Perkins Mr. William, his death, character, and writings i 557 Pern Mr. A. bis death, &c. iv 151
Persecution of the protestants under Henry VIIIth i 65 76 78 85 Of ⚫ those called heretics in Edward VIth's time 102 103 Of the pro- testants in queen Mary's reign 138 &c. Of the protestants in France and the Low Countries 271 Of the anabaptists in England 345——— Of the Brownists 380 515 &c. See Anabaptists, Brownists, Puritans. Perth, five articles of, ii 136 Petitions of the ministers in several counties against subscription i 403 404 Of gentlemen, and parishioners for their ministers 405 429— Their petitions to parliament 440 441 460 To the convocation 448 To the queen 475 506-See supplication-Petition for liberty of conscience for the puritans ii 90 Petition of the parliament in their favor 102 And against the ecclesiastical commission ib. Against the growth of popery 183 Of the Calvinists against the king's de- claration 210 Of the Scots, against the liturgy 350 Of Dr. Leigh- ton to the long parliament 415 Of that parliament to the king 583 Of the lord-mayor, &c. to the parliament 537 Of the London ap- prentices ib. Of the puritan elergy for reformation 538 Petitions for and against the hierarchy 437 &c. 538 Petition of right 221— Of the city ministers, for settling discipline and worship iii 165 Petition for unordained preachers 464 Petitioners and abhorrers v 63 64
Peyton Sir John, a zealous churchman, appointed governor of Jersey and Guernsey, with secret instructions to root out the Geneva disci- pline and plant the English liturgy and ceremonies ii 95 His pro- ceedings and success 117 118
Philip king, marries queen Mary i 133 His riches, and view in the connexion ib. and n.
Philips Mr. Arthur, professor of music iii 471
Philpot a papist, hanged i 79
Philpot Mr. his martyrdom i 142 His intolerant spirit 142 n.
Piedmont, sufferings of the protestants there iv 164 Are assisted by Cromwell 167
Pierce's Vindication of the Dissenters, a learned work, referred to i 52 and in a variety of other places in the course of the work Pierce bishop, his usage of the lecturers ii 301
Pilkington, bishop of Durham, writes to the earl of Leicester against pressing the habits i 216 220 His death and character 356 357 Pinfold Dr. notice of v 150 and n.
Pitt Dr. some account of iii 452
Plague, the great one iv 437 Anecdote relative to it ib. n.
Plays, &c. put down ii 579 iii 466
Plot against the long parliament ii 438 Consequences of it 440 Plots against parliament iii 46
Plumber's-Hall, the puritans meeting there apprehended and examin- edi 263 They are imprisoned 266
Plundered ministers, committee for iii 56
Pluralities and non-residence, the bill against them opposed by the convocation i 444 Rejected by the lords 445 Another bill to pre-
vent them, which the convocation also addresses the queen against 484 Puritans complain of them ii 62 Bill against them iii 61 Pocock Dr. some account of iii 449 Anecdote of him ib. n. Pocklington Dr. Censured in parliament ii 897 Occasion of his works of Sunday no Sabbath,' and Christian Altar,' ib.
Poley Mr. his receipts for money and plate of St. John's, Cambridge, for the king's use ii 562 563
Polyglot Bible, in 6 vols. folio published iv 224 Encouraged by Mr.
Pole cardinal arrives from the pope, and reconciles the kingdom to Rome i 136 Loses his influence, because not severe enough against
heretics 158 His death 160
Pool Mr. Matt. his death, &c. v 60 and n. Pope's power and extortions in England i 49 Restrained by the stat- utes of provisors and præmunire 50 Henry VIIIth quarrels with him, and for what 58 His authority in England abolished by par- liament 59 60 61 Oath to be taken against it 64 He excommuni- cates Henry VIIIth 71 Laws against him repealed in queen Mary's time 136 Revived by queen Elizabeth 166 206 His au- thority abolished in Scotland 200 255 He admonishes queen Eliz- abeth 202 And excommunicates her 273 Pope's nuncios in Eng- land iii 234 239
Popery revived under queen Mary, penal laws against the reformers put into execution, numbers fly to Germany, Switzerland, and Ge- neva i preface 4 Sad picture of it 126 It is restored by parlia- ment 129 A bloody religion, 143 144 244 The people of Eng- land's aversion to it 227 It gains ground in queen Elizabeth's time 314 344 381 533 Statute against seducing her subjects to it 875 Advances to it in James Ist's reign ii 163 In Charles Ist's reign, and cause 177 Increase in Ireland 204 &c. Advances of the church of England towards it 213 Its great increase 217 Can- ons against it 356 Popery connived at, and encouraged by Laud iii 222 &c. His correspondence with popish priests, and counte- nancing them 238 &c. Popery revives in England growth in England 483 parliament against it 484
iv 342 386 And in Ireland 343 Its Causes of it ib. Remedies proposed by Its progress v 151 Clergy forbid to preach against it 152 But write against it ib. Reasons for the dis- senters not writing against it 153
Popish Laws repealed i 92
Popish Books licensed i 469
Popish Bishops deprived i 180 Their behavior to queen Elizabeth 201 Popish lords petitioned against ii 515
Popish Confederacy to extirpate the protestant religion i 274
Popish Plot v 52 Alarms the nation, but not credited at court 64 Remarks 55
Pordage Dr. ejected iv 136 and n. His pamphlet, and answer it. Potter Dr. some account of iii 452
Portuguese ambassador's brother executed iv 115
Powel Mr. V. iii 648 Of his case, his vindications, &c. iv 142 and H. 143 Of his sufferings, death, &c. 490 491 n.
