302, n. I
Gale, Thomas, his Scriptores XV., 217; his edition of Gildas, 233 Gardiner, Stephen, his religious position, III
Gardiner, Mr. S. R, his works on English history in the sever.teenth century, 354
Geffcken, Heinrich, his work on Church and State, 301 George III., his struggle for power, 180; defeats the Whigs, 186; State Papers of the reign of, 384; his Correspondence with Lord North, 386
Gerard, John, Life of, by Morris, 318
Germans assail the Roman empire,
13
Gervase of Canterbury, chiefly a compiler, 264
Gery, Robert, continued Cave's Historia, 214
Gesiths, relations of, with the king,
19
Gesta Stephani, the, 260 Giffard, Lady, her Life of Sir W. Temple, 369
Gildas, his de Excidi Britanniae, 233
Gregory VII., Pope, his idea of papal absolutism, 48; his ideal of the papacy contrasted with that of Innocent III., 65 Gregory IX., Pope, his quarrel with Frederick II., 71 Gregory, William, his Chronicle, 279
Grenville Papers, the, 385 Grey. Anchitell, his collection of Debates, 227
Grey Friars of London, Chronicle of the, 309 Grosseteste, Robert, his Letters, 280
Guest, Dr. E., his opinion on Gildas, 233; on the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 237; pamphlets on British history by, 243 Guizot, Essais of, 268; his Histoire
de la Civilisation, etc., 282; his works on Engli h history, 354 Gunpowder Plot, materials for the history of the, 340
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Edward VI., 322; his Annals of Elizabeth, ib. Hearne, Thomas, merits of his texts of authors, 216-7 Hemingford, Walter, Chronicle of, 276
Henry I., his quarrel with Anselm, 52; establishes order, 54 Henry II., restoration of order by, 55; his military reforms, 56; po- litical institutions of, 58; his quarrel with Becket, 59; chief authorities for reign of, 262 Henry III., King, his accession, 69 Henry IV., the Emperor, his
pnance at Canossa, 42 Henry V., his French wars, 98; authorities for reign of, 289 Henry VI., his weakness, 98;
Chronicles for reign of, 292 Henry VII., his accession, 99; nature of his authority, 100; ex- tends the royal power, 101; end of his reign, 103 Henry VIII., character of, 105; his quarrel with the Pope, 106; his use of the royal supremacy, 110; correspondence of, 226; State Papers for reign of, 312 Henry the Fowler imitates Edward the Elder, 30
Herbert, Algernon, his Britannia after the Romans, 243 Herbert of Cherbury, lord, his Life of Henry VIII., 322; his Expedition to the Isle of Rhe 340; Autobiography of, 349. Herbert, Sir Thomas, his Memoirs of Charles I., 344
Heretics, statute for the burning of 98
Hervey, lord, Memoirs of, 376 Heylin, P., his Life of Laut, 347 Hexham Chronicles, the, 261 Higden, Polychronicon of, 285 Hildebrand, see Gregory VII. Hogarth, evidence of his works to the state of society, 173 Holinshed, Raphael, Chronicles of, 306-7
Holland, lord, his Memoirs of the Whig Party, 395
LABOURERS, the condition
of, 91
Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canter- bury, 43; organises the English Church, 50; Life of, by Milo Crispin, 267; by dean Hook, 268 Langtoft, Peter, his Chronicle, 250 Langton, Stephen, nominated Arch- bishop, 65
Lappenberg, his error in accepting the de Situ as genuine, 241 Large Declaration, the, 341 Laud, Archbishop, his ecclesiastical policy, 136; alarm caused by his proceedings, 138; his Letters to Strafford, 347; History of his troubles, &c., ib.; Life of, by Heylin, ib.
Laws, early English, 254 Lecky, Mr. W. E. H., his History of England, 380 Legrand, Joachim, his Histoire du
Divorce, 320
Leland, John, his Collectanea and Commentarii, 211-2
Le Neve, John, Fasti of, 229
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