awakened, 67-of a fiddler con- verted, ib.-of T. Hooker, 68, 69 -of Apb. Abbot, 75, n—of Bp. Neile, 104, n-of Walker,140, n— of Cotton, 159-of Gataker, 201— of N. Rogers, 239—of Dr. Heylin and Bp. Williams, 248, n-of Marshall, 249-of Bp. Montaigne, 350, n-of R. Harris, 303-of a congregation, 387-of J. Wilson, 434-of a persecutor, 463-of two persecuted brothers, 467, n. Angel, John, iii. 236.
Annotations, the assembly's ac- count of, iii. 211.
Anslow, Sir Edward, a friend to the puritans, ii. 488.
Antinomian controversy, ii. 475; iii. 212.
Apocrypha, whether canonical, ii.
317-Errors in it, 318.
Apologetical narration, account of, iii. 21.
Appendix, containing authorities, iii. 537.
Archer, Henry, ii. 455.
Armitage, Timothy, iii. 254.
Arminian controversy at Boston, iii. 152.
Arminianism, the progress of, i. 71 -argument against, iii. 171- disputes on, ii. 343, 359. Arrowsmith, John, iii. 315. Articles subscribed, i. 5, 21, 35, 64, 178, 199, 358.
the Lambeth, ii. 82, n.
, thirty-one exhibited against Cartwright, ii. 151-thirty-four exhibited, 155.
of inquiry and answers, ii.
Arundal, the mayor of, prosecuted, iii. 155, n.
Ascham, Roger, a letter to, i. 215— account of him, 217, n. Assembly of divines, account of, i. 89-a list of them, 90, n. Associations of the puritans, i. 53, 54-their resolutions, 448-de- fended, ii. 156.
Astrology greatly admired, i. 375, n-controversy about it, iii. 219,
Avarice, its evil effects, i. 246. Avery, John, ii. 420. Axton, William, i. 151. Aylmer, Bishop, account of, i. 242-
his foul language, 226, 228, n; ii. 168-his learning, 225, 226-his false accusations, 241; ii. 154; n
-his letter to the council, i. 295 -his poverty and riches, ib.-a letter to him, 317--council's letter to him, 325-he offended the queen, ii. 147, n-he refused to silence an adulterous clergyman, 166-he wrote an angry letter, 168-he made his porter minister, ib. n-his barbarous proceedings, i. 40, 239, 241, 293, 296, 305, 316,317,324,441 ; ii. 39, 109, 111, 147, 166-168, 235, 237; iii. 512.
Bainbrigg, Cuthbert, i. 396. Bale, John, i. 101. Ball, John, ii. 440.
Thomas, iii. 534.
Balsom, Robert, iii. 79. Bancroft, Bishop, account of his famous sermon and new doctrine, i. 55, n; ii. 177, 178-his flattery of king James, i. 61, n-his cha- racter, 66, n—account of him, ii. 346, n-his trial of R. Harris,. iii. 304-his severe proceedings, i. 64; ii. 184, 202, 227, 232, 238, 262; iii. 516,
Baptism, salvation ascribed to, i. 270, 286.
Baptist congregation, the first in England, iii. 164, 168.
- church, the first in America, iii. 480.
Baptists complained of persecution, ii. 281.
Barber, Thomas, i. 429.
Edward, iii. 330.
Barebone, Praise-God, iii. 399. Barebone's parliament, iii. 399, 401. Barbarity, a shocking instance of, ii. 483.
Barnet, Humphrey, iii. 520. Barns, Bishop, a favourer of puri- tanism, i. 258, n.
Barret, Mr., iii. 524. Barrow, Henry, his examination, ii. 25, n-imprisoned, 28, n-his petition, 41, n-his character and death, 42.
Bastwick, Dr., anecdote of his litany, iii. 45, n-sentence against him, 47, n.
Batchelor, John, iii. 32. Bates, Randal, ii. 234. Baxter, Richard, the cause of his conversion, ii. 420, n. Baynes, Paul, ii. 261. Beard, Thomas, ii. 396.
, Nicholas, iii. 523.` Becon, Thomas, i. 166.
Bedell, Bishop, favoured the union
of protestants, iii. 251, n. Bedford, Earl of, a friend to the puritans, i. 304, n.
Bellarmine refuted, ii. 77-his books answered before they were print- ed, 177.
Benefield, Sebastian, ii. 365. Benison, Barnaby, i. 292.
Bentham, Bishop, account of, i. 165,
Bernard, Nathaniel, ii. 400.
Richard, ii. 459.
Bernhere, Mr., iii. 513. Beverly, John, iii. 298.
Beza, a letter from, i. 26—his cha- racter of Cartwright, ii. 148-his translation burnt, 193. Bible, the first translation of, i. 118 -various translations of, 118- 126-opposed by the bishops, 121, 122-the authorized version of, ii. 179, n.
first printed in America, iii.
