547. 561. 565. 593. ii. 485. 486. 487. 489. Scheure, Nicasius van der, min- ister of the Dutch church at Maidstone, A. II. i. 484. Scholars, formerly the custom of our princes to support young scholars at the universities, and fit them for high public sta- tions, Ch. 6. Scholarships, see Canterbury and Norwich schools, and Bene't col- lege, Cambridge. Scholebormve, John, M. II. ii. 244. Schoolmasters to be examined as to their religion by the bishops, G. 378. favours shewn to them, 1581, A. III. i. 76. Schools founded by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 278. chiefly endowed with chantry lands, 282. Schools in the diocese of Canter- bury, P. I. 227. Schools, license for teaching, a form of, and observations upon, W. I. 468. III. 384. Scilly, isle, a commission for its survey, M. II. i. 466. and for a fort to be built there, ib. ii. .203. Scipio, an Italian, notice of his letter to bishop Jewel, A. I. ii. 59- Scoloker, Anthony, a printer, liv- INDEX. 361 inginSavoyRentSjM.II.i. 226. printed a discourse in praise of commonwealths, ib. Scory, Frances, daug;hter of the bishop, married Matthew, son of archbishop Parker, A. IV, 614. Scory, John, C. 147. 158. 164. (as bishop of Chichester,) 431. 436. 611. 10 ig. (as bishop of Hereford,) A. I. i. 228. ii. 147. II. ii. 500. P. I. 142. III. 43. I. 419. 477. G, 286. 391. A. III. i. 224. ii. 453. W. I. 198. 263 . A. IV. 6 1 4. one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathe- dral, C. 134. 759. M. II. ii. 171. and chaplain to archbi- shop Cranmer, 171. accused for a sermon of his, C. 151. 152. preaches at the execution of Joan of Kent, M. II. i. 335. chaplain to bishop Ridley, 402. notice of a sermon of his at court, 496. his letter to Ed- ward VI. putting him in mind of certain suits made to him in this sermon, ii. 481. a mar- ried man, 171. consecrated bi- shop of Rochester, i. 496. C. 389. M. II. ii. 261. 262. has a license to eat flesh on fast days, 246. assisted at the con- secration of bishop Taylor, C. 420. translated to the see of Chichester, 331, M. II. ii. 269. has a license to preach him- self, and to license preaching, 270. one of the commissioners to reform the ecclesiastical laws, C. 388. recants under queen Mary, M. III. i. 241. C. 519. 1053. afterwards fled a- broad, M. II. ii. 171. C. 449. Ch. 95. resident at Wezel, M. III. i. 233. superintendent of a chvirch of English exiles at Embden, C. 374. 383. 511. G. 1 7. wrote a comfortable epistle to the faithful in prison or in trouble, C. 383. 511. preaches before queen Elizabeth, P. I. 71. A. I. i. 60. selected for the see of Hereford under queen Elizabeth, G. 41. P. I. 226. III. 283. A. I. i. 230. takes the oath, and does homage, P. I. 124. preaches at the solemniz- ation of the French king's ob- sequies at St. Paul's, G. 38. A. I. i. 188. 189. preaches at St. Paul's, 199. one of those bi- shops who signed the letter to the queen to stay exchanges of bishops' lands, P. I. 88. III. 27. assisted at the consecration of archbishop Parker, A. I. i. 231. P. I. 107. 108. no. 115. 116. 117. 119. 121. preached on the occasion, 114. assisted at the consecration of bp. Grin- dal, G. 49. P. 1. 1 25 . ordains by order of archbishop Parker, 129. A.I.i. 235. concerned on the protestant side in the dis- putation at Westminster, 129. IV. 600. preaches at court, I. i. 296. and at Paul's Cross, 297. his letter to archbishop Parker about his diocese, P. I. 190. has a commission to visit his cathedral and diocese, 205. present at the convocation of 1562, 240. subscribed the ar- ticles there, A. I. i. 487. lived very uncomfortably at Here- ford, P. II. 6. signed the book of Canons in the synod of 1 5 7 1, 60. his letter to lord Burghley in behalf of certain parishes in danger by the statute of sup- pression of colleges, A. II. 1,503. ii.552. his letter to lord Burgh- ley against the council of the marches of Wales, III. i. 171. 173. 174. more than once ap- plied for a reformation of the statutes of the church of He- s 3 25a INDEX. reford, W. I. 213. exactions wrung from him by sir H. Syd- ney as lord president of Wales, 219. his death, A. III. i. 476. a sentence or two from his ser- mons, ib. bishop Parkhurst's epigram to him, II. ii. 501. Scory, Silvan, A. III. ii. 453. Scoti — P. II. 343. Scot, — of Iden, A. II. ii. 22. Scot, — a seminary, A. IV. 274. executed, 91. Scot, colonel, one of the regicides of Charles I., P. II. 435. ob- tained Lambeth-house, ib. to- tally demolished archbishop Parker's monument in the cha- pel there, ib. Scot, Cuthbert, M. III. i. 570. A. I. i. 416. III. i. 396. 397. P. I. 141. takes the degree of B. A. at Cambridge, 10. fellow of Christ's college, 37. offend- ed at an interlude there, ib. 39. 40. one of those appointed by the university of Cambridge to dispute with Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer at Oxford, C. 94 1. 943. 480. bp. elect of Chester, M. III. i. 510. oneofthecom- missioners appointed by cardi- nal Pole to visit the university of Cambridge, ib. W. I. i 2. M. III. ii. 28. preaches at Paul's Cross, T07. present at the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. dissented from the bill for restoring the tenths and first-fruits to the crown, 83. 85. from that for restoring the supremacy to the crown, 84. 87. from that for exchange of bishops' lands, 86. from that for uniformity, &c., 87. 113. and from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. his speech against the qneen's supremacy, 108. ii. 408. concerned on the popish side in the disputation at West- minster, i. 128. 132. bound over to appear before the coun- cil, 133. 139. fined by the council, 140. called before the queen, 206. deprived, 210. a rigid man, detained in the Fleet for some time, 215. 417. Scot, Gregory, his good charac- ter, G. 125. applications made for a stall for him in Carlisle, ib. as prebendary of Carlisle, ib. endeavours to obtain a re- medy for the unreasonable leases in that church. A, I. ii. 255- 256. Scot, James, a banished priest, employed by the see of Rome to create disunion among pro- testants in England, P. I. 141. A. I. i. 342. Scot, John, steward to archbi- shop Grindal, G. 429. 436. 604. 605. A. L i. 559. Scot, sir Raynold, one of Ed- ward VI. 's chief officers in Ca- lais and Guisnes, M. II. ii. 164. Scot, sir Thomas, one of the committee appointed by the house of commons to consider the bill for riles and ceremo- nies, A. II. i. 185. P. II. 202. in a commission to visit the hos|)itals of Saltwood and Hith, W. I. 516. Scotland, an embassy sent there by Henry VIII. to draw it off from the pope, M. I. i. 346. Cranmer instrumental to the reformation of religion there, C. 140. Henry VIII.'s ineffec- tual measure to promote the same, 141. cause of the war between England and Scotland in the beginning of the reign of Edward VI., M. II. i. 27. victory gained over the Scots by the duke of Somerset, C. INDEX. 263 218. the French send forces there, M. II. i. 239. S. 33. Inchequeth taken by the Eng- lish, M. II. i. 240. retaken, ib. complaint of a Scotch ship be- ing detained, 429. commission- ers for the borders of England and Scotland, 467. and for a treaty, ii. 200. apprehensions from Scotland, III. i. 214. a league between England and Scotland, 350. preparations a- gainst Scotland, 358. fresh ap- prehensions, 491. a meeting of English and Scotch on the borders, 492. 494. a fight, ii. 2 1 . ill terms between the Scotch and English, 70. appearance of a war between them, 76. the Scotch invasion and repulse, 82.520.521. another invasion, 83. queen Mary's instructions how to proceed against it, 84. 522, king Philip's answer to the council concerning these proceedings, 85. an English fleet unsuccessful against them, 87. directions of the council against this invasion, 88. 524, lord Wharton's advice how to proceed, 90. instructions from the council, ib. ^ly. the Scotch retreat, 95. 532. the English enter and plunder the Scotch borders, 97. defence of the English borders neglected, ib. queen Elizabeth's statement of the condition of Scotland, A. I. i. 294. peace proclaimed be- tween Scotland, France, and England, 283. matters with England, 1563, ii. 99. the practices of the French there, 100. and of Q. Elizabeth, ib. Q. Elizabeth's declaration why she sent an army into Scot- land, 358. notice of a libel threatening an invasion out of Scotland, 363. 580. Mary queen of Scots deposed, II. i. 19. the civil war pacified by queen Elizabeth, 259. the Scots' af- fection alienated from France by the massacre at Paris, ib. inclinable to a better under- standing with England, 260. 267. the French labour to keep up distractions in Scotland, 260. 261. a broil upon the borders made up, G. 280. Ran- dolph's leUer concerning the state of affairs there, A. II. ii. 327.671. the earl of Hunting- don's judgment of the Scots' dealings with queen Elizabeth, 328. factions there, 1582, III. i. 113. which party queen Eli- zabeth supported, 114. occur- rences there, 1583,439. a par- liament there, ih. the king's speech to it, ib. dean Mat- thew's letter to lord Burghley about Scotch affairs, 1594, IV. 281. proclamation for its union with England, 1603, 527. and for commissioners to arrange it, 540. and declaring at what values certain of its monies shall be current in England, 535. see King James, and Mary queen of Scots. Scotland, church of, proceedings of religion in Scotland, 1 556, M. III. i. 544. P. Martyr's statement of the reformation there, A. I. i. 278. progress of religion there, ii. 227. queen Mary opposed to the reforma- tion, ib. the earl of Murray in favour of it, ib. bishop Grin- dal's account of the state of religion there, G. 491. letter of the church of Scotland to the English bishops in favour of nonconformists, P. I. 457- HI- 150. puritan ministers go thi- ther from England, G. 179. de- cree of the general assembly S4 264 INDEX. of the church for obedience to James VI., A. II. i. 19. articles of the kirk to be presented to the king, 267. Scotnian, William, ordained, G. 73- Scowre and Serine, impropria- tion of the vicarages of, Ire- land, given by Edward VI. to endow his college at Galway, M. II. i. 463. Serine, see Scowre. Scriptures, archbishop Arundel was for their interpretation into the vulgar tongue, and for the laity's use thereof, C. ep. (led. iii. Cranmer's plan for getting them translated, 48. bishop Stokesly declared they made the people heretics, ib. disputation on their sufficiency at Cambridge, 290. notice of Dr. Standish's work against their being in English, M. III. i. 269. their common use dis- approved of by papists, init. queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 273. certain passages of scripture explained by bishop Aylmer, Ay. 170. exercises among the clergy for the interpretation of, G. 260. the order thereof, 261. see Bible. Scriven, Thomas, a monk of the Charter-house, M. I. i. 429. Scroby, manor of, Nottingham- shire, bought by archbishop Holgate, M. II. 'ii. 77. 165. annexed it to the see of York, ib. Scroop,Scrope, Henry lord, M.III. i. 559. ii. 403. made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coro- nation, II. i. 36. one of the no- bles appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her coming to London, A. I. ii. 391. one of the mourners at the celebration of the French king's obsequies at St. Paul's, i. t88. warden of the west marches, ii. 104. one of the commissioners for a treaty there, ib. in a commis- sion to examine into the un- reasonable leases in the church of Carlisle, 255. traitorously killed in a rebellion raised by the Dacres, 327. Scroop, Scrope, John lord, one of the twelve mourners at Henry VIII.'s funeral, M. II. ii. 291. Scroop, Ralph, one of those mem- bers who absented themselves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i, 263. in- dicted in consequence, ib. Scroop, Thomas lord, A. II. i, 440. ii. 438. occupied Rose castle, belonging to the see of Carlisle, A. II. ii. 56. lord war- den of the middle marches and captain of Carlisle, IV. 412. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, Scroop, William lord, (afterwards earl of AViltsliire,) lord trea- surer to Richard II., A. IV. 3 29. the king let his realm to farm to him and others, ib. Scudamore, — a magistrate, A. III. ii. 454. Scudamore, — A. IV. 446. Scutt, Anthony, notice of, A. III. ii. 462. Seaforth, Robert Car, lord,M. III. i. 492. ii. 69. A. II. ii. 328. ^ IV. 447. 448. Seagiswick, Thomas, a recusant, A. I. i. 412. Seal, rectory of, Kent, given by queen Mary to cardinal Pole, M. III. i. 475. Scale, Agnes, M. III. ii. 405. Searle, George, burnt as an here- tic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. INDEX. %6S ii. 47 T. signed a confession of faith, ib. see Serle. Seaton, see Seton. Sebastian, king of Portugal, A. II. ii. 194. III. i. 7. one of the confederacy of popish princes against protestantism, A. I. ii. 244. went to war with the king of Fez, II. i. 14. notice of his death, ii. 159. Sebures, — A. IV. 166. Secheverel, see Sacheverel. Seckword, Thomas, of the court of wards, A. II. i. 419. III. i. 200. Secretary of state, see sir W. Petre, sir Thomas Smith, sir W. Cecil, and sir F. Walsingham. Sect at Balsham supposed to be libertines, P. II. 381. its real opinions, 382. Sectaries in Essex and Kent, M. II. i. 369. their tenets, 370. Sectaries come into England from abroad, A. I. ii. 271. Sects and opinions, certain wicked opinions taken from the con- fessions of some of them, A. III. ii. 102. Sedbergh, Yorkshire, a grammar school founded by Edward VI., M, II. ii. 51. 279. Sedgrave, — mayor of Dublin, P. I. 91. Sedgwick, Thomas, concerned in a disputation at Cambridge be- fore the royal commissioners, C. 290. 583. one of those ap- pointed by that university to dispute with Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer at Oxford, 480. 941. 943. concerned in trying Hullier for heresy, M. III. i. Seditious words, an act renewed concerning, init. queen Eliza- beth, A. I. i. 68. Sedom, William, ordained, G. 72. Sedulius, C. 764. A. I. i. 519. Seers, William, A. II. i. 261. Segar, one of the leaders of the rebellion in the west, M. II. i. 281. Segar, — M. III. i. 304. 309. Segar, — A. III. ii. 384. Segum, George, A. III. ii. 548. Seimour, see Seymour. Seintcler, Giles, a puritan, W. I. 482. Selbie, Alicia, M. III. ii. 392. Selbie, Thomas, M. III. ii. 392. Selby, John, M. III. ii. 98. Seleucia, Simeon, archbishop of, anecdote respecting him and Ustazades, C. 521. 522. Selier, John, one of the six preach- ers of Canterbury cathedral, W. I. 596. Selle, la, a French spy, S. 85. Selling, advowson of, Kent, an- nexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Selvardus, concerned in framing the Harmony of Confessions for the foreign protestant churches, A. II. ii. 680. Selye, Richard, A. II. ii. 360. a fugitive beyond sea, 596. Sempringham, priory of, Lincoln- shire, advowson of Wissenden, part of its property sold by the crown, M. II. ii. 16. Send, manor of, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharington, M. IL i. 192. Sendal, John, chaplain of Byr- myncham, deprived for being married, M. III. i. 169. Sendrew, manor of, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharington, M. II. i. 192. Sens, cardinal of, A. III. i. 191. Sensaw, tithes of, Salop, given by Edward VI. to endow his school at Shrewsbury, M. II. ii. 280. Sentence, or curse, the general, forbid to be used, M. I. i. 253. ii. 188. 255 INDEX. Sentleger, see St. Leger. Seo, Germain, excepted out of Edward VI. 's general pardon, M. II. ii. 68. Septuagint version lightly esteem- ed by bishop Aylmer, Ay. 164. Serchfiekl, John, M. III. i. 227. Sercot, John, M. I. i. 1 15. Sere, — A. IV. 488. Serelby, Thomas, ordained, G. Seres, William, printer, A. II. ii. 48. Ay. 38. he and W. Day printed the Consultation of Herman, Archbishop of Co- loigne, &c. M. II. i. 42. also Crowley's Confutation of Shax- tons Articles, 228. also Cheke's Hurt of Sedition, 305. has the exclusive privilege of printing primers, ii.40. 231. 253. print- ed bishop Pilkington's tract in vindication of his sermon about St. Paul's having been burnt, A. I. i. 391. 393. also the Ho- rarium, 354, II. i. 459. also Latin prayers for schools, 461. reprinted Cheke's Hurt of Se- dition, ii. 82. Sergeants at law, appointments of, M. II. ii. 3. 29. III. i. 361. A. I. i. 42. Serle, Francis, ordained, G. 58. Serle, Henry, A. II. ii. 590. see Searle. Series, Robert, C. 536. 1079. 1082. one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathedral, 134. 159. M. Ill' i. 478. obliged by archbishop Cranmer to re- cant for something unsound, 134. 147. 149. 155. became in consequence an enemy to the archbishop, 134. and was concerned in a conspiracy a- gainst him, 160 — 163. 166. 168. 170. 766. 768. 772. Sermishair, — W. Ill, 378. Sermons : ordered that whoever received any ecclesiastical be- nefice from the king should preacli before him, and that there should be a sermon every Sunday at court, M. II. i. 334. sermons on the week days for- bid, 341. 343. Serranus, Joannes, G. 193. Servants, the rebels' article about them answered by archbishop Cranmer, C. 835. Service of the church, Cranmer's opinion of, C. 826. Setlow, sir John, one of Edward VI. 's council in the marches of Wales, M. II. ii. 261. Seton, — printer, he and Windet printed an edition of sir T. Smith's Commonwealth, S. 85. n. Seton, — prior of Pluscardin, one of the lords of the articles in Scotland, A. III. i. 440. Seton, Alexander, C. 1 87 . a Scotch friar, and an excellent preacher, M. I. i. 567. 572. chaplain to the duke of Suffolk, 567. im- prisoned upon the six articles, ib. 572. Seton, Seaton, John, chaplain to bishop Gardiner, M. II. i. 84. and one of his witnesses at his trial, 374. present at the disputation with P. Martyr at Oxford, C. 897. and at that with Cranmer, Ridley, and La- timer, 480. and at bp. Hoper's trial, M. III. i. 288. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290. learned, but set- tled in papistry, A. 1. i. 413. confined to a certain distance round London, ib. Seton, sir John, A. IV. 267. Seton, lord, A. III. i. 605. a great instrument for Mary queen of Scots, A. II. i. 70. 74. 75. one of king James's counsellors, ii. 324. his character, ib. Settel, — fellow of Corpus Christi INDEX. 267 college, Cambridge, W. I, Settle, Thomas, a puritan, impri- soned, A. IV. 134. Seulthroppe, Robert, imprisoned for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 55. released, ib. Sevenoke, Kent, the chantry there bought of the crown by W. Tvvisden and J. Brown, M. II, ii. 405. Sewel, — G. i 25. Sexto, Augustin de, A. I. i. 19. Sexton's mass, M. III. i. 214. Seymer, Henry, mayor of Rye, A. IV. 580. Seymer, sir Thomas, lord mayor of London, M. III. i. 498. Seymer, lady, wife of the preced- ing, dies,'M. III. i. 498. Seymour, — A. IV. 413. Seymour, Anne, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. married first to J, Dudley, earl of Warwick, and afterwards to sir E. Umpton, 8. Seymour, Catharine, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. an intention of her mar- rying the earl of Pembroke's eldest son, iii. died unmar- ried, 8. Seymour, Edward, or John, M. II. i. 540. ii. 250. eldest son of the duke of Somerset by his first wife, C. Filol, i. 543. a patent granted him, restoring to him his mother's lands sold away by his father, ib. restored in blood, ib. ii. 66. Seymour, lord Edward, went to Spain to sue for a pension, A. I. ii. 54. II. i. 495. Seymour, sir Edward, see Earl of Hertford. Seymour, Elizabeth, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. married to sir R. Knight- ly, of Fausly, 8. Seymour, Elizabeth, daughter of sir Henry, A. II. ii. 211. Seymour, sir Henry, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 36. ob- tains from the king lands be- longino: to the see of Winches- ter, 484. ii. 244. A. I. i. 90. and other lands, M. II. ii. 220. 235. a magistrate, III. i. 173. 530. his death, A. II. ii. 211. had married Barbara Wolfe, ib. his issue, ib. his executor, ib. Seymour, lord Henry, A. II. ii. 319. III. i. 91 .653. 654. son of the duke of Somerset, his in- tended marriage with the earl of Oxford's daughter set aside by parliament, M. II. i. 540. Seymour, queen Jane, M. II, ii. 172. A. IV. 413. Reg, Pole's remark upon her in his letter to the king, M. I. ii. 304. the date of her death according to a MS. different from that usually assigned by historians, II. i. 10 her burial, 11. bishop Parkhurst's epigram on her death, A. II. ii. 495. 501. Seymour, Jane, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. her father tried to marry her to Edward VI., 8. died unmar- ried, ib. her burial, A. I. i. 399. was maid of honour to queen Elizabeth, ib. Seymour, Jane, daughter of sir Henry, A. II. ii. 211. Seymour, John, imprisoned as an adherent of the duke of Somer- set, probably his brother, M. II. i. 497, ii. 228. an order for his trial, 247. Seymour, Margaret, daughter of the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. an intention of her marrying the earl of Derby's son, 245. died unmarried, 8. Seymour, Mary, daughter of the 368 INDEX. duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 7. married first to sir R. Rogers, and afterwards to sir H. Pey- ton, 8. Seymour, Mary, daughter of T. lord Seymour and queen Ca- tharine Par, M. II. i. 200. com- mitted, as an orphan, to the keeping of the duchess of Suf- folk, ib. restored in blood, 202. died soon after, 203. Seymour, Robert, one of Henry VIII.'s council at Tournay, M. I. i. I r. Seymour, sir Thomas, S. 2. C. 408. 610. 621. 622. M. II. ii. 189. A. II. i. 159. III. i. 396. his part at Edward VI. 's christ- ening, M. II. i. 6. and at Hen- ry VIII.'s funeral, ii. 301. gra- tifies sir John Cheke, i. 122. bought church lands of the crown, 123. made a baron and lord admiral, ii. 158. 159. a privy counsellor, C. 208. his crimes, M. II. i. 193. 195. 197. the protector's gentleness to- wards him, 194. courted prin- cess Elizabeth, 196. married queen Catharine Par, ib. his ill life, 197. ii. 188. his evil design against the protector a little before his death, i, 198. Latimer's opinion of him, ib. orders for his execution, 199. his marriage had been displeas- ing to the protector, 208. but ai)proved of by the king, ib. proved not to have been a pa- pist, ii. 187. the protector's conduct towards him vindi- cated against Hayward, ib. Seymour, Thomas, P. I. 235. A. III. i. 509. 653. Seymour, William, succeeded as earl of Hertford by letters patent of James I., A. HI. i. 509- Seymours, the, A. II. 11. 499. Seynteler, sir John, one of the commissioners for the dissolu- tion of St. Osyth's abbey, M. I. i. 408. Seywel, see Stayivel. Shacklock, Richard, of Lovain, sets forth in English Oso- rius's letter to queen Elizabeth, A. I. ii. 84. S. 76. his Pearl answered by Hartwel, II. ii. 710. Shafton, Dorset, the chantry of S. Anne de le Gon there, bought of the crown by T, Boxley and R. Reve, M. II. ii. 408. Shaftoro, Matthew, P. I. 568. 569- Shalcros, — C. 523. Shalford, — P. II. 432. Shall, or Shaller, Michael, verger of St. Paul's, W. I. 5. married Isabel Whitgift, ib. Shapwich, manor of, Somerset, bought of the crown by sir W. Petre, M. II. ii. 235. Sharington, sir William, M. II. ii. 151. in a commission to re- ceive a payment of money from France, i. 359. his frauds in the mint, 191. S. 36. his confes- sion, M. II. ii. 397. attainted, i. 192. restored to favour, 193. his wealth, 192. obtains certain church lands from the crown, ii. 405. Sharp, Robert, parson of Strethal, P. II. 340.381. 383.385. one of the sect of the family of love, A. II. i. 556. Sharpe, — A. II. ii. 581. Sharpe, — parson of Ratcliife, A. II. ii. 548. Sharpe, — minister of Fawseley, W. II. 7. Sharpe, Henry, A. III. ii. 603. 604. Sharpe, John, G. 604. 436. Sharps, Isabella, M. III. ii. 399. Shavelock, Roger, citizen of Lon- INDEX. 269 don, slew himself, A. I. ii. 47. contest about his goods, ib. Shaw, — S. 156. 157. Shaw, — W. I. 36. Shaw, James, imprisoned as a pa- pist, A. II. ii. 66 1. Shaw, Peter, parson of Bury, A. II. ii. 546. 548. Shawe, Robert, a recusant, A. I. i. 415. Shaxton, Nicholas, (as bishop of Salisbury,) C. 85. was of Gon- ville-hall, Cambridge, 696. one of the early professors of the gospel at the university, P. I. 13. consecrated bishop of Sa- lisbury, C. 53. M. III. i. 570. assists at the consecration of bishops Manning and Salis- bury, C. 55. his letter to Crumwel in answer to orders for preaching the king's supre- macy, M. I. i. 286. ii. 204. countenanced the reformation, i. 332. inhibits a monk from reading lectures, 333. Crum- wel interferes, and censures him, ib. his expostulatory let- ter to Crumwel, ii. 222. cen- sured by bishop Burnet, i. 334. defended by Strype, ib. con- cerned in the Institution of any Christian Man, C. 72. 77. as- sists at the consecration of bi- shop Holgate, 87. opposes the six articles in parliament, 104. 743. and resigns his see on their being passed, 104. M. I. i. 544. afterwards returned to the old religion, 544. C. 618. M. III. i. 570. an answer to his thirteen articles in favour of popery, published by Crowley, II. i. 228. master of St. Giles's hospital, Norwich, III, i. 571. his trouble in early life in conse- quence of a sermon he preach- ed, ib. Shedder, manor of, Somerset, given by Edward VI. to sir E. Seymour, M. II. i. 543. ii. 228. had belonged to the duke of Somerset, ib. Sheffield, Edmund lord, created a baron, M. II. ii. 159. John his son and heir, ib. i. 272. slain in a battle against the rebels at Norfolk, 272. Sheffield, John lord, A. II. ii. 3 1 8. son of the preceding, M. II. i. 272. ii. 159. a ward of Edward VI., i. 272. has the free elec- tion of his own marriage grant- ed him by the king in conse- quence of his Other's services, ii. 215. Sheffield, lady, in love with the earl of Leicester, A. II. i. 457. Sheffield, Sampson, of Christ's college, Cambridge, accused for a sermon of his, A. III. i. 718. his answer, ib. Shelden, Ralph, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 458. wise, and of good sufficiency, ib. his valuation in the subsidy book, ib. his wife a recusant, ib. Shelden, William, one of Edward VI. 's council for the marches in Wales, M. II. ii. 162. Sheldon, William, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii, 457, religious, ib. his valuation in the subsidy book, ib. Sheldrake, — C. 456. Shelley, Edward, executed for treason, A. IV. 275. Shelley, J. of Pateham, A. II. ii. 22. Shelley, James, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 597. Shellev, John, served in the Spa- nish armada, A. IV. 388. Shelley, Richard, M, II, i. 502. III. i. 348. (as lord prior of St. John's of Jerusalem, 360.) A. III. i. 274. 276, 376. 548. IV. 387. 388.392. despatched ayo INDEX. with letters to the emperor, M. III. i. 8. 9. returns upon queen Mary's access to the throne, 13. lord prior of St. John's of Jerusalem, A. I. i. 2. the occasion of his not return- ing to England, 261, notice of his going as turcopolier to Malta, 397. 398. Parry's inter- cessions for his being allowed to return to England, HI. i. 116. 117. his own request for permission, 183. offers to make discoveries, ib. employed for the state at Venice, 1 84. his professions of loyalty, i6. 185. why he stayed abroad, 185. is permitted by the queen to come home, though a catholic, 187. 190. further particulars of him and his family, 188. 197. was great with the pope and the king of Spain, 1 89. Shelley, Richard, nephew of the preceding, presents a petition to parliament in behalf of pa- pists, A. III. i. 432. is exa- mined in certain points by the privy-council, 432. refuseth to subscribe a writing drawn up to try his loyalty, 433. Shelley, Richard, of Worming- hurst, A. II. ii. 22. a fugitive beyond sea, 597. Shelley, Thomas, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Shelley, William, his wardship and marriage granted to sir A. Cook, M. II. ii. 246. Shelley, William, of Michael Grove, A. II. ii. 22. Shelley, William, patron of the living of Hurst, W. I. 264. Shelley, William, A. III. ii. 79. Shellies, the, of Michael Grove, Sussex, A. III. i. 182. 189. Shelmerden, Robert, a recusant, A. I. i. 415. Shelton, — M. I. ii. 256. 257. Shelton, Humphrey, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Shelton, sir John, dubbed a lent, of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Sheltons, the. Ay. 115. Shene, Henry V., founder of, M. I. i. 41 1. Shepey, — knight, married Isabel Cranmer, C. 602. Shepheard, Adam, has a license to preach, M. II. ii. 268. Shepherd, John, A. I. i. 36. Shepherd, Nicholas, fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, W. III. 14. 27. I. 89. 94. P. II. 175. elected master of St. John's college, G. 225. W. I. 32. Grindal's character of him, 32. puritanically inclined, 87. disliked as master, 140. de- ])rived of the headship by the fellows, A. II. i. 450. articles of accusation against him, 451. removed by a commission, W. I. 142. insult offered to him, H3- Shepherd, William, A. IV. 245. Shepton Mallet, Somerset, a guild there bought of the crown by J. Horner, M. II. ii. 404. Shepwith, Thomas, M. II. i. 425- Sherborn, sir Richard, A. III. ii. 491. see Sherburn. Sherborn hospital, near Durham, abp. Grindal's care about, G. 274. Sherbroke, Edmund, a favourer of Cartvvright, A. II. ii. 415.417. Sherburn, Robert, bishop of Chi- chester, his letter to Crumwel in answer to orders to preach the king's supremacy, M. I. ii. 205. preaches upon it, i. 286. resigns his see from age, C. 7 1 . see Sherborn and Shyrburn. Sheres, — sent ambassador to the king of the Romans, and INDEX. 371 to the kiug of Bohemia, M, II. ii. 77. Sherf, rectory of, Salop, bought of the crown by sir R. Hill, M. II. ii. 17. Sheriff, — G. 146. Sheriff of London, see T. Leigh and J. Machil, 1555. Sherington, — A. IV. 570. see Sharington. Sherland, — petty canon of Can- terbury, dejjrived for being married, C. 471. Sherland, John, A. IV. 439. Shert, John, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 49.S. Sherton, see Shirton. Shervvin, Ralph, A. III. i. 49. 121. indicted with Campion, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 360. at- tainted of treason. III. ii. 368. Sherwood, — A. III. i. 612. Sherwood, Elizabeth, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Sherwood, Reuben, proctor of the university of Cambridge, a favourer of Cartwright, A. I. ii. 376. IV. 604. II. ii. 416. Sherwood, Thomas, a papist, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Sherwood, William, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Sheterden, — burnt as an here- tic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i-356. Shether, Edmund, notice of him as proctor at Oxford, C. 163. one of the six preachers of Canterburycathedral,T52. 159. obliged by archbishop Cranmer to recant certain passages of a sermon, 134. 148. 150. en- tered, in consequence, into a conspiracy against him, 134. 163. 166. 168. 170. 171. 771. 775- Shewel, Robert, a seminary priest, A. IV. 307. Shilling, a silver coin, its value, 1548, M. II. i. 187. 488. half- shilling, ib. Shilling, half-shilling, quarter- shilling, silver coins, A. I. i. 397- Shingford, Paul, the crown charge on lord Darcy for the tithes of, M. II. i. 462. Shingleton, — recanted in the reign of queen Mary, C. 397. n. Ship, England built the largest known, 1512, S. i. the Great Harry, burnt, M. III. i. 34. the Elizabeth launched, temp, queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 288. Ships, some English taken by the French, 1521, M. I. i. 47. Shipperius, see Scepperius. Shipping very deficient, 1552, M. II. ii. 43. 493. Shipside, — C. 493. a servant of bishop Ridley, married his sis- ter, C. 298. his destruction endeavoured by bishop Boner, but prevented by bp. Heath, ib. Shirburne, the old name for Sa- lisbury, according to Stow, A. II. i. ^65. Shirley, sir Thomas, swallowed up nearly all the revenues of the church of Norwich by a patent for concealed lands, A. II. i. 450. called in question the whole revenue, W. I. 173. A. III. i. 488. 490. 491. ii. 377- 56—60. 574. 575. issue of the business, 62. 577. 578. 579. queen EHzabeth's debt to him, IV. 156. Shirton, Robert, master of Pem- broke-hall, Cambridge, em- ployed to select persons for cardinal Wolsey's college at Oxford, P. I. 10. dean of Stoke college, 15. his death, ib. Shoreham,Kent, lands there given by Q. Mary to cardinal Pole, M. III. i. 474. 475. 37^ INDEX. Short, — indicted with Campion, P. II. 167. Shory, John, A. I. i. 64. Shotesbroke, Berks, a college there bought of the crown bv T. and E. Weldon, M. II. if. 405- Shoveler, Thomas, confined for exercising the ministerial of- fice, not being in orders, W. I. 398. Shrewsbury, Francis Talbot, earl of, S. 36. M. II. i. 265. ii. 30. 73. III. i. 25. 322. 323. 356. 549. A. I. i. 58. one of the twelve mourners at Hen.VHI.'s funeral, M. II. ii. 291. 307. in the commission to examine the claims of service at Edw. VI. 's coronation, i. 24. lord presi- dent of the north, 32. ii. i6r. accompanies the protector in his expedition against Scot- land, i. 32. lord lieutenant of certain counties, 465. ii. 162. 202. goes in state to Cold- herber, his residence in Lon- don, i. 483. which had been given him out of the see of Durham, ii. 67. one of Ed- ward VI. 's privy counsellors, 160. in a commission for ex- amination of the officers of the treasuries, 209. the king's gift to him, 285. one of the twelve mourners at his funeral, 123. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and subscrib- ing to the succession as limited by the king, C. 912. one of queen J. Grey's counsellors, 433. 913. signed the council's order to the duke of North- umberland to lay down his arms against queen Mary, 434. one in whom the duke had re- posed a confidence, M. III. i. 4. present at the proclaiming of queen Mary, 21. a com- missioner to investigate bishop Boner's deprivation, 36. sent into the north to keep it quiet, 47. his forwardness to serve queen Mary, i6. assists at her coronation, 55. 57. lord pre- sident of the north, 154. 215. 350. orders the passages into Scotland to be watched, 136. comes to London, 321. writes to the lord chancellor about captain Drurys raising forces in the north, 490. orders sent to hina about the north, 558. his proceedings against the Scotch, ii. 70 — 98. 520 — 534. the six hundreds of Derbyshire that belonged to him, 115. one of queen Mary's privy counsellors, 160. continued as such by queen Elizabeth, ib. present at the proclaiming of queen Elizabeth, 1 1 8. one of those noblemen appointed to attend the queen upon her coming to London, A. I. i. 9. 41. ii. 390. which he does, i. 14. a special charge committed to him for the defence of the realm, 24. in a commission for the care of the kingdom, 35. dissented from the bill in par- liament for restoring the su- premacy to the crown, 84. and from the bill iov uniformity, S;c. 87. one of the royal visitors for the north, 245. Shrewsbury, George Talbot, earl of, son of the preceding, (as lord Talbot, M. III. ii. 3. 94.) A. I. ii. 197. II. i. 178. 203. 245. 368. 369. 371.374.499. 570. 572. ii. 19. 20. 91. 92. 93. 99. loi. 136. 159. 228. 229. 328. 394. III. i. 113- 21 1, ii. 405. (as lord Talbot,) his part at Henry VIII. 's fune- ral, M. II. ii. 300. 306. 309. made a knight of the bath at INDEX. 273 Edward VI.'s coronation, i. 36. (as earl of Shrewsbury,) elected a knight of the garter, A. I. i. 401. appointed by queen Eli- zabeth lord lieutenant of York- shire, &c. ii. 100. licensed to retain an hundred persons, 100. 101. intercedes in behalf of Mrs. Young, widow of the archbishop of York, 301. his expenses in having Mary queen of Scots in his custody, ib. or- dered by queen Elizabeth to expostulate with her upon her tampering with foreign princes, II. i. 76. gives intelligence of her to court, 206. his letter to the privy-council about mass- mongers and conjurers in the north, 260. 270. S. 127. the queen writes to him of her sickness and recovery, A. II. i. 317. 318. his grateful letter to lord Burghley in consequence, 319. a plot to bring him into disgrace with the queen, 372. which is suspected by her, 373. his offer of a match between one of his sons and one of lord Burghley's daughters de- clined, and why, 569. his knights' fees due to the queen, 579. goes to Buxton Wells with Mary queen of Scots, S. 151. n. obtains the bishopric of Car- lisle for Dr. May, A. II. ii. 53. 55. removes the queen of Scots to Chatsworth, 99. splendidly entertains the earl of Leicester, 137. the queen's letter of thanks to him for so doing, ib. his interest at court, 138. mat- ter between him and bishop Piers, the q\ieen's almoner, about deodands, 183. was one of the privy-council, 316. 707. i. 575. and lord marshal, ii. 707. lord president of the north, 709. a scandal that the VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. queen had a child by him. III. i. 313. Mary queen of Scots removed from his custody to that of sir A. Paulet, 358. pre- sent at her execution, 557. 559. anecdote respecting him and a French ambassador, P. II. 450. Shrewsbury, Gilbert Talbot, earl of, son of the preceding, (as lord Talbot,) G. 287. A. II. ii. 183. (as earl of Shrewsbury,) IV. 89. 90. 142. 225. n. W. II. 484. (as lord Talbot,) his correspondence with his father about affairs at court, A. II. i. 369. 456. 499. 532. ii. 90. 92. 159. 160. 209. 229. a member of the house of commons, i. 532. (as earl of Shrewsbury,) a friend to archbishop Whit- gift, W. II. 421. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, A. IV. 518. Shrewsbury, countess of, her let- ter to her husband, (Francis,) M. III. i. 47. related to lord Bray, 549. Shrewsbury, countess of, (Eliza- beth Hard wick,) Ay, 113. A. II. ii. 91. brought great wealth to her husband, (George,) 92. much liked at court, ib. invites queen Elizabeth to Chatsworth, 395- Shrewsbury, a grammar school founded there by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 280. 502. Shrines, Henry VIII. 's order for their removal, C. 131. Shryff, Robert, ordained, G. 54. Shuton, Warwickshire, lands there given by the earl of Leicester to endow the hospital at War- wick, A. IV. 42. n. Shutt, John, G. 604. Shyrburn, Richard, P. III. 138. T a74 INDEX. Sibbertoft, rectory of, annexed to the see of Oxford, M. II. i. 1 20. Sible Hedingham, Essex, a chan- try there bought of the crown by J. Lucas, M. II. ii. 403. Sibton, advowson of, bought of the crown by lady Denny, M. II. ii. 233. had belonged to the duke of Norfolk, ib. Sibton, house of, Suffolk, part of its possessions bought of the crown by E. Spainy and J. Bas- pole, M. II. ii. 238. 239. Sicily, king of, see Robert. Sickness, a new kind of, in the court and city, 1580, A. II. ii. . 394- Sidal, Syddal, Henry, concerned in the royal visitation, T547, C. 209. a vigorous defender of the truth, 285. in a commis- sion against anabaptists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. recants under queen Mary, C. 285. 519. exceedingly busy in tam- pering with archbishop Cran- mer, 550. n. P. I. 154. sub- scribed to queen Elizabeth's supremacy, M. III. i. 394. P. I. 154. canon of Christ Church, Oxford, and vicar of Waltham- stow, 154. Sidney, Dorothy, daughter of Sid- ney, earl of Leicester, married to colonel T. Cheke, Ch. 146. Sidney, sir Henry, C. 297. M. III. i. 348. A. I. i. 187. 206. 341. ii. 119. 221. II. i. 13. 178. ii. loi. 160. 196. G.586. A. III. i. 85. 404, S. 105. knighted, Ch. 66. M. II. i. 499. sent ambassador to the French king, ii. 18. gentleman of Ed- ward VI. 's privy-chamber, 164. 245. certain offices bestowed on him, 234. the earl of War- wick, to whom he was related, dies at his house at Pensehurst, III. i. 320. lord president of Wales, A. I. ii. 23. II. ii. 708. elected a knight of the garter, 116. made lord deputy of Ire- land, 204. 211. bishop Whit- gift his deputy in Wales whilst he was lord lieutenant of Ire- land, W. I. 164. A. II. ii. 50. takes offence at some part of the bishop's conduct, W. I. 168. 169. is opposed by the bishop in his application for a new ecclesiastical commission for the marches of Wales, 193. settles a difference at Ludlow, 198. bishop Whitgift a check upon his exactions in Wales, 219. rigorous in his govern- ment in Wales, A. III. i. 172. 173. W. I. 219. bishop Scory's letter of complaint against him and his council, A. III. i. 171. one of queen Elizabeth's great friends, P.I. 140. a privy coun- sellor, A. II. ii. 317. 707. Sidney, lady Mary, wife of sir Henry, S. 105. Sidney, sir Philip, son of sir Henry, A. II. ii. 226. III. i. T07. ii. 623. travels into France, II. i. 215. his uncle's (the earl of Leicester) letter to Wal- singham concerning him, ib. escapes from the massacre at Paris, 226. his letter to queen Elizabeth against her French match, 218. ii. 240. 641. a motion for his marriage with Anne Cecil, when both were children, i. 178. III. i. 85. ex- tract from Dr. Powel's dedica- tion of his History of Wales to him, 403. appointed go- vernor of Flushing, 420. goes with the earl of Leicester into the Low Countries, 594. fell at Zutphen, 656. was colonel of Zealand, 674. a clause in his will, 656. INDEX. 275 Sidney, sir Robert, brother of sir Philip, A. III. i. 656. governor of Flushing, IV. 53. Sidnev, sir William, one of the heirs of Brandon, duke of Suf- folk, M. II. i. 493. gentleman of Edward VI. 's privy-chamber, 542. certain lands given him by the king, ih. ii. 225. buried, Sidney, Mrs., one of the ladies who accompanied Q. Mary in her triumphal passage through the city, M, III. i. 55. Sidney Sussex college, founded by Frances, countess of Sussex, A. III. ii. 115. her last will to that effect, ib. Sidon, Christopher, bishop of, as- sisted at the consecration of certain bishops, C. 42. 53. see T. Chetham. Sigismond, king of Poland, on what occasion Edw. VI. wrote a letter of thanks to him, M. II. i. 459. Sigismond III., king of Poland, notice of a peace between him and the great Turk, A. IV. 214. 215. by queen Elizabeth's interference, 220. 222. Sigoigne, governor of Dieppe, S. 121. A, II. i. 245. ii. 18. Silva, don Juan de, conde de Por- tulegre, one of those to whom the government of Portugal was intrusted, 1593, A. IV. , 251. 252. 253. Silvius Antonianus, A. IV, 114. Sime, — M. I. i. 115. Simier, — French ambassador, A. II. ii. 164. 230. 244. solicits amours with queen Elizabeth for Monsieur, 163. 229. Siminges, Dr., P. II. 432. Simberus, Josiah, A. I. ii. 491. 541. 545. II. i. 508. a minister at Zuric, hospitable to the English exiles, M. III. i. 232. dedicated his Oration on Mar- tyr's Life and Death to bishop Jewel, A. I, i. 430. Simmons, Henry, parson of Kils- ton, A. III. i. 40. Simms, John, an Arian, articles charged against, M. III. i. 541. see Symms. Simner, Davy, M. II. i. 430. Simond, — S. 222. Simons, — P. II. 434. Simons, Richard, ordained, G. .59- Simons, Simon, prebendary of Windsor, his death, M. II. ii. 268. see Symonds and Symons. Simpson, Cuthbert, arraigned and burnt as an heretic, temp. queen Mary, M. III. i. 347. ii. 64. 1 10. 148. Simpson, George, a recusant, A. I. i. 412. Simpson, Nicholas, P. I. 103. II. 312. 433. G, 286. canon of Canterbury, W. I. 596. Simpson, Richard, M. III. ii. .392- Simpson, Robert, W. II. 428. Simpson, Thomas, alias Iligate, a seminarv priest, notice of, A. IV. 262. ' Simson, David, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. see Sympson. Sin, original, differences respect- ing, among the imprisoned protestants, temp, queen Mary, _C. 502. Sinclair, lord, one of the lords of the articles in Scotland, A. III. _ i. 440. Sion college library has a copy of Coverdale's Bible, A. II. i. 323. and of the editions of 1540, . 154^ 325- Sion house had belonged to the duke of Somerset, but was for- feited to the crown, M. II. i. 388. 276 INDEX. Sion, nuns of, enclosed in, M. III. ii. II. Sisinius, an heretic bishop of the Novatians, first began the wear- ing of the white rochet, P. ill. J?- Sittingborn, advowson of, Kent, annexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Sixpences, first coinage of, M. II. i. 600. Six-pound piece, a Scotch gold coin, its English value, A. IV. .535- 536. 541- Sixtus v., pope, A. III. ii. 88- 401.554. 584. 589.590. IV. 26. 138. in a league with the king of Spain and duke of Savoy against Geneva, A. III. i. 596. concerned with the king of Spain in the invincible ar- mada against England, ii. 6. notice of his bull for the catholic king to invade Eng- land, 76. in a conspiracy a- gainst queen Elizabeth's life, IV. 2. Skamler, see Scambler. Skedmore, John, A. I. i. 413. see Skidmore. Skelthorp, — a free-wilier in pri- son gained over by Bradford, C. 504. Skelton, — G. 2. Skelton, — M. I. i. 132. Skelton, — father and son, con- cerned in a murder, M. I. i. 538. Skevington's gives, what, M. III. i. 400. Skidmore, John, one of Edward VI. 's council in the marches of Wales, M. II. ii. 162. see Skedmore. Skinner, — a priest, A. II. i. 270. Skinner, — A. III. ii. 191. Skinner, Anthony, one of the examiners of the court of chan- cery, M. II. i. 512. in a com- mission to reform the eccle- siastical laws, C. 388. Skinner, Ralph, A. II. ii. 497. ordained, G. 73. obtains the deanery of Durham at arch- bishop Parker's recommenda- tion, P. I. 173. preaches a recantation sermon at Paul's Cross respecting a note-book he had printed, A. I. i. 402. his death, 545, Skinner, Vincent, of Lincoln's Inn, and secretary to lord Burghley, A. III. i. 80. trans- lated Montanus's History of the Inquisition of Spain, I. ii. 305. Skip, John, P. I. 15. C. 566. of great reputation in Cambridge, P.I. II. was of Gonville-hall, C. 696. one of the early pro- fessors of the gospel there, P. I. 13. one of those who de- clined going to cardinal Wol- sey's college at Oxford, 11. chaplain and almoner to queen Anne Bolen, 14. M. II. ii. 171. sent to Cambridge to preach the king's supremacy, I. i. 260. archdeacon of Dorset, C. 77. concerned in The Institution of any Christian Man, ib. made bishop of Hereford, 108. at first supported archb|}. Cran- mer in reforming religion, but afterwards fell off from him, 109, 141. and tried to per- suade him to give way, 109. in a commission for discussion of certain questions in religion, no. in another for consecrat- ing bishop Boner, 123. 129. and bishop Heath, 1 29. present at the convocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. concerned in the revision of the Institution, &c. 583. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 9. protested in parliament against the bill au- INDEX. 277 thorizing the Book of Common Prayer, 134. popishly inclined, 529. his death, C. 385. 432. leased away for two hundred years the London residence of the see, M. II. ii. 171. Skipton, Solas, tithes of, Glouces- tershire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 6. Skipvvith, — A. L i. 447. Skipwith, Roulet, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Skoningks, Adriana, G. 500. 162. Skurlock, — A. II. ii. roi. Slaide, John, a papist, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Slane, Eleanor, daughter of James lord Slane, married to Richard Aylmer, Ay. 216. Slany, Richard, vicar of Penne, deprived for being married, M. III. i. 169. Slany, sir Stephen, lord mayor of London, A. IV. 314. Slapton, Devon, the college or chantry there converted into the residence of sir T. Arundel, M. II. i. 542. ii. 229. bought of tlie crown, upon his attaint, by J. Peter of Exeter, ib. Slater, Nicholas, ordained, G. 59. Slater, George, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. ii. 417. Sleford, manor of, Lincolnshire, bought of the crown by arch- bishop Cranmer for his see, C. 403, 910. Sleidanus, Joannes, C. 781. M. II. i. 382. promised a pension by Edward VI., to enable him to write a history of the re- formation, C. 278. Ch. 55. archbishop Cranmer's favour to him, C. 595. some account of him, 596 — 598. his letters to Cecil on the state of affairs in Germany, and about a di- ploma for his salary, 1005. 1007, 1008. loio. 1014. his letter to Cecil and Cheke con- cerning his Commentaries, and another intended work, loii. Slingesby, — G. 243. Slowe, John, M. III. ii. 405. Smalcald, diet at, respecting the ubiquitarian controversy, Ay, 41- Smarte, Edmund, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Smellev, Alexander, ordained, G. Smeton, Mark, a nuisician, an accuser of queen Anne Bolen, M. L i. 435. Smith, Dr., of Trinity-hall, Cam- bridge, one of the early gos- pellers in that university, M. I. i. 487. 568. P. I. 13. ap- prehended for heresy, ]M. I. ii. 179. C. 125. Smith, — vicar of Christ Church, Twinham, C. 248. Smith, Dr., preaches at the burn- ing of bishops Latimer and Ridley, M. III. i. 361. after- wards master of Whittington college, ib. Smith, — a merchant sent to the Tower for a conspiracy, M. III. i. 472. condemned to per- petual imprisonment, 506. Smith, — fellow of Eton college, P. I. 206. Smith, — P. II. 434. Smith, — A. II. ii. 142. Smith, — concerned with Cam- pion, the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 359. Smith, — justice, A. III. i. 200. Smith, — of St. John's college, Cambridge, ran away from col- lege, being a papist, VV. I. 520. A. III. ii. 606. Smith, — of Blackfriars, a puri- tanical writer, A. III. ii. 103. 104. Smith, — a Jesuit and traitor, A. IV. 143. 