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Causes Joan of Kent and George Van Paris to
be burnt as heretics, 42. He is zealous for the
habits, 48. But relaxes his opinion about them,
49. His sentiments about discipline, 56. Not
satisfied with the liturgy, though twice reformed,
id. He is sent to the Tower, 60. Tried for
high-treason, 61. Declared a heretic, 65. De-
graded, and recants, 71. Retracts his recanta-
tion, and is burnt, 72. Was utterly against the
Popish habits at last, 128. Cranmer's Bible,

453

Creed-church, manner of its consecration by
Laud, i. 540

Crisp, Dr. of London, his death and character,

ii. 184

Crofton, Mr. his sufferings, iii. 66

Cromwell, lord, a friend to the reformation,
i. 12. Made visitor-general of the monasteries,
18. Arrested, and beheaded without trial, 22.
Cause of his fall discussed, 23, and n.

brother, 616. Calls a new parliament, goes in
state, and his speech, id. Second speech;
appoints a recognition of the government, 617,
618. He dissolves them, 619. Plots against
him, id. His vigilance, 620. Severity to the
royalists, by decimation, id. For universal
liberty of conscience, 623. His speech to par-
liament for that purpose, id. Bates's testimony
to it, 624. Is for encouraging learning, 638.
Appoints new visitors for the universities, 639.
His zeal for the Protestant religion, 640. His
letter to the prince of Tarente, id. Appoints
major-generals, 646. Enters into an alliance
with France, id. Sends Blake to the Mediter-
ranean, id. Publishes a severe ordinance against
the old sequestered clergy, 649. But is willing
to dispense with it, 650. Reasons of the seve-
rities against the Papists, 651. Is for encou-
raging the Jews, id. Assists the Protestants in
the valleys, 653. His letter to the duke of
Cromwell, Oliver, designs to go to New- Savoy, 654. Calls a new parliament, 658.
England, i. 618, ii. 103. His character, ii. 355. Assists the Protestants at Nismes, 668. His
His bravery and conduct in the battle of Naseby, letter to cardinal Mazarine, id. Debates about
357. He and Ireton confer with the king about giving him the title of king, 672. His reasons
his restoration, 449. Reasons of his deserting for declining it, 673. Remarks, id. His title
him, 450. His speech in parliament, 457. He of protector confirmed, id. His second instal-
reduces the Welsh, 499. Defeats the Scots ment, 676. His grandeur, and wise adminis-
under duke Hamilton, 502. Returns to Lon-tration, 677. His treaty with France, 678.
don, 531. His speech on the motion for trying Constitutes an upper house of parliament, 679.
the king, 532. Reduces Ireland, 552. His His speech at their dissolution, 681. Purges
rapid success, 553. He and his army petition the army, 682. And projects a union of the
for a toleration, 555. Marches against the whole reformed interest, id. Resigns his chan-
Scots, 565. Defeats them at Dunbar, id. In- cellorship of Oxford, 683. Appoints his son
vites the Scots ministers to return to their Henry lord-lieutenant of Ireland, 684. His
churches, 566. His letter to the governor of only remaining descendants, 684. Success of
Edinburgh-castle, id. Ministers' reply, and his his arms abroad, 686. Plots against him, 687.
His
answer, 567.
Reply to the governor's com- His sickness, 696. His last prayer, id.
plaint, 568. Extracts of more letters, id. Re- death, burial, and character, 696, 697. As a
marks, id. Chosen chancellor of Oxford, 569. soldier and statesman, 698. His public, reli-
His letter to the university thereon, id. Pro- gious, and moral character, 699, 700. His
gress of his army in Scotland, 587. Defeats the enthusiasm, 700. Objections against him con-
king at Worcester, 589. His letter to the par- sidered, id. In regard to his dissimulation,
liament, id. He and his army quarrel with ambition, &c. 701. Sum of his character, 702.
parliament, 596. Remarks, id. Advises about Poems on, id. His body taken up after the
a new form of government, 597. His ambi- Restoration, iii. 67
tious designs, id. Forcibly dissolves the long-
parliament, 598. Dismisses the council of state,
599. Remarks, id. He and his council of
officers assume the government, 600. His
form of summons for a new parliament, 601.
His first (called the little) parliament, id.
Declared protector by the council, 604. His
instalment and oath, 606. Remarks, 607.
Mr. Baxter's testimony to his government, 608.
His first council, id. State of the nation at his
assuming the protectorship, 612. His grandeur
and wise management, id. Gives peace to the
Dutch, id. High reputation among foreign
nations, id.
French ambassador's speech to
him, 613.
His domestic enemies, id. His
management of the cavaliers, presbyterians, and
republicans, 613, 614. His friends, 614. Re-
marks, 615. Incorporates Scotland and Ireland
with England, id. Royalists' plot against him,
id.

