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THE ROMAN CATHOLIC COUNTER-REFORMATION.

I. The Council of Trent. Sources. J. le Plat (teacher of Canon Law at Louvain): Monumentorum ad Hist. Concil. Trid. Spectantium Amplissima Collectio. Louvain, 1781 seq. 7 (8) tom. 4to. Acta Conc. Trid. ann. 1562-63 a Cardinale Paleotto descripta; ed. Mendham, London, 1842.

Lettres et Mémoires de François de Vargas, de Pierie de Malvenda, [members of the Imperial embassy], et de quelques Evêques d'Espagne, touchant le Conc. de Trente. Paris, 1654. 4to.

Mendham: Memoirs of the Council of Trent. 8vo. London, 1834. New ed. 1844.

Planck

Anecdota ad Hist. Conc. Trid. Pertinentia. Göttingen, 1791-1818, 26 programmata.

Sickel: Zur Geschichte d. Concil von Trient; Acten-stncke aus Oesterrechischen Archiven. Vienna, 1872.

Canones et Decreta Conc. Trid., juxta Exemplar authentic. Romæ editum, ed. le Plat, Antwerp, 1779. 4to. Madrid, 1786. Fol. New ed., enlarged from the Rom. Bullarium, by A. L. Richter, Leipzig, 1853.

LIBRI SYMBOLICI ECCL. CATHOL., edd. Streitwolf and Klener, Göttingen, 1838. 2 vols. 8vo.

Histories of the Council of Trent. PAOLO SARPI: Istoria del Conc.
Trident., London, 1619, fol. ; in Latin, London, 1620; Engl. trans-
lation by Brent, 1676, fol. French ed., with notes by Le Courayer,
London, 2 tom., folio, 1736.
SFORZA PALLAVICINO: Istoria del Conc. di Trento. Roma, 1656-7,
2 t., fol. 2d ed., 3 t., 4to, 1665: in Latin, Giattino, Rom. and
Antvp., 1672, 3 t., 4to; new ed. revised by the author, Rome, 1666.
Biografia di Frà Paolo Sarpi di Bianchi-Giovini. Zurigo, 1836, 2 t.
E. Munch: Frà P. Sarpi, Carlsruhe, 1838.

Wessenberg [Roman Catholic]: Die grossen Kirchenversammlungen der 15. u. 16. Jahrh. Constance, 1840.

Courayer: Discours Hist. sur la Réception du Concile de Trente. Amsterdam, 1756 (appendix to Sarpi). Bungener: Hist. du Concile de Trente. 2 vols. 12mo. 1853.

The Popes of this Period. RANKE: History of the Popes. 3 vols. 8vo. 1867.

Lorentz: Sixtus V. u. seine Zeit. Mayence, 1852.

HÜBNER: Life of Pope Sixtus V. Engl. transl. 2 vols. 8vo.

1872.

Köllner: De actis Concil. trid. Göttingen. 2 part. 8vo. 1841.

A LIST OF WORKS ON THE REFORMATION.

Fol.

591

II. The Order of Jesuits. Corpus Institutorum Societatis Jesu. Antvp. 1702. 2 vols. 4to. Constitutiones, Decreta Congregationum, Censuræ et Præcepta, cum Litteris Apostol. et Privilegiis. Prague, 1755. 2 vols. 4to. Institutum soc. Jesu. Prague, 1757. Lives of Ignatius Loyola, by Jesuits: Consalvi, in Acta Sanctorum, Jul. vii. 634 seq.; by RIBADENEIRA, Naples, 1572, Madrid, 1586, and in Acta Sanct. 1. c. 655 seq.; by MAFFEI, Rome, 1585; by Bartoli, Rome, 1659. Genelli: Leben d. heilig. Loyola. Innsbruck, 1848. I. Taylor; Loyola and Jesuitism in its Rudiments. 8vo. London, 1849.

