Imatges de pàgina
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MIG

NOR

Migne, the Abbé, his Patrologia

Latina, 218

Mignet, M, his Histoire de Marie
Stuart, 329; his collections re-
lating to the Spanish Succession,
364

Military system of England, the,
Norman changes in, 43
Military system, the, reformed by
Henry II., 56

Milman, dean, his account of the
rise of the Mendicant Orders,
283; his account of Boniface
VIII., ib.

Milo Crispin, his Life of Lanfranc,
267

Milton, John, prose works of, 342
Moberly, Dr., his edition of Bede,
237

Monasteries, Letters relating to the
Dissolution of the, 309

Monastici-m, its merits and defects,
23; its character in the eleventh
century, 51

Monk, bishop, see Bentley.
Monmouth, Geoffrey of, his Historia
Britonum, 239; influence of his
work, 240

Monopolies, establishment of, 133
Monstrelet, Enguerrand de, his
Chronicles, 294

Montfort, Simon de, his political
ideas, 73

Montrose, Life of, by Napier, 356
Monumenta Historica Britannica,
the, 242

Moor, Thomas de la, his Life of
Edward II., 276

More, Sir Thomas, his Utopia, 105,
305; h's accounts of Edward V.
and Richard III., 296; his Life
by Roper, 310

Morley, professor H., his English
Writers, 215

Motley, Mr., his Dutch Republic

and United Netherlands, 327
Mozley, J. B., his Essays on Straf-
ford, Laud, and Cromwell, 355
Müller, professor Max, his Lecture
on Language, 207
Mullinger, Mr. J. B., his History of
the University of Cambridge, 283 i

E E

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Napier, Mark, Life of Montrose by,
356; his Life of Graham of
Claverhouse, 369

Napier, Sir William, his History of
the Peninsular War, 402
Naval History, see James, 230
Neal, Daniel, his History of the
Puritans, 321

Nelson, lord, Life of, by Southey,

400; his Despatches, ib.; Life of,
by Clarke and McArthur, ib.
Nennius, Historia Britonum of,
239
Netherlands, the, attack of France
on, 196

Netter, Thomas, his Fasciculi Zi-
zaniorum, 297

Newbury, William of, his Historia
Rerum Anglicarum, 262
Newton, Sir Isaac, Life of, by
Brewster, 382

Nicolas, Sir Harris, his Lives of
Davison and Hatton, 328
Nichols, John, his Progresses of
Queen Elizabeth, 324; his Pro-
gresses of James I., 356; Literary
Anecdotes by, 382

Noailles, de, Despatches of Antoine
and Francois, 316

Notitia Dignitatum, the, 233
Noorden, Carl von, his Europäische
Geschichte, 381

Norman conquest of England, part
of a reaction of the South against
the North, 41; its effect on the
organisation of the country, 43
Normandie, Chronique de, cited by
Fabyan, 290

Normandy, its early relations with
England, 39; taken from John,
63
Norman history, authorities for, 258
Normans, the, character of, 42;

their organisation of England, 43
North, Lord, his coalition with
Fox, 186; becomes Prime Minis-

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Paget, Mr., his New Examen, 367
Palfrey, J. G., his History of New
England, 356

Palgrave, Sir F., History of the
English Commonwealth, by, 255
Pandulph receives John's submis-
sion, 65

Parish, origin of the, 18

Paris, Matthew, his qualities as an
historian, 271; his Historia
Major, 272; his Historia An-
glorum, ib; period for which he
is the main authority, 274
Parker, Archbishop, his editions of
Matthew Paris and Walsingham,
215

Parker Society, foundation and
object of, 222

Parliament, admission of represen-

PIT

tative knights to, 73; a mission
of representatives of the towns to,
74; its progress under Edward
I., 75; its complete form, 80;
rise of the House of Commons in,
88; its relation with Elizabeth,
125; growing importance of, 127;
see Rolls; the Unreported,' 390
Parliamentary History, the, 227
Paston Letters, the, 295
Pauli, Reinhold, his opinion on As-
ser, 246; his account of the reigns
of John and Henry III., 282; his
Simon von Montfort, 283; his Auf-
sätze zur Englischen Geschichte,
299; his Geschichte Englands seit
den Friedenschlüssen, 403

Pearson, Mr. C. H., his view of
British history, 244
Peasants' revolt, the, 92

Pelham, Henry, Life of, by Coxe,
378

Penitential system, its action as an
organising power, 24; literature
of the, 253

Penn, William, Life of, by Dixon,
369

Pepys, Samuel, Diary of, 361
Percy Society, foundation
object of, 222

and

Persia, fall of the empire of, 3
Peterborough, Benedict of, work
ascribed to, 262; Chronicle of
the monastery of, 277

Peterkin, Alexander, on the Re-
formed Church of Scotland, 313
Philip II., king of France, takes
provinces from John, 63

Philip VI. makes war with the
Flemish burghers, 87

Pictet, M., his Origines Indo-
Européennes, 207

Picts, the, their attack on south
Britain, 15

Piers the Ploughman, 92
Pits, John, his Scriptores Angliae,
213
Pitt, William (the elder), his cha-
racter as a statesman, 178; his
Life by Thackeray, 382; his
Correspondence, 385; see Chatham,
the earl of.