Cromwell, Henry, appointed by his father
lord-lieutenant of Ireland, ii. 684. Some ac-
count of him and his family, id. His letters to
his brother, iii. 3. His letter to Fleetwood, 4.
Others, 5. 69

Cromwell, Richard, chosen chancellor of
Oxford, ii. 683. Proclaimed protector, iii. 1.
Calls a parliament, id. Obliged by the army to
dissolve them, 2. Deposed by the army, id.
Quietly resigns the protectorship, 6, and n.
Resigns his chancellorship, and absconds, 36.
His character, 37. Death and character of his
wife, 201, n.

Crosby's History of English Baptists, quoted
by the editor, i. 13, n. and in a variety of other
places in the course of the work. See an ac-
count of this work, editor's advertisement to
vol. iv.

Cross in baptism, objections of the Puritans
Executes the Portuguese ambassador's against it, i. 157. Bishop Rudd's moderating

speech about it, 408. Puritans' objections, 426.

429

Cross, of the, in baptism, a learned treatise, by
Mr. R. Parker; consequences to the author, i.
440

Crosse, Dr. some account of him, ii. 491
Crosses, several pulled down, ii. 202. Pam-
phlet on it, id. n.

Crowder, Mr. his hard treatment, i. 545

Crowly, Mr. his sufferings, i. 148

Defenders in Bohemia, some account of, i.

473

Delaune, Mr. his sufferings, iii. 242, 243,
and ns.

Delegates, rise of the court of, i. 11
Delinquents, ordinance for seizing their es-
tates, ii. 197

Dell, William, a Baptist minister, some
account of, iii. 408

Demonstration of Discipline, a book so called;

Cudworth, Dr. some account of him, ii. 253.n. proceedings against the supposed author, i. 331,

Daillé, of Paris, his letter on the king's con-

stancy in religion, iii. 21

De L'Angle on the same, iii. 21
Damplin, a Papist, hanged, i. 23

Proceedings

Danger of the church, cry of, iii. 199
Dangerfield's plot, iii. 215.
against him in James's reign, 258

D'Anvers, an eminent minister and writer, an
account of, iii. 415

Darrel, Mr. his sufferings for pretending to
cast out unclean spirits, i. 373. His protesta-
tion, 374

Davenant, bishop, censured, i. 537. Death
and character, ii. 93. His benefactions to
Queen's-college, Cambridge, id. n.

Davenport, Rev. Mr. removes to New-Eng-
land, i. 571

Davenport, Christopher, some account of the
work he wrote under the title of Franciscus de
Clara, and of himself, i. 598, and n.

