INDEX. 545 Covenant with God entered into, ii. 464. ---, a form of, iii. 433. Coventry, the mayor of, prosecu ted, iii. 51, n-many divines fled there, 230. Coverdale, Miles, i. 117. Cox, Benjamin, iii. 417. Cox, Richard, at Frankfort, i. 16- account of him, 108, n-his arbi- trary spirit,.207. Crackenthorp, Richard, ii. 312. Cradock, Walter, iii. 382. Cranford, James, iii. 268. Crane, Nicholas, i. 362. Cranmer, Archbishop, a persecutor, i. 8, 10-a nonconformist, 12. Crick, Richard, i. 278. Crisp, Tobias, ii. 471. Cromwell, Lord, above the bishops, i. 3-his fall, 121, n. , Oliver ' prevented from. going to New England, i. 84- proposed a commonwealth, 94- made lord protector, 95-his cha- racter and death, 97-his letter to J. Cotton, iii. 158-Whitaker's letter_to him, 194-an enemy to persecution, 416, n--anecdote of him, ib.-his government opposed, 310, 327, 406-his generosity, 487. Crook, Samuel, iii. 107. Crowley, Robert, i. 357. Crosby's incorrect statement recti- fied, iii. 150, 151. Cross in baptism to be refused, i. 157-159. -, a treatise on the, ii. 238=the meaning of it, 310, n. Crowder, Mr., iii. 520. Crucifix retained, i. 377. Cruto, Timothy, received the dying advice of 0. Bowles, iii. 467. Culverwell, Ezekiel, iii. 512. Darling, Thomas, dispossessed, ii. 118, 120. Darrell, John, ii. 117. Dorton ' Nicholas', iii. 531. Davenish, Mr. 594. Davenport, John, iii. 446. Death of Saltmarsh, remarkable, iii. 73. Declaration subscribed,i. 405. of J. Arrowsmith, 315. against the king's death, iii. 217. Deering, Edward, i. 193. Deering, Sir Edward, a friend to the puritans iii. 178. Committee of accommodation, i. 86, n. ----- religion offensive to Laud, iii. 89, n. Common Prayer set aside, i. 93. _Commons, house of, released many puritans, i. 86; ii. 483. Concord in New England founded, iii. 318. Conference desired, ii. 64. , the Hampton-court, ii. 310. , at Lambeth, ii. 316. ----, withJ. Cotton, iii. 156. Confessions of faith, ii. 21, 63. Conformity, controversy for auff against, is 58-enforced, 67. Conscience ' horrors of, ii. 203. Consent of scripture, account of, ii. 216-occasioned acontroversy, 218, 221. Conversion, a remarkable one, ii. 350. Conviction, .a painful instance of, M. 117. Convocation, the first protestant, i. 3-that in 1562, 21-its proceed- ings, 22-a supplication to that in 1571, 170-the tyrannical pro- ceedings of that in 1640, i. 85. Cooper, Mr., iii. 520. Cope, it's unlawfulness, i. 366. Cope, Sir Anthony, account of, ii. 344, it. Copping, John, i. 262. Corbet, Edward, iii. 266. Corbet, Sir Robert, a friend to the puritans, i. 151; n. Cornwall, the petition of its inha- bitants to parliament, i. 41. Cornwell, Francis, iii. 25. Coryat, George, ii. 168. Coryat,Thomas, account of, ii. 168. Cosins, Dr., his innovations, iii. 91, n. Cotton, John, iii. 151. Cotton, Roger, anecdote of, ii. 218, n. , Sir Rowland, a famous He- brean, ii. 218. Council, their address to Whitgift, i. 49-their illegal proceedings, 71-their letter to Bale, 103 - supplications to them, 290, 294, 320; ii. 325-their letters toAyl- mer, 294, 325. Courage, a remarkable instance of, iii. 80. Courts, ecclesiastical, their charac- ter, iii. 155. County committees, i. 92. VOL. 111. 4N 11111-1P17109NIK
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