leyn, 383;
another plan for Mary's escape, 391;
resumes negotiations with Cromwell for a treaty between Charles and
Henry, 394;
expectations of Henry's separation from Anne, 400;
continued negotiations for the treaty, 403;
account of the Easter (1536) at Greenwich, 404;
Henry insists on a letter from Charles, 406, 408;
Chapuys's report to Charles, 409;
report to the Emperor of Anne Boleyn's downfall, 418;
false account of Rochford's dying speech, 428;
his explanation of Anne's mysterious confession to Cranmer, 432;
reports about Jane Seymour, 442;
the negotiations for a treaty again taken up, 446;
introduced to Henry's new Queen, 448;
advises Mary to take the Succession oath with a secret protest, 457;
on the title "Princess of Wales," 459 _n._;
difficulty with Rome about absolution for Mary's "protest," 460;
the success of the Reformation indirectly owing to Chapuys, 463.
Charles V. (Emperor):
his position in regard to Europe in 1526, 26;
his relations to the Church, 43;
letter to Henry VIII. on his desired divorce, 44;
letter to Wolsey, 45;
persistent efforts to bribe Wolsey, 50;
allows the Pope to escape from captivity, 52;
suggests a private arrangement between Henry and Catherine, 64;
declaration of war by France and England against Charles, 65;
his reply, _ib._;
instructions to Mendoza on the Legatine Commission, 74;
letter to Catherine, 75;
suggestion that she should take the veil, 77;
becomes the champion of the Roman hierarchy, 97;
seeks Henry's aid against the Turks, 126;
determination to stand by Catherine, 133;
fear of exciting the German Lutherans, _ib._;
his coronation at Bologna, 134;
reply to the English deputies, _ib._;
personal interest in the question of papal dispensations--his affinity
to his wife, 141;
unconscious of the changes passing over the mind of the English
people, 154;
perplexed by Henry's enforcement of Praemunire, 164;
letter to Sir T. More, 167;
insistence that only the Pope should be the judge in Henry's case, 171;
slight modification in his demand, 173;
efforts to effect reunion of the Lutherans with the Church, 175;
his position towards England after Cranmer's judgment, 222 _sqq._;
his nearness to the succession to the English Crown, 254;
dread of an Anglo-Frenc
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