and power of, i. 51;
plurality of benefices, ib.;
non-residence, i. 52;
revenues, ib.;
morals of, i. 53;
have no regard for the spiritual wants of the people, i. 53;
before the concordat, i. 54, 55;
aversion to use of the French language, i. 56;
ignorance of the Bible, i. 57;
sad straits of, i. 459;
alone, make no progress, i. 460.
Clerici, Nicholas, Dean of the Sorbonne, i. 256.
Clermont, murder at, ii. 249.
Clery, violence of the iconoclasts at, ii. 44.
Cleves, Marie of, daughter of the Duke of Nevers, marries Henry of
Conde, ii. 432, note;
permits the Protestants of Troyes to worship at Isle-au-Mont, ib.
Coconnas, a leading actor in the Massacre of St Bartholomew's Day,
his fate, ii. 562;
he is executed on the Place de Greve, ii. 628, 629.
Cocqueville, expedition of, into Flanders, and its fate, ii. 242, 243.
Coct, Anemond de, i. 83.
Cognac, ii. 283, 299, 300.
Cognat, or Cognac, village in Auvergne, near which the "Viscounts" defeat
the forces collected to oppose them, ii. 230.
Coin, a strange, i. 59.
Coligny, Gaspard de, Admiral of France, sends a Protestant colony to
Brazil, i. 291;
when converted to Protestantism, i. 292;
opposes the breaking of the truce of Vaucelles i. 297;
is consulted by Catharine de' Medici at the time of the Tumult of
Amboise, and gives her sound advice, i. 383, 384;
presents two Huguenot petitions at Fontainebleau, i. 416, 417;
his speech, i. 421;
Quintin forced to apologize to, i. 460;
he presents a Huguenot petition to the States General of
Orleans, i. 461;
declares that the "Edict of July" can never be executed, i. 484;
his reluctance to take up arms, ii. 34;
his wife's remonstrance, ii. 35;
his aversion to calling in foreign assistance, ii. 57;
his remarks on the discipline of the Huguenot army, ii. 67;
on the practicability of capturing Paris, ii. 88;
his success with the Huguenot right at Dreux, ii. 93, 94;
draws off the army after the defeat, to Orleans, ii. 95;
takes a number of places in Sologne, ii. 98;
returns to Normandy, ib.;
his successes, ii. 99;
he is accused by Poltrot of having instigated the murder of
Guise, ii. 105;
he vindicates his innocence, ii. 107;
his manly frankness, ib.;
his innocence established, ii. 108;
his
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