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INDEX

INDEX

A

Act of Supremacy, transfers Pope's
authority to Crown, 52; absolut-
ism of Crown, 53; nevertheless
acceptable to people, 64.
Act of Uniformity, appoints second
Prayer-Book of Edward v1., 53;
fine for absence from worship,
53; Prothero's "Statutes and
Constitutional Documents,"54n.;
distasteful to Puritans, 64.
Admonitions to Parliament, 69, 70.
Advertisements, Parker's, 58n.
America. See New England.
American Democracy from Puri-
tanism, 312n. See Democracy.
Anabaptists martyrs, 176; early
adopted principles of toleration,
192, 280; excesses of, 336, 337.
See Baptists.

Anglicanism and Puritanism, 46.
Animus of Anglican writers, 193–4.
Antinomianism and Anne Hutchin-
son, 283-4.

Antitheses, Puritan andAnglican,72.
Arber, on corruption of clergy, 151n.;

on Martin Marprelate Con-
troversy, 153n., 159, 167, 168;
defence of Martin Marprelate,
164; authorship of Martinist
Tracts, 167, 168.

Arminianism, not allowed in church

till Laud, 385; Buckle on, 382.
Athanasius on persecution, 362.
Augsburg Confession, 363.

B

Bacon, Lord, Advertisement touch-

ing Controversies, 49; commends
prophesyings, 85; would have
room made in church for Puri-
tans, 114; his opinion of Brown-
ists, 178n.; his prejudiced testi-
mony regarding them, 207, 209.
Bancroft, Archbishop, his Danger-
ous Positions, 74n.

Bancroft, History of United States
on Mayflower Compact, 239n.;
on Salem, 255; on Roger Wil-
liams, 279-81; on Connecticut,
291; on Puritans of New England,
306n.; on Winthrop, 349; on
intolerance of Massachusetts,
380-1.

Baptists, John Smyth, founder of,
213; first English Church of
General Baptists, 221; Roger
Williams forms first Baptist
Church in America, 277; order
for banishment of, from Massachu-
setts, 334; fined and whipped,
335; imprisonment and banish-
ment of, 336; commonly iden-
tified with Anabaptists, 336-8;
first in struggle for religious
liberty, 369-70.

Barlow, Bishop, no record of con-
secration, 49, 50; his unsacer-
dotal spirit, 50.

Barrowe, Henry, 177; arrest of, 178;
examination, 178-81; writings
in prison, 182; Dexter thinks
him author of Marprelate Tracts,
168, 188; his execution, 183.
Barrowism, between Brownism and
system of Cartwright, 184; and
Brownism, 185; Congregational-
ism of America Barrowism, 315.
Bible, one of creative causes of Puri-

tanism, 11, 14: Wyclif's, 15
Tyndale's New Testament, 16;
Great Bible, 16, 17; Genevan
Version, 17; influence on people,
Foxe, 17n.; Strype, Green, 18.
Bishops, Puritan, 4, 46; not neces-
sary to Church, 47, 48; simony
and peculation of, 149, 150;
Latimer on, 150n.; Martinist
attack on, 152; on their defence,
161; Arber on, 165.

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Body of Liberties," constitution
of Massachusetts, 324.
Borgeaud's Rise of Modern Demo-
cracy, 22, 23; on Robert Browne,
128; "Divine Right Democracy,
129; Democracy from Independ-
ency, 312n.
Bradford, William, second Governor
of New Plymouth, 243.
Brewster, William, at Scrooby, 215;
New Plymouth, 243; elder, 246.
Brooks, Philips, on Tolerance,

359.
Browne, Robert, 126; at Norwich,
127; treatise and opinions, 128;
flees to Holland, Middleburg, 129;
with Penry in Scotland, 130;
accepts living in Northampton-
shire, 131; first to grasp prin-
ciple of Independency, 132; in
thirty-two prisons, 133; Dr.
Dexter's estimate of, 133, 134;
early Independents disowned,
134; sometimes attended Estab-
lished Church, 185, 186; his
Treatise on Reformation without
waiting for any, 128, 374n.
Brownism, Cotton disowned, 135;
Dexter says misunderstood,
135n.

Brownists, carried principles to
extreme, 134; Neal on their
uncharitableness, 135; "twenty
thousand in England," 136, 201;
Neal's distinction between Brown-
ists and other Puritans, 137, 138;
increase and persecution of, 174,
175.
Burleigh, Lord, his remonstrance
against the Whitgift Articles, 98;
Brownist petition to, 196-8.
Busher's Religious Peace, 281, 367,
379.

C

Calvinism, meant democracy in
church government, 22; not in-
tolerant, 381; early Puritans all
Calvinists, 381-2; democratic,
382; Buckle, Froude, Fairbairn
on, 382-3; not identical with
Puritanism, 383; not peculiar to
Puritanism, 384; of Whitgift and
Lambeth Articles, 385.
Cambridge Platform, 313.
Campbell, Douglas, on the Puritan
in Holland, England, and Amer-
ica, 140; on State Church, 141;
England's debt to Holland, 206–7;
intolerance of Massachusetts,
344n.

Carlyle, heroism of Puritanism, v;
on libelling Puritans, 122.
Cartwright, Thomas, on Christ's
Headship, 61, 62; first to syste-
matise Puritanism, 67; position
defined in six propositions, 68;
founder of Presbyterianism, 69;
author of second Admonition to
Parliament, 70; controversy with
Whitgift, 71, 72; antitheses, 72;
did not approve of separatism,
76; aimed at a Presbyterian
despotism, 76-9.

Carver, John, first Governor of New
Plymouth, 239, 243.

Child, his Church and State under
the Tudors, 38n.; on continuity
of Church, 38-9; quotes letter by
Dr. Hammond, 47n.; on Canon
Dixon regarding corruption of
clergy, 150n.

Chillingworth on Scripture author-
ity, 112n.

Church, Dean, takes narrow view
of Puritanism; alleged appeal of
Puritans to Scripture against

reason, 110.
Church, and Scripture, 63, 70, 71,
111, 112; and State, Hooker on,
115; Browne's definition of, 128,
Robinson's, 217, 218, Jacob's,
222.

Church of England, had origin under
Henry VIII., 31; papal character
of pre-Reformation Church, 32;
from quarrel with Pope, 32;


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