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CHAPTER II.
The English Settlement and the English Kingship, 449–1066.
16. The struggle of the West Saxon kings with the Danes
17. Growth of kingly authority
18. Growth of a military aristocracy
19. The Eorls superseded by the Thegns
34
35
36
37
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
47
Parliamentary Organisation, 1199-1327.
1. Contrast between the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
9. New institutions needed
10. Tentative efforts
11. Germ of the representative system
12. Accession of Henry III. and the modified Charter.
13. Extinction of Papal influence
14. The Friars .
12. The religious difficulty at the accession of Elizabeth
13. The Elizabethan Compromise
14. The Elizabethan Commonwealth
15. Elizabeth on her defence against the Catholics
16. The Jesuit Propaganda.
17. Persecution of the Catholics.
• . 119
The Protectorate, the Restoration, and the Revolution,
1. Aims of the Protectorate
2. The Rights of Minorities
3. Government by the army
1653-1688.
4. Government of the Restoration
5. The Divine Right of Kings.
6. Character of the Restoration
7. Prospects of Toleration
8. Antagonism to France and the Papacy
9. The Exclusion Bill.
10. Reign of James II.
11. The Revolution of 1688
PAGE
160
161
CHAPTER IX.
The Revolution Settlement, and the Rule of the Whig
Aristocracy, 1688-1754-
163
164
165
1. Supremacy of the House of Commons
2. Liberty of the Pulpit a id the Press.
3. The sphere of Government restricted
4. Immediate results of the predominance of the House of Commons 166
5. Cabinet Government
166
CHAPTER XI.
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193
194
196
199