Caligula, a Roman emperor, his expedi- | tion against Britain, 488. Calvin, and Beza, the dissolvers of episco- pacy at Geneva, 25. Calvinists, taxed with making God the author of sin, 563.
Camalodunum, or Maldon, the chief seat of Cymbeline, 488. Made a Roman co- lony, 490, 491.
Camber, one of the sons of Brutus, has allotted to him Cambria or Wales, 478. Cambridge, burnt by the Danes, 547. Cambridge University, thought to be founded by Sigebert king of the East- Angles, 520.
Cameron, his explanation of St. Paul's manner of speaking, 210. Canterbury, by whom built, 479. Partly taken and burnt by the Danes, 547. Canute, son of Swane, chosen king after his father's death by the Danish army and fleet, 548. Driven back to his ships by Ethelred, ib. Returns with a great army from Denmark, accompanied with Lach- man king of Sweden, and Olav of Nor- way, ib. Attacks London, but is re- pulsed, 549. Divides the kingdom with Edmund by agreement, ib. After Ed- mund's death reigns sole king, 550. En- deavours the extirpation of the Saxon line, ib. Settles his kingdom, and makes peace with the neighbouring princes, ib. Causes Edric, whose treason he had made use of, to be slain, and his body to be thrown over the city-wall, ib. Sub- dues Norway, 551. Goes to Rome, and offering there rich gifts, vows amend- ment of life, ib. Dies at Shaftsbury, and buried at Winchester, ib. His cen- sure, ib. His remarkable instance of the weakness of kings, 552.
Capis, one in the catalogue of the ancient British kings, 482.
Capoirus, another of the same number,
Caractacus, the youngest son of Cunobe- line, succeeds in the kingdom, 488. Is overthrown by Aulus Plautius, 489. Heads the Silures against the Romans, 490. Betrayed by Cartismandua, to whom he fled for refuge, ib. Sent to Rome, ib. His speech to the emperor, ib. By the braveness of his carriage, he obtains pardon for himself and all his company, ib.
Carausius, grown rich with piracy, pos- sesses himself of this island, 498. He fortifies the wall of Severus, ib. In the midst of the great preparations of Con- stantius Chlorus against him, he is slain by his friend Alectus, ib. Carinus, sent by his father Carus the em- peror, to govern Britain, is overcome and slain by Dioclesian, 498. Carlisle, by whom and when built, 479. Cartismandua, queen of the Brigantes, de- livers Caractacus bound to the Romans, 490. Deserts her husband Venutius, and gives both herself and kingdom to Vello- catus, one of his squires, 491. Carvilius, the first Roman who sought di- vorce, and why, 180.
Carvilius, a petty king in Britain, with three others, assaults the Roman camp,
Cataracta, an ancient city in Yorkshire, burnt by Arnred a tyrant, 526. Catellus, an ancient British king, 482. Cathay, description of that country and in- habitants, 572.
Cerdic, a Saxon prince, lands at Cerdic- shore, and overthrows the Britons, 509. Defeats their king Natanleod in a memo- rable battle, 510. Founds the kingdom of the West Saxons, ib. See Kerdic. Ceremonies, oppose the reason and end of the gospel, 45. Frustrate the end of Christ's coming in the flesh, 46. Chancelor, Richard, his arrival at Moscow, and reception there, 578. Chaplains, what they are, 324.
Charity, the fulfilling of the law, 122.--and | Cingetorix, a petty king in Britain, assaults mutual forbearance, means to abate popery, 565.
Charles I. censured for dissolving parlia- ments, 276. Remarks on his devotion, 278, 279. How attended to the house of cominons, 282. His conduct towards the Irish rebels, 306. His indecent behaviour in the playhouse, &c. 371. Charged with poisoning his father, 384 With several irregular actions, 400. His flight to the Isle of Wight, 943.
Charles II. declared he would never pardon those who put his father to death, though this was said to be his father's dying in- junction, 939.
Charles V., how he deceived many German cities, 305.
Charles Gustavus, king of Sweden, letters from Oliver to, 604, 605, 007, 611, 613, 615, 618, 619, 624, 628, 633. From Richard the protector, 634, 635. From the parliament restored, 637.
Chastity, the defence of it recommended,
Chaucer, his character of the priests of his time, 10, 12.
Cheek, Sir John, his testimony concerning Martin Bucer, 159.
Cherin, an ancient British king, 482. Christ, his method of instructing men, 83. His manner of teaching, 223. Never ex- ercised force but once, 421. Christenings, reasons against taking fees for them, 430.
Christiern, king of Denmark, his bloody
Christian faith, received in Britain by King Lucius, 496. Said to have been preached by Faganus and Deruvianus, ib. Others say long before by Simon Zelotes, or Joseph of Arimathea, ib. Upon what oc- casion preached to the Saxons, 514. Christians, primitive, all things in common among them, 203. Their behaviour to tyrants, 373.
Christina, queen of Sweden, letter to her from the English commonwealth, 593. Her character, 931. Chrysanthus, the son of Marcianus a bishop, made deputy of Britain by Theodosius,
Chrysostom, St. was an admirer of Aris- tophanes, 105. His explanation of St. Paul's epistle relating to obedience to the higher powers, 362, 396.
Church, of the Reformation of the Disci- pline of, in England, and the causes that have prevented it, I. The likeliest means to remove hirelings out of the, 423. Church, not to be reformed while governed by prelates, 30. Its constitution and fabric set out in the prophecy of Ezekiel, 31. When able to do her great works upon the unforced obedience of men, it argues a divinity about her, 47. Her humility procures her the greatest re- spect, ib. Design of the prelates in call- ing the church Our mother, 72. Demands our obedience when she holds to the rules of Scripture, 329. Excommunicates not to destruction, 422. Will not cease to persecute till it ceases to be mercenary, 947.
Church of England, honours and prefer- ments should not be the incitements to her service, 70, 71. Difference between the church of Rome and her, 330. Main- tains that the word of God is the rule of true religion, and rejects implicit faith,
the Roman camp, 487. Is taken prisoner by Cæsar, ib.
Claudius, the emperor, is persuaded by Bericus, though a Briton, to invade this island, 488. Sends Aulus Plautius hither with an army, ib. He comes over him- self and joins with Plautius, 489. De- feats the Britons in a set battle, and takes Camalodunum, ib. Returns to Rome, leaving Plautius behind, ib. He has ex- cessive honours decreed him by the se- nate, ib.
