INDEX.

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Aare, The, Swiss river, boundary between the Provinces of Mainz and BesanÇon, 23.
Abjuration, Act of, declaration of Dutch Independence, 267.
Abjuration of Papal Supremacy by the Church of England, 332.
Act of Restraint of Appeals (England), 329.
Act abolishing Diversity of opinion (England), 348.
Act of Uniformity (Edward VI.), The First, 357, 360.
Act of Uniformity (Edward VI.), The Second, 363.
Act de heretico comburendo, 374.
Act of Uniformity (Elizabeth), 390 ff., 395, 401 f., 403, 419.
Act of Supremacy (Elizabeth), 390 ff., 393 f., 397, 401, 408 f.
Acts completing England’s secession from Rome, 331.
Acts of Henry VIII. revived by Elizabeth, 393 and n.
Adda, The (Val Tellina), 50.
Adrian VI., his ideas of the need of reformation, 496;
a Dutch Ximenes, 497;
an Inquisitor, 497;
in Rome, 497;
tries to reform the Curia, 498;
the martyr of the Spanish Reformation, 499;
failure in life, success after death, 500; 494, 610.
Advertisements of Archbishop Parker, 406, 418 n.
Adroyer, The, the chief Magistrate of Bern, 41 n.
Agen, Reformed church at, 166.
Agrarian troubles in England, 345, 359, 387.
Agrippa, Cornelius, 64 n.
Aigle, a district of the Pays de Vand, 67;
Farel at, 67, 69.
Albert of Brandenburg, 3.
Alcala, College at, 491 f., 537.
Alciat, AndrÉ, lecturer in Law, 95.
Aleander, Hieronymus, Papal Legate at Worms, in the Netherlands, 229.
AlenÇon, The Duke of, Francis, till 1574, then Duke of Anjou, 179 n., 203.
Alexander, of Arles, Peter, 358.
Alva, Ferdinando Alvarez de Toledo, Duke of, 193, 255 f., 259, 262.
Amboise, Town of, 146, 310;
Conspiracy of, 176;
Edict of, 192.
Ammonius, Andreas, Latin secretary to Henry VIII., 316.
Amsterdam, 236, 239.
Anabaptists, The, outside the Peace of Augsburg, 5;
in Zurich, 35;
in the Netherlands, 224 ff.;
their origin, 235, 423, 432 ff.;
places of refuge, 238, 451;
attempts to gain a town in the Netherlands, 238 f.;
old mood of describing, 430 f., 431 n.;
connection with the social revolt, 432;
with the Brethren, 432;
their organisation, 435;
their hymns, 435, 449 ff.;
their strong individuality, 437;
views on Passive Resistance, 438;
their evangelists, 439;
repudiated a State Church, 442;
their “separation” from the world, 443, 461;
persecutions, 236 ff., 445;
in Switzerland, 445 f.;
in MÜnster, 459 ff.;
polygamy among, 463 ff.;
their views on Marriage, 464.
Andelot, Francis de, brother of Admiral Coligny, 172, 194.
Anduze, Huguenot stronghold, 201.
Angeles, Francisco de los, and Luther 495.
Angers, Reformed church at, 166.
Anhalt becomes Calvinist, 3.
Anna Reinhard and Zwingli, 36.
Annates (England), 328, 331.
Anne of Cleves, 342, 347, 349.
Anti-Trinitarians, 422, 424 f.
Antoine de Bourbon, titular King of Navarre, 20, 172, 175, 178, 181, 186, 192. See Bourbon.
Antwerp, 234, 254 f.
Apology, The, of William of Orange, 267.
Apostles, The Twelve (nickname), 252.
Apostolic Tribunal (Inquisition), The, 598.
Appenzell (Swiss Canton), 22, 46, 49.
Aquila, Bishop of, Ambassador of Philip II., 386.
Archeteles (treatise by Zwingli), 33.
Areopagitica, The, 13.
Armada, Destruction of the Spanish, 212.
Arran, the Earl of, 281, 283, 298 n.
Arthur, Prince of Wales, married to Catharine of Aragon, 322.
Articles of Geneva, 105 ff., 124.
Articles, The Ten, 333 ff.
Articles, The Six, 348 f., 355, 358.
Articles, The Forty-two, 363, 411.
Articles, The Thirty-eight, 414 f.
Articles, The Thirty-nine, 363, 411 ff., 415, 418.
Articles of the order and government of the Church, The, 417.
Articles, The Twenty-one (Anabaptist), 459, 465.
Articles, The Twelve (The Apostles’ Creed), 518.
Arundel, the Constitutions of Thomas, 337.
Assembly of Notables (France), 177.
Attrition and Contrition, as defined at the Council of Trent, 584.
Aubenas, Huguenot stronghold, 201.
Aubigny, Reformed church at, 166.
Augsburg, Peace of, Elizabeth’s desire to take advantage of, 397, 405 n., 408, 414.
Augsburg Confession, 124, 341, 397, 415, 576.
Augsburg Interim, 567; 20.
Ausberger, Jacob, Reformer of MÜhlhausen, 43.
Aventuriers, Les, in France, 144.
Aytta, Vigilius van, member of the Council of State for the Netherlands, 243.
Babylonian Captivity of the Church of Christ, 334, 494.
Baden (Switzerland), Diet at, 47.
Bale, John, 318.
Band subscrivit by the Lords, 289.
Baptism, Ceremony of, according to the Reformed rite, 69;
first instance in Geneva, 83;
Anabaptist mode of administering, 435;
mode in MÜnster, 461.
Baptism, Doctrine of, defined at the Council of Trent, 581.
Barcelona, Ladies of, Ignatius’ earliest disciples, 533, 561.
Barlaymont, Baron de (Netherlands), 243, 250, 255.
Barnes, Dr. Robert (England), 18, 340, 349.
Barricades, the day of (France), 211.
Barry, Godfrey de, Seigneur de la Renaudie (France), 175.
Basel, Bishopric of, 23, 64.
Basel, Town of, the Reformation in, 38;
accepts Calvinism, 60;
regulation of morals in, 109; 22, 25, 122.
Bastille, The, used as a prison for Protestants, 164.
Bauny, qui tollit peccata mundi per definitionem, 556.
Bavaria, 48;
Anabaptists in, 449.
Bearnese, The, Henry IV. of France, 218.
BeatÆ, Spanish Mystics, 530.
Beaton, David, Archbishop of St Andrews, Cardinal, 282 f., 345 n.
Beatus, Rhenanus, Humanist, 18 n.
BÉda, NoËl, leader of the Romanist party in the University of Paris, 94, 535.
