LAWS (1843), 406; The Times, March 30, | Gladstone, Wm. Ewart, HOME RULE FOR
Francis I, alluded to, 129, 136, 139. Freeholders in Scotland, in 1831, 319. Free Trade, advocated by Sir Robert Peel, 4II.
French Revolution, Burke and the (1791), 363.
FRIENDSHIP OF KING HENRY AND HIS
CHANCELLOR, THE, 59.
Froissart, Jehan, THE SCOTS IN WAR, 92; THE BATTLE OF CRECY (1346), 93; THE PEASANTS' RISING OF 1381, 106; Chroni- cles, 93, 97, 109.
FUNERAL OF GORDON, THE (1898), 459.
Garrard, G., A NEWSLETTER TO WENT- WORTH (1637), 228; The Earle of Straf- forde's Letters and Despatches, 231. Gebur's Services in the Tenth Century, 29. Geneat's Services in the Tenth Century, 28. George I, WALPOLE AND THE COLONIES (1721), 341; The King's Speech on Opening the Session of Parliament, Cobbett's Par- liamentary History, 342. George II, alluded to, 311.
George III, to Lord North, 313; alluded to, 318, 350, 354, 358; his Royal Speech in 1782, 359.
Germania, II. Germans, the early, 4;.physical characteris- tics, 4; arms, etc., 5; government, 6; councils, 5; training of the youth, 12; in war, 8; in peace, 9; arrangement of their towns, 9; food, 10; sports, II; occupa- tion of land by, II.
Gesta Regum Anglorum, 44.
Gibbon, Edward, A GREAT HISTORIAN AND THE OUTBREAK OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775), 354; Private Letters of Edward Gibbon, 359.
Giustinian, Sebastian, HENRY VIII AND WOLSEY (1519), 129; Report of England made to the Senate, Sept. 10, 1519 (Calen- dar of State Papers, Venetian).
IRELAND (1886), 391; Parliamentary De- bates, 395.
Gookin, Daniel, A COLONIAL SCHEME OF OLIVER CROMWELL (1656), 260; in Thurloe's Collection of State Papers, 262. Gordon, George Hamilton, Earl of Aberdeen, WELLINGTON AND PARLIAMENTARY REFORM (1830), 384; LORD ABERDEEN AND THE CRIMEAN War (1855), 431; The Earl of Aberdeen, 384, 433. Government, of early Britain, 4; of the early Germans, 6; under Alfred, 17; in the Tenth Century, 28; under Canute, 36; under William the Great, 44; under Henry I, 49; under Stephen, 53; of London in the Twelfth Century, 68.
Graham, Sir James, alluded to by John Bright, 448.
GREAT FIRE, THE (1666), 270. GREAT HISTORIAN, A, AND THE OUT- BREAK OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (1775), 354.
Great Indian Mutiny, its outbreak in Luck- now, 435.
GREAT WAR, THE, 363.
GREAT YEAR IN ENGLAND'S HISTORY, A (1066), 39.
Grey, Earl, alluded to in the debate on Par- liamentary reform, 382, 384.
JAROLD, KING, in the battle of Hast- ings, 39; his death, 40.
Hainault, Sir John of, at Crecy, 96. Hampton Court Conference, the, 209. Harris, Mrs. G., THE OUTBREAK AT LUCK-
NOW (1857), 435; A Lady's Diary of the Siege of Lucknow, 437.
Harrison, Maj. Gen., in the Long Parlia- ment, 252.
Harrison, William, ELIZABETHAN HOMES, 201; The Description of England, 206. Hawkyns, Sir John to Secretary Walsyng- ham about the Armada, 180. Henry, Baron Brougham, DISSOLUTION OF PARLIAMENT (1831), 384; The Life and Times of Lord Brougham, 387.
Henry I, son of William the Great, 46; his
Charter of Liberties, 49, 72; his death, 51. Henry II., Green, 56.
Henry II, 56; his treaty with Stephen, 55; appearance and unstable character, 57; his friendship for his Chancellor, 59; the Conquest of Ireland during his reign, 62. Henry III, and the Cistercian abbats, 78; and the monks of Ely, 79; and the Great Parliament, 80; money grants to, 81; his expedition to Wales, 82.
Henry V and English Policy, 112. Henry VI, and the endowment of Cam- bridge and Eton, 114; his character, 115; tampering with juries and elections under, 117; his insanity, 118; alluded to in Queen Margaret's Story, 123; taken prisoner by Edward IV, 126.
HENRY VII AND THE EARL OF KILDARE, 186; alluded to, 138.
