ce, abuses in administration of, i. 19.
K.
Killigrew of Pendennis reaches Rouen, ii. 78.
King, the "fons omnis jurisdictionis," i. 122;
emperor in his own dominions, ib.
King's authority, checks upon, i. 15.
King's evil, cured by the touch of the French monarchs, i. 100.
Knox, John on the affair of the Rue St. Jacques, i. 303, 307, 308;
his sermon on the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, and his
denunciation of Charles IX., ii. 550.
L.
La Court, ii. 509.
Lacretelle, M., estimates the Huguenots as numbering 1,500,000 souls,
or one-tenth of the population of France, ii. 159.
La Force, Jacques Nompar de Caumont, Duke of, his wonderful escape in
the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, ii. 472, 473.
Lagebaston, President of the Parliament of Bordeaux, ii. 523.
Lainez, second general of the Order of Jesus, makes an intemperate
speech at Poissy, i. 536;
compares the Protestant ministers to apes and foxes, i. 537.
Lambert, Francois, first monk converted, i. 112;
his history, i. 113;
his imprudent appeals, i. 114;
his marriage and his death, ib.
Languedoc, fifteen cities in this province receive Protestant
ministers, i. 429;
the children learn religion only from the Geneva
catechism, ib.;
of twenty-two bishops in Languedoc, all but five or six
non-residents, ib.
Languet, Hubert his description of the persecution under
Francis II., i. 366;
of the confusion after the Tumult of Amboise, i. 397.
Lansac, a special envoy of Charles IX. to Germany, his unscrupulous
misrepresentations, ii. 217, 218;
"Lansquenets," i. 11.
Laschene, a Protestant nobleman, decapitated at Paris, ii. 330.
Laudonniere Rene de, leads the second colonial expedition to
Florida, ii. 199;
escapes from the massacre of the Huguenots, and succeeds in returning
to France, ii. 200.
Lausanne, the "Five scholars of," arrested, i. 283;
tried and executed, i. 284, 285.
Leclerc, Jean, a wool-carder of Meaux, tears down a papal bull, i. 87;
he is branded, i. 88;
and burned alive at Metz, i. 89.
Leclerc, Pierre, a minister and martyr at Meaux, i. 253, 255.
Le Coq, his evangelical sermon, i. 151.
"Le Dieu le Fort," ii. 341.
Lefevre d'Etaples, Jacques, i. 44, 67;
restores letters to France, i. 68;
his studies, ib.;
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