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TIONS UNDER HENRY VI, 117; Paston | Drake, Sir Francis, to Secretary Walsyng-
Letters, 118.

Decay of the English before the Conquest, 42.
DECLARATION OF REBELLION, A (1688),
289.

DEFENCES OF ENGLAND (1554), 151; in
1603, 208.

Defoe, Daniel, THE CLOTH MARKET AT
LEEDS (1725), 321; Tour through Great
Britain, 324.

ham about the Armada, 179; alluded to,
180.

Dryden, John, THE WHIGS AND THE EX-
CLUSION BILL (1680), 277; Absalom and
Achitophel, Poetical Works, 282.

Dudley, Lord Robert, Earl of Leicester, 155.
DUES AND Services frOM THE LAND IN
THE TENTH CENTURY, 28.
Dunkirk, naval battle off of, 254.

Diaries and Personal Records as valuable Dunning, John, later Lord Ashburton, 309.
sources, xxii.
DUNNING'S MOTION ON THE POWER OF
THE CROWN (1780), 308.

Diary of Samuel Pepys, xxii.

DISCUSSION OF ENGLAND'S FOREIGN POL- DUTCH IN THE THAMES, THE (1667), 274.
ICY (1523), 136.

Discussions of Source Study, xviii.
DISSOLUTION OF PARLIAMENT (1831), 384;
in 1629, 222.

Documents Contemporary, TREATY BE-
TWEEN CHARLES THE GREAT AND OFFA
(circ. 795), 16; ALFRED'S DOOMS, 17;
CORONATION OATH OF ETHELRED II
(979), 30; THE Charter oF HENRY I
(1100), 49; SUMMONS TO THE PARLIA-
MENT OF 1295, 89; A CUSTOMARY TEN-
ANT IN THE REIGN OF EDWARD II, 100;
A POLITICAL FAST (1562), 153; EXECU-
TION OF THE QUEEN OF SCOTS, 173; A
LAW AGAINST THE KEEPING of SHEEP
(1534), 190; A PRAYER FOR LANDLORDS,
193; APOLOGY OF THE HOUSE OF COM-
MONS (1604), 212; THE DEATH-WAR-
RANT OF CHARLESI (1649), 249; CHARLES
II AND HIS DOGS (1660), 268; PARLIA-
MENT AND THE CATHOLICS (1673), 276;
RECORD OF THE POPISH PANIC (1679),
283; PETITION OF THE SEVEN BISHOPS
(1688), 284; A DECLARATION OF REBEL-
LION (1688), 289; A CONFESSION OF
DEFEAT (1782); Parliamentary History,
360.

Documents of the Puritan Rebellion, xxi.
Dowes, Henry, to Cromwell, 195.
D'Oyley, Col, Charles, at Naseby, 248.
Drake, Hawkins, and Howard, THE FIGHT
WITH THE ARMADA (1588), 178; State
Papers relating to the Defeat of the Spanish
Armada, 184.

EARLY GERMANS, THE, 4-

East India Company, alluded to, 230,
426; its farewell to John Bull, 437-444.
Eclipse of the sun, 51.
Edmund, in the battle of Brunanburh, 24.
Edmund, Earl of Cornwall, 90.
Edmund, son of Henry III, 80.
Edric, of Mercia, 32.

Education, of the early German youth, 12;
schools in London (1173), 67; endow-..
ment of colleges by Henry VI, 114; of
schoolboys in Tudor times, 193, 195; in
1629, 224; winning the Degree of Bachelor
of Arts, 335.

Edward, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VI,
118; alluded to in Queen Margaret's
story, 123.

Edward, the laws and liberties of, 73.
Edward I, son of Henry III, 84; supports
his father in the Barons' War, 85; SUM-
MONING OF PARLIAMENT OF 1295, 89;
Select Charters (Stubbs), 91.

Edward II, A Tenant in the Reign of, 100.
Edward III, in the battle of Crecy, 95;

alluded to, 97, 100, 108; his proclamations
to labourers, 104.

Edward IV, son of Richard, Duke of York,

alluded to as Earl of March, 119; as Rose
of Rone, 121; in the battle of Barnet, 126.
Edward VI, the Protestant Revolution under,
146; his queen, 148; alluded to, 210.
Edwin, King of the Northumbrians, his con-
version, 14.

Egbert, the stone of, 23.

Elections, tampering with, under Henry VI,
117.

Eliot, Sir John, leader in the Second Parlia-
ment of Charles I, 220.

Eliott, Sir Thomas, ambassador to the
Emperor Charles V, 144.
Elizabeth and Mary Stuart (1564), 155;
compared by Sir James Melville, 158; the
arguments for and against keeping Mary
Stuart prisoner, 164-168.

Elizabeth, Queen of England, A SPEECH
OF QUEEN ELIZABETH (1566), 160; Speech
of Queen Elizabeth to Parliament (1566),
161; alluded to, 164, 229; a letter to,
from Lord Burghley, 169.