488. Biddle, John, iii. 411.
Bilson, Bishop, his famous book, ii. 266, n-his doctrine at Paul's cross, 330.
Birkenhead, Sir John, his foul aspersions, iii. 297. Bishop, anecdote of one, ii. 406, n. of Lichfield's letter to Gilby, i. 281. Bishops, Humphrey's letter to them, i. 370.
in primitive and modern times, i. 197-their superiority by divine appointment, and the de- nial of it accounted heresy, 55. Bishopric, objections against one, i. 376-one refused, 377. Bisse, Dr., anecdote of, ii. 400. Blackerby, Richard, iii. 96. Blacklock, Samuel, iii. 519.
Blackman, Adam, iii. 522.
Blackstone, Sir William, his opinion of persecution, Pref. xiii. Blackwood, Christopher, iii. 389. Blake, Thomas, iii. 269.
Blake, Humphrey, enjoined to do penance, iii. 524.
Bocher, Joan, burnt, i. 10- her great zeal, ib. n.
Bodies dug up at the restoration, iii. 16, n.
Bodley, Sir Thomas, account of, i. 364, n.
Bois, Sir Edward, a friend to the persecuted puritans, ii. 488.
of Discipline perfected, ii. 260-subscribed, i. 53.
of Sports published, i. 68- republished, 77-abolished and burnt, 89-ministers silenced for refusing to read it, ii. 501; iii. 173, 176, 178, 185, 374, 520, 526, 529.
Booth, Robert, iii. 533. Boothe, Hugh, iii. 503. Boston in New England, why so called, iii. 157.
Bound, Nicholas, ii. 171. Bourne, William, iii. 514. Bowen, Evan, iii. 381. Bowes, Sir William, a friend to the persecuted puritans, i. 398.
-, Lady, a generous friend to the puritans, ii. 351, n. Bowles, Oliver, iii. 466. Bradbourn, Theophilus, ii. 362. Bradford, John, a famous noncon- formist, i. 12.
Bradshaw, William, ii. 264. Bradshaw, Mrs., convened before the high commission, ii. 268. Bradstreet, Mr., iii. 519. Brayne, Edward, i. 289. Brewer, Thomas, ii. 444. Brewster, William, account of, ii. 341, n.
Bridger, B., iii. 514.
Bright, Edward, iii. 262.
Francis, iii. 518.
Brightman, Thomas, ii. 182.
Broad-mead, Bristol, the baptist church there when formed, iii. 333. Brodet, Mr., iii. 521. Broklesby, Mr., iii. 502.
Bromley, Lady, a great friend to the puritans, ii. 441.
Brook, Lord, account of, ii. 353, n. Broughton, Hugh, ii. 215. Brown, Nicholas, i. 275.
Robert, ii. 366. Lady, iii. 251, n. John, iii. 505. Browning, John, i. 302.
Brownists, their origin, i. 44-their number, 58, n--they petitioned the treasurer, ii. 40-their con- gregation meeting in woods, 54, 55, n-their church formed, 96-- apprehended and imprisoned, 97
their opinions, 103-their con- fession of faith, 300. Brutes, whether they make syllo- gisins, ii. 353.
Bucer, Martin, a nonconformist, i. 6. Buckingham, Duke of, anecdote of him, ii. 357, n-account of him, 359, n.
Bulkly Peter, iii. 318. Bullinger, an excellent letter to him, i. 371.
Bunney, Francis, ii. 250.
Edmund, ii. 252.
Burchell, Mr., iii. 527. Burleigh, Lord, a famous statesman,
i. 292, n-a friend of the puri- tans, 291, 303, 308, 314, 404, 436, 440, 443; ii. 110, 165, 216, 236, 315-his letter to Whitgift, i. 50— also to the heads at Cambridge, ii. 114-a petition sent to him, 190- letters to him, i. 370, 378, 380, 400, 435, 437; ii. 60, 80, 93, 99, 224, 225, 235, 249, 378. Burnet, Bishop, his character of the puritans, Pref. xiv.-his censure of H. Peters, iii. 366. Burr, Jonathan, ii. 463. Burroughs, Jeremiah, iii. 18. Burton, William, ii. 230.
-, Henry, iii. 400. Burton, Mrs., committed to prison, iii. 44, n.
Byfield, Nicholas, ii. 297.
Adoniram, iii. 374. Bying, Dr., his cruel proceedings, i. 304.
Carter, William, iii. 299.
Cartwright, Thomas, ii. 136-letter to him, 246.
