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LONDON:
GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS,
ST. JOHN'S SQUARE.
Pickering 5-4-29 19214
CONTENTS
OF
THE NINTH VOLUME.
Theodorus, archbishop of Canterbury's letter to Ethelred, king of the Mercians, 1.—
De libertate capellarum domini regis, 2.-King Ethelwolf's grant of the tithes of
the kingdom to the Church, 3.- Ealdulph, archbishop of York's profession of
canonical obedience to Ethelred, archbishop of Canterbury, 3.-Epistola Albini sive
Alcuini canonici Ecclesiæ Eboracensis et magistri Caroli magni imperatoris ad regem
Northumbrorum Adelredum, 5.-Wulston, bishop of Worcester's summons to the
council at Winchester; by which he is ordered to bring only the abbots of the diocese
along with him, 12.-Thomas, archbishop of York's profession of canonical obedience
to Lanfranc, archbishop of Canterbury. 12. - Charta regis Willielmi Primi, quæ
secernit placita ecclesiastica a causis civilibus, 14.-Charta Willielmi regis Primi de
restitutione ablatorum in episcopatibus et abbatiis totius Angliae, 14.-The Con-
queror's charter to St. Paul's, 15.-The Conqueror's charter to Battle-abbey, 16.-
King Henry I.'s letter to invite Anselm into England to his archbishopric, 18.—A
letter of several English bishops to archbishop Anselm, in Normandy, 19.-King
Henry's Letter to acquaint Anselm with his victory in Normandy, 20.-The pope's
letter to Anselm, in which he dispenses, with respect to benefices, in the case of the
sons of priests, 21.-Queen Maud's letter to Anselm, 21.-Alexander king of Scot-
land's letter to Ralph, archbishop of Canterbury, 22.-William, archbishop of Can-
terbury's summons to Urban, bishop of Llandaff, 22.-King Stephen's charter to
the Church, 23.-King Henry II.'s confirmation of the charter of privileges, &c.
granted by king Henry I., 24.-Has literas misit Henricus rex Angliæ singulis vice-
comitibus Angliæ in principio persecutionis beatæ Thomæ, 24.-King Henry II.'s
expostulatory letter to the pope upon the difference between his highness and
the archbishop of Canterbury, 25.-King Henry II.'s letter to his son king Henry,
to signify the agreement between him and archbishop Becket, &c., 27. - Pope
Alexander's bull for the canonization of archbishop Becket, 28.-Geoffrey elect
of Lincoln's resignation of his see into the hands of the archbishop of Canterbury,
29.- Alexander papa clericis per archidiaconat. Berkesire constitutis indulget ne
canes vel accipitres archidiacono exhibeant, 30.-Pope Clement III's bull of ex-
emption of the Church of Scotland, directed to king William, 30.
The king's
offer of satisfaction to the pope in the case of Stephen Langton, archbishop of
Canterbury, 31.-King John's oath of homage to pope Innocent III., 32.- King
John's charter for constituting a Jewish patriarch or high priest, 32.-King John's
charter to the Church for the liberty of elections of bishops and abbots, 33.-
King John's writ for the restitution of the bishop of Winchester's temporalities after
-
the general seizure upon the Interdict, 34.-The form of a bond, or obligation, made
to the Caursins, for the repayment of money upon loan, 34.-An order of king
Henry III. to the abbot of St. Alban's, not to pay any tax to the pope, 36.-Pope
Innocent IV.'s bull to the bishop of Lincoln, for the augmenting and erecting vi-
carages, 36.-Pope Innocent IV.'s letter to the prelates of France, England, &c. for
the regulation of the studies of the clergy, 37.-The bishop of Lichfield and Coven-
try's letter to the archdeacon of Stafford, to summon them to the synod, or convoca-
tion, at Merton, 39.-King Edward I.'s writ to the bishops, to send their quota of
men into the field to suppress the insurrection of the Welsh, 39.-The statute of
"Circumspecte Agatis," as it stands in the record, 40.-The competitors of the
kingdom of Scotland's submission of their claim to the decision of king Edward I.,
and their acknowledgment of his being the supreme lord of the kingdom of Scot-
land, 41.-John, archbishop of York's licence to the Judges, for holding the Assizes
from Septuagesima to the beginning of Lent, 42.-The English barons' letter to the
pope, in which they deny that the realm of Scotland is a fee of the see of Rome, or
that the pope has any manner of jurisdiction in temporals, 42.— William, bishop
of Worcester, fined for receiving the pope's bull containing a clause derogatory to the
Crown, 44.-The form of the papal indulgence to those who undertook an expedition
against the anti-pope Clement VII., 45.-The regalities of the County Palatine of
Durham allowed by the king and Parliament, 45.- Archbishop Islip's letter to
Wickliffe, upon his preferring him to the wardenship of Canterbury-college in Ox-
ford, 47.-Wickliff's Bileve, 47.-Courtney, archbishop of Canterbury's protestation
in the parliament-house, for the saving the privilege of himself and his suffragans, 49.
