the bread, spiritually in the re- ceiver, 434. 436. Body and blood of Christ not eaten by the wicked, ii. 425. iii. 126. 316. 435. how given in the Lord's Supper, iii. 84. 86. 201. 317. 435. Boleyn, Queen Anne, i. 1. 5. her coronation, 28. date of her mar- riage, 31. Cranmer applies to her respecting benefices at Ca- lais, 146. Cranmer intercedes for her, 163.
Boleyn, Thos. Earl of Wiltshire, letter to him, i. 1. See Wilt- shire.
Bonaventure, iii. 101. Boner, Edm. Bishop of London, letters to him, i. 71. 323. 324. commissioned to degrade Cran- mer, iv. 118. his unmannerly conduct, 120. his account of Cranmer's recantations, iv. App. 393.
Booth, Charles, Bishop of Here- ford, i. 62.
Boston or Benson, Wm. Abbot of Westminster, i. 18. 30. 41. 75.
Boughton in Kent, i. 254. 298. Bower, John, parson of Petworth,
i. 90. Boys, Mr., one of Cranmer's coun- sel, i. 280.
Bray, Mayor of Bodmin, ii. 243. Bread, a figure of Christ's body, iii. 197. in what sense holy, 282.
Bread and wine, not bare tokens, iii. 38. 48. 82. iv. 18. Brian, i. 24.
Brice, John, i. 122. Bridges, Wm., brother of sir
John, carries off Anne Bar- ker from sequestration, and marries her, i. 236. Broke, John, i. 52. Brokes, James, Bishop of Glou- cester, i. 368. 369. 382. exa-
mines Cranmer as the Pope's Subdelegate, iv. 79. 123. charg- ed by him with perjury, 87. Brook, Thos., of Calais, i. 285. Browgh, summoned before Cran- mer, i. 50.
Brown, Sir Anthony, i. 32. Brown, Thos., apothecary at Bris- tol. i. 85.
Browne, Thos., i. 245. Bruno, iv. 189.
Bryan, Sir Francis, i. 32. Brytten, Dr., i. 28. Bucer, Martin, i. 306. iii. 54. 55. 58. 167. 170. 201. 240. 336. 341. Contra Abrincensem, iv. 41. letters to him, i. 335. 338. 341.
Bull, parson of Norfleet, i. 272. Bullinger, Henr. letter to him, i. 344.
Bulstrode, James, i. 44. 45. Burcard, Francis, Vice-Chancellor to the Elector of Saxony, am- bassador in England, i.249.260. Burton upon Trent, i. 144. Butler, John, Cranmer's Commis- sary at Calais, i. 84. 89. 183. 204. 250. 252. Butts, Dr., Henry VIII's physi- cian, i. 115. Byngham, Henry, Cranmer's kins- man, i. 66.
Cade, Thomas, i. 116. ii. 260. Calais, i. 222. Cranmer's intention to send two of his chaplains there, 126. in need of good instruction, 144. proceedings there for the maintenance of the King's supremacy, 183. per- secution of the reformers there, 250. 257. difficulty of finding a learned man to be the Arch- bishop's Commissary there, 283. Calling, Christ's calling is not making, iii. 179.
Calvin, letter to him, i. 346. Cambridge, letter to the Mayor
of, i. 33. Statutes of the Uni- versity surrendered to Crum- well, 158.
Candlemas day, the bearing of candles on it discontinued, i. 324.
Candles, not to be used but on
the high altar, iv. App. 329. Canones Apostolorum, ii. 460. not kept, iv. 193.
Canon Law, extracts from, ii. 1. 11. Corpus Juris Canonici, De Consecrat. ii. 310. 323. 324. 328. 412. 428. 441. iii. 17. 101. 110. 153. 272. 274. 343. 345. 363. 369. 375. 383. 389. 412.415. 432. 450. iv. App. 436. 439. Canterbury, Abbot of St. Augus- tin's at, i. 18. 65.
Archbishop of, change of his title defended by Cranmer, i. 136.
Christ's Church at, i. 148. 155. 253. 257. 291. let- ter to the Prior, 57. complaint against the Prior, 223. design of appointing a new Prior, 238. the monks there disobey the King's Injunctions, 182.
letter respecting the new foundation there, i. 291. Cathedral Church of, interpretation of one of its sta- tutes by Cranmer, i. 322. vi- sited by Cranmer, ii. 196. College, Oxford, i.
Cap of maintenance, iii. 514. Capernaites, iii. 194. 289. 380.
iv. 23. Capito, Wolfgang, sends a book to Henry VIII. i. 191. letter to
him, 192. Carnally, the word discussed, iii. 212, &c. Christ's body not said to be present in the Eucharist carnally by papists in gene-
ral, 237: Carolostadius, iii. 18. Cassiander, i. 14.