Elizabethan and Jacobean Pamphlets, xxi.
ELIZABETHAN HOMES, 201.

Empire, responsibilities of the extension of,
462.

England and the Danes, 21; under Angevin
rule, 56, 66; under the Conqueror, 44; in
1257, 78; in the reign of Queen Mary,
197.

English History by Contemporary Writers,
xxi, xxii.

Epistolæ of Peter of Blois, 58.

Equality, the doctrine of, preached by John
Ball, 107.

Erasmus, Desiderius, SIR THOMAS MORE,
132; Letter from Erasmus to Ulrich von
Hutten, 136.

ESTRANGEMENT OF THE KING AND THE
NATION, 209.

Ethelred, his Coronation Oath, 30; and the
Danes, 31.

Evelyn, John, THE DUTCH IN THE THAMES
(1667), 274; THE TRIAL OF THE SEVEN
BISHOPS (1668), 285; Diary and Corre-
spondence, 275, 288.

EXECUTION OF SIR THOMAS MORE, THE

(1535), 140.

EXECUTION OF THE QUEEN OF SCOTS, THE
(1586) 173.

Expugnatio Hiberniæ, 62, 65.
Extortion, of money from the English
church by the Pope, 36, 79; of taxes
under William I, 46.

FAIRFAX, SIR THOMAS, Commander-

in-chief of the New Model Army, 245.
Fairness, judicial, fostered by source study,
xviii.

Famine, the, of 1087, 45; in Ireland (1846
and 1847), 414.

FAMOUS SCENE, A, IN THE HOUSE OF COM-
MONS (1629), 219.

FAREWELL LETTER TO THE KING, A
(1688), 288.

Federation, Colonial, 454.

FIGHT WITH THE ARMADA (1588), 178.
Fire in London, the Great, 270; the monu-
ment to, ascribing it to a Popish Plot, 283.
Fitz-Stephen, William, THE FRIENDSHIP
OF KING HENRY AND HIS CHANCELLOR,
59; among Materials for the History of
Thomas Becket, 60; A PICTURE OF LON-
DON (circ. 1173), 65; Descriptio Nobilis-
simæ Civitatis Londonæ, 71.

Fitz-Walter, Robert, Commander of the
forces of the Barons, 75.

FIVE MILE ACT, THE (1665), 268.
Florence of Worcester, A LETTER FROM
CANUTE TO THE ENGLISH PEOPLE,
Chronicle, 38.

Fletcher, Dr., Dean of Peterborough, at the
execution of the Queen of Scots, 175.
Foreign Foes, 151.

Foreign Policy, of England, 16; the Con-
quest of Ireland under Henry II, 62; the
Libel of English Policy, 112; Criticism of
Foreign Policy (1523), 136; the Defences
of England (1554), 151; Lord Burghley to
Elizabeth on Matters of State, 169.

Forster, Wm. Edward, THE IRISH FAMINE

(1847), 414; Transactions of the Central
Relief Committee of the Society of Friends,
during the Famine in Ireland in 1846 and
1847,418; IMPERIAL FEDERATION (1875),
452; Address to the Edinburgh Philosophi-
cal Institution, London Times, Nov. 6,
1875, 456.

FOUL DEATH, THE (1349), 102.

Fox, Charles James, alluded to, 355; the
break of his friendship for Burke, 364;
OPPOSITION ΤΟ THE FRENCH WAR
(1800), 370; Speeches, 375; THE CORN

LAWS (1843), 406; The Times, March 30, | Gladstone, Wm. Ewart, HOME RULE FOR

1843, 410.

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.

GAGE, GEN., alluded to, 357.

II.

Gambling, passion of early Germans for,

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.
Glencoe, 292.

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.

HAR

AROLD, 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.

typical Puritan, 225.

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-

son, 227.

Hutchinson, Thomas, Colonial Governor of
Massachusetts, alluded to, 354, 356, 357.
Hutton, William, THE BIRMINGHAM RIOTS
(1791), 365; A Narrative of the Riots in
Birmingham; The Life of William Hutton,

370.

IMPEACHMENT OF STRAFFORD, THE
(1640-1641), 232.

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,

XX.

Ireland, the appointment of a Lord Deputy | Kingston, Sir William, Constable of the

over, 187.

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.

Tower, 140.

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.

MES 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,

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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,

77.

JOHN WESLEY IN CORNWALL (1743), 333.
Jonson, Ben, alluded to, 228.

Juries, tampering with, under Henry VI, 117.

KEMBLE, Coronation Oath of Ethelred

II, 30; Saxons in England, 30.
Khartum, Gordon's funeral at, 459.

OF A BACHELOR OF ARTS (1780), 335;
Essays, Moral and Literary, 338.

LABOURERS' 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.
Laud, William, archbishop of Canterbury,
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.

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,

Kimberley, Lord, alluded to, 397.

King Alfred, xxii.

IOIO), 31.

King Henry VI, 114.

xxii.

LIBEL OF ENGLISH POLICY, THE, 112.

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