229. '1' 3 278 INDEX. Smith, — clerk of the privy-coun- cil, A. IV. 341. Smith, Abel, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. II. i. 451- Smith, Agnes, of Rideswel, sus- pected of heresy, M. I. i. 133. Smith, Agnes, sister of sir Tho- mas, S. 4. Smith, Alexander, sacristan of St. Paul's, suspended, G. 90. Smith, Alice, sister of sir Tho- mas, S. 4. Smith, Andrew, a puritan, in pri- son, A. IV. 130. Smith, Bridget, wife of sir Wil- liam, and daughter of T. Fleet- wood, S. 1 74. Smith, sir Clement, M. II. i. 45 1 . married the sister of queen J. Seymour, 588. his death, ib. Smith, Clement, of Queen's col- lege, Cambridge, S. 157. Smith, David, ordained, G. 73. Smith, sir Edward, bart., S. 30. n. 48. 137. 149. 150. 153. 172. Strype dedicates his Life of sir Thomas to him, ep. cled. iii. his virtues and religious constancy, ix. an useful magistrate, ib. Smith, Edward, S. 260. Smith, Edward, W. I. 472. Smith, George, brother of sir Thomas, S. 4. 151. a mer- chant in London, 5. sir Tho- mas's bequests to him, 155. 156. 170. one of his executors, 158. father of sir William, 15 I. 174. Smith, George, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i. 495- "• 551- Smith, Henry, merchant of Lon- don, has a license to bring foreigners into the country to make glass, as in Normandy, M. II. ii. 250. Smith, Henry, lecturer of St. Clement's, favoured bv lord Burghley, Ay. 100, his ser- mons a common family book, ib, suspended by bishop Ayl- mer, 101. for what reasons, ib. his answer to them, ib. satisfies the bishop, 102. the parish petition that he may have the living, ib. not proba- ble that he had it, 103. Smith, Hugh, one of those mem- bers who absented themselves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. in- dicted in consequence, ib. Smith, Jane, sister of sir Thomas, S.4. Smith, Jennette, M. III. i. 410, Smith, John, of Bristow, coat of arms granted to him, S. 2. n. Smith, John, of Rideswel, sus- pected of heresy, M. 1. i. 133. Smith, John, of Walden, father of sir Thomas, S. 2. of good rank, ib. bought a chantry at Long Ashton, ib. and the guild of \^'^alden, ib. grant of a coat of arms to him, 3. a favourer of the reformation, ib. was high sheriff of Essex and Hert- ford, ib. where buried, ib. Smith, John, son of the preced- ing, S. 4. a benefactor to Wal- den, ib. treasurer of the new corporation there, ib. father of William, 158. Smith, John, deprived from West Cammel, temp, queen Mary, M. IH. i. 353. Smith, John, M. III. ii. 321, Smith, John, C. 456. Smith, John, ordained, G. 55. Smith, John, archdeacon of Lan- daff, subscribed by proxy, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. did not vote upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 506. Smith, John, a puritan, P.I. 481. INDEX. 279 G. 171. released from prison, 201. Smith, sir John, related to Edward VI., A. IV. 413. sent ambassa- dor to the king of Spain, II. ii. 7. 10. returns home again, 99. served in Hungary against the Turk, IV. 413. his letter to lord Burghley on the sup- pression of his book concern- ing military discipline, 64. committed to the Tower for words spoken by him to the militia near Colchester, 413. his letter to lord Burghley apologizing for these words, 414. and touching his submis- sion, 415. and with thanks for his release from the Tower, 417- Smith, John, notice of his ser- mon at Cambridge asserting the Jewish Sabbath, A. III. i. 496. cited in consequence be- fore the vice-chancellor, ib. Smith, John, a conjurer, A. III. ii. 124. 125. 615. 616. Smith, sir Lan., M. Ill, ii. 92. Smith, Margaret, sister of sir Thomas, S. 4. Smith, Nicholas, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. votes against the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. Smith, Peter, A. I. i. 32. 35. Smith, Philippa, second wife of sir Thomas, S. 48. 153. Smith, Quintin, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Smith, Richard, regius professor of divinity at Oxford, C. 228. M. II. i. 212. 326. III. i. 174. 442. 475. C. 609. P. III. 299, one of those commissioned to compose The Institution of a Christian Man, C. 77. his judg- ment concerning confirmation, 113. M. I. ii. 358. publishes a defence of the mass, II. i. 52. C. 900. answered by archbp. Cranmer, 365. 367. 371. twice recants, M. II. i. 62. C, 243. his recantation, 795. bishop Gardiner offended at it, 244. affronts archbishop Cranmer, 245. his inconstancy, ib. chal- lenges P. Martyr to dispute, 284. who declines, and why, 285. conditions of a disputa- tion agreed on, ib. fled before the day came into Scotland, 286. deprived of his professor- ship at Oxford, M. II. i. 63. flies abroad, 64. to Brabant, C. 609. publishes his book on the celibacy of priests against P. Martyr," M. II. i. 64. 419. which is answered by Martyr, C. 378. Humphrey's epigram on his writing this book, ib. calumnies in it against bishop Hoper, M. II. i. 66. 69. and reflections upon archbishop Cranmer, 68. why offended with him, 69, 70. observations on this work, 65 — 68. anec- dote of his upholding justifi- cation by faith to deceive La- timer, 70. concerned against archbishop Cranmer in his trial at Oxford, C. 480. 535. 1079. 1080. 1085. 1089. 1092. com- mitted to the custody of arch- bishop Parker, P. I. 95. de- clares his detestation of his book against the marriage of priests, ib. sent up from Ox- ford to the council by the royal visitors, ib. archbishop Parker writes in his favour to the council and the visitors, 96. overreaches the archbishop in getting his sureties discharged, 97. overreached him again on another occasion, 98. his slan- der of P. Martyr answered, A. T 4 a8o INDEX. I. i. 431. printed at Louvain an answer to a disputation at Cambridge upon Christ's de- scent into hell, Ch. 90. died at Doway, P. I. 360. leaving his papers to Dorman, who pro- bably made use of them in his own writings, ib. A. I. ii. 247. Smith, Richard, G. 88. 91. Smith, Richard, possessed an ex- cellent library, C. 15. 528. which was sold by auction, 528. Smith, Robert, imprisoned for religion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i, 342. burnt at Ux- bridge, 358. S. 51. his letter to his wife, 51. his courageous death, 52. Smith, Robert, ordained, G. 59. Smith, Roger, cousin of Dr. Richard, P. I. 97. Smith, Roger, in a commission against popish seminaries in Rutlandshire, W. II. 107. Smith, Simon, of Gonville-hall, Camb. one of the early gos- pellers there, M. I. i. 487. P. I. 13- Smith, Thomas, monk of St. An- drew's, Northampton, M. I. i. 404. Smith, Thomas, a popish poet, M. I. i. 572. Smith, sir Thomas, M. II. ii. 73. III. i. 86. ii. T45. 146. A. I. i. 151. 440. 468. 546. 547. 558. ii. 89. 92. 93. 94. 115. T16. 117. 123. 124. 208.348. II. i. 35. 49. 65. 72. 74. 75. 82. 118. 121. 130. 132. 176. 179. 203. 216. 226. 245. 250. 256. 259. 260. 269. 316. ii. 499. P. II. 138. A. II. i. 458. ii. 41. Ch. 151. Ay. 5. born at Saffron Walden, S. i. in 1512, ib. Camden and Fox in- correct in fixing the date of his birth, ib. son of John Smith, of good rank, 2. brought up by his father in the reformed religion, 3. his mother Agnes Charnock, ib. assists his bro- ther George, a merchant, 5. supposed to have been at school at Waklen, ib. which school he persuaded Edward VI. to make a royal foundation, ib. went to Cambridge young, 6. admitted in Queen's college, 8. Ch. 6. calculated the nativity of Cheke, 4. appointed, together with Cheke, the king's scholars at Cambridge, 6. he and Cheke the greatest scholars in Eng- land, M. II. i. 530. applies himself diligently to the study of polite authors, S. 10. chosen fellow of Queen's college at nineteen, ib. becomes an ex- cellent Greek scholar, and is called upon to read the Greek lecture, ib. consults with Cheke on reforming the pronunciation of the Greek, ib. Ch. 14. but differs somewhat from him, S. 1 1 . lectures in his corrected manner, ib. 12. which be- comes general, 13. appointed university orator, ib. much ad- mired and followed in that office, 14. goes to Orleans, 15. induces Landrinus to adopt his mode of pronouncing Greek, 16. proceeds to Paris, ib. his conference with Strazelius, ib. 17. and with a Grecian, 17. 1 8. takes his degree in civil law at Padua, 18. returns home, ib. proceeds doctor of law at Cambridge, and is ap- pointed king's professor of law, ib. lectures in civil law, Ch. 13. appointed chancellor to Good- rich, bishop of Ely, S. 19. M. II. i. 5 17. has several pupils of rank, S. 19. refines the writ- ing and pronouncing of Eng- INDEX. 381 lish, 20. and draws up an al- phabet for that purpose, 21. 183. and another for the Greek, 22. which occasions a contro- versy in the university, ib. in which he takes a share, 23. 24. and complies, after a confer- ence with bishop Gardiner, chancellor of the university, 24. 25. his attachment to, and public defence of, the reformed religion, 26. vice-chancellor of the university, M. I. i. 578. sent by the university to queen C. Par to entreat her to inter- cede with the king, S. 27. ac- quits himself with great ap- plause in his academical exer- cises, ib. his preferments, in- come, and expenditure at Cam- bridge, 28. has the living of Leverino;ton, ib. goes to court, and is taken notice of by Henry VIII., 29. applied to by his uni- versity, when they feared the king would seize the colleges, ib. they are excepted out of the act by his endeavours, 30. re- moves into the protector's fa- mily, 29. is master of requests, 30. steward of the stanneries, ib. provost of Eton, ib. dean of Carlisle, 31. secretary of state, i6. 33. knighted, 31. purchases of the crown two houses, the manor of Yarlington, and the college of Derby, ib. marries E. Carkyke, ib. and secondly Philippa Welford, relict of sir J. Hambden, 32. suffers from the unjust imputations of the duchess of Somerset, ib. impli- cated in the duke's troubles, 33. imprisoned, but soon hbe- rated, ib. goes ambassador to the emperor at Brussels, ib. M. II. i. 165. 169. 606. his letter from thence to the protector, S. 34- 35- returns, 35. in a commission against anabap- tists, 37. C. 254. 258. M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. one of the royal visitors for the university of Cambridge, S. 37. G. 6. Ch. 40. a commissioner in the trial of bishop Boner, S. 38. C, 269. 270. M. III. i. 36. much to the bishop's dissatisfaction, S. 38. his firmness on this occa- sion, 39. 40. reprehends the bishop, 41. he, lord Paget, and archbishop Cranmer write to the lords seceding from the protector, C. 275. 276. his fi- delity to the protector in his fall, S. 42. dismissed from the secretaryship in consequence, ib. a witness against bishop Gardiner, 43. his moderation in this affair, 44. purchases of the crown the manor of Over- ston, Northamptonshire, and divers other lands, ib. in a commission to reform the ec- clesiastical laws, C. 388. sent in an embassy to France, S. 44. M. II. i. 473. 478. ii. 243. one of those appointed to treat with the French commission- ers about sea affairs, i. 575. S. 45. goes to Carlisle, and ar- ranges the affairs of that chap- ter, 44. 45. removed from his places at the accession of queen Mary, 46. cited before the queen's commissioners, C. 439. deprived of the provostship of Eton, and of the deanery of Carlisle, S. 46. his life preserv- ed, and an annuity allowed him, ib. retires into Essex, ib. sheltered through a pope's bull by a friend, 47. 48. and favoured by bp. Gardiner, 49. his letter to the bishop, ib. his grief at the miseries of his country, 52. re- called to court on queen Eli- zabeth's accession, 56. assists 282 INDEX. in the review of king Edward's Book of Common Prayer, 57. the commissioners for which met at his honse, ib. P. 1. 70. in a commission for considera- tion of things necessary for the parliament, init. queen Eliza- beth, A. I. i. 36. either he or J. Hales drew up a device for the reformation of religion, which was for the most part followed, 74. 75. 76. in a com- mission for visiting the dioceses of Norwich and Ely, 248. em- ployments given him, S. 57. an active magistrate, ib. sent to receive the duke of Finland, 59. composes a book about the queen's marrying, 60. 184. sent on an embassy to France, 65. strives to maintain peace, 66. has a conference with the pope's legate, ib. which gives dissatisfaction at court, 67. his letters and conduct approved, 68.69. 70. commanded to speak only in Latin, 70. has a dis- pute with sir N. Throgmorton, ib. writes to lord R. Dudley, 71. confined in France, but soon released, 72. treats for peace, ib. desires Haddon to acquaint him how his conduct is approved in England, ib. Haddon's letter to him, 72. 73. corresponds with Cecil, and sends him books, 75. cor- rects Haddon's Answer to Oso- rius, 77. A. I. ii. 69, his judg- ment of it, 83. his dispute with the chancellor of France about its publication, S. 77 — 80. Ce- cil's friendship for him, 82, Ce- cil praises him, 94. concludes a peace with France, 83. fi- nishes his book of the Com- monwealth, 84. 88. despatches his son into England, 85. 86. relieved by Hoby, and returns home, 86. angry with Cecil, 87. his mode of passing his time in France, 89. Haddon's appeal to him respecting Ci- cero, 91. despatched again into France in order to demand Ca- lais, 94. 95. A. I. i. 550. his letter, on his return, for some preferment, to Cecil, S. 96. from 1567 to 1570. lives in the country, 97. commits certain women accused of witchcraft, 1 00. engages in a speculation, ib. and forms a society for making copper from iron, 103. A. II. i. 520. the patent, S. 282. his two letters on the subject, A. II. ii. 555. 557. the project fails, S. 105. support- ed a bill in parliament for coming to church and receiv- ing the communion, A. II. i. 92. appointed again ambassa- dor to France, S. 107. A. H. i. 63. 155. 210. 21 T. his con- duct and abilities in a con- ference there with the king and queen-mother about Mary queen of Scots, S. 108. A. II. i. 70, his conference with de Foix, S. JIG. suffers from the cold in France, ib. his conver- sations with the queen- mother on a marriage between queen Elizabeth and the duke of Alen^on, iii. 112. writes to lord Burghley on the subject, 113. 114. and again on the irresolution of the queen and court, 1 15. A. II. i. 129. the queen of Navarre consults witli him, S. 116. stirred as much as he could, as ambassador, for the marriage of queen Eliza- beth with the prince of Na- varre, A. II. i. 67. his letters to Walsingham on the mas- sacre at Paris, 119. 121, 122. 244. 257. returns home, S. INDEX. 283 117. made chancellor of the order of the garter, ib. and se- cretary of state, ib. A. II. i. 34. remains with the queen at Windsor, S. 124. despatches much business there, ib. pro- cures the return of Walsing- ham from France, 125. his let- ters touching the supineness of the French king with regard to Flanders, 126. his advice about the largess to the earl of Desmond, ib, causes Green, a papist, to be apprehended, P. II. 134. writes to the earl of Shrewsbury about mass-mon- gers and conjurers, S. 128. procures aid for the regent of Scotland, 130. procures a pa- tent and sends a colony to the Ardes in Ireland, 131. his in- structions to his son there, 134. who is slain, 135. spends lOjOooZ. on the lands there, 137. penned the order of coun- cil to the ecclesiastical com- missioners for uniformity, &c. A. II. i. 384. recommends a master for Aylsham school, 432. he and three other privy counsellors sign a letter in fa- vour of the prophesyings in the diocese of Norwich, P. II. 361. A. II. i. 477. fatigued with bu- siness, S. 139. 141. condemns the queen's irresolution, 140. his conversation with her on Irish affairs, 141. 142. draws up a proclamation against re- solute beggars, and persons carrying dags and pistols, 143. procures an act for corn rents for colleges and certain schools, 144. 145.146. A. II. ii. 69. IV. 609. an ecclesiastical commis- sioner, G. 310. notice of his illness, S. 146. A. II. ii. 90. writes about it to lord Burgh- ley, S. 147. goes to Buxton, A. II. ii. 136. unsuccessfully treated by his physician, S. 149. retires into Essex, 150. looks over his writings, 148. dies, 151. A. II. ii. 152. his funeral, S. 151. his monument and epitaph, lb. description of his person and picture, 153. his will, 154 — 158. Cecil's character of him, A. IT. i. 155. was one of queen Elizabeth's privy-council, ii. 707. signs va- rious orders as such, C, 252. A. IV. 580. II. ii. 519. P. II. 347. was again dean of Car- lisle, temp, queen Elizabeth, G. 125. A. I. ii. 255. 256. he and bishop Taylor old ac- quaintances at Cambridge, M. II. ii. 1 68. had a house at An- kerwick, formerly a nunnery, ib. studied astrology greatly, A. II. i. 23, wrote a good hand, Ch. 164. an admirable scholar and wise statesman, S. pref. V. a great planter, i. falsely accused of covetousness, 5. of other vices, 176. his general proficiency in learning commemorated by G. Harvey, 19. and by another poet, 118. his despatch of public business, 124. his treatise on Roman coins, 148. an excellent metal- ist and chymist, 30. skilled in medicine, 160. his advertise- ments and counsels to noble- men, 53. 54. his knowledge in mathematics, astronomy, &c. 160. an excellent linguist and good historian, 164. his ora- tory, ib. skill in architecture, ib. his apophthegms, 178. ob- servations on his character, 159. writes on the manage- ment of the poor, 166. a be- nefactor to places of learning, 168. his offices and dignities, 169. his religious opinions, 284 INDEX. J 75. his wealth, 169. plate, 170. 171. houses, 169 — 173. his library, 165. 274. his works, 165. most of his tracts and pa- pers lost, pref. vi. vii. accord- ing to Mr. Baker he was not the author of the book To the Queen's poor deceived Subjects, &c. A. IV. 603. Smith, Thomas, base and only son of sir Thomas, assists his father in his embassies, S. 85. 86. 95. goes to his father's colony in Ireland, and is slain there, 133. 135. Smith, Thomas, his petition about the land granted in Ireland to sir Thomas, S. 260. Smith, sir Thomas, his loyalty to Charles I. and his sufferings in consequence, S. 137. 172. n. the father of sir Edward, 1 72. «. Smith, Thomas, ordained, G. 54. Smith, Thomas, prebendary of Norwich, A. I. ii. 44. P. I. 492. 496. III. 159. Smith, Thomas, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. II. 1.451. Smith, Thomas, in a commission to visit the hospitals at Salt- wood and Hith, W. I. 516. Smith, Dr. Thomas, C. prefixv'i. Smith, see Pulleyn and Smyth. Smiths, family of, in the Ardes, Ireland, S. 135. Smith, sir William, nephew and heir of sir Thomas, S. 151. 174. 260. 261. claims his uncle's property in the Ardes, but is defrauded of it, 137. re- builds Theydon Mount church, 151. dies, 158. Smith, William, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. a fugitive beyond sea, 597. Smith, William, P. III. 136. Smithe, William, M. Ill, ii. 394. 404. Smithson, — A. III. ii. 188. Smithson, — A. IV. 388. Smutches, Alexander, Edward VI. applies to St. John's college, Oxford, for a fellowship for him, M. II. i. 534. II. ii. 273. Smyth, Christopher, notary pub- lic, employed in archbishop Cranmer's trial, C. 1070. 1071. 1074. 1099. I[00. uoi. Smyth, John, present at Cran- mer's trial, C. 1090. as provost of Oriel college, A. I. ii. 504. Smyth, William, M. III. i. 388. Smyth, William, A. II. i. 516. see Smith. Smythwick, William, obtains an indulgence from the pope, S. 47. 48. which he uses to screen sir T. Smith in the reign of queen Mary, ib. Snagg, — a member of parlia- ment, A. II. i. 93. Snape, Anthony, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Snape, Edmund, A. III. i. 692. W. II. 58. he and other puri- tans summoned before the ec- clesiastical commission, 5. 6. 13. articles charged against them, 6, 9. imprisoned. Ay. 205. signs a petition for his enlargement, A. IV. 103. pro- ceedings against him in the star-chamber, W. II. 81 — 96. III. 242 — 285. Snathe, sir William, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI.'s co- ronation, M. II. i. 37. Snecam, — a puritan, W. I. 504. Snelleschal, house and scite of the priory of, Bucks, bought of the crown by sir T. Palmer, M. II. ii. 407. Snelling, see White. Snells, George, a puritan, in pri- son, A. IV. 130. Snells, the. A, II. ii. 420. Snepphinus, D., lectured in He- INDEX. 285 brew at Jena, Ay. 1 1 . called the other Luther, ib. Snorings, manor of, Norfolk, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Norwich, M. II. i. 368. had belonged to the priory of Blackborough, ib. Snoth, see Suoth, Snow, John, dean of Bristol, M. II. ii. 265. Snow, Richard, in a commission to inquire into church goods in Bedfordshire, M. II. ii. 21 1. Snowbal, — and his wife, bishop Gardiner's designs against them and others at court, C. 157. Snowdel, Thomas, a priest, nick- named Parson Chicken, carted through Cheapside for unclean- ness, M. III. i, 174. Soane, William, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Socrates, C. 755. S. 14. 246. Sodor and Man, bishops of, see H.Man, 1546 — 1556. T.Stan- ley, 1558 — 1570. J. Merick, 1576—1599- Soleman, — a leader of the re- bellion in the west, 1 549, M. II. i. 281. Solicitor-general, see W. Cordell, 1553 — 1557- ^- Jiosewell, 1558 — 1565. T.Bromley, 1568 — 1579. T. Fleming, 1594— 1603. Solomont, Nicholas, in a com- mission to fortify Jersey, M. II. i. 465. ii. 201. Solon, C. 755. Some, — a priest, imprisoned upon the six articles, M. I. i. 567. Some, Robert, an adherent of Cartwright, A. I. ii. 373. 376. II. i. 2. ii. 415. 416. preaches at Cambridge against plurali- ties and nonresidence, I. ii. 373. Some, Dr. Robert, master of Pe- ter-house college, Cambridge, Ay. 33. A. IV. 229. 435. W. II. 437. notice of his Treatise touching the Ministry, &c. A. III. ii. 152. and of his Defence, in answer to Penry, 153. vice- chancellor of Cambridge, 115. IV. 105. favours Calvin's ex- planation of predestination, W. II. 229. his part in the pro- ceedings against Barret in con- sequence, 230. 231. 233. 235. 238. 244. 246. 248. 257. and with Dr. Baro, 255. 283. 284. 306. A. IV. 322. reflects in a sermon on archbishop Whit- gift, W. II. 253. resented by the archbishop, 254. favourable ac- count of the sermon by certain heads of the colleges, 256. Somerdyne, Richard, G. 604. 436. Somerfield, — A. IV. 94. Somerham, the poor of, bishop Cox's bequest to, A. III. i. 37- Somers, — S. 71. Somers, John, G. 87. Somers, William, dispossessed of a devil by Darrel, A. III. i. 636. W. II. 341. the course used, 342. taken into custody as a counterfeit, 343. examined, 344. confesses his dissimula- tion, 345. Somers, see Hawy. Somerset, — M. III. i. 51. Somerset, Charles, brother of the earl of Worcester, A. ii. i. 255. Somerset, sir George, M. III. i. 14. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 9. Somerset, Thomas, imprisoned for recusancy, A. I. i. 417- Somerset, Edward Seymour, vis- count Beauchamp, earl of Hert- ford, duke of, C. 96. 208. Ch. 22. 46. 170. S. 41. M. II. i. 50. 114. C. 252.253.336. M. Il.ii. 112. 250. S. 170. A. II. ii. 467. HI. i. 505. ii. 389. (as viscount Beauchamp,) assisted at Ed- 286 INDEX. ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 6. 7. (as earl of Hertford,) a privy counsellor, 1540, I. i. 565. one of those consulted by Henry VIII. about his will, III. i. 455. his conference with sir W. Paget at king Henry's death, II. i. 17. Paget attri- buted his misfortunes to his not following his advice, ib. repairs to Edward VI. imme- diately upon his father's death, 18. does homage to him, 22. his part at the king's corona- tion, C. 204. made a knight of the bath on that occasion, M. II. i. 36. what preferment he held, C. 234. one of king Hen- ry's executors, M. II. i. 19. ap- pointed governor to the young king by the executors, 23. his prayer for God's aid in his of- fice of protector and governor, ib. made duke of Somerset, 25. his titles, ib. ii. 157. a pro- moter of the gospel, and a fa- vourite with the people, i. 25. obtains a victory over the Scots, 26. the cause of entering into this war, 27. his letter to the Scots on the subject, 28. sir J. Hayward's ill character of him, 33. his truer character, 34. Paget's new year's gift of ad- vice to him, 35. takes sir T. Smith and other pious and learned men into his house- hold, S. 29. bishop Gardiner's endeavour to wean him from the reformation, JM. II. i. 39. who also addresses him about some images being defaced at Portsmouth, 54. his answer, ib. the bishop's admonition to him, 55. his answer to prin- cess Mary on her censuring the proceedings in religion, 93. bought church lands of the crown, 123. his measures against enclosures ineffectual, 151. his gentleness towards lord Seymour when detected in his crimes, 194. had disap- proved of his marriage with queen Cath. Par, 208. loses himself with the nobility by being favourable towards the people, 237. blamed on ac- count of the rebellion in the west, 264. Paget's advice to him about it, ib. the king at first intended to send him a- gainst the rebels in Norfolk, but sends the earl of Warwick, 274. two letters of his to sir P. Hoby concerning the insur- rections, ii. 424. 425. part of another to Hoby, giving an ac- count of the English losses in France, i. 280. his letter or- dering the execution of Paget, the leader of the rebels in the west, 281. his troubles, 282. the causes of them, ib. was arbitrary, 283. courted the people, 284. would oppose the council, 285. his court of re- quests disliked, ib. two letters of sir W. Paget on these points of his conduct, ii. 427 — 437. his mild government vindicat- ed, i. 286. archbishop Cran- mer, lord Paget, and sir T. Smith write to the lords who had seceded from him, C. 275. 276. these lords summon the counties to send up forces a- gainst him, M. II, i. 287. their proceedings against him, S. 41. C. 651. 652. his authority as protector revoked, M. II. i. 288. fined, 292. goes into the west to quell the insurrections, 344. restored, 363. and part of his lands given back, ib. re- called to the council, C. 430. lord treasurer, 315. his part in the proceedings against bishop INDEX. 287 Gardiner, 315 — 320. M. III. i. 373, Sion-house once his property, 388. settles foreign worsted weavers at his estate at Glastonbury, II. i. 378. C, 346. 347. the house of com- mons favourable to his being restored to the protectorship^ M. II. i. 390. lord chancellor Wriothesly assisted the earl of Warwick in his designs against him, 430. at the head of one party with lord Paget and the lord privy seal, the earl of Bed- ford and the earl of Warwick being at the head of the other, 436. discord between him and the earl of Warwick, 437. ob- tains the bishop of Bath's pa- lace, 442. ii. 257. his narrow circumstances after his late fall, i. 442. lord lieutenant of certain counties, 464. ii. 201. in commissions to prorogue parliament, 199. 200. 204. 205. a license for a prebend of Wells to be alienated to him, 260. sent to the Tower, i. 497. a commission for his trial, ii. 247. supposed plot against him, C. 379. copy of one ar- ticle against him omitted by Fox, 380. what he is blamed for, 381. his end, M. II. i. 535. by whom chiefly brought about, ib. bishop Ponet's account of them, 536. 537. his posses- sions 538. ii. 270. 271. revo- cation of some of his acts, i. 540. the marriage of his son Henry with Catharine, daugh- ter of the earl of Oxford, set aside, ib. 554. his friends fall with him, 541. endeavoured to marry one of his daughters to the king, ii. 8. his character vindicated from the aspersions of sir J. Hay ward, 178. 183. 184. 187. 190. Becon's enco- mium of him, C, 448. act of kindness towards bishop Ton- stal, 414. certain bishops' town residences removed by him in order to build Somerset-house, A. II. i. 359. certain cautions of Fox respecting his account of the duke, II. ii. 419. 420. Somerset, (Anne Stanhope,) du- chess of, (as countess of Hert- ford, M, I. i. 598.) II. ii. 112. A. I. ii. 206. prefers J. Old to the vicara2;e of Cobing- ton, M. II. i. 47. her haughty temper, S. 32.33. sirT. Smith's answers to her accusations a- gainst him, 5.32. offended with Mrs, Cheke, Ch. 44. Cheke's letter to her in consequence, 44. Ji.'has part of Bucer's li- brary, C. 358. committed to the Tower, M. II. i. 497. bi- shop Hoper allowed to visit her, C. 314. M. II. ii. 8. re- mained in the Tower all Ed- ward VI. 's reign, ib. an allow- ance made to her, ib. 254. her son, the earl of Hertford, placed in her custody, A. I. ii. 88. a letter of hers to Cecil for his liberty. III. i. 455. her stew- ard, F. Nudigate, leaves his property to her, 89. her last will, 652. her treasure of mo- ney and jewels, 654. ii. 447. queen Elizabeth's message to her to make lord H. Seymour her joint executor with the earl of Hertford, i. 654. she how- ever appoints the earl only, ib. Somerset-house, various episcopal town residences demolished for building, A. II. i. 359. Somerton, East, a chapel of ease annexed to the parish of Win- terton, A. I. i. 540. Somervile, — went to court with the intention of killing queen Ehzabeth, A. III. i. 6 1 2. stran- 288 INDEX. gled himself in prison, ib. III. ii- 345- 346. Somervile, lord, concerned in a Scotch invasion of the English borders, M. III. ii. 83. Sonimer, William, A. II. ii. 431. Sommers, John, A. I. i. 49. Somner, William, C. pref. xvii. 22. 52. his Antiquities of Can- terbury edited and enlarged by N. Battely, A. III. i. pref. vi. Song of John Nobody, C. 876. a popish song against Latimer, M. I. ii. 180. ballad to Ed- ward VI., as he passed through London to his coronation, II. ii. 329. see Poems. Sonnyng, Berks, the free chapel of Arley Whiteknights there, bought of the crown by H. Foisted and W. More, M. II. ii. 409. Sophocles, C. 241. part of his works translated ad literam into Latin by Cheke, Ch. 171. Soreby, Thomas, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 504. signed the peti- tion of the lower house for discipline, 512. Sotherton, John, baron of the exchequer, A. III. i. 77- Soto, Petrus a, a Spaniard, nomi- nated a public professor of di- vinity at Oxford, M. III. i. 475. ii, 29. 473. undid all the good Martyr had done there, A. L i. 195. Sonde, William, of Bene't col- lege, Cambridge, an early gos- peller there, P.I. 12. Parker succeeded him in the master- ship of that college, 26. Sourton, perhaps Stourton, John, one of the henchmen at Henry VIII.'s funeral, M. II. ii. 302.' South, — parish priest of All- hallows, Lombard-street, im- prisoned on the six articles, M, I i. 567. South, — A. II. i. 226. South-hill, benefice of, Cornwall, its value, A. I. i. 228. Southampton, (William Fitzwil- liani,) earl of, present, as lord admiral, at Edward VI. 's bap- tism, M. II. i. 8. lord privy seal and a privy counsellor, I. i. 565. his deposition concern- ing HenryVIIL's marriage with Anne of Cleves, ii. 452. in a commission to treat with the French king about a match be- tween princess Mary and a son of his, III. i. 204. Southampton, (Henry Wriothes- ley,) earl of, son of Thomas, earl of Southampton, M. II. i. 430. ii. 158, Edward VI. visits his house at Tichfield, 9. Southampton, (Henry Wriothes- ley,) earl of, son of the pre- ceding, A. III. i. 645. Southampton, earl of, see T. fVriothesly. Southampton, earls of, the bishop of Lincoln's London residence came into their possession, A. II. i. 359. Southampton, countess of, see Lady FitzwiUiams. Southampton, Edward VI. 's de- vice for a mart there for the southern part of his kingdom, M. II. i. 592. a grammar school founded there by him, ii. 51. 281. South Cave, prebend and advow- son of, Yorkshire, granted to sir H. Neville, M. II. ii. 229. Southcote, John, P. II. 34. III. 289. a member of the Russia company, M. III. i. 520. made a sergeant at law, A. I. i. 42. a knight, and judge of the INDEX. 289 common pleas, P. I. 379. the bill for consecration of bishops to be good, committed to him, the chief justice of the com- mon pleas, and the attorney- general, A.I. ii. 230. in a con- ference about pvmishing recu- sants by pecuniary mulcts, G. 346. Southcote, William, a monk of St. Andrew's, Northampton, M. I. i. 405. Southern, John, captain of the ship Gabriel, M. III. ii. 87. Southminster, manor of, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of London, M. II. i. 3.39- Southserney, advowson of, Glou- cestershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Wor- cester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Southwark, foreigners settled there, C. 339. its lordship and manor given in exchange by the crown to the marquis of Northampton, M. II. ii. 228. A. I. i. 91. had belonged to the bishop of Winchester, ib. Southwel, — a Jesuit, A. IV. 273. 428. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii. 24. II. i. 495- Southwel, — A. III. i. 83. Southwel, Francis, A. II. i. 370. Southwel, sir Richard, M. III. i. 94. T38. 156. 358. 359. ii. 100. Loud his tutor at Bene't college, Cambridge, and at the inns of court, I. i. 595. well affected in religion at first, but afterwards a persecutor, 596. W. Morice committed to his custody, ib. a privy counsellor to Henry VIII., Edward VI., and queen Mary, ib. II. ii. 1 60. III. ii. 160. his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 6. aided VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. the duke of Northumberland against the duke of Somerset, 535. 536. in the commission for restitution of bishop Boner, III. i. 36. in another to inspect the ordnance and stores, 49. one of those sent to convey princess Elizabeth to the Tower, 128. present at bishop Hoper's trial, 286. a commissioner a- gainst heretics, 330. present at the celebration of the queen of Spain's obsequies at St. Paul's, 350. and of the king of Den- mark's, ii. 15. allowed by queen Mary to have forty retainers, 161. master of the ordnance and armoury, A. I. i. 14. 34. Southwel, sir Robert, one of the visitors of religious houses to be dissolved, M. I. i. 404. in- habited the Charter-house, Lon- don, II. i. 368. resigns the mastership of the rolls, 386, 432. ii. 215. he and J. Corbet bought of the crown a chantry in Sprouston, Norfolk, 407. one of queen Mary's privy- council, III. i. 28. in the com- mission for restitution of bi- shop Boner, 36. in another for searchof heretics, 476. allowed by the queen to have twenty retainers, ii. 161. buried, A. I. i. 292. Southwel, Robert, A. II. ii. 305. Southwel, sir Robert, A. III. ii. 460. Southwel, friar Robert, a danger- ous conspirator taken, A. IV. 185. Southwel, Thomas, A. IV. i 2. 13. Southwel, lady, buried, M. III. ii. 1 17. Southwel, Nottinghamshire, M. I. ii. 407. the rent of two chantries there given by Ed- ward VI. to endow his gram- u 290 INDEX. mar school at Guilford, II. ii. 504. Southwel, collegiate church of, an endeavour to alienate it from the see of York, A. III. i.677. archbishop Sandys's let- ter to prevent it, 678. South worth, sir John, a papist, A. III. ii. 597. refused to sub- scribe a form of submission, I. ii. 260. committed to archbi- shop Parker, P. I. 525. escapes, but busy the next year at Bath, 526. G. 204. harboured with the bishop of London, P. I. 527. G. 205. and dean of St. Paid's, ib. Southworth, Thomas, an har- bourer of Campion, A. II. ii. 359. P. II. 167. Souza, Rodrigo de, ambassador of don Antonio, king of Portu- gal, A. III. i. 8—12. Sovereign, and half-sovereign, gold coin, their values, M. II. i. 187. 230. 488. 489. III. i. 40. A.I. i. 397. half-sovereign, called Edward's royal, M. II. i. 187, 230. Spain, an account of the proceed- ings between that country and England, beginning at the ac- cess of queen Elizabeth to the crown, A. III. ii. 554. J. Cas- toU's account of its state, W. III. 359- see Joanna queen of Spain, and Philip II. Spain, queen of, A. II. i. 67. 77. Spainy, Edward, he and J. Bas- pole bought certain church lands of the crown, A. II. ii. 238. Spalatinus, Georgius, a counsellor to Frederic, duke of Sa.xonv, C. 18. attended the duke to the diet of Angsburgh, 581. Spalding, Lincolnshire, house and scite of the priory of, given by Edward VI. to sir J. Cheke, Ch. 36. 66. taken in exchange by queen Mary, 129. Spaniards, odious to the English from the partiality shewn to them by queen Mary, M. III. ii. 66. J. Bradford's warning concerning their designs against England, 339. jealousy of the Spaniards, S. 233. Spanish armada, intelligence of the fleet at Lisbon, A. III. ii. lo. queen Elizabeth's prepara- tions, 12. 13. notice of a book on the armada set forth in Spanish, 17. translated into English, 18. its contents, 19. 535. notice of the Litany for the fleet, 19. 539. shipwreck of the fleet on the coasts of Ireland, 21. 541. a list of the ships there taken or destroyed, 23. 543. and of those lost in the fight with the English, 543. news of the defeat carried to king Philip, 26. the priests' reason why he succeeded not, 27. thanksgiving sermons in England, ib. Spanish news printed of the overthrow of the English fleet, 32. Spanish let- lers to the same effect, 547. sir F. Drake's account of the engagement, 34. discourse at Rome about it, 46. see Ad- vertisements out of Ireland, and Copy of a Letter. Spanish church in London, some account of, C. 352. G. 69. 70. 71. A. I. i. 355. Spanish gold, value set upon, M. III. i. 189. Sparchford, Richard, M. Li. 121. Sparke, or Sparks, Thomas, suf- fragan bishop of Berwick, A. I. i. 371. had a prebend of Durham, ib. his death, II. i. 351. Sparkes, Dr., — W. I. 590. III. 219. appeared for the puritans INDEX. 291 at the conference of 1603, II. 493- Sparkes, John, rector of South Sumniercotes, W. I. 468, Sparrow, — burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 61. Sparrow, — imprisoned about Cartwright's book, P. II. 239. 241. Sparrow, bishop, fifteen articles touching the admission of apt persons to the ministry, framed by the convocation of 1575, not inserted in his Collections, A. II. i. 533. a paragraph omitted in the first decree of the convocation of 1584 in his Collections, and for what rea- son, W. I. 397. see Advertise- ments. Sparrow, John, a puritan, in pri- son, A. IV, 130. Sparrow, Robert, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 201. Sparrow, Thomas, P. II. 29. Sparrow, William, chief constable of Guisnes, M. III. i. 22. signs a letter to queen Mary about her having been proclaimed queen there, ii. 174. Speech of archbishop Cranmer at the coronation of Edward VI., C. 205. of the duke of North- umberland at his execution, 451. 917. of cardinal Pole, in behalf of religious houses, M. III. ii. 40. 482. of sir N.Ba- con, at the opening of the parliament in 1558, A. I. i. 78. and at its close, 99. of arch- bishop Heathe, against the bill for the queen's supremacy, 107. ii. 399. and of bishop Scot, i. 108. ii. 408. of Feckenham, against the bill for uniformity, i. 109. ii. 431. and of bishop Scot, i. 112. ii. 438. of arch- bishop Heathe to queen Eliza- beth, respecting religion, i. 207. her reply, ib. of lord keeper Bacon, at the opening of par- liament, 1562, 435. notice of T. Williams's, speaker of the house of commons, speech to the queen, 437. of lord Moun- tague, against the penalty of treason in a bill for assurance of Q. Elizabeth's royal power, 441. also of Mr. Atkinson, 446. a speech in favour of the pe- nalty, 455. speeches against the bill for the supremacy, P. I. 246. speech of archbishop Parker to the convocation of 1572, of what needed to be reformed, II. 207. III. 232. of lord Burgh ley in the star- chamber, 350. of sergeant Puckering, speaker of the house of commons, to queen Eliza- beth, A. III. i. 425. 427. ii. 356. of dean Fletcher to Mary queen of Scots at her execu- tion, i. 560. speech in the parliament of 1588 against a subsidy, ii. 51. 561. speech in behalf of strangers and aliens, upon a bill being brought in against their retailing wares, 52. 568. of sir F. Knollys, a- gainst bishops' courts, W. II. 1 24. Dr. Lewin's, in their be- half, 127. of lord Burghley, in the house of lords, on the causes of the queen's entry into a defensive war against Spain, A. IV. 149. of the same to the queen and privy-coun- cil, for the appointment of commissioners for reforming abuses, 326. of M. de la Fon- tain, to Dr. Vaughan, as bi- shop of London, 550. his an- swer, 551. de la Fontain's re- ply, ib. Speidek, Bastian, A. IV. 574. Speidek, Susanna, A. IV, 574. u 2 292 INDEX. Speke, sir George, patron of the living of East Dolish, A. II. i. ]o6. Speke, sir Thomas, M. III. i. 45. bought certain lands of the see of Exeter, II. ii. i6q. died of the sweating sickness, i. 493. Spence, Paul, a Romish priest, W. II. 211. Spencer, — sent to the Tower as a traitor, M. III. i. 473. Spencer, Dr., — parson of Had- ly, recommended by bishop Grindal for the see of Armagh, G. 177. Spencer, — fellow of Caius col- lege, Cambridge, P. I. 396. Spencer, — A. II. ii. 305. Spencer, sir John, dubbed a knt. of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Spencer, Miles, archdeacon of Sudbury, P. III. 159. Spencer, John, master of Bene't college, Cambridge, and dean ofEly, P. I. 30. 45.11. 465. Spencer, Richard, public notary, P. I. 4. Spencer, Thomas, an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 233. A. I. i. 491. resi- dent at Zuric, M. III. i. 233. as archdeacon of Chichester, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Spencer, Thomas, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Spencer, Thomas, ordained, G. 53- Spendlovve, John, prebendary of St. Paul's, G, 87. rector of Hackney, P. I. 190. Spenser, — condemned for trea- son, A. I. i. 546. Spering, — married EHzabeth Cheke, Ch. 2. Spicer, — minister of Cooknoe, a puritan, W. II. 7. Spicer, John, see J. Nothrel. Spicer, Thomas, ordained, G. 58. 72. Spillesby, Lincolnshire, a gram- mar school founded by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 50. 258. 279. Spilman, Francis, the office of clerk of the parliament granted to him and sir J, Mason for their lives, M. II. ii. 222. Spinola, — A. IV. 564. Spinola, Ascanius, A. IV. 571. Spinola, Baptista, a banker at Antwerp, A. III. ii. 85. Spinola, Benedict, a merchant in London, A. II. ii. 26. 30. IV. 378.571- Spire, its library, Ch. 51. Spirits, the walking of, as taught in the book of the festival, M. I. i. 214. Spital, preachers for 1563, A. I. ii. I. Spitman, — a commissioner for suppression of religious houses in Canterbury, M. I. i. 472. Sponer, Edward, vicar of Bough- ton, complaints against, C. 144. 167. Spotswood, — superintendant of Lothian, P. I. 297. Spring, sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Springham, Richard, merchant of London, a contributor to the atflicted gospellers, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 224. an exile for religion, resident at Zuric, 233. Sprint, John, dean of Bristol, in INDEX. 293 a commission to visit the dio- cese of Sanim, W. I. 245. thought of by lord Burleigh for the bishopric of Bristol, 616. archbishop Whitgift considers him unfit, ih. bishop Horn's previous character of him more favourable, ib. is not made a bishop, 617. Sprott, — A. III. i. 744. Sprotton, Northamptonshire, the chantry, and other property, bought of the crown by S. Ta- verner and J. Hynde, M. II, ii. 404. Sprouston, Norfolk, the chantry there bought of the crown by sir Rt. Southwel and J. Corbet, M II. ii. 407. Spurge, Richard, condemned as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 320. Spurge, Thomas, condemned as an heretic, temp, queen Marv, M. HI. ii. 320. his prayer for the use of the persecuted, ib. Squire, Adam, master of Balliol college, Oxford, and archdea- con of Middlesex, P. II. 268. W. I. 108. III. 33. Ay. 33. brought up under bishop Jewel, 123. had a dispensation for the vicarage of Conmore, ib. mar- ried a daughter of bishop Ayl- mer, 122. preached his own wedding sermon, 123. a profli- gate, ib. his baseness to his wife, ib. bishop Aylmer's letter concerning him, 1 24. his off- spring, 1 14. Squire, Ilenry, archdeacon of Berwick, subscribed by proxy, as member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 490. Squire, John, son of Adam, Ay. 114. brought up at the univer- sity by his uncle, archdeacon Aylmer, 116. 126. who ob- tained for him the living of Shoreditch, ib. notice of a ser- mon of his at Paul's Cross, ib. Squire, Judith, daughter of Adam, Ay, 114. Squire, Richard, vicar of Dover- court, has an annuity granted him from the crown, M. II. ii. 259- Stackbold, — A. II. i. 88. Stacy, John, M. I. i. 115. Stadius, Joannes, S. 167. Stadlow, George, M. II. ii. 190. Stafferton, — A. IV. 481. Stafford, sir Edward, A. III. i. 208. Ay. 1 14. commission for concealed lands granted to him, A. III. i. 41. 161. 688. the grant, 42. ii. 181. com- plained against, i. 166. 168. the commission superseded, 167. sent ambassador to France, 273- 314- Stafford, or Stavert, George, C. 231. 232. M. III. i. 368. fel- low of Pembroke-hall, Cam- bridge, I. i. 74. ordained, ib. reads lectures on the scrip- tures, ib. an early professor of the gospel there, 568. P. I. 11. a saying respecting him and Latimer, C. 531. visited a con- jurer, sick of the plague, and converted him, G. 32. but caught the infection himself, and died, ib. epigraph on his books, which he gave to his college library, M. I. i. 74. Stafford, Henry lord, translated into English, Fox's book De Fera Differentia inter Regiam Potestatem et Ecclesiasticam, C. 75. M. II. i. 41. why called the King's Book, 41. an act passed for his restitution, 102. translates two of Erasmus's epistles against the Lutherans, III. i. 180. dissented in parlia- ment from the bill for uni- 294 INDEX. formity, &c. A. I. i. 87. and from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. Stafford, sir Henry, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Stafford, sir Humphrey, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI.'s coronation, M. HI. ii. 182. Stafford, John, archbisliop of Can- terbury, P. I. 4. Stafford, Thomas, committed as a traitor to the Tower, M. HI. ii. 5. notice of his rebellion, 6"]. a proclamation against him and his adherents, 513. his pro- clamation, exciting the English to deliver themselves from the Spaniards, 515. names of the prisoners taken in Scarborough castle, 518. their execution, 68. Stafford, sir William, M. II. i. 359. accompanied lord Clin- ton in his embassy to France, 507- Stafibrd, lady, a lady of honour to queen Elizabeth, P. I. 572. A. II. ii. 395. Ay. 114. Stage-play at Grey Friars, M. III. ii. 6. Stakely, — A. IV. 388. Stallard, — concerned in a con- test between the university of Cambridge and the ecclesi- astical commissioners, P. I. 532. Stallard, — P. II. 432. Stallard, Thomas, rector of All Saints, Lombard-street, G. 362. Stalon, John, ordained, G. 59. Stamford, William, argues in par- liament on the act for treason, M. II. i. 554. in a commission to reform the ecclesiastical laws, C 388, made a sergeant at law, M. II. ii. 7. 250. in a commis- sion for trial of bishop Tonstal, 22. 208. in another to examine the executors of sir W. Bow- yer, 61. 210. queen Mary's sergeant in the trial of sir N. Throgmorton, i. 554. III. ii. 117. a judge ib. buried, ib. Stamford, Lincolnshire, a church of exiles established there, who introduced various manufacto- ries from the Low Countries, P. II. 148.149.150. the exiles' pe- tition to lord Burghley to settle there. III. 208. 209. Standen, Anthony, A. II. i. 260. IV. 142. 388. a fugitive be- yond sea, II. i. 65. ii. 596. pensioned by the king of Spain, I. ii. 53. II. i. 495. ii. 500. Standen, Henry, ordained, G. 54. Standen, Robert, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Standish, — recanted, C. 244. Standish, — fellow of Whitting- ton college, wrote a scurrilous book against Barnes, M. I. i. 570. answered by Coverdale, ib. notice of his book against the scriptures in English, III. i. 269. A. III. i. 288. Standish, Henry, bishop of St. Asaph, M. I. i. 108. employed by Henry VIII. as an ambas- sador, 90. assisted at the con- secration of archbishop Cran- mer, C. 28. Standish, John, presented to the parsonage of Wiggon, M. II. ii. 260. oneof Edward VI.'s chap- lains, and a prebendary of Wor- cester, 270. has a license of nonresidence, 272. Standish, John, rector of Med- burne, M. III. ii. 403. Standish, John, archdeacon of Colchester, A. I. i. 253. Standish, John, G. 87. INDEX. 295 Standish, advowson of, Glouces- tershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Stanhope, — M. II. ii. 47. Stanhope, Edward, A. III. ii. 12 2. Ay. 112. 130. chancel- lor of the diocese of London, 29. W. I. 473. acts as an ec- clesiastical commissioner, Ay. 85. 91. A. IV. 256, 258. his judgment respecting oaths in ecclesiastical courts, W. II. 32. III. 235. in a commis- sion to survey all ecclesiastical courts in the diocese of Lon- don, II. 194. one of the coun- cil in the north, A. IV. 304. 354. 395. in a commission to consider what coercion should be used for contumacy, instead of excommunication, W. II. 504. present, as vicar-general, in the convocation of 1603, A. IV. 552. Stanhope, Edward, A. IV. 213. Stanhope, John lord, married jNIargaret Mac Williams, Ch. 134. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Eli- zabeth, of the succession of king James, A. IV. 519. Stanhope, John, nephew of the duchess of Somerset, A. III. i. 654- Stanhope, sir Michael, surrenders certain officers, M. II. i. 428. imprisoned as an adherent of the duke of Somerset, 497. S. 42. n. a relative of his, M. II. i. 54 T. a commission for his trial, ii. 247. a warrant for his being beheaded, 248. what church property he had bought of the crown, 405. 406. lord Darcy obtained his residence at Bedington, i. 450. Stanhope, Michael, nephew of the duchess of Somerset, A. III. i. 654- Stanhope, Thomas, knighted, A. II. i. 585. concerned in a dis- pute, ii. 138. Stanhope, lady, M. III. ii. 408. Stanihurst, — A. IV. 13. 251. Stanihurst, Richard, A. III. i. 203. 204. 