tained in a petition to the king, ii. 601, 602;
demands of Lower Languedoc and Nismes, ii. 603;
those of the tiers etat of Provence and Dauphiny, ib.;
indignation of Catharine de' Medici at their boldness, ii. 604;
they remain firm, ib.;
they reassemble at Milhau, and perfect their organization, Dec. 17,
1573, ii. 617-619;
injury to their cause, arising from their alliance with the
"Politiques," or Malcontents, ii. 620;
the Huguenots resume arms, 1574, undertaking the fifth civil
war, ii. 622;
failure of the conferences between Biron and the
Huguenots, ii. 623, 624;
their stout demands, ii. 624;
some reasons of their military successes, ii. 630, 631;
failure of persecution, war, and treachery, of which they had been
the victims, ii. 639. See Coligny, Conde, etc.
Huguerye, Michel de la, his Memoires inedits, ii. 423;
his assertions as to the premeditation of the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew's Day, ib.;
his misrepresentation of the character of Jeanne d'Albret, Queen of
Navarre, ii. 424.
I.
Iconoclasm at Paris, i. 141, 143;
by a monk at Troyes, for a "pious" object, i. 169;
in various parts of France, i. 479;
at Montauban, i. 485, 486;
can it be repressed? ii. 42;
stringent but ineffectual measures against, ii. 43;
at Caen, ii. 44;
at Orleans, ii. 45;
at Valenciennes, etc., ii. 189;
at Cateau-Cambresis, ii. 190.
Images, whimsical defence of, ii. 43.
Impatience with "public idols," i. 487;
repressed by Calvin, ib.
Inconsistency of the laws and practice of the courts, i. 481.
Indiscreet partisans of reform, i. 162.
Informers against the Protestants, i. 361.
Inquisition, the, is jealously watched in France, i. 125 (see Commission
to try Lutherans);
also, i. 288.
Inquisition, Spanish, proposition to introduce into France, i. 287;
opposed by parliament and withdrawn, i. 288;
a second attempt ib.;
manly speech of President Seguier against it, i. 289;
a third attempt, i. 298, 299;
the Pope appoints three inquisitors-general, i. 299;
the papal bull confirmed by Henry II., i. 300;
the inquisition edict registered by Henry in a "lit de
justice," i. 312.
Insubordination to royal authority, ii. 247.
Interpretative ordinances, ii. 244.
Isabella, or Elizabeth, daughter of Hen
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