Digges, Sir Dudley, his Compleat
Ambassador, 314 Disraeli, Isaac, his Commentaries 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
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 foreigners, 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
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 1 hegns,
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, 86
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,
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
Gray, John de, nominated arch- bishop, 64
Great Council, the, compared with the Witenagemot, 46; its power over taxation, 68
Greek republics, character of, 3 Green, Mrs. Everett, her Lives of the Princesses, 228
Gregory I., Pope, sends Augustine to England, 25
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,
Hall, Anthony, texts edited by, 217
Hall, Edward, his Two Noble Families, &c., 299; his value for the Tudor period, 302-3 Hallam, on the four causes,' 283; on chivalry, 300; value of his Constitutional History for the sixteenth century, 326
Halliwell, J. O., his Letters of the Kings of England, 350 Hamilton, dukes of, Burnet's Lives of, 348
Hamilton Papers, the, 350 Hampton Court, Conference at, 130
Hardwicke Papers, the, 314
Hardy, Sir T. D., his criticism on Bale, 213; on Tanner, 214; his Descriptive Catalogue, 215; his Syllabus of Rymer's Foedera, 225; on the Rolls of Parliament, 225; his opinion on Gildas, 234; his criticism of Geoffrey of Mon- mouth, 240; of Ethelwerd, 246; his criticism on Eddius, 247 Hardyng, John, Chronicle by, 292 Harleian Miscellany, the, 231 Harold is chosen king, 39 Harpsfield, Nicholas, his Pretended Divorce, &c., 304
Harrison, William, his Description of England, 307; his Chronicle of Scotland, 307
Hatton, Sir Christopher, Life of, by Sir H. Nicolas, 328 Hatton Family, the, Correspondence of, 350
Hansard, his Parliamentary Debates, 228
Hausser, Ludwig, his History of the Reformation, 326
Haweis, Mr., his Sketches of the Re- formation, 326
Hayward, Sir John, his Life of
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, penance 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 Rhé, 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 Laud, 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
Investitures, quarrel about, 53 Ireland, account of, by Giraldus, 265; conquest of, by Henry II., ib. and 266; authorities for early history of, ib.; for history of, in sixteenth century, 324 Ireland, History of Affairs in, 339 Italy, its union under Rome, 5
AMES I., the first ten years of
his reign, 130; his treatment of the Catholics, 131; his alliance with Spain, 132; materials for reign of, 331; writings of, 333 James II., the reign of, 160; birth of his son, 161; dethronement of, 162; Lives of, 366
James, William, his Naval History, 230
Jane, queen, Chronicle of, 310 Jardine, D., On the Use of Torture, 341
Jean le Bel, Chronicle of, 293 Jerusalem taken by the Maho- metans, 61
Jessopp, Dr., his One Generation of a Norfolk House, 318
Jesuits, the, their propaganda, 118;
authorities for their history, 327 John, king, his selfishness, 62; his quarrel with the king of France, 63; his quarrel with the Pope, 64; his quarrel with Innocent III., 65; his quarrel with the baronage, 66; constitutional con- cessions of, 68
Judges of England, Lives of the,
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