Beggars, The, 250 ff. See Wild-Beggars, Sea-Beggars.
Bekentones des globens und lebens der gemein Criste zu Monster, 464.
Benedictines, Reformation among the, 509.
Bentheim Confession, 4 n.
Ber, Hans, Anabaptist evangelist, 439.
Bern, The Reformation in, 40;
The Ten Theses of, 42, 45 f., 103;
protects Swiss Protestants, 45, 63;
seeks to evangelise Western Switzerland, 63, 66, 103 f.;
Liturgy of, in use in French Switzerland, 69, 117, 118 ff.;
demands a Public Disputation at Lausanne, 70;
Synod at, 73;
protects the Evangelicals of Geneva, 79 f.;
conquers the Pays de Vaud, 89;
regulation of morals in, 109;
commanding position in Western Switzerland, 116;
Consistory of, 117 ff.;
intercedes with Geneva on Calvin’s behalf, 121 ff.; 22, 48, 113, 129.
Bernard, Jacques, minister at Geneva, 131 n.
Berquin, Louis, a French Lutheran, 18, 143.
BesanÇon, Archiepiscopal Province of, 23.
BÈze, ThÉodore de (Beza), 95, 155, 313;
at Poissy, 186 ff.
Bible, The English, 335, 337 ff., 389.
Biel or Bienne (Swiss Canton), 46;
becomes Calvinist, 60.
Bishops’ Book, The, 10, 319, 336.
Blaarer (Blauer), Ambrose, 43, 47.
Blandrata, Giorgio, Anti-Trinitarian, 426.
Blast ... against the monstrous Regiment of Women, 292, 296.
Blaurock (Brother JÖrg), 446 f.
Blois, town of, 146, 166.
Bloody Tribunal, The, 255.
Boabdilla, Nicholas, Jesuit, 537, 557.
Bockelson, Jan (Jan of Leyden), arrived at MÜnster, 459;
leader in MÜnster, 463 ff.;
introduced polygamy 465 ff.
Bocquet, Christopher, a Dominican preacher in Geneva, 75;
called a Lutheran preacher, 75 n.
Boekbinder, Bartholomaeus, disciple of Jan Matthys, 459.
Boleyn, Anne, 324, 331.
Bolsec, Jerome (Geneva), 130.
Bonner, Edmund, Bishop of London, 369, 374 f., 380 f., 389.
Book of Common Order, The (Scotlan nternal">147 f., 305, 514, 557, 577.
Cambridge, 17, 276, 320.
Campeggio, Thomas, Bishop of Feltre, a Cardinal, in England, 323 ff.;
proposed that the Princess Mary should marry her half-brother, the Duke of Richmond, 323;
at the Council of Trent, 570.
Canisius, Peter, a Jesuit, 557 ff., 591, 595, 605 f.
Canon Law in the Elizabethan Church, 417 f.
Canus, Alexandre, Reformed preacher in Geneva, 79.
Cany, Madame de, 158.

Capistrano, John of, a revival preacher in the Abruzzi, 502.
Capito, Wolfgang, 38, 43, 64 n., 453, 456.
Capucins, a reformation of the Franciscans, 507 f.
Caraffa, Giovanni Pietro, Cardinal and later Pope Paul IV., member of the Oratory of Divine Love, 505;
the Theatines, 509 f.;
character and training, 515;
an Inquisitor, 601;
his conduct as Pope, 585 f.; 510, 545.
Carlyle, Thomas, on the Thirty Years’ War, 2.
Caroli, Pierre, accuses Calvin of heresy, 116.
Carvajal, Juan de, Cardinal, 497.
Cassel, Confession of, 3, 4 n.
Castellio, Sebastian, 130.
Catechism, The Racovian, 473, 477.
Catechism of the Brethren, The, 433.
Catechisms of the Reformed Church, the Heidelberg, 3, 4 n., 306;
Calvin’s, 113, 306;
Craig’s, 306.
Catharine of Aragon, 321 ff., 324, 330, 342, 388.
Catherine de’ Medici, wife of Henry II. of France, begins to reign, 178;
her children, 179 n.;
and ladies’ side-saddle, 180 n.;
at Poissy, 186 ff.;
leader of the Romanist party in France, 192;
matrimonial policy, 196;
dies, 214; 173, 177, 180, 195, 211, 313.
Cas communes and cas privilÉgiÉs, 162.
Cauvin, Gerard, father of Calvin, 92 ff.; 95.
Cecil, Sir William, afterwards Lord Burghley, 19, 292, 295, 297 ff., 311 f., 386 f., 396.
Ceremonies of Bern, The, 118 ff.
Cervini, Marcello, Cardinal de Santa Croce, Legate at the Council of Trent, 566, 568 ff.
Chablais, District of, 117.
ChambÉry, 65.
Chambre Ardente, The, 162, 169, 290.
Chandieu, Antoine de, minister at Paris, 167.
Chapuis, Jean, Romanist in Geneva, 86.
Chapuys, Eustace, Ambassador of Charles V. in England, 330, 369.
Charles V., Emperor of Germany, disapproved of the Bern Disputation, 41;
how he inherited the Netherlands, 225;
consolidates the Netherlands, 226 ff.;
establishes the Inquisition there, 229;
increasing severity towards Protestants, 231;
Lutherans among his family, 233;
abdicates at Brussels, 240;
and Philip II., 240 f.;
persuaded that Protestants and Romanists may be re-united, 518, 523, 567; 225, 327, 358, 368 f., 371, 377, 496 f., 581.
Charles IX., King of France, 178, 186, 196, 198, 203 f.
“Charles X.,” the League King of France. See Bourbon.
Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, 22 f., 26, 225.
Chateaubriand, Edict of, 161 f., 169, 296.
ChÂtelet, The Grand and the Petit, prisons in Paris, 164.
Christian Civic League (Protestant), 48, 51.
Christian Philosophy, Discourse on, 98.
Christian Union, The (Romanist), 48.
ChristianÆ Religionis Institutio. See Institutio.
Church, Calvin’s Doctrine of the, 7, 110, 129.
Church, Doctrine of the, among the Anabaptists, 445.
Church, Doctrine of the, among the Socinians, 480 f.
Church, Doctrine of the, at the Regensburg Conference, 521 f.
Classis, ecclesiastical court in Dutch Church, 271.
Clement, Jacques, assassinates Henry III., 215 f.
Clement VII. See Popes.
Clergy, dissolute lives at Geneva, 90 n.;
disliked in England, 319, 326.
Codure, Jean, The Jesuit, 537.
