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other than the church of England as by law established, in the gown, or other peculiar habit, or attended with the ensign or ensigns of or belonging to such his office, that every such mayor, bailiff, or other magistrate, being thereof convicted by due course of law, shall be disabled to hold such office or offices, employment or employments, and shall be adjudged incapable to bear any public office or employment whatsoever within that part of Great Britain called England, the dominion of Wales, and town of Berwick-uponTweed, or isles of Jersey and Guernsey.

END OF THE APPENDIX.

THE INDEX.

The letters n. and ns. stand for note and notes.

ABBEY lands, given to courtiers, or sold
to gentry, vol. 1. p. 17.

Abbot, Dr. his mild government, vol. 2.
author's preface, p. xii. Made archbishop
of Canterbury; and lord Clarendon's ac-
count of him, p. 78. His zeal for the Pro-
testant cause in Bohemia, p. 108. Acci-
dentally kills a man, and retires from
court, p. 118. Writes to the king against
the articles of the Spanish match, p. 121.
Is suspended for refusing to license Sib-
thorp's sermon, &c. p. 151. He favours
the lecturers. p. 180. His death and cha-
racter, p. 209, &c.

Abhorrers. Refer to Petitioners.
Abjuration oath, for discovering Pa-
pists, vol. 3. p. 33.

Abstract of certain acts, injunctions,
and canons; a book published in 1584,
against the discipline of the church, vol. 1.
p. 359.

Accommodation, the committee of,
vol. 2. p. 395, &c. A grand one between
the Presbyterians and Independents, and
their proceedings, vol. 3. p. 255, &c.

Acontius on progressive reformations,
vol. 2. p. 111, n.

Act of supremacy, the substance of,
vol. 1. p. 10. Against appeals, p. 11.
For subscribing articles of faith only,
p. 216.

Acts and Monuments, and Book of
Martyrs, by Fox; their character and
effects, vol. 1. p. 153. 394.

Adams, Mr. burnt, vol. 1. p. 32.
Adamson, Mr. Patrick, his confession,
vol. 2. p. 74.

Address of the Puritans to the queen
and council, answering all objections
against them, vol. 1.

p.

429.

Adiaphorists in Germany, who, vol. 1.

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imprisoned, ibid. The second admonition,
p. 232. The heads of it, p. 234, 235, n.
236. It occasions a famous controversy
between Cartwright and Whitgift, ibid.
It is called in by proclamation, p. 239.
Conclusion of the controversy, p. 242.

Advertisement to the People, &c. a
work in answer to Martin Mar-Prelate,
vol. 1. p. 404.

Advertisements, or injunctions of the
bishops, for uniformity, vol. 1. p. 156.
The queen urged to enforce them, ibid.
For due order of preaching, p. 167, n.
For uniformity, p. 167.

Afternoon sermons, of suppressing
them, vol. 3. p. 185, 186.

Agitators in the army, vol. 3. p. 334.
Agreement of the people, vol. 3.
p. 417.447.

Ainsworth, Rev. Mr. an account of
him, his writings, and death, vol. 2.
p. 40-42, and ns.

Ainsworth, Mr. one of the heads of
the Brownists, vol. 1. p. 428. 451.

Allein, Mr. J. of Taunton; his suffer-
ings, death, &c. vol. 4. p. 390.
Allen, Mr. his case, vol. 1. p. 460.
Allegiance, oath of, vol. 2. p. 46.

Altars ordered to be taken down, and
tables placed in their stead, vol. 1. p. 53.
Opinions of the learned on them, p. 54.
Altars again adopted by Laud, vol. 2.
Author's preface, p. 13. Of consecrating
them, vol. 3. p. 164. 167. Antiquity, &c.
p. 170, 171. Of their furniture, bowing
to them, &c. p. 172. 174.

Ames, Rev. Dr. W. settles at the
Hague, vol. 2. p. 40. His death and cha-
racter, p. 230, 231, and n. Of his works,
ibid.