Clemens Alexandrinus, no authority for bishops being above presbyters, to be found in his works, 26. His counsel to the presbyters of Corinth, 39. Clergy, should be patterns of temperance, and teach us to contemn the world, 53. Advised not to gape after preferments, 69. Their condition in England, 940. Clergy, British, their bad character by Gildas, 512
Cliguellius, an ancient British king, 482. Clodius Albinus succeeds Pertinax in the government of Britain for the Romans, 497. Is vanquished and slain in a battle against Septimus Severus, ib. Cloten, reigned king of Cornwall, 480. Clotenus, an ancient British king, 482. Cloud, one sometimes fiery, sometimes bloody, seen over all England, 544. Coillus, an ancient British king, 482. Coilus, the son of Marius, leaves the king- dom to Lucius, 496.
Colasterion, a defence of the doctrine and discipline of divorce, so called, 220. Comail, and two other British kings, slain by Keaulin, and his son Cuthwin, 513. Comet, one seen in August 678, in manner of a fiery pillar, 522. Two appear about the sun, 524. Portending famine, and the troubled state of the whole realm, 543. Or blazing star, seen to stream terribly over England, and other parts of the world, 559.
Comius of Arras, sent by Cæsar to make a party among the Britons, 484. Commodus, slain by his own officers, de- clared an enemy to his country, 383. Commons, with the king, make a good par- liament, 395, 398. Their grant to K. Richard II., and K. Henry IV., 400. Commonwealth, of England, more equally balanced than any other civil govern- ment, 17. Means proposed to heal the ruptures in it, 439. A free commonwealth delineated, 441. Reasons for establishing one, 442, &c. Comes nearest to the go- vernment recommended by Christ, 444. Preferable to monarchy, 455. Conanus, Aurelius, an ancient British king, 513.
Condidan, a British king, vanquished and slain, 513.
Conscience, not to be forced in religious matters, 413, &c. Constans, the emperor, put to death by the christian soldiers, 373. Of a monk made emperor, 501. Reduces Spain, ib. Dis- placing Gerontius, is opposed by him, and slain, ib. Constantine, makes war upon Licinius, and why, 373.
Constantine, the son of Constantius Chlorus, saluted emperor after his father's death, 499. His mother said to be Helena the daughter of Coilus a British prince, ib. His eldest son enjoys this island, ib. A common soldier of the same name saluted emperor, 501. By the valour of Edebe- cus and Gerontius, he gains in France as far as Arles, ib. By the conduct of his son Constans, and of Gerontius, he re- duces all Spain, ib. Gerontius displaced by him, calls in the Vandals against him, ib. Besieged by Constantius Comes, he turns priest, is afterwards carried into Italy, and put to death, ib. Constantine, the son of Cador, sharply in- veighed against by Gildas, 513. He is said to have murdered two young princes of the blood royal, ib. Constantine, king of Scotland, joining with the Danes and Irish under Anlaf, is over- thrown by Athelstan, 539. Constantius Chlorus sent against Carausius, 498 Defeats Alectus, who is slain in the battle, ib. Is acknowledged by the Britons as their deliverer, 499. Divides the em- pire with Galerius, ib. Dies at York, ib. Constantius, the son of Constantine, over- comes Magnentius, who contended with him for the sole empire, 499.
Consubstantiation, not a mortal error, 563. Contention, in ministers of the gospel, scarce allowable even for their own rights, 423.
Copulation, no longer to be esteemed matri- monial, than it is an effect of love, 185. Cordeilla's sincere answer to her father, begets his displeasure, 479. She is mar- ried to Aganippus, a king in Gaul, 480. She receives her father, rejected by his other daughters, with most dutiful af- fection, ib. Restores him to his crown, and reigns after him, ib. Vanquished, deposed, and imprisoned by her two sis- ters' sons, ib.
Corineus, a Trojan commander, joins forces with Brutus, 478. Slays Imbertus, ib. Arrives with Brutus in this island, ib. Cornwall from him denominated falls to his lot, ib. Overcomes the giant Goema- gog, ib.
Corinthians, governed by presbyters, 36. Schism among them not remedied by episcopacy, ib.
Coronation-Oath, some words said to be struck out of it, 409.
Covenant, what it enjoined, 268. Council, General, what their power and employment, 446. Should be perpetual, ib. Instances of the perpetuity of such a council among other states, ib. Council, Saxon, of little authority, 224. Council of nobles and prelates at Caln in Wiltshire, killed and maimed by the fall- ing in of the room, where they sate, 543. Council of State, their reply to the Danish ambassadors, &c. 597.
Councils and Fathers, an entangled wood, which papists love to fight in, 562. Courland, duke of, Oliver's letter to him,
Craig, John, his opinion of kings, 238. Cranmer, and the other bishops, concur in setting aside the princesses Mary and Elizabeth, 3.
Crida, the first of the Mercian kingdom,
Criminal, more just to try one by a court of justice, than to butcher him without trial, 344
Crowns, a clerical debate about the right shaving them, 521. Cromwell, his actions compared with those of the earl of Ormond, 265. letters, 603, 792. His character, 944. His state Cuichelm, the West-Saxon, sends Eumerus to assassinate King Edwin, 517. Is bap- tized in Dorchester, but dies the same year, 519.
Cullen, council there, voted tithes to be God's rent, 429.
Cunedagius, the son of Regan, deposeth his aunt Cordeilla, 480. Shares the king- dom with his cousin Marganus, is in- vaded by him, meets him and overcomes him, ib.
Cuneglas, a British king, reigns one of five a little before the Saxons were settled, 513.
Cunobeline, see Kymbeline. Cutha, helps his father Keaulin against Ethelbert, 512.
Cuthred, king of the West-Saxons, joins with Ethelbald the Mercian, and gains a victory over the Welsh, 525. He has a fierce battle with Ethelbald the Mercian, which he not long survives, ib. A king of Kent of the same name, 528. Cuthulf, the brother of Keaulin, vanquishes the Britons at Bedanford, and takes seve- ral towns, 513.
Cuthwin, see Keaulin. Cyprian, unwilling to act without the as- sent of his assistant laics, 49. Episco- pacy in his time, different from what it has been since, 58.
Danaus, the story of him and his fifty daughters, 350.
Danes, first appear in the west, 526. They slay the king's gatherer of customs, ib. Landing at Lindisfarne in Yorkshire, they pillage that monastery, 527. At- tempting to spoil another monastery, they are cut off by the English, ib. Waste and destroy Northumberland, 529. waste Shepey in Kent, and engage with Ecbert, near the river Carr, ib. Are put to flight by Ecbert, 530. Their various success in the reign of Ethelwolf, ib. &c. Many great battles between them and
the English in the reign of Ethelred, 532. Their whole army being defeated, they are brought to terms by King Alfred, 534 In the same king's reign, several vast fleets of Danes arrive with fresh sup- plies, ib. 535. Many thousands destroyed at Colchester, and in their retreat from Maldon, 537 A vast army of them over- thrown by King Athelstan, 539. Massa- cred by the English in all parts of the land in the reign of King Ethelred, 545. Danish ambassadors, answers to them
Danius, reckoned among the ancient Bri- from the council of state, 597. Dantzick, complained of, for imposing a tish kings, 481. tribute on the English merchants, for re- lief of the king of Scots, 592. Oliver's letter to the consuls and senators of that republic, 623
David, his exclamation in the 51st Psalm explained, 234. Absolved by God him- self from the guilt of his sín, 355. conduct towards Saul accounted for, His 368. Compared with King Charles, 371. Dedication, remarks on one to our Saviour,
Dee, John, the mathematician, invited to Moscow, 581.