Cognac, a Huguenot stronghold, 194 f.
Colleges in Paris, de la Marche, 93;
de Ste Barbe, 98, 533 and n.;
de Montaigu, 94 f., 533;
Fortet, 95;
de Navarre, 97 n.
Colleges founded in Spain by Ximenes, 491.
Colleges, French, seed-beds of the Reformation, 151.
Colet, Dean, 319, 334.
Coligny, Gaspard de, Admiral of France, at the Assembly of Notables, 177;
at the States-General, 182;
at Poissy, 186;
in La Rochelle, 194 f.;
attempted assassination of, 197;
murdered by Guise, 199; 172, 184, 191, 196.
Colloquy, an ecclesiastical court in the French Protestant Church, 168.
Colloquy at Marburg, 50.
Colloquy at Poissy, 20, 186 ff.
Colonna, Vittoria, 505 f., 508, 545, 559, 587 n.
Colporteurs, French Protestant, 152.
Commentary on the Psalms, Calvin’s, 97, 101.
Communism among the Anabaptists, 438, 457, 461 f.
Como, Lake of, 50.
Company of Jesus, The, the beginnings of the, 546, 548 f.;
its constitution, 550 f., 551 and n.;
power in the hands of the General, 552 f.;
limitations to his power, 553;
rapid spread of the Order, 563;
and the Council of Trent, 595;
and the Counter-Reformation, 606;
and education, 607.
Compromise, The (Netherlands), 249.
Complutensian Polyglot, The, 492.
Conciergerie, Huguenot Prison in Paris, 164.
Concordat, The Spanish, of 1482, 491.
Conference at Westminster, 20, 400 ff.
Confession, Augsburg, 1, 341, 415, 576.
Confessions of the Reformed Churches, 3, 4 n., 6 n.;
Consensus Tigurinus, 60;
Confession of Genecu, 114;
Confession of Waldenses of the Durance, 119;
the Belgic Confession, 272 f.;
the Scots’ Confession, 300, 302 f.;
the Confession of the French Church, 167 f.;
Helvetic Confession (Second), 413.
Congregation, The (in the Scottish Reformation Church), 289, 290, 299 f.
Congregation, The (in Western Switzerland), 105 n.
Congregation of the Holy Office, The (Inquisition), 601.
Congregation of the Index, The, 604 f.
Consilium ... de emendenda ecclesia, 510.
Consilium ... super reformatione sanctÆ RomanÆ EcclesiÆ, 511.
Consistorial ecclesiastical organisation, 4, 7.
Consistory, of Bern, 117, 122;
of Geneva, 128 f.;
in the French Church, 165 f.;
in the Dutch Church, 270 ff.
Constance, Bishop of, 30 f., 33, 34, 41, 47;
bishopric of, 23;
City of, 47 f.;
Lake of, 48.
Consulta, the confidential advisers of the Regent of the Netherlands, 243 f.
Contarini, Casparo, Senator of Venice and Cardinal, Member of the Oratory of Divine Love, 505;
character a nd training, 513;
and Calvin, 514;
sent as Legate to Germany, 516 ff.;
at the Regensburg Conference, 519 ff.;
returns to Italy, 524.
Continental Divines in England, 358 and n.
Convocation (England), 327, 329, f., 355, 363 f., 390, 411, 416, 418.
Cop, Nicolas, 12, 95, 98, 145.
Cope, 403 f. n., 406 and n., 407.
Coraut, Elie, the blind preacher of Geneva, 74 n., 119 and n., 120.
Cordier, Mathurin, teacher of Calvin, 93 and n., 94, 154.
Cortese, Gregorio, Abbot of San Giorgio Maggiore, 505, 509.
Council General of the Union of Catholics (France), 213.
Council of Sens (France), 144.
Council of Tumults, or the Bloody Tribunal (Netherlands), 255.
Coutras, Battle of, 209.
Covenants in Scottish Church History, 288 f., 299.
Cox, Dr., Bishop of Ely, 390, 402 n.
Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, trial and martyrdom, 378 ff.;
recantations of, 380; 8, 318, 329 f., 338, 349, 371, 379.
Craw (Crawar), Paul, in Scotland, 277.
Crescentio, Marcello, Cardinal, sole Legate at the second meeting of the Council of Trent, 581.
Cromwell, Thomas, Earl of Essex, 332, 343, 347, 348.
Curia, The, 30, 495, 498, 503, 511, 517, 586.
Curialism, at the Council of Trent, 571, 585, 591;
its triumph there, 593.
CybÓ, Caterina, Princess of Camerino, 320, 334, 309.
Esch, Johann, martyr in the Netherlands, 224, 230.
Este, Cardinal Hippolito de, 188.
Estienne, Robert, Parisian printer, 93, 148.
Excommunication. See Discipline.
Excommunication among the Anabaptists, 443.
Exercitia Spiritualia. See Spiritual Exercises.
Exhorters in the Scottish Church, 305.
Faber, Johann, Archbishop of Vienna. See Heigerlin, Johann.
Faber, Peter, the Jesuit, 537, 545, 548, 557.
Face of a Church, the “Congregation” assumes the, 290.
Fagius (BÜchlein), Paul, 358.
Farel, William, at Basel, 39;
early life, 39 n.;
called a Lutheran preacher, 16 n.;
at Aigle, 67 f., 69;
the apostle of French-speaking Switzerland, 67;
baptized his converts from Romanism, 68 n.;
organises a band of evangelists, 71 and n.;
at Villingen, 72;
sent by Bern to Geneva, 80;
in Geneva during the siege, 84;
attempt to poison, 84 and n.;
preaches in the cathedral at Geneva, 86;
induces the Council of Geneva to abolish the Mass, 88;
struggle against the evil morals of the town, 90;
character and marriage, 91;
joined by Calvin, 102;
at the Lausanne Disputation, 103;
his “congregation,” 105 n.;
banished from Geneva, 71 and n., 115-124;12, 45 n., 97, 109, 118 ff., 143.
Feckenham, Abbot of Westminster 400 n.
Ferdinand of Austria, and the excommunication of Elizabeth, 1 n.;
on the Protestants in Vienna, 2;
and the Anabaptists, 447, 449.
Feria, Count de, Ambassador of Philip of Spain, 388, 400.
Ferrar, Robert, Bishop of St. David’s, 378.
Ferrara, RenÉe, Duchess of, 101, 505.
FerriÈre, Sieur de la, 165.
Ficino, Marsiglio, and Marguerite of Navarre, 137.
Flag of the Swiss Confederacy, 21.
Flying Squadron. See Escadron.