-Sir George Braybroke and his lady Elizabeth's indulgence, granted by pope Boni-
face IX., 50.-Pope Martin V.'s expostulatory letter upon the occasion of the statutes
of "Præmunire," 51.-A counterfeit letter in honour of Wickliff's memory, pre-
tended to be written by the University of Oxford, 52.-King Henry IV.'s decision,
by virtue of which archbishop Arundel and his successors are declared to have a
power for visiting the university of Oxford, 53.—Charta Edvardi Quarti de libertati-
bus clericorum, et ne ipsi clerici per laicos arrestentur, aut in aliquo per breve de præ-
munire facere vexantur, &c., 55.- Exemplar bullæ apostolicæ sanctissimi domini
nostri Julii papa Secundi, illustrissimo regi Henrico Angliæ illius nominis Septimo,
pro expeditione in Turcam transmissæ, 58.-Literæ responsivæ ad breve summi pon-
tificis, 61.
Pope Julius II.'s bull for dispensing with prince Henry's marrying Catharine of Spain,
64.-Prince Henry's protestation against his marriage with Catharine of Spain, 66.—
Sententiæ quædam responsionis Lutherianæ adversus Henricum Octavum Angliæ
regem, 68. Bulla Leonis Decimi papæ, qua Henricum Octavum Angliæ regem
titulo "Fidei Defensoris" ornavit, 69.- Epistola Lutheri, 72.-Fisher, bishop of
Rochester's opinion of king Henry VIII.'s marriage, in a letter to cardinal Wolsey,
74.-Pope Clement VII.'s commission to the cardinals Wolsey and Campegio, for
trying the cause of the divorce, 75.—A decretal bull drawn up in England, and
transmitted to Rome: the purport of it is, to prevent a reversal of the legate's sen-
tence in the business of the divorce, 77.-Pope Julius II.'s brief to dispense with
Henry prince of Wales for marrying Catharine, relict to his brother prince Arthur,
82.-Articuli pardonationis Reverendissimi Patris Thomæ Cardinalis, &c.; or the
articles in Cardinal Wolsey's pardon, 21 Hen. VIII. Feb. 12, 83.-King Henry VIII.'s
letter to cardinal Wolsey to sign a commission for conveying the disposal of several
benefices in his gift to the king, 83.-Bishop Tunstall's monition to the archdeacon
of London to bring in Tyndall's translation of the New Testament, 84.-The decree
of the university of Oxford against the lawfulness of the marriage of king Henry VIII.
with Catharine of Spain, 85.-An address of the lords spiritual and temporal to the
pope upon the subject of the king's marriage, 86.-The pope's answer to the remon-
strance of the lords spiritual and temporal, &c., 89. — Sir Gregory Cassali's letter
to the king, mentioning a dispensation of the pope, seeming to import an indulgence
for the having two wives, 93.-The clergy's grant of an hundred thousand pounds to
the king for release of the præmunire, 94.-The king's confirmation of the Act for
the extinguishing the payment of the annates, 97.-The last form of submission re-
quired by the king, of the clergy, and to which the lower house only consented, 97.
-The last submission of the clergy to king Henry VIII. The Latin title runs thus:
"Instrumentum super submissione Cleri, coram Domino Rege, quoad celebratio-
nem Conciliorum Provincialium," 98.-King Henry VIII.'s letter to the college of
cardinals, for a cardinal's cap for Hierom, bishop of Worcester, 101.-Cranmer's
protestation made in the chapter house at Westminster, before his consecration, 101.