Day, bishop, deprived, i. 45. Restored, 60
Deacons, conclusions of the Puritans concern-
ing them, i. 227

Dead bodies of considerable persons in Crom-
well's and parliament times dug up, iii. 104, 105
Dead, praying for them, i. 31

Deans and chapters, &c bill for abolishing
them, ii. 64. Dr. Hackett's defence of them,
65. Several speeches against them, 66, &c.
Origin of them, id. Resolutions of the commons
against them, 68

Declaration of faith, by the reformers in
prison, i. 65. Of articles of religion, set forth
by the bishops, 103

Declaration of the Doings of those Ministers,
&c. a work published in 1566, to justify those
who refused the garments; an abstract from it,
an account of the answers it produced, and the
ministers' reply, i. 149-151

Declaration to encourage sports on the Lord's
day, a curious one issued by James I. an extract
and account of, i. 472

Deering, Mr. articles of his examination, i.
204. Deprived and restored, 205. Deprived
again, 206. His death and character, 230

Deering, sir Edw. his speech against the hier-
archy, ii. 63

Defence of the ministers' reasons for refusal
of subscription to the Book of Common Prayer,
against the cavils of F. Hutton, B.D., Dr.
Covel, and Dr. Sparkes, a work published in
1607; an extract from it, i. 431

&c.

Denne, Mr. Henry, his disputation in prison
with Dr. Featly, ii. 287, n. His sufferings, iii.
361. His death and character, iii. 108, n.
Derby, earl of, defeated, ii. 588
Descent of Christ into hell, controversy about
it, i. 372

Design of this work, i. preface, p. i. x.

Detestation of the Errors of the Times; a
book published by the assembly of divines about
1645, against the sectarians, ii. 421

Devon and Cornwall ministers' protestation
of their loyalty, i. 437

De Witts murdered, iii. 182

Dewsbury, William, his death and character,
iii. 475

Digby, lord, his speech against the bishops
and new canons, ii. 6. Another for reforming
the hierarchy, 45. Another against the earl of
Strafford, 54

Diodati of Geneva, his temperate answer to
the letter of the assembly of divines, ii. 232, n.
Dippers Dipt, by Dr. Featley; a celebrated
piece against the Baptists, ii. 387, n.

Directory for public worship established, ii.
274. Preface to it, id. Its variations from the
Book of Common Prayer, 275. Success of it,
276. Ordinance for enforcing the use of it, 277.
Remarks, id. The king forbids the use of it, id.
University of Oxford's objections, 471. The
king's objection to it, 522. See Appendix, No.
VIII.

Directory for ordination of ministers, ii. 358.
See Appendix, No. IX.

Disciplina Ecclesiæ; a book in high esteem,
written by Mr. Travers, published in English by
Mr. Cartwright, i. 292

Discipline of the church, reformers' opinion
of, i. 24, n. 56, 57. Puritans' objections, and
complaints of the want of it, 156. The com-
mons address the queen to reform it, 179.
Rules for it, agreed upon by the ministers, &c.
of Northampton, 181. Associations of the
Puritans for restoring it, 225. Their book of
discipline, 292. Another treatise, called the
Abstract, id. Bill to reform it, 293. Form
of subscription to the book of discipline, 314.
Persons who subscribed it, id. What the Puri-
tans wanted reformed in it, 392. Innovations
in it, ii. 69. Bishop Williams's scheme of it,
71

Disney, Dr. his life of Jortin quoted, ii. 509, n.
Dispensing power, arguments for and against
Defender of the faith, the origin of that title, 1.6 it, iii. 185. The commons vote against it, id.

The dissenters renounce it, 187. 282. Exer-
cised by James II. 268. Declared legal by the of piety and intellect, iii. 476
judges, id.

Downer, Ann, a woman of eminent strength

Disputation at Oxford between the Reformers
and Papists, i. 64. Another appointed by
queen Elizabeth, 95