Anabaptists. Refer to Baptists.

Anagram on the word Puritan; with
proposals for a Round-heads' feast, vol. 3.
p. 38, n.

Anderson, judge, his fury against the
Nonconformists, and particularly against
Mr. Allen, vol. 1. p. 460.

Annates, or first-fruits, taken from the
pope, vol. 1. p. 10. 14. Given to the king,
ibid. Again to queen Elizabeth, p. 108,
109.

Annesley, Dr. his sufferings, vol. 4.
p. 479.

Annotations, that go under the name
of the assembly of divines, vol. 3. p. 414.

Answer of the vice-chancellor of Ox-
ford, to the petition of the ministers for
reform; a work published about 1603.
Some account of it, vol. 2. p. 6.

Answer to the reasons of the London
clergy, containing a censure on the Pres-
byterians, and defending universal liberty
of conscience, vol. 3. p. 263.

Antapologia (a quarto volume) against
the Independents, vol. 3. p. 120.

Antiquitates Britannica, a work writ-
ten by Parker archbishop of Canterbury,
vol. 1. p. 274.

Ancient historians, new editions, by
archbishop Parker, vol. 1. p. 275, n.
Antinomianism censured by the assem-
bly of divines, vol. 3. p. 55.

Anti-toleration, a pamphlet, vol. 3.
p. 265.

Anti-popes in Wickliffe's time, vol. 1.
p. 4.

Antrim, marquis of, his case, vol. 2.
p. 433. Charles II.'s letter to the duke
of Ormond about him, p. 435.

Aphorisms of Dr. Whichcote, publish-
ed by Dr. Salter, 1753, vol. 4. p. 492.
Apologetical narration of the Indepen-
dents, with remarks, vol. 3. p. 118. 120.
Apocryphal writings, the Puritans
against reading them in the church, vol. 2.
p. 49.

Apology, bishop Jewel's, a book of
great repute, vol. 1. p. 224, 225, n.

Apology for the ecclesiastical pro-
ceedings, a work by Dr. Cosins, vol. 1.
p. 421.

Appeal to parliament, or Zion's plea
against prelacy, a treatise, vol. 2. p. 188.
Appeals to Rome forbid, vol. 1. p. 11.

13. 108. 114.

Apprentices' petition, vol. 2. p. 447.
Arbitrary methods of government,
vol. 2. p. 177.

Archbishops of England, their power
before the Reformation, vol. 1. p. 2. Ordi-
nances for abolishing them, bishops, &c.
and for the sale of their lands, vol. 3.
p. 306, 307.

Archbishops of Canterbury and York,
their power before the Reformation, vol.
1. p. 2.

Archy, his jest upon prince Charles's
going to Spain, vol. 2. p. 122. Upon arch-
bishop Laud, for which he is discharged
the king's service, p. 279, and n.

Arians, behaviour of two in prison,
vol. 1. p. 91.

Arianism, its rapid spread, vol. 1.
p. 61, n.

Arminians, their state under James I.
vol. 2. author's preface, p. xii. Progress
of the Arminian controversy in Holland,
p. 95. Its state at Charles's accession,
p. 138. Restraint of the press in favour
of it, p. 148. Jesuit's letter about its
growth, p. 157. Protestation of the
commons against it, p. 168. Ministers
expelled the university for preaching
against it, p. 196. Rise of the Arminians
at court, p. 112. Conferences between
them and the Calvinists, p. 148. Death
and character of Arminius, p. 67. Armi-
nianism and popery encouraged by Laud,
vol. 3. p. 178. Discussed in the note to,
P. 178.

