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النشر الإلكتروني

INDE X

TO THE

TENTH VOLUME.

A.

AFRICA, discoveries along the coast of, 384, 414

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241

204

racter, Bertie, (Peregrine) Bishops (of the church of England) several of them made of such as were never ordained by bishops, 229. Whether they claim a power of excommunicating their prince, 233. Have the advantage of a quick dispersing of their orders, 208 offended at king Charles the Second's declaration of indulgence, 208, 209.-Their zeal against popery, ibid.—Some of them think it necessary to unite with the dissenting protestants, 209.-Look on the dissenting protestants as the only dangerous enemy, 210.-Join with the court party, ibid.-Lay aside their zeal against popery, 211. -Reject a bill, enacting that princes of the blood royal should marry none but protestants, 212. How near they came to an infallibility in the house of lords, ibid.-Called the dead weight of the house, ibid.' Bold, (Samuel) writes in defence

of Mr. Locke's Essay concerning Human Understanding, and Reasonableness of Christianity, 264. -His discourse on the resurrection of the same body, 276

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Compass, invention of the,
variation of the,

372

376

505

his voyages in the Spanish
service,
447
Calamy (Edmund) cited, 203, n.
210, n.
Candish's (sir Thomas) voyage,
497

Canons (of the church of England)
Vid. Laud.
Cape Verde discovered, 387
of Good Hope discovered,

389
Carlisle, (Charles Howard, earl
of) his character,
241
Carnarvon, (Charles Dormer, earl
of) his character,
ibid.
Carolina, laws and constitutions
for it, drawn up by Mr. Locke,
175
Catalogue and character of books
of voyages and travels, 513, &c.

Cook's (John) voyage,
Corporations, the design of the
act for regulating corporations
in 1661,

201

Cortes (Ferdinand) conquers Mex-
ico,
Crew, (John, lord) his character,

D.

441

241

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synod forbad publishing their
persecutions of the remon-
strants,
112
Limborch, (Mr.) his notion of the
last judgment of the under-
standing,

114
explains the terms he
uses in discoursing of human

-

liberty,

124, &c.
lays down his judgment
concerning it in ten theses, 128,

129
shows wherein he seems
to differ from Mr. Locke, 130,
&c.

complains of professed
protestants, for attributing too
much to human authority, 142;
—gives an instance of this in
the triennial solemn inspection
of the acts of the synod of Dort,
ibid.
Lindsey, (Robert Bertie, earl of)
his character,
204
Linn, (Nich. of) voyages of, 378
Liturgy of the church of England,
228, 229
Loadstone, polarity of, discovered,
373
Locke, (Mr.) his Latin letter to
Mr. Limborch, about Father Si-
mon's critical history,
desires the publishing of Mr.
Le Clerc's edition of the Hebrew
psalms,

5

18

advises against a too hot re-
gimen in the small-pox, 19

writes to Mr. Limborch, con-
cerning the toleration proposed
in the English parliament,

22

complains to him that the
toleration was not so large as
was wished for,
23

his account of two born deaf
taught to speak by Dr. Wallis,

24.
complains of the presbyte-
rians' hot zeal in the cold coun-
try of Scotland,
27

advises him to dedicate his
History of the Inquisition to
archbishop Tillotson,28;-his

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