FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357  
358   359   360   361   362   >>  
s to the case being tried in England, 75; the arguments of the Legates to her, 77; the Queen remains still firm, 78; her popularity, 79, 81; the Brief amending defects in Julius' dispensation, 83, 86; Catherine refuses to embrace a conventual life, 87; protest against the trial at Blackfriars, 101; appeal to Henry there, _ib._; Catherine pronounced contumacious, 102; her joy at the advocation of the cause to Rome, 108; objection to the summoning of Parliament, 110; first interview with Chapuys, 113 _sq._; demands from Rome instant sentence in her cause, 125; dislike of Wolsey up to his death, 132; fresh efforts to persuade her to take the veil, 133; the suggestion of a neutral place for the trial, 143; alarm at the enforcement of Praemunire, 149; a party formed in her favour in the House of Commons, 151; letter of Catherine to Clement, 151; sends a special representative to Rome, 159; reception of the news that Henry had declared himself "Pope" in England, 162; distrust of Clement's intentions, 163; renewed appeal to the Emperor, 165; causes of her popularity, 167; her answer to a delegation of Peers and Bishops urging a neutral place of trial, 170; sneer at the "Supremum Caput," 171; question of the consummation of her marriage with Prince Arthur, 171; Catherine separated from her daughter, and sent to Moor Park, 174; English nobles make another effort to move Catherine, 176; her reply, 177; annoyed at the Pope's delays, 179; her opinion on the probable result of the meeting of Henry and Francis, 193; complaints to Charles, 197; the proposal that Cranmer should try the cause in the Archbishop's court, 207; Catherine pressed by English peers to withdraw her appeal, after the passing of the Act of Appeals, 214; her reply, 216; _resume_ of her position in regard to Henry, 217 _sq._; summoned, refuses to appear before Cranmer's court at Dunstable, 220; her rejection of the demand that she be styled and endowed as "Princess Dowager," 234; allowed to have the Princess Mary with her, 234; said to have desired a marriage between the Princess and Reginald Pole, 241, 295; absolute refusal of the renewed Cambrai proposition, 246; sent to Kimbolton, and separated again from her daughte
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356   357  
358   359   360   361   362   >>  



Top keywords:

Catherine

 

appeal

 
Princess
 

refuses

 

Clement

 

neutral

 
Cranmer
 
English
 

England

 

separated


popularity
 
marriage
 
renewed
 

result

 

probable

 

Supremum

 
Charles
 

Bishops

 

complaints

 

urging


opinion

 

Francis

 

meeting

 

annoyed

 

nobles

 

Arthur

 

proposal

 

daughter

 

Prince

 

question


delays

 

consummation

 

effort

 

desired

 

allowed

 
Dowager
 
styled
 

endowed

 

Reginald

 

Kimbolton


daughte
 
proposition
 

Cambrai

 

absolute

 

refusal

 

demand

 
withdraw
 

passing

 
Appeals
 

Archbishop