Scotland and the Reform Bill, 318; Royal Speech in 1721, 341; American debate, 355, 359; Royal Speech of 1782, 359; Burke and the French Revolution, 363; Fox on the French War, 370; the Clare Election, 381; Wellington and Reform, 382; Dissolution of in 1629, 222; in 1831, 384; a Chartist petition to, 387; Home Rule, 391; speech on Child Labour (1842), 401; debate on Corn Laws, 406; Repeal of Corn Laws, 411; debate on the "Trent" Affair, 445, 448.
House of Lords, Pitt's Warning to, 350; and Home Rule, 395; a possible election issue, 465.
Houses and furnishings in Elizabethan times, 201-206.
Howard, Lord Charles, to Walsyngham about the Armada, 178, 182. HUNDRED YEARS' WAR, THE, 92.
HENRY VIII AND WOLSEY (1519), 129; Hutchinson, Col. John, his portrait as a and the English Bible, 144.
Henry, King of Navarre, and later of France, Hutchinson, Lucy, A PURITAN GENTLE- alluded to, 170.
Herschell, Lord Chancellor, 395-400. HIGHLANDERS, THE (circ. 1730), 329. Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum, 13, 16.
History of England, Roger of Wendover, 51. Holland, at war with England (1653), 254, 257.
Holiday sports in London (circ. 1173), 69. HOME RULE FOR IRELAND (1886), 391. Hooker. See Vowell, Sir John. House of Commons, speech in (1523), 136; Queen's speech in (1556), 160; apology of, to James I, 212; a famous scene in (1629), 219; attempted arrest of five mem- bers (1642), 237; the Self-denying Ordi- nance, 242-245; of the Long Parliament, 251; address against the growth of Popery (1673), 276; the Exclusion Bill, 277; bur- lesque bill of costs of an election, 298; debate on the "Wilkes case, 299; pur- chase of seats in, 302-304; position of a representative, 305; debate on the power of the Crown in, 308; Sydney Smith on the exclusion of Catholics from, 315;
MAN, 225; Memoirs of Colonel Hutchin-
IMPERIAL FEDERATION (1875), 452. Imperialism, the cost of, 465. Impressions, increased depth of, in the study of sources, xvii.
India, Clive in, 343, 360; the mutiny in, 435; English treatment of natives of, 438; the proper policy for, 441; the Empire of the East India Company in, 343, 360, 426, 443; as a precedent, 461, 464. Interest aroused by the study of sources, xviii.
International law, 444. Introduction to the study of English History,
Ireland, the appointment of a Lord Deputy | Kingston, Sir William, Constable of the
Ireland, its Conquest in the Reign of Henry Second, 62; resistance of the natives, at first thrown into confusion, 62; weaknesses in following up the invasion, 63; inability of John to cope with either the enemy or his own unruly army in, 64; in the Eighteenth Century as seen by Dean Swift, 324. Ireton at Naseby, 246.
IRISH FAMINE, THE, 414.
Kitchener, Sir Horatio Herbert, described by G. W. Steevens, 456; in the Sudan, 457.
Knights slain at Evesham, 85. Knight, Francis W., Governor of the Vir- ginia Colony, 216.
Knighton, Henry, THE FOUL DEATH (1349), 102; History of England, 106. Knox, Capt. John, THE BATTLE OF QUE- BEC, 346; Historical Journal, 349.
AMES I AT THE HAMPTON COURT Knox, Vicesimus, WINNING THE DEGREE
JACONFERENCE (1604), 209.
James VI of Scotland, later I of England, alluded to, 170, 209, 217, 229; at the Hampton Court Conference, 209; Apol- ogy of the House of Commons to, 212. James, Duke of York, brother of Charles II, 265, 272, 274; later king as James II, addressed, 284; alluded to, 285, 290. Jeffrey, Francis, SCOTLAND IN THE UNRE- FORMED PARLIAMENT (1831), 318; Par- liamentary Debates, 320. Jenney, John, 118.
Johan, Walter, a tenant, under Edward II,
John, King of Bohemia, 95.
JOHN COMPANY'S FAREWELL TO JOHN BULL (1858), 437.
John, son of Henry the Second, in Ireland, 63; his later struggle as king with the Barons, 73-77; grants the Magna Carta,
JOHN WESLEY IN CORNWALL (1743), 333. Jonson, Ben, alluded to, 228.
OF A BACHELOR OF ARTS (1780), 335; Essays, Moral and Literary, 338.