Powers civil and ecclesiastical, observations concerning their just ⚫ boundaries i 173 174
Poynet Dr. translated to the see of Winchester i 115 His death 158 Practice of Prelates, a pamphlet published by the puritans i 402 Præmunire, the statute ofi 50
Prayers for the dead, opinion of the reformers about them i 81 Of bidding prayer 92
Preachers, the great scarcity of good ones formerly in the church i 193 202 205 246 247 368 &c. The reasons of it 370 415 n. 460 463 &c. 476 Diligence of the puritan preachers 350 Preaching min- isters desired by the puritans ii 42 Preaching on conformity 359 Votes for encouraging it 483 Petition for unordained ones iii 464 Committee for preaching ministers 51
Preaching forbid i 69 95 127 163
Predestination and free-will, rise of the controversy about them i 145 Revived in the university of Cambridge 545 Sentiments of the church on this bead 546 549
Prerogative, acts in favor of i 77 Advances of it ii 98 Sibthorpe and Manwaring's sermons for it 195
Presbyterians, their ordination admitted by archbishop Grindal i 386 Their first church in England established at Wandsworth 314- Presbyterians in the assembly of divines, and their chief patrons in the parliament iii 155 Their severity in enforcing uniformity in the use of the directory 172 Their reply to the independents about the divine right of presbytery 286 Their zeal to have that right established 291 Are offended at the provisos in the ordinance, about suspension from the sacrament 297 Petition against the or- dinance for presbyteries, because it gave them not power enough
Defeat the design of a comprehension for the independents 307 Their reply to the proposals for a toleration 308 Argue against the lawfulness of a separation 310 Their high notions of uniformi- ty and against liberty of conscience 311, &c. Censured in a pam. phlet 315 Petition against sectaries, &c. 328 Seconded by the Scots 329 Petition again against sectaries, &c. 364 Their aver- sion to a toleration 386 Their separate views 390 Their propos- als 409 Counter-petition of their elergy, and an ordinance in their favor 419 420 Their provincial assemblies 388 384 481 Their country associations 483 A terrible ordinance passed by their in- fluence against blasphemy and heresy 484 Remonstrance of their ministers against the proceedings of their army in relation to the king. &c. 517 Their farther vindication 519 Whether they are chargeable with the king's death 533 Their conduct towards the commonwealth government iv 32 Refuse the engagement 34 Pro- ceedings against them 50 A plot against parliament 68 Their state under Cromwell 105 Copies of testimonials to ministers 106 Enemies to Cromwell's government 111 Are for restoring the king Are in full possession of the nation 248 269 Are courted by Monk 288 Terms on which they would restore the king 271 Their
vain expectations from the court 262 A deputation of their minis- ters wait on the king at Breda 276 Their ministers made king's chaplains 284 Address for a comprehension 314 Abstract of their first proposals 315 Their reception 318 Abstract of a defence of these proposals against the bishops 321 The beginning of their sufferings 322 They apply to the king ib. Abstract of their see- The king's declaration ond paper of exceptions and requests 328 acceptable to most of them 332 Some accept preferments 333 Are in despair on the commons rejecting the king's declaration 334 Their troubles 349 Sham plots fathered on them 357 430 v 52 74 They descend to Their hardships in the Savoy conference 264 intreaties 369 Behavior of their divines at the conference 372 Their hardships before the act of uniformity 379 Their conduct after the act 404 Their difficulties 405-See Nonconformist and Dissenters. Presbyterian Government, &c. Presbytery established by law in Scat- land i 535 English presbyterian churches in Holland ii 69 Ordi- nation by presbyters defended 411 Their jurisdiction 413 Propo- sitions for establishing it in the treaty of Uxbridge iii 262 Divine right of it debated 286 Carried in the assembly of divines 290 But dropt in parliament ib. Petitions to admit the divine right of it 291 Established by way of probation 300 Remarks ib. Exceptions of Parliament's the Scots, and their amendments to it proposed 301 reply 302 Questions sent to the assembly of divines, about its di- vine right 304 Remarks 305 Attempts for a further establishment of it 328 &c. London ministers assert it to be jure divino 332 How far the establishment of it prevailed 386 487 A description of it as settled in Scotland 381 n. University of Oxford's objections to it 425 It is established without limitation of time 487 Presbyterian Endeavors to support it 121 government established iv 39 stored 249 Abolished at the restoration 284 291 Scotland v 232
Press restrained i 250 451 A private one set up by the puritans 487 Discovered, and its promoters punished 491 Restraint of it, in fa- Laud's care of it 253 vor of Arminianism and popery i 192 193
Farther restraint of it 312 Orders for restraining it iii 71 Abuse of it by Laud 224 Again fettered iv 416 417
Preston Dr. John ii 160 165 182 His death, &c. 219 221 n.
