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Thanksgiving, general, ordered for a victory over
the Scots, 417.

Theodoretus, his words upon justification, 205.
Theophylactus says, that they bring in divisions
and occasions of evil, who bring forth any thing
beside the doctrine of the apostles, 34; quoted
upon justification, 211.

Theophilus Alexandrinus says, that if Christ had
been crucified for devils, his cup would not have
been denied them, 451.

Thirlby, archdeacon of Ely, severely reprehended
by Cranmer for negligence, 292.

Thirlby, bishop of Ely, commissioner against Cran-

mer, 224; professes great friendship for him, 228.
Tiltey, abbot of, suit between him and the bishop

of London's chaplain, 261.

Todd, archdeacon, quotation from his life of Cran-
mer, 128 n, 567.

Tombs, men heard at, 47.

Tongues, gift of, its use, 183, 514.

Tonstal, bishop, his sermon against the pope, 13.
Totehill, Henry, brought before Cranmer for sup-
porting the pope and St Thomas à Becket, 387, 8.
Traditions, relating to baptism, prayer, crossing the
forehead, offices of bishops, &c., 56, 7, 8; writ-
ten, not necessary to salvation, 57, 8, 9; apostolic,
written and unwritten, ibid., 60; of the Scribes
and Pharisees, deemed by them equal to God's
laws, 146; the same has taken place in our times,
ibid.

Trentals, services of thirty masses, 63, 147, 57, 273.
Triacle, treacle, antidote to disease, 122.
Trindals, rolls of wax, (erratum, p. 155, rolls of war,)
155, 503.

Trumpet, use of, in the field, 170.

Trygonnell, Dr, an officer to Cranmer, 256, 61.
Tudbery priory, in Staffordshire, suppression of,
379.

Turks, war with, in Germany, 233, 4, 5, 6.

Turner, nominated archbishop of Armagh, as un-
willing for it as he was to be hanged by the
rebels, 439.

Turney, Henry, 311, 34.

Turntippets and flatterers, 15.

Tyndale, his English bible prohibited by Henry
VIII., ix.

Tythes, unlawful exaction of 3d. per acre for, 289.

Unction, to remit venial sins, not in scripture, 117.
See Extreme Unction.

Unwritten verities, pretended, broached by the pa-
pists, 10; not necessary for our salvation, or the
scriptures would be insufficient, ibid.; reasons
against, 52; the term is a new invention of the
papists, ibid.; scriptures alleged by the papists for
them answered, 53; other authorities for them
answered, 56; history of the origin of, 515; enu-
meration of some of them, ibid.; it may be good
to forbid the denial of some of them, 516.

Vadian, Joachim, of St Gall, Cranmer's letter to
him, disapproving of his treatise on the eucharist,

342.

Valent, the monk, deceived by the devil, 42.
Venison, Cranmer's want of, for himself and friends,
255, 70; mastership of the game of the see of
Canterbury, 386, 8.

Vestments, ecclesiastical, controversy about the
wearing of, x, 428, 31.

Victor, his proceedings against the churches in the
east, about Easter Day, 77.

Victore, Hugo de Sancto, his words on justifica-
tion, 204.

Vigilantius condemned of heresy for speaking
against watchings, 175.

Vigils, disuse of, 175; abolition of, 414, 15.
Vineyard, the Lord's broken down and wasted, 9.
Virginity, perpetual, of our lady, proved by scrip-
ture, 60.

Visions, prove no doctrine, 47, 64; how to know true
from false, 66.

Visitation of monasteries, &c., inhibition of Henry
VIII. for, 463.

Vows, of religion, the three chief, 147.

Vulgar tongue, prayers enjoined to be recited in it,
81, 155, 156, 161: scriptures in, first used, 119;
should be used in the mass, except in certain
secret mysteries, 151; the Cornish men reject the
reformed service because they do not know Eng-
lish, 179; the scriptures translated into it re-
peatedly in ancient times, 183; must of necessity
be used to confute an English heretic, 183.