ABOURERS' UNION, the, of 1834, 420; of 1872, organized by Joseph Arch, 419-
422. Labouring classes, wages of, raised during plague, 104; attempt to fix wages by a royal ordinance, 105; disregard of ordi- nance, 105; rising of peasants in Kent, Essex, Sussex, etc., 109; husbandmen in- jured by the increase of wool-growing in the reign of Henry VIII, 189, 191; their condition in the reign of Queen Mary, 197, 198; in 1629, 223; in Ireland in the eighteenth century, 328; in England in 1838, 387; children in the coal mines (1842), 401; in Ireland during the famine of 1846-1847, 414-417.
Lancastrian defeat at Towton, 121; at Bar- net, 126.
Land Services in the Tenth Century, 28-30. LAMENT OF EARL SIMON (1265), 86.
Juries, tampering with, under Henry VI, 117. Laud, William, archbishop of Canterbury,
EMBLE, Coronation Oath of Ethelred
II, 30; Saxons in England, 30.
Khartum, Gordon's funeral at, 459.
with others, petitioning James II, 284; on trial, 285; sent to the Tower, 287.
LAW AGAINST THE KEEPING OF SHEEP, A (1534), 190.
Kildare, the Earl of, and Henry VII, 186; Lawrence, Sir Henry, alluded to, 435.
made Lord Deputy of Ireland, 188.
Kimberley, Lord, alluded to, 397.
League, the Anti-Corn Law, 407.
LETTER FROM CANUTE TO THE ENGLISH PEOPLE, A (1027), 35.
KING ETHELRED AND THE DANES (1006- Letters and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell,
Life of Alfred, xxii.
Life of Sir Thomas More, xxii.
love of display, 149; the native army at 'her service, 152; mercenaries, 152; her naval forces, 152; lack of a leader, 153.
LIGHT BRIGADE AT BALAKLAVA, THE Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots, 155; her
Lincoln, Abraham, alluded to by John Bright, 446; Punch's tribute to, 449. Lochleven Castle, Mary Stuart's escape from, 161.
LONDON, A PICTURE OF (circ. 1173), 65; its site, 65; religious life, 65; its strength, 66; its gardens, pasture and tilth, 66; its springs, 67; the ordering of the city, 68; its sports, 69-71; sides with the Barons, 75; the Plague in, 102; Peasants' Rising fomented in, 108; in the reign of Queen Mary, 199; the great Fire in, 270. London Bridge, 199, 271. LONDON COMPANY TO THE VIRGINIA COLONY (1622), 216.
LONG PARLIAMENT, THE (1633), 251. LORD ABERDEEN AND THE CRIMEAN WAR (1855), 431.
Lords, the, and the Home Rule Bill, 395. Low Countries, the, importance to England of, 172.
Lucknow, outbreak of the mutiny at, 435. Lucy, Henry W., THE LORDS AND THE HOME RULE BILL (1893), 395; A Diary of the Home Rule Parliament, 400. Lucy, Richard de, 61.
Ludlow, Edmund, CROMWELL AND THE LONG PARLIAMENT (1653), 251; Me- moirs, 253.
Ludlow Memoirs, xxii.
MAGNA CARTA, the, 72.
MANCHESTER SCHOOL, THE, AND THE EMPIRE (1830), 423.
Margaret, Queen of Henry VI, 123. Marshal, William, Earl of Pembroke, 73; messenger between King John and the Barons, 74-76.
Marvell, Andrew, THE DEATH OF CHARLES I (1649), 250; CROMWELL (1658), 263; Poetical Works, 250, 264.
escape from Lochleven, 161; Sir Walter Mildmay's opinion on her keeping, 168; report of the manner of her execution, 173.
Massachusetts Bay Colony, voted in a state of rebellion, 355.
MASSACRE OF GLENCOE, THE (1692), 292. Materials for the History of Thomas Becket, 60, 61.
Matilda, Countess of Anjou, claimed the English throne, 54; at war with Stephen, 54; escapes to France, 54; her son Henry recognized as the heir of Stephen, 55. Maxwell, James, keeper of the Black Rod,
222; at the impeachment of Strafford, 232. Meath, the Bishop of, and the Earl of Kil- dare, 186.
Meer Jaffier, created Nabob by Clive, 342; alluded to, 362.
Melville, Sir James, ELIZABETH AND MARY STUART (1564), 155; Memoirs of his own Life, 159.
Melvin, servant to the Queen of Scots, 173- 177.
Memoirs of Colonel Hutchinson, xxii. Mercenaries in Ireland (1183), 64. Messina, Archbishop of, 79.