Fontainebleau, Edict of, 147; 184 f.
Foxe, Edward, Bishop of Hereford, 340 f.
Foxe, John, the Martyrologist, 332.
Francis I. of France, alternately protects and persecutes the Reformers, 143 f., 145, 147 ff.;
Calvin’s letter to, 147;
founds the “Royal Lectureships” at Paris, 534 f.
Francis of Assisi, 506 ff., 527.
Franciscans and the Reformation, 305.
Franciscans, reformation among the, 508 f.
Frankfurt congregation of English exiles, 287; 20.
Frankfurt Conference, 124.
Frankfurt Fair, 18.
Frederick, Elector of the Palatinate, becomes a Calvinist, 3, 4 n.
Fregoso, Fred., Archbishop of Salerno, 505, 510.
Freiburg, Swiss Canton, strongly Romanist, 43, 65, 75 n., 76, 84; 21.
Frenchman, this (iste Gallus), 102 and n., 153.
Friesland, East, an Anabaptist place of refuge, 238.
Forest Cantons, and the Reformation, 41, 50;
at war with Zurich, 49; 22.
Froben, printer at Basel, 27.
Froment, Antoine, at Villingen, 72;
in Geneva, 74 f.;
his wife a preacher, 74 n.;
contest with Furbiti, 78 f.;
during the siege of Geneva, 84.
Furbiti, Guy, Romanist preacher in Geneva, 78 ff.
Gallars, Nicholas des, minister of French Protestants in London, 186.
Gallen, St., 22, 47, 48, 60, 122, 437, 440.
Gardiner, Stephen, Bishop of Winchester, 349, 352, 369, 371, 375.
Geelen, Jan van, an Anabaptist leader, 239.
Gemblours, 266.
Geneva, city of, history and constitution, 61 ff.;
parties in, 62;
Bern and Freiburg, 63;
“the gate of western Switzerland,” 63, 89;
town councils in, 63;
Luther’s writings in, 64 n.;
turbulent priests in, 77 and n.;
the affair of Furbiti in, 78-82;
plot to seize the town, 82;
besieged by the Bishop and the Duke of Savoy, 83;
attempt to poison the Reformed preachers in, 84 and n.;
Public Disputation in, 85 ff.;
Mass abolished provisionally in, 87;
completely, 89;
Disputation before the Council, 88;
becomes an independent republic, 89;
motto Post tenebras lux, 89;
evil living in, 90 and n.;
the Articles of 105 ff.;
adopts the ceremonies of Bern, 118 ff.;
banishes Calvin and Farel, 120 ff.;
begs Calvin to return, 125 ff.;
the ecclesiastical ordinances of, 128;
Consistory of, 128 f.;
the ministry in, 131 f.;
what Calvin did for, 130 ff.;
a city of refuge, 134;
“the dogs of Geneva,” 187;
sends missionaries to the Netherlands, 233, 249; 6, 8, 45, 152.
Geneva, Bishop of, 61 f., 77, 116 f.;
Amadeus VIII. of Savoy, 62;
Pierre de la Baume, 77, 82 f., 85, 89.
Geneva, Vidomne of, 62, 117.
Gentili, Anti-Trinitarian, 426.
German National Council feared by the Pope, 565 n.
German Protestant opinion of Henry VIII., 341.
German Vulgate, 434.
Germany and the Counter-Reformation, 606 f.
Germany, name given to an Inn at Cambridge, 320, 330.
Gex, district of, 117.
Ghent, city of, 265, 267.
Glapion, confessor to Charles V. and Luther, 494.
Glareanus (Heinrich Loriti). See Loriti.
Glarus, a Swiss Canton, 22, 27 f.
Goch, John Pupper of, 226, 230.
Goderick, English lawyer, and his Advice, 389.
Gonzaga, Elenore, Duchess of Urbino, 506.
Gonzaga, Ercole di, Cardinal of Mantua, principal Legate at the third meeting of the Council of Trent, 588.
Gonzaga, Julia, 506.
Grace, pilgrimage of, 346.
Grandson, in the Pays de Vaud, 43, 67, 72.
Granvelle, Antoine Perronet de, Cardinal and Bishop of Arras, 243, 519, 521.
GraphÆus, Cornelius, 230.
Grassis, Matteo, founder of the Capucins, 507 f.
GraubÜnden, the (Grisons), 22, 49 f.
Grebel, Conrad, Humanist and Anabaptist, 436, 446 f.
Grey, Lady Jane, 371.
Gribaldo, Giovanni Valentino, an Anti-Trinitarian, 426.
Grindal, Edmund, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, 402 n., 404.
Groot, Gerard, and the Brethren of the Common Lot, 226, 228.
Guest, Edmund, letter to Cecil, 398 and n.
Gueux, Les. See Beggars.
GuipÚzcoa, the district in which Loyola was born, 525.
Guises, the family of the, 151, 173 and n., 180, 209, 283, 295, 297.
Guise, Francis, Duke of, 170, 173, 177 f., 187, 189, 191 f., 296.
Charles, brother of Francis, Cardinal of Lorraine, 163, 170, 173, 177, 187, 312, 588.
Louis, brother of Francis, Cardinal of Guise, 189, 213.
Henry, Duke of, son of Francis, 198 f., 208, 212 f.
Charles, Duke of Mayenne, son of Francis, 213 f., 218.
Haarlem, Town of, 236 f., 261.
Hagenau, Conference at, 124.
Hague, The, 236.
Haller, Berthold, Reformer of Bern, 40 f., 64 n., 68.
Hamilton, Patrick, 279 f.
Hanseatic League, 279.
Hapsburg (the place), 21.
Heath, Dr., Archdeacon of Canterbury, 340 f.
Hegius (Haag) Alexander, 226.
Heidelberg Catechism, 3, 4 n.
Heigerlin, Johann (Faber), 26 and n., 30, 34, 512.
Helvetic Confession, First, 6 n.
Henry II. of France, consistently persecutes the Protestants, 151.
Henry III., 204, 214.
Henry IV. See Bourbon.
Henry VIII. of England, his policy towards Scotland, 282 f.;
had defended curialist claims, 321;
real doubts about the validity of his marriage, 322 f.;
security of the kingdom demanded a male heir, 323;
expected the Pope to declare his marriage invalid, 324;
appeals to the Universities, 326;
Supreme Head of the Church, 327;
uses the annates to coerce the Curia, 328;
separates from Rome, 330 ff.;
and the German Protestants, 340 ff., 347;
his theological learning, 347;
his will, 352;
and Zwingli, 10, 315 f., 370, 417.