Castell's Lexicon Heptaglotton, ac- count of, iii. 322, n. Catlin, Robert, ii. 428. Cawdrey, Robert, i. 430. Cawton, Thomas, iii. 320. Cecil, Sir William, an excellent letter to, i. 220. See Burleigh. Ceremonies, when to be refused, ii. 322.
Chadderton, Lawrence, ii. 445. Chaplains of regiments, i. 88. Chapman, Edward, iii. 506. Charke, William, ii, 113.
Charles I., his accession, i. 70-his arbitrary power, 72-his death, 94 his recommendation, ii. 444, n-his schismatical remark, iii. 383, n.
II. restored, i. 98-the li- centiousness that followed, and the king's fair promises, ib. Chauncey, Charles, iii. 451. Cheare, Abraham, iii. 435. Chester, the people of, prosecuted, iii. 51, n.
Children newly born cannot believe, ii. 322.
Christ's descent into hell, the con- troversy of, ii. 222, 238, 330-the denial of, accounted heresy, 5. Christmas not observed, i. 273, n. Church of England, its deplorable state, i. 34.
Church-power, how regarded by the puritans, Pref. xv. xvi. Churton's base character of the pu- ritans, Pref. xiv.-his reproach of Cartwright, ii. 161.
Cinnus, a famous book, iii. 216. Clarendon's bitter censures, iii. 41- his misrepresentations, 120, 137,
Clark, Hugh, ii. 412.
Clarkson, Lawrence, ii. 505. Cleaver, Robert, iii. 516. Clergy, their deplorable ignorance, i. 168-remedy against this, 169 -they are very corrupt, 245. Clifton, Richard, ii. 199. Cobbet, Thomas, iii. 483.
Cole, Robert, canonically habited
and preferred, i. 24.
Cole, William, ii. 106. Coleman, Christopher, i. 150. Thomas, iii. 60.
College, expulsion from, i. 327. Collier, Thomas, iii. 27.
Committee of accommodation, i.
religion offensive to
Laud, iii. 89, n. Common Prayer set aside, i. 93. Commons, house of, released many puritans, i. 86; ii. 483. Concord in New England founded, iii. 318.
Conference desired, ii. 64.
the Hampton-court, ii.
at Lambeth, ii. 316. with J. Cotton, iii. 156. Confessions of faith, ii. 21, 63. Conformity, controversy for and against, i. 58-enforced, 67. Conscience, horrors of, ii. 203. Consent of scripture, account of, ii. 216-occasioned a controversy, 218, 221.
Conversion, a remarkable one, ii. 350.
Conviction, a painful instance of, iii. 117.
Convocation, the first protestant, i. 3-that in 1562, 21-its proceed- ings, 22-a supplication to that in 1571, 170-the tyrannical pro- ceedings of that in 1640, i. 85. Cooper, Mr., iii. 520.
Cope, its unlawfulness, i. 366. Cope, Sir Anthony, account of, ii. 344, n.
Copping, John, i. 262. Corbet, Edward, iii. 266.
Corbet, Sir Robert, a friend to the puritans, i. 151, n.
Cornwall, the petition of its inha- bitants to parliament, i. 41. Cornwell, Francis, iii. 25. Coryat, George, ii. 168.
Coryat, Thomas, account of, ii. 168. Cosins, Dr., his innovations, iii. 91, n.
Cotton, John, iii. 151.
Cotton, Roger, anecdote of, ii. 218, n.
Sir Rowland, a famous He- brean, ii. 218. Council, their address to Whitgift,
i. 49-their illegal proceedings, 71-their letter to Bale, 103- supplications to them, 290, 294, 320; ii. 325-their letters to Ayl- mer, 294, 325.
Courage, a remarkable instance of, iii. 80.
Courts, ecclesiastical, their charac- ter, iii. 155.
County committees, i, 92.
a form of, iii. 433. Coventry, the mayor of, prosecu- ted, iii. 51, n-many divines fled there, 230.
Coverdale, Miles, i. 117. Cox, Benjamin, iii. 417. Cox, Richard, at Frankfort, i. 16- account of him, 108, n-his arbi- trary spirit, 207. Crackenthorp, Richard, ii. 312. Cradock, Walter, iii. 382. Cranford, James, iii. 268. Crane, Nicholas, i. 362.
Cranmer, Archbishop, a persecutor, i. 8, 10-a nonconformist, 12. Crick, Richard, i. 278. Crisp, Tobias, ii. 471. Cromwell, Lord, above the bishops, i. 3-his fall, 121, n.
Oliver, prevented from going to New England, i. 84- proposed a commonwealth, 94- made lord protector, 95-his cha- racter and death, 97-his letter to J. Cotton, iii. 158-Whitaker's letter to him, 194-an enemy to persecution, 416, n-anecdote of him, ib.-his government opposed, 310, 327, 406-his generosity, 487. Crook, Samuel, iii. 107. Crowley, Robert, i. 357. Crosby's incorrect statement recti- fied, iii. 150, 151.