-King Henry VIII.'s warrant to the abbot of Evesham to excuse his attendance in
Parliament, 103.-King Henry VIII.'s letter to archbishop Cranmer, authorizing
him to give a final determination concerning the marriage between the king and
Catharine of Spain, 103.-The archbishop of York and the bishop of Durham's letter
to the king: in which they report their message delivered to the queen; and her
answer upon the sentence of divorce, pronounced May 20, 1533, 105.-Protestatio
sive confessio facta per quosdam episcopos, decanos, et magistros ecclesiarum cathe-
dralium, quod episcopus Romanus non habet majorem aliquam jurisdictionem a Deo
sibi collatam in hoc regno Angliæ quam quivis alius externus episcopus, 108.-Pro-
testatio, &c. universitatis Oxon. Quod Romanus episcopus non habet majorem ali-
quam jurisdictionem sibi a Deo collatam in hoc regno Angliæ quam quivis alius
externus episcopus, 110.-A letter from the university of Cambridge to king Henry
VIII. congratulating his majesty for throwing off the pope's supremacy, and suppress-
ing superstition, 112.-A petition of the clergy of Canterbury to king Henry VIII.
for relief against a statute passed in the 21st year of his reign, 117.-A commission
to inquire into the yearly value of the revenues belonging to the clergy and religious
houses, &c., pursuant to certain instructions, 118.—King Henry VIII.'s commission
in allowance of the deputation made by Cromwell, vicar-general, 119.—The arch-
bishop of Canterbury's mandate, to inhibit the provincial bishops the exercise of any
jurisdiction during the king's visitation, 123.-The founder of an abbey or hospital's
letter to the bishop, to confirm the election of the head of the house, 124.-The
prior of St. Austin's, London, oath of canonical obedience to bishop Tunstal, 124.-
A form for installing or consecrating an abbess; composed by Theodorus, archbishop
of Canterbury, 125.-The opinion of Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, concerning the
articles presented to the king's highness by the princes of Germany at the con-
ference at Smalcald, where the articles were proposed to the king's agents, the
bishop of Hereford, &c., 131.-Propositions laid before the council about the pope's
pretended authority, 134.-An instrument of Francis I., king of France, for the
justification of the marriage of king Henry VIII. with queen Anne, and against the
validity of the former marriage with queen Catharine, notwithstanding the pope's
dispensation, 136.-The opinion of certain of the bishops and clergy touching a
general council, in the reign of king Henry VIII., 139.-Henricus Octavus Dei
gratia Angliæ et Francia rex, fidei defensor, dominus Hyberniæ, ac in terris sub
Christo Ecclesiæ Anglicana supremum caput. Pio et Christiano lectori, 141.-
King Henry VIII.'s letter to some of the bishops, reprimanding them for not reading
the articles lately set forth, and for speaking against some of the ceremonies of the
Church, 150.-The form of the beads in Ireland, 153.—Relaxation of the regal
suspension of episcopal jurisdiction, or Licentia Domini regis ad exercendam
jurisdictionem, 155.-The abbot and convent of St. Edmondsbury's grant of an
annuity to Thomas Cromwell and his son, 157.-King Henry VIII.'s patent, for
creating the abbot of Tavestocke, in Devonshire, a lord of parliament, 158 —The
valuation of twenty-seven of the mitred abbeys, extracted from Speed, 159.—A copy
of the monks' patents for the payment of their pensions, 159.-A commission granted
to archbishop Cranmer and others against the Anabaptists, 161.-A declaration of
the faith, and a justification of the proceedings of king Henry VIII. in matters of
religion, or a summary declaration of the faith, uses, and observations in England,
162. The judgment of the convocation for annulling the marriage between the king
and Anne of Cleve, 174.-The resolutions of several bishops and divines upon some
questions concerning the sacraments, 175.-A copy of the letters-patent which were
to be signed by king Henry VIII. for giving authority to a book entitled "Reforma-
tio Legum Ecclesiasticarum," 223.-Part of king Henry VIII.'s last will and testa-
ment relating to matters of religion, 225.-The order for the coronation of king
Edward, Sunday, February 13, at the Tower, &c., 227.—An inhibition directed to the
