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BRO

Brodie, George, the Constitutional
History of, 352

Brompton, John, Chronicon of, 268
Brooke, lord, his Discourse of
Episcopacy, 342

Brougham, lord, his Statesmen of
Reign of George III., 393; his
England under the House of
Lancaster, 300

Bruce, J. C., The Roman Wall of,
243

Bryce, professor, his Holy Roman
Empire, 268

Buchanan, George, his History of
Scotland, 324

Buckingham, George Villiers, duke
of, his position under Charles I.,
134
Buckingham, duke of, Memoirs of
the Court of George II. by, 387;
his Memoirs of the Court of the
Regency, 396

on

Buckle, T. A., his criticism of
Geoffrey of Monmouth, 239
Burke, Edmund, his political prin-
ciples, 181; his views on the
Middlesex election, and
American taxation, 183; his
opinions compared with those
of Bacon, 184; Correspondence
of, 386; Speeches of, ib.; politi-
cal pamphlets of, ib.; Life of, by
Macknight, 392; study of, by
Mr. John Morley, 392; his Re-
flections on the French Revo-
lution, 397

Burleigh Papers, the, 316
Burnet, bishop, his History of the
Reformation, 320; his Lives of
the Dukes of Hamilton, 348;
Own Tim.s of, 358

Burton, Dr., his Reign of Queen
Anne, 380; his History of Scot-
land, 355

Burton-upon-Trent, Annals of the
monastery of, 274

Burton, H., his Protestation Pro-
tested, 342

Burton, T., Diary of, 362
Bury, Richard of, his Philobiblon,
295

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Cabinet Government, establishment
of, 167

Calais, loss of, 112

Calamy, Edmund, his abridgement
of Baxter's Autobiography, 365 ;
his Lives of the ejected Ministers,
365
Calderwood, David, his History of
the Kirk of Scotland, 313
Calendars of State Papers, 226
Calvin, John, his dogmatic system,
113

Camden Society, foundation and
object of, 222

Camden, William, his Annals of
James I., 332; Britannia of,
242; his Anglica, etc., ib.
Camden, John, his Life of Elizabeth,
311

Campbell, lord, his Lives of the
Lord Chancellors, 229; of the
Chief Justices, ib.

Canada, the conquest of, 178
Candidus, Hugo, his History of the
Monastery at Peterborough, 264
Canning, George, foreign policy of,
196
Capgrave, John, his Chronicle of
England, 288; his Book of the
Noble Henries, ib.

Carey, Sir Robert, Memoirs of, 349
Carew Letters, the, 319, 333
Carew, Sir Peter, his Life by
Hooker, 311

Carleton, Sir Dudley, correspond-
ence of, 346

Carlyle, Thomas, his Letters and
Speeches of Cromwell, 353
Carstairs, William, his edition of
State Papers, 372; Life of, by
Story, 381

Carte, Thomas, Life of Ormonde by,
352
Castlereagh, Viscount, see London-
derry.

Catholics, the English, Elizabeth's
distrust of, 116; their persecu-
tion, 119; their treatment by
James I., 131; feeling against,
in the reign of Charles II., 158

CAV

Cave, William, his Historia Litte-
raria, 214

Cavendish, Sir Henry, his Debates
of the Unreported Parliament,'
390

Caxton Society, foundation and ob-

ject of, 223

Celibacy of the clergy, opinions of
Dunstan on, 36; arguments in
favour of, 48

Cella, John de, part author of the
Historia Major, 272

Ceorls, their position in the English
tribe, 17

Challoner, his Missionary Priests,
318

Chamberlayne, Edward, his Angliae
Notitia, 359

Chancellors, the Lord, Lives of,
229

Chandler's Debates, 227

'Chaplain, the,' his account of
Henry V., 289-90
Charles I., engages in war with
Spain and France, 134; his
breach with the House of Com-
mons, 136; nature of the oppo-
sition to, 137; his arbitrary
government, 139; introduces a
new Prayer-book into Scotland,
141; his quarrel with the Long
Parliament, 143; character of
his supporters in the Civil War,
144; execution of, 149; corre-
spondence of, with Henrietta
Maria, 344

Charles II., restoration of, 154;
growing distrust of, 158
Charter, the Great, its grant by
John, 66

Chatham, the Earl of, becomes
Prime Minister, 180; his views
on the Middlesex election and on
American taxation, 183; death
of, 187

Chetham Society, foundation and
object of, 223

Chivalry, character of, in the reign
of Edward III, 90
Christie, Mr. W D., his Life of
Ashley Cooper 369

Chronicle, the inglo-Saxon, 237;

COB

editions of, 238; texts of, 245;
periods at which they respectively
terminate, 259; the Peterborough
version of, 264
Chroniques de London, 278
Church, dean, his Beginning of the
Middle Ages, 257; his Life of
Anselm, 268

Church and State, their relations in
the Middle Ages, 49

Church of England, its separation
from Rome, 106; its character
in the reign of Elizabeth, 113;
its development under Elizabeth,
121; its character in the
eighteenth century, 173; the in-
fluence of Wesley on, 177
Church, the Christian, its character
in the Roman empire, II; its
relations with the empire, 12; its
organisation, ib. ; its relations
with the Teutonic conquerors of
the empire, 13.