744. Stanley, sir Edward, taken at mass, A. II. i. 497- P- II- 365- Stanley, sir George, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Stanley, Peter, a magistrate, his ill character, A. III. ii. 464. Stanley, sir Robert, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Stanley, sir Rowland, M. III. ii. 92. tries to be high sheritf of Cheshire, G. 265. opposed by archbishop Grindal,and why,i6. Stanley, Thomas, A. II. ii. 469. III. i. 398. made comptroller of the mint, M. II. ii. 62. 225. A. I. i. 40. bought of the crown the chantry of Kirkeby, Lan- cashire, 403. dubbed a kniglit of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation. III. ii. T82. Stanley, Thomas, bishop of So- dor and Man, notice of, P. I. 361. 362. Stanley, sir William, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328, one of the gentlemen of his privy-chamber, 164. Stanley, William, assay- master of the mint, M. II. ii. 227. Stanley , William, master of Bene't college, Cambridge, dean of St. Asaph, and archdeacon of Lon- don, P. I. 64. Stanley, sir William, A. III. ii. 78. "86. IV. 110. 141 — 144- U4 296 INDEX. 148. 149. 208. 229. 232. 251. 269. 270. 383. 384. 388. 389. 392. betrays De venter to the king of Spain, A. III. i. 622. ii. 46. Stanton, — P. III. 160. Stanton, — fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 386. 642. IV. 325. 326. W. II. 317. Stanton, Agnes, married to R. Vevian, C. 936. Stanton, William, chaplain to bi- shop Cox, A. I. ii. 528. II. ii. 178. see Staunton. Stanton, see Feny Stanton. Staphileus, bishop, the pope's agent, M. I. i. 309. Ay. 32. returns from England, M. I. i. ^52. I53-. ii- 95- 96- 105. Staphili, writers in favour of the pope, P. I. 198. Staplegrove, living of, deappro- priated, A. II. i. 579. Stapleton, Brian, a magistrate in Yorkshire, a papist, his charac- ter, A. III. ii. 465. Stapleton, sir Richard, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182.' Stapleton, Richard, a converted papist, A. IV. 425. Stapleton, sir Robert, A. III. i. 469. ii. 465. IV. 597. in a com- mission to visit the church of Durham, II. ii. 169. plots a horrible scandal against arch- bishop Sandys, III. i. 142. because the archbishop had refused a lease of Southwell, which the queen had request- ed for him, 143. the archbi- shop acquaints lord Burghley of his conduct, 146. his exami- nation before the star-chamber in consequence, ii. 218. his behaviour, i. 149. the archbi- shop's letter to lord Burghley, requiring him and his abettors to be publicly punished, 151. the judgment given in the star- chamber against him, 153. his public confession at the assizes at York, and the archbishop's answers, ii. 220. his misbeha- viour at his confession, i. 154. 155. is fined and committed to the Tower, 157. his letters thence, 157. 158. Stapleton, Thomas, a Jesuit, C. 668. A. I. ii. 262. II. i. 125. W. III. 93. a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 597. III. ii. 598. wrote against bishop Jewel's Apology, I. i. 302. 428. P. I. 360. Whitaker wrote against him, W. II. 315. A. III. ii. 158. translated Bede's History of the Church of England, P. II. 392. published his Fortress of the Faith, ib. answered by Dr. Fulk,x\. II. ii. 7 1 1, his Counter- blast answered by Bridges, 7 1 o. Stapleton, William, a fugitive be- yond sea, A. ii. 597. Star-chamber, their rules and or- dinances respecting printing, W. I. 423. III. 160. their pro- ceedings against Cartwright, II. 70. 71.81. III. 242. Starkey, — A. III. i. 636. W. II. 341- Starkey, Thomas, M. I. i. 306. notice of his Exhortation to the People, instructing them to Uni- ty and Obedience, 264. sent to confer with Reinolds before his execution, 306. 367. a friend of Reg. Pole, 361. his com- munication with him relative to the divorce and supremacy by the king's order, 362 — 367. 445. 445. ii. 279. his letter to Pole concerning his book De Unione Ecclesiastica, 282. the king offended with him iti con- sequence of Pole's conduct, i. INDEX. 297 449. his letter to Crumwel, vindicating himself, ib. his let- ter to Pole upon the report of his going to Rome, and being about to be made a cardinal, 459. notice of his book against the pope's supremacy, 514. State of the English Fugitives under the King of Spain, notice of this tract, A. III. i. 513. IV. 348. Stars, blazing, appeared, M. III. i. 472. S. 161. A. II. ii. 151. Stationers' company, their con- troversy with Cambridge about the university printing-press, A. III. i. 281. the university's letter to lord Burghley about it, ii. 273. the stationers' com- plaint to him, i. 282. his letter to the university thereupon, ib. another, consenting to a printing-press, 2S3. le^-ter of the university of Cambridge to lord Burghley concerning their printer Ijeing hindered print- ing the Bible by this company, IV. 103. C. Barker gives an im- pression of Cheke's New Testa- ment to this company, Ch. 172. Statutes, book of, printed by To- til, in 8vo., M. III. i. 537. Staunton, — C. 298. 1053. Staunton, John, abbot of Dalle, M. I. i. 396. Staunton, Thomas, attorney of the duchy of Lancaster, P. III. 136. A. II. i. 516. Staunton, captain William, exe- cuted as A traitor, M. III. i. 489. see Stanton. Stavert, see Stafford. Stavvel, see S towel. Stawne, William, a popish poet, M. I. i. 572. Staynburn, Yorkshire, a charter of J. Fitz-Adam de Whitgift granting 'certain lands there to the Convent of St. Mary's, York, W. III. 5. Staywel, Seywel, or Stowel, (sometimes called Straley, or Stretchley,) a rebel, taken pri- soner at Scarborough, and ex- ecuted, M. III. ii. 5^6. 67. 518. 68. Stebunheath, the ancient name of Stepney, A. III. i. 302. the manor and marsh taken in ex- change by the crown from the see of London, M. II. i. 339. Steel, mines of, discovered in De- von, M. II. i. 429. Steele, — P. II. 434. Steelyard, see Stilyard. Stener, captain George, M. II. i. 461. Stepes, Robert, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Stephen, king of England, A. II. ii. 437- Stephen, Richard, has a license for finding gold and silver ore, M. II. ii. 211. Stephens, Robert, the French king's printer, S. 77. A. I. ii. 83. printed Smith's two tracts on the pronunciation of Greek and English, S. 26. Stephens, Thomas, a puritan, died in prison, A. IV. 130. see Stevens. Stepney, Leonard, ordained, G. 73. Stepney, see Stebunheath. Stere, — a gospeller, M. I. i. 115. Sterling, John, M. I. i. 133. Sterne, — P. II. 434. Sterne, John, consecrated suffra- gan bishop of Colchester, W. II. 147. suspended for not ap- pearing at the convocation of 1603, A. IV. 555. Sternhold, Thomas, M. III. i. 439. a gentleman of Edward VI. 's privy-chamber, M. II. i. 136. what led to his publi- cation of the Version of the Psalms, ib. ii. 115. 298 INDEX. Steukley, — sent to Florida with a squadron, A. I. ii. 97. re- buked for misusing a French captain, ib. Steukley, Thomas, M. II. i. 570. 571. 572. 574. Steukley, Thomas, Ch. 143. A. II. i. 16. 66. ii. 132. 356. III. i. 191. 276. brings in indul- gences from the pope, II. ii. 191. honourably received by the king of Spain, i. 11. and pensioned by him, ii. 551. ob- ject of his visit, i. 10. confer- ences concerning him, II. 12. the honour the king of Spain did him resented, 13. titles con- ferred upon him by the pope, ib. ii. 194. notice of his death, i. 14. ii. 355. notice of him, i. 66. III. i. 408. Steukly, William, A. II, ii. 551. see Stiikely. Stevenage, manor of, Herts, given in exchange by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. had belonged to the see of Westminster, ib. Stevens, Edward, vicar of Dun- mow, G. 52. Stevens, John, ordained, G. 59. Stevens, Thomas, one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathe- dral, C. 471 . deprived for being married, ib. see Stephens. Stevenson, Cornelius, compounds for the making saltpetre, A. II. ii. 313. what success he had, 314. Stevenson, Edward, presented to the living of St. Martin's, Iron- monger-lane, London, M. III. i. 591. Stevenson, Thomas, a Jesuit, A. IV. 275. Steward, Dr., chancellor to bishop Gardiner, C. 247. 248. Steward, — a Scot, A, II. i. 264. Stewart, captain James, one of James VI. 's counsellors, A. II. ii. 325. his character, ib. Stibbing, W^illiam, bought some of the earl of Oxford's proper- ty, A. III. ii. 191. Stikelbom, John, A. II. i. 484. Stileman, — A. IV. 465. see Style- man. Stiles, — P. II. 157. Still, George, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. II. i. .451- Still, John, a favourer of Cart- wright, A. I. ii. 376. II. i. 2. ii. 415. Still, John, P. II. 399. G. 276. A. II. ii. 666. III. i. 496. 721. ii, 1 19. 274. 415. 416. W. II, 57, was originally fellow of Christ's college, afterwards of Trinity, I. 154. chaplain to archbishop Parker, P. II. 278. obtains a stall in Westminster church through the archbi- shop's recommendation, ib. re- commended by the archbishop for the deanery of Norwich, 331. 459. elected master of St. John's college, Cambridge, in the room of Mr. Shepherd, removed by a commission, ^V. I. 142. appointed master of Trinity college, Cambridge, 154. P. 11.459. his Latin letter to lord Burghley upon his no- mination, W. III. 42. rector of Hadleigh, G, 344. W, I. 245. II. 112. in a commission to visit the deanery of Bocking, ib. as archdeacon of Sudbury, Ay. 33. nominated by the coun- cil to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. labours to convert certain Brownists, A. III. i. 269. his account of his depriv- ing Browning of his fellowship in Trinity college, P. II. 195. a magistrate, A. III. i. 646. INDEX. 399 preached at the opening of the convocation, 1588, W. I. 537. consecrated bishop of Bath and Wells, II. 147. P. II. 459. brings into the convocation of 1597 articles for the keeping of parish registers, W. II. 378. assists at the consecration of bishop Godwin, 457. present at the convocation of 1 603, A. IV. 552. Stillingfieet, Edward, bishop of Worcester, C. 223. 568. Stillington, Dr., A. IV. 142. Stilyard, merchants of, or mer- ciiants of the Haunse, put down, M. II. i. 519. Stinchecomb, chapelry of, part of the endowment of the unit- ed see of Worcester and Glou- cester, M. II. ii. 6. Stirley, see Bowyer and Sturley. Stoadly, — M. II. ii. 47. Stochouse, Dr., parson of Laven- ham, M. I. ii. 364. Stockaborn, Surrey, an annuity belonging to the chantry there, given by Edward VI. to endow his grammar school at Guil- ford, M. II. ii. 504. Stocker, George, a priest, A. III. ii. 600. Stocket, — P. II. 465. Stockton, manor of, Wilts, taken in exchange by the crown from the dean and chapter of Win- chester, M. II. i. 1 19. Stogursey, Somerset, the borough of Stogursey and Wellington taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Bath and Wells, M. II. ii. 13. 271. Stoke, St. John Baptist de, col- lege of, Suffolk, some account of, P. I. 15. Parker, as the dean, adds a school to it, 16. Ch. 37. his statutes for the college, P. I. 17. his letter to queen Catharine's coiuicil a- gainst its dissolution. III. 10. dissolved, I. 44. and bought of the crown by sir J. Cheke and W. Moyle, M. II. ii. 402. its school suppressed at the same time, Ch. 37. Stoke, manor of, Suffolk, given by Edward VI. to sir J. Cheke, Ch. 66. M. II. ii. 218. re- sumed by the crown, Ch. 129. Stoke-Brewen, living of, Norfolk, its value, A. I. i. 228. Stoke Episcopi, lordship of, Glou- cestershire, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Worcester, M. II. i. 118. Stokes, Dr., prior of the Au- gustins in Norwich, one of those sent to Bilney before his execution, P. I. 23. sent to Clare to preach against Parker, ib. Parker's letter to him on the subject. III. 3. his letter to Crorawel, on being impri- soned for opposing the king's proceedings, 8. made the ora- tion to cardinal Pole's com- missioners at Cambridge, M. III. ii. 29. Stokes, — of Queen's college, A. I. i. 228. Stokes, — married the duchess of Suffolk, A. I. i. 293. Stokes, Dr., concerned in the theological disputation before queen Elizabeth at Cambridge, A. T. ii. 107. Stokes, Robert, vicar of Hackney, married, P. I. 190. notice of him, ib. Stokes, Walter, a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Stokes, William, has a license to act as curate, G. 398. Stokesley, John, bishop of Lon- don, M. I. i. 190. 234. C. 1052. A. IV. 189. employed as an ambassador by Henry VIII., C. 13. M. I.' i. a 18. 300 INDEX. called in the New Testament in his diocese, C, 1 16. handled Patmore roughly, 643. present at princess Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. his new year's gift to the king, M. I. i. 211. Latimer cited before him and other bishops, 251. C. 615. in the commission to pronounce divorce between Henry VIII. and Catharine of Arragon, 29. oneof the convocation of 1534, M. I. i. 263. and protests against Cranmer's visitation at St. Paul's, C. 47. on what grounds, ib. his appeal to the king on this matter, 704. re- • fuses to translate the portion of scripture sent to him by Cranmer in order to make a new version, 48. declares that the reading of the scriptures makes the people heretics, ib. Lawney's jest upon him, 49. one of the convocation of 1 536, M, I. i. 378. in a commission for taking the value of bene- fices in London, 426. con- cerned in The Institution of any Christian Man, C. 72. 77. one of the bishops who dis- puted with Lambert, 94. he and Tonstal write to Pole against his being made a cardinal, M. I. i. 461. his judgment con- cerning confirmation, ii. 348. present at Edward VI. 's bap- tism, II. i. 8. combines with bishops Tonstal, Gardiner, and Sampson to preserve the old religion, I. i. 503. ii. 381. his judgment of pilgrimages, 388. Stokesly, living of, Yorkshire, its value, A. I. i. 228. Stolberg, count, consulted by archbishop Herman, concern- ing the histauratio Ecdesia- rum, C. 412. Stonar, sir Walter, present at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. Stonard, Stoney, lady, a recusant, P. II. 167. A. II." ii. 360. III. "• 597- Stonarde, William, cardinal Pole's absolution of him, after he had revoked his heresy, M. III. ii. 467. Stonden, — a puritan, one of the preachers in the army sent a- gainst the rebels in the north, P. n. 371. Stonden, manor of, given by Ed- ward VI. to the duke of So- merset, M. II. i. 539. Stone, — a papist, P. I. 569. Stone, Ambrose, punished for adulter)', A. II. i. 180. t 81. 182, Stone, Richard, a constable of Tournay, and yeoman of Henry VIII.'s guard there, M. I. ii. 12. Stone, Thomas, minister of Whar- ton, (Warkton,) a puritan, W. II. 7. 58. III. 271. 282. Stonelye, — C. 565. Stoner, sir Francis, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. HI. ii. 181. Stoner, John, an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 360. Stoner, Mrs., an attendant on queen Anne Bolen, M. 1. i. 435. see Stonard. Stonyng, — M. III. i. 155. Slopes, John, deprived of his pre- bend in St. Paul's, for not ap- pearing at a visitation, A. I. i. 253- Stopford, — A. IV. 261. Stopford, Francis, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Stordevant, — A. III. i. 6 it. 612. Story, — a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Story, Ellen, daughter of Dr. Story, A. II. i. 126. ii. 451.452. INDEX. 301 Story, Joan, mother of Dr. Story, A. II. i. 126. ii. 452. 453. Story, John, M. III. i. 229. A. I. ii. 366. IV. 189. excepted out of Edward VI. 's general par- don, M. II. ii. 67. oneof queen Mary's commissioners for trial of archbishop Cranmer, C. 532. 533- 535- 54°- 547- 1069. 1070. 1072. 656. a member of the house of commons, A. I. i. 92. reprimanded by the house for appearing in the house of lords as counsel to the bishop of Winchester against the pa- tentees of certain lands of his see, ib. his speech in the house defending his persecutions un- der queen Mary, 115. sent to the Fleet, 220. went abroad, 1 15. pensioned by the king of Spain ii. 54. II. i. 495. ap- pointed searcher of all ships at Antwerp for English goods and heretical books, P. II. 366. probably concerned in setting up the inquisition there, A. I. ii. 193. how decoyed from thence, and carried prisoner to London, 296, P. II. 366. Ch. 106. condemned as a traitor, and executed, A. I. i. 1 15. II. i. 124. III. ii. 495. P. II. 367. his will, A. II. i. 125. II. ii. 450. instances of his cruelty under queen Mar)', I. ii. 297. II. i. 125, Ramsey's rhymes against him, ib. Stor\', Nicholas, father of the pre- ceding, A. II. i. 126. II. ii. 452. Story, Mrs., pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i- 495- Stourbridge, Worcestershire, a grammar school founded by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 281. 503. see Sturbridge. Stourton, Anthony, brother of lord Stourton, keeper of White- hall, buried, M. III. ii. 107. Stourton, Arthur, he and sir A. Dudley have the office of keep- ing the jewels, &c. in the palace of Westminster, M. II. i. 443. Stourton, Charles lord, son of William, M. III. i. 592. occa- sion of his quarrel with Hart- gyl, ib. particulars of his mur- dering Hartgyl and his son, ib. 600. sent to the Tower, 510. condemned, 511. exe- cuted, 512. P. II. 236. Stourton, John lord, son of the preceding, P. II. 235. A. III. ii. 430. a papist, P. II. 235. committed to archbishop Par- ker's keeping, 236. the pains the archbishop took with him, 237. his conformity, 238. Stourton, William lord, his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 7. one of the twelve mourners at Edward VI. 's fu- neral, ii. 123. had charge of one of the king's pieces near Bologne, III. i. 592. died, ib. Stourton, (Agnes Ryse,) lady, one of the ladies that attended queen Mary in her triuniphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 54. Stourton, lady, A. III. ii. 430. see Sourton. Stow, John, A. I. ii. 324. III. i. 422, 519. 609. 744. ii. 18.73. G. 96. P. II. 515. obtained certain ancient historians for archbishop Parker, 516. a col- lector of matters for English history forty-seven years, C. pref. XX. had all the collections of Reiner Wolfe, ib. his en- comium of archbishop Whit- gift, W. II. 507. his books seized as being papistical, G. 184. list of them, 516. notice of his Summary of Chronicles, 302 INDEX. A. II. i. 464. published his Annals in 410. dedicated to archbishop Whitgift, 1600, W. II. 437. referred to, C. 380. G. 452. A. II. ii, 206. 210. 360. III. i. 408. 512. cor- rected, C. 322. M. II. i. 424. ii. 75. III. i. 54. A. IV. 78. Stow, manor of, given back by Edward VI. to the earl of Westmoreland after his pardon, M. II. ii. 75. Stowel, Stawel, John, proceed- ings against, for having two wives, P. II. 160 — 163. see Staywel. Stowey, manor of, Somerset, given by Edward VI. to sir E. Sey- mour, M. II. i. 543. ii. 228. had belonged to his father, the duke of Somerset, ib. Strachv, William, chamberlain, S. 5'. Stradling, — a papist, G. 204. A. II. ii. 551. Stradling, sir Edward, seizes an heiress, A. III. i. 399. 400. 401. Strailes, Anthony, M. III. ii. 409. Straker, — a promoter, why put in the pillory, A. III. ii. 464. Straley, see Staywel. Strand in London, regulations concerning a church there, G. 149. Strange, Henry lord, A. II. ii. 426. present at the celebration of the emperor's funeral at St. Paul's, I. ii. 119. G. 146. see Henry and William, earls of Derby. Strange, lord le, he and his wife do penance for murder, P. III. 181. Strange, Thomas le, M. II. ii. 302. see Straunge. Strangers, persecuted for religion abroad, flock to England, A. I. ii. 269. sir T. Row's certifi- cate of strangers in London, IV. 569. see Foreigners. Strangles, sir Richard, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. IIL ii. 182. Strangwais, sir Giles, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Strangways, or Strangwich, — a pirate, M. II. ii. 3 i. 253. taken, A. I. i. 290. cast to suffer death, 291. Strangways, — a great sea offi- cer, G, 80. Strangwish, — servant to cardi- nal Wolsey, M. I. i. 178. 179. sued him for a debt, 1 78. ii. 138. Stransham, Edward, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Strasburgh, magistrates of, send for P. Martvr back from Eng- land, M. II." ii. 18. Strasburgh Liturgy, particulars of, M. II. i. 379. Stratford, John, archbishop of Canterbury, renewed and gave a fresh charter to Eastbridge hospital, Canterbury, M. III. i. 480. P. II. 307. Stratford, abbot of, present at princess Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. and at Edward VI.'s, M. II. i. 8. Stratford, manor and borough of, Warwickshire, given by Ed- ward VI. to Dudley duke of Northumberland, M. II. ii. 231. a grammar school found- ed in the town by Edward VI., 51. 281. Stratford Langton, monastery of, aparcelofitspossessionsbought of the crown by sir R. Cholme- ly, M. II. ii. 232. Straunge, Robert, a magistrate, A. I. ii. 370. see Strange. Strazelius, king's professor of INDEX. 303 Greek at Paris, sir T. Smith's conference with, S. 16. Street, — M. III. i. 191. Street, Robert, ordained, G. 72. 73. see Strete. Strelly, sir Nicholas, appointed deputy warden of the east marches towards Scotland, M. II. ii. 223. Stretchley, see Staywel. Strete, Stretes Guillim, or John, Edward VI. 's limner, M. II. ii. 285. notice of three of his por- traits, 217. Strete, John, probably son of the preceding, has the office of child of the leash, M. II. ii. 285. Strete, Richard, present at the convocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557-. Stribithil, Thomas, constable of Tournay, and yeoman of Henry VIII. "s guard there, M. I. ii. 12. Strickland, — brings a bill into the parliament of 157 i, for a further reformation in religion, A. II. i. 93. 96. notice of his speech, 96. 98. queen Eliza- beth offended at it, has him stayed from parliament, 94. the house debate upon the step, ib. is allowed to return, Strickland, William, G. 604. StrigelUis, Victorius, Ay. 11. Strozza, Strozzi, Peter, A. II. i. 237. 238. devised a plot a- gainst Ireland, 15. a French sea-commander, 212. com- mands the navy near Bour- deaux and Rochelle, 241. Struddel, Robert, C. 89. Struthius, — an heretic, P. III. 393- Stryp, Garret, A. IV. 572. Strype, John, notice of, A. IV. 599. his encomium on Cran- mer, C. pre/, i. his censure of the preceding archbishops, iv. his praise of the subsequent, v, what induced him to make his Collections concerning Cran- mer, vii. the sources from whence he compiled, xv. plan of his work, xviii. reasons for his uncouth style, xix. Whar- ton's observations on his Me- morials of Archbishop Cran- mer, 1039 — 1061. the dif- ference between the Oxford edition and the first edition, adv. his object in writing his Ecclesiastical Memorials, M.I. i. pre/, ix. x. from what mate- rials compiled, x. copied all the extracts from MSS. himself, xii. reasons of his writing the Ecclesiastical History of Queen Elizabeth's Reign, A. I. i. pref. vi. his method, ib. his reason for publishing another vohune of the church's history underqueen Elizabeth, II. i. pref. i. the me- thod pursued, ii. why he did not complete the Annals, IV. pref. his sources for writing archbishop Parker's Life, P. I. pref. V. viii. his reason for writ- ing it, vii. I. his declaration of adhering to truth, ix. his apology for his style, ib. his omissions in one historical work supplied in others, xiii. his mo- tive for writing the Lives of some of the first bishops after the reformation, G. ep. ded. iv. viii. additional reason for writ- ing archbishop Grindal's, v. the sources of his information, ix. his object in writing archbishop Whitgift'sLife, W. I. pref vii. x. his method, vii. his sources, ix. his chief attention not to style in writing the Life of Smith, S. pref. vii. his vindication of his writings against certain charges 304 INDEX. made against them, A. III. i. pref. iv. V. testimonials produced by him in his favour, vi. Stuard, Edmund, dean of Win- chester, has a commission to visit the diocese of Winchester, M. III. i. 481. Stuart, colonel, A. III. i. 548. Stuart, Francis, earl of Bothwel, A. IV. 281. a Scotch commis- sioner for making a league with England, A. III. i. 567. Stuart, lord James, as earl of Murray, A. I. ii. 206. 207. 209. 212. II. i. 192. III. i. 234. natural son of James V. of Scotland, M. III. ii. 82. con- cerned in two invasions into the English borders, 82. 83. (as earl of Murray,) a com- missioner to treat about a match between .Mary queen of Scots and the earl of Leices- ter, A. I. ii. 120. 124. reason of his flying out of Scotland, 202. receives aid from Eng- land, 205. forces raised against him to prevent his stopping the marriage of Mary queen of Scots with lord Darnley, ib. a memorial sent to the English court upon the marriage, pro- bably by him, ib. favours the reformation in Scotland, 227. G. 492. regent of Scotland, A. I. ii. 359. murdered, ib. Stuart, captain James, (as earl of Arran,) A. II. ii. 327. his ill character, 325. tutor of the earl of Arran, ib. the accuser of the earl of Morton, ib. pur- suit made after him, as earl of Arran, III. i. 441. had been concerned in slaying lord Rus- sel at a treaty on the English borders, 442. Stuart, lord John, concerned in an invasion of the English bor- ders, M. III. ii. 83. Stuart, lord Robert, natural son of James V. of Scotland, M. III. ii. 82. concerned in two invasions of the English bor- ders, ib. 83. one of James VI. 's counsellors, A. II. ii. 324. his character, ib. (afterwards earl of Orkney.) Stuart, William, lord treasurer of Scotland, put to open penance, and why, A. I. ii. 104. see Stewart. Stubbes, William, his letter re- commending Gerard for the vacant see of Chester, W. II. Stubbs, — minister of Eastwel, A.m. ii. 515. Stubbs, Edmund, minor canon of St. Paul's, deprived for not appearing at a visitation, A. I. J- 253- Stubbs, John, A. III. i. 213. 214. 432. notice of him, P. II. 418. of Bene't college, Cambridge, and Lincoln's Inn, A. II. ii. 305. Cartwright marries his sister, 155. wrote the Gaping Gulph against queen Eliza- beth's marriage with the duke of Anjou, G. 359. A. II. ii. 232. some account of it, 303. Ay. 40. the councils letter a- gainst this libel, G. 584. pu- nished for it, with amputation of his right hand, A. II, ii. 239. his petition from the Tower for liberty, 239. spe- cimens of his letters, 304. no- tice of his answer to cardinal Allen's English Justice, 306. his letters of good counsel to Hicks, III. i. 215. his letter to lord Burghley about his answer to Allen's Defence of English Catholics, 708. notice of its publication, 744. Studley, — fellow of Trinity col- lege, Cambridge, W. I. 94. INDEX. 305 Studley, Daniel, a puritan, impri- soned, A. IV. 129. 134. 245. W. II. 187. Studley, Jerome, a puritan, died in prison, A. IV. 130. Stukely, sir Hugh, the manor of Brampton Abbot given to him by Henry VIII., Ch. 129. Stukley, Edith, daughter of John lord Stukley, married to E. Loud, M. I. i. 538. see Steuk- Sturbridge fair, the right of, as- signed to the university against the town of Cambridge, A. II. ii. 69. see Stourbridge. Sturley, sir Nicholas, his part at Henry VIII.'s funeral, M. II. ii. 300. Sturley, Mrs., M. III. ii. 403. one of the ladies that attended queen Mary in her triumphal passage through the city, i. 55. of the privy-chamber, 550. Sturmius, Joannes, C. 362. S. 20. M. II. i. 384. A. I. i. 468. 561. G. 14T. the most learned pro- fessor of Strasburgh, Ch. 53. G. 322. chief governor of the university there, 322. archbi- shop Grindal's friendship for him, ib. his favour to Citolinus, P. II. 231. 232. Sturry, parish of, Kent, notice of, P. I. 257. Sturton, see Stourton. Stves, Mrs., a gospeller, M. I. i. '116. Styleman, Augustin, ordained, G. 54. see Stileman. Stympe, Thomas, in a commis- sion to visit the diocese of Winchester, M. III. i. 481. Styward, Austen, A. II. i. 542. "• 576. 577- 579- 587- 588. 590- 594- Styward, Ny., keeper of the spi- ritualities of the vacant see of Norwich, P. II. 362. recom- VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPK. mended by Dr. Perne for the chancellorship of that diocese, 398. present at archbishop Par- ker's funeral, 433. his judg- ment respecting oaths in the ecclesiastical courts, W. II. 32. III. 235. Styward, Thomas, notice of his Path to Martial Discipline, A. III. i. 106. his copy of verses prefixed to it, ii. 196. Styxwold, nunnery of, continued under hard terms at the time of the dissolution of several re- ligious houses, M. I. i. 395. Subsidy granted, 1557, M. III. ii. 105. 1562, A. I. i. 469. 1566, ii. 238. speeches against a sub- sidy in the parliament of 1588, III. ii. 50. 51. 561. the pre- amble to a grant of the clergy, IV. 499. Succession to the crown after queen Elizabeth, proceedings in the parliament of 1562 re- specting, A. I. i. 439. Suckley, tithes of, Worcestershire, given by Edward VI. to endow his grammar school at Stour- bridge, M. II. ii. 281. Suckling, Edmund, prebendary of Norwich, A. III. ii. 58. 61. Suckling, Robert, A. III. i. 490. Sudbury, Bernhard, ordained, G. 59- Sudbury, archdeacon of, see J. Still. Suenta, see Amula. Suffeit, Thomas, A. IV. 570. Suffolk, Charles Brandon, duke of, M. I. i. 235. 554. II. ii. 168. his part at Edward VI. 's christening, i. 6. 7. and at queen Elizabeth's, A. II. ii. 541. his deposition concerning Henry VIII.'s marriage with Anne of Cleves, M. I. ii. 4.52. was president of the privy- council, 1540, i, 565. support- 3o6 INDEX. ed tlie six articles in parlia- ment, C. 104. had two sons by his second wife Catharine (Willoiighby), M. II. i. 202. 491. married Mary daughter of Henry VII., and widow of Lewis XII. of France, as one of his wives, A. II. ii. 404. 425. 446. i. 90. his offspring by her, ii. 425. 446. notice of his mar- riage both with lady Mortimer and Anne Brown, 444. 445. his offspring by them, 445. founded the hospital of St, John at Lutterworth, M. III. ii.401. had certain impropriate rectories, 407. Parkhurst his chaplain, A. II. i. 346. Park- hurst's epitaph on him, ii. 496. his descent, P. I. 48. notice of his suit with lady Powis, M. II. ii. 44. the London house of the bishops' of Nor- wich became his property, A. II. i. 358. Suflblk, Henry Brandon, duke of, son of the preceding, M. II. i. 493. ii. 240. made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's co- ronation, i. 36. godfather to Underhil's child, 180. died of the sweating sickness, 49 1 . Ch. 89. Montlis Mind for him, M. II. i. 496. had been educated by Holbech, ii. j68. and at Cambridge under Haddon, i. 383.491. and Cheke, Ch, 20. see lord Charles Brandon. Suffolk, duke of, see H. Grey, marquis of Dorset. Suffolk, earl of, see T. lord How- ard of Walden. Suffolk, Mary, (daughter of Hen- ry VII.,) duchess of, A. II. i, 90, Suffolk, (Catharine Willoughby,) duchess of, wife of Brandon duke of Suffolk, Ch. 20. M. III. i. 226, A, II, i. 347. ii. 211. 693. Ill, i, 106, IV. 571, persecuted for her religion, M. I, i, 598. zealous for the re- formation, II, i. 83. lady Mary Seymour committed to her care, 200. 201, her quality and condition, 201, her letter to Cecil about her poverty, 202. sojourned at Cambridge for the sake of her sons, 383, 492, her kindness to Bucer, 383. 384. commanded to lodge the queen of Scots, on her way to Lon- don, at her house at Stamford, 502. attends princess Mary on a visit to Edward VI., ii, 30. has the wardship of her son, Henry duke of Suffolk, and Agnes Woodhil, (Woodvile,) 240, an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, Ch, 95, re- sident at Wezel with her hus- band Mr, Bertie, M,III, i, 233. 410. fled into Poland to escape apprehension, Ch. 109. 110. owner of certain impropriate rectories, M, III, ii, 407, Park- hurst her chaplain, A. II. i. 346. his epigram to her, ii. 496. Peregrine Bertie her son and heir, 398. 399, IV. 588. 589. Suffolk, (Frances Brandon,) duchess of, wife of Grey duke of Suffolk, M. IL ii. 112. A. L i. 400. obtains the release of her husband from the Tower, M. III. i. 25. her death, A. I. i. 293. buried in Westminster- abbey, when Jewel preaches, 292. Suffragan bishops, see Bishops suffragan. Suffrages, English, commanded to be used, C. 181. 183. Suigo, Alexander, murdered, and why, A. IV. 390. SuUiard, SuUyard, Edward, a re- cusant, A. II. ii, 343. 676, III. INDEX. 3^1 i. 214. 270. 609. ii. 422. IV. 276. notice of his imprison- ment, W. I. 528. 529. Sulliard, Thomas, a recusant, A. III. ii. 422. Siimmercotes, the parishes of North and South, in Lincohi- shire, united by archbp. Whit- gift, W. I. 467. Summons of queen Elizabeth for a convocation, G. 99. Sumner, Henry, one of those who went from Cambridge to car- dinal Wolsey's college at Ox- ford, C. 4. P. I. 10. an early gospeller there, M. I. i, 569. see Somner. Sundays, form of a bill for keep- ing Sundays and holidays, drawn up by the convocation of 1562, but not enacted by parliament, A. I. i. 529. Sundridge, fee farm of, Kent, given by queen Mary to cardi- nal Pole, M. III. i. 475. Sunega, Baltharzar, A. IV. 564. Sunega, don Pedro de, notice of his treasonable practices a- gainst king James, A. IV. 564. Suoth, or Snoth, Alice, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 123. Superstition, sir J. Cheke's trea- tise on, Ch. 183. Supplication of the poor Com- mons to the King, 1546, ex- tracts from a book so called, shewing the state of the king- dom, M. I. i. 609. Supremacy of the king, reluctant- ly submitted to by the clergy, 1530, M. I. i. 204. 205. 206. notice of certain works respect- ing it, 230. Sampson's Latin oration in favour of the king's supremacy, ii. 262. translation of it, i. 237. the convocation own the king's supremacy, 257. C. 33. the clergy and universities subscribe to it, 36. orders to the bishojis and she- riffs concerning it, M. I. i. 259. Dr. Heines and Dr. Skip sent to Cambridge to preach the supremacy, where it was much opposed, 260. notice of certain books published on this sub- ject, 263 — 268. collection out of authors concerning the king's supremacy, probably made by archbishop Cranmer, 283. the king's supremacy ordered to be preached up in the several dio- ceses, 285. the northern clergy backward in acknowledging it, 296. the king's letter to the earl of Sussex to seize such as preached up the pope's au- thority, ii. 208. his letters to the justices of peace to further the cause of the supremacy, i. 297. ii. 209. a book for preach- ing and declaring the king's power emended by Bedyl, with the advice of bishop Fox, and approbation of archbp. Cran- mer, i. 299. some executed for refusing to swear to the king's supremacy, the refusal having been made high treason by an act of parliament, ib. the king's supremacy chiefly established through Cromwel, 316. the king gives proof of his su- premacy by appointing a royal visitation of the dioceses, and by suspending the power of the bishops, 321. ii. 216. notice of a book against the pope's su- premacy, i. 512. and of Star- ky's book on the same sub- ject, 514. also of a sermon, preached before the king by bishop Tonstal, on the same subject, 518. the king's supre- macy acknowledged in Ireland, 572. an oath of supremacy, C. 124. another, 187. the clergy X 2 3o8 INDEX. ordered to preach in support of the king's supremacy, P. I. 31. cardinal Pole's advice concern- ing the supremacy, C. 923. Cranmer's reasons against the pope's supremacy, 542. cardi- nal Pole's reasons for it, 981. queen Mary did not assume tlie title of supreme head of the church, M. III. i. 246. act for restoring the supremacy to the crown passed, A. I. i. 84. 86. 87. some particulars of this act, 100. the need of it, 102. several former acts revived by it, 103. those bishops and clergy who refused to take the oath contained in it were de- prived, 105. their numbers, 106. archbp. Heathe's speech in parliament against it, 107. ii. 399. and bishop Scot's, i. 108. ii. 408. arguments used for restoring the supremacy, i. 108. in what the bill was a- mended, 109. a discourse in favour of the queen's supre- macy, ib. ii. 423. oath of su- premacy imposed by parlia- ment, 1562, P. I. 245. the pe- nalty of refusing to take it, 246. what was said against it in parliament, ib. 247. the oath at present only administered to Boner, 250. opinions respect- ing supremacy, Ay. 168. no- tice of a writing in support of the queen's supremacy, W. I. 540. copy of it. III. 213. see the King's Book. Surplice, see Habits. Surrey, Henry Howard, earl of, why beheaded, M. III. i. 58. his portrait painted by Stretes, II. ii. 217. grandfather of Philip earl of Arundel, A. III. i. 456. Surrey, Thomas Howard, earl of, see Duke of Norfolk. Surrey and Sussex, John Warren, cited before the council of the province of Canterbury for a- dultery, P. III. 181. Sussex, Edward RatclifFe, last earl of, his parents, Ch. 141. Sussex, Henry Ratcliffe, second earl of, C. 396. 456. 493. 494. M. III. i. 96. 474. A. II. ii. 127. one of the twelve mourn- ers at Henry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 291. his part at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, i. 6. his letter to his wife concerning the new king, (Edward VI.,) 18. lord lieutenant of Norfolk, 464. ii. 162. 202. one of the twelve mourners at Edward VI.'s funeral, 123. supported queen Mary's claim to the crown in Norfolk, C. 525. M. III. i. 134. ordered to attend princess Elizabeth to the Tower, 128. very obliging to her, ib. queen Mary's letter to him to raise forces for her, 134. cre- ated a knight of the garter, 188. sent into Spain to con- clude the match between the queen and prince Philip, 196. dies, 512. buried, ib. his Month's Mind, 513. was a privy counsellor, ii. 414. Sussex, Henry RadclifFe, fourth earl of, second son of the pre- ceding. Ay. 79. A. III. ii. 12. 533. 123. lord lieutenant of the county of Southampton, i. 569. 666, a magistrate of Norfolk, ii, 460. Sussex, Robert Ratcliffe, first earl of, M. I. i. 235. one of Henry VIII. 's privy-council, 565. Sussex, Robert Ratcliffe, fifth earl of, son of Henry fourth earl, signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the succession of king James, A. IV, 519. INDEX. 309 Sussex, Thomas Ratcliffe, third earl of, son of Henry, (as lord Fitzwalter,) M. III. i. 323. 348. 474. (as earl of Sussex,) A. I. i. 209. ii. 89. 123. II. i. 177. ii. 468. P. II. 138. A. II. i. 378- 575- 'i- 18.53. 135. 136. 319. 668. 321. (as lord chamberlain, 358.) III. i. 2. 15. 106. ii. 244. (as lord Fitz- walter,) his part at Henry Vni.'s funeral, M. II. ii. 298. attended sir T. Audley's fune- ral, III. i. 320. lord deputy of Ireland, ii. 4. chosen a knight of the garter, ib. 25. (as earl of Sussex,) goes to Ireland, no. P. I. 90. 9 1 . ambassador about the match between queen Elizabeth and the archduke of Austria, A. I. i. 222. ii. 240, built a church at Woodham Waters, G. 140. had a seat at Newhall, Essex, ib. present at the celebration of the empe- ror's funeral at St. Paul's, A.I. ii. 119. G. 146. one of the commissioners to settle an in- tercourse with Flanders, A. I. ii. 122. signed the queen's pro- clamation against excess of ap- parel, 195. 540. differences be- tween him and the earl of Lei- cester, 210. the reason of them, 211. much beloved by the duke of Norfolk, ib. lord president of the north, 315. II. ii. 709. his proclamation against the rebels there, i. 317. admitted of the privy-council, 35. ii. 316. lord chamberlain, 708. in favour of the queen's mar- riage with Monsieur, i. 57. his apphcation to the bishop of Norwich about selling an ad- vowson, 173. in a commission to treat with the French com- missioners about Mary queen of Scots, 199. against Birchet's being executed by martial law, 427. his letter, as lord cham- berlain, to lord Burghley about Birchet, 428. lord Talbot's ac- count of his conduct at court, 457. attends the queen in a progress, P. II. 3 74. favourably represents archbishop Parker to her, ib. the archbishop's le- gacy to him. III. 345. a friend of the earl of Essex, A. II. ii. 83. 84. displeased with his brother Egremond's conduct, 131. writes to condole lord Burghley on the loss of Went- worth, his son-in-law. III. i. 209. signed divers orders of the privy-council, P. II. 347. A. II. ii. 519.25. 127. G. 363. 370- 393- Sussex, (Eliz. Howard,) countess of, persecuted for religion, M. I. i. 598. attended queen Jane Seymour's funeral, II. i. 12. Sussex, (Frances Sidney,) coun- tess of, foundress of Sidney Sussex college, her last will, A. III. ii. 115. Sutclitf, Matthew, dean of Exe- ter, C. 263. A. I. i. 184. W. II. 159. 173. Sute, Robert, baron of the ex- chequer, A. III. i. 76. Sutherland, John Sutherland, earl of, concerned in an invasion of the English borders, M. III. ii. 83- 93- Sutherton, John, P. II. 432. Sutherton, Nowel, P. II. 432. Suthray, — treasurer of the church of Exeter, M. II. ii. 53. Sutton, — minister of Ipswich, A. I. i. 378. 379. Sutton, — appointed master ot Aylsham school, P. II. 337. Sutton, — A. IV. 42. Sutton, Ambrose, M. III. ii. 393- Sutton, Ann, wife of Waller Had- don, P. II. 145. X3 310 INDEX. Sutton, Gerard, owner of the ab- bey of Connel, Ireland, M. II. ii. 241. Sutton, Richard, founder of the Charter-house, some notice of, A. III. i. 38. Sutton, Richard, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. Sutton, Robert, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Sutton, William, of Aram, arch- bishop Sandy's favourable cha- racter of, A. III. ii. 466. Sutton, manor of, Hants, given by Edward VI. to sir J. Gates, M. II. i. 481. 484. ii. 220. had belonged to the see of Win- chester, ib. Sutton Coldiield, town of, War- wickshire, improved by bishop V^oysey, M. II. i.423. value of the living, A. I. i. 228. Sutton, Loundale, Nottingham- shire, a chantry there given by Edward VI. to endow his free school at East Retford, M. II. ii. 280. Swadell, Tristam, a recusant, A. ^ I. i. 415- Swaffer, Lawrence, M. I. i. 116. Swain, Catharine, M. I. i. 121. Swale, sir Richard, attended the Hampton - Court conference respecting the ecclesiastical courts, W. II. 496. one of the commissioners for suppressing all books published without au- thority, 504. Swanington, manor of^ surren- dered by Beaumont to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 45. granted to the earl of Huntingdon, ib. Swant, Polito, A. IV. 572. Swarte, Martin, S, 222. Sweating sickness, notice of, C. 388.448. M. II. i. 491.496. Sweden, embassy from, 1558, A. I. i. 39. 402. Sweden, king of, see Gustavus I. 1523 — 1560, Eric XIV. 1560 — 1568, John III. 1568— 1594- Sweden, prince of, see Duke of Finland. Sweet, Lewis, archdeacon of Tot- nes, W. I. 420. III. 156. Sweeting, — A. II. ii. 141. Swerder, William, master of East- bridge hospital, Canterbury, P. I. 566. III. 174. Sweringham, — A. II. i. 76. Swetnam, William, archbishop Whitgift's license to him to teach children, W. III. 384. Swift, — minor canon of St. Paul's, P. II. 23. Swifte, Thomas and X^'^illiam, bought of the crown the free chapel of Tilne, in the parish of Hayton, M. II. ii. 406. Swinburn, — a rebel. A, I. ii. 320. 332. II. ii. 551. Swinburn, Robert, master of Pem- broke-hall, Cambridge, G. 458. Swinburn, Rowland, put into the mastership of Clare-hall, Cam- bridge, M. III. i. 80. P. I. 59. 60. died under queen Mary, 87. Swinford, (Old,) Worcestershire, a grammar school endowed by Edward VI. for the town of Stourbridge, and parish of Old Swinford, M. II. ii. 503. Swone, John, a favourer of Cart- wright, A. II. i. 2. ii. 415. Swygo, — notice of, A. II. ii. 30- Swynford, chantry of, Leicester- shire, bought of the crown by W. Parker, M. II. ii. 406. Sybton, house of, part of its pos- sessions sold by the crown, M. II. ii. 239. Sydnam, father, a grey friar of Greenwich, preaches, M. III. '• 493- INDEX. 3" SyHnam, sir John, a magistrate, why unfit for the commission, A. III. ii. 462. Sydnam, lady, wife of the pre- ceding, a recusant, A. III. ii. 462. Sydnour, — his new year's gift ' to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. Syley, — executed as a rebel, M, HI. ii. 68. Sylva, an Italian physician, A. II. i- 175- Sylvester, — M. I. i. 279. Sylvius, ^Eneas, C. 492, see Sil- v'ms. Symcotts, — A. II. ii. 587. Symms, — A. III. ii. 605. Symms, John, imprisoned for re- cusancy, A. I. i. 417. see Simms. Symonet, Jacobus, dean of the rota, concerned in the con- sultation at Rome about Henry VIII. 's divorce, M. I. i. 145. 146. ii. 77. 78. 80. 82. loi. T02. 104. Symonds, Dr., in a commission for discussion of certain ques- tions in religion, C. 110. Symonds, Hugh, vicar of St. Mi- chael's, Coventry, taken up for a sermon of his, M. III. i. 77. deprived for being married, 169. Symonds, William, made a ser- geant-at-law, A. I. i. 42. Symons, — a lawyer, active in accusing persons on the six ar- ticles, C. 175. punished, 176. see Simons. Symple, — a Scot, A. IV. 142. 143. 148. Sympson, Edmund, rector of St. Dunstan's in the East, Lon- don, G. 362. Sympson, William, one of the council at Tournay, M. I. i. 1 1. Synger, William, a magistrate in Suffolk, A. HI. ii. 42[. Synod held by the puritans, A. HI. i. 690. their letter of cre- dit, 691. the orders made at this synod, ii.477. persons ap- pointed by the synod for each county, as chief, 478. i. 691. the synod endeavours to clear itself of schism, 691. see Con- vocation. Sysson, — concerned in a hor- rible scandal plotted against archbishop Sandys, A. III. i. 142. 147. 469. ii. 218. T. Tables, see Communion Tables. Tabor, William, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. i. 2. ii. 417. Tadingston, Suffolk, St. Marga- ret's chapel there bouo^ht of the crown by J. earl of Oxford and T. Almote, M. II. ii. 408, Tadlow, George, citizen and ha- berdasher of London, sir T. Mores Utopia translated into English at his request, M. II. i- 549- Taffyn, Nicholas, A. IV. 571. Tailbois, — in a commission to visit the hospitals at Saltwood and Hith, W. II. 145. Tailbois, Robert, son of Ralph, married Elizabeth Barnes, A. II. ii. 113. a magistrate, IV. 480. Talbot, — of New college, Ox- ford, a gospeller, but after- wards fell back, M. I. i. 581. 582. C. 174. tutor to lord Wriothesley's children, M. I. i. 582. Talbot, — W. I. 168. Talbot, — an harbourer of Cam- pion the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 359. Talbot, — A. HI. ii. 493. Talbot, lord Francis, son of George, earl of Shrewsbury, A. II. ii. 92. a member of the house of commons, i. 532. his X4 312 INDEX. letters to his father with court news, 572. ji. 93. 318. Talbot, sir John, A. I. i. 543. Talbot, John, of Salwarp, a ma- gistrate in Worcestershire, W. I. 188. Talbot, John, a recusant, A. IV. 276. notice of his imprison- ment, W. I. 528. 529. 530. Talbot, lord, see George and Gil- bert, Earls of Shrewsbury. Talbot, Robert, a collector of ancient writings, and an ac- quaintance of Leland, Bale, &c., P. II. 499. Talbot, sir Thomas, M. III. ii. 92. Talbot, Thomas, his opinion re- specting predestination, A. I. i. 494. Talbots, the, A. II. i. 370. Talboth, — indicted with Cam- pion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. Tallow forbidden to be exported, M. II. i. 186. Tally, — accused of preaching false doctrine, M. I. i. 444. ii. 273- Talman, Benedict, wrote a book against the ubiquity of Christ's body, A. II. ii. 105. 227. Talman, John, appointed a sing- ing vicar of Edward VI. 's col- lege at Galway, M. II. i. 463. Talthworth, tithes of, Hereford- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Tame, Thame, Bucks, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Tamstale, parsonage of, bought of the crown by E. Spainy and J. Baspole, M. II. ii. 239. had belonged to the house of Syb- ton, ib. Tamworth, — queen Elizabeth's favour to, P. I. 285. Tanfield, see Bedford. Tankerfield, — burnt for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 470. Tarentum, duke of, married to Joan queen of Naples, after the murder of her husband, A. III. i. 400. detested in conse- quence, 401. Tarry, — A. II. ii. 693. Tasis, — a Spanish ambassador in France, A. III. i. 316. Tassat, Galliot, M. II. i, 497. ii. 220. Tassel, Bartholomew, P. II. 385. Tatam, — of Merton college, Oxford, P. I. 500. Tater, Christopher, A. III. i. 275. ii. 271. Tatton, Robert, M, III. ii. 92, A. IV. I. 2. Tavannes, marshal, a great per- secutor in the massacre at Paris, A. II. i. 258. 365. his miserable death, ib. Taverham, manor of, granted by the crown to the dean and chapter of Norwich, M. II. i. ]2I. Taverner, Richard, M. II. i. 460. A. I. i. 381. one of those who went from Cambridge to car- dinal Wolsey's college at Ox- ford, (Christ Church,) P. I. 10. a gospeller, M. I. i. 569. has a license to preach, II. ii. 270. was clerk of the signet to Henry VIII., A. II. ii. 147. translated the Common Places of Sarcerius into English, I. i. 498. II. ii. 147. his opinion concerning free-will, I. i. 498. Taverner, Richard, P. I. 106. Taverner, Silvester, he and J. Hynde bought of the crown the chantryofSprotton, North- amptonshire, M. II. ii. 404. Tawe, — a popish magistrate, M. II. i. 181. Taxes in Edward VI. 's reign, M. n. ii. 155. INDEX. 313 Taye, John, a magistrate in Es- sex, A. I. i. 55. Tayler, Jobn, priest of Fritenden, A. I. i. 558. Taylor, — A. IV. 94. Taylor, — English consul at Lis- bon, A. IV. 251. Taylor, captain, his death how caused by the earl of West- moreland, A. I. ii. 345. Taylor, Hamletus, ordained, G. 73- Taylor, Hugh, a priest, executed, ^ A. III. ii. 495. Taylor, James, a priest, A. III. ii. 424. 599. Taylor, Dr. John, archdeacon of Buckingham, Hen. VIII. 's am- bassador in France, M. I. i. 94. 98. as master of the rolls, his new year's gift to the king, 211. probably brought forward in life by cardinal Wolsey, 188. Taylor, Dr. John, C. pref. xiii. 92. M. I. ii. 369. II. i. 83. C. 383. 384. (as bishop of Lin- coln,) 430. 