Cassiodorus, ii. 420. iii. 307. Catharine, Queen Catharine of Arragon, letters relating to her divorce, i. 1. 21, &c. Catholic Church, explanation of the term, ii. 32. Catechism, Cranmer's, ii. 440. iii.
13. 42. 43. 55. 99. 101. 177. 293. 297. 342. 344. iv. 96. Catechism of 1552, iv. 64. 102. Cavalier, Ralph, recommended by Cranmer to Edw. VI. i. 349. Cave, Dr., i. 50. 275. Cecil, Wm., Lord Burghley, let- ters to him, i. 342. 343. 35I. 352.
Cellerar, of Christ Church Cant.
application that he may have liberty to take exercise, i. 148. Ceremonies, ecclesiastical, iv. App. 279. 286. not to be contemned, ii. 54. restored to their right use, i. 210. injunction for ob- serving them, iv. App. 337. why some were abolished and some retained, App. 366. Chalcedon, Council of, ii. 393. Champion, Cranmer's chaplain, i. 135. 157. 162. 274. Champneis, Sir John, Lord Mayor of London, i. 142. 178. Chancellor, Cranmer's letters to him, i. 37. 42. 49. 56. 65. Change of one thing into another, of two kinds, iii. 179. Changes of things, the substances remaining, iii. 489. Charing, Vicar of, i. 106. Charles V. his campaign against Solyman in 1532, i. 7. 9, &c. his treaty with the German protestants, 7. his promise of a General Council, 7. 8. his interview with the Pope at Bologna, 8. mutiny in his army, 9. excesses of the mutineers
and the boors, i. 9-12. discon- tent at his not pursuing Soly- man, 10. plague in his court, 13. negotiations with him re- specting Hen. VIII's divorce, 8.
Charter House in the isle of Ax-
holm, i. 127. 134. 187. Charter House in London, i. 113. 134. Chedsey, Wm., i. 270. his dispu- tation with Peter Martyr. iii. 219. with Cranmer, iv. 9. Cheke, Sir J., i. 343. 353. 355. 359. Chesewryght, i. 65.
Chester, Rowland Lee, bishop of, i. 78.
Chevenay, Wm., clerk, applies for
license of non-residence, i. 237. Chevening, Kent, i. 47. 57. 92. Cheyne, Sir Thomas, lord war-
den of the Cinque Ports, i. 358. Christ, his atonement, ii. 287. 307. Christ, present in his sacraments,
iii. 38. his presence in the Eu- charist, ii. 310. his body and blood eaten by faith, 306. eaten spiritually, iii. 317. not eaten by the wicked, ii. 31 1. iii. 316. 329. how received in the sa- crament, iii. 103. received in the sacrament verily and truly, 288. how long he abideth in the receiver of the sacrament, 99. corporally in heaven, not on earth, 175. called bread his body, 178. 181. two natures in Christ illustrated by refer- ence to the Eucharist, 437. Chrysostom, ii. 440. iii. 89. 100. 177. 189. 200. 288. 357.380. 521. iv. 166. 177, &c. 202. 206. 211. 213. 226.
his exhortation to study
Church, definition of, iv. App.
277. authority of, iii. 2. 17. 19, 20. 22. 23. iv. 11, 165. which Church to be followed, ii. 462. the Church, of two kinds, iv. 154. the holy Church and the visible Church distin- guished, iii. 19. 20. the visible Church liable to error, iv. 155. its corruptions, 161. persecu- tion a mark of the true Church, 236.
Church of Rome, iii. 18. cor- rupted gradually, 220. Claybroke, Dr., i. 28. letter to him, 46.
Clergy, provision for their sup- port, ii. 55.
Clerk, John, Bishop of Bath and Wells, i. 30.
Clemens Alexandrinus, Pædagog.
ii. 320. 373. 428. iv. App. 403.
Clemens Romanus, ii. 401. his five epistles spurious, iii. 221. Cleves, Anne of, received by Cran- mer at Canterbury, i. 297. at- tempt to reconcile her to Hen. VIII, 311.
that of the papists, iii. 95.
&c. Confession, ii. 39. Confirmation, ii. 18. 48. 98. 101. Confusion of natures, iii. 467. Consecration, defined, ii. 413. Constantius, Marcus Antonius, (i. e. Gardyner,) ii. 284. iv. 60.
Cobham, Geo. Brook, lord, i. 131. Controversies prevailing in Eng-
Dr. John, Cranmer's Chancellor, i. 107. Cole, Dr., disputes with Cranmer, iv. 26. his sermon at St. Mary's Church before Cranmer's death, 131.
Collman, Cranmer's bailiff at Wingham, i. 55-
land in 1536, ii. 16. to be de- termined not by the Church, but the Scriptures, iv. 165. Corbet, Henry, a Dutch priest, i. 276. 288.