Exercitia Spiritualia Ign. Loiolæ, Antvp. 1638, Ratisbon, 1855. History of the Jesuit Order, by Hasenmuller, 1588; by Gretser, Ingolstadt, 1584; by R. Hospinian, Zurich, (1649) 1670. Hist. d. Religieux de la Compagnie de Jésus, Paris, 1740, Utrecht, 1741.

4to. 4 tom.

Harenberg: Pragm. Gsch. d. Ordens d. Jesuiten. Halle, 1760. 2 vols. 4to. [Goudrette :] Hist. Générale de la Naissance et des Progrés de la Compagnie de Jesus; et [C. Paige] l'Analyse de ses Constitutions et Priviléges. Paris, 1760. Amst., 1761, 5 vols. Wolf: Allg. Gsch. d Jesuiten. 4 vols. Leipzig, 1803.

Histories of the Jesuits, by Dallas, 2 vols. London, 1816; by Liskenne, Paris, 1825; by De Sarrion, Paris, 1838; by CRÉTINEAU JOLY, Paris, 1844-6, 6 tomes; by Brühl, Würzburg, 1845 seq.; by Buss, Mayence, 2 abth., 1853; by Stöger, Ratisbon, 1851; by Kortum, Mannheim, 1843; by Julius, Leipzig, 1845 seq.; by STEINMETZ, London, 1848. 3 vols. 8vo.

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For the multitudinous works respecting the Jesuits, reference must be had to the special bibliographies :—

Carayon Bibl. historique de la Compagnie de Jésus, ou Catalogue des ouvrages relatifs à l'histoire des Jesuites depuis leur origine, etc. 4to. 1864.

Bibliothèque des Écrivains de la Compagnie de Jésus, ou Notices bibliographiques 1° De tous les ouvrages publiés par les Membres de la Compagnie de Jésus; 2o Des Apologies, des Controverses relig ieuses, des Critiques littéraires et scientifiques suscitées à leur sujet. Par Augustin et Alois de Backer, Série 1.-VII, 1853-61. Of this work, Petzholdt (Bibliothèque bibliograph, 1866), after referring to the previous bibliographical labors of Ribadeneira, Alegambe, and Southwell, says: “Alles was von Jesuiten-bibliographie bisher erschienen ist, wird durch das B.'sche Werk durchaus überflüssig gemacht."

INDEX.

"Acceptants," 453.

Adiaphoristic controversy, 165.
Adrian VI., Pope, on the corruption of
the church, 13; his character, 115;
reply of the Diet of Nuremberg
(1522) to his demand for action
against Luther, 115; his letter to
Zwingle, 147.

Academies, the Italian, broken up by

the Inquisition, 405.

Æsop, Luther translates, 120.
Aix la Chapelle, Peace of, 455.
Albigenses, their character, 55; cru-
sades of Innocent III. against them,

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the "Council of Blood," 302; exe-
cutes Egmont and Horn, 303; his
scheme of taxation, 303; resigns,
304.
Amboise, conspiracy of, 260; avenged
by Guise, 261; edict of, 269.
Anabaptists, their tenets, 475; different
classes of, 476; numerous in the
Netherlands, 288; influence of Men-
no on them, 311.

Anderson, Lawrence, 176.
Anglo-Saxons, their conversion, 23.
Anne Boleyn, her return to England,
247; her marriage with Henry VIII.,
320.
Anselm, element of mysticism in, 65;
his doctrine of the satisfaction of
Christ, 460.

Anthony of Navarre, summoned to
Orleans, 262; made lieutenant-gen-
eral. 263.

Antitrinitarians, rise of the, 477.
Anquetil, on Catharine de Medici, 257.

Alexander V., Pope, his pledges to the Aquinas, his doctrine of indulgences,

council of Pisa, 43.

Alexander VI., Pope, his grant to

Spain, 47; his character, 45; excom-
municates Savonarola, 65.
Alexander of Hales, his doctrine of

supererogatory merits, 92.
Allen, William, 414, 505.
Alphonso, king of Portugal, 47.
Altieri, 393.