444. A. II. ii, 500. IV. 613. P. III. 21. edu- cated at St. John's college, Cambridge, Ch. 5. a famous preacher in London, M. I. i. 492. parson of St. Peter's, Cornhill, ii. 369. imprisoned on the six articles, i. 567. master of St. John's college, Cambridge, C. 240. as dean of Lincoln, present at the con- vocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. concerned in the royal visita- tion, 1547, C. 209. chosen prolocutor of the convocation of 1547, 220. supported the marriage of priests in that convocation, 222. one of those appointed to draw up the Book of Common Prayer, M. II. i. 134. in a commission against anabaptists, 385. ii. 200. in another to reform the ecclesiastical laws, Ch. 44. C. 388. consecrated bishop of Lincoln, 420. M. II. ii. 269. P. I. 60. has a license to preach, M. II. ii. 270. praises Ponet's book for the marriage of priests, 54. turned out of the house of lords in queen Mary's first parliament, for be- ing married, Ch. 5. C. 457. M. II. ii. 168. deprived, C. 442. 1056. M. III. i. 153. died soon after, II. ii. 168. an old acquaintance of sir T. Smith, ib. Taylor, John, alias Baker, M. II. ii. 4. 7. Taylor, John, parson, A. II. ii. 22. Taylor, John, fellow of King's college, Cambridge, W, I. 34. Taylor, Margaret, has a letter from Edward VI. to join in marriage with J. Canslare, M. II. ii. 253. Taylor, Richard, C. 251. Taylor, Robert, dean of South Mailing, in a commission to visit the vacant see of Chiches- ter, C. 384. Taylor, Robert, of the exche- quer, A. IV. 157. 158. Taylor, Roger, alias Cooke, C. 1098. 1 100. Taylor, Rowland, C. pref. xiii. 569. 959. P. I. 70. chaplain to archbishop Cranmer, and par- son of Hadley, C. 393. 603. in a commission to investigate a conspiracy against archbishop Cranmer, 172. in two commis- sions to reform the ecclesiasti- cal laws, 192. 388. 593. M. II. i. 530. 531. ii. 205. 206. P. II. 62. concerned in the royal vi- sitation, 1547, 209. one of the keepers of the spiritualities of the vacant see of Norwich, 274. in a commission against SH INDEX. anabaptists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. appointed one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathe- dral, 262. and archdeacon of Exeter, 269. in a commission to exercise spiritual jurisdiction in the vacant see of Worcester, C. 384. imprisoned for his re- ligion under queen Mary, 489. 490. his congratulatory letter to Cranmer, Ridley, and Lati- mer, after their disputation, 486. an intention of sending him and others to dispute at Cambridge, M. III. i. 185. his trial and condemnation, 164. 166. 289. ordered to be burnt, 331.332. endured the fire with firmness, C. 955. his epitaph, 604. his country and conver- sion, M. III. i. 291. grossly slandered in a sermon preached the day after his burning, C. 604. his extraordinary learning, 603. his care of his parish, ib. Taylor, William, chaplain to abp. Heathe, fled beyond sea, init. queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 416. Taylor, see Cardmaker. Tedcastel, John, married Eliza- beth May, A. I. i. 306. had a lumierous offspring, ib. Tedder, Tydder, — a seminary priest, recants, A. III. i. 699. W.I. 538. II. 155. Tedleston, manor of, bought of the crown by W. Thomas, M. II. i. 522. Teligny, — A. II. i. 52. 216. 242. son-in-law of admiral Co- ligni, 230. Tempest, Myget, A. I. ii. 320. an harbourer of Campion the Je- suit, II. ii. 359. P. II. 167. pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53.'II. i. 495. ii.ssc Tempest, Nicholas, A. IV. 481. Tempest, Robert, a priest, A. III. ii. 598. IV^ 148. Tempest, ^^'illiam, curate of Crip- plegate, London, his letter on being detected in ignorance, P. I. 258. III. 58. Tempests, the, A. I. ii. 345. Temple, — A. III. i. 433. Temple, William, of King's col- lege, Cambridge, answered Digby in defence of Ramus, A. IV. 610. provost of Trinity college, Dublin, ib. Temple, Waltham, manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. 159- Temples, (the two inns of court,) cleared of papists, P. I. 567. interrogatories put to the pa- pists, 568. Tenant, Henry, appointed one of the governors of Edward VI. 's grammar school at Gyggles- wick, M. II. ii. 505. Tenham, manor of, Kent, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Canterbury, C. 405. P. I. 160. Tenison, — married one of lady Gerard's daughters, A. IV, 307. his wife a great recusant, his house therefore searched, ib. Tenison, — of Peter-house col- lege, Cambridge, queen Eliza- beth's letter to his college to admit him fellow. A, III. i. 716. their letter to lord Burgh- ley thereupon, 717. ii. 496. Tenison, Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury, A. III. i. pre/, ix. Strvpe's dedication of his Life of Archbishop Parker to him, P. I. pre/, iii. had been bishop of Lincoln, 64. Tenths, see First-fruits. Terenlianus, wrote de Literis et Sijllabis, S. 1 1 . Terentius, C. 241. Terentius, anecdote respecting INDEX. 315 him and the emperor Valens, P. III. 7T. Terre, Agnes, imprisoned for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 56, released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Terrington, church of, archbishop Whitgift's care for its repair, W. II. 219. Terry, — schoolmaster of Battel, A. IV. 402. Terry, sir John, accompanies lord Clinton in his embassy into France, M. II. i. 507. Terry, John, imprisoned as a pa- pist, A. II. ii. 661. Terryl, — A. I. i. 57. Tertullian, A. I. i. 426. ii. 509. P. III. 78. 81. Tesmond, William, punished for forging, M. III. i. 496. Tesmond, William, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. Testament, see Bible. Testament, New, attempt at a translation by Cheke, using only English Saxon words, Ch. 163. translated by him, with notes, 172. Testaments, see Wills. Testimonials for a bishop elect, copy of, W. II. 35 I. Testons, first coined bv Henry VIII., M. II. i. 233. ■ of the value of twelve pence, ib. 486. called in by Edward VI., 233. 488. S. 36. still go in York, M. II. ii. 68. their value raised by proclamation. III. i. 508. Testwood, — burnt upon the six articles, C. 157. Tewksbury, John, burnt as an heretic, temp. Henry VIII., M. I. i. 116. 315. Tewokebury, — M. I. ii. 407. Teynter, rectory of, a stipend payable from it to the united see of Worcester and Glou- cester, M, II. ii. 6. Thackham, Thomas, vindicates himself from the charge of treachery towards Palmer, whom he succeeded as schoolmaster at Reading, M. III. i. 574. 575. notice of his answer to a slander in Mr. Fox's Acts and Monuments, 575. and of the reply thereto, ib. harboured lady Vane, 576. his relation of the taking of Palmer, 577. Perry's opinion of its truth, 584. information gathered at Reading touching Palmer, ii. 43°- Thackwel, — printed popish Welsh books, W. I, 579. Ill, 218. Thame, Bucks, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Thames, extraordinary ebb of, 1557, M. III. ii. 109. Thanksgivings appointed for a victory, 1547, C. 218. at the ceasing of the plague, P. I. 268. some account of bishop Cox's form, III. 60. for victory over the Turks, A. II. i. 155. see Prayer. Thatcher, John, a magistrate of Sussex, A. I. i. 70. Thatcher, John, notice of, A. IV. 386. Theatrum Crudelitatis Hceretico- rum in Anglia, notice of this tract, A. III. i. 705. Thecka, Henry, deprived for be- ing married, M. III. i. 169. Theloal, Simon, A. II. ii. 526. III. ii. 473. Theobertus, kingof Mettes, beaten in battle byTheodotus, S. 193. Theodoricus, king of Rome, fa- ther of Amula Suenta, 8. 190. Theodorus Balsamensis, see Bal- samensis. Theodosius, emperor, summoned the council at Ephesus, A. I. ii. 62. a singular man, and of 3i6 INDEX. a meek spirit, II. ii. 511. yet was carried away, and decreed against Cyril, ib. his excommu- nication, IV. 67. Theodotus, a noble of the Goths, S. T90. 212. married Amula Suenta, heiress to the kingdom of Rome, ib. caused her to be slain, ib. gained a victory over Theobertus, king of Mettes, Theophilus, a minister of the strangers' church at Norwich, P. II. 82. III. 185. 186. A. II. i. 1 74. a dispute between him and the other ministers, 174. the bishop of Norwich interposes, ib. they refuse his jurisdiction, ib. P. II. 83. he challenges to dispute, 84. they are banished, ib. A. II. i. 174. Theophylact, translated by CEco- lampadius, C. 583. Theses Theologicce Anglorum Rhe- mensium, notice of, A. III. i. 27 I. Thetford, Norfolk, a custom of this town in spiritual causes, C. 40 1 . an annual sermon there endowed by archbishop Parker, P. 1.503. 505. Thetford-hall, manor of, Lin- colnshire, given by Edward VI. to sir W.Cecil, M. II. ii. 222. Thexton, Lancelot, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, or- dained, M. II. i. 402. presented to the living of Great Bircham, ii. 265. has a license to preach, 267. in a commission against papists in Norfolk, P. II. 137. vicar of Aylsham, 335. A. II. i- 433- 434- Theydon, Boyce, manor of, So- merset, granted by Edward VI. to sirT. Wroth, M. II. i. 387. Theydon Mount, church of, de- stroyed by lightning, S. 151. rebuilt by sir W. Smith, ib. sir T. Smith had a residence there, 154- 155- 156. Thickens, Edward, of Cripple- gate, convicted of adultery, and punished, W. II. 429. Thickpeny, David, curate of Brighthelmstone,inhibited from preaching, and why, G. 293. the form of his submission en- joined, 294. restored by arch- bishop Grindal, 292. imposed upon the archbishop, 294. Thimbleby, sir Richard, a magis- trate in Lincolnshire, A. I. ii. !97- Thimblethorps, — imprisoned as a papist. Ay. 26. 27. 28. Thimelby, manor of, Lincoln- shire, granted by Edward VI. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 363. Thimelthorp, George, his frauds on bishop Parkhurst, A. II. i. 330. 332. 335. 336. concerned about the archdeaconry of Nor- wich, 445. ii. 536. Thinn, Francis, notice of his Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury, A. III. i. 659. 744. P. II. 502. W. I. 6. see Thijnn. Thirkel, — A. I. i. 10. Thirlby, Thomas, M. I. ii. 407. (as bishop of Westminster,) C. 261. M. II. i. 167. 331. 334. (as bishop of Norwich,) ii. 242. 254. 259. III. i. 191. (as bishop of Ely,) 322. 323. 454- C. 543. 611. 1019. M. III. ii. loi. 1 10. A. I. i. 413. P. II. 454. born at Cambridge, III. 298. educated at Trinity- hall, ib. II. ii. 1 70. supported there by queen Anne Bolen, the earl of Wiltshire, and lord Rochford, M. I. i. 430. a fel- low of Trinity- hall, P. III. 298. takes his doctor's degree, ib. introduced to Henry VIII. by Dr. Butts, C. 129. archbishop Craimier's great esteem for INDEX. 317 him, ib. 654. present at the convocation of 1534, M. I. i. 263. prolocutor of that in 1540, 553. one of the committee ap- pointed by convocation to con- sider Henry VIII. 's marriage with Anne of Cleves, 558.559. in a commission for discussion of certain questions in religion, C. no. consecrated the first bishop of Westminster, 1 29. A. III. i. 38. assists at the con- secration of bishop Wakeman, C. 135. and of bishop Bush, 142. concerned in the revision of the Institution of a Christian Man, M. I. i. 583. appointed to consecrate bishop Kitchin, C. 197. his letter to Parker about his preaching at court, P. I. 50. dean of the chapel to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 170. in the commission for drawing up the Book of Common Prayer, i. 134. returns from being am- bassador with the emperor, 172. goes along with the reforma- tion, 332. one of bishop Gar- diner's witnesses at his trial, 374. made bishop of Norwich, C. 129. in a commission against anabaptists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. S. 37. in another for the borders of England and Scot- land, M. II. i. 467. in another for survey of the king's courts, ii. 207. in another for sale of the king's lands, 17. 210. 211, sent ambassador to the empe- ror, 68. 78. returns home, 103. appointed by queen Mary her resident ambassador at the em- peror's court. III. i. 7. 28. held the see of Norwich six years, yet never went into his diocese, A. II. ii. 261. left the episco- pal property in great decay, 263. 582, 587. 589. (as bishop of Ely,) assisted at the trial of bishop Hoper, M. III. i. 286. of Rogers, 288. and of R. Tay- lor, 290. and of others, 330, appointed one of the ambassa- dors to the pope, 333. returns home again, 350. 359. he and bishop Boner appointed to de- grade archbishop Cranmer, 539. 541. 647. which he does with sorrow, 129. 539. assists at the consecration of archbishop Pole, 473. 474. has a commission for search of heretics, 477. sent to treat with the Russian ambas- sador, 521. assists at the con- secration of certain bishops, ii. 27. one of the overseers of car- dinal Pole's will, 143. a privy counsellor, 160. P. III. 298. signed various orders as such, M. III. ii. 414. i. 502. 559, ii. 75. 527. laid aside in the next reign, 160. the blame of the loss of Calais thrown on him, W. I. 436. continued by queen Elizabeth ambassador inFrance, whither he had been sent by queen Mary for the restitution of Calais, A. I. i. 37. 49, S. 65, sent his proxy to queen Elizabeth's first parliament, A. I. i. 82. returns home, 284. present himself in parliament, 86. dissented from the bill for restoring the supremacy to the crown, 87. and from that for uniformity, he. 113. summon- ed before the queen, 206. de- posed, 211. imprisoned in the Tower, ih. 220. P. I. 177. 178. excommunicated, A. I. i. 212. placed in archbishop Par- ker's custody, 213. P. I. 95. 277. 278. 283. 291. M. II. ii. 270. his death, P.I. 278. and burial, M. II. ii. 170. present at Edward VI. 's christening, i. 9. Thistel, or Thixtel, John, of Pern- 3i« INDEX. broke-liall, Cambridge, an uni- versity preacher, M. I. i. 75. an early gospeller, 568. P. I. 13- Thomas, — curate of Sholden, C. 144. Thomas, captain, an Irishman, a spy of Walsingham's, A. II. i. 87. 153- Thomas, Christian, M. III. i. 174. Thomas, John, M. III. i. 149. a rebel, taken prisoner at Scar- borough castle, ii. 519. exe- cuted, 68. Thomas, Lewis, abbot of Kyn- mer, consecrated suffragan bi- shop of Salop, C. 87. 1046. Thomas, Roger, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Thomas, Rowland, dean of Ban- gor, G. 318. Thomas, Thomas, printer at Cam- bridge, particulars of his press being seized by the stationers' company. A.m. i. 281.282.283. ii. 273. prints An Harmony of the Confessions of the reformed Churches, i. 651. made a dic- tionary of his own, and printed it, IV. T05. Thomas, William, M. I. i. 385. 387. III. i. T12. his character of prince Edward, II. i. 13. one of the most learned men of his time, ib. notice of his History of Italy, 311. clerk of the council, ii. 164. 224. went in an embassy to France, i. 473. ii. 243. his attempt to obtain a prebend of St. Paul's, i. 495. III. i. 281. G. 7. bi- shop Ridley's letter to sir J. Cheke to prevent it, M. III. ii. 264. grants made to him by the king, II. i. 522. ii. 221. his questions of state polity drawn up for the king, i. 157. his pre- fatory letter to the king, 156. also his common places of state, ii. 315. his discourses, whether it be expedient to vary with time, 365. whether it be bet- ter for a commonwealth, that the power be in the nobility or in the commonalty, 372. what prince's amity is best, 377. touching his majesty's outward affairs, 382. touching the re- formation of the coin, 389. an apology for some passages in the last and the other dis- courses, 391. executed. III. i, 192. 278. his supposed trea- son, 280. his works, 279. his heirs restored in blood, A. I. i. 468. Thomas, sir William, A, III. i. 365- Thombe, Michael, his recanta- tion, C. 257. Thomond, bishop of, A. IV. 252. Thompson, — a leader of the rebellion in the west, M. II. i. 281. Thompson, — a Lent preacher, 1565, P. III. 135. Thompson, — his prayer for lord Burghley the night before he died, A. IV. 468. Thompson, Edmund, ordained, M. II. i. 403. Thompson, Giles, dean of Wind- sor, W. II. 492. Thompson, Henry, bought church lands of the crown, M, II. i. 123. Thompson, John, M. I. i. 121. 125. 132. Thompson, Roger, a recusant, A. I. i. 412. Thomson, — M. III. i. 365. Thomson, — a jurat of Sandwich, P. I. 275- Thomson, — a papist, imprison- ed. Ay. 26. 27. Thomson, — a priest, A. III. ii. 599- INDEX. 319 Thomson, Christopher, imprison- ed as a papist, A. II. ii. 660. Thomson, Edmund, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 129. Thomson, Henry, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Thomson, James, a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Thomson, John, M. III. ii. 408. Thomson, Laurence, assisted in answering Feckenham's objec- tions against Cough's sermon, A. II. ii, 710. see Tovison. Thoresby, Ralph, M. I. i. pre/, ix. A. II. i. 481. IV. 610. G. 431. W. I. pref. ix. Thorn, — a godly minister, A. II. ii. 420. Thorn, Henry, presented to the living of East Dolish, A. II. i. 106. Thorn, Yorkshire, a grammar school founded there by Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 505. Thornborough, John, bishop of Limerick, his letters to lord Burghley to be one of the privy- council of Ireland, A. IV. 292. and for the removal of his goods from York to Limerick, 293. made bishop of Bristol, W. II. 518. Thornborow, — and Adria his wife, taken as mass-mongers, P. II. 366. A. II. i. 497. Thornden, (Thornton,) Richard, M. I. ii. 407. C. 435. 1044. 1046. M. III. i. 178. 481. no- tice of him, C. 1049. a Bene- dictine monk, P. I. 477. dear to archbishop Cranmer, and made by him a prebendary of Canterbury, C. 89. the arch- bishop's mark of respect to him, T049. yet concerned in the combiration against the archbishop, ib. 171. 173. 772. suffragan of Dover, 159. a great persecutor under queen Mary, 89. cardinal Pole gives him a faculty of absolution, M. III. i. 211. thrust himself into Adis- hani living, 213. in a commis- sion for search of heretics, 476. notice of his illness and death, ii. 28. P. I. 477. his character, C. 436. Thornden and Thorn- ton confoimded by Strype, 1049. Thorneton, — A. I. i. 246, Thorneton, Thomas, prebendary of Worcester, W. II. 350. Thornton, — in a commission to visit the diocese of Hereford, 0.316. Thornton, Thornden, John, C. 1044. 1046. 1047. commissary of Oxon, 52. styled Episcopus Syrineusis, ib. prior of Dover, 89. notice of his death, 1049. Thornton and Thornden con- founded by Strype, ib. Thornton, Thomas, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, A. IV. 338. Thornton, dean and chapter of, revenues granted to them by Edward VI., M. II. i. 120. Thorp, —A. II. i. 463. Thorp Kirby, alias Kirkby, manor of, Essex, granted by Edward VI. to lord Darcy, M. il.i. 461. Thoulwel, — A. I. i. 228. Thousand ministers, letter from the university of Cambridge to that of Oxford, upon their an- swer to the petition of, A. IV. 522. Thoyden Bois, manor of, granted by Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth. M. II. ii. 223. Thrackhold, — M. III. i. 81. Thrackvvray, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Three farthings, a silver coin, A. I. i. 397. Three half-pence, a silver coin, A. I. i. 397. 320 INDEX. Threlkeld, Richard, a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Threskil, Edmund, has a commis- sion to exercise episcopal juris- diction in the diocese of Here- ford, W. I. 263. Throgmorton, — chamberlain of the exchequer, present at a pri- vate conference about the sa- crament, Ch. 70. 77. Throgmorton, — condemned as a rebel in Norfolk, A. I. ii. 365. 366. Throgmorton, Clement, A. I. i. 47- Throgmorton, Francis, W. III. 95. I. 298. A. III. ii. 243. con- cerned in a plot for the escape of Mary queen of Scots, A. III. i. 88. 113. 234. 238.314. 315. 446. taken up for treason, 358. executed, 696. Throgmorton, John, one of Ed- ward VI.'s council in Wales, M. II. ii. 162. master of the guests under queen Mary, III. i. 99. sent to the Tower as a conspirator against the queen, 472. executed, 488. Throgmorton, sir John, W. 1. 297. A. IV. 487. Throgmorton, lady, wife of the preceding, A. II. ii, 211. IV. 139. a recusant. III. ii. 597. accused of attending mass, W. I. 165. Throgmorton, Kenelm, a French hostage placed in his custody, A. I. ii. 95. Throgmorton, Michael, servant to cardinal Pole, M. I. i. 477. 478. Throgmorton, sir Nicholas, M. III. i. 125. A. I. ii. 119. sur- renders the office of a treasurer of the mint, M. II. ii. 63. 227. 230. recommended by Edward VI. as a knight for the shire of Northampton, 66. one of the principal gentlemen of the king's privy-chamber, 164. committed as a conspirator in Wyat's rebellion, 149. tried and cleared, 150. 187. 280. 47. 60. 91. i. 554. pardoned. III. i. 330. ambassador in France, A. i. 17. 548. 549. S. 65. not friendly to sir T. Smith, 66. 81, returns to England, 67. goes again to France, 70. is arrest- ed, ih. A. I. ii. 94. 1 16. settles a peace, S. 72. 83. present at the celebration of the emperor's fu- neral at St. Paul's, A.I. ii. 1 1 9. G. 147. sent by queen Elizabeth to break off the marriage of Mary queen of Scots, A. I. ii. 203. great means made for his being of the privy-council, 204. what influence he was thought to have over the earl of Leices- ter, 211. notice of his death, II. i. 35. and character, ib. S. 70. 81. Throgmorton, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Throgmorton, Thomas, a recu- sant, A. III. i. 705. IV. 276. 389- Throgmortons, the, A. IV. 229. 232. Throuston, manor of, surrendered by Beaumont to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 45. granted by him to the earl of Huntingdon, ib. Thuanus, A. II. i. 353. Thucydides, C. 241. Ch. 171. S. 13- . . Thudley, sir Richard, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Thules, Christoph;?r, a priest, A. IV. 256. Thules, William, a recusant. A, I. i. 412. INDEX. 321 Thunderclap, 1559, A. I. i. 290. Thundering and lightning, 1561, A. I. i. 401. 404. Thurgarton, priory of, notice of, M. I. i. 397. Thurgood, — C. 613. Thurland, Thomas, master of the Savov hospital, deprived, and why,"A.IV. 582. 583.584. G. 235- 531- restored, 239. Thurland, Edmund, A. 11. i. 578. Thurste, Agnes, M. III. ii. 404. Thwaites, — C. 159. 769. M. I. i. 279. Thwaites, — A. II. ii. 616. Thwaites, Robert, M. I. i. 505, Thwing, — pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 53. II. i, 495- Thynn, sir John, imprisoned as an adherent of the duke of So- merset, M. II. i. 497. S. 42. he and L. Hyde bought of the crown Barkeley's chantry in Meere, Wilts, M. II. ii. 406. Thynn, William, prebendary of Wells, M. II. ii. 260. see Thinn. Tibal, see Tybal. Tichfield, the earl of Southamp- ton's house, M. II. ii, 9. Tilby, William, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Tildesly, — A. III. ii. 491. Tiler, — A. II. ii. 617. see Tyler. Tillage, proclamation for, M, II. ii. 15. 214. Tillius, John, bishop of Angou- leme, set forth the Greek ca- nons, and those of Charles the Great, against the worship of images, P. I. 221. III. 54. a favourer of the pure religion, ib. had many ancient MSS., especially of the councils, ih. Tillotson, John, archbishop of Canterbury, praised by Strype^ C. pref. vi. Tilmanston, advowson of, Kent, annexed by queen Mary to the VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPK. see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Tilney, — a case about his mar- riage, P. I. 549. master of the revels, A. II. ii, 708. Tilney, Charles, concerned in a plot to murder queen Eliza- beth, A. III. i. 606. ii. 424. 429, Tilneys, the. Ay, 115. Tilsley, parish of, Tilney, pro- bably so miscalled by Fuller, Ay, 2, Tilting at court before queen Mary, M. Ill, i. 330. 335, at Greenwich before queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. i. 288, and at court, Ch, 133. Tilxley, William, M. III. ii. 397. Tims, see Tyms. Tindal, see Tyndal. Tinmouth, scite of the monastery of, Northumberland, given by Edward VI. to the duke of Northumberland, M. II. ii. ,223, Tipper, — A. IV. 289. 290. see Typper. Tipping, Ralph, A. II. ii. 346. Tipping, sir Thomas, married Anne Cheke, Ch. 147, Tirol, — A. IV. 251. Tirrel, see Tyrrel. Tirwhit, see Tyrwhit. Titchburn, — pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I, ii, 54, II. '• 495- ii- 551- Titchburn, — A. II. ii. 22. Titchburn, Peter, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 66 1. Tither, — a papist, A. III. i. 275. ii. 271. Tiverton, notice of a great fire at, W. II. 404. Tobel, meaning of. Ay. 122. Tod, Gregory, chaplain to arch- bishop Cranmer, C. 251. Tod, Robert, a puritan, released from prison, G. 201. Y 332 INDEX. Todd, Henrv James, C. adv. vi. Todd, John.'M. III. ii. 410. Todd, Thomas, fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. II. ii. 668. Todd, William, archdeacon of Bedford, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the ar- ticles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. 490. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 504. signed the peti- tion of the lower house for dis- cipline, 512. Todwel, manor of, Herts, given in exchange by the crown to the see of London, M. II. i. 340. had belonged to the see of Westminster, ib. Tofts, John, C. T45. Toke, see Wade. Toledo, cardinal of, A. IV. 139. Toledo, Ferdinando de, ill treated by the base son of the king of Navarre, A. I. ii. 88. Toleshunt knights, Essex, proper- ty there bought of the crown by J. Wells, M. II. ii. 405. Toller, John, prebendary of Nor- wich, P. I. 492. III. 161. Tolwyn, William, rector of St. Anthony's, London, P. I. 1 1 1. imprisoned upon the six ar- ticles, M. I. i. 567. Tomkins, Richard, his character, A. m. ii. 453. Tomkins, Thomas, condemned as an heretic, temp, queen Marv, M. III. i. 332. burnt, 334. his hand burnt with a candle by bishop Boner, A. I. ii. 298. Tomkyns, — a printer, A. III. ii. 603. Tomlyn, — concerned in Martin Marprelate's printing press, A. III. ii. 605. Tomson, — held t\ie rectory of Kilken, A. II. ii. 525. III. ii. 472. Tomson, Harold, arraigned as a protestant, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 330. see Thompson. Tomworth, — A. I. ii. 10 1. sent in an embassy to Mary queen of Scots, 206. 207. Tong, or Tongue, — chaplain to prince Edward, M. II. i. 16. one of the learned men of Cam- bridge, S. 14. Ch. 18. a great preacher, C, 295. preaches a- gainst Lent, ib. Tonic, Robert, an inmate of car- dinal Wolsey's family, M. I. i. 194. Tonstal, — A. HI. ii. 266. 267. Tonstal, Cuthbert, (as bishop of London,) M. I. i. 109. 569, (as bishop of Durham,) C. 1 13. 114. M. III. i. 174. 323. 436. 454. ii. 95. C. 480. 543. 978. A. I. i. 28. 289. II. i. 351. ii. 500. 376. 377. 683. 690. 692. P. I. 106. 107. II. 454. base born, M. II. ii. 167. III. i. i 73. educated at Cambridge, P. III. 297. vicar-general to archbi- shop Warham, ib. employed in frequent embassies by Henry VIII., ib. who made him mas- ter of the rolls, and afterwards bishop of London, ib. an in- mate of cardinal Wolsey's fa- mily, M. I. i, 194. as bishop of London, made a strict in- quisition in Essex for the known men, P. I. 5. sent forth an or- der, at the instigation of cardi- nal Wolsey, calling in all Eng- lish translations of the scrip- tures, M. I. i. 254. C. 1 16. as bishop of Durham, his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. present at the con- vocation of 1534, 263. sent ambassador to Cam bray, 282. preached in favour of the king's supremacy, 294. his letter on the subject, defending himself INDEX. y^z from the inijuitalion of being- favourable to the usurpations of Rome, ii. 206. his letter to Crumwel concerning a com- mission sent him to take the valuation of livings in his dio- cese, 219. his letter concern- ing a book taken at Newcastle, called Hortulus AnimcE, 274. sends up his papal bulls to Crumwel on their being an- nulled, i. 381. concerned in the Institution of a Christian Man, C.'j'j. one of the bishops who disputed with Lambert, 94. ordered by the king to read over Pole's book De Unione Ecclesiastica, M. I. i. 456. dis- approves of it, ib. writes to him, expressing his sorrow at his being made a cardinal, 461. combines with bishops Stokes- ly, Gardiner, and Sampson to preserve the old religion, 503. ii. 381. appointed by the king to confer with certain German divines, i. 508. his judgment of pilgrimages, ii, 388. notice of his sermon preached before the king against the pope's su- premacy, i. 518. supported the six articles in parliament, 104. 743. in the commission for discussion of certain questions in religion, iio. solution of some questions about the sa- craments, probably his, iii. 744. one of Henry VIII.'s privy counsellors, 565. con- cerned in the business about Anne of Cleves, 555 — 559. his deposition concerning the mar- riage, ii. 452. in a commission to treat of a match between princess Mary and a son of the French king, III. i. 204. no- tice of his denying his having overlooked the translation of the scriptures, I. i. 613. A. II. i. 325. takes part in the fune- ral of Henry VIII., M. II. ii. 29 ( . one of king Henry's exe- cutors, i. 19. sided at first with king Edward and Cranmer in reforming the church, 55. bi- shop Gardiner's censure on this conduct, ib. one of bishop Gar- diner's witnesses at his trial, i. 374. in a commission to re- form the ecclesiastical laws, 530. in another to prorogue parliament, ii. 199. one of Edward VI. 's privy-council, 159. and of his council in the north, 161. deprived, C. 414. ]M. II. ii. 22. sent to the Tower for misprision of treason, C. 414. M. II. ii. 21. 167. 185. 193. a commission for his trial, 208. restored by queen Mary, C. 443. 1056. M. II. ii. 267. assists at her coronation. III. i. 55. does her homage, 56. in the commission to deprive king Edward's bishops, 153. C. 442. assists at the trial of bishop Hoper, 332. M. III. i. 286. and of Dr. Taylor, 290. preaches in the shrouds, 320. in a com- mission for the arraignment of protestants, 330. in another to make up a difference between lord Wharton and the gentle- men of Northumberland, ii. 72. has orders for raising the forces of his see, 79. refuses to go till an actual invasion, 80. in a commission to settle peace with Scotland, A. I. i. 30, sent his proxy to the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, 82. de- prived again, 206. 211. com- mitted to the custody of arch- bishop Parker, P. I. 94. well treated by the archbishop, A. I. ii. 358. who prevailed upon him to change some of his opinions, P. I. 94. III. 298. y 2 324 INDEX. his death, M. II. ii. 167. G. 40, A. I. i. 213. ii. 358. bu- ried in Lambeth church, P. III. 298. M. II. ii. 167. G. 40. Harpsfield's praise of him, M. III. i. 62. Erasmus's cha- racter of him, P. I. 94. allow- ed of the marriage of priests, III. 298. wrote a book in fa- vour of transubstantiation, M. II. ii. 167. on which Ridley annotated, C.492. his opinion of transubstantiation, A. I. i. 116. 212. notice of his tract de Arte Supputandi, S. 268 — 271. Tonstal, Francis, M. III. ii. 92. Tonstal, John, chaplain to bishop Tonstal, M. I. i. 121. Tonstal, Marmaduke, M. I. i. 132. Tonstal, Rodolph, chaplain to archbishop Grindal, G. 244. made by him a prebend of York, ib. and master of the hospital at Ripon, ib. Tonstal, Thomas, a Franciscan friar, and cousin-german to bi- shop Tonstal, P. I. 141. A. I. i. 342. Took, — of Bene't college, Cam- bridge, a gospeller, M. I. i. 568. Tooker, William, notice of his book, Charisma, sive Donum Sanationis, A. IV. 438. 620. as dean of Litchfield, absolved from his suspension for non- appearance at the convocation of 1603, 555. Tooly, — hung for robbery in a smart dress, M. III. i. 342. Topclyff, — S. 104. A. II. i. 521. Topclyff, Richard, A. III. i. 125. 362. W. I. 605. III. 200. A. IV. 256. 425. a great instru- ment of queen Elizabeth's for discovering popish traitors, II. i. 577. his declarations and dis- coveries concerning papists, III. i. 610. his letter to lord Burghley about seminaries and papists, IV. 53. his letter to the queen concerning South- wel and Copley, 185. Torrentinus, Laurentius, printer to the duke of Florence, had a privilege in England to print the digests and pandects of the civil law for seven years, M. IL i. 552. ii. 217. Tossel, John, a Avizard, M. III. i. 482. ii. 389. Totehil-street, Westminster, mes- suages there bought of the crown by W. Chester and C. Nedeham, M. II. ii. 409. Tothel, Tothyl, Richard, printer, has a license to print books on the common law for seven years, M. II. ii. 1 14. 255. prints the book of statutes, III. i. 537. notice of his print- ing, 538. warden of the sta- tioners' company. Ay. 38. A. II. ii. 189. Tother, John, priest, imprisoned for religion under queen Mary, and released under queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. i. 55. Totneys, Devon, a chantry there bought of the crown by J. Pe- ter and J. Bogan, M. II. ii. 402. Touche, Edward, A. IV. 574. Touchstone of the New Gospel, (see R. Bristow.) Touker, or Tucker, Francis, put in the inquisition at Rome, A. III. i. 274. comes home, ib. makes discoveries of the Eng- lish at Rome, ib. informs con- cerning some in the Marshal- sea, 275. his letter to lord Burghley about these matters, ii. 271. Tour, Bertrand de la, a French INDEX. 3^5 nobleman, reveals the confe- deracy of popish princes against queen Elizabeth, A. II. i. 375. 376. 377. P. II. 290, III. 307- Tournay, cardinal Wolsey made bishop of, M. I. i. 8. advice to Henry VIII. for a bishop of Tournay, 9. letter of the con- stables there to cardinal VVol- sey about their pay, 11. 13. ii. 8. and of the council, i. 14. ii. 12. an intent of seizing the place, i. 17. a conspiracy of the French for invading it, 21. income of the bishopric, 30. Tournay given up, 34. Tourner, Rowland, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. II. ii. 550. called himself lord Aud- ley at Madrid, lb. see Turner. Tovye, William, prebendary of Worcester, W. II. 350. Towceter, rectory of, Northamp- tonshire, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Litch- field and Coventry, M. II. i. 119. Tower, Robert, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. i. 2, ii. 415. 416. nominated by the coun- cil to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. Tower-hill, abbot of, present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 8. Tower-hill, new abbey of, M. I. i.410. founded byEdward III., 411. Towford, manor of, Devon, taken in exchange by the crown from lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234. Towly, John, a pardon granted to, M. II. ii. 239. Townley, John, a recusant, A. IV. 276. Ay. 25. Townsend, — a papist, A. II. i. 162. Townsend, — P. II. 358. Townsend, Dr., W. I. 420. III. 153- Townsend, Henry, a magistrate, A. IV. 243. Townsend, sir Robert, one of Edward VI. 's council in the marches of Wales, M. II. ii. 161. Townsend, sir Roger, in a com- mission to visit the religious houses to be suppressed in Suffolk and Norfolk, P. I. 44. one of the lord lieutenants for Norfolk, M. II. i. 464. ii. 202. Townsend, Thomas, a magistrate in Norfolk, suspected, and backward in religion, A. III. ii. 460. Toy, Humphrey, M. III. ii. 362. A. II. i. 414. ii. 512. 513. em- ployed to print Whitgift's An- swer to the Admonition to Par- liament, &c. P. II. 140. III. 207. Whitgift's Defence of his Answer printed by Binneman for him, 363. Toy, Robert, printed bishop Gar- diner's Declaration of such Ar- ticles as G. Joy had gone about to confute, M. II. i. 52. also his Declaration of the Devil's Sophistry, &c. ib. Tracy, Richard, son of William, a favourer of all good and god- ly learning, M. II. i. 520. Vi- gon's Surgery dedicated to him by Traheron, ib. his letter to Cecil upon queen Elizabeth's having the crucifix in her cha- pel, A. I. ii. 198. 199. Tracy, William, of Todington, popish severity shewn to his dead body, A. I. ii. 198. Trade, Henry VIIl.'s care of, M. I. i. 6. treaty at Bruges about it, A. I. ii. 204. 211. Traffbrd, Edmund, A. I. ii. 259. Traheron, Traherne, Bartholo- mew, a gospeller at Oxford, Y3 326 INDEX. M. I. i. 581. librarian to Ed- ward VI., ib. Ch. 87. sets forth Vigon on Surgery, M. II. i. 420. in a commission to re- form the ecclesiastical laws, 530.531. ii. 205. 206. C. 388. made dean of Chichester, M. II. ii. 266. 267. 270. a pre- bend of Windsor granted him, 274. 276. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. read divinity lectures at Frank- fort against the Arians, 514. M. III. i 543. accused for a certain point of doctrine, 543. vindicates himself, ib. j)r.blish- ed his readings at the recom- mendation of bishop Barkley, 544. A. III. i. 40. bishop Park- hurst's epigram to him, II. ii. 502. Traitors executed, M. III. ii. 3. Transubstantiation, disputation concerning, at Cambridge, M. II. i. 328. C. 290. passage a- gainst it in a Saxon homily, P. 1.472. archbishop Parker's in- ference from this homily of the doctrine of the ancient English church on this point, 475. see Corporeal presence. Trapp, — P. I. 224. Travers, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. Travers, Walter, a puritan, A. III. i. 226. W.I. 299. A. III. i- 493- 494- W. I. 550. 601. II. 6. ordained at Antwerp, A. II. i. 277. Ill: i. 179. W. I. 477. his ordination called in question, A. II. ii. 174. III. i. 352. W. I. 478. his reasons for its validity, 346. 476. III. 1 75. also, (with archbp. Whit- gift's marginal observations,) I. 480. III. 182. nominated by the council to confer with any papist, I. 198. sometime fellow of Trinity college, Cam- bridge, 340. reader at the Tem- ple, A. 111. i. 352, favoured by lord Burghley and others in his suit for the mastership of the Temple, W. I. 340. A. III. i- 352- 353- 354-. opposed by archbishop Whitgift, W. 1. 34 1 . who gives some account of him at the queen's desire, 343. and states his opinion of the book De Disciplina Ecclesiastica, of which he was reputed to be the author, 344. A. III. i. 413. he is in consequence excluded, W. I. 344. his book De Disci- plina Ecclesiastica of high au- thority among the puritans, 345. corrected by Cartwright, ib. reprinted in English by the presbyterians in 1644, under the title of a Directory of Go- vernment, (Sfc. ib. would inno- vate at the Temple, A. 111. i. 354. preaches opposite doc- trines to Hooker, W. I. 448. and in consequence inhibited by archbishop Whitgift from preaching, ib. supplicates the council, ib. A. III. i. 352. 632. account of Hooker's Answer to his Supplication, W. I. 345. 449. A. III. i. 353. articles of pretended imsound doctrine gathered by him against Hook- er, W. I. 451. 477. his appli- cation to lord Burghley to be restored to preaching, 475. one of the ministers of the hohj discipline, 502. Travers, William, a priest, A. 111. ii. 599. Traves, John, M. III. i. 364. ii. 285. Treacle a remedy tor poison, C. 759- Treason, an act of parliament concerning, 155 1, M. II. i. 554. another act explaining it, III. i. 58. an act concerning it INDEX. 327 renewed, A. I. i. 68. lord Mon- tague's and Mr. Atkinson's speeches against the penalty of treason, in a bill for assurance of Q. Elizabeth's royal power, 441 — 455. a speech in favour of the penalty, 455. Treasurer of the household, see Earl of Wiltshire. Treaty for the marches between England and Scotland con- cluded 1563, A.I. ii. 104. with France 1564, 115. S. 109. at Bruges about trade, A. I. ii. 204. 211. Tregennow, James, curate of St. Ives, Cornwall, M. III. i. 175. Tregonwel, Trigonel, John, C. 27. I 107. mo. an inmate of cardinal Wolsey's family, M. I. i. 194. employed by Hen. VIII. in an embassy about his di- vorce, C. 13. one of the com- mittee appointed by convoca- tion to investigate the king's marriage with Anne of Cleves, M. Li. 559, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation. III. ii. 181. in the commission for restitution of bishop Boner, i. 36. II. ii. 165. present at the trial of bishop Hoper, III. i. 286. allowed by the queen to have thirty re- tainers, ii. 162. TreifFord, Edmund, favourable no- tice of, G. 267. recommended by archbishop Grindal to be sheriff of Cheshire, ih. Tremain, — married to John Cheke, Ch. 2. Tremain, Nicholas, proclaimed traitor, M. III. i. 487. fled be- yond sea, lb. Tremain, Richard, proclaimed traitor, M. III. i. 487. fled be- yond sea, ib. Tremain, Richard, fellow of Exe- ter college, Oxford, A. II. ii. 33. ordained, G, 54. subscrib- ed, as a member of the convo- cation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. one that signed a request to the synod concern- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 502. votes for the six ar- ticles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. one of tlie Lent preachers, 1565, P. III. 135. commissary in all the pe- culiars of the church of Exe- ter, A. II. ii. 34. Tremain, Richard, a recusant, A. II. ii. 33. III. ii. 600. impri- soned, 662. Tremayle, sir John, one of Henry VIII. 's council at Tournay, M. I. ii. 16. Tremellius, John Emanuel, P. I. 59. 61. 196. 538. a converted Jew, M. II. i. 323. appointed Hebrew professor at Cam- bridge, ib. his letter to Cecil, ib. a prebend of Carlisle grant- ed to him, 324. ii. 53. by bi- shop Goodrich's application, 53. he and his wife made de- nizens, III. i. 324. cardinal Pole's harsh behaviour to him, VV. I. I i. professor at Heidel- berg, P. II. 147. Tremoyl, M., a Fretich hostage, M. h. i. 358. Tremuleeus, Joannes, G. 193. Trenenian, — married to Edward Cheke, Ch. 2. Trent, cardinal of, M. II. i. 298. Trent, council of, Bullinger's opinion of its purpose, M. II. i. 398. Sieidan's account of it, C. 10 1 4. censures Jewel's A- pology, A. I. i. 428. a godly admonition of the decrees of this council, published by arch- bishop Parker, or his order, ii. 59. 1 14. bishop Jewel's answer to Scipio concerning this coun- cil, 60. Y4 328 INDEX. Tresberket, manor of, Carmar- thenshire, granted by the crown to Dr. Leyson, M. II. ii. 232. had belonged to the priory of Carmarthen, ib. Tresham, — A. III. i. 125. IV. 332. 390. Tresham, captain, A. I. ii, 344. IV. 35°- Tresham, Lewis, son of sir Wil- liam, A. II. ii. 346. Tresham, sir Thomas, M. III. i. 194. created lord prior of St. John's of Jerusalem, ii. 21. sent his proxy to the first par- liament of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. his death and burial, ^398. Tresham, sir Thomas, A. III. i. 434. ii. 597. IV. 276. knighted by queen Elizabeth, II, i. 585. an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, P, II, 166. A. II, ii, 358, committed and fined in consequence. III, i, 180. 181, his protestation of allegiance to queen Elizabeth, ii. 80, 81. notice of his imprisonment, ^^ W, I. 528. 529.530, Tresham, Dr, William, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, M, I, ii, 407, III, i. 220, in a com- mission for discussion of cer- tain questions in religion, C. 1 10. concerned with the dis- putation on the sacrament with P. Martyr at Oxford, 286, 287, 289. his slanderous character of him, A. I. i, 43 I. his epistle to a relation respecting it, C, 851. one of the disputants a- gainst Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer at Oxford, 480, 367. his part at Cranmer's trial, 535. 1079. 1084. 1090. 1092, a recusant under queen Eliza- beth, A. 1. i. 414. placed in aM;hbishop Parker's custody, P. I. 95. III. 299. was vice-clian- cellor of Oxford, 299. Tresham, sir William, and his wife, A. II. ii. 346, Tresham, lady, buried, M. Ill, ii. 10. Tresham, lady, a recusant. A, III- "• 597- Tresom, Thomas, a traitor. A, IV. 229, Trevise, — A. III. i. 744, Trevor, Dr., physician, A. II. ii. 83- Trevor, Richard, W, II, 332, Trew, — a teacher among the free-willers, imprisoned, temp, queen Mary, C. 502. Trewbody, Thomas, deprived from the prebend of Combe, temp, queen Mary, M. Ill, i. 353, Trials by jury, wherein superior to those by civil law according to bishop Aylmer, Ay, 167. who however laments the cor- ruption of the trial by jury in his time, ib. 191. Trig! an, Francis, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii, 661. Trimnel, Charles, bishop of Nor- wich, (afterwards bishop of Winchester,) A, III. i. pre/. viii. Trinity denied, C, 255, Trinity college, Cambridge, sta- tutes signed for, by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 274. the sur- plice thrown off there by all but three at Cartwright's in- stigation, A. I. ii. 154. parti- culars respecting the circum- stance, ib. Cecil, as chancellor of the university, writes to the college upon it, ib. their let- ter to lord Burghley in behalf of one of their society, IV. 585. comj)laint respecting the election of Westminster scho- lars to that college, W. I. 26. 27. 28. III. 12, numbers of scholars elected regulated, I. INDEX. 339 28. what alteration dean Good- man afterwards endeavoured to make, ib. eminent persons edu- cated at this college under Whitgift, 156, 157. catalogue of the MSS. bequeathed to it by archbishop Whitgift, III. 410. Trinity-hall, Cambridge, archbp. Parker's donation of plate, P. II. 90. 91. record of an Ireni- cum between this hall and Bene't college, 92. a law-scho- larship founded by archbishop Parker for Norwich school, 95. archbishop Parker's benefac- tion to the hall, 484. III. 337. 338. 35°- Trip, — a minister. Ay. 30. Triumph at court, M. II. i. 482. at Greenwich, III. i. 328. Trocmarton, — A. I. i. 552. Troublefield, see Tubervile. Troughton, Thomas, M. III. i. 484. ii. 391. Trudgeover, see Eagles. Trugeon, — Ay. 27. Tubman, William, G. 604. 436. Tuchyner, Thomas, schoolmaster, M. III. i. 438. Tuck, Henry, a gospeller, M. I. i. Tuck, John, in a commission for search of heretics, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 476. Tucker, John, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Tucker, Lazarus, M. II. i. 544. see Touker. Tufton, John, in a commission for restitution of money un- justly taken away under queen Mary, A. I. i. 559. Mary Bar- rel placed in his custody, P. I. 289. entertained queen Eliza- beth at Hotherfield, A. II. i, 465- ii- 539- Tuke, sir Brian, M. I. i. 163. a patron of Leland, II. ii. 42. Tunbridge, Kent, a grammar school founded there by Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 51. 231, 281. the castle and manor granted by Edward VI. to the Duke of Northumberland, III. i- 43- Tunslal, see Tonstal. Turbervile, (Troublefield,) James, consecrated bishop of Exeter, C. 459. M. III. i. 360. pre- sent at the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 82. dissented from the bill for re- storing tenths and first-fruits to the crown, 83, 85. from that for restoring the supremacy to the crown, 84. 85. 87. from that for exchange of bishops' lands, 86. from that for uni- formity, &c. 87. from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. pre- sent at the disputation at West- minster, 1 29. summoned be- fore the queen, 206. impri- soned in the Tower, 211. 220. P. I. 177. 178. 278. signs the letter of the deprived bishops to the queen, A. I. i. 217. fur- ther notice of him, 214. his character, ib. Turgarton, Derbyshire, M. I. ii. 406. Turges, Edmund, ordained, M. II. i. 402. Turk, William, groom of Ed- ward VI.'s privy-chamber, a grant to, M. II. ii. 218. Turks ; their invasion of Hun- gary, 1532, C. 16. their assist- ance called in by the French against the emperor Charles V., M. II. i. 296. thanksgiving ap- pointed for victory over them, A. II. i. 155. 156. bonfires ordered, 157. Turnbull, Hugh, cation of Can- terbury, temp, queen Mary and 33° INDEX. queen Elizabeth, M. III. i. 478. F. I. 103. 144. complying with popery under queen Mary, A. I. i. 492. in a commission for heretics, M. III. ii. 120. as dean of Chichester, subscribed, as a member of the convoca- tion, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. votes against the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. Turnbull, Richard, one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathedral, M. III. i. 478. Turner, — A. III. i. 482. Turner, Bernard, vicar of Shop- land, A. III. i. 180. Turner, captain Edward, sent to the Tower as a traitor, M. III. i. 472. arraigned and con- demned, 494. 549. his heirs restored in blood, A. I. i. 468. Turner, Dr., A. II. ii. 577. Turner, Dr., offered to the house of commons, whereof he was a member, a bill and book in favour of the puritans, W. I. 347- Turner, John, rector of St. Leo- nard's in East-cheap, interroga- tories ministered unto him for being married, C. 468. 469. his confession, 470. Turner, Richard, C. 393. 643. S. 51. A. I. ii. 169. II. i. 8. a Staffordshire man, C. 394. fel- low of Magdalen college, Ox- ford, M. II. i. 518. the chief occasion of the first concord- ance in English, ib. curate of Chartam, C. 394. 611. 1054. his conduct there, 147. com- monly called Turner of Can- terbury, 394. lived in Mr. Morice's family, ib. his trou- bles from his bold preaching against popery, ib. 159. 160. 611. M. II. i. 518. placed by archbp. Cranmer as a preacher at Canterbury, C. 229. 395. 1052. preaches against the re- bels in Kent, 395. Cranmer's opinion of him, 398. 906. M. II. i. 518. recommended by him for the see of Armagh, C. 394. M. II. i. 518. which he declines, C. 399. a prebend of Wells granted to him, M. IL i. 518. ii. 268. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. 472. resident at Basil, where he read divinity lec- tures, 395. M. III. i. 232. disapproved of Knox's princi- j)les about government, 406. preaches at Paul's Cross, G. 38. one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathedral, P. I. 144. vicar of Dartfbrd, 151. preaches before the visitors of the diocese of Rochester, ib. preaches a Spital sermon, 1561, A. I. i. 408. Turner, Robert, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 45°- Turner, Robert, a Jesuit, made professor of divinity at Ingol- stadt through cardinal Allen's influence, A. III. i. 461. no- tice of his correspondence with the cardinal, 462. notice of his Ccedes Darliana, 565. drew up in Latin a consolatory letter to Mary queen of Scots, at the desire and instruction of bishop Leslie, 237. published certain orations and letters of Cam- pion, II. i. 161. whose scholar he had been. III. i. 237. Turner, Thomas, M. I. i. 133. III. i. 579. admitted fellow of Peter-house college, Cam- bridge, W. I. 8. Turner, Thomas, W. II. 160. Turner, William, C. 336. A. I. i. INDEX. 