Henry of CondÉ. See Bourbon.
Hesse Cassel becomes Calvinist, 49.
Kampen, 237.
Kappel, First Peace of, 49;
Second Peace of, 51;
Battle of, 51;
Charter of, 51.
Kata-Baptists, 423, 434.
Kessler, Johann, 47.
Kibbenbroick, Gerard, Anabaptist burgomaster of MÜnster, 460.
Kinds, taking the communion in both, a sign of Protestantism, 20, 399, 405 n.
King’s Book, The,

10, 337, 349.
Kirkcaldy of Grange, Sir William, 284.
Kirk-Session, ecclesiastical court in the Scottish Church, 308.
Klein-Basel, 25.
Knipperdolling, Bernhard, Anabaptist, burgomaster of MÜnster, 460; 425, 454 and n., 468.
Knox, John, early history, 285;
galley-slave in France, 286;
preaches in England, 286, f., 360, 362;
in Switzerland and Germany, 287;
marries Marjory Bowes, 288;
in Scotland, 293;
in Edinburgh, 299 ff.;
rapidity of his work, 308;
and Queen Mary, 309 ff.;
and the Duke of Somerset, 359.
Kolb, Francis, preaches in Bern, 42.
Krakau (Cracow), a Socinian centre, 472.
Kuiper, Willem de, a disciple of Jan Matthys, 459.
Lainez, Diego, Jesuit, 188, 537, 455, 548, 552, 556, 577 f., 595.
Lambert, Francis, 64 n.
Lasco, John À, Polish refugee in England, 358.
Latimer, Hugh, Bishop of Worcester, 371, 378, 382.
Laud, Archbishop, 355.
Lausanne, Bishop of, refuses to come to the Bern Disputation, 41, 44.
Lausanne, Bishopric of, 23, 67, 70.
Lausanne, part of the Pays-de-Vaud, 67, 113, 116, 152;
reformation in, 70, 89, 125.
League, The Perpetual (Forest Cantons), 21;
of Brunnen, 21;
of the House of God (RhÆtia), 22;
The Grey (Grisons), 22;
of the Ten Jurisdictions, 22;
The Three perpetual, of RhÆtia, 22;
Christian Civic, 48;
Borromean, 60;
The League against the Huguenots, how it arose, 205 ff.;
becomes disloyal, 207, 209, 212, 608;
The League of Paris, 207;
the Sixteen, 210.
Leclerc, Jean, French Protestant martyr, 143.
Leclerc, Pierre, Minister at Meaux, 150.
Lecturers, Royal. See Royal.
LefÈvre d’Étaples, Jacques (Faber Stapulensis) and Humanism, 11;
and Luther, 15, 74, 97;
wishes to restore the practices of the Church of the first three centuries, 109;
inspired the “group of Meaux,” 141;
anticipated Luther, 141;
translated the Bible into French, 142;
a mystic, 142 n.
Leib, Kilian, Salzburg chronicler, and the Anabaptists, 448.
Leith, 17, 279.
Lenten Fasting, 31.
Lesley, Norman, 284.
Lethington, William Maitland of. See Maitland.
Leyden, Anabaptist attempt on, 239;
siege of, 263;
University of, 264.
Leyden, Jan of. See Bockelson.
Libertines in Geneva, 116.
Lindau, 48.
Lindsay, Sir David, Scottish satirist, 278.
Lollards, in England, 316 f., 374;
and Anabaptists, 440 f.
Lords of the Congregation (Scotland), 289, 293, 299, 420.
Loriti, Heinrich of Glarus (Glareanus), Swiss Humanist, 18 n., 25 n., 29.
Lorraine, The Cardinal of. See Guise.
Louis of CondÉ. See Bourbon.
Louis of Nassau. See Nassau.
Louise of Savoy, mother of Francis I., 137, 141.
Louvain, University of, and list of Prohibited Books, 603.
Loyola, Ignatius. See Ignatius.
Lupulus. See WÖlfflin.
Luther, on clerical marriage, 37;
influence on the Reformed Churches, 13 ff.;
anticipations of his teaching, 15, 141;
and Zwingli, 27, 50;
theory of the Eucharist, 56, 412 f.; 16 ff., 24, 53, 124, 141, 148, 154, 341, 354, 405 n., 421, 452, 473, 493, 507, 529, 570, 578.
Luther’s writings known in France, 142;
in England, 320;
in Geneva, 64 n.;
in Scotland, 279.
Lutheran theologians invited to France, 146.
Lutheran, a name applied to all Protestants, 16 and n., 65, 79 n., 150, 330, 600.
Lutherans lost part of Germany to the Reformed, 3.
Lutzern, 22, 47 f.;
Diet at, 32.
Lyons, Church at, 166.
MaÇon, Jean le, first Protestant minister in Paris, 166.
Macronius, Martin, 364.
Madruzzo, Bishop of Trent and Cardinal, 567 ff., 574, 581.
Madruzzo, Ludovico, Bishop of Trent, 588.
Maier, Johann, of Eck, 26.
Mainz, Archiepiscopal Province of, 23.
Maitland, William, of Lethington, 19, 304, 310, 312.
Mamelukes (in Geneva), 62.
Mangin, Étienne, of Meaux, 150.
Manresa, Dominican Convent at, 527;
Ignatius Loyola at, 528.
Mantes, Assembly of French Protestants at, 221.
Manuel, Nicholas, artist in Bern, 40.
Manz, Felix, Swiss Anabaptist martyr, 446 f.
Marais-Saint-Germain, Rue de, 174.
Marburg Colloquy, the, 50.
Marcourt, Antoine, author of the Placards, 146.
Margaret of Parma, 242, 248, 250, 252, 257.
Marguerite d’AngoulÊme, sister of Francis I., married the King of Navarre, education and character, 136 ff.;
her Christian Platonism, 137;
relations with BriÇonnet, 138;
with Luther and Calvin, 138;
the Heptameron, 140;
accused of heresy, 145;11, 74 n., 97 n., 136 n., 143, 505 f., 534 f.
Marguerite de Valois, daughter of Catherine de’ Medici, married to Henry IV., 197.
Marignano, Battle of, 28.
Marnix, John de, 254.
Marot, Clement, his French Psalms in Geneva, 106 n., 148;
in Paris, 172; 93, 146.
Marriage, regulations for, in Geneva, 105 f.;
of the clergy, 355;
“clerical,” 36; 33, 42.
Marsiglio Ficino, 137.
Marsiglio of Padua, 434.
Martha Houses (Jesuit), 561.
Martyr Vermigli, Peter, 358.