Army, parliament vote the raising one,
vol. 2. p. 501. Character of it, p. 507.
Character of the king's, p. 515. Farther
character, and the ravages they committed,
vol. 3. p. 90. Of the parliament's, their
character, and good discipline, p. 92.
New modelled, p. 228. Rise of enthusi-
asm in it, p. 229. 313. Their strict dis-
cipline, ibid. Their separate views,
p. 331. Controversy between the parlia-
ment and them, p. 333. They seize the
king at Holmby, p. 335. Their declara-
tion, p. 336. They impeach eleven mem-
bers of the house of commons, p. 337.
Several members retire to them, p. 339.
They march to London, p. 341. Reasons
of their deserting the king, p. 345. Their
proposals, p. 347. They unite with the
parliament, p. 355. They are dissatisfied
with the treaty of Newport, p. 444. Their
proceedings, p. 445. Their remonstrauce,
ibid. They seize the king a second time,
ibid. They march to London, and purge
the parliament, p. 446. Resolve to im-
peach the king, p. 448. Remonstrance of
the Presbyterian ministers and others
against them, p. 449, &c. Part of them,
with the remainder of the parliament,
proceed against the king, and put him to
death, p. 454. Scots army enter England,
p. 88. Again under duke Hamilton, p. 408.
of vol. 3.-See Scots. Progress of the
English army in Scotland, vol. 4. p. 46.
Quarrel between them and the parlia-
ment, p. 58. Remarks, ib. They depose
Richard Cromwell, p. 192. Aud restore
the rump-parliament, ib. Their petition,
p. 196. Behaviour of the officers, p. 221.
Origin of a standing army, p. 279, n.

Arrowsmith, Dr. some account of him,
and of his Tactica Sacra, vol. 3. p. 103.

Arrow against Idolatry; and the Com-
munion of Saints; two treatises repub-

lished at Edinburgh, 1789. Written by
Ainsworth, vol. ii. p. 40, n. 42.

Articles of religion devised by Henry
VIII. vol. i. p. 19. The forty-two articles
in king Edward's reign, p. 62. Articles
set forth by the bishops in Elizabeth's
reign, p. 127. The thirty-nine agreed on
in convocation, and the controverted
clause of the twentieth considered, 147.
They are subscribed, p. 149. Act for sub-
scribing articles of faith only, 216. Re-
marks thereupon, ib. &c. Many deprived
for not subscribing them, 226. Whitgift's
three articles, 320, 321. Ministers sus-
pended for not subscribing them, 323.
His twenty-four articles for the court of
high-commission, 337, &c. n. Lambeth
articles, 454. Articles to be subscribed
by the clergy, and in what form, ii. 33.
Lincolnshire ministers' reasons against
them, 48. Occasion a second separation,
54.

Articles of the church of Ireland,
91. Remarks upon them, ibid. At large
in Appendix, No. VI. The five of Perth,
101. Ratified in parliament, 102. Articles
of the Spanish match, 120. Sworn to by
the king and prince, 121. The king's
declaration before the thirty-nine, 163.
Are received in Ireland, 231. Articles
of visitation by the bishops, 246. 248.
Mischief of them, 249. Alterations made
in the articles of the church of England,
by the assembly of divines, iii. 55. See
also Appendix, No. VII. Articles of disci-
pline in the assembly's confession re-
jected by the parliament, 320. and Ap-
pendix, No. VIII.

Ascanio licensed to import Popish
books, i. 385. Remarks on this licence,
ibid. n.

Ash, Mr. Simeon, his death and cha-
racter, iv. 343.

Askew, Mrs. Anne, burnt, i. 32.

Assembly of divines, steps towards
calling it, iii. 43. Ordinance for calling
it, 44. Names of the lay assessors, 46. A
list of the divines, ib. The king forbids
their meeting, 48. Episcopal clergy's
reasons against the assembly, with the
answers to them, 49. Their character, 50.
They meet, 51. Rules agreed on by them,
ib. Their vow or protestation, ib. Regu
lations sent them by the parliament, 52.
Their petition to the parliament for a fast,
&c. 53. Their alterations in the thirty-
nine articles, 55. They censure Antino-
mianism, ibid.. Scots commissioners ap-
pointed to join them, 56. Mr. Marshall
and Mr. Nye's letter to them, ib. Their
debates on the solemn league and cove-
nant, 57. Their exhortation to the taking
it, 63. Their letter to foreign churches,
71. Episcopal divines leave them, 78.
The examination and approbation of mi-
VOL. V.