Defence of the people of England against Salmasius, 338. In the original Latin, 649. Second. against an writer, 919. anonymous
In the original Latin, 707. Of the author against Alexander More, Deira, kingdom of, in Northumberland, in Latin, 733. Demetrius Evanowich, emperor of Russia, set up by Alla, the West-Saxon, 512, 513. an impostor, dragged out of his bed, and pulled to pieces, 575.
Denmark, king of, see Frederick III. Deodate, Charles, letters to, 952, 954. Digression, concerning the affairs of church Deruvianus, see Faganus. Dinothus, abbot of Bangor, his speech to and state, in 1631, 302, &c. Dioclesian, a king of Syria, and his fifty bishop Austin, 516. daughters, said to have been driven upon Dioclesian, the emperor, persecuted his this island, 476. Diodorus, his account how the Ethiopians christian subjects, 499. punish criminals, 379.-of the succession Diogenes, his delineation of a king, 380. to kingdoms, 391. Dionysius Alexandrinus, commanded in a vision to read any books whatever, 107.
Dis, the first peopler of this island, as some fabulously affirm, the same with Samo- thes, 476.
Disciples of Christ, their saying relating to Discipline, in the church, necessary to re- marriage, explained, 207. move disorder, 29. Its definitive decrees to be speedy, but the execution of rigour slow, 47.
Dispensation, what it is, 141. Divines, advice to them not to be disturb- ers of civil affairs, 242. Divorce, arguments for it, addressed to the parliament and assembly, 120, &c. In- disposition, unfitness, or contrariety of mind, a better reason for it than natural frigidity, 125.
Reasons for it, 126-130, 133-135. An idolatrous heretic to be di- vorced, when no hope of conversion, 130. To prohibit divorce sought for natural causes, is against nature, 133. neither did nor could abrogate the law Christ of divorce, 136. Permitted for hardness of heart, not to be understood by the common exposition, 137. allowed of it, 143. The law of divorce How Moses not the premises of a succeeding law, 145. A law of moral equity, 146 Not permitted, from the custom of Egypt, 147. Moses gave not this law unwill- ingly, ib. Not given for wives only, 149. Christ's sentence concerning it, how to be expounded, 150. conscience, 155. Not to be restrained by To be tried by law, 157. Will occasion few inconveni- ences, ib. No inlet to licence and con- fusion, 189. The prohibition of it avails to no good end, 192 Either never esta- blished or never abolished, 196. Lawful to Christians for many causes equal to adultery, 216. Luther, and Melancthon, 217. By Eras- Maintained by Wickliff, mus, Bucer, and Fagius, ib. By Peter Martyr, Beza, and others, 217-219. What the ancient churches thought of divorce,
166. St. Paul's words concerning it, ex- plained, 168. Commanded to certain men, ib. Being permitted to God's an- cient people, it belongs also to Christians, ib. Allowed by Christ for other causes beside adultery, 170. For what cause permitted by the civil law, ib. Allowed by christian emperors, in case of mutual consent, 172. Why permitted to the Jews, 224. Why Milton wrote on the subject, 934.
Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce, 120. Judgment of Martin Bucer, concerning, Domitian, the killing of him commended 159. Defence of that tract, 220, &c. Ar- guments against it refuted, 222, &c. Donaldus, said to have headed the Caledo- by Pliny, 382. nians against Septimius Severus, 498. Donaldus, king of Scotland, brought to hard conditions by Osbert and Ella, kings of Northumberland, 531. Downam, bishop, his opinion of the oppo- sers of the episcopal government, 63. Druids, falsely alleged out of Cæsar to have forbidden the Britons to write their memorable deeds, 475. Uttering direful prayers, astonish the Romans, 491. Their destruction in the isle of Anglesey, an- Druis, the third from Samothes, fabulously ciently Mona, ib. written the most ancient king in this Drunkenness, how to be prevented, 193. island, 476. Duina, river, account of its fall into the sea at Archangel, 568.
Dunstan, sent by the nobles to reprove King Edwy, for his luxury, 541. Banished by the king, and his monastery rifled, ib. Recalled by King Edgar, ib. His mira- culous escape when the rest of the com- pany were killed by the fall of a house, 543. His saying of Ethelred, at the time Dunwallo Molmutius, son of Cloten, king of his being baptized, 544. His death and character, ib. of Cornwall, reduces the whole island into a monarchy, 480. Said to be the first Durstus, king of the Picts, said to be slain British king that wore a crown of gold, ib. Establishes the Molmutine laws, ib. by the joint forces of the Britons and Romans, 504.
Dutch, summary of the damages received from them by the East-India company, 602, 603.
Eadwald falls back to heathenism, 516. Runs distracted, but afterwards returns to his right mind and faith, 517. By what means it happened, ib. sister Edelburga in marriage to Edwin, He gives his ib. Leaves his son Ercombert to suc- ceed, 519.
Eadbert, shares with his two brothers in the kingdom of Kent, 524. His death, 525. Eadbert, king of Northumberland, after Kelwolf, wars against the Picts, ib. Joins with Unust, king of the Picts, against the Britons in Cumberland, ib. Eadbright, usurping the kingdom of Kent, Forsakes his crown for a monk's hood, ib. and contending with Kenulph the Mer- Eadburga, by chance poisons her husband cian, is taking prisoner, 527. Birthric, with a cup which she had pre- pared for another, 528 posed to her by Charles the great, to The choice pro- whom she fled, ib. He assigns her a rich monastery to dwell in as abbess, ib. tected of unchastity, she is expelled, ib. De- Eandred, son of Earldulf, reigns 30 years And dies in beggary at Pavia, ib. king of Northumberland, after Alfwold, the usurper, 528. Becomes tributary to Ecbert, 529.
Eanfrid, the son of Edwin, converted and baptized, 518.
