into the conferences at Ger- truydemberg dropped, 607. protests of the lords expunged, ibid. 608, 609. seven proroga- tions, 616. a new session, 617. addresses on the peace, 618. supplies, the malt tax is ex- tended to Scotland, 621. a motion to dissolve the union, ibid. a bill to render the treaty of commerce with France ef- fectual, 622. thrown out by a small majority, 623. an act for mortgaging part of the civil list to pay a debt on it of five hundred thousand pounds, 628. both houses address to remove the pretender from Lorrain, 629. the necessity of fewer and shorter sessions, 660. an- nual meetings of parliament a great evil, ibid. Parliament, Scotch, declare the prerogative in 1633, i. 21, 22. pass an indemnity, 55. meet after the restoration, 114, 115. grant forty thousand pounds additional revenue for life to king Charles, 116. the act re- scinding all acts of parliament since 1633, 117, 119. an act for keeping the twenty-ninth of May, 120, 121. a new ses- sion. episcopacy réstored, 143. the oath of supremacy, 144, 145, 146. the covenant ab- jured, ibid. the unheard-of se- verity against lord Lorn, 149. a committee for setting fines, ibid. the incapacitating act, 150. rights of patronage re- stored, 152. presbyterian mi- nisters turned out, ibid. 153, 154, 155. a character of them, 156, 157. and of the new ones, 158. a new session. Warristoun executed, 203. an act against conventicles, 204. and regulating a national sy-
nod, 204. customs left to the king, 205. an act offering an army to march where the king should command, ibid. the parliament dissolved, ibid. a new one, 284. an act for the supremacy, another for the mi- litia, 285. severe acts against conventicles, 292. a new ses- sion, 338. another session, 362. complaints of Lauder- dale, 363, 364. the parliament prorogued, 369. a convention of estates give money, 421, 469. the duke of York goes to Scotland, 477, 512. an act against popery, 513. some ac- cusations of perjury suppress- ed, 514. a new test, 515, 516. the protestant religion how defined, 517. the parliament dissolved, ibid. many turned out for refusing the test, 518, 519. a new parliament in king James the second's reign, 634. grant all that is asked, 636. they will not take off the penal laws, 680. are dissolved, 681. a convention meet after the revolution, ii. 21. duke Hamil- ton chosen president, they pass a sentence of forfeiture on king James, 22. declare king Wil- liam and queen Mary king and queen of Scotland, ibid. in their claim of rights insert the abolishing episcopacy, 23. a petition of grievances to be tendered with the crown, ibid. 24. the convention turned in- to a parliament, 25. some high demands, they are prorogued, 26. an act taking away the supremacy and the right of pa- tronage, 61. presbytery esta- blished, chimney-money grant- ed, an oath renouncing king James, 64. a reconciling ses- sion held by duke Hamilton,
120. they empower the king to protect the episcopal clergy, 121, 157. the examination of Nevil Payne dropped, ibid. the marquis of Tweedale commis- sioner, 156. they examine into the affair of Glencoe, 157. an act for a new company trading to the East and West Indies, 158. the project of Darien, ibid. it is voted a national concern, 235. the duke of Queensbury commissioner, 234. many angry votes about Darien, 234, 235, 319, 320, 321. a new parliament in 1703, 360. the duke of Queens- bury commissioner, ibid, made treason to attempt an altera- tion in the church govern- ment, ibid. [357] debates a- bout the succession, [357] [359.] an act for a commerce with France, [357,] [360.] they give no supply, [359] the settlement in 1641 offered them to enact the succession, 396. the marquis of Tweedale commissioner, ibid. refuse the succession till after an union with England, 397. their suc- cessor to be different, 398. the act for that purpose tacked to a money-bill, 398, 399. passed by the queen, 399, 400. the duke of Argile commis- sioner, 404, 426. an act for a treaty of union, 427. the ar- ticles debated in parliament, 459, 460, 461. and agreed to, 462, 463, 464. Parma, duke of, ii. 287. Parma, prince of, i. 311. Parry made a justice, i. 570. Parties, folly of keeping them up, ii. 662. Paterson, bishop, i. 290, 293, 516, 518, 680. archbishop of Glasgow, 681. ii. 62.
Paterson, projector of the expe- dition to Darien, ii. 158, 163. "Patriarcha," by Filmer, i. 571. Patrick, bishop, his character, i. 189, 462, 674, 684. he is made bishop of Ely, ii. 76. his death, 488, 676. 720. Pats, of Rotterdam, i. 330. Paul's (St.) church rebuilt, i. 373. Payne, Nevil, agent for king James, ii. 35. is engaged in a plot, 36. resists a double tor- ture in Scotland, 63. his ex- amination in parliament is dropped, 121.