Church, the English, its origin, 22;
its monasticism, 23; its peni-
tential system, 24; its relation to
the State, 27; its effect on the
growth of national unity, 26;
organised by William I. and
Lanfranc, 50

Churton, Ralph, his Life of Nowell,
328

Cirencester, Richard of, not the
author of the de Situ Britanniae,
241

Civil War, the first, 147; the second,
149

Clarendon, Lord Chancellor, his
system of government, 154; his
History of the Rebellion, 334; his
Short View, 339

Clarendon State Papers, the, 336
Clarke, J. S., Life of James II. by,
366

Cluniac reforms, the, 47

Clive, lord, Life of, by Sir John
Malcolm, 393

Cnut, his reign, 38

Coalition Ministry, the dismissal of,
188

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COL

Colchester, lord, Diary and Corre-
spondence of, 397

Collier, Jeremy, his Ecclesiastical
History, 319

Collingwood, lord, Life of, by
Clarke and McArthur, 400
Commendation of freemen, 34
Commons, House of, its constitu-
tion, 88; growing strength of,
90; its position in Elizabeth's
reign, 126; its position at the
death of Elizabeth, 128; its in-
creased importance after Eliza-
beth's death, 129; its treatment
of Catholics and Puritans, 131;
its ecclesiastical policy in the
reign of Charles I., 135; su-
premacy of, 163; first results of
its supremacy, 166; its relation
to the nation, 168; its relation to
the constituencies after the death
of Anne, 171; expulsion of
Wilkes from, 183; gives a ma-
jority to any ministry in power,
185; its constitution in 1783,
189; Journals of, 228

Commonwealth, the, its meaning as
a political term, 110; Elizabethan
conception of, 116
Compurgators, oath of, 21
Confirmatio Cartarum, 80
Cooper, C. H., and Thompson,
Athenae Cantabrigienses of, 330
Cooper, Ashley, Life of, by Christie,
369

Coote, Mr., his Romans of Britain,

244
Cornwallis, lord,

of, 387

Correspondence

Courtenay, Hon. T. P., see Temple
Coventry, Walter de, Memoriale of,
273

Coxe, archdeacon, his edition of
the Shrewsbury Correspondence,
371; his Lives of Marlborough,
Walpole, and Pelham, 379
Craik (and Macfarlane), History of
England by, 394
Cranmer, Archbishop, his religious
position, III

Cromwell, Oliver, his services, 147;

his Protectorate, 150; difficulties

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DA

ALRYMPLE, Sir David,
Memorials and Letters of, 334
Dalrymple, Sir John, his Memoirs
of Great Britain, &c., 363
Danes, the, wars with, 29; con-
quer England under Cnut, 38
Daniel, Sam., History of England
by, 279

Danish settlements in England, 29
Danish wars, destruction of culture
in England, 36

D'Avaux, Ct., Negotiations of, 363
Davison, Wm., Life of, by Sir H.
Nicolas, 328

Debates, parliamentary, early col-
lections of, 227

Debates (Commons) of 1610, 1620,
and 1621, 335; do. 1625, 336
Debates (Lords) of 1621, 1624,
1626, 335

Debrett's Debates, 227
Declaration of indulgence, the,
issued by James II., 160

De Quincey, criticism on Bentley
by, 382

Devereux, Mr., his Lives of the
Devereux, 329

Devil, the, legends of, 25
Devizes, Richard of, his Chronicle,
264
D'Ewes, Sir Simonds, his Journals
of the Elizabethan Parliaments,
227, 315; Autobiography of, 348
Dialogus de Scaccario, the, 268
Diceto, Ralph of, his Chronicles,
250; his Imagines Historiarum,
263; important for reign of Henry
II., ib.

DIG

Digges, Sir Dudley, his Compleat

Ambassador, 314

Disraeli, Isaac, his Commentaries on
Reign of Charles I., 353
Dissenters, their treatment under
the Restoration, 156; relations
of, with political parties, 172
Divine Right of Kings, meaning of
the doctrine of the, 154

Dixon, Mr. R. W., his History of

the Church of England, 326
Dixon, H., his Lives of Blake and
Penn, 369

Dodd, Charles, his Church History,
322

Dodington, Bubb, Diary of, 391
Domesday Book, 45; facsimile
edition of, 267

Dryden, John, political poems of,
366; writers on, 369;
Dudley, lord, Letters of, 401
Dudo of St. Quentin, authority for
Norman history, 258