Eanfrid, the son of Ethelfrid, succeeds in Eardulf, supposed to have been slain by the kingdom of Bernicia, 519. Slain, ib. Ethelred, 527. Is made king of the Nor- thumbrians, in York, after Osbald, ib. In a war raised against him by his peo- ple, he gets the victory, ib. Earth, whole, inhabited before the flood, of his kingdom by Alfwold, 528. Driven out
East-Angles, kingdom of, by whom erect- East-India Company, English, summary of ed, 510. Reclaimed to Christianity, 519. their damages from the Dutch, 602, 603.
East-Saxon, kingdom, by whom began, | 510. The people converted by Melitus, 515. They expel their bishop, and re- nounce their faith, 516, 517. Are recon- verted by means of Oswi, 520. Ebrane, succeeds his father Mempricius, in the kingdom of Britain, 479. Builds Caer- Ebrane, now York, and other places, ib. Ecbert, succeeds his father Ercombert, in the kingdom of Kent, 521. Dying, leaves a suspicion of having slain his uncle's sons, Ecbert and Egelbright, ib. Ecbert, of the West-Saxon lineage, flees from Birthric's suspicion to Offa, and thence into France, 527. After Birthric's decease is recalled, and with general ap- plause made king, ib. He subdues the Britons of Cornwall and beyond Severn, 528
Overthrows Bernulf at Ellandune or Wilton, ib. The East-Angles yield to his sovereignty, ib. Drives Baldred, king of Kent, out of his kingdom, and causes Kent and other provinces to sub- mit, ib. Withlaf, of Mercia, becomes tributary to him, 529. Gives the Danes battle by the river Carr, ib. In another battle he puts to flight a great army of them, together with the Cornish men, 530. He dies, and is buried at Winches- ter, ib.
Ecclesiastical Causes, Treatise of Civil Power in, 412.
Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction, a pure tyranni- cal forgery of the prelates, 47. Ecferth, the son of Offa, the Mercian, with- in four months ends his reign, 527. Ecfrid, Oswi's eldest son, succeeds him in the kingdom of Northumberland, 521. Wins Lindsey from Wulfer the Mercian, 522. He wars against Ethelred, the bro- ther of Wulfer, ib. He sends Bertus with an army to subdue Ireland, 523. March- ing against the Picts, is cut off with most of his army, ib. His death revenged by Bertfrid a Northumbrian captain, ib. Eclipse of the sun, followed by a pestilence, 521. Another, obscuring almost his whole orb, as with a black shield, 524. Edan, a king of the Scots in Britain, put to flight by Ethelfrid, 515. Edelard, king of the West-Saxons, after Ina, molested with the rebellion of his kinsman Oswald, 525. Overcoming those troubles, dies in peace, ib. Edgar, the brother and successor of Edwy, in the English monarchy, calls home Dunstan from banishment, 541. His prosperous reign, and favour towards the monks, ib. His strict observance of justice, and care to secure the nation with a strong fleet, ib. He is homaged and rowed down the river Dee, by eight kings, 542. His expostulation with Ke- ned, king of Scotland, ib. He is cheated by the treacherous duke Athelwold of Elfrida, ib. Whom, avenging himself upon the said duke, he marries, 542. Attempting the chastity of a young lady at Andover, is pleasantly deceived by the mother, 543. Buried at Glaston ab- bey, 542.
Edgar, surnamed Atheling, his right and title to the crown of England, from his grandfather Edmund Ironside, 557, 559. Excluded by Harold, son of Earl God- win, 559.
Edilhere, the brother and successor of Anna, in the kingdom of the East-Angles, slain in a battle against Oswi, 521. Edilwalk, the South-Saxon, persuaded to Christianity by Wulfer, 522. Edith, Earl Godwin's daughter, eminent for learning. 554. Is married to Edward the Confessor, ib. Is harshly divorced by him, 555.
Edmund, crowned king of the East-Angles, at Bury, 531. His whole army put to flight by the Danes, he is taken, bound to a stake, and shot with arrows, 532. Edmund, the brother and successor of Athel-
stan, in the English monarchy, frees Mercia, and takes several towns from the Danes, 540. He drives Anlaf and Suth- frid out of Northumberland, and Dun- mail out of Cumberland, ib. The strange manner of his death, ib. Edmund, surnamed Ironside, the son of Ethelred, set up by divers of the nobles against Canute, 549. In several battles against the Danes, he comes off for the most part victorious, ib. At length con- sents to divide the kingdom with Canute, ib. His death thought to have been vio- lent, 550.
Edred, third brother and successor of Athelstan, reduces the Northumbrians, and puts an end to that kingdom, 541. Dies in the flower of his age, and buried at Winchester, ib.
relation of his conversion to Christianity, 518. He persuades Eorpwald, the son of Redwald, to embrace the christian faith, ib. He is slain in a battle against Ked- wallay, 519.
Edric, the son of Edilwalk, king of South-Edwin, duke of the Mercians. See Morcar. Saxons, slain by Kedwalla, the West- Egyptians, their conduct toward kings, Saxon, 522. 378.
Eric, a descendant of Ermenred, king of the South-Saxons, 522. Died a violent death and left his kingdom in disorder, ib. 523.
Edric, surnamed Streon, advanced by King Ethelred, marries his daughter Edgitha, 546. He secretly murders two noblemen whom he had invited to his lodging, 548. He practises against the life of prince Edmund, and revolts to the Danes, ib. His cunning devices to hinder Edmund in the prosecution of his victories against Canute, 549. Is thought by some to have been the contriver of King Edmund's murder, 550. The government of the Mercians conferred upon him, ib. Put to death by Canute, and his head stuck upon a pole, and set upon the highest tower in London, ib.
Education, of youth, rules for the method and progress of it, 98, &c. That of the clergy generally at the public cost, 436. Edward the Confessor, his law relating to the king's office, 397. Said to be the first that cured the king's evil, 558. To have cured blindness with the water wherein he washed his hands, ib. Edward VI. a committee appointed by him to frame ecclesiastical laws, 219 Di- vorce allowed by those laws for other causes beside adultery, ib. Acknow- ledges the common-prayer book to be chiefly a translation of the mass book, Edward, the elder, son and successor of King Alfred, 536. Has war with Ethel- wald his kinsman, who stirs up the Danes against him, ib. Builds Witham in Es- sex, 537. He proves successful and po- tent, divers princes and great command- ers of the Danes submitting to him, ib. 538. The king and whole nation of Scot- land, with divers other princes and peo- ple, do him homage as their sovereign, 538 Dies at Farendon, ib. And buried at Winchester, ib.
