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Reformed Politicke, A (John Frége-

ville), 315

Reformers, the, and the Romish vest-

ments, 9; imperfect views of re-
ligious liberty, 267

Religious Thought in England (J.
Hunt), 1

Renaissance and Reformation in Eng-
land, the, 145-148

Replye to an Answere made by Dr.
Whitgift, 49

Report of the Royal Commission, 1893,

on the City of London, 131
Returne of Pasquill, The (T. Nash),
227, 319, 328

Rhythmes against Martin (Whip for
an Ape), 227, 319, 327
Richmond, Marprelate enquiry at, 315
Rising, Romanist, in the north, 26; in
Norfolk, 27

Rochelle, Waldegrave at, 184
Rogers, Walter, witness at Marprelate
enquiry, 315

Romanists and national progress, 26;
why religious liberty was denied
them, 266

Rough, John, 25 n.

St. Bartholomew's massacre, 46
Sampson, Thomas, Dean of Christ

Church, Oxford, 14, 33, 64
Sandys, Bishop (London), 32, 33, 45,
58; on the Romish vestments, 10; ex-
pects further reform of Prayer Book,

13

Scambler, Bishop (Norwich), condemns
Kett to the stake, 313

Scory, Bishop (Peterborough), pastor of
the secret Church in London, 25; his
alienation of Church property, 102
Scotch appeal on behalf of the Non-
conformists, 21

Scotland, correspondence about Henry
and Waldegrave, 211

Second Admonition to Parliament, 42
Secret Church in London under Mary,
pastors of, 25 and note
Secret press, a, discovered at Hamp-
stead, 48

Sedition, Marprelate charged with, 255
Service Book, the, used secretly in
Mary's reign, 24

Settle, Thomas, browbeaten at the
High Commission by Whitgift, 121
Simms, Valentine, assistant to J.
Hodgkins, 185; his examination,
335; his later activities, 204
Simms and Thomlyn, their final ex-
amination, 319

Sion's Plea against Prelacy (Alex.
Leighton), 91

Sir Marten Marr-People and his Coller
of Esses, 332

Sharpe, Edward, minister at Fawsley,
162

Sharpe, Henry, bookbinder, only partly

trusted by Penry, 163; stitches
HAY ANY WORKE, 182, 316; warned
away by Penry and Hales, 180;
invited to print the tracts, 318;
betrays the Marprelate confederates,
155, 201-204; his deposition be-
fore Hatton, 319
Smith, John, 24
Smith, Sir Thomas, 61

Some, Robert, Dr., A Godly Treatise,
153, 233; confesses that unworthy
men enter the ministry, 109; his
Godly Treatise annotated by Barrowe,
315

Some, Master], laide open in his
Coulers, 210, 233, 320, 332
Spanish Armada, the, thanksgiving for
its defeat, 165

Spurrier, a, at Pie Corner, Smithfield,
is Martin's agent, 182

S[tafford], W., attacks pluralism, 107
Stage plays, Marprelate caricatured in,

221; anti-Martinist, prohibited, 223
Stanhope, Dr., ecclesiastical lawyer, 79
Stationers' Company, the, their rights
of seizure, 23

Stewes, the laws of the, 259, 260 n.
Strickland (M.P.), 34

Stubbe, Thomas, The Gaping Gulph,
30

Stubbes, Philip, attacks pluralism, 108
Supplication, A (John Penry), pub-
lished, 316

Survey of the pretended Holy Discipline
(Dr. Bancroft), 249, 331
Sutcliffe, Matthew, Answere to Job
Throkmorton, 235, 253; his inter-
pretation of Throkmorton's denial,
308

Taylor, Rowland (the martyr), and the
Romish vestments, 9

Thacker, Elias (congregational martyr),

54
THESES MARTINIANAE [see MARTIN
JUNIOR] (fifth Marprelate Tract),
150, 318, 326; significance of its
unfinished condition, 295; how the
copy reached the printer, 297; pos-
sible theories of its authorship, 298
Thirty-nine Articles, the, their Protest-
ant character, 15

Thomlyn, Arthur, assistant to J.
Hodgkins, 185; his examination, 335
Three articles for subscription, the, 38
Throkmorton, Bess, maid of honour to
Elizabeth, 218

Throkmorton, Clement, father of Job,
184

Throkmorton, Sir George, of Coughton,
184

Throkmorton, Job, of Haseley Manor,
184, 185; supports Penry's Equity,
216; his petitions to Burleigh and
Hatton, 216; his kinship to Katherine
Parr, 218; his connection with Hacket,
219; his interview with Copinger,
252; his alias at Wolston, 187; sus-
pected of being Marprelate, 284;
pursuivant fails to arrest, 215; pro-
ceedings against, 214; charged at
the Warwick Assizes, 215; his
appeal to Hatton, 321; denies he is
Marprelate, 253, 307; alleged later
writings, 195; the authorship of the
tracts, 289-308

Thynne, Francis, refers to Marprelate,
314

Tithes and voluntary offerings, Bishop
Cooper's views on, 170, 171
Tompkins, Nicholas, Mrs. Crane's
servant, examined, 177, 316; second
examination, 319; beyond the sea,
320

To my faithfull Brethren (Vestiarian),

19

To my louynge brethren (Vestiarian),
19

Tower, the, of London, 133

Toy, Humphrey (bookbinder), 43
Tylney, Edmund, licenser of plays,

222

Tyndale, William, as a translator, 2

Udall, John, of Corpus Christi, Cam-
bridge, 53; writes Diotrephes, 152;
confers with Stephen Chatfield, 313;
his notes used by Marprelate, 213;
silenced, 312; his ministry at New-
castle-on-Tyne, 213; preached before
the Scotch General Assembly, 211;
reaches London from Newcastle, 320;
examined at Lord Cobham's, 320;
his imprisonment, 212; removed to
White Lion prison, 320; in fetters
at Croydon, 320; not Marprelate,
277

Underdown, Thomas (minister of

Lewes), conference with Whitgift, 72
Uniformity, ecclesiastical, 1; produces
nonconformity, 15; not compre-

hension, the basis of the Establish-
ment, 15; rigorously imposed, 15;
Acts of, their influence on the Church,
16; their failure, 16
Unlawful Practises of Prelates, The, 92

Vernon, Dorothy, married to Job
Throkmorton, 210 n.