331 381. a native of Northumber- land, C. 394. educated at Pem- broke-hall, Cambridge, G. 7. an early gospeller there, P. I. 13. befriended by sir J. Cheke and sir W. Cecil, C. 394. phy- sician in ordinary to the duke of Somerset's family, ib. wrote on original sin against Cooke, M. II. i. III. notice of his tract against the mass, 216. the first Englishman that com- piled an herbal, C. 394. notice of its publication, M. II. i. 552. ii. 218. made dean of Wells, C. 394. M. II. ii. 261. or- dained, 62. an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. notice of his Spiritual Physic, M. III. i, 235. C. 512. quotations from it, 76. 420. his letter to Fox concerning bishop Ridley, 385. his works prohibited as heretical, 418. preaches at St. Paul's before a great audience, temp, queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 199. re- stored to his deanery, P. I. 93. did not vote upon the six arti- cles altering certain rites and ceremonies, in the convocation of 1562, A. I. i. 505. seques- tered for nonconformity, G. 145. P. I. 301. was the author of The Hunting of the Romish Fox, C. 512. Turner, William, a puritan, re- leased from prison, G. 201. see Tourner. Turpin, — M. III. ii. 402. Turpin, Thomas, an exile for re- ligion at Arrow, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 154. Turpin, Thomas, ordained, G. 73; 74- Turrit, Dr., j)resent at Edward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 9. Turvile, John, patron of the liv- ing of Thurleston, M. III. ii. 401. Turwert, Henry, burnt as an anabaptist, temp, queen Eli- zabeth, A. IV. 608. Tusser, — A. IV. 92. 93. 94. Tutte, sir Richard, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Tutty, captain, served under the Dacres against the Scots, A. I. i. 28. thanked for his services, ib. Twee, Jenet, daughter of an al- derman of Dublin, married to R. Aylmer, Ay. 216. Twidall, Adam, A. I. ii. 26. Twiford, manor of, Hants, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Winchester, M. II. i. 483. Twine, Brian, wrote his Apology for the Antiquity of Oxford, in answer to the treatise of Caius on the Antiquity of Cambridge, A. I. ii. 1 08. censured by Strype for reflecting upon some of archbishop Parker's writings, P. I. pre/, xii. 555. Twisden, William, he and J. Brown bought of the crown the chantry in Sevenoke, Kent, M. II. ii. 405. Twisse, Dr., A. I. i. 528. Twydale, John, fellow of Queen's college, Cambridge, ordained, G. 53. Twynge, John, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Tyas, Edward, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. Tybal, Edmund, M. I. i. 133. Tybal, John, M. I. i. 131. his confession, ii. 50. Tybald, Thomas, A. II. ii. 452. Tydder, see Tedder. T've, Dr., A. II. ii. 578. 332 INDEX. Tye, Peter, A. II. ii. 577. Tye, Thomas, a priest, and com- missary of bishop Boner, M. III. ii. 61. 62.63. 148. P.I. 47. A. I. i, 378. II. ii. 283. 284. Tyled, Clement, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 5 1 8. executed, 68. Tyler, — imprisoned for spread- ing Browne's books, A. III. i. 28. ii. 172. see Tiler. Tyllesworth, Robert and Thomas, gospellers, M. I. i. 116. 117. Tyms, — sister of the succeed- ing:, a letter from her and Fos- ter, consoling an afflicted gos- peller, M. III. ii. 63. 510. Tyms, William, A. II. ii. 283. a minister, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 488. ii. 320. Tyndal, Humphrey, master of Queen's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 721. ii. 1 19. 121. 496. IV. 105. W. II. 145. P. III. 265. A. IV. 229. W. II. 284. A. IV. 435. vice-chan- cellor of the university. III. i. 496. 645. 646. favours Cal- vin's explanation of predestina- tion, W. II. 228. how far con- cerned in the dispute with Bar- ret at Cambridge on that sub- ject, 230. 231. 235. 246. 248. 257. 268. and with Dr. Baro, 306. A. IV. 320, 322. deputed by the university to assist in drawing up the Lambeth arti- cles, W. II. 279. Tyndal, John, brother of Wil- liam, C. T16. Tyndal, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Tyndal, William, C. pre/, xiii. A. I. ii. 43. the New Testament translated by him under the name of Hotchyn and others, published, 1526, M. I. i. 113. C. 115. A. II. i. 322. pro- hibited by bp. Boner, C. 138. anecdote how king Henry met with and approved of his work, entitled TheOhedienceofaChris- ten Man,M. I. i. 171. 172. 173. his answer to sir T. More pro- hibited from being read, 255. the Bible (called Matthew's) translated by him and Cover- dale, published, 1537, 472. C. 83. 84. 117. A. II. i. 324. an alteration in its reprint, 1540, M. I. i. 473. reprinted again, 1549, A. II. i. 325. his trans- lation of the scriptures forbid- den by the parliament of 1542, C. 141. put to death for his religion in Flanders, 83. his works prohibited as hereti- cal, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 418, edited by J. Fox, A. II. i. 463., Tyngerst, alias Fingurst, manor of, Bucks, given in exchange by the duke of Somerset to a prebend of Wells, M. II. ii. 260. Tynton, manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. 160. Typoets, Paul, A. IV. 570. Typtoft, lord, executed for acting against the laws, although by the king's commission, C. 216. Typper, — a searcher after con- cealed lands, W. II, 197. 198. see Tipper. Tyrone, earl of, A. III. ii, 22. see S. O'Neal. Tyrrel, — M, III. i. 311- 554- Tyrrel, — A. IV, 207. Tyrrel, Anthony, his confession and story,, A. III. i. 615. his letter to lord Burghley, ib. a second offering to discover INDEX. 333 treasonable practices, 617. his letter to the queen recanting his recantation, 6ig. ii. 425. again deserts popery, i. 697. his letter to the queen, ib. and to lord Burghley, 698. makes a public recantation, 699. W. I. 538. II. 155. his letter to lord Burghley for his favour, A. III. i. 700. ii. 487. Tyrrel, Charles, his controversy with Chetwood about a mar- riage, A. I. i. 51. 52. _ Tyrrel, Edmund, a magistrate in Essex, M. III. i. 440. a perse- cutor of protestants, temp, queen Mary, ib. in a commis- sion against Lollards, 553. Tyrrel, George, pensioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. 1.495.11.551. Tyrrel, sir Henry, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coro- nation, M. II. 1. 36. high sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, ii. 164. he and his heirs govern- ors of Edward VI. 's grammar school at Chelmsford, 279. a persecutor of protestants, temp, queen Mary, III. 1. 440. in a commission against Lollards, 553. allowed by the queen to have twenty retainers, 11. 16 r. Tyrrel, sir John, M. III. 1. 46. pre- sent at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 9. lived at Gippinghall, P. I. 47. a magistrate, and a great Romish zealot, ib. the chief instrument in a perse- cution at Mendlesham, ib. Tyrrel, Thomas, bought of the crown the chantry of Great Sampford, Essex, and that of Iselham, Cambridgeshire, M. II. ii. 403. 404. Tyrrel, family, P. I. 48. Tyrwhit, — A. II. 11. 364. III. 1. 125. Tyrwhit, (Teret,) sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. 11. 181. Tyrwhit, Philip, one of those members who absented them- selves from the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 263. indicted in consequence, ib. Tyrwhit, sir Robert, M. II. i. 443. ii. 258. III. ii. 408. his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. 1. 6. lord lieutenant of Huntingdon, 465. 11. 163. 202. died, III. ii. 408. Tyrwhit, Tristam, a magistrate in Lincolnshire, A. I. 11. 197. Tyrwhit, William, A. III. 1. 434. notice of his imprisonment as a papist, W. I. 528. 529. Tyry, — a Jesuit, A. IV. 140. Tyson, or Tyton, Claude, A. IV. 571- 574- Tyson, John, one of those com- missioned to compose the In- stitutlon of a Christian Man, C. 78. Tyson, Mary, A. IV. 574. U. Ubiquitary, title given to those who were for the real presence. Ay. 41. Udal — of Corpus Christ! col- lege, Oxford, a gospeller, M. I. 1. 569. Udal, — M. III. i. 155. Udal, Ephraim, rector of St. Au- gustin's by St. Paul's, son of John, of different principles from his father, W. II. 41. wrote his Noli me Tangere In defence of the church property against the long parliament, temp. Charles I., 42. seques- tered in consequence, ib. Udal, or Uvedale, Nicholas, em- ployed by queen Catharine Par in the translation of Erasmus's Paraphrase, M. II. 1. 45. 48. Leland's commendatory verses 334 INDEX. on him and the work, 46. his statement of Henry VIII. "s judgment for the use of the Bible, C. 122. his character of Edward V^I., 427. presented to ■a prebend of Windsor, M. II. ii. 267. 273. his account of the learning of women in Ed- ward VI. 's reign, P. I. 358. Udal, John, a chief author in Martin Marprelate, W. I. 551. A. III. ii. 603. 604. 606. IV. 10 1, indicted for his Demon- stration of Discipline, &c. W. II. 37. 38. which was answer- ed by a Remonstrance, 40. his petition to lord Burghley, 39. dean Nowel and Dr. Andrews sent to confer with him, ib. moved by sir W. Raleigh to make a declaration of some points, 98. his confession, ib. requests to be banished, 100. some Turkey merchants offer to send him to one of their factories, 10 1. some account of his trial and condemnation for being concerned with Martin Marprelate in publishing sedi- tious books, A. IV. 28. his reasons why the judges should not proceed in judgment a- gainst him, 29. the form of submission offered by him, 32. sergeant Puckring's letter about the proceedings against him, 34. the submission required of him by the judges, 36. his last offered submission, 37. Dr. Bancroft's letter to Puckring giving lord chancellor Hatton's advice as to staying his exe- cution, ib. his letter to Puck- ring after his trial, maintain- ing his innocence, &c. 38. no- tice of his correspondence with his judges, 40. notice of his belief, drawn up to pacify the queen, 41. his pardon obtained by archbisliop Whitgift, W. II, 40. 97. 102. dies before he was released from prison, ib. Udal, see Woodall. Udall, — A. III. i. 691. ii. 479. Ugnol, — A. IV. 43. Ulmis, Joannes ab, M. II. i. 532. 533.534. a fellowship procured for him in St. John's college, Oxford, 532. returns to his own country again, 534. ii. 273. Umberfield, Richard, a puritan, in prison, A. IV. 130. Umpton, sir Alexander, or Ed- ward, of Oxfordshire, made a ^night of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 36. married Anne, daughter of the duke of Somerset, and widow of Dudley earl of Warwick, ii. 8. Umpton, sir Henry, ambassador in France, A. III. i. 5. 273. Underdown, Thomas, parson of St. Mary's in Lewes, suspended as a nonconformist, W. I. 255. Underbill, — one of the leaders of the rebellion in the west, 1549, M. II. i. 281. Underbill, Edward, C. 246. 446, M. II. i. 177. III. i. 138. son of Thomas, II. i. 179. of the band of gentlemen pensioners, C. 246. zealous for the re- formation, M. II. i. 179. some account of him, ib. follows bad company at tirst, 180. but leaves them, ib. they raise scandals of him, 181. his ac- tions, ib. takes away the pix out of Bow church, ib. frees Day the printer, ib. prose- cutes the wood-mongers, 182. his great dangers, 183. ac- count of his sufferings for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 92. his examination, 94. sent to Newgate, 96. released, 99. further notice of him, 100 — INDEX. 335 103. his prayer against the pa- pists, 103. Underhill, John, consecrated bi- shop of Oxford, W. I. 61 7. as- sists at the consecration of bishop Coldvvel, II. 1 1 2. dies, Ay. 1 10. Underhill, Thomas, of Honing- ton, father of Edward, M. II. i. 179. Undertree, — P. II. 368. 369. Underwold, manor of, Yorkshire, taken in exchange by the crown from lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234. Underwood, — suffragan in Nor- wich, degraded Bilney before his martyrdom, C. 51. Underwood, Nicholas, A. II. ii. 420. Underwood, Richard, archdeacon of Norwich, and almoner to archbishop Parker, P. III. 159. Underwood, William, he and others bought the manor of Howden, which had belonged to the see of Durham, A. II. »• 53°- Uniformity ot common prayer, an act for, passed 1558, A. I. i. 86. 87. 98. 118. observation on it, 1 04. Feckenham's speech against it, 110. ii. 431. and bishop Scot's, i. 112. ii. 438. orders and resolutions for uni- formity, i. 329. chiefly framed by archbishop Parker, ib. a let- ter from the privy- council to the commissioners for uniform- ity, 385. the want of it shewn by the varieties in the divine service, &c. P. I. 302. the queen's letter enforcing uni- formity, III. 65. opposition to it, I, 311. bishop Pilkington's letter on the subject. III. 69. dean Whittingham's, 76. queen Elizabeth's proclamation for it, 1565, I. 427. great want of uniformity in London, G. 143. 144. some of the clergy se- questered, and some deprived, 145. 146. 154. Beza remarks on the contentions in England concerning it, 167. bp. Grin- dal's letter to Bullinger on the controversy of the habits, 490. his letter to Zanchius on the differences in religion, 493. see Puritans, Unite, a gold coin of king James, A. IV. 542. Universities, state of, in the reign of Edward VI., M. II. i. 404. ii. 146. supplied few of the first clergy after the reforma- tion, as they were still infected with popery, G. 74. see Cam- bridge and Oxford. University college, Oxford, library of, possesses Cheke's MS. de Superstitione, affixed to his translation of Plutarch's book on the same subject, probably the very book he presented to Henry VIII., Ch. 169. Unwritten Verities, notice of this tract, M. II. i. 212. ii. 410. Unyon, — A. III. ii. 106. Upchere, Thomas, ordained, G. 58. Upsher, Richard, A. III. i. 38. Upton, advowson of, Gloucester- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Urban, pope of Rome, schism raised between him and Cle- ment, pope of Avignon, by Joan, queen of Naples, A. III. ii. 401. Urbin, Guidubaldo, duke of, A. II. ii. 150, 151. Urbin, Stephano d', slain at the siege of Rochelle, A. II. ii. 506. Ursin, — A. IV. 575. Ursinus, cardinal, M. I. i. 145- Ursinus, Zacharius, a learned 33^ INDEX. professor of Heidelberg, ap- pointed to draw up a common confession of the reformed churches, A. II. ii. 103. de- clines it, 104. Urwen, Christopher, a Scotch rebel, slain in a skirmish, M. III. i. 497. and his two sons also, ib. Urynge, Ellen, burnt as an here- tic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. '• 552. Usher, Christopher, of Christ's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 645. 646. Usher, James, archbishop of Ar- magh, C. 297. A. I. i. 187. preached a funeral sermon on Dr. Theoph. Aylmer, Ay. 121. the primate of Ireland for the time being made judge of the faculties, through his applica- tion, P. II. 183. Ustas, Roland, held the monas- tery of Kilchullin, in Ireland, M. III. i. 261. ii. 256. Ustazades, courtier to Sapores, king of Persia, anecdote re- specting, C. 521. Utenhovius, Joannes, M. II. i. 399. A. I. i. 259. G. 127. en- tertained at Canterbury by abp. Cranmer, M. II. i. 123. one of the ministers of the Dutch church in London, temp. Ed- ward VI., 377. returned again to England, temp, queen Eli- zabeth, A. I. i. 1 74. a man of noble rank and quality, G. 62. 97. chief elder to the Dutch church again, ib. A. IV. 550. Uvedale, Nicholas, presented to the parsonage of Calborn, M. II. ii. 273. Uxbridge, property there that did belong to the see of West- minster, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Lon- don, M. II. i. 339. V. Vache, Gillan de, A. IV. 574. Vachel, John, a papist, recon- ciled to the church, A. IV. Vadianus, Joachimus, his Apho- risms upon the Consideration of the Eucharist intended to prove no corporal presence, C. 94. Vagabonds and rogues in the north, orders respecting, A. I. ii. 295. 554. the effect thereof, 296. Val, Claude la, le mareschal St. Andre, advocate to the French king, sent ambassador to Eng- land, M. II. i. 474. ii. 42. Valdez, Jaques Flores de, general of the army of the galleys of Castille, in the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 536. Valdez, don Pedro de, one of the commanders of the Spanish armada, A. III. ii. 18. 536. is taken prisoner, 543. 33. 34. 35. his examination and an- swers, 35. 549. returns home upon his ransom, 36. his letter to lord Burghley, ib. writes a letter of thanks to queen Eli- zabeth, 37. Valeant, John, imprisoned, temp, queen Mary, released, temp, queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 56. Valence, bishop of, A. II. i. Valence, M. de, his oration in- strumental in obtaining the kingdom of Poland for Mon- sieur, (afterwards Henry III. of France,) A. II. ii. 507. Valenger, Stephen, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Valentius, Petrus, a French pro- testant, chaplain and almoner to bishop Goodrich, M. II. i. 517. an instance of his in- tegrity, ib. Valera, Cyprian de, a Spanish INDEX. 337 officer of the armada, taken prisoner, A. III. ii. 23. Valey, John, ordained, G. 58. Valla, M. de, S. 77. Valla, Laurentius, his book a- gainst Constantine's Exaltation of the See of Rome, translated by Grimbold, C. 492. pro- nounced the pope to be Anti- christ, A. I. ii. 67. Vanderel, Hans, A. IV. 574. Vanderstrate, Hans, a condemned anabaptist, submits, A. II. i. 564- Vane, — concerned in Wyat's rebellion, sent to the Tower, M. III. i. 137. see Fane. Vanes, the bishop of, a French commissioner for settling a peace between the emperor and king of France, M. III. i. 346. Vanhil, Giles, A. IV. 573. Van Mildert, Daniel, an elder of the Dutch church in London, A. II. i. 422. Vanne, Vannes, Peter, a learned Italian, Ch. 25. Henry VIII. 's ambassador in Italy, ib. his new year's gift to Henry VHI., M. I. i, 211. present, as dean of Sarum, at the convocation of 1540. 557- Vannes, Peter, of St. Paul's ca- thedral, G. 87. Varillas, — his defamatory cha- racter of archbishop Cranmer, C. 659. Vastern, Great and Little, the pro- perty of the duke of Somerset, returned to him on his restora- tion, M. II. i. 363. Vauce, — a popish priest. Ay. 76. Vaughan, — M. IIL i. 187. com- mitted as a traitor, 149. par- doned, 330. Vaughan, — a retainer of the earl of Essex, A. III. i. 656. VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. the earl's lofty letter to ser- geant Puckring for having been a counsel against him, 657. Vaughan, Cuthbert, master of Edward V'l.'s bears, bulls, and dogs, M. II. ii. 164. 237. Vaughan, Ithel, A. III. i. 364. Vaughan, sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI.'s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. present at bishop Ho- per's trial. III. i. 280. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290. Vaughan, Dr. Richard, Ay. 113. (as bishop of London,) A. IV. 556, nominated by the coimcil to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. appointed visitor of the diocese of Litchfield, 199. archdeacon of Middlesex, and chaplain to bishop Aylmer, Ay. 194. cousin and executor to the bishop, 114. consecrated bishop of Bangor, W. II. 332. assists at the consecration of bishop Bilson, 350. and of bi- shop Watson, 351. and of bi- shop Bancroft, 385. address of the Dutch church to him, when raised to the see of London, A. IV. 543. his answer to de la Fontain's address, 551. Vaughan, Robert, his character, A. III. ii. 453- Vaughan, Walter, chief porter of Guisnes, M. HI. i. 22. ii. 174. Vaughans, the, Ay. 115. VautrouUerius, VantroUy, Tho- mas, a Frenchman, printer, A. IV. 575. printed Jusiitia Bri- tann'wa, 616. Vaux, — M. I. i. 371. Vaux, — of King's college, Cam- bridge, popishly inclined, W. L36. Vaux, — secretary to don John of Austria, A. II. i. 379- HI. i. 182. Vaux, Vawce, Laurence, a recu- 338 INDEX. sant, A. I. i. 413. an answer preparing to his Catechism, II. ii. 71 r. Vaux, Edward lord, dies, M. III. i. 504. Vaux, William lord, A. III. i. 1 25. 434. one of the noblemen appointed to attend queen Eli- zabeth on her coming to Lon- don, I. ii. 391. an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 166. A. II. ii.358. III. i. 180. his confession, 181. Vaux, lady, A. III. i. 125. Vavasor, — concerned in a dis- putation at Cambridge before the royal commissioners, C. 290. an harbourer of Campion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. impri- soned as an obstinate papist, G. 273. 535. Vayne, Andrew, archdeacon of Brecon, in a commission to visit the diocese of Landaff, W. I. 410. Veal, — a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Vega, L. Gutierres de la, see Gu- tierres. Velatelo, Acerbo, A. IV. 574. Vele, Abraham, printed sir T. More's Utopia, M. II. i. 549. Veletre, — Stewart, lord, A. II. "•,325- Velsius, Justus, Ch. 50. notice of, G. 135. 138. A. I. ii. 8. his summary of religion, G. 135. 482. bishop Grindal's animad- versions on it, 136. 485. his challenge to the ministers of the Dutch church in London, 9. the form of it, 10. he gives one of the ministers up to Sa- tan, II. a second covenant with God moved by him, ih. his letter to de Loene there- upon, 12. his anathema, 13. writes also to the French am- bassador, ib. and to the queen, 1 4. he is forbid the kingdom, ib. Venables, sir Thomas, A. III. ii. 91. Venalia, Jerom, A. IV. 570. Venalia, Lombard, A. IV. 570. Venetians decline having any thing to do in the matter of king Henry VIII. 's divorce, M. I. i. 218. Venetus, — C. 1005. Ventrice, John, footman to Ed- ward VI., M. II. ii. 282. Veper, Elizabeth, W. II. 428. Verdungus, — A. III. i. 294. Vere, Bridget, daughter of Ed- ward earl of Oxford, married to Francis earl of Berkshire, A. III. i. 85. IV. 471—474. Vere, Catharine, daughter of the earl of Oxford, her marriage with the duke of Somerset's son set aside, M. II. i. 540. Vere, Elizabeth, daughter of Ed- ward earl of Oxford, married to William earl of Derbv, A. m.i. 85. IV. 471— 474.' Vere, Susan, daughter of Edward earl of Oxford, married to Phi- lip earl of Montgomery, A. III. i. 85. IV 471.472. 473. Veret, Peter, a learned foreign divine of the reformed religion, A. III. i. 343. Verge, M. de, A. II. i. 209. Veric, John, A. IV. 574. Vernam, John, vicar of Stottes- wel, deprived for being mar- ried, M. Ill, i. 169. see Vernon. Verney, — master of the jewel- house, buried, M. III. ii. 120. A. I. i. 46. Verney, — A. III. i. 521. exe- cuted for designing lord Burgh- ley's death, II. i. 123. Verney, Edmund, M. III. i. 549. Verney, Francis, M. III. i. 549. Verney, Ralph, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Verney, sir Thomas, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen INDEX. 339 Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Vernon, (Vernam,) sir George, made a knight of the bath at Edward VI. 's coronation, M. II. i. 36. disinclined to lend Q. Mary money, III. ii. 78. 79. Vernon, Henry, de Sydbery, one of those members who refused to sit in the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, 263. Vernon, see Veron. Veron, John, (Senonoys,) trans- lated into English Zuinglius's Short Pathway to the Right Understanding of the Scripture, M. II. i. 445. 552. ordained, 553. minister of Ludgate, ib. wrote divers tracts, ih. impri- soned forreUgion, temp, queen Mary, ib. III. i. 77. C. 608. preaches at Paul's Cross, temp, queen Elizabeth, G. 39. A. I. i. 199. 298. and again before the queen, 200. parson of St. Martin's, Ludgate, and St. Se- pulchre's, 199. prebendary of St. Paul's, G. 87. a man does penance for defaming him, A. I. i. 406. dies, ii. i. Verona, bishop of, sent by the pope to accompany cardinal Pole to a conference with the French king and the English ambassadors, M. I. i. 464. ii. 328. Verre, Richard, punished for forgery, M. III. i. 362. Verstegan, — A. IV. 207. Verulam, lord, see Fr. Bacon. Veruli, cardinal, M. II. i. 298. Vevian, Robert, rector of Hever, a married priest, form of his restitution after suspension, C. 935- 936. 937- Veysey, see Voyseij. Vicars, Anne, accused of witch- craft, S. 97. 98. 99. Vicars, the poor condition of, 1562, A. I. i. 512. articles to be inquired of, relating to them, 513. Vice-chamberlain, see sir T. He- neage. Victorys, Angel, A. IV. 575. Victorys, John, A. IV. 575. Victuals, see Provisions. View of Antichrist, &c. probably written by A. Gilbe, A. III. i. 1 01. notice of it, 100. Viglio, president, one of the em- peror's commissioners for a peace between himself and the French king, M. III. i. 346. Vigon, John, a famous Italian chirurgeon, his works published in English by B. Traheron, M. II. i. 420. Vilatel, Arasio, A. IV. 571. Vilatel, Shepion, A. IV. 571. Villa Dorta, Merinlomez, earl of, one of those to whom the go- vernment of Portugal was in- trusted, 1593, A. IV. 251. Villa Garsya, John de, M. III. ii. 29.473. Villequer, count, A. III. i. lo. Viller, — A. III. i. 674. Villeroy, — A. IV. 564. Villers, — a French preacher. A, III. i. 179. W. I. 345. 477. some time in England, ib. chaplain to the prince of O- range, ib. an enemy to Eng- land, ib. Villers, John, A. IV. 488. Villers, William, a merchant, his letter shewing why queen Eli- zabeth should take the Low Countries under her protec- tion, A. II. ii, 15. 16. Vilutelii, Acerbo, A. III. i. 57. Vimioso, count, agent to Antonio, king of Portugal, his confer- ence with queen Elizabeth's ambassador in France, A. III. i. 7. 9. 10. 12. z 2 340 INDEX. Vincent, David, gifts to him from the crown, M. II. ii. 278. Vincent, Thomas, a gospeller, M. I. i. 115. Vincentius Lirinensis, his ff'ay Home to Christ, • 358- 539- "• 527- 532- bought church lands of the crown, II. i. 123. in the ser- vice of princess Mary, 454 — 458. one of queen Mary's privy-council, 388. III. ii. 160. INDEX. 343 made lieutenant of \^'^altham forest, II. i. 388. a special commissioner to investigate a conspiracy, III. i. 549. he and his wife sent to the Tower for hearing mass, A. I. i. 400. his death and burial, 404. she is released, ib. Waldgrave, sir Edward, chancel- lor of the duchy, A. II. ii, 709. Waldgrave, (Frances Neville,) lady, attended queen Mary in her triumphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 55. Waldgrave, Robert, concerned in the printing-press of Martin Marprelate, A. III. ii. 602 — 605. W. 1.579.580. III. 218. printed the Declaration of Dis- cipline, A. IV. 61 7. Waldgrave, sir William, M. III. i. 14. ii. 597. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, 181. bought lands of the earl of Oxford, A. III. i. 83. a magistrate of Suffolk, ii. 421. Waldgrave, lady, wife of the pre- ceding, a recusant, A. Ill, ii. 597- Wales, principality of, when in- corporated with England, A. II. ii. 50. superstitions and wickedness there, M. II. i. 357. names of Edward VI. 's council in the marches there, 463. ii. 161. list of the presidents there, A. II. ii. 50. its bad state as to religion, P. I. 404. Walett, Thomas, constable of Tournay, and yeoman of Hen- ry VIII. 's guard there, M. I. ii. 12. Waley, John, printed a book of Interrogatories, A. I. i. 245. he and W.Salisbury, gent., have a patent for printing the Bible, Common Prayer, and Homilies in Welsh for seven years, ii. 88. Walgrave, see Waldgrave. Walkaden, — A. II. i. 25. Walker, — chaplain of the court, anecdote respecting, M. III. i, 31- Walker, — condemned to per- petual imprisonment for being concerned with traitors, M. III. i. 507. Walker, — minister of Ipswich, A. I. i. 379. an ineffectual en- deavour to procure him a stall in Norwich, P. I. 496. 497. what compelled him to leave Norwich, 519. cited as a puri- tan before the ecclesiastical commission, II. 66. G. 252. Walker, — scholar of Oxford, A. II. ii. 504. Walker, — A. IV. 98. Walker, — A. IV. 553. Walker, Edward, P. I. 154. Walker, John, P. II. 84. III. 1 86. II. 267. W. III. 32. (as arch- deacon of Essex,) Ay. 33. G. 605. A. III. ii. 232. subscribed, as a member of the convoca- tion, the articles of 1562, I. i. 489. one that signed a request to the synod concerning cer- tain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for disci- pline, 512. concerned in a dis- order in Norwich cathedral, P. II. 36. in a commission against papists in Norfolk, 137. arch- deacon of Essex, Ay. 29. no- tice of his and Mr. Clark's conference with Campion the Jesuit, A. II. ii. 362. 363. an ecclesiastical commissioner. Ay. 60. preaches at a visitation of bishop Aylmer, 70. A. III. i. 329. one of those nominated Z4 344 INDEX. to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. Walker, Peter, priest, punished for false seditious tales, A. I. i. 67. archdeacon of Stafford and Derby, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the conv'ocation, the ar- ticles of 1562, 489. votes a- gainst the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies. Walker, Richard, student of Christ's college, Cambridge, or- dained, M. II. i. 402. canon residentiary of Litchfield, bi- shop Sampson's commissary for depriving the married clergy, III. i. 169. Walle, George, made a sergeant at law, A. I, i. 42. Waller, — P. II. 343. Waller, Thomas, M. III. i. 482. ii. 389. Wallev, see Whalle]/. Wallis, — M. III. ii. 81. Wallis, Francis, president of St. John's college, Oxford, A. Ill, i. 519. Walloon church, in Threadnee- dle-street, London, the first establishment of, G. 457. Wallop, sir Henry, A. II. ii. 378. Wallop, sir John, M, I. i. 235. II. i. 496. ii. 492. sent on an embassy into France by Henry VIII., I. i. 7. 347. his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 6. in a commission for the con- troversies with the French a- bout the borders, 428. was of the order of the garter, cap- tain of the castle of Guisnes, and a soldier of great worth, 493. dies of the sweating sick- ness, ib. Wallyce, John, a rebel, taken pri- soner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 519. executed, 68. Walmesly, — sergeant at law. argues for the validity of a bull from Rome, A. III. i. 280. Walmesly, — innkeeper, A. III. '•313- Walpole, — a Jesuit, A. IV. 237. 238. 270. 273. Walpole, — A. 'IV. 488. Walpole, Thomas, A. IV. 237. 238. 239. Walsal, John, parson of Est- linge, W. I. 283. one of the six preachers of Canterbury ca- thedral, 596. in a commission to visit the hospitals of Salt- wood and Hith, II. 145. Walsh, — M. III. i. 344. Walsh, Francis, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. very honest, wise, and religious, ih. his valuation in the subsidy book, lb. Walsh, William, bishop of Meath, bought the monastery of Tru- im, and granted it to the town for certain considerations, M. in. i. 261. ii. 257. Walshe, Richard, prior of St. John Baptist's hospital at Bridgevvater, C. 10 1. Walsingham, sir Francis, S. 60. A. II. i. TO. 12. 15. 16. 21. 22. 28. 32. 53 — 56. 59. 60. 65. 66. 68. 72. 73. 86. 88. 90. 127. 128. 132. 155. 176. S. 114. 118. A. II. i. 206. 215. 216. 225. 231. 242. 246. 247. 255. 256. 258. 261. 263. 264. 317.319. 458. 500. 535. ii. 20. 21. 68. 94. 97. 133. Ay. 48.49. S. 158. 161. 162. 178. 179. A. II. ii. 160. 200. 245. 248. 668. 672. 339. 340.360. III. i. 7. 10. 12. ii. 170. i. 15. 83.91.92. 129. 184. 196. 210. ii. 263. i. 272. 314. 316. 362. 383. ii. 368. i. 480. ii. 410, i. 546. 656. 681. 687. ii. 476. 503. 72. 113. 132. IV. 10. -3^' 257 — 260. 401.402. an INDEX. 345 exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 404. he and lord Burghley in a commission to make inquisition of embez- zlements at Manchester col- lege, P. II. r I. sent on an em- bassy into France in behalf of the French protestants, A. II. i. 9. a peace settled before he arrived, 10. his character of sir N. Throgmorton, 35. sent into France as ambassador, chiefly about queen Elizabeth's proposed marriage with the duke of Anjou, 24. 48. his need there caused by his great expenses, 34. 154. his letter to Cecil, containing his discourse with the French queen about the match, 50. ii, 421. his diligence as ambassador in France, i. 153. his apprehen- sions, if the queen's marriage with Monsieur should be broken off, 55. a peace concluded with France by his means though the match was broken off, 58. 62. 210. 21 1, his ad- vertisement to the queen on the danger from Mary queen of Scots, 69. his opinion in fti- vour of a treaty with France rather than Spain, 81. deceived by the French king, and apt to think well of him, 83. his advice as to the article respect- ing an invasion for religion in the league with France, ib. count Lodowic's conference with him about the tyranny of Spain, 84. desires to return from his embassy in France owing to ill health, S. 106. A. II. i. T75. 338. obtains leave, S. 125. promotes the marriage between the prince of Navarre and Margaret the French king's sister, 116. A. II. i. 67. his fears as to the proceedings with Mary queen of Scots, 201. his reasons for advising that queen Elizabeth should aid the prince of Orange, 212. the English who fled to his house escaped the massacre of Paris, 225. why he still continued in France, 226. 227. his message to the king of France upon the massacre, with the answer, 227. queen Elizabeth's care for him, 229. his advice to her, 237. his statement to the queen's council of the dissimu- lation of the French, whereby he had been deceived, 243. portends God's revenge on France, 256. his advice re- specting Scotland, 260. his great expenses and close liv- ing, 339. kept there still, not- withstanding his miserable con- dition, ib. comes home, 340. made secretary of state, ib. S. 138. his sister married sir W. Mildmay, A. II. ii. 91. in fa- vour of the queen's marrying the duke of Anjou, 229. was one of the privy-council, 317. 707. signed various orders as such, G. 338. A. II. ii. 25. 127. G. 586. 363. 370. 393. A. III. i. 225. 247. in an ec- clesiastical conuiiission, G. 310. sent ambassador into France about the queen's marriage, A. III. i. 2. condoles with lord Burghley on the death of Went- worth his son-in-law, 208. en- couraged Cartwright to write against the Rhemish transla- tion of the scriptures, 289. W. 1.482. lord Howard dedicates his Defence against the Poison of supposed Prophecies to him, and why, A. III. i. 295. a book on the discovery of the New- found land dedicated to him, 299. archbishop Grindal's le- 346 INDEX. gacy to him, G. 428. one of the overseers to his will, 429. somewhat favourable to non- conformists, W. I. 425. his advice to archbishop Whitgift concerning subscription, 431. Matthew made bishop of Dur- ham chiefly through his means, 681. A. III. ii. 466. father-in- law to sir P. Sidney, i. 404. succeeded sir R. Sadler as chan- cellor of the duchy, 696. no- tice of his death, IV. 46. a most complete and happy se- cretary of state, S. 164. com- mended by bishop Hutton for his acquaintance with religious subjects, W. III. 224. Walsingham, Thomas of, his his- tory ])ublislied by archbishop Parker, P. II. 380. 500. reach- ing from Edward I. to Henry V. cum Hypodigmate Neustrice sive Normannicp, 500. Walsingham, Great and Little, lordship and manor of, bought of the crown bv E. S]5ainy and J. Baspole, M. II. ii. 239. Walter, — vicar of Charing, W, I. 283. Walter, David, M. III. ii. 362. Walter, Edmund, M. II. i. 512. Walter, William, A. III. ii. 127. Walter, see Walton. Waltham, abbot of, see R. Ful- ler. Waltham, Essex, M. I. ii. 406. part of the jjroperty of Walt- ham abbey bought of the crown by sir R. Wroth, II. i. 389. and part granted to lady Den- ny, ii. 233. the abbey steeple falls down, 30. Waltham, manor of, in the coun- ty of Southampton, ])assed to the crown from the see of Win- chester, M. II. i. 483. Edward VI. visits lord Biirghley at his house there that had belonjicd to the see, ii. 9. lady Burghley's benefaction to the place, A. III. ii. 127. Walthamsted, see Godstow. Walthamstow in Essex, sir G. Monoux's benefactions to, C. 70. Walton, Isaac, corrected in his Life of Hooker, W. II. 202. Walton, John, G. 287. Walton, John, A. III. i. 590. Walton, manor of, given by Ed- ward VI. to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 361. Walton, manor of, Essex, given by Edward VI. to lord Darcy, M. II. i. 461. Walton, (Walter,) manor of, So- merset, given by Edward VI. to sir E. Seymour, M. II. i. 543. ii. 228. had belonged to his father, the duke of Somer- set, ih. Walwick, — agent in England from East Free/.eland, S. 124. Walwvn, Humphrey, ordained, G. Walwyn, sir Richard, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182.' Wand, — A. IV. 184. Wanley, Humphrey, P. I. 541. Wannert, James, a monk of the Charter-house, removed to a monastery at Hull, M. I. i. 428. executed for being con- cerned in a rebellion in the north, ib. Wansted, manor of, Essex, grant- ed by Edward VI. to lord Rich, M. II. i. 514. Wansted house his property. III. i. 25. after- wards the seat of the earl of Leicester, A. II. ii. 202. Wanton, — M. III. i. 499. Wanton, Thomas, fellow of Mer- ton college, Oxford, he and cer- tain other fellows form a con- INDEX. 347 spl racy against archbishop Par- ker, P, I. 500. 501. War proclaimed with France, M. III. ii. 6. Warbeck, Perkin, A. II. ii. 644. Warblington, a residence of sir R. Cotton's, visited by Edward VI., M. II. ii. 9. Warburton, sir John, M. III. ii. 91. dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coro- nation, 181. Warcop, — a papist, executed, A. IV. 426. Warcoppe, — A. II. ii. 601, Warcup, — A. II. ii. 616. Warcup, Robert, A. II. ii. 616. Warcup, Mrs., a contributor to the afflicted gospellers, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 224. P. I. 368. instrumental in saving Jewel's life, M. III. i. 227. Humphrey retired to her house, P. I. 368. Ward, — a friar, imprisoned for marrying, M. I. i. 567. "Ward, — a puritan minister, W. II. 6. Ward, Dr., A. III. ii. 496. Ward, Dr., one of the English divines sent to the synod of Dort, C. 423. Ward, Richard, one of those members who refused to sit in the first parliament of queen Mary, M. III. i. 262. indicted in consequence, 263. Ward, Robert, concerned in the trial against archbishop Cran- mer, C. 536. 1079. 1081. 1090. 1092. M. II. ii. 24. Ward, William, a monk of St. Andrew's, Northampton, M. I. i. 404. W^ard, William, fellow of King's college, Cambridge, W. I. 34. VV^ard, William, clerk of the coun- cil, A. IV. 428. 429. Warde, Richard, P. III. 121. Wardeboys, alias Laurence, John de, abbot of Ramsey, his new year's gift to HenryVIIl., M. I. i. 211. Wardel, — A. III. ii. 233. Wardington, manor of, Oxon, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Lincoln, M. II. i. 1 19. Wardour, Christopher, clerk of the pells, A. IV. 276. Ware, Dr., A. I. i. 117. Ware, sir James, C. 297. A. I. ii. 54. P. I. pre/, xi. 484. Warefeld, — G. 604. Warfield, Richard, fellow of Je- sus college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 722. Warford, — a priest, A. IV. 388. Warham, William, archbishop of Canterbury, C. 646. iioi. P. III. 305. notice of his enthron- ization, I. 3. and feast, 347. remonstrates with cardinalWol- sey on account of the irregular interference of his legantine courts, M. I. i. III. and com- plains to the king, ib. his dis- grace threatened by Wolsey, 191. he and bishop Fox ap- pointed by the pope to exa- mine whether Henry VI. ought to be canonized, 168. he and other divines concerned in con- demning all English transla- tions of the scriptures, C. 1059. Latimer cited to appear before him and other bishops, M. I. i. 251.615. dies, C. 19. a patron of Erasmus, 20. 576. foretells a Thomas shall succeed him, 20. was in favour of the king's supremacy, 2 1 . would have taken further steps against the pope, had he lived, ib. Cran- mer's declaration of his allow- ing the king's supremacy, ib. built a sumptuous palace at Otford, 405. its cost, ib. his 348 INDEX. benefaction to the parsonage of Hackington, W. I. 545. Warham, William, nephew of the archbishop, C. 20. resigned the archdeaconry of Canterbury and the provostship of Winghain, 24. had a pension for life al- lowed out of the preferment, ib. 472. a benefactor to the parsonage-house of Hacking- ton, W. I. 545. Warley, John, A. III. i. 637. 638. Warne, see Laishford and War- ren. Warner, — a public spirited mem- ber of the house of commons, A. 1. i. 440. Warner, Bartholomew, A. III. i. 519- Warner, Dr., parson of Winter- ton, an early gospeller, M. I. i. 568, P. I. 13. chosen by Bil- ney to comfort him in his ex- tremes, 13. W^arner, sir Edward, A. I. ii. 25. lieutenant of the Tower, M. II. ii. 15. no. A. I. i. 55. has a license to eat flesh on fast days, M. II, ii. 242. he and R. Cat- lin bought of the crown the chantry of Coslani, 402. a friend of sir N. Throgmorton, III. i. 125. committed to prison, 149. pardoned, 330. robbed, ii. 11. present at the celebration of the French king's funeral at St. Paul's, A. I. i. 188. 191. G. 38. Warner, John, warden of All Souls college, Oxford, M. III. i. 290. in commissions to visit his college, C. 130. P. I. 228. Warner, John, G. 87. Warner, John, votes in the con- vocation of 1562 against the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, A. I. i. 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. Warner, Simon, appointed keeper of the hospital at Norwich, P. I. 539- . Warner, Vincent, a priest, A. III. ii. 598. Warner, W^illiam, rector of Rad- wey, deprived for being mar- ried, M. III. i. 169. Warrant, rough draught of, to grant commissions for visiting hospitals, &c., A. IV. 483. Warreham, — a priest, sent to the Tower, M. II. i. 371. Warren, — a commissioner for prosecution upon the six ar- ticles in London, M. I. i. 565. Warren, — A. III. ii. 493. Warren, sir Edward, M. III. ii. 91. Warren, Warne, John, arraigned as an heretic, M. III. i. 347. 359. burnt, 347. see Laish- ford. Warren, John, prebendary of Can- terbury, M. III. i. 478. in a commission for search of here- tics, 476. ii. 120. Warren, or Warden, Thomas, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scar- borough castle, M. III. ii. 5 19. executed, 68. W^arren, sir William, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Warren, John Plantagenet, earl of, A. II. ii. 560. Warrington, or Warnington, Ro- bert, a proctor of the arches, a registrar to a commission a- gainst Lollards, A. I. i. 57. Warter, Thomas, ordained, M, II, i. 403. AVarton, alias Parfew, Robert, C. 465. (as bishop of Hereford,) 481. A. I. i. 416. abbot of Bermondsey, M. II. ii. 174. consecrated bishop of St.Asaph, C. 71. 1045. his part at Ed- INDEX. 349 ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 8. one of those commissioned to compose The Institution of a Christian Man, C. 72. 77. as- sists at the consecration of bi- bishop Yngworth, 88. and of bishop Holbeach, 90. recom- mends two persons as siiftra- gan bishops, 10 1. assists at the consecration of bishop Finch, ib. of bishop Boner, 123. 129. and of bishop Heath, 129. pre- sent at the convocation of 1 540, M. I. i. 557. one of the coun- cil in A^'ales, II. i. 463. ii. 161. well affected to popery, 174. made a spoil of his see by long leases, ib. in a commission to deprive Edward VI. 's bishops, III. i. 753. translated to the see of Hereford, i 80. Warwick, earl of, temp. Henrv VI., A. IV. 330. Warwick, Ambrose Dudley, earl of, M. II. ii. 108. 225. A. I. i, 291. II. i. 151. ii. 302. 554. III. i. 102. W. I. 517. A. III. ii. 452. imprisoned as an ad- herent of lady Jane Grey, M. III. i. 24. released, 330. con- cerned in a just at court, A. I. i. 292. sent as governor to New Haven, (Havre de Grace,) 548. ii. 94. S. 166. his mark of respect to the duke of Nor- folk, A. I. ii. 197. marries a daughter of the earl of Bed- ford, Ch. 133. queen Elizabeth has a tournament on the occa- sion, ib. a privy counsellor, A. II. i._575- ii- 316- 707- signed certain orders as such, 25. G. 338. A. III. i. 225. ii. 261. master of the ordnance, II. ii. 3 1 6. knight of the garter, HI. i. 102. his presentation of Evans to the vicarage of Warwick, re- fused by archbishop Whitgift, W.I, 588. III. 219. Warwick, John Dudley, earl of, see duke of Northumberland. Warwick, John Dudley, earl of, son of the duke of Northum- berland, M. II. ii. 76. (as lord Lisle,) 215. III. i. 44. sir E. Seymour his ward, II. i. 543. ii. 233. made master of the horse, 62.163.225. his part in a splen- did muster before Edward VI., i. 584. marries Anne, daughter of the duke of Somerset, ii. 8. surrenders the office of master of the buckhounds for his bro- ther Robert, 63. allowed to have one hundred retainers, III. 257. imprisoned as an adherent of lady Jane Grey, III. i. 24. condemned for trea- son, 33. his death, 320. Warwick, countess of, A. II. ii. 541- Warwick, (Anne Russel,) coun- tess of, A. III. ii. 130. Warwick, Richard Neville, earl of, his displeasure at Edward IV. 's marriage, S. 228. 248. attainted, M. III. i. Warwick, Robert Rich, earl of, married Anne Cheke, widow of R. Rogers, Ch. 147. •Warwicks, earls of, descended from lord chancellor Rich, M. I-i- 375- Warwick, manor, town, and castle of, given by Edward VI. to the duke of Northumberland, M. III. i, 42. 43. had belonged to Richard earl of Warwick, 42. an hospital founded there by the earl of Leicester, W. II. 22. Cartwright's letter con- cerning its bad estate at the death of the earl of Leicester, A. IV. 41. statement of his en- dowment, 42. Washborn, John, a magistrate in AVorcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. an honest gentleman, ib. his 350 INDEX. valuation in the subsidy book, ib. Washington, Laurence, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. i. 2. concerned in depriving Shepherd of the mastership of the college, 451. Wastel, John, he and H. Darley bought the borough of North Allerton, that had belonged to the see of Durham, A. II. ii. 53°- Water, Abraham, Dutchman, M. I. i. 114. Waterer, Roger, a puritan^ in prison, A. IV. 130. Waterhouse^ — A. II. ii. 84. 85. Waters, — sergeant at arms, M. III. ii. 18. Waters, Geoffrey, curate of St. Leonard's, East-cheap, G.362. Watkins, — A. III. ii, 462. Watkins, John, dean of Hereford, A. III. ii. 454. a commissary for the vacant see of Peterborough, W.I. 411. Watkins, Richard, protonotary, C. 27. 1076. 1 1 II. AVatlington, manor of, Oxon, an- nexed to the see of Oxford, M. II. i. 120. Watsmouth, Edward, ordained, G. 53- Watson, — P. II. 434. Watson, — a candidate for the mastership of St. John's col- lege, Cambridge, A. III. i. 386. 642, Watson, — chaplain to lord Lum- ley, A. III. i. 501. Watson, — a priest, A. IV. 14. Watson, Anthony, consecrated bi- shop of Chichester, W. II. 351. assists at the consecration of bishop Bancroft, 385. and of certain other bishops, 405, of archbishop AVhitgift's hospital at Croydon, 417. and of bishop Heton, 423. and of bishop Dove, 457. and of bishops Bennet and Jegon, 465. at- tended queen Elizabeth in her last hours, 466. present at the convocation of 1603, A. IV. 552. in the commission for suppressing all books publish- ed without authority, W. II. 504. assists at the consecration of bishop Bridges, 518. Watson, Edward, a magistrate in Northamptonshire, suspected in religion, A. III. ii. 452. Watson, John, a rebel, taken pri- soner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Watson, John, (as bishop of Win- chester.) G. 391. 436. present- ed to a prebend of Winchester, M. II. ii. 267. chancellor of St. Paul's, G. 87. archdeacon of Surrey, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the ar- ticles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. votes against the six articles altering certain rites and cere- monies, 505. signed the peti- tion of the lower house for dis- cipline, 512. dean of Winches- ter, one of bishop Horn's exe- cutors, IT. ii. 378. consecrated bishop of Winchester, G. 380. his death, W. I. 261. remiss in his diocese, ib. Watson, John, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Watson, Robert, a great civilian, C. 610. steward to archbishop Cranmer, ib. an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, after his escape from prison, ib. 450. notice of his ^tiologia, &c. 610. Watson, Thomas, S. 14. M. I. ii. 366, (as bishop of Lincoln,) G. 273. Ay. 25. A. II. ii. 354. had an exhibition at Cambridge from H. Monmouth, M. I. i. INDEX. 35^ 488. ii. 365. vice-chancellor of Cambridge, III. i. 572. chap- lain to Henry VIII., I. i. 488. ii. 365. and to bishop Gardi- ner, II. i. 109. assists him in his second book in answer to Cranmer, C, 371. one of the bishop's witnesses at his trial, M. II. i. 374. present at a pri- vate conference on the sacra- ment, C. 386. Ch. 70. 77. G, 10. preaches at Paul's Cross, M. III. i. 32. extracts from a sermon of his before queen Mary, 113. 120. notice of his sermon for private masses, 1 20. notice of Crowley's answer to these two sermons, A. I. ii. 303. sent by bishop Gardiner to ascertain the state of the colleges at Cambridge, P. I. 82. one of the disputants at Oxford against Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, C. 941. 943. 480. present at bishop Hoper's trial, M. III. i. 288. and at Dr. Tay- lor's, 290. made bishop of Lin- coln, 488. consecrated, ii. 27. in a commission for burning the bodies of Bucer and Fa- gius, i. 510. preaches before the queen, 513. at Alhallows, Thames-street, ii. 2. at the Spittle, 3. and at Paul's Cross, 108. his ingratitude to Rough, 45. engaged on the popish side in the disputation at Westmin- ster, A. I. i. 128. 131. 133, IV. 607. G. 34. sent to the Tower in consequence of his behaviour, A. I. i. 138. 139. 140. 21 1. P. I. 177. 178. 