Dugdale (Sir W.), his Monasticon,
257

Dumont, M., Corps Universel of,
345

Dundonald, lord, Life of, by Fox
Bourne, 400

Dunstan, archbishop, his eccle-
siastical policy, 35; favours edu-
cation and clerical celibacy, 36
Dunstan, St., Lives of, 249, 253
Dunstable, Annals of the monastery
of, 274

Durham, Simeon of, his History,
249

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ELI

Ecclesiastical, force of the term as
applied to history, 235

Eddius, author of Life of Wilfrid,
247

Edgar, cedes Lothian to the Scot-
tish King, 30; constitution of
England in his reign, 32; the
secular laws of, 37

Edmund Ironsides, his reign, 38
Edward the Confessor, reign of, 38;
his love of fore gners, 39; Life
of, 247; Lives of, 252
Edward the Elder, his wars with

the Danes, 30

Edward I., character of his reign,
75; his ideas of the kingly power,
76; his relations with France,
78; his dispute with the clergy
and the baronage, 79; completes
the English Parliament, 80
Edward II., his reign, 81; author-
ities for reign of, 275-6
Edward III., his French wars,
86

Edward IV., causes of the strength
of his government, 99; Historie
of the Arrivall of, 295
Edward V., Docket Book of, 297
Edward VI., his reign, III
Edward VI., Literary Remains of,
310

Egbert, unites the English king-
doms, 28

Eighteenth century, state of society
in the first half of, 173
Eldon, lord, Life of, by Horace
Twiss, 398

Eliot, Sir John, his leadership of
the Commons, 135

Elizabeth, difficulties at the begin-
ning of her reign, 113; her re-
ligious compromise, 114; charac-
ter of the church of her reign,
115; her treatment of religious
parties, 116; her rivalry with
Mary Queen of Scots, 117; her
conduct towards the Catholics,
119; her treatment of the Puri-
tans, 121; literature of her reign,
123; development of the English
character in her reign, 124; her
sympathy with the nation, 125

ELL

Ellis, Sir Henry, his Historical
Letters, 219; his criticism on
Polydore Vergil, 298-9
Elmham, Thomas, his Life of Henry
V., 289

Emmae Encomium, the, 247
Empire, the Roman, see Rome.
England, early institutions of, 17;
introduction of Christianity into,
22; union of the kingdoms of,
under Egbert, 28; tendency to
break up in Edgar's reign, 37;
Norman organisation of, 43;
effect of the loss of Normandy on,
64; its connection with Flanders,
86; influence of the French Re-
volution on, 193; its relations with
France, 195; foreign policy of,
196; its struggle with Napoleon,
196

English, the, settlement of, in
Britain, 16; their institutions,
17; effect of war on the institu-
tions of, 18; growth of kingship
amongst, 19; their relation to the
Norman kings, 45

English Historical Society, foun-
dation of, 222

Eorls, their position in the English
tribe, 17; superseded by ʼn hegns,
32

Erskine, lord, his pamphlet on the

War, 397; Speeches of, 399
Ethelwerd, Chronicle of, 246
Ethelred of Kievaulx, his Life of
Edward the Confessor, 252
Ethelred the Unready, his weak-
ness, 37

Evelyn, John, Diary of, 361
Evesham, Battle of, 74
Exclusion Bill, the, 159

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FRE

Fielding, evidence of his works,
173

Fisher, bishop, Life of, by Lewis,
323
Fitz-Neal, Richard, probably the
author of work ascribed to Bene-
dict of Peterborough, 262
Fitzmaurice,

lord Edmund, his
Life of Lord Shelburne, 392
Flanders, connection of England
with, 85

Fletcher of Saltoun, Discourses of,
375

Forster, John, his works relating to
the Commonwealth, 354
Forster, Mr. W. E., his pamphlet
on Macaulay, 367

Foss, Mr., his Lives of the Judges.

228

Fox, Charles James, his quarrel
with Shelburne, 188; History of
Reign of James II. by, 366;
Early History of, by Trevelyan,
392; Memorials of, by Earl Rus-
sell, ib.; Life and Times of, by
same, ib.

Foxe, John, his Actes and Monu-
mentes, 309

France under Philip II., 63; its
relations with Edward I., 78;
antagonism of the Restoration
Parliaments to, 157; European
wars of, 194

Francis of Assisi, character of his
work, 72

Frankfort, the exiles at, 114
Frankfort, Troubles at, see Brief
Discourse, 313

Fray Francisco, his treatise on the
Spanish marriage, 340
Frederick II., his struggle with the
Popes, 71

Freeman, Mr. E. A., his Compara-
tive Politics, 209; on the Anglo-
Saxon Chronicle, 237, 238; on
Henry of Huntingdon, 250; on the
Lives of Edward the Confessor,
253; his History of the Norman
Conquest, 256, 268; his account
of the Angevin reigns, 282; on
the wars of Edward III. and
Henry V., 300

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