PIT

Pitt, William (the younger), inherits
his father's policy, 187; becomes
Prime Minister, 188; seeks
national support, 190; the later
years of his ministry, 193; en-
gages in war with France, 195;
Life of, by Tomline, 391; by
earl Stanhope, 392

Poets of the court of Charles I.,
137

Poitiers, William of, his Gesta
Willelmi, 258

Pole, Reginald, the de Unitate of,
304

Popes, the, claims of, 25; the de-

crease of their influence in Eng-
land, 70

Popish Plot, the, 159

Porter (G. R.), his Progress of the
Nation, 230

Poulet, Sir Amias, Letter Books of,
317

Prices, History of, by Rogers, 301;

by Tooke and Newmarch, 403
Protestantism, its chracter, 108;
its progress in the reign of Ed-
ward VI., III; Elizabeth's
support of, 116; views of the
Jesuits on, 118

Prothero, Mr., his Life of Simon
de Montfort, 283
Provisions of Oxford, the, 73
Prynne, William, Papers relating to,
347

Puiseux, M., his Siège de Rouen,

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ROM

Reformation, the age of the, its
general character, 109
Reformation, the, its influence on
our historical literature, 306
Reformation, Narratives of the, 310
Renaissance, the, character of, 104;
its effect upon England, 105; its
development under Elizabeth, 123
Representative government, the
Roman empire incapable of, 8
Representative system in England,
the, its germs, 69; Simon de
Montfort's scheme of, 73; growth
of, 74; completion of, 75
Reresby, Sir John, Travels and
Memoirs of, 360
Restoration, the, 154

Revolution of 1399 contrasted with
the Revolution of 1688, 97
Revolution of 1688, the, institutions
established at, 163; res riction of
the sphere of government as a
result of, 165

Richard, bishop of London, his
Dialogus de Scaccario, 268
Richard I., his reign, 61; authori-
ties for reign of, 264

Richard II., beginning of his reign,
93; his weakness, 96; deposition
of, 97; French chroniclers on,
287

Richard III., Papers of, 296
Richey, Mr. A. G., his Lectures on
Irish History, 324

Rievaulx, Aethelred of, his a count
of the Battle of the Standard,
261
Rishanger, William, his Chronica,
273
Rockingham, lord, Memoirs of,
385

Rockingham, the Marquis of, his
leadership, 180; death of, 188
Rogers, professor Thorold, his
History of Prices, 301

Rolls of Parliament, first publication

of, 225

Rolls Series, the, account of its
origin, 219; value of the series,

220

Roman law, revival of the study, of
55

ROM

Rome, its constitution, 4; effect of
the conquest of Italy on the in-
stitutions of, 6; its position as
head of the nations, 7; impossi-
bility of establishing representa-
tive government in its empre, 8;
establishment of the empire of, ib.;
establishment of scientific law in,
9; sacrifice of the individual to
society in, 10; abstract concep-
tion of, 10; relations with the
Church of the empire of, 12;
Teutonic conquest of its empire,
13; its province in Britain, 15
Romilly, Sir John, his proposals in
connection with the Rolls Series,

220

Romilly, Sir S., Letters of, 387;

parliamentary Journal of, 397
Rose Correspondence, the, 388
Rouen, siege of, authorities for, 290
Rousseau, his influence on the

French Revolution, 192
Roxburgh Club, its foundation, 221
Royal Society, the, histories of, by
Sprat, Birch, Thomson, and
Weld, 368

Rupert, Prince, Life of, by War-
burton, 356

Rusdorf, M. de, Mémoires of, 346;

his Consilia et Negotia, ib.
Rushworth, Collections of, 335
Rymer's Foedera, commencement
of, 224; its defectiveness during
the Commonwealth, 363

ACHEVERELL, Dr., prose-

Scution of, 169

Salisbury, John of, writings of,
265

Sander, Nicholas, de Origine Schis-
matis Anglicani, 330
Sanderson, Robert, assisted Rymer
in the compilation of his Foedera,
224

Sanford, Mr., his Studies of the
Great Rebellion, 355

Satirical poctry, in the twelfth
century, 267

Savile, Sir H., his Scriptores post
Bedam, 216

SMI

Saxons, the, settlement of, in
Britain, 16

Scobell, H., Collection of, 338
Scotland, its relations with Edward
the Elder and Edgar, 30; its
relations with Edward I., 77; its
resista ce to Charles I., 141;
sources for early history of, 281;
authorities for history of, in the
sixteenth century, 324