Dissenters, Protestant, friends to their coun-
try, i. preface vi. Grievances on them, id.
See more under Noncomformists. Bill for
their ease, iii. 187. It miscarries, 188. Seve-
rity of the court against them revived, 193.
Their sufferings, 193, 194. Bill for easing
them withdrawn by the clerk, 222. Pro-
ceedings thereon in the next parliament, 226.
Their persecution revived by order of king and
council, 230. Treatises in favour of them,
231. Their farther sufferings, 232. Their
persecution compared with the reformers in
Mary's reign, 252. Persecution revived in
James's reign, 258. Some turn from the
church to them, 264. Progress of the persecu-
tion against them, id. Their methods to con-
ceal their meetings, 265. Reasons for their
not writing against Popery, 266. Have liberty
by means of the dispensing power, 268. Are
caressed by the court, 269. The end of their
prosecution by the penal laws, id. Computa-
tion of sufferers, and estimation of damages,
271, 272, n. Reasons of their numbers not
decreasing, 272. Commission of enquiry into
their losses by the church-party, 273. They
are courted by the king and church, 279.
Admitted to serve offices, 282. But will uot
generally acknowledge the dispensing power,
283, and n. Addresses of some of them, 283,
284, and ns. Are jealous of the king's con-
duct, 285. The church applies to them for
assistance, with assurances of favour in better
times, 286. Prince of Orange's advice to
them, id. Remarks, id. Letter to them, id.
Reasons for their not being for abrogating the
penal laws at this crisis, 289. Are courted by
the bishops in their distress, with fair promises,
303, 304. Remarks, 305. Conduct of the
tories towards them since the Revolution, 327.
Distractions in the state, ii. 91.

Divine Beginning and Institution of Christ's
true, visible, and material Church; a small
treatise, by Mr. Jacob, 1610. Explication
and confirmation of ditto, another treatise i.,
461. Other works of his, 462.

Divisions between the first reformers that
fled to Frankfort and Geneva, i. preface vi.
Doctrinal Puritans, i. preface iv., and
368.

Doctrine of the church, reformers' opinions
on, i. 24, n. Doctrines reformed, 51. Re-
formation of it desired in the conference at
Hampton-court, 398. Innovations in it, ii. 69

Dod, Mr. his death and character, ii. 388.
Of his sayings, 389, n.

Dorislaus, Dr., circumstances of his death, ii.
551. Anecdotes of him, id. n.

Dorset, Devon, Somerset, and Hampshire,
ravaged by the king's troops, ii. 245

Downing, Dr. and Mr. Marshall, defended
against a charge of Dr. Grey, ii. 173, n.

Downing, Dr., his death and character, ii.

286

Drelincourt, his letter on the king's con-
stancy in religion, iii. 20

Drop of Honey, &c., a popular little tract,
iii. 415

Dublin University founded, i. 459

Du Moulin, Dr. Lewis, some account of him,
ii. 491. His sentiments about the authors of
the king's death, 546

Dunbar, battle of, ii. 565

Dunkirk delivered to the English; ii. 686.
A story of Cromwell, in relation to it, id. Sold
to the French by Charles II. and Lord Claren-
don's hand in it, iii. 108, 109, n.

Dury, Mr. writes against the Jews, ii. 652
Dutch and French churches, their address to
James I. and his answer, i. 391. Address to
the Bishop of London, and his answer, 415.
Laud obliges them to conformity, 574. His
injunctions to them, id. They are broken up,
575. See German and Dutch church. Dis-
turbed by archbishop Laud, ii. 327

Dutch war, under the long parliament, ii. 595.
Cromwell puts an end to it, 612. Under
Charles II. iii. 138. The second, 176. Ended,
194. Holland overrun by the French, 182
Duppa, Dr. an account of, iii. 44, and n.
His charities, id. n.

Dyke, Mr. suspended, i. 284. His parishi-
oners and the lord-treasurer intercede for him,
but in vain, id.

Earle, Dr. J., an account of, p. xlvi. of Life
of Neal, prefixed to vol. i. n.

Eaton, Rev. John, his death and character,
ii. 94. Of his work entitled The Honeycomb
of Free Justification, id.

Ecclesiastical courts, their power extended by
Laud, i. 583. Held in the bishops' own names,
584. Ecclesiastical commission erected, iii.
274. To prepare materials for a bill of com-
prehension, 319. Names of commissioners, 320.
Their powers, id. Dispute about the legality
of their commission, id. Reasons against alte-
rations in the liturgy, 321. And for them, id.
Proceedings, 322. Ecclesiastical laws; see.