Martyrs, in England under Queen Mary, 376 ff.;
in the Netherlands, 224, 230 f.;
in Scotland, 280 f.;
in France, 148 ff.
Mary of Burgundy, daughter of Charles the Bold and grandmother of Charles V., wife of Maximilian, 225.
Mary of Guise or Lorraine, sister of Francis Duke of Guise, and Queen of James V. of Scotland, 20, 290, 293 f., 386.
Mary of Hungary, Regent of the Netherlands, 233, 240, 518.
Mary, Queen of England, reaction under, 368 ff.;
marries Philip, prince of Spain;
Papal supremacy restored, 373;
Romanist legislation, 373 f.;
scruples about possession of ecclesiastical lands, 382;
death, 383 ff.; 292, 346, 380.
Mary, Queen of Scotland, educated in France, 283;
“the little Queen,” 283;
refuses to ratify the acts of the reforming Estates, 309;
in Scotland, 309 ff.;
her coming dreaded, 309; 281, 292, 310.
Massacres, at Vassy, 190;
at Sens, 190;
at Toulouse, 190;
at Rouen, 190;
at Paris, 190;
of St. Bartholomew, 198 f., 261, 608;
at ZÜtphen, 261;
at Haarlem, 261.
Matthew, Thomas, of Matthew’s Bible, 339.
Maubert, Place, where the Protestants were burnt, 148.
Mayenne, Duke of. See Guise.
Meaux, The group of, 11 f., 67, 97, 109, 137 ff., 145.
Meaux, the Fourteen of, 148, 150.
Meaux, Protestant Church in, 165 f.
Mechlin burnt by the Spaniards, 261.
Medici, Giovanni Giacomo de’, a condottiere, 50.
Meersburg, 47.
Melanchthon, 4 n., 148, 154, 340, 507, 519 ff., 557.
Melchiorites, The, 438;
in MÜnster, 458;
on separation, 465.
Mendoza, Pedro, Archbishop of Toledo and Cardinal, 490.
MÉrindol, ArrÊt de, 149.
Merlin, Jean Raymond, 184.
Meyer, Sebastian, Reformer of Bern, 40.
Michelet, Jules, on Calvin, 159.
Milhaud, a Huguenot stronghold, 201.
Milton, John, 13.
Ministry in the Reformed Churches, 131< htm.html#Page_207" class="pginternal">207 ff.
Paris’ students songs, 535 f.
Parker, Dr. Matthew, Archbishop of Canterbury, 404, 409, 417.
Parkhurst, John, Bishop of Norwich, 402 n., 416.
Parlement, of Paris and the Reformation, 142 f., 144, 146, 160, 162 f.,

169, 170, 171, 174, 185, 213, 220, 535, 556.
Parlement, of Aix, 147, 149;
of Bordeaux, 147, 217;
of Dijon, 176;
of Rouen, 147;
of Toulouse, 147, 171.
Parlements, French, 163 n., 217.
Parliament for the enormities of the Clergy, 326, 327.
Parma, Alexander Farnese, Duke of, 218, 220, 249, 266.
Parma, Margaret of. See Margaret.
Patrick’s Places, 280 n.
Patrimony of the Kirk, 306.
Paul IV., Pope, 1 n., 163, 169. See Caraffa.
Paul, Martin, of the GraubÜnden, 50.
Payerne, 64, 89.
Pays de Vaud, 66, 84, 89, 103, 109, 116 f.
Peace of Monsieur, 204.
Peasantry, Italian, religious condition, 501;
devotion to Francis of Assisi and his imitators, 502.
Peasants’ War, The, 54.
Penance, Doctrine of, at the Council of Trent, 584.
Penney, 117.
Penz, JÖrg, pupil of Albrecht DÜrer, Anabaptist, 436.
Picards, 11, 92.
Picardy, character of the people, 92.
Pictures in Churches (Zurich), 35, 42.
Philip of Hesse and the Anabaptists, 447, 455, 458; 58.
Philip II. of Spain, compared with Charles V., 240 f.;
policy of extirpation of Protestants, 241;
minute knowledge of Netherlands’ affairs, 243 n., 244.
Pius V., 196, 595.
Placards (manifestoes) in Geneva, 64 f.;
in Paris, about the Mass, 145.
Placards (Government proclamations against the Protestants) in the Netherlands, 242, 245, 247, 256, 265.
Platonism, Christian, 11, 137.
Poissy, Colloquy of, 20, 186 ff., 313;
Conference at, 188;
Edict of, 188.
Poitiers, Church at, 166 f.
Pole, Reginald, Archbishop of Canterbury, Cardinal, member of the Oratory of Divine Love, 505;
Legate at the Council of Trent, 566; 372, 377, 381 f., 510, 524, 587 n.
Politiques, Les, 203.
Polonorum, Bibliotheca Fratrum, 472.
Polygamy, in MÜnster, 463 ff.
Post tenebras lux, 89.
Pope, the Primacy of the, 33, 492;
Swiss Bodyguard of the, 23;
power limited by the Peace of Augsburg, 1 and n., 405, 414;
and Bishops at the Council of Trent, 592 f. See Curialism.
Popes mentioned:
Innocent III. (1198-1216), 597.
Julius II. (1503-1521), 322, 371.
Leo X. (1513-1523), 180, 319 f.
Adrian VI. (1522-1523), 494, 496 ff.
Clement VII. (1523-1534), 64, 324;
advises Henry VIII. to bigamy, 325, 510.
Paul III. (1534-1549), Reforms under, 510, 512; 345, 357, 470, 500, 510, 548, 550, 581;
and the Council of Trent, 565 and n., 581.
Julius III. (1550-1555), Council of Trent under, 565 and n., 581.
Marcellus II. (1555), 585.
Paul IV.span> (1555-1559), Council of Trent under, 565 and n., 591, 594; 245.
Pius IV. (1559-1565), his policy of reformation, 595.
Pius V. (1566-1572), 196.
Sixtus V. (1580-1590), 208.
PrÆmunire, Statutes of, 325.
Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges, 183.
Prayer-Book of King Edward VI., The First, 356 f., 361, 403 n.
Prayer-Book of King Edward IV., The Second, 287, 290 and n., 361 f., 395 f., 398, 401, 403 and n., 405.
Prayer-Book of Elizabeth, 396 ff., 401, 404, 419.
Praying Circles or Readings among the Brethren, 433.
Pre-aux-clercs, The, Psalm-singing at, 172, 183; 165.
Presence of the Body of Christ in the Sacrament of the Supper, 411 ff.
Privas, a Huguenot stronghold, 201.
