Terence lecture abolished, 110 Terentianus, treatise by, on classical pronunciation, 55
Tests: imposed on those admitted M.A., 145; to divinity degrees, ib.; the earliest imposed on admission to degrees, 146; not imposed during reign of Elizabeth, 147; new, pre- scribed by Gardiner, 154; on ap- pointment to Regius professorship, first instance of, 351; see also Three Articles
Theodosius, Code of, studied at Padua, 57
Theology, the chief study, 414; narrow
spirit in which it was conceived, 415; excessive attention to, detrimental to linguistic studies, 416 Thirleby, Tho., bp. of Ely, his assist- ance sought by the university_in gaining possession of the premises of the Franciscans, 27; rose to emi- nence through study of the civil law, 131 Thomas, Tho., f. of King's, appoint-
ment of, as university printer, 293; undertakes the publication of a work by Whitaker, ib.; represented by the Stationers' Company, as ignorant of the craft, 295; re-appointed to his office, 297; Latin Dictionary of, 320; styled the Cambridge Puritan printer'; 321; publishes the Har-
monia Confessionum, ib. Thornton, Ri., one of the royal com- missioners appointed by Tho. Crom- well, 8
Three Articles, the, subscription to, required from those appointed to preach before the university, 456; also from all admitted B.D. or to the doctorate in any faculty, 457; from all admitted to any degree, 458 Thucydides, becomes familiar to stu- dents in the time of Ascham, 53 Tonstall, his Arithmetic prescribed as a text-book in time of Edw. vi, 110 Travers, Walter, statement of, with respect to competent preachers pro- duced by the universities, 262; Dis- ciplina Ecclesiastica of, 263; trans- lation of the same, by Cartwright, 291; extended influence of the work, 292; new translation of printed at university press, 302; quotation from preface to, ib.; a favorite with Burghley, 303; relations of with Whitgift, ib.; a friend of Cartwright, ib.; character of, by Whitgift, ib. n. 2; ordained at Antwerp, 804; his
orders not recognised by Whitgift, ib.; recommended by Burghley for the mastership of the Temple, 305; elected 2nd provost of Trinity Col- lege, Dublin, 355; his merits, as de- scribed by his predecessor, ib.; sud- den departure of, owing to the rebel- lion, 356; invited by Andrew Mel- ville to assist him at Glasgow, 366
Tremellius, Jo. E., teacher of Hebrew at Cambridge, 172, n. 4; period during which he held the professor- ship of Hebrew, 416; testimony of Ramus to his learning as a Hebrew scholar, 417; his nationality, ib. Trent, Council of, importance attached to its decisions at Cambridge, 257, n. 3
Trinity Church, lectures at, suspended by the academic authorities, 557; election of Preston to lectureship at, 572
Trinity College, foundation of, 81; its main revenues, whence derived, 82; character of its early church patron- age, 83; its obligations to St John's, 84; its first fellows, 84-85; oath administered to master of, 139; original statutes of, 138 and Append. (A); the statutes characterised by dean Peacock, 139; new statutes given to, on accession of queen Mary, 152; petition of, against the Westminster monopoly, 271; failure of same, 272; retirement of Whitgift from master- ship of, ib.; appointment of Still to same, 272; effects of Whitgift's rule at, 273-4; statute of, with respect to residence of fellows, 275; close connexion of, with Trinity Col- lege, Dublin, 355; negotiations of, with the executors of the countess of Sussex, 358; described by Giles Fletcher as the fairest sight in Cam- bridge,' 373, n. 1; alleged malad- ministration of, by Richardson, 386; progress of, under Neville, 468; how described by bishop Corbet, 469; and by Giles Fletcher, ib.; Liber Memo- rialis in library of, ib.; comparison of numbers at, with those of St John's, 470
Trinity College, Dublin, foundation of,
353; Case's share in the measure, ib.; colonia deducta from Cambridge, ib.; scheme of foundation of in 1563, 354; original designation of, ib.; scheme of Sir John Perrot in con- nexion with, ib.; charter given to,
354; first five provosts of, all Cam- bridge men, 355
Trinity College, Oxford, foundation of, 166
Trinity Hall, proposed amalgamation
of with Clare Hall, 134; obligations of, to archbishop Parker, 249; de- pressed condition of, in reign of James 1, 496; Henry Howard a pa- tron of, 497; absence of distinguish- ed names among members of in 17th century, 500
Trivium, the, alterations in, 111 Tübingen, university of, in the time of Camerarius, 73
"Tucking,' a punishment inflicted on freshmen, 401
Tutors (college), system of, in 17th cen- tury, 396; laxity of college regula- tions with respect to, 397; complaint of lord Burghley with respect to, 398; better influence of, ib.