Cross in baptism to be refused, i. 157-159.
a treatise on the, ii. 238-the meaning of it, 310, n.
Crowder, Mr., iii. 520.
Crucifix retained, i. 377. Cruso, Timothy, received the dying advice of O. Bowles, iii. 467. Culverwell, Ezekiel, iii. 512.
Darling, Thomas, dispossessed, ii. 118, 120.
Darrell, John, ii. 117. Darton, Nicholas, iii. 531. - Davenish, Mr., iii. 524. Davenport, John, iii. 446.
Death of Saltmarsh, remarkable, iii. 73. Declaration subscribed, i. 405.
against the king's death,
Defender of the faith, occasion of, i. 2.
Deliverance, several remarkable in- stances of, i. 254; ii. 238, 239; iii. 66, 79, 80. Denne, Henr, iii. 376. Dennys, William, executed, i. 58. Dent, Arthur, ii. 111.
Denton, Rihard, iii. 521.
Devil, his love of women, i. 266, 269.
Devils cast out, ii. 117-contro- versy of, 120.
Dingley, John, iii. 314.
Dighton, Thomas, his barbarous usage, ii. 383, n.
Diphthongs, a treatise on, iii. 211. Discipline, Book of, published, ii. 328.
Dispute about the wine in the sacra- ment, i. 182.
Disputations, various, in public, i. 172, 387; iii. 187-189, 225, 256, 378, 418, 464. Dissenting Brethren, iii. 312. Dod, John, iii. 1.
Doddridge, Dr., his mistake recti- fied, ii. 455, n.
Dorset, Earl of, a friend to the pu- ritans, iii. 155. Downham, John, ii. 496. Downing, Calibute, ii. 495.
Dreams, two very curious, i. 15, n; iii. 75, n.
Drewet, William, iii. 507. Drogheda, the slaughter at, iii. 355. Dudley, Lord, a letter to him, i. 377.
Dugdale's base character of the pu- ritans, Pref. xiv. Dunster, Ralph, iii. 323. Durance, John, iii. 31.
Dyke, Daniel, ii. 235. Dyke, Jeremiah, ii, 279.
Eaton, John, ii. 466.
Echard's unjust aspersions, iii. 250,
Edmunds, Thomas, iii. 515. Edward VI. desired to perfect the reformation, i. 6-against all se- verity, 10-his letter to Cover- dale, 123—a bold sermon before him, 245.
Edwards, Thomas, iii. 82. Edwin, John, i. 285.
Egerton, Stephen, ii. 289. Eliot, John, iii. 484.
Ellison, John, i. 355.
Elsmer, Lord, a letter to him, ii. 224.
Elizabeth, Queen, her accession, i. 17 her inclinations to popery, 19-her arbitrary proceedings, 33, 35, 37-her death, 59-she prohi- bited all preaching, 115-anec- dote of her, 173-dissuaded from assuming the title of supreme head, 218--her great cruelty, 335 -a letter to her, 368-she visited Cambridge, 372-a petition sent her, ii. 50.
Endicot, his severe proceedings, iii. 481.
Engagement subscribed, i. 94-re- fused by certain puritans, who were turned off their livings, iii. 231, 237, 269.
England, New, the first planters of, and their severe trials, ii. 341, n, 374-the number of ministers driven there, i. 81, n. Episcopius publicly refuted, ii. 343. Erbery, William, iii. 185. Essex ministers, the number sus- pended, i. 49, n-nonresidents in, ii. 166-they petitioned the coun- cil and the parliament, 274, 276. Earl of, account of him, iii. 233,n-a friend to the puritans,514 Evans, Hugh, iii. 293.
Mr., iii. 502. -, Mr., iii. 508. Examinations of puritans, i. 134, 151, 181, 224, 264, 285, 298, 339, 366, 423, 433, 445; ii. 1, 325, n, 31, 53, 185, 241; iii. 46. Excommunication of a minister's son, i. 80, n-the sentence pro- nounced, 348.
Exhortation, a very excellent one, ii. 340.
Fairclough, Lawrence, account of, ii. 421, n.
Samuel, account of his
conversion, ii. 452, n.
Faith, confessions of, i. 321; ii. 21, 63.
Farrar, Thomas, iii. 510. Feake, Christopher, iii. 308. Female casuistical puritanism, an instance of, iii. 93, n. Fenn, Humphrey, i. 444. Fenner, Dudley, i. 392. William, ii, 451.
Feoffees prosecuted, i. 75 ; ii. 417. Field, John, i. 318.
Fifth monarchy-men imprisoned, i. 96-their opinions, iii. 257, n. Firmin, Giles, anecdote of his con- version, ii. 422.
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