Corell's Wood, i. 59. Cornethwaite, Simon, i. 236. Coronation of Edward VI. Cran- mer's speech at it, ii. 118. Corporal, Corporally, the words discussed, iii. 212, &c. 235, &c. 244. 265. 271. 286. 345.
Comb Abbey, Warwickshire, i. Corpus Christi College, Oxford,
Comet, 1532, i. 13.
Commandments, the Ten, ii. 48. the Second, 49. the Fifth, 55. Common Prayer, Book of, iii. 171. 217. 346. 379. 417. 494. 498. its excellence, 164. iv. 3. 164. defended by Cran- mer, 3. misrepresented by Gar- dyner, iii. 96. 99. 101. 114. 117. 145. 146. not under- stood by Gardyner, 289. trans- lated into French, i. 354. Pre- face to it, iv. App. 363. Commonalty, insolence of, ii.
258. unfit to govern, 259. Commons, enclosure of, ii. 258. 261.
Communion under both kinds, ii. 405. order for it, iv. App. 352. Communion how to be received, ii. 463. iii. 12. Communion of saints, ii. 31. Comparison between the true
doctrine of the Eucharist and
complaint from a scholar there of the support given by its mem- bers to popery, i. 268. Corruption of the world, iii.
Councils General, ii. 12. 203.
Charles V.'s proclamation re- specting a General Council, i. 7. 8. consultations at Rome for holding one, i. 176. Judg ment of the Convocation re- specting them, iv. App. 258. opinion of certain bishops and clergy on them, App. 264. General Councils liable to er- ror, iv. 155. not of sufficient authority to make Articles of
Faith, iv. 191. Council of Basle, iv. App. 306. of Carthage, the sixth, iv.
of Chalcedon, ii. 393. of Constance, iv. App.
-ofConstantinople, the first,
iv. App. 304.
Council, of Ephesus, iii. 3. 5. 69. 548. iv. App. 428.
of Florence, iv. App. 307. of Gangra, iv. 196.
of Laodicea, iv. 196. fourth General Lateran, iii. 17. 363. iv. App. 439.
of Neocæsarea, iv. 196.
of Nice, ii. 460. iii. 531. 533. iv. 195. App. 304. Council, the Privy, their letter
concerning Homilies and In- junctions, iv. App. 341.concern- ing Communion in both kinds, App. 352. of instruction to preachers, App. 354. three let- ters from the Lords of the Council at Windsor to the Lords in London, 1549. App. 369. letter from the Council to Ridley, for the taking down of altars, App. 377. to the Princess Mary, on her nonconformity, App. 378.
Court of Street, our Lady of, i. 79. Coverdale, Miles, Bishop of Ex-
eter, Cranmer's application re- specting his homage and his first fruits, i. 342.
Craiford, John, Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, i. 115. Cranmer, Edmund, Archdeacon of Canterbury, i. 131. Cranmer, Thomas, Archbishop of of Canterbury, his first mar- riage before he took orders, iv. 100. his second marriage after ordination, ibid. lived with his wife secretly under Hen. VIII, openly under Edward VI, 100, 101. his appointment to the Archbishopric of Canterbury, 100. 114. came to it un- willingly, 92. 114. disclosed at that time to Henry VIII. the usurpation of the Pope, 115. his oaths and protesta- tion at his consecration, App. 247. oath to the King for
his temporalities, App. 251. protested against the oath at his consecration under legal advice, 115. his plan for fill- ing up vacancies in religious houses, i. 20. his house over-
charged with servants, 34. his poverty, 34. 54. 57. his debts, 54. 63. 74. 189. his ap- peal from the Pope to a Gene- ral Council, 1533, i. 72. 1556, iv. 121. defends his visitation of the diocese of Winchester against Gardyner, i. 138. his claim on lands belonging to the dissolved priory of Davington, 147. 150. draws articles a- gainst the supremacy of the Pope for the assistance of preachers, 152. reports to Henry VIII. his sermons gainst the papal supremacy, 167. intercedes for Anne Bo- leyn, 163. refuses to grant a dispensation for Massey's marriage to his niece, 173. his opinion on prohibited de- grees of matrimony, 174. ii. 77. obtains license from Crumwell to visit his diocese, i. 189. his exchange with the King, 189. 203. his judgment on the Eucharist in 1537, 195. re- pels the charge of using spies, 217. his Annotations on the King's Book, 226. 227. ii. 65. his Disputation with the sacra- mentary Lambert, in 1538, iv. 95. his directions for the pro- per use of the English Bible, i. 284. his opinion of preben- daries, 292. his remarks on the new foundation at Can- terbury, 291. 294. maintains the propriety of opening the school at Canterbury to all ranks, 294. intercedes for Crumwell, 298. his inter- view with the ambassador of
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