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KEM

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

J

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,
228

Judicial reforms, established by
Henry II., 57

Jumièges, William of, his Historiae
Normannorum, 258

Junius, Letters of, 391

Jutes, the, settlement of in Britain,
16

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KEN

Kennet, bishop, his History of
England, 217; his Register and
Chronicle, 359

Kent, Proceedings in the County of,
338

Ker of Kersland, Memoirs of, 377
Ket's rebellion, 112

King, Dr., Anecdotes of, 377
'King's Pamphlets,' the, at the
British Museum, 334
King, the, growth of his authority
amongst the English settlers, 19;
relations of, with his Witan, ib.;
his relations with his gesiths, ib. ;
his constitutional powers in the
tenth century, 35; growth of his
authority after Alfred's reign, 30
Kirk, Mr. John F., his Life of
Charles the Bold, 301

Knight, Charles, his share in Miss
Martineau's History of the Peace,
403

Knighton, Henry, History of Eng-
land by, 285

LABOURERS, the condition

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

LON

Letters, the Royal, temp. Henry
III., 279; episcopal, of Walter
de Grey, 280; papal, collections
of, ib.

Levi, Professor Leone, his History
of Commerce, 230

Lewes, battle of, 73

Lewis, son of Philip II., invited to
take the English throne, 69
Lewis XIV., European position of,
157; his intolerance, 161

Lewis, John, his Life of Fisher, 323
Lewis, Sir G. C., his observations
on the historical value of letters
and despatches, 384; his Essays
on the Administrations, 395
Liber Albus, 278

Liberal movement, the, spread of,
198

Liber Custumarum, 278

Liber de Antiquis Legibus, 278
Liberty of the press, the establish-
ment of, 165

Lincolnshire, the rebellion in, 1470,
295

Lingard, John, his error in accepting
the de Situ as genuine, 241;
value of his History for the
sixteenth century, 326; value of
his History for the seventeenth
century, 353; his account of
James II., 366

Liverpool, lord, Life of, by Mr.
Yonge, 398

Livius, Titus, his Life of Henry V.,
289

Lloyd, David, his State Worthies,
323

Lobanov-Rostovsky, Prince, edition
of Letters of Mary, Queen of
Scots, by, 317

Locke, John, his Letters on Tolera
tion, 373

Lollardism, course of, 97
Lollards, the, their rise, 95
London, Chronicle of, 278
London Chronicle, the, temp. Henry
VII. and Henry VIII., 304
London, City Records of, 277
Londonderry, lord, Life of, by
Alison, 401; Correspondence of,
402

LON

Longman, William, his Lectures on
the History of England, 282; his
Life of Edward III., 300
Long Parliament, the, its first mea-
sures, 142; its breach with the
King, 143; character of its sup-
porters in the Civil War, 145;
Cromwell's dissolution of, 149
Lords, House of, Journals of, 228;
Protests, 336

Lowell, J. R., his Essay on Dryden,
370

Luard, Mr., his edition of Mat-
thew Paris, .282

Ludlow, Edmund, Memoirs of, 343
Luttrell, Narcissus, Diary of, 362

M

ABILLON, John, his Acta
Sanctorum. 218
Macaulay, lord, History of, 367;
Essays of, 382

MacGeogehan, the Abbé, his His-
tory of Ireland, 267
Mackintosh, Sir James, his History

of the Revolution, 366; his Vin-
diciae Gallicae, 397

Macknight, Thomas, his Life of
Burke, 392

Machyn, Henry, Diary of, 310
Macpherson, David, his Annals of
Commerce, 229

Macpherson, James, Original Paters
edited by, 372
Macray, Mr., his Manual of British
Historians, 215

Magna Carta, its grant by John,
66

Maine, Sir H., his authority cited,
208; his History of Institutions,

209

Maitland Club, foundation and ob-

ject of, 221

Maitland, Dr., his Essays on the
Reformation. 327
Majoribanks, George, his Annals of
Scotland, 325

Malmesbury, the Monk of, his Life
of Edward II., 275
Malmesbury, William of, his ac-
count of Aldhelm, 248; his Gesta
Regum Anglorum, 251; his de

MID

Gestis Pontificum, ib.; his His-
toria Novella, ib. and 260
Malmesbury Correspondence, the,
386

Mansfield, lord, Life of, by lord
Campbell, 393

Manufacturing industry, its influence
on politics, 190

Marianus Scotus, Chronicle of, 249
Markham, Clements, Life of Fair-
fax by, 356

Marlborough, duchess of, literature
relating to, 378

Marlborough Despatches, the, 378
Marlborough, duke of, his Life by
Coxe, 379; by Alison, ib.
Marprelate, Martin, see Maskell.
Marsden, J. B., his History of the
Early Puritans, 327; his Later
Puritans, 368

Martineau, Miss, her History of the
Peace, 403

Mary, queen, her reign, 112

Mary II., queen, Letters and Me-
moirs of, 365

Mary, queen of Scots, her captivity,

117; materials for the history of,

317
Maskell, William, his History of the
Marprelate Controversy, 313
Map, Walter, his de Nugis Curia-
lium, 265

Massey, Mr., History of England
by, 394

Masson, Mr. D., his Life of Milton,
356

Maurer, G. L. von, his Einleitung,
&c., 210

May, Thomas, his History of the
Long Parliament, 338

May, Sir Erskine, History of Eng-
land by, 395

Mayor, Professor John E. B., his
edition of Bede, 237; his ex-
posure of the forgery by Bertram,
241; his edition of Baker's His-
tory of St. John's College, 383
M'cCrie's Life of Knox, 329
Melrose, Chronica of, 261
Melros State Papers, the, 333
Middle Ages, the, decline of the
system of, 83

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

Monasticism, 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 Lectures
on Language, 207
Mullinger, Mr. J. B., his History of
the University of Cambridge, 283

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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

E E

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 Pre-
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-

NOR

ter, ib.; his correspondence with
George III., 386
North, Roger, Lives of his brothers

by, 365; his Examen, 359
Northumberland, Wilfrid in, 26;
cession to the King of the Scots
of the Northern part of, 30

Ο

CCASIONAL conformity, le-
gislation on, 172
O'Curry, Mr. Eugene, his Lectures
on Irish History, 266

Oliphant, Mr. T., his Old and

Middle English, 208

Ordericus Vitalis, his Ecclesiastical
History, 51, 260

Organisation of England, political,

21; ecclesiastical, 22
Ormonde Papers, the, 339

Osbert de Clare, his Life of Edward
the Confessor, 252

Osney, Annals of the monastery of,
275

Otterbourne, Thomas, his Chronica,
289

Overton, J. H., see Abbey.
Oxford, University of, Puritan visi-
tation of, 344

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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; admission
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.

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