278. has the quartan ague, A. I. i. J 40. summoned before queen Elizabeth, 206. deprived, 210. he and bishop White threaten- ed to excommunicate the queen, 213. a sour and morose man, 220. lived some time in the custody of the bishops of Ro- chester and Ely, ib. II, ii. 660. G. 116. imprisoned in Wisbich castle, and why, A. 1. i. 214. II. ii. 352. Watterton, — G. 242. Watts, — the martyr, M. III. i. 553- AVatts, — entertained queen Eli- zabeth, A. II. ii. 544. Watts, — parson of Charleton, W. II. 462. Watts, Dr., G. 297. Watts, Thomas, G. 103. A. I. ii. 296. P, II. 399. G. 276. 286. 463. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 491. or- dained, G. 55. archdeacon of Middlesex, 52. 87. chaplain to bishop Grindal, P. I. 209. one of those recommended by the bishop for the provostship of Eton, lb. a married man, ib. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 501. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. an eccle- siastical commissioner, P. I. 481, 531. G. 310. in a com- mission to visit the Savoy hos- pital, A. IV. 584. presented to the living of Bocking, P, II. 47. Watts, Thomas, prebendary of St. Paul's, G. 87. Watts, Dr. William, published an edition of Matthew Paris, 1684, P. II. 97. Wav, Mrs., imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. IVmj of Life, notice of this tract, A. II. ii. 226. Waye, — keeper of the JNIarshal- sea, A. I. ii. 26. Weachton, manor of, Yorkshire, 352 INDEX. taken in exchange by the crown from lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234. Weapons, proclamation for the length of certain, A. II. ii. 294. Weather unseasonable in 1573, A. II. i. 468. Weavers, foreign, settled at Glas- tonbury, some account of, C. 346 — 351. upon queen Mary's accession to the crown they i-emoved to Frankfort, 352. and kindly receive the English exiles there, ib. Webb, — P. II. 434. Webb, — A. II. ii. 675. Webb, — sent as an agent by queen Elizabeth to the empe- ror, A. III. ii. 135. Webb, Christopher, one of the six preachers of Canterbury ca- thedral, W. I. 596. Webb, Dr., a priest, A. III. ii. 598. IV. 94. Webb, John, a commissioner for search of heretics, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 476. Webb,' Robert, M. III. ii. 404. Webb, William, sheriff of Lon- don, A. III. i. 203. 205. 206. 207. lord mayor, IV. 98. Webly, Thomas, a papist, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Webster, — notice of his claim to a prebend of York, G. 254. 255- 256. Webster, Augustine, prior of Shene, executed for disowning the king's supremacy, M. I. i. 302. 303. Webster, Dr., A. IV. 325. Webster, Joim, ordained, G. 72. Webster, Richard, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. III. ii. 599. IV. 256. AVedmore, park of, taken in ex- change by the crown from the see of Bath and Wells, M, II. ii. 271. Wedows, sir Roger, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Weekston, Roger, and his wife, A. III. ii. 603. 605. see Weke- stun. Weemes, — a Scotch gentleman, servant to king James, A. III. i. 310. 311. Weidnerus, Wolfgang, chief pas- tor at Wormes, A. I. i. 196. Wekeston, Robert, monk of Gi- radon, his immorality, M. I. i. 396. see Weekston. Welbeck, Nottinghamshire, M. I. ii. 406. Welbeck, monastery of, had pos- sessed the advowsons of What- ton and Aslacton, C. 602. Welchman, John, M. III. i. 599- Weldard, Arthur, A. III. i. 519. Welden, — an indictment a- gainst her on the six articles, C. 157. Welden, — a puritan, his abuse of bishop Aylmer, Av. 39. Welden, Edward, he and T. Wel- den bought of the crown the college at Shotesbroke, M. II. ii. 405. Welden, Thomas, M. III. ii. 53. see the preceding. See Wildon. Welford, Thomas, M. III. ii. 406. Welford, advowson of, Glouces- tershire, part of the endow- ment of the united see of Wor- cester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. 6. Wellington, borough of, Somer- set, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Bath and Wells, M. II. ii. 13. 271. granted to the duke of North- umberland, 231. Wells, — incumbent of Rye, no- tice of, M. I. i. 499 — 501. INDEX. 353 Wells, — a bailiff of Oxford, C. ^562. 563. Wells, Gilbert, notice of his im- prisonment as a jjapist, W. I. 528. 529. Wells, John, bought of llie crown certain tenements in Falcot and Toleshunt Knights, M. II. ii. 405. Wells, Richard, used the title of lord Willoughbv, A. IV. 588. Wells, lord Robert, A. IV. 588. Wells, borough and hundred of, reverted upon the attainder of the duke of Somerset to the see of Wells, M. II. ii. 13. 271. the mansion house in the city bought of the crown by J. Ayleworth and W. Lacye, 405. the town endeavour to get a grant for a corporation, A. II. i. 504. bishop Berkley's letter to lord Burghley against it, ib. the town exclaim against him, 506. he again writes to that lord against it, ib. Wells, deanery, an act for the establishment of, M. II. i. 102. Wells, prebend of, M. II. i. 442. Wellys, Thomas, prior of St. Gre- gory's by Canterbury, C. 51. and titular bishop of Sidon, 1043. 1045. Wellys, Thomas, rector of Char- tham, chaplain to archbishop Warham, C. 1044. Welman, — W. II. 2. Welsborn, John, present at Ed- ward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. Welsford, rectory of, granted by the crown to the see of Ox- ford, M. II. i. T20. Welsh, an act of parliament, 1562, for translating the Bible and other divine service into, A. I. i. 462, a patent granted for printing the Bible, Com- VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. mon Prayer, Homilies, and other godly books in Welsh, ii. 88. Welsh, — a leader of the rebel- lion in the west, 1549, M. II. i. 281. Welsh, — fellow of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, im- ])risoned for nonconformity, M. II. ii. 52. Welsh, — curate of Little Wal- dingfield, a nonconformist, P. II.34T. Welsh, — vicar of Blackburne, A. II. ii. 548. Welsh, John, deprived from the church of Curry Malet, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 353, Welsh, John, made sergeant at law, A. I. i. 42. Welsh, Nicholas, M. III. ii. 398. Wendelin, — printer at Stras- burgh, a morose man, and strongly addicted to Luther's opinion on the sacrament, G. 24- Wendesly, Richard, a civilian, in the ecclesiastical commis- sion, P. III. 184. II. 69. 160. 161. 275. seneschal to arch- bishop Parker, III. 339. one of his executors, ib. Wendon, Nicholas, A. III. i. 275. ii. 272. archdeacon of Suffolk, and prebendary of Norwich, notice of, P. I. 492. III. 159. did not vote in the convoca- tion of 1562, upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, A. L i. 505. a fugitive beyond sea, II. ii. 596- Wendy, Thomas, physician to Edward VI., one of the royal visitors for the university of Cambridge, Ch. 40. G. 6. S. 37. C. 290. and of Eton col- lege, M. II. ii. 9. he and J. Barton bought of the crowii A a 354 INDEX. Edmund's chantry in Barring- ton, 403. physician to queen Ehzabeth, A. I. i. 248. in a commission to visit the univer- sity of Cambridge, and Eton college, lb. P. I. 86. Went, — chancellor to archbp. Sandys, A. III. i. 146. Wentworth, — cofferer to queen Mary, his death and burial, M. III. ii. 118. Wentworth, Henry, third lord, A. IV. 94. his letter to lord Burghley, acquainting him of his father's death. III. i, 303. Wentworth, sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI. 's coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Wentworth, Paul, W. II. 333. Wentworth, Peter, A. IV. 332 — 336. one of the committee appointed by the house of com- mons to wait upon archbishop Parker touching matters of re- ligion, II. i. 96. his words to the archbishop, 99. one of those to whose consideration a bill for rites and ceremonies was referred, 185. P. II. 202. one also of the committee for impeaching Mary queen of Scots, ib. substance of his un- dutiful speech in parliament, A. II. i. 186. 99. for which he is sequestered the house, 186. 189. and imprisoned, P. II. 204. examined by a committee of the house, A. II. i. 190. re- stored to his seat by the queen's favour, ib. sent to the Tower for his too free speaking, IV. 335. W. I. 488. Wentworth, Thomas, first lord, (as lord chamberlain,) C. 315. his part at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 7. Edward VI. gives him the manors of Stebxuiheath (Stepney) and Hackney, 340. buried, 444. converted Bale from popery, P. I. 283. Wentworth, Thomas, second lord, son of the preceding, A. III. i. 489- ii- 577- 578- IV. 474. one of the lord lieutenants for Suffolk, M. II. i. 465. ii. 162. 202. in commissions to pro- rogue parliament, 199. 200. obtains lands from the see of London, 268. in the commis- sion to consider bishop Boner's appeal against his trial, III. i. 38. one of queen Mary's privy- council, ii. 160. laid aside in the next reign, ib. an act passed for assurance of cer- tain lands of the see of Lon- don to him and others, A. I. i. 93, 104. tried for the loss of Calais, of which he had been governor under queen Mary, but acquitted, 38. 284. Daus's translation of Bullinger's ser- mons on the Revelations, de- dicated to him, 383. in a com- mission against papists in Nor- folk, P. II. 137. his death, A. III. i. 302. a great friend of lord Burghley's, ib. Wentworth, William, marries Elizabeth Cecil, but dies with- in the year, A. III. i. 86. 208. IV. 47;. Wentworth, lady, attended queen Mary in her triumphal passage through the city, M. III. i. 54. Wentworth, Mrs., wife of Peter, A- IV. 335. 336. Wentworths, the, A. I. i. 551. II. ii. 499. Wentworth, tithes of, Hereford- shire, part of the endowment of the united see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Wesselus, his works prohibited as heretical, temp. Henry VHI., M. I. i. 254. INDEX. 35H West, a rebellion breaks out in the west, M. II. i. 264. pro- clamation against the rebels, 266. the leaders, 281. West, — recanted under queen Mary, C. 519. had been stew- ard to bishop Ridley, and tries Co persuade him to recant, ib. his death, 520. West, — murdered by lord Da- cre's sons, M. III. i. 490. ii. 107. was son and heir of sir William, ib. West, — notice of his sermon at Aldgate, G. 39. A. I. i. 200. why had before the ecclesiasti- cal commission, P. I. 446. III. 148. West, — A. IV. 307. West, John, curate of St. Mi- chael's, Crooked-lane, G. 362. West, Nicholas, bishoj) of Ely, M. I. i. 108. A, II. ii, 589. his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. goes to hear Latimer preach, III. i. 369. sends for him, ib. his words to him, ib. preaches a- gainst him, 370. and forbids him to preach, ib. 371. 372. West, Robert, fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, W. III. 14. West, William, M. II. i. 522. disinherited for designing to kill his uncle, lord Delawarre, 291. restored in blood, A. I. i. 468. created a baron by queen Elizabeth, M. II. i. 291. see Delawarre. West, sir William, M. III. ii. 107. buried, 23. A\"estacre, advowson of, Norfolk, bought of the crown by E. Spainy and J. Baspole, M. II. ii. 239. Westborough, Westbury, manor and park of, Somerset, reverted to the see of Bath and Wells upon the duke of Somerset's attainder, M. II. ii. 13. 271. Westbroke, John, ordained, G. 54- Westbury, see Westborough. Westby, — A. II. ii. 359. Westby, John, A. I. ii. 257. 259. Westby, Thomas, archdeacon of York, present at the convo- cation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. Westcote, Sebastian, A. I. i. 250. 251. 253. G. 88. master of the choristers at St. Paul's, A. I. i. 251. excommunicated as a papist by bishop Grindal, G. 113. the bishop's letter to the earl of Leicester, who had in- terceded for him, ib. Westden, Marion, a gospeller, M. I. i. 116. 121. Westerfield, Richard, M. II. ii. 244. Westham, Essex, property there bought of the crown by T. Golding and W. Cely, M. II. ii. 404. West-hatch, manor of, Essex, given by Edward VI. to sir T. Wroth, M. II. i. 387. Westinghunger, manor of, Kent, given by Edward VI. to lord Clinton,' M. II. i. 361. Westley, John, M. III. ii. 399. Westminster, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Westminster abbey, its new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 211. its altars demolished, A. I. i. 400. Westminster, abbot of, see fV. Benson and J. Feckenham. Westminster, bishop of, see T. Thirlby. Westminster, bishopric of, dis- solved, M. II. i. 334. 338. its property given to the see of London, 339. Westminster, collegiate church of, an act for, M. II. i. 554. sta- tutes drawn up for it by Dr. 35^ INDEX. Bill, P. I. 158. orders of its governiHcnt since the last erec- tion, &c., A. II. ii. 120. 613. dean Goodman's letter con- cerning them, 120, new sta- tutes drawn up, and prepared for the signet, 121. the dean's letter requesting their confir- mation, ih. dean Goodman's list of the names and places, &c. of the prebendaries, III. i. 594. ii. 415. the order by the statutes for their residence, &c. 410. dean Goodman's letter to lord Burghley for the college, IV. 586. Westminster collegelibrary, books given to, by lady Burghley, A. III. ii. 128. Westminster, deans of, see G. Goodman, 1561 — 1601. L. Andrews, 160 1 — 1605. Westminster, monastery of, the manor of Paddington had be- longed to it, M. II. i. 340. Westminster-school: complaint of Trinity college, Cambridge, re- specting elections from this school, W.I. 26.27.28.111. 12. the number of scholars elected regulated, I. 28, dean Good- man's petition for the ratifica- tion of Dr. Bill's statutes. III. 15. case of Christ Church col- lege, Oxford, refusing to elect two Westminster scholars, A. II. i. 554. Westminster, Matthew of, edited by archbishop Parker, P. II. 97. 380. 500. Westmoreland, Charles, si.xth earl of, A. II. i. 261. 440. ii. 365. III. i. 202. 203. 624. ii. 560. 586. IV. 207. 229. 280. 384. consents to the bill for conse- cration of bishops to be good, from which he had dissented, A. I. ii. 230. he and the earl of Northumberland headed the rebellion of the papists in the north, A. I. ii. 312. 383. Ill, i. 385. ii. 340. their declara- tions, I. ii. 313. 314. pro- claimed traitor, 315. escaped into Flanders, 344. 345. pen- sioned by the king of Spain, 53. II. i. 494. ii. 468. his case recommended to lord Burgh- ley by Dr. Parry, 366. III. i. 372. and by G. More, W. II. 370. 372. his character taken from a tract on the rebellion, A. I. ii. 337. III. i, 408. car- dinal Allen gives him a different character, IV. 604. his circum- stances until his death, I. ii. 344- 345- IV- 230- 39°- 39^- was the cause of the death of one of his captains, I. ii. 345. Westmoreland, Henry Neville, fifth earl of, M. III. i. 559. ii. 514. 79. 80. 94. 95.533. 115. installed a knight of the garter, II. ii. 30. of a tainted life and blemished manners, 74. his at- tempts at robbery, 75. pardoned and rewarded, ib. a privy coun- sellor, 160. 233. one of the council in the north, 161. lord lieutenant of the bishopric of Durham, 163. in a commis- sion for the debatable land be- tween England and Scotland, 207. assists at queen Mary's coronation. III. i. 57. he and the bishop of Durham appoint- ed to settle a difference between lord ^V''harton and the gentle- men of Northumberland, ii. 72. his letters to the earl of Shrewsbury, 76. 77. has the gout, 94. Westoker, manor and advowson of, taken in exchange by the crown from the see of Bath and Wells, M. II. ii. 13. 271. Weston, — imprisoned in queen INDEX. 2>51 Anne Bolen's business, M. I. '• 433- Weston, — an harbourer of Cam- pion, P. II. 167. Weston, — A. III. i. 135. Weston, — alias Burges, a Jesuit, pretends to the exorcising fa- culty, A. III. i. 700. arch- bishop Abbot's account of him, 701. Weston, Edmund, archdeacon of Lewes, subscribed, as a mem- ber of the convocation, the ar- ticles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for disci- pline, 512. Weston, Henry, an act for his restitution, M. II. i. 210. Weston, Hugh, C. 97. 367. M. II. ii. 24. III. i. 31. 139. 185. C. 460. 463.541.594. M. III. i. 229. 331. 436. A. I. i. 116. ii. 284. Ay. 146. was in favour of priests' marriages, C. 222. called the communion table an oyster board, M. II. i. 355. preaches, as dean of Westmin- ster, at Paul's Cross, III. i. 32. 78. prolocutor to the lower house of convocation, 65. C. 462. his speech, M. III. i. 68. ii. 182. brought in a bill de- claring the Catechism, set forth by convocation temp. Edward VI., to be full of heresies, C. 423. sent, as moderator, by the convocation in the disputation against Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, at Oxford, 479 — 489. 532. 1082, 1092. ]\1. III. i. 182. 183. P. I. 466. his argument for burning men without law, C. 501, made dean of Wind- sor, M. III. i. 488. deprived for his scandalous life, 174. ii. 22. C. io;2. his death and burial, M. III. ii. 65. 119. A. I. i. 41. 45. his character, M. III. ii. 65. Weston, John, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, A. IV. 338. Weston, sir Richard, his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 212. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, II. i. 9. Weston, Richard, a magistrate in Essex, a persecutor of the pro- testants, M. III. i. 440. in a commission against Lollards, 553- Weston, Richard, ordained, G. Weston, Robert, a civilian, dean of the arches, P. I. 109. 161. 210. 239. 250. A. I. i. 472. ii. 98. P. I. 432. 443. II. 186, has a commission to visit the city and diocese of Litchfield and Coventry, I. 152. Weston, Robert, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 489. did not vote upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. some particulars respecting him, 493. Weston, Thomas, merchant of London, G. 338. Weston, William, rector of St. Michael's, Buntington, in a commission to hear appeals a- gainst certain deprivations, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 171. Weston, parsonage of, Yorkshire, given by Edward VI. to endow his grammar school at Sed- bergh, M. II. ii. 280. Westphaling, Herbert, A. I. ii. 148. P. II. 50. W. I. 446. in commissions to visit the church of Gloucester, P. I. 319. G. 315. canon of Christ Church, Oxford, P. II. 6. mentioned A a 3 358 INDEX. lor the see of Oxford, ib. mar- ried a daughter of bishop Bar- low, 474. in a commission for visiting the diocese of Oxford, G. 318. notice of his Treatise of Reformation of Religion, A. III. i. 225. nominated by the council to confer with any pa- pist, W. I. 198. recommended by archbishop Whitgift for the deanery of Windsor, 337. the conge d'elire nominating him to the see of Hereford, 466. his consecration, 467. his let- ter to lord Burghley about the justices in his diocese, A. III. i. 669. ii. 453. his letter to lord Burghley about one brought before him for seditious words, IV. 21. Harbert, bishop of Norwich, founded the priory of Norwich in the time of Wil- liam Rufus, A. III. 3. 490. ii. 376. Westphalus, Joachim, ^vrote a- gainst Calvin, C. 507. Westthorp, Ralph, sergeant at arms, A. IV. 447. 448. Westwel, — a puritan minister, A. III. i. 691. ii. 478. Westwel, site of the manor of, Kent, passed from the see of Canterbury to the crown, P. I. Wetheral, — of Lincoln's Inn, G. 236. Wetherld, — P. II. 432. Wetsteene, — professor at Basil, writes against sir T. Smith's mode of pronouncing Greek, S. 26. Wever, Richard, his wretched end after lie had recanted from the protestant religion, M. III. i. 278. \Veylech, manor of, given in ex- change by the crown to lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234. Whaddon, the poor of, bishop Cox's bequest to, A. III. i. 38. Whalley, — receiver for York- shire, tried to persuade several noblemen to make the duke of Somerset protector again, M. II. i. 390. imprisoned as an adherent of the duke's, 497. grossly wronged the king, as receiver, II. ii. 44. surrenders his office, and is fined, 45. W^halley, Edmund, abbot of York, his letter to cardinal Wolsey to spare the priory of Rome- burg, M. I. ii. 133. Whalley, Richard, M. III. i. 277. Whalley, William, presented to the living of Landbeache, P. I. 65. III. 21. A. IV. 613. canon of Lincoln, ib. Whalley, rectory of, Lancashire, given by the crown in exchange to the see of Canterbury, C. 403. 910. M. II. i. 119. P. I. 363, 364. had belonged to the monastery of Whalley, ib. Wharton, — employed by Crum- wel as his visitor of religious houses in Suffolk, M. I. i. 539. a magistrate in Suffolk, III. i. 175-^ Wharton, — chaplain to arch- bishop Sancroft, P. II. 250. Wharton, Henry, C. pref xvi. P. II. 505. his observations on Strype's Memorials of Arch- bishop Cranmer, C. 1039 — 1061. Wharton, Jeffrey, doctor of de- crees, bishop Tonstal's vicar- general, M, I. i. 113. 132. 133. P. I. 5. Wharton, Philip lord, S. 120. A. II. i. 226. IV. 268. Wharton, Thomas lord, C. 420. M. III. i. 49J. 492. ii. 75. 79. 82. 83. 521. 84. 88. 90. 534. 97. one of Edward VI. 's coun- cil in the north, II. ii. 161. in INDEX. 359 a commission about the de- batable land between England and Scotland, 207. has a pa- tent for an augmentation to his arms, 235. was warden of the west marches, 254. a sum of money allowed him, ib. pre- sent at bishop Hoper's trial, III. i. 286. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290. the middle marches com- mitted to him, 351. a feud be- tween him and lord Dacres, i6. keeper of the town and castle of Berwick, 558. his deserts as warden of the east and mid- dle marches, 560. a difference between him and the gentle- men of Northumberland, ii. 72. one of the noblemen ap- pointed to attend queen Eliza- beth upon her coming to Lon- don, A. I. ii. 391. dissented in parhament from the bill for uniformity, &c. i. 87. Wharton, sir Thomas, M. III. ii. 83- 533- a chief officer in the marches between Scotland and England, i. 136. present at bi- shop Hoper's trial, 286. of queen Mary's privy-council, 160. signed certain orders as such, 414. 502. ii. 125. laid aside in the next reign, 160. allowed by queen Mary to have thirty retainers, 162. Wharton, William, his letter to lord Burghley on the number of papists in Yorkshire, A. II. i. 271. W^harton, lady, a papist, A. II. ii. 341. IV. 268. Whatton, advowson of, Notting- hamshire, bought of the crown by abp. Cranmer, C. 602. had belonged to the monastery of AVelbeck, ib. the manor now in the possession of the noble family of Dorchester, ib. no- tice of T. Cranmer's monu- ment in the parish church, ib. Wheataker, Richard, vicar of Am- breley, suspended for noncon- formity, W. I. 255. Wheeler, John, appointed child of the leash, M. II. ii. 284. Wheeler, Thomas, P. II. 432. 469. Wheelock, Abraham, Arabic pro- fessor at Cambridge, P. II. 5 15. Whetcomb, John, fellow of Mer- ton college, Oxford, in a con- spiracy against abp. Parker, P. I. 501. Whettehil, sir Richard, one of Henry VIII. 's council at Tour- nay, M. I. ii. 16. Whiston, William, translated O- chinuss sermons, A. III. i. 287. Whitacre, see Goodacre. W^hitaker, William, A, II. i. 149. Ay. 34. A. III. i. 281. ii. 273. i. 496. ii. 496. 115. W. I. 521. A. III. ii. 121. W. II. 6. A. IV. 105. 324. fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, and regius professor of divinity at Cam- bridge, II. ii. 213. thought somewhat to favour puritan- ism, W. I. 136. gave a solid answer to Campion's Ten Rea- sons, P. II. 165. his judgment of Cartwright's Second Reply to Dr. Whitgift's Second An- swer, W. I. 136, translated into Latin Jewel's Defence of his Apology, A. II. ii. 213. made chancellor of St. Paul's, 391 . endeavours for and against his being made master of St. John's college, Cambridge, A. III. i. 386. 642. W. I. 453. recommended by the college, A. III. i. 643. his application to lord Burghley, 386. who supports him, 389. W, I. 454* elected with some difficulty, A. III. i. 644. 714. W. L 458. why supposed to be puritani- A a 4 360 INDEX. cally inclined, 454. takes the degree of D. D., 459. his letter to lord Burghley, with an ac- count of the state of his col- lege, A. III. i. 714. 715. one of those who solicited Cart- wright to answer the Rhe- mists' translation of the scrip- tures, W. I. 482. expels Eve- rard Digby from his college, and why, 516. 520. A. II. ii. 405. III. ii. 108 — 113. arch- bishop Whitgift's opinion of this measure, W. I. 517. and letter to the earl of Leicester, who favoured W hi taker, 519. notice of his Disputatio de Sa- cra Scriptura, 8^c. A. III. ii. 158. falsely charged with fa- vouring puritanism in his col- lege, W. II. 56. 57. his vindi- cation of himself, 61. his letter to lord Burghley in favour of certain puritans, III. 265. con- cerned in a controversy at Cambridge with Dr. Baro, re- specting predestination, A. IV. 320. W. II. 227. favours Cal- vin's explanation of it, 228. his part in the university pro- ceedings against Barret for a sermon, 230. 235. 246. 248. 268. 273. his letter to archbi- shop Whitgift on the subject, III. 337. chiefly employed a- gainst him, II. 264. his ob- servations on Barret's answers to certain questions put to him by order of the archbishop, 265. preaches upon the points now in controversy, 278. de- puted by the university to as- sist in drawing up the Lam- beth articles, 279. his death, 282. these articles called Whit- aker's doctrines, 283. archbi- shop Whitgift's concern at his death, 315. the queen's esteem for him, ib. see Wheataker. Whitbroke, William, sub-dean of St. Paul's, G. 87. 88.91. A.I. i. 250. 251. Whitchurch, Edward, printer, no- tice of his edition of the Bible, 1540, C. 83. 117. A.II.i.324. imprisoned for printing it, M. I. i. 566. solicited Old to trans- late Erasmus's Paraphrases on certain of St. Paul's Epistles, II. i. 47. printed two editions of Erasmus's Entire Paraphrase on the New Testament, 48. 552. also bishop Hoper's Ora- tion against Purgatory, 309. also Traheron's translation of Vigon's work on surgery, 420. excepted out of queen Mary's pardon, C. 446. White, — discloses a conspiracy against queen Mary, in which he was concerned, M. III. i. 473- White, — A. I. i. 379. White, — G. 206. White, — A. II. ii. 531. III. ii. 468. White, — A. III. ii. 231. White, Dr., A. IV. 94. AVhite, Dor., a papist, A. III. i. 610. White, Henry, in the commis- sion for valuing the benefices in London, M. I. i. 426. White, Joanna, M. III. ii. 405. White, John, M. III. i. 174. C 465. (as bishop of Lincoln,) 48 1 . ( as bishop of VV'^inchester,) M. III. ii.6o. A. I. i. 154. IIL ii. 263. an inmate of bishop Gardiner's family, M. III. i. 466. warden of Winchester, C. 334. called the conununion- table an oyster board, M. II. i. 355. chaplain to bishop Gar- diner, 374. and one of the bi- shop's witnesses at his trial, ib. notice of his tract in verse against P. Martyr, called Diu- INDEX. 361 cosio-Marhjrion, 423. preaches at Paul's Cross, III. i. 32. 77. 79. consecrated bishop of Lin- cohi, 180. C. 459. writes a copy of verses deducing king Philip's genealogy from John of Gaunt, M. III. i. 203. as- sists at bishop Hoper's trial, 286. and at Dr. Taylor's, 290, preaches at Paul's Cross, 322. and at bishop Gardiner's fune- ral, 362. 471. assists at the consecration of abp. Pole, 473. 474. one of the commissioners appointed for judging Ridley and Latimer, 532. visits his diocese before his departure from it, M. III. i. 482. 483. translated to the see of Win- chester, 487. preaches at Paul's Cross, 503. at the Spittle, ii. 3. at St. Mary Overy's, 5. at Paul's Cross again, 26. at bi- shop Griffith's funeral, 119. A. I. i. 45. and at queen Mary's, M. III. i. 140. his character of her, T39. the sermon, 536. confined for it, 140, enlarged, A. I. i. 48. present in the first parliament of queen Elizabeth, 82. dissented from the bill for restoring the supremacy to the crown, 84. and from that for restoring the tenths and first- fruits to the crown, 85. ap- pears in the house of commons against the bill for the pa- tentees of certain of his see- lands, 9 1, one of the house complains of him, ih. his coun- sel argues, 92. cancelled re- cords, ib. one on the popish side in the disputation at West- minster, 128. 130. 131. G. 34. committed to the Tower in consequence, A. I. i. 133. 138. 139. 140. 220, sunnnoned be- fore the queen, 206. deprived, and recommitted to the Tower, 210. placed in alderman White's custody, 211. with whom he died, 213. he and bishop Wat- son threatened to excomnmni- cate the queen, ib. White, lady, sister of the pre- ceding, A. I. i. 140. White, John, he and S. Kyrton bought of the crown the chan- try of Farnham, M. II. ii. 409. White, — M. III. i. III. White, John, schoolmaster of Wickham college, M. III. i. 276. 438. _ White, John, alias Snelling, j)ro- fesses to be John the Baptist, A. III. i. 637. his examination, ib. White, sir Nicholas, A. II. ii. 330. III. i. 380. Ay. T09. a friend of Cecil, A. II. i. 15. 32. seneschal of Wexford, 15. master of the rolls in Ireland, 576. his account of the state of that country, ib. III. i. 1 14. displeases sir H. Sidney, the lord lieutenant, II. ii. 72. lord Burghley's advice to him for the recovery of favour, 73. he does not obtain it, ib. his letter to lord Burghley, relating the death of the earl of Essex, 83. married a Devereux, W.I. 157. his son educated at Westmin- ster and Cambridge by lord Burghley, ib. and his second son by the earl of Essex, ib. White, Richard, a magistrate in Hampshire, backward in reli- gion, A. HI. ii. 462. White, Roger, ordained, G. 59. White, Rowland, an extract from his MS. tract on the reforma- tion of Ireland, recommending twelve free-schools and one university, A. III. i. 256. White, sir Thomas, dubbed a- knight of the carpet at queen 363 INDEX. Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. i8i. White, Thomas, prebendary of Winchester, his death, M. II. ii. 265. White, sir Thos., (as lord mayor, M. III. i. 32.) 360, 499. ii. 16. lord mavor of London, con- cerned in proclaiming queen Mary, i. 21. dubbed a knight of the carpet at her corona- tion, ii. 182. alderman, i. 360. a member of the Russia com- pany, 520. bishop White placed in his custody, A. I. i. 211. who died at his place in Hampshire, 213. White, lady, wife of the preced- ing, buried, M. III. ii. 109. White, Thomas, warden of New college, Oxford, committed to archbishop Cranmer to be re- claimed, C. 431. vice-chancel- lor of Cambridge, M. III. ii. 28. White, Thomas, complied with the popish religion under Q. Mary, A. I. i. 492. archdeacon of Berks, subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. voted against the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. White, Thomas, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 661. \Miite, Thomas, in a commission to visit Merton college, Ox- ford, P. I. 232. in another to visit the church of Bristol, G. 314. chancellor to bp. Gheast, ib. and vicar-general of Salis- bury, W. I. 245. White, Thomas, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, A. IV, 338. P. III. 265. W. II. 145. see Wight. White-hall, formerly called York- place, being then the town residence of the archbishops of York, A. II. i. 359. alienated by Henry VIII., ib. Whitebroke, see Whitbroke. Whitehead, David, A, I. ii. 46. III. i. 224. present at a private conference on the sacrament, G. 10. C. 385. Ch. 70. 77. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. pastor of an English congregation at Frank- fort, 393. M. III. i. 231. 404. Cranmer's opinion of him, C. 398. 906. who had recom- mended him for the see of Ar- magh, M. III. i. 231. returns from exile under queen Eliza- beth, G. 35. preaches before her, ib. P. I. 71. A. I. i. 60. one of the commission for re- viewing king Edward's Book of Common Prayer, S. 56. A. I. i. 75. one of the protestants concerned in the disputation at Westminster, C. 393. A. I, i. 129. IV. 600. in a list of persons to be preferred, I. i. 228. 229. regretted the indis- cretion of the violent puritan ministers, 269. sequestered for nonconformity, G, 145. Whitehead, Hugh, first dean of Durham, M, II. ii. 23. had been prior there, ib. his death and burial, ih. Whitehead, James, fellow of Merton college, Oxford, in a conspiracy against archbishop Parker, P. 1. 501. Whitehed, John, M. II. ii. 249. Whitehorn, John, he and J.Bayly bought of the crown the chan- try at Chard, M. II. ii. 402. Whitehorn, Robert, public no- tary, G. 287. P. II. 433. Whitfield, John, his informations respecting papists, A. IV. 264 — 372. INDEX. 363 Whitfield, John, uncle, A. IV. 268. Whitfield, Ralph, A. IV. 265. Whitgift, Alice, daughter of Hen- ry, married to H. Cuckson, W. 1-5. Whitgift, Alice, two daughters of William, VV. I. 5. Whitgift, Aylmer, W. I. 5. Whitgift, Bridget, married to R. Collingwood, W. I. 5. Whitgift, Elizabeth, W. I. 5. Whitgift, George, W. I. 409. II. 418. 421. a natural brother of the archbishop, I. 5. 6. an officer in his family, 6. the in- scription on his grave-stone, ib. Whitgift, Henry, a merchant of Great Grimsby, W. I. 4. father of the archbishop, 5. the rest of his offspring, ib. Whitgift, Isaac, W. I. 5. Whitgift, Isabel, married to M. Shall, W. I. 5. Whitgift, Jane, W. I. 5. Whitgift, Jeffrey, W. I. 5. Whitgift, John Fitz-Adam de, his grant to the monastery of St. Mary's, York, W. I. 4. III. 5. Whitgift, John, W. I. 4. Whitgift, John, A. I. ii. 133. 139. 200. 350. 372. 378. II. i. 7. 351. P. II. 178.227. 325. A. II. i. 451. 459. ii. 538. IV. 585. II. i. 565. 568. ii. 39. 65. 121. 122. 214. 278. (as bishop of Worcester,) G. 391. A. III. i. 132. 173. 281. P. I. 396. (as archbishop of Canter- bury,) A. I. ii. 142. III. i. 349. 465- 473- 627. 634. 658. W. III. 186. A. III. ii. 470. 94. 97. 150. IV. 63. 106. 114. 187. 194. 227. I. ii. 224. IV. 318. 552. pun on his name, W. I. 3. related to good fami- lies, ib. his pedigree, 4. eldest son of Henry Whitgift, a mer- chant^ and Anne Dynewel, 5 . born at Grimsby, 1530, 6. (or, according to Fr. Thynne, 1533,) ib. educated first by his uncle, Rt. Whitgift, abbot of Wellow, ib. afterwards sent to St. Anthony's school in Lon- don, ib. two anecdotes of him whilst a boy, 7. first entered at Queen's college, Cambridge, 8. why removed to Pembroke- hall, ib. the martyr, Bradford, his tutor, ib. chosen a scholar of his college at the recom- mendation of Bradford and Grindal, then fellows, ib. elect- ed fellow of Peter-house, ib. the kindness of Dr. Perne, the master, to him, during an ill- ness, ib. who also screened him, when he thought of flying abroad to escape the popish visitation at Cambridge, 10. 12. his gratitude to Perne in after-life, 9. a slander in Mar- tin Marprelate against him re- futed, 13. continues safe in the university, ib. ordained, 14. preaches before the university, ib. continued his studies at college about twelve years, ib. two noblemen's sons his pu- pils, ib. his judgment of dean Nowell's Catechism, A. I. i. 528. why not concerned in the disputations before queen Eli- zabeth at Cambridge, ii. 107. became bishop Cox's chaplain, W. I. 15. what preferment the bishop gave him, ib. appointed lady Margaret's lecturer in di- vinity, ib. the subject of liis lectures, ib. prepared for the press, but never printed, ib. concerned in certain business relative to the university, ib. one of the heads who signed the letter to Cecil, their chan- cellor, to stop the queen's pro- clamation for enjoining the 3^4 INDEX. habits, 17. P.I. 386. III. 126. a Lent preacher, 1565, 135. preaches before the queen, W. 1. 18. and in consequence made her chaplain, ib. takes the de- gree of D. D., ib. chosen mas- ter of Pembroke-hall, 19. be- ing recommended by Grindal, ib. G. 460. founded, conjointly with Mrs. Fulnetby, a Bible- clerkship at Peter-house, W. I. 20. III. 7. chosen master of Trinity college, shortly after he had been elected at Pem- broke-hall, I. 20. being select- ed by sir W. Cecil, 21. highly esteemed by archbishop Par- ker, bishop Grindal, and bi- shop Cox, ib. his letter to Ce- cil, in vindication of himself from false reports, as not qua- lified for the mastership of Trinity college. III. 8. hitherto in straitened circumstances, I. 22. made regius professor of divinity at Cambridge, 23. ap- pointed, with others, by the university, to examine a lady Margaret's preacher, ib. a pre- bend of Ely given him through bishop Cox, which he held till he was bishop of Worcester, 26. principally concerned in certain college affairs with re- spect to the Westminster scho- lars, 26. 27. 28. III. 12. con- cerned in settling a contest in Corpus Christi college, P. I. 534. resigns the regius pro- fessorship of divinitv, W. I. 29. reconmiends Dr. Kelk to be master of St. John's college, 31. one of the commissioners for visiting King's college, 33. procures new statutes lor the imiversity, 37. III. 17. P. II, 37. 38. 175. III. 221. cen- sured for them by the puri- tans, particularly by Deering, W. I. 38. concerned in the suspension of Cartwright from being lady Margaret's reader in divinity at Cambridge, ib. and in his expulsion from Trinity college, 41. his state- ment of Cartwright's tenets, A. I. ii. 379. submits his an- swers to Cartwright's asser- tions to archbishop Parker, W. I. 39. 40. had offered him any conference, 42. Cartwright's hatred towards him, 43. vice- chancellor, 44. copy of his li- cense to preach throughout the kingdom, granted by the university, III. 20. preached before the convocation of 1 57 1 , P. II. 51. dean of Lincoln, prebendary of Ely, and rector of Teversham, has a dispensa- tion to hold another benefice, and why, 80. W. I. 46. 116. his gratitude in after-life, 46. preaches before the convoca- tion, ib. chosen prolocutor of the lower house, ib. P. II. 2 1 1. concerned in the controversy with the proctors at Cam- bridge about the Barnaby lec- turers, W. I. 47 — 5 1 . discou- raged, thinks of leaving the university, 51, some of the heads apply to the chancellor to prevent it, 52. a contro- versy at Magdalen college re- ferred to him, ib. 118. selected by archbishop Parker to an- swer the Admonition to Par- liament, 54. A. II. i. 275. 425. Ay. 37. P. II. 139. dissuaded by Mr. Norton from publish- ing his answer, W. I. 57. P. II. 143. Ay. 13. 14. his an- swer to Mr. Norton, W. I. 61. hath the advice of archbishop Parker in his Answer to the Admonition, 65. the archbi- shop encourages him in this INDEX. Z^5 work, P. II. 252. his reply to the archbishop, 253. his letter to archbishop Parker, with the first part of his book. III. 207. sends his book to lord Burgli- ley, II. 141. account of it, W. I. 66. dedicates it to the church of England, 68. his exhorta- tion to the governors of the church in the preface, 70. and his account of the anabaptists, 71. and donatists, 74. and of the compilers of the Liturgy, 75. his Answer contains Bi- shop Jevvel's Vindication of Archbishops, &c. 76. answers three other pamphlets support- ing the Admonition, 80. 83. his opinion of the church of England, 85. his Answer re- viewed by archbishop Parker, and other bishops, ib. his An- swer a defence of the episco- pacy and liturgy of the church of England, 86. his book op- ])ugned, and himself libelled at Cambridge, 87. P. II. 194. his learning censured by Udal, W, I. 88. concerned in the expul- sion of Chark the puritan from Cambridge, i6. 89. 91. III. 27. ex])els Cart^vright from his col- lege, for not taking orders ac- cording to the statutes, I. 95. his letter to the archbishop of Canterbury on the subject, 96. preaches at Paul's Cross, ib. resigns the rectory of Tever- sham, 98. greatly concerned in preserving the privileges of the university in the dispute rela- tive to Mr. Aldrich, 102. some account of Cartwright's Reply to his Answer to the Admoni- tion, 102 — 107. publishes his Defence against Cartwright's Reply, 109. P. II. 363. his letter to the lord Burghley about it, W. III. 35. his fair method of answering Cart- wright, I. Ill, his declaration concernino; the church of Eng- land, ib. what was the true state of the controversy, 112. this Defence approved of, 1 1 6. lord Burghley and lord keeper Bacon patrons of Trinity col- lege through his means, 117. his sermon against the puri- tans, preached before the queen, 1574, printed, 120. P. II. 363. its contents, W. I. 120. vice-chancellor a second time, 127. employed by the university to confer with the chancellor about moderating a statute, ib. some account of the Second Reply of T. Cart- wright against him, 128. 134. and of The Rest of the Second Reply, &c. 137. one of the commissioners to settle the disputes and to regulate the statutes at St. John's college, Cambridge, 142. A. II. i. 553. his opinion of the plan of aug- menting small livings by the addition of impropriations, W. I. 144. one of those recom- mended by archbishop Parker for the see of Norwich, P. II. 422. his letter acquainting lord Burghley of archbishop Parker's having inveighed against him in his letter to the queen on his death-bed, 431. which seemed ungrateful, 430. his letter to bishop Cox concerning his trou- bles, A. II. i. 549. prevents the buying and selling of places in the university, W. I. 148. his letter to the lord Burghley on the subject, 149. exact in ex- ecuting the college statutes, 151. resolves two questions, how far the law of Moses is binding on Christians, 152. recommended by archbishop 3^5 INDEX. Grindal as a commissioner to visit St. John's college, Cam- bridge, G. 297. in the ecclesi- astical commission, 310. ap- pointed to the see of Worces- ter, W. I. 152. recommends (bishop) Howland as his suc- cessor in the headship of Tri- nity college, 153. in what state he left his college, 155. per- sons of note and quality bred up by him in the college, 156. his discipline and example there, 157. his gifts to the college, ib. his character for learning there, ib. new statutes and privileges for the univer- sity procured by him, 158. his confirmation and consecration to the bishopric, 161. G. 340. patent of arms granted to him, W. I. 162. III. 44. mark of respect paid to him at his de- parture from Cambridge, I. 162. queen Elizabeth's letter to him to forbid the prophe- cies, 163. made vice-president of Wales, 164. A. 11. ii, 50. 51. 76. some particulars of his conduct in this office against papists, W. I. 164. thanked by the council for his exertions, 167. misrepresented at court, 168. clears himself in a letter to lord Burghley, 169. 170. opposes the proceedings of the concealers in AVorcestershire, 171. 172. his speech to the queen against the concealers, 173. obtains the disposal of the prebends in Worcester ca- thedral, 175. letter of the pri- vy-council to him, notifying the return of the lord president of Wales to his office. III. 45. endeavours to correct abuses in the queen's fines, I. 178. his letter to the lord Burghley in behalf of F. Philipps, ih. con- sulted, when archbishop, by the earl of Pembroke about mat- ters in Wales, 179. the coun- cil's directions to him for mak- ing a certificate of such persons as absented themselves from church, 181. and for recalling such youth as went beyond sea, 183. his answer to the article respecting the ministers in the petition of the house of commons for a reformation of the church, 187. III. 47. the appointment of the justices in Worcestershire and Warwick- shire left to him, I. 187. in- quires after papists, 189. the council's directions to him re- specting such as refused to come to church, 191. opposed the renewal of an ecclesiastical commission in Wales applied for by the lord president of the marches, 193. interposes for the clergy of his diocese, 194. another letter from the council to him respecting popish recu- sants, 195. composes a differ- ence at Ludlow, 198. thecoim- cil's letter to him to urge the use of the book of Advertise- ments, 200. appointed visitor of the church and diocese of Litchfield, 199. G. 404. 407. 409. A. III. i. 251. a divinity lecture established in the ca- thedral chiefly by his means, W. I. 212. his letter about the prorogation of the visitation, G. 410. conclusion of his vi- sitation, W. I. 212. concerned in framing the statutes for the cathedral of Hereford, 213. employed in making peace be- tween two gentlemen of the county, 217. intercedes against the concealers respecting the preferment of the divinity lec- tureship at Hereford, ib. III. INDEX. 367 65. proofs that he had been a check upon the lord president, sir H. Sidney, and council of the marches in Wales, I. 219. refuseth the see of Canterbury, archbishop Grindal being alive, 221. G. 425. archbishop Grin- dal's legacy to him, G. 428. par- ticulars of his election to the see of Canterbury, 1583, W. I. 222. a popish tale, that the queen laid her hand on his head at his consecration, 224. why the queen selected him for the see of Canterbury before other bi- shops, 2. as archbishop, his cares and concerns for the clergy, A. III. i. 331. aided by sir C. Hatton, ib. congratu- lated by the university of Cam- bridge on his elevation, W. I. 225, III. 67. under what dis- advantages he entered upon his charge, I. 226. certain articles agreed upon by himself and the bishops, 229. his letter or- dering them to be put in exe- cution, 233. his directions for proceedings against recusants, 234. opposition to these ar- ticles, 235. articles of inquiry for church affairs sent to him from the council, 238. his let- ter ordering them to be distri- buted to the bishops, 239. at- tacked in consequence in the Practice of Prelates, 241. visits metropolitically, 244. strictly requires subscription to the three articles on the queen's supremacy, the Book of Com- mon Prayer, and the Thirty- nine Articles, 241. 248. shews the ill consequence of not sub- scribing them, 248. certain pu- ritanical ministers of Kent, who refused to subscribe these ar- ticles, appear before him, 245. 249. and appeal from him to the council, 249. his letter to the council upon the com- plaints of these ministers, 250. objections of certain ministers of Sussex against the Book of Common Prayer, with his an- swers, which induced them to subscribe, 256 — 259. commis- sions the suffragan bishop of Dover to confirm children and confer orders, 263. III. 69. unites the parishes of Hurst and Bonnington, I. 264. preaches at St. Paul's, ib. con- tents of his sermon. III. 70. his reasons for the continuance of the ecclesiastical commis- sion when it was complained against, I. 265. 266. put into the high commission at bishop Aylmer's request. Ay. 69. would not interfere in the matter of Gitfard, 72. draws up articles or interrogatories to be an- swered by the ministers ex of- ficio, W. I. 268. copy of them, III. 81. communications be- tween him and certain gentle- men of Kent concerning the Kentish ministers he had sus- pended, I. 272. supplies their places with other ministers, 281. draws up a summary of Beal's book in favour of the puritans, 283 — 288. which he communicated to lord Burgh- ley, who was always disposed to countenance him in the ser- vice of the church, 283. his animadversions on some of the absurdities of this book, 288. III. 87. Beal's ill behaviour to- wards him, I. 289. 290. con- sults lord Burghley with re- spect to Beal's conduct, 290. Beal's angry letter to him, 292. 293. III. 91. his letter to lord Burghley vindicating himself, I. 296. alarmed at there being 368 INDEX. a printing press at Cambridge, in consequence of a book print- ed there, 299. A. III. i. 610. ii. 444. his letter to lord Burgh- ley respecting certain ministers that were suspended, W. I. 303. 304. receives threatening letters in consequence of these proceedings, 306. has a sche- dule drawn up of all the con- forming and nonconforming ministers of his province, 307. copy of it. III. 99. his twenty- four articles of inquiry into the conformity of ministers disap- proved of by lord Burghley, I. 310. lord Burghley's letter to him on the subject, III. 104. his answer, I. 311. III. 107. his reasons for proceeding by these articles, I. 318. 322. his second letter to lord Burghley on the subject, 324. III. 112. endeavours to retain lord Burgh- ley's friendship, who still enter- tained the same opinion, I. 327. the council write to him in favour of several suspended preachers, 328. his answer, 331. his letter to the queen respecting objections against the Liturgy, 333. his argu- ments induce certain disaffect- ed ministers to conform, 335. urges the filling up the vacant sees, 336. his list of persons fit to fill the vacancies, ib. Ce- cil's friendly ex])ressions to him notwithstanding their differ- ence, 338. his answer, 339. opposes the appointment of Travers, as being a puritan, to the mastership of the Tem- ple, though supported by lord Burghley ,340. and recommends Dr. Bond, 341. gives some ac- count of Travers, at the queen's desire, 343. his opinion of the book De DiscipUna Ecclesias- tica, of which he was reputed to be the author, 344. 345. his answer to the sixteen articles in the petition, drawn up by Thomas Sampson, from the house of commons to the house of lords, for certain alterations in ecclesiastical matters, 354. his observations on these ar- ticles, Avritlen to the queen, 360. III. 1 24. his letter to lord Burghley concerning them, I. 361. articles drawn up by him and the bishops for the reformation of divers disorders of the church, and exhibited to the queen, 364, III. 130. his reasons against a bill for abo- lishing pluralities, I. 380. sir F. Knollys's notes in answer to these reasons, 381. makes a table of fees for his spiritual courts, 386. his answers to ar- ticles in a paper, entitled Means how to settle a godly Quietness in the Church, III. 135. his answers to certain acts pro- posed to be made for defects in the ecclesiastical laws, 141. his courts charged with popish tyranny, I. 390. his letter to the queen upon some bills re- lative to ecclesiastical matters, passed in parliament, 391. who checks the parliament in med- dling in matters of the church, 392. procures an act of par- liament for the hospital of East- bridge in Canterbury, 393. Avliich he had previously reco- vered when granted away by the queen as concealed, 395. advises an inquiry to be made into the qualities of ministers and the value of their benefices, 397. his schedule of Beal's mis- demeanours, 401. his reasons against a Melius inquirendum, 403. his letter to lord Burgh- INDEX. 