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Albert, Archduke, benefactor of
St. Gregory's, 269.
Alcuin, on the Mass, 225.
Altar stones defaced, 167.
Altars, to be pulled down, after
Mass was abolished, 140; rever-
ence due to, in Archbishop Win-
chelsea's Constitution, 230.
Anglican Orders, condemnation of,

a domestic question, 145.
Anima Christi, date of, 235.
Annals of Winchester College, egre-
gious mistakes in, 342.
Apostolicae Curae, Bull, 145, 148,
151, 156, 157, 160, 170.
Arcudius, work of, in favour of

Greek Orders, 181.

Articles Organiques, no value in,
312; not accepted by any Pope,
312.

Association, need for, to Church,

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ligion, 306; real object of, 307;
subsequent expenditure entailed
by, 308; spirit of M. Paul Bert
in, 309; Leo XIII did not pro-
test against, from fear of worse
evils, 310.

Augustine, St., on Christianity in
Britain, 221.

Authorisation of religious Orders,
purpose of, 297.

Authors, advice to, to secure reviews,
333.

Ave caro Christi cara: prayer at
Elevation of the Mass, 235.

Bacon, Roger, attempt of, to estab-
lish critical investigation, 7.
Baigent, Mr. J., excellence of edit-
ing work of, 337.

Baker, Father Augustine, 272; com-
piler of Apostolatus, 273.
Barber, Father Luke Bernard, 281;
refused mitre, 286.

Barberini, Cardinal, against deci-
sion adverse to Greek Orders,
180.
Barkworth, Venerable Mark, 267.
Barlow, Bishop of St. David's, op-
posed to the Mass, 123.
Barlow, Father Ambrose, 268.
Barlow, Father Rudesind, 272.
Becanus, Martin, on essentials of
Orders, 188.

Bede, St., on the Mass, 223.
Bell, Father Arthur Francis,
O. F. M., 268.

Benedictine missionaries in Scot-
land, 245, 258.

Benedictine, English, property in
France, statement of facts about,
314 seqq.

Benediction, service of, advertised,
216.

Bennet, Father Bede, 279.
Bere, Abbot of Glastonbury, patron
of learning, II.

Berington, Rev. Joseph, on numbers
of Catholics, 206-207.

Bert, M. Paul, spirit of, in Associa-
tion Laws, 309.

"Bibles of the Poor," 38.
Boleyn, Anne, attracts notice of
Henry VIII, 69.

Bonaventure, St., on imposition of
hands in conferring Orders, 190.
Bonner, Bishop, sent to prison, 116;
describes his treatment in prison,
117; upholds the Mass, 123.
Boulay de la Meurthe, Comte, on
the framing of the Concordat, 295.
Bradford, John, ordained by Or-

dinal, styled a laic and not de-
graded, 155.

Bradshaw (or White), Father Au-
gustine, 266.

Brewer, Mr. J. H., on scandals in
the Church, 40; warns against
declamations of reformers, 42;
defends Churchmen from charge
of immorality, 43; his explana-
tion of origin of Henry VIII's
divorce proceedings, 60.
Brief of Paul IV explanatory of Bull
Praeclara Charissimi, 152.
Britain, doctrine of Eucharist in,
same as to-day, 222.

Brown, Bishop Thomas Joseph,

284; first Bishop of Newport
and Menevia, 285.

Browne, Dr., defends retention of
blasphemies of King's oath, 144.
Brunetière, M., on cost of perse-
cuting policy of French Govern-
ment, 308.

Buckley, Dom Sigebert, 270.
Burke, Edmund, champions cause
of Catholics, 212.

Calendar of Letters and Papers,

Foreign and Domestic, for reign
of Henry VIII, Dr. Pauli on, 59.
Campeggio, Cardinal, mission to
England for divorce proceedings,
79; interviews King, 80; inter-
views Queen Katherine, 80; closes
Legatine Court, 83; divorce case
withdrawn to Rome, 83.
Canada, Lord North's Bill estab-
lishing Catholicism in, 195.
Canon of Mass and Communion
Service contrasted, 135.
Carne, Sir Edward, on Pope's atti-
tude towards Elizabeth, 100.
Carron, Abbé, works of, 216.
Catholics, subject to double land
tax, 199; at mercy of informers,
199; estimated numbers of, in
eighteenth century, 206; eman-
cipation of, did not imply social
equality, 214; sufferings of, in
Scotland, 247.

Cavendish on Wolsey and the di-
vorce, 60.

Caverel, Dom Philip, Abbot of St.
Vedast's, Arras, Charter of,
adorned with portraits of Gre-
gorian martyrs, 267; benefactor of
St. Gregory's, 269.

Caxton, helped by Church to print

works of instruction, 13.
Cecil, Sir W., becomes Chief Sec-

retary, 101; advises formation of
a secret Cabinet, 101.
Chalcedon, Bishop of, held juris-
diction in Scotland, 245.
Chalice, reverence for, in Saxon
England, 227.

Chantries, uses of, 35; at Alton,
Hants, 36.

Charnock, Prior, a favourer of
learning, II.

