The Cambridge Modern History, المجلد 2

الغلاف الأمامي
Sir Adolphus William Ward
Macmillan, 1904

من داخل الكتاب

المحتوى

Risings in the south and west
35
CHAPTER II
36
CHAPTER III
66
Barbarossa at Toulon
68
Treaty of Chambord 1552
82
CHAPTER IV
104
At the University of Erfurt
110
Luthers ordination Transfer to Wittenberg 1508
116
The practice of Indulgences
122
Remission of guilt Luthers position
128
Mission of Miltitz to Germany Interview with Luther
134
Luther at the Diet
140
NATIONAL OPPOSITION TO ROME IN GERMANY
142
The state of popular feeling in Germany
148
The knights and Sickingen
154
Spread of the Reformed doctrines
160
The Anabaptists
166
Demand for a General Council Catholic Princes at Ratisbon 1524
172
Leaders motives and aims of the rebels
183
Suppression of the rebellion 15256
190
Ferdinand King of Hungary Effects of these preoccupations
199
The original Protestants
205
The Protestant Princes at Schmalkalden
212
The Diet of Augsburg Proposed new League
215
Charles conciliates the Protestants Turkish invasion repelled
218
Revolutionary movements
222
Truce of Nice 1538 Fear of a General Council Mission of Held 1536
235
Bigamy of Philip of Hesse Philip makes terms with Charles V
241
Dynastic purposes and opportunism
247
Philip of Hesse Diet of Ratisbon Charles Vs diplomacy
253
Death of Margaret of Savoy Maria of Hungary regent in the Nether
273
Its success Peace of Cadan 1534 The Protestants and the Reichskam
274
Assembly of Notables
280
The moderate party in France The Christianae religionis institutio 1536
288
Proposed Inquisition
297
CHAPTER X
305
Zwinglis ideas His influence and position at Zurich
311
The first public Disputation at Zurich 1523
317
The Swiss Anabaptists
323
The Christian Civic League and the Christian Union
329
Relations with Germany The Tetrapolitana
335
Division of the Swiss Confederation
341
CHAPTER XI
342
The Bishop The Vicedom The citizens
350
The Christianae Religionis Institutio 1536 Various editions
357
Influence of Calvin
373
CHAPTER XIII
416
Failure of Suffolk War with Scotland
422
Arrest of de Praet
424
Anne Boleyn War declared by France and England against the Emperor
430
Religious persecution Foreign policy
486
Irish title The navy
495
Parliament of 1553 Dangerous position of Northumberland
511
The suitors for Marys hand Edward Courtenay
515
Conspiracies against Mary
526
The Reformers
532
The martyrs Cranmer Ridley and Latimer
538
The Dudley conspiracy
544
CHAPTER XVI
550
Murder of Beton Battle of Pinkie 1547
556
Elizabeth and her relations to foreign Powers
561
Act of Supremacy
567
Elizabeth and the Scottish Protestants
573
The papal Nuncio The Scottish Reformation Parliament
579
Elizabeths Second Parliament The Oath of Supremacy
585
The Churches of England and Scotland
591
Elizabeth and the Calvinists Zurich Bullinger
597
Changes in the united kingdoms The clergy
601
New rules for the clergy Christians difficulties
607
of Upsala
630
The AntiTrinitarians Hosius and the Jesuits Lelio and Fausto Sozzini
638
Commission of Cardinals 1537 Their recommendations
643
Split of the Catholic reformers The Inquisition
649
Relations of the Jesuits to successive Popes
655
Summons of a Council to Trent Adjournment Questions to be sub
661
Seripando The Jesuits at the Council
667
Pope Paul IV 1555 His secular and religious policy
673
The Sacrament of Orders The rights of Bishops
680
Acceptance and execution of the decrees
686
CHAPTER XIX
690
Occasion of the Epistolae obscurorum virorum
696
The Platonic Academy The new Aristotelians
702
The life and death of Giordano
708
Luther Jakob Boehme
714
CHAPS PAGES
719
Luther 728733
728
The Reformation in France 765768
765
Accession of Pope Paul IV His character
769
Proclamation of Lady Jane Grey Flight of Mary
779
By R V LAURENCE M A Fellow and AssistantLecturer
784
The Anglican Settlement and the Scottish
806
The Scandinavian North 814817
814
Charles abdication
825
Beginnings of the Peasants Rising 1524 177
830
League with France
833
INDEX 835857
835
Resulting settlement of Europe
840
292
844
Different parties among the Catholic reformers
846
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مقاطع مشهورة

الصفحة 709 - The caricature of his filth and zanyism proves how fully he both knew and felt the danger in which he stood. I could write a treatise in proof and praise of the morality and moral elevation of Rabelais...
الصفحة 569 - Highness is the only supreme governor of this realm ... as well in all spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes as temporal...
الصفحة 855 - History in the University of Cambridge. Edited by AW WARD, Litt.D GW PROTHERO, Litt.D., and STANLEY LEATHES, MA To be complete in twelve volumes. Royal 8vo.
الصفحة 856 - It is the one work now within reach of the young American student of to-day in which he may learn the connected story of the great battle that resulted in the overthrow of slavery and the rededication of the republic to unsullied freedom. In no other publication are these facts so concisely, so fully, and so well presented...
الصفحة 32 - Viterbo, revealed the disease, when it pointed to the misuse of papal power as the cause of all the harm, and demanded a limitation to the absolutism of the Head of the Church. This tallied with the Pope's ideas, and the celebrated instruction issued to the Nuncio Chieregato (1522), which announced that the disease had come from the head to the members, from the Pope to the prelates, and confessed, " We have all sinned, and there is not one that doeth good.
الصفحة 596 - God, is the only supreme governor of this realm, and of all other his Highness's dominions and countries, as well in all spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes as temporal; and that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state or potentate hath, or ought to have, any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within his Majesty's said realms, dominions and countries.
الصفحة 130 - The Christian who has true repentance has already received pardon from God altogether apart from an Indulgence and does not need it; and Christ demands this true repentance from everyone.
الصفحة 503 - ... to good and godly uses, as in erecting of grammar schools to the education of youth in virtue and godliness, the further augmenting of the Universities, and better provision for the poor and needy...
الصفحة 722 - La diplomatie française vers le milieu du xvi* siècle, d'après la correspondance de Guillaume Pellicier, évêque de Montpellier, ambassadeur de François I
الصفحة 352 - ... purpose, and the ethical ideas of Seneca; but the passion for religion- has not as yet penetrated as it did later into his very bones. Erasmus is in Calvin's eyes the ornament of letters, though his large edition of Seneca is not all it ought to have been ; but even Erasmus could not at twenty-three have produced a work so finished in its scholarship, so real in its learning, or so wide in its outlook.

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