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nisters referred to them, 80. An account
of the several parties amongst them,
116, &c. Their farther proceedings, 124.
Ordered to confer about discipline, ibid.
Their proceedings and advice about ordi-
nation, 125, 126. They compose a direc-
tory for public worship, 127. Debates
about ordination, 234. The power to
ordain given them pro tempore, 235.
They debate about the divine right of
Presbytery, 236. About the power of
the keys, 242. They petition against the
ordinance for presbyteries, 252. Are
threatened with a premunire, 253. Ques-
tions propounded to them about the di-
vine right of Presbytery, ib. Are terrified,
and appoint a fast, 255. They recommend
a new version of the Psalms, 266. Their
sentiments of the jus divinum, 278. Their
proceedings upon their confession of
faith, 318. Their larger and shorter
catechisms, 322. Scots commissioners
take leave of them, ibid. Conclusion of
the assembly, 413. Their works, ib. Of
the Annotations which go under their
name, 414. A farther account of their
character, ib. The confession, Appendix
No. VIII. Assembly of Episcopal and
Presbyterian divines, to peruse the king's
declaration, iv. 259.

Associations of the Presbyterian mi-
nisters in the country, iii. 418. iv, 75.
Good effects, 76. Not countenanced by
the London Presbyterians, ib. To stand
by the prince of Orange, v. 67.

Assurance, act of, i. 146.

Asty, Mr. preaches for Mr. Tomkins,
and the consequence, i. 17, n. of Neal's
memoirs; again discussed, ii. p. vii, viii,
of Advertisement prefixed. Some account
of Mr. Asty, vii.

Augmentations, court of, i. 17.
Auricular confession, expediency of
maintained, ii. 262.

Axton, Mr. his remarkable examina-
tion, i. 209. 211, n. He is deprived,

ibid. n.

Aylmer, Dr. made bishop of London,
and from a favourer, becomes a persecu-
tor, of the Puritans, vol. i. p. 275. The
queen's letter to him for suppressing the
prophesyings, and his order thereon,
p. 284, 285, n. His persecuting zeal,
p. 293. A proof of his rigour, ib. n. His
farther severities against the Puritans,
p. 345. List of those whom he deprived,
ib. n. His answer to the privy-council's
letter, in behalf of Mr. Benison, p. 351.
His ill language to Mr. Merbury, at his
examination, p. 352. His different senti-
ments before he was made a bishop,
p. 353. His inhuman treatment of Mr.
Gardiner, p. 376. His death and cha-
racter, p. 449, 450. Anecdotes of him,

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Bagshaw's readings against the bi-
shops, ii. 293. His speech against the
order, 362, 363.

Bailey, William, memoirs of him and
his wife, v. 263, n.

Bainham, James, knt. burnt, i. 16.
Ball, Rev. Mr. his death and character,
ii. 309.

Ball, Stephen, some account of, v. 96.
Ballard, a Popish priest, executed for
a plot; his judgment of the Puritans,
and of Whitgift's writings, i. 386.

Bampfield, Mr. his sufferings, iv. 487,
and n.

Bancroft, Dr. first advances the notion
of the divine right of episcopacy in a
sermon, i. 396. Dr. Raynolds's remarks
upon it, ibid. n. He is made bishop of
London, 451. His behaviour at the
Hampton-court conference, ii. 13. He
answers Raynolds's objections, ibid. Is
against a preaching ministry, 15. Flat-
ters king James, 17. Is president of the
convocation, 25. Made archbishop of
Canterbury, 34. His temper and furious
proceedings, 35. He revives the persecu-
tion of the Puritans, ib. His letter to the
bishops about conformity and subscrip-
tion, 38. His death and character, 77.
The latter discussed, ib. n. Satire on his
death, ibid.