Canons

Ecclesiastical historians, remarks on, i.

face, x.

Edge-hill fight, ii. 153

pre-

Edmunds, St., Church in Salisbury, some
particulars relating to it, and to its painted win-
dows, i. 550, 551

Edinburgh Castle surrendered, ii. 569

His

Edward VI. born, i. 19. Succeeds his father,
31. The regency appointed during his mino-
rity, id. The reformation advances, id. His
injunctions about religion, &c., 32, n.
first service-book, 37. Prohibits all preach-
ing, and why, 35. Insurrections in his reign,
and on what account, 39. Severities on

account of religion in his time, 40, 41. His re- sickness, and the hazard of the reformation at
luctance to sign the warrant for Joan Boucher's that time, 166. She assists the confederate
execution for heresy, 41. An instance of his Protestants of France and Holland, 167. Re-
piety, 47. His letter to the archbishop to bellion of her Popish subjects, id. She is ex-
dispense with the habits in Hooper's consecra- communicated by the pope, 168. Proceedings
tion, 48. His patent for establishing the Ger- of her parliament thereupon, 169. She is very
man church in London, 49. His book of arti-arbitrary with her parliament, 175. 179. 186.
cles, 51. His second service-book, 52. Ap- And stops their attempts for a farther reforma-
points a royal visitation about the church tion, 194. Her inveteracy against the Puritans,
plate, &c. 53.
How far the reformation pro- and attempt to suppress them, 200. 203. She
ceeded, and the king's desire of proceeding was favourable to the Papists, 221. Persecutes
farther, 54, 55. He laments that be could not the Anabaptists, 222. Her reasons for put-
restore the primitive discipline, 55. His death ting down the religious exercises of the clergy,
and character, 56, 57. Remarks on the senti- |231, n. 235. Her letter to the bishop of Lon-
ments of the reformers in this reign, id. By don for that purpose, 231, n. Grindal's honest
his will appoints Lady Jane Grey his successor, advice to her, 233. For which she sequesters
59. His laws about religion repealed, 61. But and confines him, 234. Her designed marriage
revived by Queen Elizabeth, 88. His service with the duke of Anjou, 241. She forbids a
book re-established, with alterations, 96, 97 fast appointed by the commons, id. And the
private fastings of the clergy, 242. She requires
full conformity, 243. Continues to assist
foreign Protestants, 250. Grants a commission
of concealments, id. But revokes it, id. Grants
a new ecclesiastical commission, 268. Again
stops the parliament's proceedings for a farther
reform, 298. A plot of the Papists against her
life, 300. Rejects the bill for the better ob-
servation of the sabbath, 302. Stops other bills
for reform, 313. Another plot of the Papists
against her, id. Puritans petition her, but in
vain, 317. Her conduct in the Spanish inva-
sion, 323. She again stops the proceedings of
parliament, 324. Prohibits the books against
the church, 329. Her arbitrary messages to the
parliament, 344. She repents of putting Bar-
rowe and Greenwood, two Brownists, to death,
355. Dislikes the predestinarian controversy,
370. She again stops the parliament's proceed-
ings, 375. 377. Her death and character, 383.
The editor's supplemental reflections on her
reign, 384-388.

Edwards, Dr., some account of him, ii. 486
Edwards's Antapologia, against the Indepen-
dents, ii. 268. His Gangræna, 421. Remarks
upon it, 422

Ejected ministers, their sufferings, iii. 122.
Names of those who survived the Revolution,
328. See Ministers

Eikoon Basilikè, a spurious book, ii. 541
Elders, Puritans' opinion concerning them, i.
434

Elector palatine takes the covenant, and
sits in the assembly of divines, ii. 224. 282.
His answer to the committee of lords and com-
mons, 282

Elenchus Religionis Papistics, with an ap-
pendix by Dr. Bastwick; this work denies the
divine right of the order of bishops, &c., i. 570.
Other works ascribed to him, 590. Extract
from the Elenchus of Dr. George Bates, an
eminent royalist, ii. 161

Elizabeth, princess, married to the elector
palatine, i. 457

Elliott, sir John, his speech in parliament, i.
522. He dies in prison, 526. Of his portrait,
id. n.

