ification, ii. 161, 162;
to Conde's appeal, ii. 162;
he makes a conciliatory reply, ii. 164;
he reconciles the inhabitants of Orange and the Comtat
Venaissin, ii. 165;
he reaches Bayonne, ii. 167 (see Bayonne, Conference of);
forbids the formation of confraternities, ii. 180;
his edict obtained by Chancellor L'Hospital, for the relief of the
scattered Huguenots, ii. 184, 185;
he is reported to have been threatened by Philip II. and the
Pope, ii. 195;
his flight from Meaux to Paris, at the outbreak of the second civil
war, ii. 207;
his sanguinary injunctions to Gordes, ii. 209, note;
he is alienated from the Huguenots by the attempt of Meaux, ii. 210;
is moved by Spain, Rome, and the Sorbonne, to decline further
negotiations with Conde, ii. 228;
he issues the edict of pacification, Longjumeau, March 23, 1568,
terminating the second civil war, ii. 234;
his indignation at a treacherous plan formed to violate the
peace, ii. 237;
his proclamation that he had not, in the edict of Longjumeau, intended
to include Auvergne, etc., ii. 244;
entreats his mother to avoid war, ii. 262;
his edicts of Sept., 1568, proscribing the reformed
religion, ii. 275, 276;
impolicy of this action, ii. 277;
attempt to make capital out of them, ib.;
receives congratulations and sanguinary injunctions from Pope Pius V.,
after the battle of Jarnac, ii. 308;
treats the Duke of Deux-Ponts' declaration with contempt, ii. 316;
rewards Maurevel for the murder of De Mouy with the collar of the
order, ii. 338;
his letter, ib.;
offers the Huguenots impossible terms, ii. 357, 358;
becomes strongly inclined to peace, ii. 360;
he issues the edict of pacification, Saint Germain, Aug. 2, 1570,
terminating the third civil war, ii. 363, seq.;
his earnestness as to the peace, ii. 370;
he tears out the record of proceedings against Cardinal Chatillon from
the parliamentary registers, ii. 371;
his assurances to Walsingham, ib.;
his gracious answer to the German princes, ii. 372;
he orders the "Croix de Gastines" to be taken down, ii. 375, 376;
indignant at the attempts to dissuade Anjou from marrying Queen
Elizabeth, ii. 379;
and at the affront received from Sebastian of Portugal, ib.;
his gracious reception of Coligny
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