Privileges of Nobles in France in the Sixteenth Century, 171.
Processions expiatory, in Paris, 146.
Proclamations about religion, by Mary, 370;
by Elizabeth, 388.
Psalms, Calvin’s Commentary on the, 97, 101.
Psalms, Singing of the, in the vernacular, 106 and n., 183, 251 f.;
in the Netherlands, 251;
in England, 355;
Clement Marot’s, 172 and n., 252.
Pseaumes included religious canticles, 107 n.
Purgatory, The Doctrine of, attacked, 31, 33, 42.
Puritanism, the beginnings of, 364.
Puy, Cardinal du, Prefect of the Inquisition, 378.
Queen, The little, 282 f.
Quignon, Cardinal, a liturgist, 357.
Quintin, Dr., speaker for the clergy at the States-General of 1560, 182.
Randolph, Sir Thomas, Elizabeth’s Ambassador in Scotland, 303, 311.
Ratisbon. See Regensburg.
Readers in the Scottish Church, 305.
Readings, 433.
Re-baptism, 68 n.; 424, 447.
Reformation of the MediÆval Church demanded by all, 484.
Reformed Churches, Confraternity among the, 20;
Confessions. See Confessions.
Reformers in Italy, 503 f.
Regensburg, The Conference at, 519 ff.;
was the parting of the ways, 523.
Regents in the Netherlands, Margaret of Austria, 225;
Mary, widowed Queen of Hungary, 233, 242;
Margaret of Parma, 242, 248, 250, 252, 257;
the Duke of Alva, see Alva;
Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma, see Parma.
Relics destroyed in England, 343, 344 and n.
Religion, Those of the, 160.
Religion, The alteration of, 396.
Renaissance, The, 6, 8.
Renan, Ernest, on Calvin, 159.
Renard, Simon, envoy of Charles V. in England, 377.
Renato, Camillo, 426.
Renaudie, Godefroy de Barry, Seigneur de la, 175.
RenÉe, Duchess of Ferrara. See Ferrara.
Requesens-y-Zuniga, Don Louis, 262.
Request, The (Netherlands), 250.
Reservatio ecclesiastica, 2.
Restitution, The, defends polygamy in MÜnster, 467.
RhÆtia, 22.
Richmond, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of, 323.
Ridley, Nicholas, Bishop of London, 318, 359, 360, 364 f., 371, 378, 382.
Riots in Geneva, 81, 87.
Rocco di Musso, on the Lake of Como, 50.
Rocheblond, Sieur de la, founder of the Paris League, 207 f.
Rochelle, La, Huguenot stronghold, 194 f., 201, 223.
Rodriguez, Simon, Jesuit, 537, 556.
Rogers, John, 339, 377.
Roll, Heinrich, Anabaptist, 456.
Roman Civil Law and ecclesiastical rule, 8.
Romanist reaction in Europe, 387.
Roser, Isabella, and Ignatius Loyola, 561 and n., 562.
Rothmann, Bernhard, Anabaptist leader in MÜnster, 452 ff.;
his Theses, 454;
doctrine of the Holy Supper, 455 f.;
accepts polygamy with difficulty, 465 f.;
death, 468.
Rotterdam, 11.
Rotuli ScotiÆ, The, 276.
RÖubli, William, first Swiss priest to marry, 37.
Rouen, Church at, 166.
Rough, John, Scottish preacher, 285.
Roussel, Gerard, 97, 109.
Royal Lecturers in Paris, 95, 98.
Rubric, The Black, on kneeling at the Lord’s Supper, 362, 405 n.
Rubric, Ornaments, of 1559, 405 and n.
Rule of Faith, Doctrine of the, at the Council of Trent, 568, 572 ff.
Ruysbroec, Jan van, the Mystic, 226.
Sacrament of the Holy Supper, ought to be celebrated weekly, 105 and n.;
both “kinds” partaken, 355, 394;
discussed at the Regensburg Conference, 522 f.;
Doctrine of, defined at the Council of Trent, 568, 582 ff.
Sacramental Controversy, Bern Theses and the, 52;
in the Netherlands and the Rhine Provines, 52;
Carlstadt’s views, 53;
Zwingli’s views permeate German cities, 53;
controversy complicated by political ideas, 54;
common thoughts about the Sacrament of the Holy Supper, 54;
Eucharist and Mass, 55;
Zwingli’s theory, 55;
Luther’s theory, < c@vhost@g@html@files@40798@40798-h@40798-h-1.htm.html#Page_53" class="pginternal">53.
Staffort Book, The, 4 n.
Staprade, Anabaptist preacher in MÜnster, 456.
States-General, The, of France, 177, 180 ff.,

185 f., 206, 212;
of the Netherlands, 241, 266.
Stipends of clergy, 69.
Stoicism and the Reformed theology, 13.
Straelen, Anthony von, 255.
Strassburg, 20, 43, 48, 60, 101, 124 f., 129, 144, 152, 453.
Submission of the Clergy (England), 327.
Substance and Presence, 59, 412 f.
Superintendents in the Scottish Church, 305, 308.
Supper, Doctrine of the Holy, at the Regensburg Conference, 522 f.,
at the Council of Trent, 583.
Supreme Governor of the Church (England), 393, 418 f.
Supreme Head of the Church (England), 327, 331, 393 and n.
Swiss soldiers, 23 f., 32.
Switzerland, political condition, 21 ff.,
how Christianised, 23;
religious war in, 49.
Synod of the Brethren, 435.
Synod of the Socinians at Krakau, 472.
Synods of the Reformed Churches, at Bern, 73, 118;
at Lausanne, 118;
at Zurich, 121;
in the French Protestant Church, 167, 168;
at Mantes, 221;
in the Dutch Church, 271;
difficulties in the way of a National Dutch Synod, 272;
in Scotland, 304.
Talavera, Fernando de, Confessor to Isabella of Castile, 490.
Temples (churches), 184.
Ten Articles, The, of the English Church, 10, 333 ff.
Teresa, Saint, 506, 531, 543.
Testament and Complaynt of the Papyngo, 278.
Theatre, French, and the Reformation, 151.
Theses, Zwingli’s Sixty-seven, 33.
Theses of Bern, The Ten, 42, 45 f.
ThÈses ÉvangÉliques de GenÈve, The, 85.
ThÈses, ÉvangÉliques of Lausanne, 103.
Theses, Luther’s, 17.
Theses, Rothmann’s, 454.
Thirty-eight Articles, The. See Articles.
Thirty-nine Articles. See Articles.
Thirty Years’ War, 2.
Thomas Aquinas, St., 78, 82, 491, 575.
