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CHAP.
XI.

Pauli's
Geschichte
Englands.

and the statemanship of the period it evinces powers of a high order. DR. PAULI'S Geschichte Englands' contains no facts which may not be found in the foregoing writers; but the introduction and first four chapters are of some interest, as occasionally presenting us with the views of an enlightened Continental historian respecting the foreign policy and diplomatic relations of England at this critical period.

1 Geschichte Englands seit den Friedenschlüssen von 1814 und 1815, von Reinhold Pauli. Leipzig, 1864.

INDEX.

A

ABB

BBEY (and Overton), English
Church in the Eighteenth

Century, by, 383
Abbotsford Club, foundation and
object of, 221

Adam of Usk, his Chronicon, 287
Adelard, see St. Dunstan.
Adolphus, John, History of Eng-
land, by, 394

Aelfric Society, foundation and
object of, 223

Alcuin, Life and Letters of, 248;
his history of Archbishops of
York, ib.

Aldhelm, of Sherborne, Life of, by
Faricius, 248

Alfred, King, his wars with the
Danes, 29; Life of, by Asser,
245
Alison, Sir Archibald, Life of
Marlborough by, 379; his Lives of
Lord Castlereagh and Sir Charles
Stewart, 401; his History of
Europe, 402; his Continuation,

402

Almon's Debates, 227
America, resistance to taxation by,
183; its resistance to England,
187
Amundesham, John, supposed
author of Annales of St. Albans,
291
Anderson, collections by, relating
to Mary, Queen of Scots, 317
André, Bernard, his History of
Henry VII., 303

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Annales, the, of the monasteries, 274
Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury,

43; sketch of his career, 51; his
conflict with William II. and
Henry I., 52; his part in the
quarrel about investitures, ib.;
Life of, by Eadmer, 267; by
Dean Church, 268

Anstey, Mr., his Munimenta Aca-
demica, 300

Antoninus, the Itinerarium of, 232
Aquitaine, retains its allegiance to
the English kings, 63
Archæologia, 218

Army, the Cromwellian, 148; its
character under the Protectorate,
152

Asiatic monarchies, nature of, 2
Asser, Life of Alfred, by, 245
Athens, its political system con-
trasted with that of Persia, 4
Atterbury, bp., criticism on, by
Macaulay, 382

Auckland Correspondence, the, 388
Augustine, preaches Christianity in
England, 22; his behaviour to
the British priests, 25
Avesbury, Robert, his account of
Edward III., 284

Avignon, the Popes at, 84

BAB

BABYLON fall Chancellor, fall

of, 133; his Life of Henry VII.,
322; Life of, by Spedding, 356
Baillie, Robert, Letters and Four-
nals of, 351

Baker, Thomas, his History of St.
John's College, 383
Balcanqual, Dr., the author of the
Large Declaration, 341

Bale, John, his Scriptores Britanniae,

212

Balfour, Sir James, his Annales of

Scotland, 341

Bamford, Passages in the Life of a
Radical by, 401

Bancroft, George, his History of the
United States, 356
Bannatyne Club, foundation and
object of, 221
Barillon, Despatches of, 363
Baronage, the, its tyranny in
Stephen's reign, 55; its power
weakened by Henry II., 56
Bassompierre, M. de, Memoir of the
Embassy of, 345

Baxter, Richard, Autobiography of,
364

Bayeux Tapestry, the, 259
Bec, the abbey of, 51
Becket, Archbishop, see Beket.
Bede, his Ecclesiastical History, 28;
the Venerable, 234; his History,
235-6; editions of, 237; his
Life of St. Cuthbert, 247
Bedell, bishop, Lives of, 348
Bedford Correspondence, the, 385
Beket, Thomas, his quarrel with
Henry II., 59; his murder, 60;
account of, by William of New-
bury, 262; Lives of, 267; Free-
man's Essay on, 268
Bekynton, bishop, his Correspon-
dence, 292

Berwick, duke of, Memoirs of,
377

Bertram, C. J., forges the de Situ
Britanniae, 241

Biography, Dictionary of Christian,
257

Birch, colonel, Memoir of, 348
Birch, Dr., his Historical View,

BRI

346; his Courts of James I. and
Charles I., 351
Bishoprics, the English, their rela-
tion to the kingdoms, 27
Bishops, their position after the
Teutonic conquest of the empire,

14
Blaauw, Mr., his Barons' War, 283
Black Death, the, 92

Black Prince, the, his chivalry,
90

Blake, admiral, Life of, by Dixon,
369

Blondel, Robert, his de Reductione
Normanniae, 294

Blunt, Mr. J. H., his Reformation
in England. 326

Boderie, le Fèvre de la, corre-
spondence of, 345

Bollandus, John, his Acta Sanc-
torum, 218

Bolingbroke, Lord, his political
pamphlets and correspondence,
374-5

Bonaparte, Napoleon, his rise to
power, 195

Boniface, St., preaches in Germany,
28

Boniface VIII., Pope, issues the
Bull Clericis laicos, 79

Boston, Jolin, his Catalogus, etc.,

211

Bourne, Mr. Fox, his Life of Lord
Dundonald, 400

Boyer, A., History of the Reign of
Queen Anne by, 375; Life of Sir
W. Temple by, 365

Brentano, Dr., his Essay on Gilds,

277

Brewer, Mr., his prefaces to the
Monumenta Franciscana and
Roger Bacon, 282; his view of
British history, 244

Brewster, Sir David, see Newton.
Brief Discourse, the, or the Troubles
at Frankfort, 313

Bright, professor, his Early English
Church History, 257

Britain, Roman province in, 15;
English settlements in, 16
Britons, their treatment by the
English, 16

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 Times 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

CAT

ÆDMON, his poetry, 28
Cabala, the, 315

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

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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 Anglo-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, 105; 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

Cobbett, William, his Parlia-
mentary Debates, 228

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