3^9 ley about it, 405. Dr. Drury's advices to him about a Melius inquirendum, A. III. i. 333. ii. 317. consecrates the bishops of Balh and Wells, of Lincoln, and Peterborough, W. I. 408. 409. the instrument confirm- ing his option of Layton Buz- zard upon the confirmation of the bishop of Lincoln, IIL T50, anxious that Dr. Good- man, dean of Westminster, should be raised to a bishop- ric, I. 410. his metropolitical visitations, 1584, ib. defends the liberties of the church, 411. 412. his letter to the queen in behalf of J. Hynde, in. 1 5 J. his commission to S. Finch to examine clerks con- victed at Croydon, 152. a writ- ing sent to him by one endued with a later spirit, I. 414. its contents, 416. of a popish ten- dency, 4 1 8. vindicates a privi- lege of his see about a servant of his committed to the Fleet, A. III. i. 333. sends into the diocese of Lincoln to require subscription to the articles for conformity, 348. anxious for the restriction of the press, W. I. 422. rules drawn up by him for its regulation, 423. III. 160. and set forth by the star- chamber, I. 423. his preface to them, ib. how some great men were affected towards his measures for uniformity, ib. supported by sir Chr. Hatton in these measures, 426. 427. to whom he opens his mind concerning some great men, 426. courteous to Cartwright in consequence of his altered conduct, 428. for which, and his conduct to Fenne, the earl of Leicester thanked him, ib. though not really a friend to VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPK. him, 430. he still refuses Cart- wright a license to preach, ib. sir F. Walsingham's advice (o him concerning subscription, 431. which he promised to comply with, ib. his letter to Walsingbam, 432. the earl of Leicester requires his judg- ment about the queen's aiding the Low Countries, 434. 435. answers warily, 436. resolu- tion of the question, whether the queen be bound by the word of God to assist the United Provinces against the king of Spain, probably by him, 439. his reasons against farming out and enhancing the tenths and first-fruits, 441. III. 171. prevents the measures for the present, I. 443. inhibits Travers from preaching at the Temple, as he and Hooker preached opposite doctrines there, 448. his remarks on certain doctrines of Hooker considered as unsound by Tra- vers, 452. endeavours to allay certain disturbances in Oxford, 459. his articles of inquiry in every parish of the diocese of Chichester, sede vacante, 462. III. 1 79. his opinion of bishop Bickley's fitness for his station, I. 464. who had been brought up by him, 465. unites two parishes in Lincolnshire, 467. grants licenses for teaching schools, 468. and for eating flesli in Lent, 469. and to certain persons to receive the sacrament at another parish church, in consequence of some contention with their own in- cumbent, ib. made a privy counsellor, 471. chiefly through lord Burghley, to the annoy- ance of the earl of Leicester, ib. enjoins penance on one B b ?,1^ INDEX. Leak for a mock communion, 472. excepts against Travers's foreign ordination, 478. his marginal animadversions on Travers's reasons for the vali- dity of his ordination, 480. III. 182. forbids Cartwright from answering theRhemists' Testa- ment, I. 481. for which he is attacked by Martin Marprelate, 483. his kindness to the son of Fox the Martyrologist, 485. A. III. i. 396. 742. his estimation of Fox's Martyrology, W. I. 486. sum of a speech in par- liament, 1586, upon the bill and book of the puritans then offered, probably drawn up by him, 489. III. 186. notice of a tract entitled Certain Mis- chiefs ensuing the Puritans' Demands and Platform, also probably composed by him, I. 491. and of another tract, pro- bably his likewise, in favour of the existing ecclesiastical go- vernment, 493. his writings abused by Ballard, 506. ten- der in giving his advice about the trial of the queen of Scots, 509. his judgment against Da- vison in the star-chamber, 510. probably wrote certain tracts in vindication of the proceed- ings against the papists, 511. notice of a speech, probably his, that papists had been law- fully executed, A. III. i. 620. charged with importing popish books, W. I. 512. his cautious license, 513. appoints a form of thanksgiving for the preser- vation of the queen's life, ib. Dr. Bagshaw committed to his custody as a papist, A. III. i. 610. his letter to the univer- sity of Cambriilge about their preachers subscribing certain articles, 651. III. ii. 445. his opinion respecting the expul- sion of Everard Digby from St. John's college, Cambridge, W. I. 517. A. III. i. 108. 109. his letter to the earl of Leicester, who favoured Dr. Whitaker, the master of the college, 5 1 9. his and lord Burghley's letter, ordering Digby to be restored to his fellowship, W, III. 209. approves of Hickman, of Cor- pus Christi college, Cambridge, being deprived of his fellow- ship, I. 522. his judgment of the matter, 523. his orders for the clergy to furnish arms a- gainst the Spanish invasion, 1588, 525. III. 211. I. 607. appoints public prayers to be used in these dangerous times, 526. and sets forth certain ar- ticles to be observed by the ministers for assisting the peo- ple's repentance and devotions, 527. deals with certain popish gentlemen by order of the coun- cil, 528. reminds the bishops to enforce the observance of certain articles and canons for the clergy, 530. 531. reasons, probably his, against a bill in parliament against pluralities, 533. certain orders of his to be observed throughout his province, 539. his letter to such of the clergy as were backward in paying the sub- sidy, 540. augments the vicar- age of Hackington, 542. em- powered to search out the au- thors of Martin Marprelate, 551.552. probably urged Dr. Bancroft to preach his sermon on the superiority of bishops, 559. a syllogism, charging him with tyranny, framed by the j)uritans, with his answer, 563. 564. specimens of Martin Mar- prelate's abuse of him, 571. III. INDEX. 371 218. urges bishop Cooper to answer Martin Marprelate, I. 572. wrote his own vindication of himself, in bishop Cooper's Answer, 575. some particulars of it, ib. his reason for not answering Cartwright's Second Reply, 576. his reasons for ordering the Apocrypha to be bound up with the Bible, 590, his articles of inquiry at his visitation, 593. excepted against by sir F. Knollys, as infringing the queen's authority, 597. his opinion as to the treatment of the ])rinters of Martin Mar- prelate, 602. his care for the church with respect to the uni- versities, 609. highly esteems bishop Hutton for his learning, 614. considers Dr. Sprint as unfit for a bishopric, 616. con- secrates the bishops of Bristol and Oxford, 617. unites two parishes in Northampton, ib. loses his great friend Dr. Perne, 618. his letter to the justices in Kent for release of the clergy from composition corn, A. IV. 14. probably drew up the paper on the inconveni- ences of parish clerkships, 63. his proceedings, together with the commission, against recu- sants, W. II. 2. active against the puritans, 5. advised by lord Burghley not to act as a com- missioner against Cartwright, as he had had controversies with him, 24. confers with Morice respecting his defence of his treatise against the oath ex officio mero, 29. Knollys's reflections against him, 34. ob- tains a pardon for Udal con- demned for felony for a sedi- tious publication, 40. 97. 102. his character as described in the Remonstrance to Udal's Demonstration of Discipline, 40. Penry's abuse of him, 46. articles drawn up by him to be signed by the fellows of St. John's college, Cambridge, in order to clear themselves from the charge of puritanism, 59. his letter to the church of Lin- coln, respecting a charge of false doctrine against their dean, 63. his care for the clergy's supply of arms, 65. his visitations, 67. appoints prayers for Wednesdays and Fridays against famine and war, ib. present in the ecclesiastical commission at Cawdry's de- privation, Ay. 91. absents him- self from Cartwright's trial be- fore the Star-chamber, W. II. 74. his interrogatories put to Cartwright and other piuitans, 85. their answer, 87. sets them at liberty, 90. A. IV. 66. en- joins catechising and confirm- ing, W. II. 106. III. 288. consecrates the bishops of Llandaff and Sarum, II. 112. chosen umpire of a dispute be- tween Mr. Broughton and Dr. Reynolds, 113. opposes Broughton's scheme of an He- brew abridgment of the Bible, Ay. 163. disliked Broughton's Concent, ib. W. II. 113. 115. his injunction respecting two hospitals at Canterbury, 119. his interrogatories at the visita- tion of hospitals, 145. visits All Souls college, Oxford, 146. his ordinance for the explana- tion of its statutes, III. 297. his instrument nominating its officers, 298. consecrates cer- tain bishops, II. 147. his let- ter to lord Cobham respecting his daughter, lady Sandys, 1 49. letter to him, and directions of inquiry from the council about B b 2 372 INDEX. recusants in his diocese, 151. 152. his letter to the bishops for contributions for converted priests, 155. expostulates with Beza for interfering in English ecclesiastical matters, 159. his letter, 160. Beza's previous letter to him, III. 300. Bar- row's invectives against him, II. 1 89. obtains, for the uni- versity of Cambridge, eccle- siastical preferments in the lord keeper's gift, 192. their letter of thanks to him for this bene- fit, III. 314. labours to stay- books of concealment for ca- thedral churches, II. 196. Hooker dedicates his Eccle- siastical Polity to him, 200. gives and obtains preferment for him, 202. Saravia dedicates his defence of his work on episcopacy to him, 207. Abbot dedicates his Miroir of Papists' Subtilties to him, 210. conse- crates certain bishops, 214. 218. his care for the repara- tion ofTerrington church, 219. his dispute with Broughton as to Christ's descent into hell, 220. his opinion on the sub- ject. Ay. 162. Broughton's temper soured against him for not forwarding his views of preferment, W. II. 224. had nearly quieted the disciplina- rians, 226. communications to him from Cambridge respect- ing liarret's tenets against Cal- vin's scheme of predestination, 232. and from Barret himself, 235. disapproves of the pro- ceedings of the university a- gainst Barret, 238. his rea- sons, 239, 240. Barret's peti- tion to him, 243. his inter- position declined by the heads of the colleges, 245. their vin- dication of themselves, 247. and statement of the true doc- trine in six points, 249. his reply, 251. Dr. Somes's reflec- tions upon him in a sermon, 253. which he resents, 254. the heads of the colleges an- swer his last letter, 255. Dr. Whitaker's letter to him in their behalf, 257. III. 337. the heads apply to lord Burgh- ley, their chancellor, against him, II. 258. his letter to lord Burghley in consequence, ib. the petition of the heads (by their chancellor's order) to him to appease their troubles, 259. the reasons of this petition, 260. ordered Barret to be examined, 262. the questions put to him, and his answers, 263. with Dr. Whitaker's ob- servations upon them, 265. who was chiefly employed in these proceedings against Bar- ret, 264. the insufficiency of Barret's answers shewn by the heads to the archbishop, 266. his judgment of them, 268. requires Barret's case to be heard before him, 273. Bar- ret's answers at this examina- tion, ib. orders a favourable retractation to be drawn up for Barret, ib. which he is un- willing to make, 275. the arch- bishop's recapitulation of the whole matter, 276. the Lam- beth articles drawn up under his superintendence, 279. copy of them, 280. archbishop Hut- ton's judgment of them, ib. and bishop Yong's, 281. charged of not approving of them him- self, 282. his public instruc- tions respecting them to the university of Cambridge, ib, his private directions, 283. the queen displeased with these articles, orders them to be INDEX. 'in suspended, 286. disapproved of also by lord Burghley, 287. disapproves of proceeding to extremities against Dr. Baro for his dispute relative to pre- destination at Cambridge, 310. inquires into alleged irregulari- ties in the province of York, 312. his concern at Dr. Whit- aker's death, 315. recommends Dr. Clayton as master of St. John's college, who was elect- ed, 317. his letter concerning Mr. Overal being elected public professor of divinity at Cam- bridge, ih. accedes to Brough- ton's opinion of Christ's de- scent into hell, 320. begins the foundation of his hospital at Croydon, 327. his care for the poor of Kent in a dearth, 329. 330. A. IV. 351. conse- crates certain bishops, W. II. 332- 333- the earl of Hertford committed to his custody, 333. his circular letter for a collec- tion for Turkish slaves, 335. and for a supply for the poor in a dearth, 336. A. IV. 351, unsuccessfully recommends Dr, James as bishop of Wor- cester, as Dr. Bilson obtained the see through lord Burghley, W. II. 347. 348. 349. conse- crates bishop Bilson, 350. dis- covers certain property belong- ing to St. Thomas's hospital, at Canterbury, that had been concealed, 352. accused by Broughton of not forwarding his preferment, and of hinder- ing his new translation of the Bible, 355. encourages bishop Bilson to preach upon Christ's descent into hell, 36 t. his judgment of war or peace with Spain, 372. what part he took in the election of a member of parliament for Kent, 373. ap- points the fees to be taken by his officers, 377. which fees are sanctioned by the hun- dred and thirty-tifth canon, 378. probably concerned in drawing up certain reasons for licences to marry without banns, 381. also certain laws and ordinances for the church, 382. his observations on, and sanction of, certain orders for the church of Canterbury, 384. III. 382. consecrates bishop Bancroft, whom he had aided in obtaining the see of Lon- don, II. 385. his character of him, 386. incurs Broughton's anger again for recommend- ing Bancroft in preference to him for the see of London, 388. the success of his long exertions against the disci- plinarians, 395. his orders for the observance of the appoint- ed times and places for mar- riage, 400. his letter concern- ing such as took holy orders, 401. urges a contribution of the clergy for a fire at Tiver- ton, 404. consecrates certain bishops, 405. offends Brough- ton again by not eagerly en- couraging him to answer a Jew's letter respecting the Mes- siah, 408. 414. checks the Sab- batarian doctrine, 41 6. inquires into the fees of the bishops' courts, \h. his hospital finished and consecrated, 417. why he built it in his lifetime, 420. slandered for his wealth, ih. gives an account of his pur- chases, 421. his true revenue cleared by his steward in par- liament, 422. consecrates the bishop of Ely, 423, hcenses given by him to teach school, 424, remonstrates at the choir of the cathedral of Canterbury Bb 3 374 INDEX. being summoned to muster with the militia of the city, as an act contrary to the privi- leges of that church, 425. trou- bled about prohibitions issued against proceedings in his courts, 427. his dispute with the university of Cambridge concerning IMr. Butler, 436. Stow dedicates his Annals to him, 437. and Dr. Willet his Synopsis Papismi, 438. makes fruitless inquiries for the three unprinted books of Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity after his death, 440. his letter requir- ing the clergy to raise horse- men to prevent a foreign in- vasion of Ireland, 441. his ex- hortation to the bishops to observe the canons of the con- vocation of 1597, particularly with regard to their courts, 446. endeavours to decrease the too frequent sittings of ecclesiastical courts, II. 446. 450. absolves Dr. Monford from his suspension for having illegally married the earl of Hertford, 453. absolves a cou- ple from excommunication, who had been illegally mar- ried, 454. licenses two butchers of Canterbury to kill flesh in Lent, 456. his dispute with the mayor of Canterbury on this point, 460. consecrates certain bishops, 457. his letter to the college of physicians concerning a pretender to phy- sic and astrology, 458. grants a license for a place of sepul- ture, 459. prevents an en- croachment on the property of his see, 461. rectifies certain disorders in All Souls college, Oxford, 462. 463. 464. con- secrates certain bishops, 465. 518. removes a clergyman, a lunatic, from the wardship of a layman, 465. HI. 389. at- tends the queen in her last hours, II. 466. composes a prayer for her, 467. signed the proclamation, upon the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, A. IV. 518. sends Dr. Nevyl to the king in Scotland to assure him of the loyalty of the church towards him, W. II. 469. the king's answer relieves him from the alarm lest the king should favour the new discipline, ib. crowns the king, 468. his let- ter to the bishops, inquiring into the state of the religion and of the clergy, 470. an- other, ordering the day of the king's deliverance from the Gowry conspiracy to be re- ligiously observed, 474. an- other, for a collection to be made for Geneva throughout the country, 477. careful to have all works against the church of England answered, 482. his diligence to preserve the church unaltered, 484. his letter to the earl of Shrews- bury concerning the endea- vours of the puritans with the king, III. 391. probably con- cerned in king James's pro- clamation for the ecclesiastical conference, 1603, II. 490. his questions to archbishop Hut- ton in order to the conference, and his answers, ib. III. 392. his conduct at the conference misrepresented, II. 492. ap- pointed dean Barlow to write an authentic relation of this conference, which he therefore probably reviewed himself, ib. his speech at the conference on the points to be considered, 493. his panegyric of the king. INDEX. 375 498. one of the commissioners for the regulation of certain ecclesiastical matters, 5o4' f'^'ls sick, 505. dies Feb. 29, 1603, 506. whether he died of grief, lest the puritans should suc- ceed against the church, ib. his Christian departure, 507. Stow's character of him, ib. and Fuller's, 508. archbishop Hutton's grief at his death, ib. III. 408. buried at Croydon, II. 508, his character, 509. libelled by Pickering, ib. vin- dicated in the star-chamber, ib. the earl of Salisbury's de- claration of his clemency, 510. his monument, 511. and in- scription written by Dr. Cha- rier, ib. III. 409. books and MSS. given by him to certain colleges, II. 518. list of his MSS. III. 410. reasons of his backwardness for a new trans- lation of the Bible instead of the Bishops' Bible, II. 527. Dr. Covel's eulogium of him, 533. was godfather to a son of bishop Aylmer, Ay. 122. his character of Fox, A. I. i. 310. III. i. 739. sir G. Paul's en- comium of him, G. 447. and Strype's, C. pref. v. P. I. pref. XIV. VVhitgift, John, W. II. 421. of Curleys, cousin and heir to the archbishop, I. 5. married Anne Goodman, ib. his offspring, ib. Whitgift, John, son of the pre- ceding, W. I. 5. married Eli- zabeth Aylmer, ib. his off- spring, ib. Whitgift, Philip, ^V. I. 5. Whitgift, Richard, W. I. 5. 409. Whitgift, Robert, abbot of Wel- lovv, or Welhove, W. I. 4. educated his nephew (arch- bishop) Whitgift, ib. his pre- diction respecting the Roman catholic church, ib. Whitgift, William, W. II. 42 1. married Margaret Bell, I. 5. his offspring, ib. Whithear, John, has the next presentation to the deanery of Bristol, M. II. ii. 265. Whitheare, — P. II. 434. Whithers, Robert, G. 286. see Withers. Whiting, — minister of Toppes- field, W. I. 470. Whiting, John, and T. Freeman bought certain church lands of the crown, M. II. ii. 16. Whiting, John, ordained, G. 72. Whiting, William, P. II. 145. 356- 433- 466. AVhitlyn, Rodolph, rector of St. Andrew's, Holborn, P. I. 189. and of Burmesh, ib. married, ib. further notice of him, ib. Whitmore, — A. IV. 261. Whitney, — P. II. 432. Whitstable, advowson of, Kent, annexed by queen Mary to the see of Canterbury, M. III. ii. 121. Whittelegh, hundred of, Somer- set, bought of the crown by sir W. Petre, M. II. ii. 235. Whittingham, William, G. 15. M. III. i. 407. A. I. ii. 169. P. I. 546. A. II. i. 8. W. I. 481. III. 185. II. 158. A. II. ii. 107. III. i. 259. ii. 267. i. 468. translated some of the Psalms in Sternhold and Hop- kins's version, M. II. i. 136. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450. Ch. 95. resident at Geneva, M. III. i. 233. and at Frankfort, 404. wrote the preface to Good- man's book. How Superior Powers ought to be Obeyed, ii. 131. A. I. i. 182. Ay. 211. B b 4 376 INDEX. signs the letter of the church at Geneva to that at Frank- fort, A. I. i. 152. concerned in the translation of the Ge- neva Bible, 343. II. i. 151. P. I. 409. made dean of Dur- ham, A. I. i. 545. through the earl of Leicester, P. I. 311. his letter to Cecil about the state of his church, 267. preaches at court, 268. A. I. ii. 88. his letter to the earl of Leicester against the wearing of the habits being enforced, P. I. 3 IT. III. 76. sequestered for nonconformity, G. 145. summoned before the arch- bishop of York, 252. 253. P. II. 67. his ordination called in question by archbishop San- dys, A. II. ii. 167. 168. the archbishop's letter to lord Burghley on the subject, 6?.o. a relation respecting his ordi- nation, 170. the earl of Hunt- ingdon's account of his case, 172. Whittington, sir Richard, when lord mayor of London, M. III. ii. 10. built Whittington col- lege, Newgate, and other places, ib. reburied, ib. Whittington college, an hospital in London so called, A. I. ii. 150. founded by sir R. Whit- tington, M. III. ii. 10. Whittle, Richard, M. Ill, ii. 392. Whittle, Thomas, a priest, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 470. ill used by bishop Boner, A. I. ii. 299. Whyller, — M. I. ii. 253. Whype, Thomas, merchant of London, M. III. i. 305. Whytwel, John, almoner to arch- bishop Cranmer, C. 251. 256. Wiat, sir Henry, his new year's gift to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 212. Wiat, William, a priest, M. III. ii. 410. see Wyat. Wiburn, John, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, W. III. 299. Wiburn, Perceval, P. I. 483. G. 269. W. I. 550. an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 491. M. A. of St. John's college, Cambridge, G. 54. or- dained, ib. 58. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 488. one that signed a request to the synod concerning cer- tain rites and ceremonies, 502. votes for the six articles alter- ing certain rites and ceremo- nies, 504. signed the petition of the lower house for disci- pline, 512. deprived for non- conformity, 145. betakes him- self to husbandry, 146. cited before the ecclesiastical com- mission, 252. P. II. 66. ex- amined about Cartwright's book, 239. 240. prohibited from preaching, 241. held a prebendary of Westminster and of Rochester, A. III. ii. 415. 416. G. 449. his puritanical opinions, W. I. 245. suspend- ed, 249. intercession made in his behalf, 271. see Wyborn. Wickendove, the poor of, bishop Cox's bequest to, A. III. i. 38. Wickenford, alienated from the see of Worcester, A. I. i. 96. Wickham, Edward, W. II. 333. Wickham, William, (as dean of Lincoln,) A. II. ii. 189. (as bishop of Lincoln,) III. i. 284. prebendary of Westminster, ii. 415. 416. as dean of Lincoln, one of those recommended by archbishop Whitgift for the see of Chichester, W. 1. 337. INDEX. 377 consecrated bishop of Lincoln, 409. assists at the consecration of bishop Howiand, ib. his let- ter to lord Burghley, shewing the true state of the vicarage of Hocknorton, endeavoured to be alienated from the church, A. IV, 172. assists at the con- secration of bishop Redman, W. II, 2 1 8. translated to the see of Winchester, ib. his let- ter to lord Burghley on that occasion, A. IV. 286. married a daughter of bishop Barlow, P. II. 474. Wickham, parish of, Durham, Farnacre's chantry there given by the crown to A. Pringel, M. II. ii. 403. Wickham, manor of, Essex, be- longed to the see of London, Ay. 83. the mansion alienated from the see, ib. Wickliff, John, C. 538. A. I. ii. 43. II. i. 160. 463. manyMSS. of his translation of the scrip- tures, C. 115. his works prohi- bited as heretical, temp. Henry VIIL, M. I. i. 254. the fore- runner of the reformation in England, A. HI. i. 737. his opinion of ecclesiastical dig- nitaries, IV. 192. notice of his tract De Ecclesia, Ay. 174. Wicklivites, convocation sum- moned against them, 1382, C. 52. Widders, Richard, one of Henry VIII.'s council at Tournay, M. Li. II. Widdington, boys born there free of Walden school, S. 6. Widrington, sir Thomas, he and T. Coghil, obtained the manor of Crake, Yorkshire, from the see of Durham, A. II. ii. 530. Wielmacker, John, an anabaptist, burnt, A. II. i. 564. Wier, Richard, printed a Debate between the Heralds of England and France, M. II. i. 422. Wier, William, accused of sedi- tious words, A. IV. 21. Wierus, Theodore, the prince of Condi's agent in England, A. I. ii. 291. III. i. 126. his letter to Cecil, thanking him for his seconding the French protest- ants' affairs with queen Eliza- beth, I. ii. 291. Wiggen, John, M, I. i, 133. Wiggin, — lectured in divinity at Cambridge, Ch. 13. S. 18. Wiggins, — a puritan minister, W. H. 13. Wigginton, Giles, a puritan min- ister, W. I. 550. III. 219. A. IV. 96. 98. deprived, I. 584. Hacket's adviser, ib. publish- ed The fools bolt, IV. 95. Wight, — A. HI. i. 300. Wight, Daniel, W. L 555. 558. a puritan minister, II. 13. pro- ceedings in the star-chamber against him, 81 — 96. HI. 242 — 285. imprisoned. Ay. 205. signs a petition for his enlarge- ment, A. IV. 103. Wight, John, a merchant, A. I. ii. 311. Wight, Thomas, a rich merchant and a great papist, M. II. i. 116. Wight, William, a puritan, releas- ed from prison, G. 201. see White. Wiglarrow, property there given in exchange by the crown to lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234. Wigmore, — a magistrate in Herefordshire, A. HI. ii. 454. Wigmore, monastery, had pos- sessed the vicarage of Prestend, M. II. ii. 16. Wigson, see Weekson. Wigston, — VV. II. 511. see M'ygston. Wikes, Henry, printed Newel's 378 INDEX. Reproof of Dormans Proof, &c., P. I. 360. Wilbore, — prior of St. Augus- tine's, C. 612. 1020. prebend- ary of Rochester, M. II. ii. 274. lately deceased, C. 612. 1020. M. II. ii. 274. Wilborne, John, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. executed, 68. Wilbraham, Richard, allowed by queen Mary to have ten re- tainers, M. III. ii. 162. Wilbram, — G. 366. Wilby, — C. 456. Wilcox, — a Scotch friar, im- prisoned upon the six articles, M. I. i. 567. Wilco.x, John, of Cambridge, has a license to preach, M. II. ii. 261. Wilcox, Robert, a priest, A. IV. 255- Wilcox, Thomas, a puritan, much followed in London, W. III. 33. P. II. 268. one of the compilers of the Admonition to the Parliament, I. 55. A. II. i. 275. ii. 482. examined about it, P. II. 239. Ay. 36. in New- gate, P. II. 240. his part, pro- bably, in Gilby's View of Anti- christ, &.C., A. II. ii. 218. III. i. 67. 101. Wild, — W. II. 465. III. 389. Wilder, Philip van, gentleman of Edward VI. 's privy cham- ber, M. II. ii. 283. 285. Wildon, John, a priest, A. III. ii. 599. see fVelden. Wilford, — S. 151. Wilford, Cecilia, the wife of arch- bishop Sandys, A. III. ii. 65. Wilford, Francis, signed the an- swer of the church of exiles at Frankfort to that at Geneva, A. I. i. 153. and the resolu- tions concerning the ceremo- nies to be established in Eng- land, 263. Wilford, Thomas, a papist, A. II. ii. 346. III. i. 434. notice of his imprisonment, W. I. 528. 529- Wilford, sir Thomas, A. III. ii. 65. see IVilsford. Wilke, William, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. Wilkinson, Anthony, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Wilkinson, Oswold, A. II. ii. 468. Wilkinson, Thomas, a rebel, taken prisoner in Scarborough castle, M. Ill, ii. 5 1 8. execut- ed, 68. Wilkinson, William, notice of his Confutation of certain arti- cles delivered unto the family of love, A. II. ii. 275. ^00. i. 486. Wilkinson, Mrs., a woman of good quality and a great re- liever of good men, C. 449. M. III. i. 224. 226. advised by archbishop Cranmer to flee a- broad upon queen Marys ac- cession, C. 449. 916. Wilkinson, Mrs., has the impro- priation of Kimbeltoune, M. III. ii. 404. Wilks, Richard, M. II. i. 339. C. 443. in a commission a- gainst anabaptists, M. II. i. 385. ii. 200. master of Christ's college, Cambridge, Ch. 67. Wilks, Thomas, clerk of the coun- cil, A. II. ii. 320. 670. III. i. 16, ii. 248. IV, 263. employ- ed by queen Elizabeth in em- bassies, III. i. 77, Wilks, William, fellow of Mer- ton college, Oxford, his fellow- sliip decided to be not vacated by his taking the living of St. Peter's, Oxford, G, 370. 396. INDEX. 379 Willan, Robert, a favourer of Cartwright, A. II. i. 2. ii. 417. Willanton, Robert, one of the six preachers of Canterbury ca- thedral, M. III. i. 478. Willanton, Thomas, a recusant, A. I. i. 411. Willerton, John, A. I. i. 250. 251. Willet, — A. II. ii. 512. 513. Willet, Andrew, M. II. i. 424. A. II. ii. 68. fellow of Christ's college, Cambridge, III. i. 649. 719. ii. 500. rector of Barley, W. II. 228. notice of his de- dication of his Synopsis Pa- pisnii to archbishop Whitgift, 438. and to queen Elizabeth, 439- Willet, Henry, ordained, G. 73. Willet, Thomas, public notary, S. 48. P. I. 116. William the Conqueror, A. IV. 588. William, Rufus, gave lands to bishop Herbert to found a mo- nastery at Norwich, M. I. i. 504. his death, S. 205, WiUiam, Henry, C. 937. WiUiams, — M. III. i. 407. Williams, — M. III. ii. 410. Williams, — alias Morgan, pen- sioned by the king of Spain, A. I. ii. 54. II. i. 495. IV. 61. Williams, — P. II. 236. Williams, — a grave preacher, Ay. 104. W. I. 260. Williams, — A. III. i. 657. Williams, — vicar of Hocknorton, A. IV. 172. 173. Williams, David, M. III. ii. 405. Williams, Elizabeth, M. III. ii. 393- Williams, Griffith, present at archbishop Cranmer's trial, C. 1080. T 100. Williams, Henry, dean of Litch- field, present at the convoca- tion of 1540, M. I. i. 557. married Elizabeth King, III. i. 168, deprived in conse- quence, ib. Williams, Henry, heir of lord Williams, dies of the sweating sickness, M. II. i. 494. Williams, J., A. III. i. 519. Williams, sir James, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Williams, Jenkyn, imprisoned .is a papist. Ay. 26. 27. Williams, John, present at the convocation of 1547, C. 221. 222. prebendary of Gloucester, 274. keeper of the spiritual- ities of the vacant see of Glou- cester, ib. Williams, John, present at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. ?•. Williams, sir John, M. II. i. 463. C. 552. 558. his part at Ed- ward VI.'s baptism, M. II. i. 6. recommended as a knight of the shire of Oxford, ii. 66. master of the jewel-house, 1 64. resigns that office, y6. 257. in princess Elizabeth's retinue on her going to London, III. i, 22. made baron Williams of Thame, 186. ii. 159. and lord chamberlain to king Philip, ib. his issue, 159. one of the no- blemen appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her com- ing to London, A. I. ii. 391. appointed president of the marches in Wales, I. i. 34. II. ii. 51. 708. one of the royal visitors for the university of Oxford, P. I. 92. being sick, sends for Jewel, who abides sometime with him, A. I. i. 192. in a commission for visit- ing certain dioceses, 247. bu- ried, 292. Williams, lady, wife of the pre- 38o INDEX. ceding, buried, M. III. i. 507- Williams, John, imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 662. a priest, III. ii. 599. Williams, John, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, W. III. 299. Williams, John, bishop of Lin- coln, afterwards archbishop of York, and lord keeper, G. 195- Williams, John, bishop of Chi- chester, his opinion of the re- formation, and the church of England, P. I. pref. xv. xvi. Williams, Philip, P. III. 265. W. II. 145. Williams, Richard, in a con- spiracy to kill queen Elizabeth, A. IV. 272. Williams, sir Roger, A. III. i. 6. ii. 163. 164. IV^. 149. a brave soldier, and one of queen Eli- zabeth's great officers in her army under the earl of Essex, III. i. 5. IV. 65. composed a tract about the war in the Ne- therlands, 65. Williams, Simon, ordained, G. 54- Williams, Thomas, speaker of the house of commons, 1562, notice of his speech to queen Elizabeth, A. I. i. 437. Cecil probably concerned in draw- ing it up, 439. Williams, William, assay-master of the mint in Dublin, M. II. i. 600. Williams, William, presented to the rectory of All Saints in Muro, M. III. i. 591. an exile at Frankfort for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 153. Williamson, — of Boston, Lin- colnshire, M. II. ii. 167. Williamson, Anthony, a fugitive beyond sea, A. II. ii. 596. Williamson, Bartholomew, A. IV. 575- Williamson, Elizabeth, A. IV. 575- Williamson, Jane, married to E. Goodrich, M. II. ii, 167. Williamson, John, a popish gen- tleman of Lancashire, A. I. ii. 260. Williamson, Peter, C. 937. Williamson, Robert, A. III. i. 693. imprisoned as a papist, II. ii. 661. Williamson, Thomas, chamber- lain, S. 5. Williamson, sir Thomas, a papist in Lancashire, A. I. ii, 260. Williamson, Thomas, vicar of Eccles, A. II. ii. 546. 548. Williamson, William, a rebel, taken prisoner at Scarborough castle, M. III. ii. 518. execut- ed, 68. Willingale Spane, Essex, an an- nuity from this manor granted by Edward VI. to Walden school, S. 5. Willis, Anne, A. III. i. 742. Willis, Francis, dean of Worces- ter, exercises episcopal juris- diction in the vacant see of Worcester, W. II. 112. Willis, sir Richard, of Cambridge- shire, married Allice Fox, A. III. i. 742. Willis, sir Thomas Fox, heir of the preceding, died young, a lunatic, A. III. i. 742. see Willys. Willoughby, Baptist, ordained, .^- 73- Willoughby, sir Christopher, A. II. ii. 399. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. heir male of lord Willoughby of Eresby, ii. 159. William his heir, created lord Willoughby of Parham, ib. Willoughy, Charles lord, son of INDEX. 381 William, M. II. ii. 159. escort- ed the duke of Anjou out of England, A. II. ii. 318. Willoughby, Dr., C. 149. bene- ficed in Kent, and chaplain to Henry VIII., 159. in a con- spiracy against abp. Cranmer, 159— 171. 766—774. Willoughby, Dr., one of queen Anne Bolen's council, and her physician, P. II. 156. had the livings of Snoring and Albo- rough, ib. and of St. Michael's, Cornhill, ib. his negligence and prodigality, ib. archbishop Par- ker an umpire in a case re- specting him, ib. deprived, 158. Willoughby, sir Edward, his part at Henry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 301. Willoughby, sir Hugh, chief cap- tain in an adventure of the north-east passage, M. II. ii. 76. 254. III. i. 521. froze to death in the adventure, 521. II. ii. 231. Willoughby, lord, A. IV. 156. \\ illoughby, lord, see R. Wells. Willoughby, Thomas, chaplain of queen Elizabeth, and pre- bendary of Canterbury, P. I. 144. 366. II. 25. 301. III. 316. G. 314. Willoughby, William, M. III. ii. 408. son of sir Christopher, created lord Willoughby of Parham, II. ii. 159. escorts the queen of Scots into Lon- don, i. 503. captain of Calais, ii. 14. a feud between him and sir A. Dudley, ib. one of the noblemen appointed to attend queen Ehzabeth upon her com- ing to London, A. I. ii. 391. Charles his son and heir, M. II. ii. 159. Willoughby, William, prebend- ary of Canterbury, proceeded against for being married, C. 471. Willoughby, lady, M. I. i, 372. Willoughby and Eresby, William lord, A. II. ii. 399. ^ Willoughby, Peregrine Bertie, lord, M. III. i. 226. Wills, cardinal Wolsey has a court for, by virtue of his la- gan tine power, M. I. i. 109. 192. Wills of estates of certain a- mounts proved in the court of the vicar-general, M. I. i. 112. excessive charges of proving them, ib. difference of form in the time of Henry VIII. from that of Edward VI., II. i. ^557- 558- Willyard, Thomas, vicar of Ba- bram, M. III. i. 506. Willyat, Thomas, ordained, G. 54- , . Willys, sir Richard, knight and baronet, married the heiress of Dr. Fox, A. I. i. 377. Willys, Thomas, his advertise- ments respecting Spain, A. IV. Willys, William, C. pref. xvi. see Willis. Wilraot, Richard, ordained, G. 58. Wilock, — A. II. ii. 496. Wilsby, advowson of, Lincoln- shire, passed from the see of Carlisle to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 363- Wilsford, John, denies the queen's supremacy, A. II. ii. 187. his letter to lord Burghley to ob- tain the queen's pardon, 624. see Wilford. Wilshaw, — A. I. i. 228. Wilson, — a public-spirited mem- ber of the house of commons, A. I. i. 440. Wilson, — chaplain to bishop Sandys, A. I. ii. 30. 382 INDEX. Wilson, — P. II. 433. Wilson, — chaplain to archbi- shop Grindal, G. 436. 602. who bequeathes the next pre- sentation of Wonston to him, ib. Wilson, Dr., M. III. i. 572. Wilson, Isabel, G. 603. Wilson, James, imprisoned for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 55. released, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Wilson, James, A. IV. 465. Wilson, Miles, of Cambridge, has a license to preach, M, II. ii. 265. has a conference with Cecil on the spoliation of the ecclesiastical revenues, C. 591. his letter to him on the sub- ject, 992 — 1002. Wilson, Dr. Nicholas, of Cam- bridge, employed as an itine- rant preacher to preach up the pope's power, M. I. i. 245. attainted and deprived of his living of St. Thomas Apostle's, London, 246. Wilson, Nicholas, fellow of Mag- dalen college, Oxford, ordain- ed, G. 55. 59. Wilson, Thomas, presented to the living of Washingborough, M. II. ii. 269. has a license to preach, ib. Wilson, Thomas, fellow of St. John's college, Cambridge, or- dained, G. 54. was an exile for religion, temp, queen Mary, A. I. i. 491. subscribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. one that signed a request to the synod concerning certain rites and ceremonies, 502. signed the petition of the lower house for discipline, 512. nominated by the council to confer with any papist, W. I. 198. dean of AVorcester, Ay. 33. W. I. 408. Wilson, Thomas, A. I. ii. 261. Wilson, Thomas, dean of Dur- ham, A. III. i. 259. ii. 267. Wilson, William, P. III. 265. AV. II. 145.332. Wilson, Mrs., A. I. ii. 21. 22. see Wylson. Wilton, Wilts, reserved rents of the monastery of, given by Ed- ward VI. to the earl of Pem- broke, M. II. ii. 221. Wiltshire and Orraond, Thomas Bolen, earl of, as viscount Rochford, M. Li. 161. ii. 89. as treasurer of the household, 434. sent as chief ambassador abroad, about Henry VIII. 's divorce, C. 13. 14. 566. his part at princess Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541. and at Edward VI.'s, M. II. i. 6. 7. supported several persons at the university of Cambridge, I. i. 430. a great scholar and philosopher, C. 6. at his desire Erasmus wrote three tracts, ib. Wiltshire, earl of, see marquis of Winchester. Wimbleton, R., a sermon of his preached 1388, printed, A. III. i. 416. Wimsley, or Wimbesly, George, in a commission for a divorce, M. II. ii. 203. Wimsley, or Wimbesley, George, chancellor of Westchester, na- tural son of Savage, M. III. i. 1 73- 174- Wimsley, or Wimbesley, alias Savage, John, archdeacon of London, natural son of Savage, M. III. i. 173. he and dean Pye present Weston as prolo- cutor of the convocation of 1553, C. 462. M. IIL i. 65. his speech on the occasion, 67. see IVymmeslij. Winchcombe, John, P. III. 121. INDEX. 3^ Winchelsey, lord, in a commis- sion about a match between princess Mary and a son of the French king, M. III. i. 204. Winchelsey, Robert, archbishop of Canterbury, notice of his metropolitical visitation, P. III. 179. moved Edward II. for a remedy against frequent prohi- bitions, 182. Winchester, John Paulet, second marquis of, son of the follow- ing, M, II. ii. 158. a lord lieu- tenant of Hampshire, A. III. i. 666. ii. 12. 553. Winchester, William Paulet, lord St. John, earl of Wiltshire, marquis of, (as earl of Wilt- shire,) M. II. i. 563. (as mar- quis of Winchester,) 511. 512. 543- 583- "• 73- 160. (as lord treasurer,) 195. III. i. 322. 336, 402. ii. 346. i. 474. 506. 558. ii. 12. 1 10. A. I. i, 32. 198. P. I. 172. A. IV. 473. present (as sir W. Paulet) at Edward VI. 's baptism, M. II. i. 9. lord St. John, and president of Henry VIII. 's council, and great master of the household, ii. 291. 310. one of the twelve mourners at his funeral, ib. one of his executors, i. 19. went along with the reforma- tion, C. 208. bought church lands of the crown, M. II. i. 123. signed certain orders of Edward VI. 's privy-council as lord St. John, C.252. 253.317. M. II. ii. 159. created earl of Wiltshire, 158. signed, as such, certain orders of council, C. 316.317.319.325. master of the wards and liveries, M. II. i. 43 T. lord treasurer, 465. lord lieutenant for Southamp- ton, ib. ii. 163. 202. in a com- mission to prorogue parlia- ment, 199. 200. created mar- quis of Winchester, i. 499. ii. 158. 221. Ch. 66. takes part in a splendid muster before the king, M. II. i. 584. the king visits his house at Wal- tham, which had belonged to the see of Winchester, ii. 9. and at Basing, 10. escorts princess Mary to visit the king, 30. appointed seneschal for the trial of the duke of Somer- set, 246. has a license to eat flesh on fast days, i. 130. in a commission, as lord treasurer, to consider bishop Boner's ap- peal against his trial, III. i. 38. has a conference with bi- shop Gardiner, S. 43. he and the duke of Northumberland ruled the court, M. II. ii. 69. he by counsel and wit, the duke by stout courage and proud- ness of stomach, ib. chief mourner at the king's funeral, 123. signed the instrument of the council, swearing and sub- scribing to the succession as limited by the king, C. 912. one of queen Jane Grey's coun- sellors, 433. 913. yet signed the order to the duke of North- umberland to lay down his arms against queen Mary, 434. present at the proclaiming of queen Mary, M. III. i. 2 1 . con- tinued lord treasurer by her, 28. in the commission to in- vestigate bishop Boner's depri- vation, 36. the emperor writes to him about the match be- tween his son, prince Philip, and queen Mary, 90. probably alluded to by bishop Ponet, as a great temporizer, 141. prayed the queen to be sparing in giv- ing away lands without his ad- vice, to which she consents, 195. her value for him, for his 3«4 INDEX. great care and vigilancy in her exchequer, ib. (as lord trea- surer,) one of the mourners at the earl of Bedford's funeral, 335. and at the queen of Spain's obsequies, 350. one of the Russia company, 520. a knight of the garter, ii. 3. chief mourn- er at the king of Denmark's obsequies, 15. made lieutenant- general south of the Trent, 114. lady Pecksal, a daughter of his, dies, ib. one of queen Mary's privy-council, 160. sign- ed various orders as such, i. 358. ii. 414. 559. 75.527.532. his part at her funeral, 141. present at the proclaiming of queen Elizabeth, 118. one of the noblemen appointed to at- tend the queen upon her com- ing to London, A. I. i. 9. 41. ii. 390. continued lord trea- surer, II. ii. 395. 707. 709. in a commission to understand what lands had been granted from the crown in the late reign, I. i. 19. 36. dissented in parliament from the bill for uniformity, Sic. 87. and from that for the patentees of the bishop of Winchester's lands, 93. in a commission for ex- change of bishops' lands, 149. chief mourner at the French king's obsequies, 187. G. 38. splendidly entertains the queen at Basing, A. I. i. 367. dean Daniel committed to his cus- tody, 414. chief mourner at the emperor's obsequies, ii. 119. G. 146. signed various orders of queen Elizabeth's privy- council, A. I. i. 58. G. 97. P. I. 443. dies, S. 117. A. II. i. 34. an addition to his arms, M. II. ii. 158. his son John succeeded him, ib. Winchester, marchioness of, wife of thepreceding,escorts princess Mary on a visit to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 30. attends queen Mary in her triumphal passage through the city. III. i. 54. chief mourner at the mass of requiem for Anne of Cleves, ii. 12. buried, A. I. i. 46. Winchester, third and.fourth mar- quises of, see JV. Paulet. Winchester, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Winchester, see of, a new set- tlement of, M. II. i. 483. the city freed from suit and service to the see, 485. impoverished, ib. ii. 166. 244. 266. the lord- ship and manor of Southwark had belonged to it, 228. i.481. the rate of its first-fruits and tenths fixed, ii. 263. 264. an act passed ratifying certain alienations of property from it, A. I. i. 90 — 93. value of the see, 227. Winchester, bishops of, see S. Gardiner, 153 1— 1550, 1553 — i5S5-^--Po«e^i55i— 1553. J. White, 1557,1558. R.Horn, 1561 — 1580. J. Watson, 1580 — 1583. T. Cooper, 1583— 1594. T. Bilson, 1597 — 1616. Winchester, cathedral of, bishop Home's bequest to, A. II. ii. 377- Winchester, city of, freed from suit and service to the bishop, M. II. i, 485. Winchester college, a grant to, M. II. i. 443. a right belong- ing to its president, ii. 504. Latin prayers allowed to be used there, A. I. i. 333. 337. the grammar used there, S. 6. dispensed from observing the Wednesday fast, P. I. 352. popery prevalent there, G. 196. archbishop Parker's account of the college, P. III. iii. in- cluded in the act for corn INDEX. 3^5 rents, S. 144. 145. queen Eli- zabeth's request to the college, A. III. !• 77. their letter to her, ib. forgery against the col- lege, 390. Winchester, dean of, see L. Hum- phrey. Winchester, dean and chapter of, revenues granted to them by Edward VI., M. II. i. 119. Winchester, ill state of the dio- cese of, W. I. 261. Winck, William, a recusant, A. 1. i. 414. Wincour, Christian, A. IV. 574. see Wyngius. Wind, John, comptroller of the mint at York, M. II. i. 518. Windebank, sir Richard, deputy of Guisnes, proclaims queen Mary, M, III. i. 22. ii. 174. Windebank, lady, wife of the preceding, married, A. I. i. 46. Windet, — printer, he and Seton printed an edition of Smith's Commonwealth, S. 85. Windham, — alderman of Nor- wich, P. II. 336. Windham, — A. II. ii. 209. Windham, — imprisoned as a papist, A. II. ii. 660. Windham, — one of the judges consulted about the trial of Mary queen of Scots, A. III. i. 529- Windham, sir John, dubbed a knight of the carpet at Ed- ward VI.'s coronation, M. II. ii. 328. Windham, Thomas, an adven- turer in the north-east pas- sage, M. II. ii. 76. 231. Windham, Norfolk, an annual sermon there endowed by arch- bishop Parker, P. I. 504. 505. Winds, violent, in 1572, S. 164. Windsor, — a papist, expelled Corpus Christ! college, Oxford, P. I. 529. VOL. II. INDEX TO STRYPE. Windsor, sir Edmund, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 181. Windsor, Edward, signed Eliza- beth's proclamation against ex- cess in apparel, A. I. ii. 195. 54°- Windsor, Edward lord, a papist, A. III. ii. 430. his letter to the earl of Sussex, giving the rea- son of his going out of Eng- land, II. i. 378. Windsor, Edward, A. III. i. 605. 606. ii. 429. Windsor, Henry lord, son of Wil- liam, made a knight of the bath at Edward V'l.'s corona- tion, M. II. i. 36. Windsor, lord, P. III. 121. A. II. i. 214. one of the noble- men appointed to attend queen Elizabeth on her coming to London, I. ii. 391. concerned in exhibiting a device before the queen, II. ii. 209. accom- panies the duke of Anjou into the Low Countries, 3 1 8. Windsor, Walter, took part in a tournament before queen Eli- zabeth, Ch. 134. Windsor, William lord, C. 420. his part at Henry VIII.'s fune- ral, M. II. ii. 300. 309. an ex- change of property between him and the archbishop of Canterbury, C. 261. protested in parliament against the Book of Common Prayer, M. II. i. 132. in a commission to pro- rogue parliament, ii. 199. one of the twelve mourners at Ed- ward VI.'s funeral, 123. bu- ried, III. ii. 1 17. Windsor, dean of, has a patent to be a body corporate, M. II. ii. 275. endowment given to him and his successors, ih. Windsor, deans of, see W. Frank- c c 386 INDEX. liti, 1533—1553- W^- Day, 1572 — 1595- G. Thompson, 1602 — t6i2. Windsor, dean and chapter of, revenues granted to, by Ed- ward VI., M. II. i. T20. the French protestants hire a church in Threadneedle-street of them, A. I. i. 175. Windsor, prebendary of, its va- lue, A. I. i. 227. Windsor, the court there in 1572, S. 124. Wine, Richard, M. I. i. 536. Wingfield, see Wyngjteld. Wingham, and Wingham Barton, Kent, property there passed away from the see of Canter- bury, C. 405. 624. P. I. 160. Winkbourn, manor and rectory of, Nottinghamshire, granted by the crown to Edward VI., M. II. ii. 405. had belonged to the priory of St. John's of Jerusalem, ib. Winkle, — bailiff of Oxford, C. 562. 563. Winslade, — a leader of the re- bellion in the west, M. II. i. 281. Winston, Mich., discovers mines of iron and steel in Devon, M. II. i. 43 1, in a commission to work them, ib. Winswick, advowson of, Hunt- ingdonshire, bought of the crown by J. Whiting and T. Freeman, M. II. ii. 16. had be- longed to the priory of Hunt- ingdon, lb. Winter, admiral, M. II. i. 573. concerned in Wyat's rebellion, III. i. 93. 144. 187. 