Tyler, prof., account of Cotton's writings by, 481
Tyndall, Humph., president of Queens', signs petition against Elizabethan statutes, 236; takes part in pro- ceedings against Barret, 334; sum- moned to Lambeth to assist Whit- gift in the preparation of the Lam- beth Articles, 338; signs petition against committee of enquiry, 385; ancient lineage of, 477; sympathies of, with Puritanism, ib.; promoted to the presidency through Leices- ter's influence, 478; defects of, as an administrator, ib.; death of, 483
Udall, Jo., of Trinity College, author of a Hebrew Grammar, 418 n. 1 Undergraduates, characteristics of, circ. 1600, 390; insubordination of, 391; the ideal undergraduate of the sta- tute book, ib.; contumacy of, in re- spect to dress, 393; sent too young to the universities, 394; allowance to in 17th century, 397; age of, at entrance, 398; class from which they were mainly recruited, 399 Universities, limitation of their object in the time of Ascham, 115; on the continent, warning afforded by effects of controversy in, in 16th century, 213; the continental, state of, from 1580-1600, 284; English and con- tinental, comparison of state of, 432; advantages resulting from the col- lege system of the former, 436; to-
gether with the Court pronounced by Carleton to be 'the compendium of all England,' 433; regarded by Bacon as the mainspring of the re- ligious contentions of the realm, 438 University press, re-establishment of, 292; opposed by Stationers' Com- pany, 293; discountenanced by Burghley, ib.; publication at, of work by Whitaker, ib.; seizure of effects of, by the Stationers' Com- pany, 294; remonstrance of the university on behalf of, ib.; re-es- tablishment of, finally sanctioned by Burghley, 297; suggestions of Whit- gift for supervision of, 304; appeals for protection from, against the Lon- don Stationers, 319; works of, pirated by London printers, 320; enactments of the senate for protection of, ib. University street (or Regent Walk) built by Parker's benefaction, 247 Ursinus, F., criticism on Ramus by, 407
Valladolid, foundation of Jesuit college at, 260
Vesalius, teaches Dr Caius anatomy at Padua, 58
Vice-chancellor, election of, formerly in the hands of the regents, 221; how modified by statutes of 1572, 222; change in mode of election of, cen- sured by petitioners, 236, n. 3; de- cision in favour of, in question of precedency of the mayor of the town, 441
Vice-chancellorship, circumstances of Parker's election to, 72; last election to, of one not a Head, 321 Villiers, Geo., duke of Buckingham, letter to Laurence Chaderton from, 570; it solves the difficulty attaching to Chaderton's retirement from the mastership of Emmanuel, ib. Visitation of the colleges in 1549, 113 Voysey, Jo., bp. of Exeter, one of the authors of the Institution, 18
Ward, Sam., (m. of Sidney College) of St John's College, one of the first fel- lows of Sidney College, 359; his re- markable powers of acquisition, 490; his general character, ib.; his Diary, Adversaria, and portrait, 491; his morbid habit of self-inculpation, ib.; his grief at the loss of a favorite pupil, 492; one of the delegates to the Synod of Dort, 560; his survey of affairs at home and abroad in June 1625, 574
Watson, Tho., master of St John's, chaplain to bishop Gardiner and sent by him to enquire into disputes at St John's, 39, n. 2; testimony of Ascham to his merits, 40; his Ab- salom, ib.; sent as Gardiner's deputy to Cambridge, 150; elected to master- ship of St John's, ib.; admitted by proxy, ib. n. 5
Webb, Laurence, f. of St Catherine's, retires to English College at Douay, 254
Welshmen, numbers of, at English College in Rome, 258; opposed to the Jesuit influence in the college, 260; dislike of Degory Nichols for, 287
Wendy, Tho., M.D., one of the visitors
of the university in 1549, 110; one of the compilers of first statutes of Trinity College, 138; one of the uni- versity commission in 1559, 174 Westminster School, exclusive rights