Scots, their attack on Southern
Britain, 15

Scriptores, Decem, 216
Seebohm, Mr., his Oxford Re-
formers, 328

Selden, John, one of the editors of
the Decem Scriptores, 216
Senlac, Harold's death at, 40
Serfdom, growth of, 34
Serfs, the, emancipation of, 97
Shaftesbury, see Cooper.
Shakespeare Society, foundation
and object of, 222

Shakespeare, William, his historical
plays chiefly founded on Hall, 299
Shelburne, the Earl of, his policy,

187; Prime Minister, 188; Life
of, by lord E. Fitzmaurice, 392
Sheridan, R. B., Life of, by Moore,
393

Shipmoney, levy of, 137

Shirley, professor, his Preface to
the Fasciculi Zizaniorum, 301,
Shrewsbury, duke of, his Corre-
spondence, 371

Sidmouth, lord, Life and Corre-
spondence of, 398

Sidney, Sir Philip, Life of, by Lord
Brooke, 328; do. by Zouch, ib. ;
do. by Fox Bourne, ib.
Simancas, State Papers preserved
at, 317

Simon, Earl, see Montfort, Simon de.
Simony, proposed abolition of, 47
Sismondi, account of the third Cru-
sade by, 269

Slavery, effect of the introduction
of, I

Smith, Adam, his influence on Pitt,

190

Smith, John, his edition of Bede,

237

SOC

Social contract, the Whig theory of

the, 164

Societies, historical, account of
principal, 221-3

Somerset, earl of, account of trial
of, by Amos, 340
Somers Tracts, the, 315
Somerville, Thomas, his History of
Reign of Queen Anne, 378
Songs, political, edited by Wright,
267, 280, 298

Southey, Robert, his Life of Wesley,
393; his Life of Nelson, 400
Spain, negotiations of James I,
with, 132

Spalding Club, foundation and ob-
ject of, 222

Spanish marriage, the treaty for
the, 340

Spanish succession, collections re-
lating to the, 364; works relating
to, 381

Sparke, Joseph, his Scriptt. Hist.
Anglic., 217

Spedding, Mr., his Life of Bacon,
356

Spelman (and Wilkins), Councils,
&c., by, 244

Spenser, Edmund, his account of
Ireland, 324

Spottiswoode, archbishop, his His

tory of the Church of Scotland, 314
Sprigg, Joseph, his Anglia Redi-
viva, 343

Stafford, William, his Examination
of Complaints, 319
Stair, the earls of, Annals of, by
Graham, 381

St. Albans, the historic school of,
270; importance of the monastery
at, 271; activity of its chroniclers,
ib.; Chronica of, edited by Riley,
ib. n. 2; monk of, Chronicle of
England by, 286; Annales of
monastery of, 291

Stamp Act, the, imposes taxation
on America, 186

Standard, battle of the, accounts of,
by Richard of Hexham, &c., 261
Stanhope, earl, his History of Eng-
land and Reign of Queen Anne,
379

SWI

Stanyhurst, Richard, a contributor
to Holinshed's Chronicles, 307
Star Chamber, the Court of, institu-
tion of, 102

Starkey, Thomas, his England in
the Reign of Henry VIII., 305
State Papers, formerly not open to
the inspection of men of letters,
223; calendars of, 226; for reign
of James I., 330

State Trials, collection of, by Cob-
bett and Howell, 327
Stephen, king, anarchy of his
reign, 54; authorities for his
reign, 260-1

Stephen, Mr. Leslie, his English
Thought in the Eighteenth
Century, 383
Stewart, Sir Charles, Life of, by
Alison, 401

Stowe, John, his Summary, An-

nales, and Survey of London, 308
St. Paul's, Domesday of, 278
Strafford, lord, Letters and Des-
spatches of, 342

Strickland, Agnes, her Lives of the
Queens, 228; her Lives of the
Stuart Princesses, 357

Strype, John, his Memorials and
Annals, 321; his Lives of Cran-
mer, Parker, &c., 323
Stubbes, Philip, Anatomie of
Abuses, by, 319

Stubbs, professor, on the mark
system, 210; his criticism on the
Lives of Dunstan, 254; his Docu-
ments, &c., ib.; his Select Charters,
&c., 257; his Early Plantagenets,
269; his preface to Walter de
Coventry, 282

Sully, Oeconomies Royales of, 345
Supreme Head of the Church of
England, title of, 110

Surtees Society, foundation and ob-
ject of, 221

Swift, dean, his Journal to Stella,
373; his History of Queen Anne's
Reign, ib.; his political pam-
phlets, 374; his criticisms of
Clarendon and Burnet, ib.; his
'Tale of a Tub,' 172

Swinfield, bishop, the Roll of, 280

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