188. Winter, Edward, A. III. ii. ^'j. 38. Winter, George, a recusant, sub- mits, W. I. 194. ^Mnter, George, a magistrate in Worcestershire, A. III. ii. 457. his character, ib. his valuation in the subsidy book, ib. Winter, John, A. I. i. 48. Winter, John, prebendary of Can- terbury, G. 314. W. I. 222. 596- Winter, captain John, S. 95. G. 80. A. III. ii. 38. Winter, Thomas, archdeacon of Cornwal, present at the con- vocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. Winter, Thomas, of Fowlston, a traitor, abroad, A. IV. 229. Winter, sir William, A. III. ii. Winterbourn, lordship and manor of, Wilts, granted by Edward VI. to sir W. Sharington, M. II. i. 192. ii. 405. Winterstock, hundred of, Somer- set, given by Edward VI. to sir E. Seymour, M. II. i. 543. ii. 228. had belonged to his father, the duke of Somerset, ib. Winterton, parish of, Suffolk, the chapel of ease of East Somer- ton annexed to it, A. I. i. 540. Wintley, John, fellow of Merton college, Oxford, in a conspiracy against archbishop Parker, P. I. 501. Wintrop, Adam, A. I. i. 46. Wintrop, William, A. I, i. 309. Wirkius, — A. I. ii. 545. Wirtemburg, see Wittenburg. Wisbich, the poor of, bishop Cox's bequest to, A. IH. i. 37. Wisbich castle, advertisements of the condition of the priests, &c. in that prison, A. IV. 273. their names, 275. a relation of the stirs there among the se- cular priests and Jesuits, 443. 444. Wisdom, Robert, parson of St. Catharine's, Lothbury, M. I. i. 567. imprisoned upon the six articles, ib. 570. C. 397. the INDEX. 2,^7 various works written by him, ib. M. II. i. 136. doctrines al- leged against him, I. i. 570. his vindication of himself, ii. 463. foretells the reformation, i. 571. recommended by arch- bishop Cranmer for the see of Armagh, C. 393. 398. 906. an exile at Frankfort, temp, queen Mary, 450. 398. A. I. i. 491. preached there in favour of the English Book of Common Prayer, C. 398. in a list of per- sons to be preferred in queen Elizabeth's reign, A. I. i. 229. claims the living of Settering- ton, 246. preaches at court, 299. archdeacon of Elv, sub^ scribed, as a member of the convocation, the articles of 1562, 489. votes for the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 504. Wise — a leader in Wyat's re- bellion, surrenders himself, M. II. ii. 424. Wise, Andrew, M. II. ii. 253. vice-treasurer of Ireland, called to account for his debts, A. I. i. 21. 34. Wiseman, — M. III. i. 46. Wiseman, — P. II. 432. Wiseman, Edmund, one of Henry VIII. 's council at Tournay, M. Li. II. Wiseman, Thomas, A. IV. 139. 140. 147. Wissenden, parish and church of, Rutlandshire, bought of the crown by J. Whiting and T. Freeman, M. II. ii. 1 6. had be- longed to the priory of Sem- pringham, ib. Wit, Richard, a papist, executed, A. III. ii. 495. Witchcraft, an act against, brouglit into parliament, A. I. i. 88. Witches, examined, S. 97. 98. Withens, Dr., dean of Battel, backward in religion, A. IV. 401. Withers, — P. II. 432. Withers, — W. II. 332. Withers, Fabian, translated car- dinal Pole's Defensio Unitatis EcclesiastkcB, M. III. i. 257. Withers, Francis, an exile for re- ligion at Frankfort, temp. Q. Mary, A. I. i. 152. Withers, George, P. I. 307. II. 1 10. a man of good learning, preacher at Bury St. Edmund's, I. 374. his letter to archbishop Parker promising to wear the habits at the desire of his con- gregation, i6. 375. 394. fa- voured by bishop Parkhurst, 382. preaches at Cambridge against the painted windows, ib. rector of Danbury, A. III. i. 262. his letter to lord Burgh- ley about the controversies in the church, 263. ii. 268. im- bibed his notions in Helvetia, i. 263. Withers, George, G. 425. Withers, Stephen, translates out of French Calvin's treatise on Relics, A. I. i. 384. Withers, see ffliithers. Withington, Oliver, A. HI. i. Withipol, Paul, in a commission for valuing the benefices in London, M. I. i. 426. Withipol, Richard, vicar of Wal- thamslow, C. 70. Withipole, — had a patent for the judicial offices in the see of Norwich, A. III. i. 480. Witney, sir Robert, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. Witney, manor of, Oxon, given by Edward VI. to sir A. Dud- ley, M. II. i. 484. ii. 220. had belonged to the see of Win- 388 INDEX. Chester, i. 484. a chantry there bought of the crown by W. Boxe, ii. 406. Wittenburg, Wirtemburgh, Chris- topher, duke of, receives the Interim, yet taxes those that heard mass, M. II. i. 173. aged and merry-conceited, ib. sent contributions to the Enghsh exiles, temp, queen Mary, C. 519- Wittenburg, duke of, offers to marry queen Elizabeth, A. I, ii. 99. her answer, ib. Wittenburg, the city of, with Me- lancthon, blamed for admitting the interimistical and adiaphori- cal doctrine, Ch. 52. conference of their divines with the Eng- lish ambassadors, M. I. i. 352. .353- Wittham, chantry of, Essex, bought of the crown by G. Claydon and R. Barker, M. II. ii. 408. Wivenhoo, two chantries of, Es- sex, bought of the crown by W. Cely, M. II. ii. 403. Wives: some people teach that it is lawful to have two wives, M. II. i. 142. forbidden to be in colleges and cathedral churches, A. I. i. 405, Wodde, Giles, A. III. ii. 174. 179. Wode, — M. III. ii. 6. Wogan, William, M, III. ii.400. Wolcock, — a leader of the re- bellion in the west, 1549, M. II. i. 281. Woleston, Lancashire, tithes of, given by the earl of Leicester to Warwick hospital, A. IV. 42. Wolf, — imprisoned as an ad- herent of the duke of Somer- set, S. 42. n. Wolf, — M. III. i. 456. Wolf, Wolphius, John, A. I. i. 428.429. II. i. 149. 349. 508. P. I. 198. a learned printer and minister at Zuric, M. I. i. 546. II. i. 308. prints P. Mar- tyr's Tractatio de Sacramento, &c. ib. kindly entertained the English exiles, temp, queen Mary, III. '\. pref.v'm. 232. A. II. \: 348. Wolf, John, a noted London printer, printed a translation of the Spanish account of the armada, A. III. ii. 18. also Bancroft's Dangerous Positions and Proceedings, IV. 194. Wolf, Peter, C. 349. 888. Wolf, Reginald, Reiner, C. 652. printed Dr. Smith's Declara- tion of his Retractation, M. II. i. 52. bishop Ridley's injunc- tions for his diocese, 400, Co- verdale'sNewTestament, 1 550, 415. archbishop Cranmer's book on the sacrament, 419. C. 43 1 . and the archbishop's vindication, 366. 901. an Ad- moyiition concerning Matrimony, P.I. 176. Man's translation of Musculus's Common Places, A. I. ii. 87. the Thirty-nine Ar- ticles, 1563, P. II. 56. the book o^ Advertisements, 1. '3,1^. bi- shop Jewel's Apology, 354. and a translation of it, 357. dean Nowel's Catechism, II. 18. notice of him, A. II. i. 530. his design of an Univer- sal Cosmography, ib. how far completed, 531. assisted by Holinshed, 530.531. his death, 530. Stow had his Collections, C. pref. XX. Wolfe, Barbara, married to sir H. Seymour, her death, A. II. ii. 211. her offspring, ib. Wolfe, Morgan, father of the pre- ceding, A. II. ii. 211. Wollaston, Henry, married Ur- sula Fox, A. HI. i. 741. INDEX. 389 Woller, Elizabeth, G. 533. Wollesgrove, manor of, Devon, taken in exchange by the crown from lord Darcy, M. II. ii. 234- Wolley, — a priest, dead, A. III. i. 697. Wolley, sir John, A. I. ii. 95. Ill-' J- 543- 545- W. I. 553. secretary in the French tongue to queen Elizabeth, P. II. 50. and for the Latin tongue, A. III. i. 540. one of the privy- chamber, 654. his letter to lord Burghley on the death of his mother, 729. a member of parliament, W. I. 533. an ec- clesiastical commissioner, Ay. 91. opposed the bill against the bishops' government, W. II. 123. Wollock, John, an exile for reli- gion, temp, queen Mary, C. 450- Wolman, Richard, M. I. i. 163. ii. 124. his new year's gift to Henry VIII., i. 211. arch- deacon of Sudbury, one of those commissioned to com- pose the Institution of a Chris- tian Man, C. 77. his judg- ment concerning confirmation, M. I. ii. 351. dean of Wells, C. 113. Wolsley, John, a priest. A, III. ii. 598. Wolsey, Thomas, cardinal, C. 3. 154. M. I. ii. TT7. P. I. 14. III. 301. A. II. i. 359. III. ii. 50. IV. 603. 607. notice of the objects of his counsels and intrigues, M. I. i. 4. first in- troduced at court by bishop Fox, 72. Henry VIII. 's great favourite, 5. his almoner, S. 3. persuaded him to undertake an expedition against Lewis XII. in behalf of the pope, M. I. i. 5. advises him to encourage trade, 6. 8. the king appoints him bishop of Tournay, 8. in- stances of his interest at court, 13. 17. letter of the chapter of the church of Tournay to him, ii. 19. another bishop claims the see in opposition to him, i. 23. his letter to the ambassadors in France respect- ing the giving up of Tournay, 32. resigns the bishopric when Tournay was restored to France, 35. promotes the interview be- tween the king and Francis I., 38. his letter to the king with respect to the French king, 41. another to the same, about the danger of his ships from France, 43. another to the same, upon the seizure of some English ships by the French, 48, praised by Erasmus as an encourager of learning, 53. gets the title of Defender of the Faith con- ferred upon the king in order to engage him against Lu- theranism in England, 55. his commission to the bishops to collect all books favouring Lu- ther's tenets, 56. ii. 20. his letter to certain ambassadors about investing certain foreign- ers with the order of the gar- ter, i. 71. institutes a general visitation for the reformation of clergy and laity, ih. excited to it by bishop Fox, ih. ii. 25. removes the convocation from St. Paul's to Westminster, which irregularity made its proceedings null and void, i. 'j6. influences king Henry in favour of the emperor against the French from expectation of his interest for the papacy, 79. made legate for life by pope Clement, 1524, which office had never before been granted for life, ib. his letter c c 3 39° INDEX. to the king concerning forces to be sent to the emperor, 80. writes to the king's ambassadors at Rome, 8 1 . his letter to the king's ambassador in Italy to treat with the Venetians to aid the emperor against the French, attempting to recover Milan and Naples, ii. 32. and to the king's ambassador in the Low Comitries, i. 86. his courtly message to lady Mar- garet, governess of the Low Countries, respecting some- thing she had said against him, 88. offended with the empe- ror for not forwarding his views of the papacy, he per- suades king Henry to break with him and join the French king, 93. his instructions to the ambassadors for the ac- complishment of this measure, 94 — 105, he and the bishops consult about prohibiting Tiu- dal's New Testament of 1526, 254. C. 115. draws up the requisition to the emperor in favour of the pope, then his prisoner, M. I. i. 106. goes as ambassador into France, ib. letter of the ambassadors to him respecting his embassy to France, ib. made vicar-general by the pope, 107. his legan- tine courts usurp the business of the other episcopal courts, 108. his court for wills preju- dicial to the prerogative court of the archbishop of Canter- bury, 110. T92. archbishop Warham remonstrates with him in vain, and complains to the king, 1 1 1 , very earnest in favour of the unlawfulness of the king's marriage, 135. from what motives, ib. anxious for a commission decretal of this matter from the pope, 161. ii. 119. his protestation to the king relative to his own con- duct in the business, i. 164. ii. 126. appointed to confer with sir T. More as to his scruples against the king's di- vorce, 199. first founder of the college of St. Frideswide, Ox- ford, Ch. 25. obtains the dis- solution of certain monasteries for the endowment of his col- leges at Oxford and Ipswich, M. I. i. 169, 170. list of par- sonages impropriated, and mo- nasteries dissolved, for the en- dowment of Cardinal college, Oxford, ii. 130. 132. builds a hall, his palace at York-place, (now Whitehall,) i. 171. the occasion of his fall, ib. the effect of his evil fortune on his mind and body, 1 74. the king's first acts of displeasure against him, ib. yet intermixed with kindness, ib. Crumwel and Gardiner his firm friends in his disgrace, 175. his mean- ness of spirit, ib . 177. the king's favourable resolutions concerning him, 176. his let- ters to secretary Gardiner in this matter, ib. ii. 135 — 139. pardoned, and restored to the see of York, i. 177. sues to the secretary to persuade the king to relieve his poverty, 178. chiefly concerned for his colleges, 179. ii. 137. the fate of them, i, 181. certain di- rections of his for his school at Ipswich, ii. 139. observa- tions upon him i. 182 — 197. elated in prosperity, 182. in- stances of his aspiring spirit, ib. his endeavours to obtain the papal chair, 183. 184. his costliness, 184. dejected in ad- versity, 185. courteous, 186. commended by Erasmus for INDEX. 391 his courtesy, ib. how he pro- bably was instrumental to Gar- diner's subsequent advance- ment, 187. liberal and muni- ficent, ih. deserved well of the church by promoting men of learning, ib. the names of some whom he brought for- ward, 188. oppressive in effect- ing his own ends, ib. an in- stance of such oppression, ib. ii. 143. his court-craft, as stated in the " Practice of " Prelates," i. 189. morose and severe towards the end of his life, 190. caused Dr. Pace to be imprisoned, 191. threat- ened archbishop Warham, ib. his offensive conduct to the clergy, 191. his counsels bene- ficial to the nation, 192. Eras- mus's praise of him in this re- spect, ib. encourages learning at Oxford, 193. his domestics men of learning, 194. a patron to Erasmus, ih. instigated him to write his work, De Libera Arbitrio, against Luther, 195. his character according to Eras- mus, 196. notice of Caven- dish's Life of him, ib. a con- versation between him and La- timer about the doctrines of the latter, IIL i. 371. a com- parison between him and Cran- mer, C, 105. 655. Wolsey, William, burnt as an heretic, M. I. i. 544. II. i. 517. Wolstaunton, advowson of, Staf- fordshire, given in exchange by the crown to the see of Carlisle, M. II. i. 118. Wolstrope, convent of, its high character, M. I. i. 393. Wolton, John, (as bishop of Exeter,) G. 391. A. IV. 75. born at Whaley, Cheshire, G, 58. ordained, ih. 59. admitted to the vicarage of Brauncton, P. II. 47. consecrated bishop of Exeter, G. 359. A. II. ii. 307. deprived A. Randal, one of the family of love. III. i. 31. for what dangerous tenets, 32. who complains against him, ib. his letter to lord Burgh- ley concerning Randal, ib. ii. 180. his sentence is confirmed, i. 32. signs certain articles agreed upon by the bishops for the regulation of the church, W. I. 232. assists at the con- secration of bishops Wickham and Rowland, 409. accusations of misgovernment falsely laid against him, 419. 420. his answers. III. 153. was the son of Alexander Nowel's sister, and went with him into exile, temp, queen Mary, I. 419. read divinity lectures at Exe- ter, ib. his zeal there during the plague, ib. father-in-law of bishop Godwin, ib. Vowel's character of him, G. 359. Women : some of Knox's disci- ples held that it was not law- ful for women to reign, M. III. i. 17. 18. notice of Knox's book against it, A. i. 178. and of Goodman's, 182. proof of the continuation of these prin- ciples, 186. Women ought to communicate, proved by bishop Latimer a- gainst Dr. Weston, M. III. i. 183. bishop Aylmer's charac- ter of women, Ay. 181. Woocock, — C. 379. Wood, — of Broadlane, Kent, married sir T. Smith's sister, S.47. Wood, — a Scotchman, and fac- tious fellow, G. 153. Wood, Anthony, quoted or re- ferred to, C. adv. vi. n. A. I. i. 308. corrected, C. 22. Ch. 87. A. L i. 378. c c 4 392 INDEX. Wood, Henry, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, his contest with the college about not being ordained, P. II. 105. archbishop Parker's judgment of the matter, 107. Wood, John, nephew of sir T. Smith, S. 151. 155. one of his executors, 158. Wood, Leaver, a minister in Kent, W. I. 426. his character, 279, deprived for nonconformity, ib. Walsingham intercedes for him, 426. 430. archbishop Whit- gift's letter to Walsingham in consequence, 432. Wood, Nicholas, fellow of All Souls college, Oxford, W. II. 464. Wood, Richard, A. III. i. 25. W. I. 409. 588. recommended by archbishop Whitgift for the deanery of Peterborough or Ely, 337. rector of Bocking, II. 112. in a commission to visit the deanery of Bocking, ib. Wood, Thomas, canon of Can- terbury, M. III. i. 478. P. I. 103. Wood, Thomas, chaplain to queen Mary, A. I. i. 417. nominated by her for the see of St. Asaph, M. III. ii. 136. her death stop- ped his appointment, ib. im- prisoned for recusancy, A. I. i. 417. II. ii. 660. Wood, William, ordained, G. 54. Wood, William, one of the six preachers of Canterbury cathe- dral, P. II. 25. Wood, William, rector of Hurst, W. I. 264. Woodall, — M. I. ii. 365. Woodall, or Udal, — captain of the Isle of Wight, condemned for treason, M. HI. i. 488. Woodbury, (East,) lordshij) of, Essex, given by Edward VT. to lord Rich, M. II. i. 514. Woodcock, Stephen, has a license to act as a schoolmaster, W. I. 469. Woodcock, Thomas, a bookseller, taken up for selling the Admo- nition to the Parliament, A. II. ii. 189. Ay. 37. Woodcocke, William, M. III. ii. 399- Wooderall, Dr., provincial of the Augustin friars, maintained at the university by H. Mon- mouth, M. I. i. 488. ii. 365. Woodfin, Nicholas, a priest, exe- cuted, A. III. ii. 495. Woodgate, Thomas, a gospel- preacher, persecuted, M. III. i. 401. Woodhal, Catharine, G. 603. Woodhal, Dorothy, G. 603. Woodhal, Edmund, G. 603. Woodhal, Elizabeth, G. 603. Woodhal, Isabel, G. 603. Woodhal, William, nephew and executor to archbishop Grin- dal, G. 429. 602. 605. Woodhal, manor of, Worcester- shire, taken in exchange by the crown from the dean and chap- ter of Worcester, M. II. i. 1 18. Woodham Waters, Essex, a new church built by the earl of Sus- sex, G. 140. Wood hi I, see IVoodvile. Woodhouse, sir Henry, married Anne Bacon, A. II. ii. 210. a magistrate in Norfolk, III. ii. 460. Woodhouse, sir Roger, a ma- gistrate in Norfolk, A. HI. ii. 460. Woodhouse, sir Thomas, high sheriff of Suffolk and Norfolk, C. 494. Woodhouse, Thomas, a priest, executed, A. III. ii. 494. Woodhouse, sir William, C. 494. A. I. i. 33. his part at Henry VIII. 's funeral, M. II. ii. 301'. INDEX. 393 ^Voodhull, Agties, a dispute about her marriage, A. I. i. 52. Woodman, — M. III. i. 172. Woodrew, manor of, bought of the crown by sir W. Sharing- ton, M. II. i. 192. Woodrington, Henry, A. III. i. 439- Woodroff, — in a contest about a prebend of York, G. 254. WoodrofF, David, sheriff of Lon- don, M. III. i. 288. ii. 3. Woodroff, George, a magistrate in Yorkshire, notice of, A. III. ii. 465. Woodroff, sir Nicholas, lord mayor of London, Ay. 138. Woodvile, — married to Henry Stafford, duke of Bucks, M. II. ii, 240. n. Woodvile, (Woodhil,) Agnes, committed as a ward to the duchess of Suffolk, M. II. i. 492. ii. 240. Woodvile, Elizabeth, married to Edward IV., M. II. ii. 240. n. Woodvile, Lionel, bishop of Salis- bury, bishop Gardiner supposed to be his base son, M. II. ii. 166. Woodvile, noble family of, M. II. ii. 240. n. Woodward, Robert, a priest, one of the pope's factors abroad, A. II. ii. 355. HI. i. 275. ii. 272. 598. Woodwick, Somerset, lands there given in exchange by queen Mary to sir J. Cheke, Ch. 1 29. Woolridg, half of the wood of, part of the endowment of the luiited see of Worcester and Gloucester, M. II. ii. 5. Woolward, John, ordained, G. 72. Woort, Hendric Ter, an ana- baptist, recants, A. II. i. 564. burnt, ib. Worcester, M. I. ii. 406. 407. Worcester, bishopric of, the ad- vowsons and manors of Grim- ley and Howe given in ex- change to the see by the crown, M. II. i. 118. the see united with that of Gloucester, II. ii. 5. the endowment, ib. 273. 274. part of its property alienated, 238. notice of an act brought into parliament con- cerning an ahenation of cer- tain of its lands, A. I. i. 96. value of the see, 227. see E. Freake. Worcester, bishops of, see II. Latimer, 1535 — 1539' J- Bell, 1539—1543- ^- Heath, 1543 —1551- 1553- J-Hoper, 1552. 1553. R. Pates, 1555— 1558. E. Sandys, 1559 — 1570- -^• Bullingham, 1570 — 1576. J. whitgift, 1577 — 1583- £• Freake, 1584 — 1590. R. Fletcher, 1592 — 1594. T. Bil- son, 1596. 1597. G. Babing- ton, 1597 — 1610. Worcester, dean of, see T. Wil- son. Worcester, dean and chapter of, certain revenues granted to them by Edward VI., M. II. i. 118. sir J. Bourne's charges of abuses against them, A. I. ii. 39. Worcester, Charles Somerset, first earl of, chamberlain to Henry VIII., M. I. i. 9. Worcester, Edward Somerset, fourth earl of, had a patent for the office of steward of the lands of the see of St. David's, A. III. i. 584. sent ambassa- dor to king James to congra- tulate him on his marriage, A. IV. 44. 45. signed the pro- clamation, on the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, 519. 394 INDEX. attends the funeral of arcli- bishop Whitgift, who had for- merly been his tutor at Tri- nity college, Cambridge, W. II. 508. Henry lord Herbert his son and heir, A. II. ii. 89. Worcester, Henry Somerset, se- cond earl of, present at queen Elizabeth's baptism, A. II. ii. 541- Worcester, Henry Somerset, fifth earl of, see lord Herbert. Worcester, William Somerset, third earl of, A. I. i. 435. S. 164. one of Edward VI. 's council for the marches in Wales, M. II. i. 463. ii. 161. one of the twelve mourners at his funeral, 123. assists at queen Mary's coronation. III. i. 57. one of the noblemen ap- pointed to attend queen Eliza- beth upon her coming to Lon- don, A, I. ii. 391. consented to the bill in parliament for consecration of bishops to be good, from which he at first dissented, 230. present at the duke of Norfolk's trial, II. i. 121. ambassador at Paris, to stand proxy for the queen at the christening of the French king's daughter, 250. 253. his instructions, 254. robbed by pirates in his voyage to France, lb. Leicester's charactifr of him, ib. and lord Burghley's, 255. some account of him, 254. Worcester, (Christian North,) countess of, wife of William earl of Worcester, one of the chief mourners at the funeral of the countess of Arundel, M. HI. ii. 19. Worde, Wynkyn de, reprints the book of the Festival, 1532, M. I. J. 212. Works, good, Cranmer's opinion of, C. 761. Worley, Henry, W. I. 259. com- missary to archbishop Whit- gift, 256. in a commission to exercise episcopal jurisdiction in the diocese of Chichester, 263. Worly, — M. I. ii. 406. Wormold, farm of, Middlesex, obtained from the see of Lon- don by the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 223. granted by Ed- ward VI. to sir J. Mason, ib. ^Vorsely, Richard, sent to examine the state of Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight, A. I. i. 14. 32. 35- Worsely, Robert, keeper of Man- chester prison, A. III. i. 244. Worsop, Nottinghamshire, M. I. ii. 406. Worsted, manor of, granted by Edward VI. to the dean and chapter of Norwich, M. II. i. 121. Worthial, John, archdeacon of Chichester, present at the con- vocation of 1540, M. I. i. 557. an official for the vacant see of Chichester, C. 384. Worthington, Thomas, a noto- rious seminary priest, A. III. i. 61 1. 612. ii. 598. Worthington, William, a pardon granted to him for debts to Edward VI. as a collector of his rents, M. IL ii. 234. Wotisfunt, lord Sandys's house, visited by Edward VI., M. II. ii, 10. Wotton, — a brother of the Eng- lish hospital at Rome, M, I. i. 482. had formerly been an ambassador, ib. Wotton, — a puritan, A. IV. 553- Wotton, sir Edward, C. 335. present at Edward VL's bap- tism, M. II. i. 9. one of his privy-council, ii. i6o. bought INDEX. 395 of the crown the manor of Collridge, Kent, 405. Wotton, Edward, president at Dr. Taylor's trial, M. III. i. 290. Wotton, sir Edward, (afterwards lord Wotton,) A. III. i. 134. 621. one of queen Elizabeth's privy-council, II. ii. 707. sent ambassador to king James, III. i. 438. high sheriff of Kent, W. II. 330. his letter to lord Burghley, suing to be treasurer of the queen's chamber, A. IV. 346. unsuccessful, 347. signed the proclamation, on the death of queen Elizabeth, of the suc- cession of king James, 519. Wotton, John, A. III. i. 727. Wotton, Nicholas, C. 113. 168. S. 45. M. II. i. 520. III. i. 348. 478. P. I. 102. 103. 144. A. I. ii. 116. II. i. 575. one of those conmiissioned to com- pose the Institution of a Chris- tian Man, C. 77. dean of York and Canterbury, M. II. ii. 160. his judgment concerning con- firmation, I. ii. 350, ambassa- dor at the court of Cleves, I. i. 555. supported priests' mar- riages in the convocation of 1547, C. 222. he and sir J. Mason appointed to examine into certain accusations against bishop Ferrar, 263. ambassa- dor at the French court, M. II. i. 254. in a commission against anabaptists, 3 85. ii. 200. why released from the office of se- cretary of state, i. 385. S. 43. n. still remained in the council, 43. 71. M. II. ii. 160. 161. sent ambassador to the empe- ror, i. 451. 468. in a commis- sion to treat with French com- missioners about sea affairs, 575. sent ambassador to the French king, ii. 68. 78. 93. 1 03. has a lease for twenty-one years of the manor of Leigh, 257. and a license of non- residence from his prebend of Salisbury, 258. in a commis- sion to consider bishop Boner's appeal against his trial, III. i, 38. acknowledges queen Mary, C. 435. continued by her as ambassador in France, ib. acts as archbishop of Canterbury, during the vacancy of the see, 459. one of queen INIary's privy-council, M. III. ii. 160. continued in the council under queen Elizabeth, ib. acts as archbishop of Canterbury, dur- ing a second vacancy of the see, P. I. 69. thought of as a successor in the see, 71. em- ployed by queen Elizabeth as ambassador in France, A. I. i. 37. 49. S. 65. returns home, A. I. i. 86. 284. did not vote in the convocation of 1562, upon the six articles altering certain rites and ceremonies, 505. having absented himself, Ay. 13. in a commission to ad- just an intercourse of trade with the Low Countries, A. I. ii. 122. signed the queen's proclamation against excess in apparel, 195. 540. his death, 246. his embassies, ib. his ne- phew Thomas's encomium of him. III. i. 301. Wotton, R., (it maybe Edward,) present at Dr. Taylors trial, M. III. i. 290. Wotton, Thomas, A. I. i. 64. a person of great learning, reli- gion, and wealth, ii. 272. high sheriff of Kent, i. 33. 56. in a commission for restitution of money imjustly taken away un- der queen Mary, 559. Dering dedicates to him his book a- gainst Harding, ii. 272. enter- tained queen Elizabeth at his 396 INDEX. residence at Bocton Malherb, II. i. 465. ii. 539. one of the executors of sir W, Pickring, i. 530. attended archbishop Parker's funeral, P. III. 339. publishes LambanVs Perambu- lation of Kent, A, II. i. 44. P. II. 292. his commendation of Lambard, 509. in a commis- sion to visit Eastbridge hospi- tal, Canterbury, W. III. 355. 356. Wotton, (Old,) manor of, given back to the duke of Somerset upon his restoration, M. II. i. 363; Wourlich, — an ecclesiastical commissioner, A. III. i. 169. Wrangdike, see Barowdown. Wray, — A. II. ii. 693. Wray, sir Christopher, (as lord chief justice,) A. III. i. 22. 31. ii. 173. i. 269. 270. 499. IV. 168. W. II. 70. III. 241. Ay. 213. one of bishop Boner's counsel against bishop Horn, P. II. 168. lord chief justice, A. II. ii. 708. present at arch- bishop Parker's funeral, 433. 434. an ecclesiastical commis- sioner, W. II. 346. Wray, Francis, condemned as a traitor, M. III. i. 494. 549. Wreak, — vicar of Brabourne, W.I. 281. Wren, Matthew, bishop of Ely, once a fellow of Pembroke- hall, Cambridge, G. 457. drew up an account of all the mas- ters of that college, ib. Wrenbury, tithes of, Cheshire, sold away from the crown, M. II. ii. 6i". Wresel, lordship of, Lincolnshire, given in exchange to the crown by the duke of Northumber- land, M. III. i. 43. Wright, — A. IV. 305. 332. Wright, — imprisoned as a pa- pist, A. II. ii. 661. Wright, Dr., alias Dobson, a priest, A. III. ii. 598. his so- lution of a case of conscience concerning taking up arms for Spain against queen Elizabeth, 83- 583- Wright, Catharine, W. II. 340. A. III. i. 636. Wright, Henry, of St. John's col- lege, Cambridge, ordained, G. 54- Wright, John, M. II. i. 527. or- dained, 403. Wright, Rt., a puritan, preacher to lord Rich, Ay. 54. ordained at Antwerp, W. I. 477. brought before the ecclesiastical com- missioners, Ay. 55. committed by them to prison, 56. offers to subscribe two articles, ib. 60. matters charged against him, A. III. i. 177. articles of inquiry put to him with his answers, 178. matters proved against him, 179. his answers, ii. 228. 232. Wright, Walter, Ch. t6o. A. I. ii. 504. public notary, in a com- mission to visit All Souls col- lege, Oxford, C. 130. present at archbishop Cranmer's trial, 1 07 1. 1080. one of cardinal Pole's visitors for the univer- sity of Oxford, M. III. ii. 29. conveyed Martyr from the crowd at his conference with Dr. Smith, A. I. i. 382. com- plies, and is employed under queen Mary, ib. notice of his sermon preached after queen Elizabeth's accession, 383. one of the royal visitors of the university of Oxford, P. I. 95. in a commission to visit the diocese of Oxford, 205. his death, A. I. i. 383. Wright, William, mayor of York, in the commission to value the INDEX. 397 benefices in the diocese of York, M. I. i. 331. Wright, William, M. II. ii. 244. Wrightington, — A. III. ii. 493- Wriothesly, sir Thomas, C. 236. 664. M. III. i. 450. A. II. i. 534. ii. 565. (as earl of South- ampton,) S. 36. M. II. i, 305. A. III. i. 456. a Londoner, M. II. ii. 41. present at Edward VI. 's baptism, i. 9. secretary, and a privy counsellor, 1540, I. i. 565. his deposition con- cerning Henry VIII. s marriage with Anne of Cleves, ii. 459. lord chancellor, i. 597. sided with bishop Gardiner in perse- cuting the gospellers at court, ib. one of king Henry's ex- ecutors, II. i. ig. created earl of Southampton, ii. 158. bought church lands of the crown, i. 123. discharged from the privy- council, 390. ii. 183. much ad- dicted to bishop Gardiner's principles, 430. an adherent to the earl of Warwick against the duke of Somerset, ib. 535. 536. buried, 444. some account of him, and his rise in life, III. i. 466. Henry his son and heir, II. i. 430. ii. 158. Writheosly, William, deprived from the prebend of Lytton, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 353- Wroteby, lands there given by the earl of Leicester for the endowment of Warwick hospi- tal, A. IV. 42. Wroth, Gersom, son of sir T., M. III. i. 226. so christened from having been born in exile, II. i. 389. made a free denizen by parliament, temp, queen Elizabeth, ib. Wroth, John, escheator of So- merset and Dorset, has a par- don of Richard III., for debts, M. II. i. 389. Wroth, John, son of sir T,, M. II. i. 389. Wroth, Richard, son of sir T., M. II. i. 389. Wroth, sir Robert, son of sir T., M. II. i. 389. increased the family property, ib. Wroth, sir Thomas, M. II, i. 495. A. I. i. 65. ii. 32. II. ii. 499. G. 112. dubbed a knight of the carpet at Edward VI .'s co- ronation, M. II. ii. 329. one of the principal gentlemen of his privy- chamber, 164. the king's grants to him, i. 387. 388, 485. 540. ii. 223, 228. 233. 244. 245. 285. the king used to exercise and play with him, i. 388. present at a private conference upon the sacra- ment, C. 386. Ch. 70. 77, G. I 2. in a commission for mar- tial law, M. II. ii. 31. 207. in another for survey of the king's courts, 207. in another for ex- amination of the officers of the treasuries, 209. an exile for re- ligion, temp, queen Mary, III. i. 226. Ch. 95. servicealDle to his fellow exiles, M. III. i. 226. resident at Argentine, 232. re- turns home on queen Eliza- beth's accession, A. I. i. 151. in a commission to visit the dioceses of Norwich and Ely, 248. was in great favour with the queen, M. II. i. 389. lived at Enfield, ib. his issue, ib. Wroth, Thomas, son of the pre- ceding, M. II. i. 389. Wrotham, passed away from the see of Canterbury to the crown, C. 405. granted to sir J. Ma- son, M. II. ii. 226. fee-farm given by queen Mary to car- dinal Pole, III. i. 474. Wroxham, vicarage of, the cha- 398 INDEX. pel of Salhowse annexed to it, A. 1. i. 540. Wy, manor and rectory of, Kent, given by Edward VI, to lord Clinton, M. II. i. 362. Wyat, John, rector of Kegworth, M. III. i. 170. Wyat, sir Thomas, C. 335. M. III. i. 100. 280. A. I. ii. 25. II. i. 427. III. i. 602. in a commission for the controver- sies with the French about the borders, M. II. i. 428. left out of a new commission, 429. heads a rebellion against queen Mary, III. i. 132 — 143. A. I. i. 468. II. ii. 420. offers the prisoners in the Marshalsea liberty, 155. executed, 149. 187. see Wiat. Wyborn, ^Villiam, a papist, in prison, A. III. i. 610. see Wi- hurn. Wycomb, Stephen de, collated to the vicarage of Colreede, P. III. 178. Wye, Henry, burnt as an heretic, temp, queen Mary, M. III. ii. 471. had signed a confession of faith, ib. Wygston, sir William, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. 182. see fllgston. Wyke, tithes of, Worcestershire, bought of the crown by Mar- garet Brown, M. II. ii. 16. Wyley, John, M. I. i. 122. Wyllymothe, Richard, ordained, G. 59. Wylson, Dr., C. 37. M. I. ii. 407. present at Edward VI. 's bap- tism, II. i. 9. and at the con- vocation of 1547, C. 221. 222. Wylson, Thomas, Ch. 49. A. I. i. 493. ii. 107. 121. 131. 168. P. II. so. W. III. 14. A. II. i. 331. ii. 499. i. 357. 358. 369. 370. 374. 447. 518. ii. 554. P. II. 269. A. II. ii. 8. 9. 10. 94. 625. Ay. 24. A. II. ii. 321. 326, 394. 398. III. i. 677. ii. 559. IV. 171. 601. S, 166, sometime fellow of King's col- lege, Cambridge, Ch. 96. at- tended sir T. Smith's Greek lectures, 8. 14. studied at Pa- dua, Ch. 96. his Oratio in Mor- tem Edv. comitis Devonice, M. III. ii, 420. notice of his trea- tise on logic, A. I. i. 345. and on rhetoric, 347. put into the inquisition at Rome, ii. 286. his own account, II. ii. 153. his wonderful deliver- ance, I. ii. 287. made master of St, Catharine's, near the Tower, 285. his Latin verses to queen Elizabeth, 353. pub- lishes a translation of some of Demosthenes's Orations, 367. II. i. 45. Ch. 96. his letter to Cecil sent Avith this transla- tion, A. II. i. 48. ii. 421. his opinion of the benefit of read- ing Demosthenes, i, 47. master of requests to the queen, ii. 708. incorporated doctor of laws at Cambridge, W. I. 45. acts as an ecclesiastical com- missioner, P. III. 184. A. II. i. 419. G. 310. a member of the house of commons, A. II. i. 1 85 . notice of his book against usury, 340. 147. bishop Jewel's judgment of it, 341. some of his wise sayings, 342. pub- lishes bishop Parkhurst's epi- grams, 344. one of them on himself, ii. 502. a great friend of the bishop, i. 510. sent am- bassador into the Netherlands, 380. P. II. 366. A. II. ii. 7. account of the sacking of Ant- werp, probably by him, 2. made secretary of state, 152. S. 151. went ambassador into Portu- gal, S, 80. A, III, i. 96, a INDEX. 399 friend of sir T. Smith's, S. 167. his opinion of Cheke, M. II. ii. 182. Ch. 150. 176. A. II. i. 46. a privy counsellor, ii. 317. 707. signed certain or- ders as such, 127. G. 586. 363. 370. quoted or referred to, Ch. 148. 150. 154. 162. see Wilson. Wylton, prebend of, Yorkshire, lands belonging to, granted by Edward VI. to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 539. Wymark, — a searcher after con- cealed lands, W. II. 197. 198. Wymbishe, — A. IV. 588. Wymborn, manor of, Dorset, given by Edward VI. to the duke of Somerset, M. II. i. 539. Wymmesly, Edmund, G. 87. 88. 90. see IVimsleij. Wymondham, monastery of, Nor- folk, lands belonging to, an- nexed to the see of Norwich, M. II. i. 368. Wyngfield, sir Anthony, M. II. i. 502. a privy counsellor, I. i. 565. II. ii. 160. C. 316. 319. present at Edward VI. 's bap- tism, M. II. i. 9. and at Henry VIII.'s funeral, ii. 302. comp- troller of the king's household, C. 320. M. II. ii. 163. a wit- ness against bishop Gardiner, C. 320. escorts princess Mary on her visit to the king, M. II. i. 445. sent to her about con- forming to the reformed reli- gion, 457. one of the lord lieutenants for Suffolk, 465. ii. 162. 202. one of the chamber- lains of the exchequer, 63. 228. Ch. 90. in the commis- sion to hear bishop Boner's appeal against his trial. III. i. 38. knight of the garter, II. i. 587. his death and burial, ib, 588. Wyngfield, Jaques, M. II. i. 374. Wyngfield, sir John, sent am- bassador into Spain, M. I. ii. 365- Wyngfield, sir John, killed at the capture of Cales, A. IV. 399. Wyngfield, sir Richard, deputy of Calais, M. I. i. 38. Wyngfield, sir Robert, dubbed a knight of the carpet at queen Mary's coronation, M. III. ii. i8i. in a commission against papists in Norfolk, P. II. 137. a magistrate of Suffolk, A. III. ii. 421. Wyngfield, Robert, of Upton, has a license to build a private se- pulture, W. II. 459. Wyngius, (or Wincour,) Goto- fridus, A. IV. 574. one of the ministers of the Dutch church in London, G. 62. 78. bishop Grindal's character of him, 75. 76. Wynyver, Thomas, minor canon of St. Paul's, deprived for non- appearance at a visitation, A. I. i. 253. Wyrley, Thomas, rector of Boiir- ton upon Dunsmore, deprived for being married, M. III. i. 169. Wyt's, Margaret, second wife of Saravia, W. II. 210. X. Xenophon, C. 241. 755. Ch. 171. Cheke's opinion of, 152. 153. Y. Yale, Thomas, P. I. 109. 114. 163. 241. 244. A. I. i. 472. ii. 115. 213. P. I. 530. II. 356. G. 286. 287. S. 158. appointed advocate of the court of Can- terbury, P. I. 87. in a com- mission to visit the church of Canterbury, 144. vicar-general to archbishop Parker, 149. II. 186. and afterwards to arch- bishop Griudal, Ay. 19. G. 287. 400 INDEX. in commissions to visit the diocese of Rochester, P. I. 151. and of Peterborough, 152. abp. Parker's chancellor, and judge of his court of audience, 161. II. t86. in commissions to visit the diocese of Oxford, I. 205. and All Souls and Mer- ton colleges, Oxford, 228. and the dioceses of Ely and Bris- tol, 258. and Bangor, 405. 509. an ecclesiastical commis- sioner, 443. 503. 531. III. 184. II. 160. G. 179. 310. in a commission to visit the diocese of Norwich, P. I. 493. he and J. Parker have the office of keeper of the prerogative court of Canterbury, II. 26. his col- lections out of the registers of the archbishops of Canterbury, concerning their ancient cus- toms and privileges, 48. III. 177. his opinion concerning a marriage, A. II. i. 170. abp. Parker charged with being too much carried away with him, P. II. 163. attended the archbishop's funeral, 432. one of the overseers of his will, III. 339. his opinion respect- ing the ecclesiastical courts, G. 307. he, as vicar-general and chancellor, and Clerk, as official of the arches, contend for precedency, 309. in com- missions to visit the church of Wells, 3T4, and the diocese of Bangor, 315. acts for archbi- shop Grindal in his sequestra- tion, 343. in a commission to visit the diocese of St. Asaph, W.I. 411. held the prebend of Vaynol in that diocese, A. II. ii. 225. III. ii. 472. Yardley, Roger, a recusant, A. III. ii. 600. Yarley, Richard, M. III. ii. 406. Yarlington, manor of, Somerset, given by the crown to the marquis of Northampton, S. 31. 169. sold by him to sir T. Smith, ib. Yates, see Gates. Yaxley, William, a recusant, A. III. i. 609. ii. 422. Yeamans, — A. II. ii. 141. Yeat, — an harbourer of Cam- pion the Jesuit, P. II. 167. A. II. ii. 360. Yehingham, Edward, one of the henchmen at Henry VIII. 's fu- neral, M. II. ii. 302. Yelingbery, farm of, Middlesex, obtained from the see of Lon- don by the duke of Somerset, M. II. ii. 223. forfeited to king Edw^ard, ib. given by him to sir J. Mason, ib. Yelverton, — recorder Of North- ampton, M. III. i. 577. Yelverton, — a civilian, A. III. i. 132. 133. IV. 302. Yelverton, Harry, a papist, A. III. ii. 460. Yeomans, — curate of Hadley, ^ C. 394. Yngton, manor of, bought of the crown by R. Palladay and F. Foxhal, M. II. ii. 407. Yngvey, John, M. III. ii. 405. Yngworth, Richard, a black friar, P. III. 8. prior of Langley priory, C. 88. consecrated a suffragan bishop, ib. 1046. 1047. Yong, James, a Jesuit, his con- fession, A. IV. 137. Yong, Nicholas, a sectary in Kent, M. II. i. 370. Yong, Thomas, A. IV. 137. Yonge, — P. II. 434. see Young. York, — A. II. ii. 419. York, Edw'ard, in a conspiracy to kill queen EUzabeth, A. IV. 272. York, John, of the priory of Thurgarton, M. I. i. 397. INDEX. 401 York, sir John, M. III. i. 78. concerned in the adventure of the north-east passage, II. ii. 76. 23 I. under-treasurer of the mint, 227. has a pardon for all transgressions as such, ib. 246. imprisoned as an adherent of queen J. Grey, III. i. 24. one of the Russia company, 520. an alderman of London, ib. York, Rowland, A. III. ii. 86. betrayed Zutphen to the king of Spain, i. 623. York, Richard Plantagenet, duke of, protector to Henry VI., A. IV. 329. York, archbishopric of, M. III. ii. 408. its value, 1559, A. I. i. 227. Battersea house recovered to the see by archbishop Grin - dal, G. 259. York, archbishops of, see E. Lee, 1531—1544- R-Holgate, 1544 — 1553- N- Heath, 1555— 1558. T. Young, 1560 — 1568. E. Grindal, 1570 — 1575. E. Sandys, 1576 — 1588. J. Piers, 1588 — 1594. M. Button, 1595 — 1605. T. Matthew, 1606 — 1628. York, church of, archbishop Mat- thew's library given to, by his widow, P. II. 390. York, St. Mary's convent of, see St. Mary. York, dean of, see M. Hutton. York, a mint established there, M. II. i. 518. York-place, the residence of car- dinal Wolsey, nowcalledWhite- hall, M. I. i. 171. see White- hall. Yorkshire, state of, at archbishop Grindal's first going there, G. 243. the three ill qualities he discovers in the people, ih. Young, Edward, he and Walter bought certain church lands of the crown, M. II. ii. 402. VOL. II. INDKX TO STRYPE. Young, Eliza, imprisoned, temp. queen Mary, C. 511. A. I. i. 55. set at liberty, temp, queen Elizabeth, 55. Young, Father, A. IV. 252. Young, Frances, G. 604. Young, Henry, in a conspiracy to kill queen Elizabeth, A. IV. 272. Young, James, A. I. i. 310. P. II. 240. Young, John, master of the rolls, M. I. i. 9. Young, John, C. 359. 898. M. III. i. 174. 570. Ay. 25. A. IV. 607. translates abp. Cranmer's book on the sacrament into Latin, C. 365. recants, 244. one of the disputants at Cam- bridge against Bucer, 290. M. II. i. 327. C. 583. the contro- versy between him and Bucer, M. II. i. 327. G. 8. 467. one of Bucer's enemies, 384. his letter to Cheke concerning Dr. Redman, Ch. 67—70. M. II. i. 527. 528. concerned on the popish side in two private con- ferences on the sacrament, C. 385. Ch. 70. 77. a complaint against him for seditious preach- ing, C. 431. one of the dis- putants sent from Cambridge to Oxford against Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, 480. 941. 943. preaches at St. Mary Spittle, M. III. ii. 3. admitted to a prebend of Ely, P. I. 65. master of Pembroke-hall, Cam- bridge, C. 365. M. III. i. 80. vice-chancellor of the univer- sity, 80. deprived for refusal of the oath of supremacy, G. 38. 459. imprisoned for recu- sancy, A. I. i. 417. II. ii. 661. his letter to lord Burghley to be set at liberty, i. 489. Young, John, (as bishop of Ro- chester,) G. 391. W. I. 205. D d 402 INDEX. 223. succeeds Whitgift in the mastership of Pembroke-hall, 22. being recommended by bishop Grindal, whose chap- lain he was, G. 460. preaches the Clerum-sermon for the bi- shop, when he took the de- gree of D.D. at Cambridge, ib. a Spital preacher, P. I. 426. a residentiary of St. Paul's, preaches before the convoca- tion of 1572, II. 211. and be- fore the queen, 496. made bi- shop of Rochester, C.462. A. II. ii. 184. bishop Aylmer's character of him, 184. IV. 317. who recommends his remove to Norwich, Ay. 58. the arms assigned him on becoming a bishop, A. II. ii. 184. his in- come, and other preferments, ib. III. ii. 415. his notes on Nicholas's Evangelium Regni, published, II. ii. 184. inter- poseth for Chatham hospital, 272. signed the articles agreed upon by the bishops for the regulation of the church, W. I. 232. an ecclesiastical com- missioner, 256. recommended by archbishop Whitgift for the see of Worcester, 337. assists at the consecration of bishop Godwin, 408. of bps. Fletcher and Underhil, 61 7. of bishop Babington, II. i 12. of bishops Sterne and Still, 147. of bi- shop Rudd, 214. and of bi- shop Redman, 218. his judg- ment of the Lambeth articles, 281. assists at the consecra- tion of bishops Morgan, Day, and Vaughan, 332. 333. his letter to lord Burghley on be- ing* slandered as covetous, A. IV. 315. assists at the conse- cration of bishop Bancroft, W. II. 385. of bishop Robinson, 405. of bishops Ben net and Jegon, 465. and of bishop Thornborough, 518. Young, John, A. III. i. 637. Young, John, A. III. ii. 187. 188. Young, Richard, justice, A. III. i. 200. 449. 613.614. ii. 422. 433- 434- 435- 437- W. I. 579. A. IV. 99. 100. 134. 140. 187. 188. 208. 209. 243. 246. 256. 258. 260. W. II. 178. Young, Robert, a recusant, A. I. i.415. Young, Roger, P. III. 121. Young, Thomas, (as archbishop of York,) A. I. ii. 126. P. I. 476. 525. G. 254. 259. 365. chanter of St. David's, C. 262. pulled down the great hall in the palace there for lucre of the lead, ib. M. III. i. 424. his ill conduct to Ferrar, bi- shop of the diocese, ib. 427. ii. 355. 362. A. I. i. 370. Fox faithful in not concealing this in his Hist^ory, though advised to do it, M. III. i. 430. A. IV. 601. one of the six who pub- licly owned the reformation in the first convocation of queen Mary, C. 461. fled into exile, 450. resident at Wezel, M. III. i. 233. one of queen Elizabeth's visitors for certain dioceses, A. I. i. 247. consecrated bishop of St. David's, P. I. 124. 126. III. 283. A. I. i. 230. 232. has a commission to visit his diocese metropolitically, P. I. 152. reconmiended by archbi- shop Parker for the see of York, 173. translated to that see, III. 284. A. I. i. 370. he and certain bishops, and others of the ecclesiastical commis- sion, sit at Lambeth for the' regulating the matters of the church, P. I. 194. they agree on certain articles for the re- gulation of the clergy, ib. sub- INDEX. 403 scribes, as a member of convo- cation, the articles of 1562, A. I. i. 487. signs the orders for readers and deacons, 515. vi- sits his province, P. I. 361. 362. lord president of the council in the north, A. I. ii. 197. II. ii. 51. 709. a conspi- racy against him, I. ii. 197. in a conmiittee of both houses of parliament appointed to wait on the queen touching the suc- cession and her marriage, 234. consecrates suffragan bishop Barnes, P. I. 477. his death, A. I. ii. 300. Young, Mrs., widow of the arch- bishop, wrong done to her, A. I. ii. 300. Young, Thomas, G. 50. Young, Walter, he and Edward bought church lands of the crown, M. II. ii. 402. see Yong. Z. Zacutus, S. 163. Zanchius, Hieronymus, A. II. ii. 680. kind to the English ex- iles, temp., queen Mary, A. II. i. 348. 349. 426. public pro- fessor at Strasburgh, C. 342. m-ges a Lasco to write to queen Elizabeth in favour of the re- formation in England, ib. his account of the number of pro- testants in Spain and Italy, 353. consults bishop Grindal concerning his subscription of the Augsburg Confession, G. III. his answer, 112. sends his Judicknn de Dissidio Eccle- siarum in Coena Domini, to the bishop, 141. leaves Strasburgh, declining to sign the Augsburg Confession without reservation, ib. becomes minister of the church of Clavenna, ib. writes again to the bishop concerning the stirs for Lutheranism, 142. professor of divinity at the uni- versity of Heidelberg, A. I. ii. 276. II. i. 142. writes to queen Elizabeth against imposing the ecclesiastical habits, 142. G. 157. by Mount's instigation, A. II. i. 143. the substance of his letter to bishop Jewel, 144. why his confession was dis- liked by Beza, 373. considered superiority in bishops to be humanum institutiun. III. ii. 602. his congratulatory letter to Grindal, on being advanced to the see of Canterbury, G. 321. C. Secundus Curio his father-in-law, Ch. 95. M. II. ii. I23_. Zenobia, S. 193. Zonaras, Joannes, his and Bal- samon's Commentaries on the Apostles' Canons, published in Latin by J. Fox, C. 516. Zouch, Edward lord, educated under Whitgift at Trinity col- lege, VV. I. 157. III. 17. at- tended the archbishop's fune- ral, II. 508. Zouch, Eliz., abbess of Shafts- bury, M. II. ii. 215. Zouch, George lord, one of the noblemen appointed to attend queen Elizabeth upon her com- ing to London, A. I. ii. 391. Zouch, George, father of sir John, M. I. i. 171. in queen Anne Bolen's service, ib. disinclined to lend queen Mary money, III. ii. 78. 79. Zouch, sir John, A. I. i. 56. an annuity granted to him, M. II. ii. 215. a controversy between him and sir Thomas Stanhope, A. II. ii. 138. 139. Zuinglians, statement respecting, M"I. i. 529. Zuinglius, Ulric, C. 95. 741. A. I. i. 240. II. i. 144. 159. 160. III. i. 98. his works prohibited 404 INDEX. as heretical, temp. Henry VIII., M. I. i. 254. and temp, queen Mary, III. i. 418. his Short Pathway to the right under- standing of the Scriptures, pub- lished in English by Veron, II. i. 445. favourable to the disci- pline of the church of England, W. I. 86. Zuinglius, Rodolphus, son of the preceding, A. I. ii. 491. 545. II. i. 336. is kind to the Eng- lish exiles, temp, queen Mary, M. III. i. 232. reflected on by Feckenhani, A. I. i. no. ii. 434-. Zuinglius, Rodolphus, son of the preceding, visits England, A. II. i. 144. 336. Zurich, see Exiles. Zutphen, betrayed by R. York to the king of Spain, A. III. i. 623. THE END. Princeton Theological Seminary-Speer Library 1 1012 01 50 9090 liiWIi t II mf lill' to'li ■P imincillumHJinfiJiitjfH i;;. i; ';.; .lii!^ 's^'tMliiiiii