Alva, Duke of, at the conference of
Bayonne, 270; his character, 301;
his recommendations to Philip II.,
301; sent to the Netherlands, 301;
marches from Italy, 301; establishes

92; of supererogatory merits, 94; on
the infallibility of the Pope, 30.
Arianism, its prevalence among the
barbarian nations, 22; supplanted by
Catholicism, 22.

Aristotle, connection of scholasticism
with, 536; his authority shaken by
the Humanists, 536; how far attacked
by the reformers, 536; by Luther,
536; Melancthon's view of, 536; re-
tained his place in Catholic universi-
ties, 537.

Armies, constitution of, in the 17th
century, 426.

Arminians, their doctrines, 473; their
scholarship, 475; their political dif-
ference with the Calvinists, 315;
their critical spirit, 545.

Arminius, his history, 473; his contro-
versy with Gomarus, 473; Milton's
remark on, 528.
Arnauld, 452, 531.
Arneys, Antoine, 228.

Arnold, of Brescia, his aim and fate,
386.

Arnold, T., on Church and State, 500.
Arran, Earl of, 353.

Art, how affected by Protestantism,
540; in the Netherlands, 541.
Articles, the ten, 323; they offend the
Catholic party, 323; the six, 324.
Articles, of the Church of England,
framed, 327; revision of (1563), 331.
Articles, the Lambeth, 339.
Asceticism, its origin in the church,
552; in the Middle Ages, 552; cast
away by Protestantism, 552.
Astrology, in the 15th and 16th cen-
turies, 3.

Atonement, Protestant and Catholic
view of, 460; the theory of Grotius,
474.

Autos da fé, in Spain, 408.

ment, 350; relation of his system to
Protestantism, 537.

Bajus, 451.

Balmes, his view of the Reformation, 6.
Baltimore, Lord, 508.
Barneveldt, Olden, 474.

Baronius, 25; his annals, 522.
Basel, council of, 43; it hears the Utra-
quists, 181; Reformation established
in, 143.

Baur, F. C., 546; on Servetus, 227.
Baxter, Richard, 437; his character,
443; ejected from his parish (1662),
442.

Bayle, on Leo. X., 46.
Bayonne, conference at, 270.
Beaton, Cardinal, 353.
Beda, the Syndic, 243.
Beghards, who they were, 57.
Beguines, who they were, 57.
Bellarmine, on the corruption of the
Church, 13; on the visible Church,
465; on Church and State, 504.
Bembo, Cardinal, his spirit, 73.
Berengarius, 148.

Bernard, St., mysticism of, 65.
Bernard, of Weimar, 431.

Berne, Reformation, established in, 143.
Berquin, Louis de, 248.

Augsburg, Diet at (1530), 118; its de- Berthelier, 230; put to death, 208.

cree, 119.

Beveridge, 446.

Augsburg, Confession of, 119; Apol- Beza, Theodore; his character and
ogy for the Confession, 119.
Augsburg, peace of, 168: wholesome

effect of it, 422; violations of it,
433.

Augustine, on religious persecution,

223; he is studied by Luther, 90;
how he differs from Calvin, 337.
Austria, spread of Protestantism in,
422; Jesuit influence in, 423.
Avignon, residence of the popes at, 38;
character of their court, 39.

Babylonian captivity of the Papacy, 38.
Bacon, Leonard, his Historical Dis-
courses, 441.

Bacon, Lord, his view of astrology, 3;
on the Puritan controversy, 349; on
episcopacy, 334; on church govern-

manners, 266; at the Colloquy of
Poissy, 266; on Calvin's death, 238;
his remark on the death of Francis
II., 263; on the origin of the word
"Huguenot," 264.

Bible, the source of Protestantism, 10;
Luther's translation of the, 112; its
benefit to the Germans, 112; early
German translations of the, 112: pub-
lished in English by Henry VIII.,
323; made by the Protestants the rule
of faith, 461; effect of it in Protestant
countries, 530; the reading of it not
encouraged in the Catholic Church,
530; origin of the disuse of it among
the laity, 531.
Biel, Gabriel, 467.
Blandrata, 478.

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