Pearson, bishop, his death and character, i. 694. ii. 676. Peiriski and sir Robert Murray, parallel between, i. 59. Pelham, lord, ii. 720. Pemberton made chief justice, i. 501, 535, 556, 568. Pembroke, earl of, i. 798. his character, ii. 199. first pleni- potentiary at Ryswick, 202, 261, 262. made lord high ad- miral, 313, 356. lord lieute- nant of Ireland, and president of the council, 516. again made lord high admiral, ibid. resigns that post, but refuses a pension, 537. Pen, admiral, i. 219. Pen, the quaker, i. 649, 651, 693, 694, 702, 731, 736. ii. 69, 71. Pendergrass, his discovery of the assassination plot, ii. 165, 166, 167, 169.
Pepys, secretary, i. 390, 614. Percy, lord, i. 100.
Perkins, sir William, knows of the assassination plot, ii. 165. 172. is in that of an invasion, 173. absolved at Tyburn, 174,
Perth, countess of, turns Roman catholic, i. 678.
Perth, lord, i. 419, 420, 522. made chancellor of Scotland,
583. cruel in torturing, 585, 586, 587, 636. turns papist, 653. has a chapel for mass, 678. is imprisoned, 804. Peterborough, lord, i. 353, 477, 591, 606.
Peterborough, earl of, (see Mon- mouth and Mordaunt,) com- mands in Spain, ii. 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 443, 447, 449, 492. sent ambassador to Vi- enna, 558. his conduct in Spain approved by the house of lords, 559, 560, 561, 562. Peters, Hugh, i. 162. Petre, said to have been made a lieutenant general, i. 430.
Philip V. king of Spain, (see An- jou,) settled on that throne, ii. 251, 252. marries the duke of Savoy's daughter, 269. goes over to Italy, 287, 290, 294, 328. his campaign there, 328, 329. his campaign against Portugal, 389, 390. he quits Madrid, 448. returns thither, 449. reduces Valentia and Ar- ragon, 475. his son acknow- ledged by the Cortes, 529. the French troops leave him, 549. he protests against the treaty at the Hague, 550. loses the battle of Almanara, 555, 556. renounces his right of succes- sion to the crown of France, 612.
Philosophical meetings in Ox- ford, i. 192.
Phipps, sir Constantine, council for Sacheverel, ii. 540.
Pickering, i. 432, 443, 468. Piedmont, campaigns there, ii.
100, 111, 154, 392, 418, 445,
Pierce, Mrs. her deposition, i, 785. Pierpoint, Mr. prevails on parlia- ment to take away the ward- ships from the crown, i. 16. 44, 267.
Piers, Alice, parallel between her and the duchess of Marlbo- rough, by the tories, ii. 429. Pignatelli, pope Innocent XII. II. 73, 176.
Pilkington severely fined, i. 535, 536.
Pique, his character, i. 566. Plague of London, i. 218. spreads over the country, 224. Player, chamberlain of London, 559.
i. Plot, assassination, ii. 55, 56, 95,
96, 148, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175.
Plot, gunpowder, denied by the papists, i. 11.
Plot, Montgomery's, ii. 35, 36, 37, 63.
Plot, the popish, i. 424, 425, 426,
427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438. reflections on it, 451. Plot, protestant, i. 504. Plunket, an Irish bishop, tried and executed, i. 502. Plymouth, garrison declare for the prince of Orange, i. 793. Plymouth, earl of, ii. 271. Pocock, Edward, ii. 676. Pointy, French admiral, ii. 413. Poland. See Augustus, Sobieski, Stanislaus.
Polignac, Abbé, ii. 551.
Pollexfen, i. 460. Counsel for the city charter, 532, 533. Polyglot Bible, by Walton, i. 192. Pompone, i. 306, 332, 390. Pontchartrain, ii. 252.
Pool, Mat. i. 308. Poor of England, ii. 659. Pope Innocent, his character, i. 705. his disputes with France, 706. succeeded by Alexander VIII. an enemy to France, ii. 72. succeeded by Innocent XII. 73, 176. and he by Cle- ment XI. 251. who is in the French interest, 252, 263, 269, 286, 294, 323, 395. threatens the emperor and arms, 512. is forced to submit, 514, and own king Charles of Spain, 533. Popery, increase of in the time of Charles I. 26, 27. Popoli, duke de, ii. 420. Porter, captain, in the assassina-
tion plot, ii. 165, 166, 169. many tried and convicted on his evidence, 171, 172, 173, 174. he discovers practices on him, 183.
Porter, sir Charles, chancellor of
Ireland, i. 654. ii. 159, 160. Portland, earl of, (see Benthink,) i. 575. made groom of the stole, ii. 5, 35, 36. the assas- sination plot discovered to him, 165, 192. his private ne- gotiation with Boufflers, 200, 201. Ambassador in France, 224. resigns his place of groom of the stole, 225, 226, 235. negotiates the partition treaties, 225, 260, 261, 264. is impeached, but not prosecuted,
265, 274, 280, 301, 303, 306. Portocarrero, cardinal, ii. 252. Portsmouth, duchess of, i. 337, 379,392,410, 436,456. for the exclusion, 481. why, 486,487, 503, 531, 556, 564, 592. a new scheme concerted at her lodg- ings, 604, 605. attends the king in his last illness, 607. her account of his death, 610. Portugal, John V. king of, firm to his father's treaties, ii. 476.
marries the emperor's sister, 479, 480. great riches from America, 524, 620. campaigns on his frontier, 504, 531, 556. agrees to the treaty at Utrecht, 618.