Vestiarian Controversy, the, inherited
from the reformers, 9; Bishop
Hooper's action in, 9; its literature,
17
Viewe of some part of such publike
wants (The Supplication) (Penry)

181

Wake, Canon of Christ Church, 45
Waldegrave, Robert, Puritan printer,

151; sees Sir Richard Knightley,
157; enters a book at Stationers'
Hall, 312; his type ordered to be
destroyed, 312; his house raided,
312; takes some type to Mrs. Crane's
house, 312; his wife takes the type
from Mrs. Crane's, 312; with Penry
printing at East Moseley, 312;
printing at Fawsley, 161; his house
broken into, 315; gives tracts to a
visitor to Fawsley, 314; sees Sir
Richard Knightley about removing
the press, 315; retires from the
Martinist press, 182; his black letter
type, 155; his movements after leaving
Coventry, 183, 184; dines with R.
Sharpe's father-in-law, 317; re-
ported at Rochelle, 317; meets
Penry at Haseley, 316; settled in
Scotland, 211; prints A Confession
in Scotland, 320; prints Reformation
no enemie (Penry), 320; appointed
King's printer in Scotland, 321
Walsingham, Sir Francis, his reforming
sympathies, 12

Warrington, Martin's type spilled on
the ground at, 189

Warwick, Earl of, his sympathy with
the reformers, 12

Wastal, a house servant at Fawsley,
179

Wentworth, Peter (M. P.), 35

Whip for an Ape (Rhythmes against
Martin), 227, 319, 327
White Lion, the (prison), 134
White, Rev. F. O., 4 n.
Whitgift, John, outwardly conforms
in Mary's reign, 6; Dean of Lincoln,
45; why he ceased the Admonition
controversy, 49; traduces Archbishop
Parker's memory, 57; Bishop of Wor-

cester, his zeal against Roman
recusants, 67; fills all vacancies with
his own supporters, 68; resists the
alienation of cathedral lands, 76;
Archbishop of Canterbury, his quali-
fications for the primacy, 69; his
primacy, 69; his new articles, 70;
on Satan's love for women 72; de-
fends the Apocrypha, 72; his new
High Commission 74; his view of
Confirmation, 78; his interrogatories,
82 n. 2; examines H. Barrowe, 83;
opposed by Robert Beale, 98; de-
fends pluralism, 105; his character
and opinions, 111; his consistent
policy, 111; his one opposition to
his ecclesiastical superiors, 111 n.; the
failure of his policy in the long-run,
112; becomes a Protestant, 112;
and Cardinal Pole, 112; his Pro-
testantism screened by Dr. Andrew
Perne, 113; his sermon on the re-
storation of Protestantism, 114; his
deference to his superiors, 114; his
interested bestowal of patronage,
114; his faithfulness to his friends
and party, 115, 117; his defence of
Perne and Aylmer, 115; fills public
offices with his supporters, 116; his
theory of episcopacy, 117; on the
distinction of bishop and elder, 118;
his list of Bancroft's qualifications
for the episcopacy, 118; his grand
and ostentatious manner of living,
119; agreed theologically with the
Nonconformists, 120; retained the
pomp and authority of the Roman
hierarchy, 120; his merciless per-
secution of Wigginton, 120; rails
at Fenner and Settle, 121; opposes
any mercy in the treatment of Non-
conformists, 122; indicts Beale for
condemning the rack, 122; his false
promises of favour to Nonconformist
prisoner, 123; showed no pity to

Sir Richard Knightley, 123; his
relentless persecution of Udall, 124;
imprisonment under him, 127; dele-
gates censorship to R. Cosin, 312;
letter on the arrest of the printers,
318

Wickham, W., Dean of Lincoln, 47;
Bishop of Lincoln, 313
Wigginton, Giles, his opposition to
Whitgift, 83-86; his imprisonments,
84; receives early copies of the
tracts, 155; imprisoned for pos-
sessing copies of the tracts, 164;
examined, 315; not the writer of
the tracts, 280

Wigston, Roger, of Wolston Priory,
his imprisonment and trial, 206-208,
319

Wigston, Mrs., of Wolston Priory, her

imprisonment and trial, 206-208, 320
Wilson, J. Dover, M. A., corrects the
date of Th' Appellation (Penry), 179
n.; his speculation about Walde-
grave's 'Dutch letters,' 183; ex-
plains the printing of THE PRO-
TESTATYON, 193 n.

Wilson, John, replies to Whitgift and
Aylmer on illegal subscription, 95
Winchester, Bishops of, the, and the
stewes, 259

Wolf, John, consults Archbishop Whit-
gift about Waldegrave's press, 312
Wolston Priory (seat of Roger Wigs-
ton), pamphlets taken to, 189
Wood, Lawrence, of Fish Street, Lon-
don, employed by Newman, 189
Worship, character of public, 38
Wright, Leonard, A Friendly Ad-
monition, 236, 320

Yelverton,

(M.P.), 35
Yelverton MSS., 335

Young, Archbishop, robs the leaden
roofs at York, 102; robs the See of
St. David's, 102

THE END

Printed by R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, Edinburgh.

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