possessed by at Trinity College, 270; attempts to set aside same, 271 Whitaker, Wm. (m. of S. John's), his theory with respect to the interpreta- tion of Roman doctrine, 257; f. of Trinity, 293; appointment of, to Regius professorship, ib.; work by, to be published at university press, ib.; Strype's conjecture concerning same, ib., n. 3; succeeds to the mastership of St John's, 322; re- lated to Laurence Chaderton, ib.; his opinion of Cartwright's writings, 323; endeavours to expel Everard Digby from St John's, ib.; increase of Puritanism at St John's during his rule, ib.; his reputation as a con- troversial writer, 324; Scaliger's ad- miration of, ib. n. 3; appointment of to Regius professorship of divinity, 326; takes part in proceedings against Barret, 334; defends the Heads in their dispute with Whitgift, 337; summoned to Lambeth to assist Whitgift in the preparation of the
Lambeth Articles, 338; accused of encouraging Puritan conclaves in St John's, 339; contemporary and sub- sequent reputation of, 340; poverty of, at time of his death, ib.; suc- cessors of, 345
White, Jo., bp. of Winchester, attack made by, on the Marian exiles, 172 White, Sir Tho., founder of St John's College, Oxford, secretes ac- cessories of the Roman ritual in his house, 244, n. 1 Whitgift, Jo., D.D., archbp. of Canter- bury, protected during Mary's reign. by Dr Perne, 181; early career of, 209; appointed lady Margaret pro- fessor, 210; successively master of Pembroke and of Trinity, ib.; pro- moted to the Regius professorship, ib.; inclines to Calvinistic views, ib.; subscribes the. remonstrance against uniformity in dress, ib.; his change of views attributed to jealousy of Cartwright, 211; be- comes an object of suspicion to the Puritan party, 218; comes forward as their opponent, 222; advises a revision of the statutes of the uni- versity, ib.; is entrusted by Cecil with the task, ib.; proceeds to rigor- ous measures against Cartwright, 225; deprives him of his fellowship, 226; unpopularity which he thereby incurs, 227; his character and con- duct criticised by Dering, 235; ac- cused of resorting to illegal means against his opponents, 240; he pro- poses to leave Cambridge, ib.; dis- suaded from his purpose, ib.; his Answer to the Admonition to Parlia- ment, ib. ; comment of, on the Puritan preachers, 241; takes part in de- struction of Dr Caius' 'popish trum- pery', 244; apparent success of policy of, in the university, 262; testimony of, to number of preachers educated at Cambridge, ib.; vigilance shewn by, in remedying abuses in the col- leges, 268; representations made by, on the subject, to Burghley, 269; efforts of, to defeat the Westminster monopoly at Trinity, 270; election of, to bishopric of Worcester, 272; resig- nation of his mastership by, ib.; testi- mony of Still to good effects of his rule, 273; Robert Devereux among his pupils, 274; his skill as an ad- ministrator, 275; he defends the non- residency of fellows of the college at their cures, 276; grounds of justifi-
cation of his view, ib.; his own con- ception of the duties of his master- ship, 277; feelings with which de- parture of, was regarded by many at Cambridge, 277-8; departure of, and circumstances that attended it, 278; contemporary testimony to high merits of, 279, n. 2; testimony of, with respect to condition of Oxford, 283; succession of, to archbishopric of Canterbury, 291; opposes the ap- pointment of Travers to the master- ship of the Temple, 305; appealed to by Barret, 328; his transcript of the Codex Bezae, 330; his remon- strance with Beza, 333; condemns the prosecution of Barret, ib.; ac- cuses the university of ingratitude, 334; covert attack upon, by Some, 336; letter of, to Burghley, with re- spect to dispute between himself and the Heads, 337; summons Barret to Lambeth, 338; acts as arbitrator be- tween Trinity