bishop of London by the king's commissaries for a general and regal visitation, toge-
ther with a citation for the said bishop to appear before the visitors, 231.-The bedes,
or the ancient form of bidding prayer, 234.-A form of procuratorial powers, which
those who represented the convents or inferior clergy were furnished with to sit in
parliament, 236.-Answer to certain arguments, raised from supposed antiquity, and
practised by some members of the lower house of parliament, to prove that ecclesias-
tical laws ought to be enacted by temporal men, R. B. C., 237.-The ancient method
of electing bishops in the Church of England, 244.-Quæ sunt Episcopalis ordinis
dignitatis et jurisdictionis, 246.-The office for the communion, as it stands in the
first Common Prayer-book, made in the reign of king Edward VI., 247.-The lady
Elizabeth's letter to the queen-dowager Parr, then married to the lord-admiral Sey-
mour, (it was written to wish the queen-dowager a good hour,) 265.-The names of
the two-and-thirty persons commissionated by king Edward VI. to examine, correct,
and set forth the ecclesiastical laws, 266.-The forms of ordaining the lower orders,
settled by the fourth council of Carthage, 267.-Part of the service at the consecration
of a bishop in the Greek Church, (the translation, examined by the original,) 268.——
Ordinatio presbyteri, 269.—A patent of king Edward VI. for the establishment of
the Dutch Church in London, 276.-Articles agreed upon in the convocation, and
published by the king's majesty, 279.-An account of some of the alienations of
Church lands in the reign of king Henry VIII. and king Edward VI. not mentioned
in the History, 295.-Queen Mary's proclamation for prohibiting preaching and
expounding Scripture without her licence, 298.-A form of a licence to preach
granted by queen Mary, 300.-The opinion of Philips, Haddon, Cheney, and Philpot,
members of the convocation, concerning the presence of our Saviour in the holy
eucharist, 300.-Articuli ministrati presbyteris conjugatis, mense Martio, 1554,
301.-Archbishop Cranmer's answer to the three articles given him by the com-
mittee at Oxford, 302.-Articles concerning archdeacons, their officials, and ministers,
311.-Cardinal Pole's legatine commission from pope Julius III., 316.-The king
and queen's letters-patent to indemnify cardinal Pole for holding a synod, 319.-Car-
dinal Pole's letter to the princess Elizabeth, 319.-Cardinal Pole's significavit into
the court of Chancery, for the punishment of heretics, 320.-The differences between
the Common Prayer-book set forth in the first year of queen Elizabeth, and the
second book made use of in the reign of king Edward VI., 321.-Certain considera-
tions of a Roman Catholic, why a man may not, with a safe conscience, and without
offending God, be present at the Service now used, 322.-An information made to
queen Elizabeth by of the several abuses and frauds done unto the State in
general and the Crown, by such as have been employed by her father, &c., upon the
suppression of the abbeys, &c., 326.-The form of a congé d'élire, 331.-Archbishop
Parker's homage to queen Elizabeth, (apud West. die Feb. 1559,) 331.-At the con-
firmation of a bishop by the archbishop, the dean and chapter by their proxy certify
the following particulars, touching the regularity of the election, before the arch-
bishop, his vicar-general, or commissary, 332.-The form of a commendam, 335.—
Sampson's and Humphrey's letter to the archbishop of Canterbury, and the bishops of
London, Winchester, Ely, and Lincoln, to excuse their non-compliance with reference
to the ceremonies, 336.—An university licence for preaching, granted by Fisher,
chancellor of Cambridge, in a bull from the court of Rome, 338.-Queen Elizabeth's
letters-patent to the university of Cambridge for licensing preachers, 340.-Bishop
Grindall's letter to Bullinger, relating to the contests about the habit, 340.-The
form of the excommunication of the bishop of Gloucester, pronounced in the synod
an. 1571, 342.-Part of the queen's mandate to the archbishop, for confirming and
consecrating the bishop of Man upon the earl of Derby's nomination, 342.-The
address of the London clergy to the convocation, 343.-A draft of archbishop
Grindall's resignation of the archbishopric of Canterbury, 346.-Part of Hosius
bishop of Corduba's letter to the emperor Constantius, 347.-Part of St. Athanasius's