Band of defence of the Scots nation,
ii. 276.

Baptism of infants, on what founda-
tion adopted by the reformers, i. 147, n.
Treatise on baptism, iv. 371. v. 117. 122,

123.

Baptists, their history, v. 93. How far
their sentiments agree with those of
Wickliffe, 95. Articles devised by
Henry VIII. pointed against them, 98.
Their persecutions in the reign of Ed-
ward VI. 101, et seq. And of queen Mary,
103. A proclamation against their wri-
tings, 104. How persecuted in the reign
of Elizabeth, 107, &c. Form of the abju-
ration-oath tendered them, 108. Some of
them burnt in Smithfield, 112. Many of
them go into exile, 113. Excellent senti-
ments charged upon them by their ene-
mies, 114. Plead for liberty of con-
science, 116, &c. Vindicate their princi-
ples, 117. Number of their congregations
in 1644, p. 118. Their first congregation
in London ascertained, ibid. Various
churches in the country mentioned, 121.
How abused by Dr. Featley, 127. In-
stances of their ministers who were cruelly
persecuted, 133, et seq. Their state during
the protectorship, 145. Many of them in
the army of the parliament, 153. Their

bold remonstrance with Cromwell, p. 152,
n. A sketch of their history by major-
general Harrison, 156. Their condition
after the Restoration, 165. From the
declaration of indulgence to the Revolu-
tion, 187.

Barber, Mr. Edward, his sufferings,
v. 133.

Barber, Mr. suspended, i. 328.

Barclay, Robert, intercedes for friends
in Scotland, v. 260. Of his Apology,
and other works, 269, &c. Of his father,
274.

Bare-bones; of this appellation, as
applied to parliament; and other quaint
terms applied to persons' names, iv. 65,
and n.

Barnadiston, Giles, memoirs of, v. 264.
Barnes, Dr. burnt, i. 28.

Barnes, Dr. succeeds Pilkington as
bishop of Durham, i. 290. Is for severe
measures, ib. His usage of Whittingham,
291.

Barnstaple plundered, and the mayor
hung by the king's soldiers, iii. 91.
Taken by the parliament forces, 272.

Barker, Mr. John, xxiv of life of Neal,
prefixed to vol. i. n.

Baro, Dr. his case in the predestinarian
controversy, i. 455.

Baronets, their institution, ii. 87.
Barret, Mr. begins the predestinarian
controversy at Cambridge, i. 453.

Barrowe, Mr. the Brownist, his suppli-
cation to the parliament, i. 430. His sup-
plication for a conference, 432. Reasons
for refusing it, 433. His first examina-
tion, 434, 435. His second, ibid. His
trial, sentence, and execution, 436. His
letter against archbishop Whitgift, 437.
Barrowists. See Brownists.

Barwick, Dr. his mention of a parti-
cular oath for the university, iii. 97. A
curious quotation from his Querela Can-
tabrigiensis, 107. Account of, iv. 209. n.
Bastwick, Dr. his sufferings, ii. 228.

253.

Bates, Dr. G. an eminent royalist;
some observations of his, iv. 92. 97, 98.
Bayes, Mr. J. p. xxv of the life of
Neal, prefixed to vol. i. n.

Bayly, Dr. some account of him, iiì.
389.

Baynes, Rev. Mr. his death and cha-
racter, ii. 94. Anecdote of him, ibid. n.
Baxter, Mr. Josiah, strange prosecu-
tion in this name, v. 172.

Baxter, Mr. his character of the par-
liament party, ii. 508. Of the Puritan
clergy, 509. Keeps his people from
taking the solemn league and covenant,
iii. 67. His account of the sectaries in
the army, 313. His sentiments about the
authors of the king's death, 465. He re-

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