Portugal, Peter king of, enters into the French alliance, ii. 289, 290. is neutral in the war, 323. enters into the grand al- liance, his treaty with Eng- land, 352, 353. campaigns on his frontier, 389, 390, 423, 444, 445. his death, 476. Powel, judge, i. 424. his opinion in the trial of the seven bi- shops, i. 743. and in the affair of Ailesbury, ii. 367. Powel, Mr. i. 478. Powis, lord, i. 430, 447. Powis, countess of, i. 475, 750. Powis made solicitor general and attorney general, i. 669, 742. ii. 367.
Powle, i. 389, 424, 474. Powlet, earl of, ii. 552,553, 612. Prance discovers Godfrey's mur- der, i. 445, 446, 447. Prayer, form of, devised for Scot- land, i. 10.
Preachers in conventicles punish- able with death, i. 292. Preaching, mode of, in 1661. i. 191.
Presbyterian (Scotch) preachers, their character, i. 34, 35. au- thor recommends that some of the more moderate shall be placed in vacant churches, 281. Presbyterians, English, against
king Charles's murder, i. 47. an union with them proposed at the restoration, 178. thank the king (Charles II.) for the toleration, 308. a comprehen- sion proposed at the revolution, ii. 30, 31, 32. does not succeed, 33.34. divisions among them, 247.
Presbyterians, Scotch, discon- tented, i. 116, 119, 121, 144. refuse the oath of supremacy, 146. silenced, 153. their cha- racter, 156. their discipline, 157. an accommodation with them treated, 273, 274, 275, 278. rejected by them, 293. Conferences thereon, 294, 295, 296, 297. the fury of the Car- gillites and Cameronians, 511, 512. the presbyterians insolent to the episcopal clergy,804,805. their fury at the revolution, ii. 29, 30, 64. alienated from king William, 87. reconciled to him, 121. are provoked a- gain, 122. methods taken in 1712. to incense them, 594, 595. Presbytery new modelled in Scot- land, i. 33. their leaders, 34, 35. their general assembly op- pose the parliament, 42, 43. they raise the Whiggamore insurrection, 43. divisions a- mong them, 55, 61, 62, 63. presbyteries prohibited, 141. presbytery established in Scot- land, ii. 22, 23, 24, 64, 360, [357] made unalterable at the union, 461. Preston, Dr. i. 19.
Preston, lord, i. 301, 638. made secretary of state, 783. seized going over to France, ii. 69. tried, condemned, and par- doned, 70, 71. Pretender, the, owned by France,
ii. 293. by the pope, Savoy and Spain, 294. is attainted, 296. an oath abjuring him, 297, 298, 301. a plot in Scot- land for him, 376, 377, 378. his expedition from Dunkirk thither, 500, 501, 502. his campaign in Flanders, 503. called first the pretender in the queen's speech, ibid. his
sister's death and character, 602. he removes to Bar le duc, 629. Addresses to remove him thence, ibid. Priests, the best spies, i. 311. Primi, abbot, i. 301. Primrose, Archibald, his charac- ter, i. 20, 27, 104, 105, 109. clerk register, 110, 113. draws the prerogative acts, 116. and the rescissory act, 118, 122, 288, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417. Princess royal, her death, i. 171. Princess Anne. See Denmark. Prince George. See Denmark. Prior, Matthew, ii. 580. Privilege of peers, act relative to, ii. 271. Protestant religion, its first crisis, i. 310. second crisis, 311. third crisis, 311, 312, 313. fourth crisis, 314. fifth crisis, 321,656.
Prussia, king of, (see Branden- burgh,) ii. 322, 324. judged prince of Neufchatel, 482. France owns his regal title, 528. his death and character, 616, 617.
Puritans, their character, man-
ners, and conduct, i. 17, 18. bill against them, temp. Eliz. i. 494. attempt to repeal it, 495. Pyrenees, treaty of the, how ob-
served by France, ii. 529. Quakers' behaviour on prosecu- tions, i. 270, 271, 702. divi- sions among them, ii. 248, 249. Queen Anne. See Anne. Queen Catherine. See Catherine. Queen Christina. See Christina. Queen Elizabeth. See Elizabeth. Queen Mary. See Mary. Queen Mary II. See Mary II. Queen mother of England, Hen-
rietta Maria, her dislike to Montrose, i. 52.
Queen motherof France, i.31,251.
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