College and executors of the countess of Sussex, 358; ac- counts of, as college tutor, 401; as- sists in the suppression of the mutiny of the earl of Essex, 440; disapproval of, of admission of James Mountague to degree of D.D., 444; vigilance of, on accession of king James, 448; he dissuades king James from his de- sign of restoring the impropriations of church livings, 450; his illness and death, 453-4; his reconciliation with Cartwright before his death, 454; various testimonies to his merit, ib., n. 1; sends Dr Neville to con- gratulate king James on his acces- sion, 469; endeavours to carry the election of his chaplain, Dr Carrier, to the mastership of Corpus, 495 Wigan, Eudo, appointment of to the
Regius professorship of divinity, 53 Wilkes, Ri., master of Christ's College, fell. of Queens' College, 24; expelled from mastership of Christ's on ac- cession of queen Mary, 151 Williams, Jo. (archbp. of York), f. of St John's, 475; defeated Valentine Cary's candidature for the master- ship, ib.; held Overall's teaching his own greatest advantage at Cambridge, 500; youthful generosity of, to pro- fessor Lively, 503; indebted for his fellowship at St John's to Playfere's good offices, 505; intercedes for William Knight, 566
Wilson, Dr Nich., master of Michael- house, elected to the mastership of
St John's, 20; declines the office, ib.
Wilson, Tho., account given by, of Andrew Melville's teaching at St Andrews, 367
Wilton, Ri., esq., of Topcroft Hall, quotations from 'Note Book' of, 390, n. 2; 393, n. 1; 397, n. 1; 399, n. 3 Windows, destruction of superstitious, in the university, A.D. 1565, 196 Wingfield, Anthony (public orator), letter from to Beza, 330
Withers, Geo., M.A., of Corpus, a zealous Reformer, 196; incites the university to a further destruction of superstitious windows, 197; is sus- pended by Parker from preaching, ib.; subsequent career of, ib.; takes his degree of D.D. at Heidelberg, 213; omission of his name by Cooper, ib. n. 2
Wittenberg, university of, its state as described by Melanchthon, 49; its state described by Musaeus, 100; dis- tracted by theological contentions, 104-6; condition of, circ. 1584, 284 Women, not permitted to be resident in college, 395
Wotton, Anthony, f. of King's, a can- didate for the Regius professorship of divinity on Overall's election to same, 351; professor at Gresham College, ib.
Wotton, Sam., f. of King's, translates Ramus's Logic, 411
Wray, Sir Christ., fellowships at Magda- lene College founded by, 70 Wren, Math. (bp. of Ely), f. of Pembroke, one of the disputants in the philo-
sophy act before James 1 in 1615, 519 Wright, Mr W. Aldis, information af- forded by, 83, n. 3
Wriothesley, Tho., earl of Southamp- ton, representation made to, by the university with respect to its condi- tion, 28
Xenophon, becomes familiar to students in the time of Ascham, 53
Yeldart, Arthur, of Clare Hall, f. of Pembroke College, 167; elected president of Trinity College, Oxford, ib.
Young, Jo. (m. of Pembroke), a member
of the Catholic faction at St John's, 40; an opponent of Bucer, ib.; one of the disputants before the Visitors of 1549, 114; characterised by James Pilkington, 121, n. 3; opposed to the Reformation, 122; lectures in opposition to Bucer, ib.; succeeds to mastership of Pembroke, 151; re- moved from his post in 1559, 177 Young, Jo. (bp. of Rochester), master of Pembroke, endeavours to obstruct the search for suspected books, 202,
Young, Jo., f. of Sidney, described as 'the first Scottish man who ever kept his acts and took a degree in the university', 362
Zasius, civilian, his writings studied by Sir T. Smith, 130
Zürich, a centre of the Marian exiles, 171; their sufferings there, 173 Zürich Letters, the, examined by Burnet in 1685, 171, n. 2
CAMBRIDGE: PRINTED BY C. J. CLAY, M. A. & SON, AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
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