Edward, surnamed the younger, Edgar's son, by his first wife Egelfleda, advanced to the throne, 543. The contest in his reign between the monks and secular priests, ib. Great mischief done by the falling of a house where the general council for deciding the controversy was held, ib. Inhumanly murdered by the treachery of his step-mother Elfrida, ib. Edward, son of Edmund Ironside, heir ap- parent to the crown, dies at London, 557. Edward, surnamed the Confessor, the son of King Ethelred, by Emma, after Hardic- nute's death is crowned at Winchester, 554. Seizes on the treasures of his mother Queen Emma, ib. Marries Edith, Earl Godwin's daughter, ib. Makes prepara- tion against Magnus, king of Norway, ib. But next year makes peace with Harold Harvager, ib. He advances the Normans in England, which proves of ill conse- quence, ib. He is opposed by Earl God- win, in the cause of Eustace of Boloign, banishes the earl, and divorces his daughter whom he had married, 555. Entertains Duke William of Normandy, ib. He sends Odo and Radulph, with a fleet, against Godwin and his sons exer- cising piracy, 556. Reconciliation at length made, he restores the earl, his sons and daughter, all to their former digni- ties, ib. He is said to have designed Duke William of Normandy his suc- cessor to the crown, 558. Buried at West- minster, ib. His character, ib. Edwi, the son and successor of Edmund, is crowned at Kingston, 541. He banishes bishop Dunstan, for reproving his wan- tonness with Algiva, ib. The Mercians and Northumbrians set up his brother Edgar, ib. With grief whereof he ends his days, and is buried at Winchester, ib. Edwin, thrown out of the kingdom of Deira, by Ethelfrid, 513, 517. Fleeing to Red- wal, the East-Angle, for refuge, is defend- ed against Ethelfrid, 517. He exceeds in power and extent of dominion all before him, ib. Marries Edelburga, the sister of Eadbald, ib. He is wounded by an as- sassin from Cuichelm, ib. The strange
Eikon Basilike, whether written by King Charles, 276. Answers to the several heads of that tract: On the king's call- ing his last parliament, ib. Upon the earl of Strafford's death, 280. Upon his going to the house of commons, 282. Upon the insolency of the tumults, 284. Upon the bill for triennial parliaments, 287. Upon his retirement from West- minster, 289. Upon the queen's depar ture, 293. Upon his repulse at Hull, and the fate of the Hothams, ib. Upon the listing and raising of armies, 296. Upon seizing the magazines, 299. Upon the nineteen propositions, 302. On the re- bellion in Ireland, 306. Upon the calling in of the Scots, 309. Upon the covenant, 311. Upon the many jealousies, &c. 312. Upon the ordinance against the com- mon-prayer book, 314. Upon the differ- ences in point of church government, 315. Upon the Uxbridge treaty, &c. 318. Upon the various events of the war, 319. Upon the reformation of the times, 321. Upon his letters taken and divulged, 322. Upon his going to the Scots, 323. Upon the Scots delivering the king to the Eng- lish, 324. Upon denying him the attend- ance of his chaplains, ib. Upon his pe- nitential vows and meditations at Holm- by, 325. Upon the army's surprisal of the king at Holmby, 327. To the prince of Wales, 328. Meditations on death, 332. Eikonoclastes, Baron's preface to that tract, 271. The author's preface, 273. Reason of calling it so, 275. Elanius, reckoned in the number of ancient British kings, 481. Eldadus, 482. Eldol, 482.
Elfled, the sister of King Edward the elder, her army of Mercians victorious against the Welsh, 537. Takes Derby from the Danes, ib. She dies at Tamworth, 538. Elfred, the son of King Ethelred, by Emma, betrayed by Earl Godwin, and cruelly made away by Harold, 552.
Elfwald, succeeding Ethelred in Northum- berland, is rebelled against by two of his noblemen, Osbald and Athelheard, 526. He is slain by the conspiracy of Siggan, one of his nobles, ib. Elfwin, slain in a battle between his bro- ther Ecfrid and Ethelred, 523. Elidure, his noble demeanour towards his deposed brother, 482. After Archigallo's death, he resumes the government, ib. Eliud, reckoned in the number of ancient British kings, 482.
Elizabeth, Queen, against presbyterian reformation, 450.
Ella, the Saxon, lands with his three sons, and beats the Britons in two battles, 509. He and his son Cissa take Andredchester, in Kent, by force, ib. Begins his king- dom of the South-Saxons, ib.
Ella, a king in Northumberland, 531. Elmer, a monk of Malmsbury, fitted wings to his hands and feet, with which he flew more than a furlong, 559. Elwold, nephew of Ethelwald, reigns king of the East-Angles, after Aldulf, 528. Embassador. See Ambassador, also French, Spanish, &c.
Emeric, succeeds Otho in the kingdom of Kent, 512.
Emma, the daughter of Richard, duke of Normandy, married first to King Ethel- red, 545. Afterwards to Canute, 550. Ba- nished by her son-in-law Harold, she re- tires to Flanders, and is entertained by Earl Baldwin, 552. Her treasures seized on by her son King Edward, 554. She dies, and is buried at Winchester, 555. A tradition concerning her questioned, ib. Emperors, of Rome, their custom to wor- ship the people, 363 England, history of, 475.
English nation, their pronunciation of the Vowels censured, 99. Its character, 115. The wits of Britain preferred before the French by Julius Agricola, ib. Had been foremost in the Reformation, but for the perverseness of the prelates, ib. Have learnt their vices under kingly govern.
ment, 302. When they began to imitate the French in their manners, 555. Their effeminacy and dissoluteness made them an easy prey to William the Conqueror, 561. Their putting Charles the First to death defended, 338, 919. Englishmen, to be trusted in the election
of pastors, as well as in that of knights and burgesses, 17. Their noble achieve- ments lessened by monks and mechanics, 43
Enniaunus, an ancient British king, de- posed, 482.
Eorpwald, the son of Redwald, king of the East-Angles, persuaded to Christianity by Edwin, 518. He is slain in fight by Ricbert, a 519. pagan, Epiphanius, his opinion of divorce, 214. Episcopacy, answers to several objections relating to the inconveniences of abolish- ing it, 18, 19. Insufficiency of testimonies for it from antiquity, and the fathers, 22 Not to be deduced from the apostolical times, 28. A mere child of ceremony, 33. Not recommended to the Corinthians by St. Paul, as a remedy against schism, 38. See Prelacy, and Prelatical Episco-
Erasmus, writes his treatise of divorce, for the benefit of England, 174. Erchenwin, said to be the erector of the kingdom of the East-Saxons, 510. Ercombert, succeeds Eadbald in the king- dom of Kent, 519. Orders the destroying of idols, ib. The first establisher of Lent here, ib. Is succeeded by his son Ecbert,
Ermenred, thought to have had more right to the kingdom than Ercombert, 519. Errours, of service to the attainment of truth, 107.
