ii. 7;
its excessive severity, ii. 68;
it affects to regard Conde as a prisoner in the hands of the
Protestant confederates, ii. 70;
sternly reproved by Charles IX. for failing to record the edict of
Amboise, ii. 139, 140;
declares Coligny infamous, and sets a price on his head, ii. 330, 331;
extravagance after the victory of Moncontour, ii. 337;
its servile reply to Charles IX., ii. 493;
it declares Coligny's memory infamous, ii. 496.
Parliament of Rouen, or Normandy, puts to death Augustin
Marlorat, ii. 80. See Rouen.
Parliaments, provincial, i. 17.
Parma, Duchess of, Regent of the Netherlands, sets a price on the
head of Theodore Beza, ii. 388, note.
Partenay falls into the hands of the Huguenots, ii. 282.
Pasquier, Etienne, on barbarism at the university, i. 42;
his estimate of Calvin, i. 216;
on Paris at the beginning of the first civil war, ii. 41.
Pasquinade against the Cardinal of Lorraine, i. 447.
Patriarche, the, a Protestant place of worship, i. 571, 573.
Paul III., Pope, his alleged intercession for the Protestants, i. 180;
grounds of doubt respecting it, i. 181.
Paul IV., Pope, his disappointment at the escape of Andelot from the
stake, i. 320;
ii. 568;
believes that no heretic can be converted, ib.
Paulin, Viscount of, ii. 230, note; 600.
Pauvan, Jacques, i. 89;
his theses, i. 90;
burned on the Place de Greve, i. 91.
Pavia, battle of, Feb. 24, 1525, i. 122.
Peace of Amboise, March 19, 1563, terminating the first civil
war, ii. 115;
peace of Longjumeau, or "short" peace, after the second civil
war, ii. 234;
number of Protestants murdered during, ii. 250;
peace of St Germain, after the third civil war, ii. 363.
People, rights of, overlooked, i. 11;
"incomparable kindness of," i. 14;
submission to nobles, i. 15.
Perigord, Protestantism in, i. 428.
Perry, Mr. G. G., his remarks on Whittingham, ii. 293.
Persecution, failure of, i. 220;
more systematic, i. 224;
severity of, i. 296, 359.
Petit, Guillaume, the king's confessor, i. 72.
Petition of the Triumvirs, ii. 58.
Peyrat, M. du, ii. 514.
Pezenas, in Languedoc, i. 428.
Philip the Fair and Pope Boniface VIII., i. 27.
Philip II., King of Spain, offers aid to Catharine de' Medici, i. 358;
opposed to a French nationa
|