Wakefield, John, controller of Cranmer's house-
hold, refuses to join in lord Darcy's rebellion,
363.

Waldesius, favourite secretary to Charles V., 235.
Wales, complaints against the clergy in, 37.
Waltham Abbey, Cranmer resides at, vii.
Wardship of the crown, 389.

Warham, archbishop, and the maid of Kent, 65;
first admitted the king's supremacy, 214.
Webster, Augustine, prior of Axholme, 299; con-
demned for treason, 303.

Wentworth, Mrs Ann, her delusions, 65.
Westminster, Cranmer's letter to the abbot of, 240.
Weston, Dr, refuses to deliver Cranmer's supplica-
tory letter to the council, 445 n.

White-meats, (butter, eggs, cheese, &c.) may be
eaten in Lent, 508.

Wilson, Lea, his extensive collection of Cranmer's
bibles, 125 n.

Wilton abbey, dispute about the appointment of
an abbess to, 258, 97.

Wiltshire, earl of, Cranmer's letter to, 229; a com-
missioner for the king's subsidy, 301; desires Rix
as chaplain, 302.

Winchester, bishop of. See Gardiner.
Winchester, meeting of Hen. VIII. and the bishops
at, 314, 26.

Window, (blank) for a name in a collation, 249.
Wine, Cranmer writes to lord Lisle to procure him,
at Calais, 316, 18; to C. Cobham, for the same,
411.

Wisbech, in the see of Ely, a suit for the agreement
of the fruits thereof, 264.
Witch of Endor and Saul, 45.
Witchcraft, to be inquired of, 158.

Withbroke, in the diocese of Coventry and Lich-
field, Cranmer nominates to it in the vacation of
the see, 259.

Wolfe, Rayner, printer, 429, 40.

Wolsey, cardinal, urges Cranmer to join his founda-
tion at Oxford, vii; his proceedings with the maid
of Kent, 65.

Women, smelling of balm, civet, and musk, 120;
fond, addicted to superstition, 179.

Worcester, bishop of, with Cranmer and the bishop
of Chichester, commissioners for reforming the
church-service, 414, 15.

Worldly prosperity, no proof of the truth of a re-
ligion, 62,

Wotton, Dr, Cranmer's master of the faculties, 394.
Wriothesly, Sir Thomas, Cranmer's letter to, 378.
Writings, ancient, destroyed and hidden by the
court of Rome, 76.

Word of God, the, written in the canon of the bible,
contains all things needful for our salvation, 19;
no where but in the scriptures, 52; nothing to be
added to or taken from it, 53; necessary to estab-
lish a new article of faith, 64; the only rule of
faith in all controversies of religion, 77.
Word of mouth, without writing, not to be be-
lieved, 52; the things which St Paul preached,
but did not write to the Thessalonians, are written

elsewhere, 55; these chiefly related to traditions,
and ceremonies, ibid.; things delivered by, not
necessary to salvation, 58.

Words, brawling about, deprecated, 79, 132.
Wydon, Les, or Lois Weedon, near Towcester, the
benefice farmed, 279.

Wytesham, or Wyttrisham, priest of, imprisoned,

306.

York, archbishop of, Cranmer's letter to him, to
supend the quarterly reading of the general curse,
281.

THE

WORKS

OF

THOMAS CRANMER,

ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY.

[merged small][graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed]

For the Publication of the Works of the Fathers

and Early Writers of the Reformed
English Church.

THE

WORKS

OF

THOMAS CRANMER,

ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY,
MARTYR, 1556.

EDITED FOR

The Parker Society,

BY THE

REV. JOHN EDMUND COX, M.A., F.S.A.,

OF ALL SOULS' COLLEGE, OXFORD, CURATE AND LECTURER OF STEPNEY.

VOLUME THE FIRST.

Cambridge:

PRINTED AT

THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.

M.DCCC.XLIV.

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