Escwin, and Kentwin, the nephew and son of Kinegil, said to have succeeded Ken- walk in the government of the West- Saxons, 522. Escwin joins battle with Wulfer at Bedanhafde, ib.
Estrildis, beloved by Locrine, 478. With her daughter Sabra thrown into a river, 479.
Ethelbald, king of Mercia, after Ina, com- mands all the provinces on this side Humber, 524. He takes the town of Somerton, ib. Fraudulently assaults part of Northumberland in Eadbert's ab- sence, 525. His encounter at Beorford with Cuthred the West-Saxon, ib. In a fight at Secandune is slain, ib. Ethelbald, and Ethelbert, share the English Saxon kingdom between them after their father Ethelwolf, 531. Ethelbald marries Judith his father's widow, ib. Is buried at Sherburn, ib. Ethelbert, succeeds Emeric in the kingdom of Kent, 512 He is defeated at Wibban- dun by Keaulin and his son Cutha, ib. Enlarges his dominions from Kent to Humber, 514. Civilly receives Austin and his fellow preachers of the gospel, ib. Is himself baptized, 515. Moved by Aus- tin, he builds St. Peter's church in Can- terbury, and endows it, ib. He builds and endows St. Paul's church in London, and the cathedral at Rochester, ib. His death, 516.
Ethelbert, Eadbert, and Alric, succeed their father Victred, in the kingdom of Kent, 524.
Ethelbert, or Pren. See Eadbright. Ethelbert, the son of Ethelwolf, enjoys the whole kingdom to himself, 531. During his reign, the Danes waste Kent, ib. Is buried with his brother at Sherburn, 532.
Ethelfrid, succeeds Ethelric in the kingdom of Northumberland, 514. Britons, 515. Overthrows Edan, king of He wastes the Scots, ib. In a battle at Westchester, slays above 1200 monks, 516. Ethelmund, and Weolstan, in a fight be- tween the Worcestershire men and Wilt- shire men, slain, 527. Ethelred, succeeding his brother Wolfer in the kingdom of Mercia, recovers Lindsey, and other parts, 522. Invades the king- dom of Kent, ib. A sore battle between him and Ecfrid the Northumbrian, 523. After the violent death of his queen, he exchanges his crown for a monk's cowl, Ethelred, the son of Mollo, the usurper Al- cred being forsaken by the Northum- brians and deposed, crowned in his stead, 526. Having caused three of his noblemen
to be treacherously slain, is driven into banishment, ib. After ten years' banish- ment restored again, ib. He cruelly and treacherously puts to death Oelf and Oelfwin, the sons of Elfwald, formerly king, ib. And afterwards Osred, who, though shaven a monk, attempted again upon the kingdom, ib. He marries Elfled the daughter of Offa, 527. rably slain by his people, ib. And is mise- Ethelred, the son of Eandred, driven out in his 4th year, 530. Ethelred, the third son of Ethelwolf, the slain the 4th year after, ib. Is reinstated, but third monarch of the English-Saxons, in- fested with fresh invasions of the Danes, 532. He fights several great battles with them, ib. 533 He dies in the 5th year of Ethelred, the son of Edgar by Elfrida, his reign, and is buried at Winburn, 533. crowned at Kingston, 543. Dunstan at his baptism presages ill of his future reign, 544. New invasions of the Danes, and great spoils committed by them in his reign, ib. &c. Being reduced to straits by the Danes, he retires into Normandy, 547 Is recalled by his people, and joy. fully received, 548 Drives Canute the Dane back to his ships, ib. He dies at London, 549.
Ethelric, expels Edwin the son of Alla out Ethelwald, the son of Oswald, taking part of the kingdom of Deira, 513. with the Mercians, withdraws his forces Ethelwald, succeeds Edelhere in the king- from the field, 521. dom of the East-Angles, 521. Ethelwald, surnamed Mollo, set up king of the Northumbrians in the room of Os- wulf, 525. He slays in battle Oswin, but is set upon by Alcred, who assumes his Ethelrolf, the second monarch of the Eng- place, ib. lish Saxons, of a mild nature, not war- like, or ambitious, 530. He with his son Ethelbald gives the Danes a total defeat at Ak-Lea, or Oat-Lea, ib. Dedicates the tenth of his whole kingdom towards the maintenance of masses and psalms for his success against the Danes, ib. Goes to Rome with his son Alfred, ib. Marries Judith the daughter of Charles the Bald of France, 531. He is driven by a con- spiracy to consign half his kingdom to his son Ethelbald, ib. Dies and is buried Ethelwolf, earl of Berkshire, obtains a vic- at Winchester. ib. tory against the Danes at Englefield, 532. Ethildrith, wife of Ecfrid, turns nun, and In another battle is slain himself, ib. Ethiopians, their manner of punishing made abbess of Ely, 523. Eumerus attempts to assassinate King Ed- criminals, 379. Euripides, introduces Theseus king of win, 517. Is put to death, ib. Athens speaking for the liberty of the Eusebius, thought it difficult to tell who people, 385. were appointed bishops by the apostles, 23. His account of Papias, and his in- fecting Gunæus and other ecclesiastical Eustace, count of Boloign, revenging the writers with his errors, 25. death of one of his servants, is set upon by the citizens of Canterbury, 555. He complains to King Edward, who takes his part against the Canterburians, and commands Earl Godwin against them, Excommunication, the proper use and de- but in vain, ib. sign of it, 19. Left to the church as a rough and cleansing medicine, 51. Exhortation, to settle the pure worship of God in his church, and justice in the state, 17.
Faganus and Deruvianus said to have Factor for religion, his business, 113. preached the gospel here, and to have Fagius Paulus, his opinion concerning converted almost the whole island, 496. divorce, 155 Testimonies of learned men concerning him, 160. In the same sentiments with the author as to divorce, Famine, discord, and civil commotions 162. Agrees with Martin Bucer, 217. among the Britons, 505. Fashions, of the Romans imitated by the Swane driven by famine out of the land, 546. Britons, a secret art to prepare them for bondage, 494.
Fathers, primitive, in what manner they interpreted the words of Christ concern- Faustus, incestuously born of Vortimer ing divorce, 212, &c. and his daughter, lives a devout life in Fencing and wrestling recommended to Glamorganshire, 508. youth, 101.