Chisholm, Wm., Bishop of Dun-
blane, last of old Scottish hier-
archy, 242; became Bishop of
Vaison in France, 244.
Church, English, commanding in-
fluence of, before Reformation,
2; patron of printing, 13; parish
centre of social and religious life,
26; necessary scandals in the,
40; not connived at, 40; senti-
ment of laity towards, 45; in-
fluence of, on education, 46; al-
leged hostility of laity to, dis-
cussed, 93; nationalisation of,
289; in France in nineteenth
century, 292.

Church and State, solutions of re-
lations between, 289; separation
of, 290.

Churches, in England, profuse
decoration of, 22; gifts to,
churchwardens' accounts evid-
ence of, 23; decorations of, 37,
39; screen work of, 37; evidence
of, to belief in Blessed Sacra-
ment, 229.
Churchmen employed on
business, 50.
Churchwardens' Accounts, evidence
of, as to gifts to churches, 23;
evidence of, to belief in Blessed
Sacrament, 231.

State

Clarke, J. Willis, discovers name
of English painter, 38.

Clement VII, threatened by Eng-
lish agents, 75; complains of
being deceived by Wolsey, 80.
Clement VIII admits validity of
Greek Orders, 179.

Clergy, Catholic, timid and cau-
tious, 204; numbers of, in eigh-
teenth century, 208; French, re-
ceived in England, 212; begin
to wear cassocks in 1825, 215;
Scotch, fate of, unknown, 242;
claims of, 293; freedom of, to
teach, claimed, 294.
Coghlan, Catholic publisher of
Church music, 216.

Colet, Dean, friend of Erasmus, 7.
Collier, on alteration of religion, 102.
Combes, M., and the repudiation
of the Concordat of 1801, 288;
and the religious Orders, 297;
arbitrary in his methods, 301;
returned to power to suppress
Congregations, 302; refuses ex-
religious right to preach, 304;
effects breach between France
and the Vatican, 312.
Commission appointed to examine
question of Greek Orders, 177;
on Greek Orders in their favour,
181.

Committee, Catholic, appeal to Pitt
for relief, 1788, 211.
Common Prayer, Book of, com-
position of, 126; construction of,
128; no formal commission issued
to compile, 130; when drawn up,
submitted to bishops, 131.
Communion, under both kinds, Act
for, 118; bishops opposed to, 119
and note; Convocation on, 121;
frequent in Middle Ages, 232.
Communion Office of First and
Second Prayer Book, compared,

141.

Communion Service, called "a
Christmas game," 135; taken
from Lutheran Liturgy, 136.
Concordat, of 1801, repudiation

of, 288; between Napoleon and
Pius VII, 290; M. Hanotaux on
value of, 291; what Napoleon
wanted it for, 291; and the posi-
tion of religious orders, 294;
Comte Boulay de la Meurthe on
the framing of the, 295.
Congregations applied for recogni-
tion, 298.

Constitution of Archbishop Win-
chelsea on reverence due to altars,
230.
Convocation opposed to Reforma-
tion, 107; Professor Maitland on,
107; on Act for Communion
under both kinds, 121.

Cooke, Sir A., reports Bonner's

protest against innovations, 116.
Corporal, blessing of, in Saxon Eng-

land, 227.

Cox, Bishop, his teaching on the
priesthood, 165.
Cranbrook Church, inventory of,

24.

Cranmer, and reform of the Breviary,

114; leads opposition to the Mass,
122; views of, on the nature of the
Mass, 123; devises new Ordinal,
138 and note; consecrated by
Pontifical, degraded from Epis-
copate, 154; his teaching on the
Mass and Sacrifice, 163; on the
priesthood, 163.

Cressy, Father Hugh Serenus, 272,
273.

Croke, Ric., friend of Erasmus, 7.

Davis, Charles Henry, Bishop of
Maitland, N.S. W., 285.
Davis, Father Oswald, 286.

Day, Bishop of Chichester, upholds
the Mass, 123.

de Mun, Comte, describes result of
confidence in MM. Combes and
Waldeck-Rousseau, 303.

De Paiva, Father Placid, 286.
Deposing power of Popes, settled
by English Bishops in 1788, 202.
Diaconate in Pontifical and Ordinal
compared, 172.

Dispensation, powers of, abused,

52.
Douay, St. Gregory's, foundation
of school at, 274-275; dispersed
at French Revolution, 275; Eng-
lish College, case of, 299.
Doullens, monks of Douay im-
prisoned at, during French Revo-
lution, 276; release from, 277.
Downside, St. Gregory's, the makers
of, 263 seqq.; commencement of,
264; settlement of St. Gregory's
at, 278; difficulties experienced
on arrival at, 280; proposal to
leave and to return to Douay de-
feated, 281.

Duggan, Father Dermot, letter of,
to St. Vincent de Paul, 251.

Editing, instances of incompetent,
332, 334 seqq.

Editing and reviewing, 327 seqq.
Education, ecclesiastical patronage
of, 46; examples of, 48.
Edward VI and the Catholic Liturgy,

113 seqq.

Elevation in Holy Mass, mediaeval

prayers at, 236.
Elizabeth, Queen, influence of in
the Reformation, 97; legal posi-
tion of as to legitimacy and right
to throne, 98; religious con-
victions of, 99; decides in favour
of reformers, 102; coronation of,

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