Elliott, Rev. Mr., removes to New England,
546

Το

Elliston, Mr., his sufferings, i. 288
Engagement, a new oath established to the
commonwealth, ii. 550. Enforced, 556.
be taken by the whole nation, id. Refused by
the Presbyterians, id. Cavaliers and sectarians
take it, 557. Reasons for and against it, id.
Tendered to the universities, 569.

Elizabeth, Queen, on her accession wishes
to restore King Edward's liturgy, i. preface, iv.
Objected to by many, but enforced by her, and
subscription urged by the bishops to the liturgy,
ceremonies, and discipline, of the church, iv.
Erects a court of high-commission, v. Carries
her prerogative as high as Charles I., id. Ille-
gitimated by her father, 16. Her danger and
sufferings in her sister's reign, 83. Her acces-i.
sion to the crown, 85. State of the nation and
of religion at that time, 86. She forbids all
preaching for a time, id. The supremacy re-
stored to her by parliament, 88. She appoints
ecclesiastical commissioners, 90. Is afraid of
reforming too far, 96. 118. Her injunctions
about religion, 103. She retains images, and
several Popish ceremonies in her chapel, 107.
Assists the confederate Protestants in Scotland,
113. The pope writes to her, 115. She is
averse to the married clergy, 118. Her supre-
macy confirmed, 119. She writes to the arch-
bishops to enforce the act of uniformity, 125.
Refuses to ratify the bishops' advertisements,
127. 136. 141. She visits the university of
Cambridge, 146. A remarkable instance of her
stretching the prerogative, 160. Her dangerous

England's Complaint, &c., a pamphlet against
the canons, i. 632

English Pope, a work printed in 1643. A
smart quotation from it, i. 598.

English Puritanism, a treatise by Mr. Brad-
shaw, abstract from it, i. 432

Enthusiasm, rise of it in the army, ii. 356.
A farther account of it, 423
Episcopacy, rise of the controversy about its
divine right, i. 321. The controversy carried

on, 363.
Restored in Scotland, 448, &c.
Pamphlets for and against, ii. 27. Bishop Hall's
defence of it, and answer by Smectymnuus, 28.
Remarks, 32. Bill for its abolition, 150.
Remarks, 151. Debated in the treaty of Ux-
bridge, ii. 345. Between the king and Mr.
Henderson, 400. Abolished by parliament,
418. Debated in the treaty of Newport, 514.
Remarks, 519. Archbishop Usher's senti-
ments about it, 526. State of, before the Re-
storation, iii. 15. Restored in Scotland against
the king's mind, 99, 100. Restored in Ireland,
101. Abolished in Scotland, 325. Which
excites disaffection to the government and to
the English dissenters, 326. Cromwell tole-
rates episcopalians, ii. 608

Exhortation to the taking of the solemn
league and covenant, ii. 222. Answered, 223

Exiles for religion in queen Mary's days, i.
61, 76. Their petition to her in behalf of the
sufferers at home, 69. Disputes among them
about the ceremonies and service-book, which
gave rise to the Puritans, 77. They appeal to
Calvin, 79. Some of them set up the Geneva
discipline, id. Their reasons for laying aside
the rites and ceremonies, 80.
Remarks upon
the breach between them, 81. Farther differ-
ence among them, 82. They return home on
queen Elizabeth's accession, and with what tem-
per, 87. Their good resolutions, 88. See Re-
formers.