Ferdinand 11, grand duke of Tuscany, let- ters from the English republic to him, 592, 596, 598, 599. From Oliver, 625, 628,
631. Fergus, king of Scots, said to be slain by the joint forces of the Britons and the Romans, 504.
Ferrer, the son of Gorbogudo, slain in fight Flaccus, the printer, account of him, 923. by his brother Porrex, 480. Flattery, odious and contemptible to a gene- Fletcher, Dr. Giles, ambassador from Queen rous spirit, 552. Forms of Prayer, not to be imposed, 93. Elizabeth to Russia, 581. Fornication, what it is, 152. 153. A lawful cause of divorce, 152 Why our Saviour uses this word, 153. The Greek deficient in explaining it, 205. To understand rightly what it means, we should have recourse to the Hebrew, ib. Fortescue, his saying of a king of England, France, see Lewis, king of 401. Quotation from his Laud. Leg. Ang. 402. Francus, named among the four sons of Histion, sprung of Japhet, and from him the Francs said to be derived, 476. Frederic III., king of Denmark, letters to him from the council of state. 595, 599 From Oliver, 609, 612, 621. Frederic, prince, heir of Norway, &c. letter parliament restored, 637. From the from the council of state to him, 600. Freedom of writing, the good consequences From Oliver, 625. of it, 57. Not allowed while the prelates had power to prevent it, 85. See Li- censing.
French, according to Hottoman, at the first institution of kingship, reserved a power of choosing and deposing their princes, 374. Their manners and language when introduced into England, 555.
French ambassador, Oliver's letter to the, 626.
Friars, dying men persuaded by them to Fulgenius, reckoned among the ancient leave their effects to the church, 65. British kings, 482. The commander in chief of the Caledonians against Septi- mius Severus, so called by Geoffrey of Monmouth, 498.
Galgacus, heads the Britons against Julius Agricola, 495.
Galileo, imprisoned by the inquisition, for his notions in astronomy, 112, 113. Garden and Gardener, an allegorical story applied to the prelates, 69. Geneva, Oliver's letter to the consuls and Genesis ii. 24. explained, 183. Gentry, reason of their espousing prelates, senators of that city, 610. 53.
Geography, its study both profitable and delightful, 567.
Germanus, in a public disputation at Veru- lam, silences the chief of the Pelagians, 505. He is entreated by the Britons to head them against the Picts and Saxons, ib. He gains the victory by a religious Gerontius, a Briton, by his valour advances stratagem, ib. His death, 506. the success of Constantine the usurper in France and Spain. 501. him, he calls in the Vandals against Displaced by him, ib. Deserted by his soldiers, de- fends himself valiantly with the slaugh- ter of 300 of his enemies, ib. He kills his wife Nonnichia, refusing to outlive him, ib. Kills himself, ib. Geruntius, the son of Elidure, not his im- mediate successor, 482.
Gildas, his account of the Britons electing and deposing their kings, 237. His bad Gill, Alexander, letters to, 950, 951. character of the Britons, 499, 506. two eminent successes, 512. Godwin, earl of Kent, and the stand for Hardicnute, 552. prince Elfred to Harold, ib. to account by Hardicnute, appeases him with a very rich present, 553
West-Saxons, He betrays Being called
exhorts Edward to take upon him the| crown of England, ib. Marries his daugh- ter to King Edward, 554. Raises forces in opposition to the French whom the king favoured, 555. Is banished, ib. He and his sons grow formidable, 556. Coming up to London with his ships, a reconciliation is suddenly made between him and the king, ib. Sitting with the king at table, he suddenly sinks down dead, ib.
Gomer, the eldest son of Japhet, believed the first that peopled these west and northern climes, 476.
Gonorill, gains upon her father King Leir, by dissimulation, 479. Is married to Maglaunus duke of Albania, 480. Her ingratitude to her father, ib. Gorbogudo, or Gorbodego, succeeds Kin- marcus in the kingdom, 480. Gorbonian, succeeds Morindus in the king- dom, 481. His justice and piety, ib. Gospel, more favourable than the law, 139. Imposes no subjection to tyranny, 358, &c. Not contrary to reason and the law of nations, 361.
Government, the reasons of its first esta- blishment, 233. Kingly, the consequences of readmitting it, 279.
Grammar, Latin, what it is, 457.
Gratianus Funarius, the father of Valen- tinian, commander in chief of the Roman armies in Britain, 499.
Hamborough, letters to the senate of that city, 587, 588, 590, 592, 595, 630, 624, 625. Hanse Towns, letter to them from the English commonwealth, 595. Hardicnute, the son of Canute by Emma, called over from Bruges, and receive as king, 553. He calls Godwin and others to account about the death of Elfred, ib. Enraged at the citizens of Worcester for killing his tax-gatherers, he sends an army against them, and burns the city, ib. Kindly receives and entertains his half-brother Edward, ib. Eating and drinking hard at a feast, he dies, and is buried at Winchester, ib. Was a great epicure, ib.
Hardness of heart, permitted to wicked men, 202.
Harold, surnamed Harefoot, the son of Canute, elected king by Duke Leofric and the Mercians, 552. He banishes his mother-in-law Emma, ib. His perfidious- ness and cruelty towards Elfred the son of Ethelfred, ib. He dies, and is buried at Winchester, 553.
Harold, son of Godwin, made earl of Kent, and sent against prince Griffin of Wales, 557. He reduces him at last to the ut- most extremity, ib. Being cast upon the coast of Normandy, and brought to Duke William, he promises his endeavours to make him king of England, 558. He takes the crown himself, 559. Puts off Duke William, demanding it, with a slighting answer, ib. Is invaded by his brother Tosti, ib. By Harold Harfager, king of Norway, whom he utterly overthrows and slays, together with Tosti, ib. Is invaded by Duke William of Normandy, 560. Is overthrown at the battle of Hast- ings, and slain together with his two brothers Leofwin and Gyrtha, ib. Hartlib, Mr. tract of education addressed to him, 98.
Hayward, his account of the liturgy in Edward VI's time, 59.
Gregory, archdeacon of Rome, and after- ward pope, procures the sending over of abbot Austin and others to preach the gospel to the Saxons in this island, 514. Griffin, prince of South Wales, committing great spoil in Hereford, is pursued by Harold earl of Kent, 557. After a peace concluded he breaks his faith, and re- turns to hostility, ib. Is again reduced, ib. Harold brings the Welsh to sub- mission, ib. Lurking about the country, he is taken and slain by Griffin, prince of North Wales, ib. Griffith, Dr. brief notes on his sermon, 453, &c. Moves to be admitted physician to church and state, 453. His address to the general, ib. compared to Dr. Man-Heimbach, Peter, letters to, 959, 963. waring, 454. His geographical and his- Heli, an ancient British king, 482. torical mistakes, 455. Help-meet, the meaning of that word, 182. Grotius, his observations concerning di- Helvius, Pertinax, succeeds Ulpius Mar- vorce, 150, 152. His opinion concerning cellus in the government of Britain, 497. it, 219. Hemingius, his definition of marriage, 186. Guendolen, the daughter of Corineus, is His opinion concerning divorce, 218. married to Locrine the son of Brutus, Hengist and Horsa, with an army, land in 478. Being divorced by him, gives him the Isle of Thanet, 507. Hengist gains battle, wherein he is slain, 479. Causes advantages of Vortigern, by marrying Estrildis, whom Locrine had married, to his daughter to him, ib. Takes on him be thrown into a river with her daughter the kingly title, 508. His several battles Sabra, ib. Governs 15 years for her son against the Britons, ib. 509. His treache- Madan, ib. rous slaughter of three hundred British Gueniver, the wife of Arthur, kept from grandees under pretence of treaty, 509. him in the town of Glaston, by Melvas His death, ib. His race ends with Alric, a British king, 511.
