< Page:Church and State under the Tudors.djvu
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xvii
CONTENTS
date page
Personal Supremacy of Elizabeth206
Rise of the Puritans207
Elizabeth's Dislike of them208
Her Bishops mostly sympathise with them209
The Advertisements—
State Regulation of Foreign Protestant Churches
1564
1567
210
210
Elizabeth and the Jesuits212
Different Views of her Conduct towards them213
Elizabeth excommunicated1570214


CHAPTER X

REIGN OF ELIZABETH (continued)

Change of Policy produced by the Excommunication217
Legislation of the thirteenth year of Elizabeth (13 Eliz. c. 12)1571218
Elizabeth's Personal Government of the Church219
Enforcement of Conformity—Deprivation of Cartwright220
Elizabeth's Religious Views221
English Protestantism of the Swiss Type222
Elizabeth and Archbishop Grindall223
Grindall Sequestrated—Religious Differences increasing224
Legislation of XXIII. of Elizabeth and of XXIX of Elizabeth
1581
1587
225
And of XXXV. of Elizabeth1593226
Whitgift becomes Archbishop—The Bishops mere Tools of Elizabeth1583227
Whitgift an Enemy of the Puritans—Whitgift an extreme Calvinist—Case of Dean Whittingham1578228
And of Travers1584230
The Martin Marprelate Controversy1590233
Bitterness of the Puritans and Harshness of the Bishops234
The Oath ex officio—Inquisitorial Character—Trifling Character of the Points in Dispute235
A Moderate Party exists notwithstanding236
Bancroft's Sermon of 'Trying the Spirits' first suggests a Divine Right of Bishops1588237
His extreme Doctrine of the Royal Supremacy—Bilson's Perpetual Government of Christ's Church1591238
It was the State which persecuted, not the Church240
The Predestinarian Controversy and the Lambeth Articles241
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