Factories, English, in Holland, regulations of
them projected by Laud, i. 552

Fagius comes to England. i. 35. His bones
dug up and burnt by the Papists, 73

Erastians, their opinion of church govern-
ment, ii. 265. Their chief patrons in the as-
sembly of divines, and in the parliament, id.
Their objections to the divine right of presby-
tery, 361. Their conduct, 365. Their opinion Fairfax, general, his character, ii. 355.
about suspension and excommunication, 366 King's clergy's petition to him, 459. Coun-
Erasmus's Paraphrase on the Gospels in Eng-ter-petition of the Presbyterian clergy to him,
lish, ordered to be set up in churches, i. 104 460. He suppresses the cavaliers in Kent and
Erastus's famous book, De Excommunica-
tione, anecdote of it, i. 378, n. His principles,
ii. author's preface, xiii.

Erudition of a Christian Man, a remarkable
book, called the King's Book, an account of, i.
23, and n. Remarks upon it, 26

Essex, earl of, his character, ii. 3. Charac-
ter of his party, 4. Arrives in London after
the battle of Edge-hill, ii. 172. Is defeated in
Cornwall, 243. He is removed, 355. His
death and character, 425

Essex, petitions for their deprived ministers,
i. 267, 285. Names of those that were sus-
pended, 281, n.

Et cætera oath, i. 630. Objections against
it, ii. 11

Evans, Dr. John, some account of, p. xli of
Memoirs of Neal prefixed to vol. i. n.

Evans, Catherine, &c., travels and history
of, iii. 442

Essex, 499

Faith, the first reformers' opinion about it,
i. 24, n.

Falkland, lord, his speech for reforming the
hierarchy, ii. 43. Against the earl of Straf-
ford, 54

False news, proclamation against spreading,
iii. 183

Family of love, an enthusiastic sect, i. 222
Farmer, Richard, some account of, iii. 413
Fast, voted by the commons, i. 241. Forbid
by the queen, 542. Parliament's monthly one,
ii. 201. The king's in opposition, id. Par-
liament's kept on Christmas-day, 284. Occa-
sional fasts, 201

Fastings of the clergy put down, i. 242
Feasts of dedication, i. 559, ii. 303. Their
rise, 306

Featley, Dr. expelled the assembly of divines,
and taken into custody as a spy, ii. 234. His

Ewins, Mr., some particulars of him, iii. 414, death, 387. An account of his book against

and n.

Exchequer shut up, iii. 176
Exclusion bill brought in, iii. 214. Brought
in again, 226

Excommunication, Puritans' notion of it,
i. 347, and n. Terrible consequences of it in spi-
ritual courts, 418. Canon about it, 631. Opi-
nions of the Presbyterians, Independents, and
Erastians, on it, ii. 366. Ordinance of it, 368
Executions for Treason, a book so called,
quoted, i. 73

the Baptists, id. n. His challenge in defence
of the church of England, id. His character,
and last prayer, 388

Fell, Dr. vice-chancellor of Oxford, treats
the parliament's visiters with contempt, ii. 473.
Is deprived of his vice-chancellorship, and taken
into custody, 475. Some farther account of
him, 484. His death, &c. iii. 294

Fell, Mrs. M. persecuted, iii. 434
Fellows, form of inducting the new ones at
Cambridge, ii. 257

Felton, stabs the duke of Buckingham, i.

Fenner, Mr. defends the Puritans, i. 316,

317

Exercises, religious. See Prophesyings.
Exeter besieged by a Popish faction in Ed-519
ward VI.'s time, i. 40. The inhabitants re-
lieved by Lord Russell, id. It surrenders to
the parliament army, and the Princess Henri-
etta, the King's daughter, made prisoner there,
but escapes to France, ii. 390

Exhortation to the Governors, &c., a book
published by Mr. Penry in 1588, i. 356'

549

Feoffees, censured in the star-chamber, i.

Ferrars, bishop, burnt, i. 69. He was against
the Popish garments, 128

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