Guiderius, said to have been the son of Cunobeline, and slain in a battle against Claudius, 489.
Guitheline, succeeds his father Gurguntius Barbirus in the kingdom, 481. Gunhildis, the sister of Swane, with her husband Earl Palingus, and her young son, cruelly murdered, 545. Guorangonus, a king of Kent, before it was given to the Saxons, 507. Guortimer, the son of Vortigern, endeavours to drive out the Saxons, 508. His suc- cess against them, ib. Dying he com- mands his bones to be buried in the port of Stonar, ib. Gurguntius Barbirus, succeeds Belinus in the kingdom, overcomes the Dane, and gives encouragement to Bartholinus a Spaniard to settle a plantation in Ireland, 481. Another ancient British king named Gurguntius, 482. Gurgustins, succeeds Rivallo in the king- dom, 480.
Gyrtha, son of Earl Godwin, accompanies his father into Flanders, together with his brothers Tosti and Swane, 555. His noble advice to his brother Harold as he was ready to give battle to Duke William of Normandy, 560. Is slain in the battle," with his brother Harold and Leofwin,
Gytro, or Gothrun, a Danish king, baptized by the name of Athelstan, and received out of the font by King Alfred, 534 The kingdom of the East-Angles said to be bestowed on him to hold of Alfred, ib.
Henninus, duke of Cornwal, marries Re- gan, daughter of King Leir, 480. Henry II., reigned together with his son,
Heresy, according to the Greek, not a word of evil note, 415. The word explained, ib. Heresy, or false religion, defined, 562. Popery the greatest heresy, ib. Heretic, an idolatrous one ought to be di- vorced, after a convenient space allowed for conversion, 130. He who follows the Scripture, to the best of his knowledge, no heretic, 415. Who properly one, ib. Herod, a great zealot for the Mosaic law, 206. Taxed of injustice by our Saviour, 358.
Herod and Herodias, the story of them from Josephus, 196.
Herodotus, his account of the behaviour of the Egyptians to their kings, 378. Hertford, built or repaired by King Ed- ward, the son of Alfred, 537. Hesse, William, Landgrave of, Oliver's letter to him, 622. Heth, Richard, 957. Hewald, two priests of that name, cruelly butchered by the Saxons, whom they went to convert, 523.
Hierarchy, as dangerous to the crown as a tetrarchy, or heptarchy, 16. Hinguar and Hubba, two Danish brethren, how they got footing by degrees in Eng- land, 532.
Hirelings, the likeliest means to remove them out of the church, 424, &c. Judas the first, Simon Magus the next hireling, 425. How to be discovered, 436. Soon frame themselves to the opinions of their paymasters, 437. Are the cause of athe- ism, ib.
Histion, said to be descended of Japhet, and to have had four sons who peopled the greatest part of Europe, 476. Historians, English, defective, obscure, and fabulous, 524.
History, remarks on writing, 961. Holland, states of, abjured obedience to King Philip of Spain, 238. Letters from Oliver to, 619, 627.
Holstein, Luke, letter to, 954. Honorius, the emperor, sends aid twice to the Britons, against their northern in- vaders, 504.
Horsa, the brother of Hengist, slain in the Saxons' war against the Britons, 508. His burial-place gave name to Horsted, a town in Kent, ib.
Horsey, Jerom, agent in Russia, 580. Hotham, Sir John, proclaimed a traitor by King Charles, 294. Vindicated by the parliament, ib. The king's remarks on his fatal end, 295.
Hull, reasons for the parliament's securing that place, 294. Petition to remove that magazine to London, ib.
Humbeanna and Albert, said by some to have shared the kingdom of the East- Angles, after one Elfwald, 528. Humber river, whence named, 478 Hus and Luther, the reformers before them called the Poor Men of Lyons, 431. Husband, or wife, whether at liberty to marry again, 172.
Jago, or Lago, succeeds his uncle Gurgus- tius in the kingdom, 480. James I., his behaviour after the powder- plot, 307. Compared with Solomon, 357. Icenians, and Trinobantes, rise up in arms against the Romans, 492.
Ida, the Saxon, begins the kingdom of Bernicia in Northumberland, 511. Idwallo, learns by his brother's ill success to rule well, 482.
Idolatry, brought the heathen to heinous transgressions, 566.
Idols, according to the papists, great means to stir up pious thoughts and devotion,
Jeroboam's episcopacy, a particoloured and party-membered one, 35.
Jerome, St. his opinion, that custom only was the maker of prelaty, 36. Anselm of Canterbury, of the same opinion, ib. Said to be whipped by the devil for read- ing Cicero, 107. His behaviour in rela- tion to Fabiola, 166. His explanation of Matth. xix. 214.
Jews, had no more right than Christians to a dispensation of the law relating to di- vorce, 142. Did not learn the custom of divorce in Egypt, 199. Their behaviour to their kings, 368, &c. Ignatius, epistles attributed to him, full of corruptions, 24. Directs honouring the bishop before the king, ib. His opinion no warrant for the superiority of bishops over presbyters, 28.
Ignorance and ecclesiastical thraldom, cau- tion against them, 174. Immanuel, duke of Savoy, Oliver's letter to him in favour of his protestant subjects, 606.
Immanuentius, slain by Cassibelan, 487. Immin, Eaba, and Eadbert, noblemen of Mercia, throw off Oswi, and set up Wol- fer, 521. Imprimaturs, the number of them neces- sary for the publication of a book where the inquisition is established, 106. Ina, succeeds Kedwalla in the kingdom of the West-Saxons, 523. Marches into Kent to demand satisfaction for the burning of Mollo, ib. Is pacified by Victred with a sum of money, and the delivering up of the accessories, ib. Vanquishes Gerent, king of Wales, ib. Slays Kenwulf and Albright, and vanquishes the East-Angles, 524. Dies at Rome, ib. Independents, their tenets, 342. Commend- ed for their firmness, 404 Reflected on by Salmasius, ib. Their superiority over the other parties, 937. Inniaunus, deposed for his ill courses, 482.
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