Mildmay, Sir Walter, CONCERNING THE KEEPING OF THE QUEEN OF SCOTS (1569), 164; Sir W. M.'s Opinion Con- cerning the Keeping of the Queen of Scots, 168.
Mills, Arthur, on Colonial Constitutions, quoted by the Rt. Hon. William E. Fors- ter, 453, 455.
MILTON TO CROMWELL (1652), 251. Milton, John, MILTON TO CROMWELL (1652), 251; Poetical Works, 251. Minot, Lawrence, SONG OF NEVILLE'S CROSS, 97; among Political Poems,
Modern Political Orations, xxii.
Mary, Queen of England, personal appear- Monastery of Canterbury, 47.
ance, 148; character, 149; religion, 149; | Monk, Gen., alluded to, 256; receives
North, Lord, quoted, 312; addressed by George III, 313.
Northampton, castle of, besieged by the Barons, 75.
Charles II on his restoration, 267; defends | NORMAN ENGLAND, 39. Chatham, now Duke of Albemarle, 274. Monks and monasteries before the Norman conquest, 42; in 1807, 45; spread of the Benedictine order under William I, 47; the assessments of Henry III refused by the Cistercian order, 78; the election of a bishop by the monks of Ely, 79; the pope's levy on the house of St. Albans, 79. Monks of Ely, 79; of St. Albans, 79. Monmouth, Duke of, son of Charles II, satirized as Absalom by Dryden, 282. Montague, Lord, accused of treason, 127. Montague, Sir Edward, later Earl of Sand- wich, 265. Montford, Simon de, death of, 85; lament for, 86.
'CONNELL and the Clare Election, 381.
More, Margaret, Mrs. Roper, her farewell to her father, 141.
More, Sir Thomas (1579), his character, 132; speech and manners, 133; a pattern of friendship, 133; his high spirits, 134; as a minister at court, 135; at court, 134; quoted, 137; taken to the Tower, 140; his farewell to William Kingston, 140; his farewell to his family, 141; to Sir Thomas Pope, 142; his message to the king, 142; his execution, 143; SHEEP WALKS IN THE REIGN OF HENRY VIII, 188; Utopia, 190. Morley, Rt. Hon. John, A WARNING
(1899), 461; Parliamentary Debates, 465. Mortimer, Roger, 85.
Mutiny, the Great Indian, its outbreak at Lucknow, 435; at Cawnpore, 436; at Meerut, 437.
WAPIER, SIR CHARLES, alluded to, 448. NASEBY (1645), 245.
Navy, the first, 32, 37; of Harold, 39; in the Reign of Queen Mary, 152; in the Fight with the Armada, 178, 180, 183; in 1603, 208; in 1637, 228; defeated by Holland, 254; in 1654, 257; the Dutch in the Thames, 274.
New England History Teachers' Association, xix, xx.
NEWSLETTER TO WENTWORTH, A (1637), 228.
Odo, Bishop, brother of William I, 47. Old South Leaflets, xxii, 49. Old Swan, the, near the Tower, 140, 271. Opposition to the French War (1800), 370. OUTBREAK AT LUCKNOW, THE (1757), 435.
MATTHEW, ENGLAND IN 1257, 78; Chronica Majora, 84. Parliament, of 1257, 80; of 1295, 89; a speech in the House of Commons (1523), 136; statute of, concerning the Bible, 144; Queen's speech to, 160; statute of, on the keeping of sheep, 190; Apology of the Commons to James I, 212; a famous scene in the House of Commons, 219; impeachment of Strafford, 232; Charles I to the House of Lords, 236; Attempted Arrest of Five Members (1642), 237; the Self-denying Ordinance, 242; Cromwell and the Long Parliament, 251; Cromwell's speech in the First Protectorate Parlia- ment, 257; Oxford sessions of 1665, 268; the Five Mile Act, 269; and the Catholics, 276; the Exclusion Bill (1680), 277; Dry- den's satire on, 278-282; the Second Declaration of Indulgence, 284; burlesque Bill of Costs for election to, 298; debate on the "Wilkes" case, 299; purchase of a seat in 1767, 302; a representative's position, 305; debate on the power of the Crown, 308; Catholics in, 315; Scotland in the Unreformed, 318; Royal Speech in 1720, 341; Pitt's Warning to the Lords (1775), 350; American debate, 355, 359; Royal Speech of 1782, 359; the French Revolu- tion, 363; Fox on the French War, 370; the Clare Election, 381; Wellington and Reform, 382; Dissolution of, 384; Chartist Petition for Annual Sessions, 387; debate on Home Rule, 391; The Lords and
« PreviousContinue » |