Thomas of Canterbury, St., 345.
Thomism, The New, arose in Spain, 491 f.;
at the Council of Trent, 571, 577, 580, 582.
Thorens, Seigneur de, his house used in Geneva by the Evangelicals, 83 n.
Throckmorton, Sir Nicholas, Elizabeth’s Ambassador in Paris, 296 f.
Thyez, The people of, and secular excommunication, 112 n.; 117.
Tiger of France, Epistle sent to the, 176.
Tithes, attacked, 31, 446.
Toggenburg Valley, 24.
Toledo, College at, 491.
Torquemada, Thomas de, Inquisitor, 598 f.
Tournelle, La, criminal court of the Parlement of Paris, 170.
Tournon, Cardinal de, 149, 187.
Tours, Church at, 166;
Battle at, 214;
Henry IV. at, 214, 216, 220.
Tradition, Dogmatic, 423, 573 f.
Transubstantiation, 333, 412.
Trent, City of, 564 f.
Trent, Council of; First Meeting, 564-581;
papal legates at, 565 f.;
differences among the Romanist powers at, 566 f.;
debates on procedure, 568 ff.;
Second Meeting, 581-587;
definition of the doctrine of the Sacraments, 582 ff.;
Third Meeting, 587 ff.;
varying views about the reorganisation of the Church, 588 ff.;
was to be a continuation of the former Council, 589;
procedure at, 589 f.;
work of Cardinal Simonetta at, 590;
what the Council did for the Roman Catholic Church, 594;
its list of prohibited books, 604; 211, 247 f., 416, 517.
Triumvirate, The, Montmorency, St. AndrÉ and Guise, 184, 190, 193.
Tschudi, Peter, a Humanist, 18 n.
Tulchan Bishops, 360 and n.
Tunstall, Cuthbert, Bishop of Durham, 371, 373.
Twelve Articles, The (The Apostles’ Creed), 518.
Twenty-one Articles, The, of the Anabaptists, 459, 465.
Tyndale, William, 279, 317, 319, 337 ff., 377.
Ubiquity, Doctrine of, 4, 7, 57, 412 f.
Udall, Nicholas, translated into English the Paraphrases of Erasmus, 353.
Ulm, 53.
Uniformity. See Act of.
Unterwalden, a Forest Canton, 21 f., 47.
Uri, a Forest Canton, 21 f., 47.
Ursinus, Zachary, 4 n.
Utrecht protests against Alva’s taxation, 259.
Vadianus. See Watt.
Valais, The, 22, 48;
the Bishop of the, 41.
Valladolid, University of, 491.
Val Tellina, The, 50.
Vargas, Juan de, 255.
Vassy, Massacre at, 189 f.
Vatable, Francis, a royal lecturer in Paris, 96.
Vax, Antonia, attempts to poison Farel and others, 84 and n.
Vermigli, Peter Martyr, 358.
Vestments (Ornaments), Controversy about, 364, 403, 405 and n.
Vicar-General (England), 332.
Vidomne of Geneva, 62, 117.
Vienna, University of, 25, 607.
Viret, Pierre, in Geneva, 81 ff., 112.
Visitation, Spanish Crown had the right of ecclesiastical, 491.
Visitations of the Church in England, 332; 353, 407, 410.
Vlissingen (Flushing), seized by the Sea-Beggars, 260.
Voes, Heinrich, martyr in the Netherlands, 224, 230.
Volkertz, Jan, Anabaptist martyr, 236.
Vulgate, The Latin, and the Council of Trent, 573 f.
Wagner, Sebastian, 43 and n.
Walcheren, Island of, 254, 260.
Waldenses, 92, 148.
Waldshut, The Brethren met at, 434.
Wallen, Jan, Anabaptist martyr, 236.
War of Public Weal in France, 19;
Religious wars in France, 191 ff.;
in Switzerland, 49 ff.;
of the Moors and Christians in Spain, 488.
Warham, William, Archbishop of Canterbury, 18, 317, 320, 322, 329, 338.
Watt, Joachim de (Vadianus), a Humanist, 25 n., 47.
Watteville, M. de, Advoyer of Bern, 44;
Nicholas de, 45 and n.;
J. J. de, Advoyer of Bern, 45 n., 73.
Weekly Exercise, The (Scotland), 308.
Welches, La Dispute de, 44.
Werly, Pierre, a turbulent canon of Geneva, 65, 76 and n., 77 n.
Wesen, 25.
Wessel, John of, 15, 226.
Westminster, Conference at, 20, 400 ff.
Wiclif, 19, 317 f.;
influence in Scotland, 277.
Wiclifites, 92, 317.
Wieck, van der, Lutheran Syndic of MÜnster, 456 f., 460.
Wied, Hermann von, Archbishop of KÖln, 3, 558.
Wild-Beggars, The, 257.
Wildermuth, a soldier of Bern, 91.
Wildhaus, Zwingli’s birthplace, 24.
Wilhelmus van Nassouwe, 261.
Willebroek, 255.
William of Orange. See Nassau.
Wishart, George, Scottish martyr, 284.
Wittenberg, 6, 11, 453.
Wittenberg Articles, The, 341.
Wittenberg Concord, 60.
WÖlfflin, Heinrich (Lupulus), 25.
Wolmar, Melchior, taught Calvin at Bourges, 95.
Wolsey, Cardinal, 18, 319, 320, 324, 325, 343.
Works, Merit in, 33.
Worms, Conference at, 124, 125, 126.
Worms, Diet of, three forces met at, 495.
WÜrtemburg, 48.
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, 371.
Wyttenbach, Thomas, 10, 27, 38, 46.
Xavier, Francis, 537, 556, 559.
Ximenes de Cisneros, Francesco, Cardinal, 490 ff., 493, 497, 530.
Yaxley, Francis, agent of Mary of Scotland, 420 n.
Ypres, 254.
Zug, Swiss Canton, 22, 47.
Zurich, Great Council in, 29, 33 ff.;
Public Disputations in, 34 f.;
at war with the Forest Cantons, 49;
Consensus of, 60;
synod at, 122;
ecclesiastical discipline in, 129;
Anabaptists in, 441.
ZÜtphen burnt by the Spaniards, 261.
ZÜtphen, Heinrich of, 228, 230.
Zwickau Prophets, 431.
Zwingli, Bartholomew, Dean of Wesen, 25 f.
Zwingli, Huldreich, the Elder, 25.
Zwingli, Huldreich, youth and education, 24;
moral character, 37;
Humanism and, 10, 37;
and Luther, 27, 55 f.;
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