Price Mr. Samuel, p 53 of memoirs of Neal prefixed to vol. i n. Remarks ib. Prince of Wales, king's letter to him iii 510 Prisoners of the prerogative released by the long parliament ii 392 To enforce Proclamation for the Hampton-Court conference ii 35 conformity 47 Against jesuits and puritans 51 Against papists in Ireland 206 Against prescribing a time for calling parliaments For preventing the emigration 218 For repairing churches 240 of the puritans 312 For the better government of the king's army
Proclamations, acts concerning them i Repealed 92
Professors in the university of Oxford who submitted to the parliament
iii 449 of those who were ejected 453 Of those who succeeded 455 Their behavior 462
Prohibitions granted to stop proceedings in the bishop's courts i 554 555 Prohibitions in the spiritual courts iii 196
Prophesyings what, the rise of them,and orders about them i 291 Con- fession of faith signed by the members 292 They increase 334 Are suppressed in the diocese of Norwich ib. The council's letter to continue them 335 But to no purpose 337 They are regulated in other dioceses 357 Queen's reasons for putting them down 358 Her letter to the bishop of London, &c. for that purpose 358 n. Letter of the bishop of Litchfield and Coventry to his archdeacon, in compliance therewith 360 Grindal refuses to put them down, and writes to the queen in their favor 361 They are totally sup pressed 362 Attempt to revive them to no purpose 452 Protestants unhappily adopt the persecuting conduct of the papists i 102 Burnt in queen Mary's time 144, &c. Private congregations of them 148 A mixed execution of protestants and papists 79- Protestants in France and the Low Countries. &e. cruelly perse- cuted 271 &c. See Persecution and Reformers. Protestant inter- est in Germany rained by king James ii 145 Union of it projected by Cromwell iv 203 Protestants turned out, and papists put into office, by king James v 186
Protestation of puritan ministers on the king's supremacy ii 90 Of loyalty, from the Devon and Cornwall ministers 92 Of the general assembly in Scotland, against episcopacy 106 Of the commons, against Arminianism 213 Against that, and tonnage and pound- age 216 Of the Scots, against imposing the liturgy 327 329 the long parliament 443 Of the bishops 521 Objections against
Protestation of the king's supremacy, made in the name of the afflict- ed ministers, and opposed to the shameful calumniations of the pre- lates, a pamphlet, extract from it ii 90 to 93
Provincial Assembly of London, the first iii 383 General rules for it 384 The second, and their petition to parliament ib. The third 480 The fourth 481 Lancashire assembly 481 Assembly of Lon- don, their proceedings iv 156
Provisors, the statute of i 49
Prowd Mr. his letter to lord Burleigh i 372
Prynne, his sentence with Bastwick and Burton, in the star-chamber ii 276 278 and ns. Their second sentence 304 305 Disgusts the nation 307 Released by the long parliament 392 His memento against the king's death iii 516
Psalms, a new version of iii 318
Puritans, origin of that term i preface 5 An account of the rise and publication of the present work in 1732 p 20 of memoirs of Neal, prefixed to vol. i and editor's advertisement, immediately following. Their doctrines agreeable to Wickliffe i 52 Their rise also 150- Their sentiments concerning the supremacy 172 They were for uniformity in religion in their way, as well as the other reformers in theirs 185 When and on what account they began to be called
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