two brethren, ibid. His death denounced by the bishop for eat- ing with an excommunicated person, ibid.
Sigebert, the kinfman of Cuthred, fucceeds him in the Weft-Saxon kingdom, iv. 150.
Siger, the fon of Sigebert the small, and Sebbi the fon of Seward, fucceed in the government of the Eaft-Saxons after Swithelm's decease, iv. 139.
Silures, a people of Britain, choose Caractacus for their leader against the Romans, iv. 45. They continue the war against Oftorius and others, 47.
Simonist, who the first in England, iv. 141.
Simon Zelotes, by fome faid to have preached the chriftian faith in this ifland, iv. 64.
Sin, not to be allowed by law, ii. 5. Such an allowance makes God the author of it, 10.
Sifilius, fucceeds Jago, iv. 17.
Sifilius, the fon of Guitheline, fucceeds his mother Martia, iv. 20. Another of that name reckoned in the number of the ancient British kings, 22.
Siward, earl of Northumberland, fent by Hardecnute, together with Leofric, against the people of Worcester, iv. 234. He and Leofric raife forces for king Edward against earl Godwin, 240. He makes an expedition into Scotland, vanquishes Mac- beth, and placeth in his ftead Malcolm fon of the Cumbrian king, 244. He dies at York in an armed posture, 245. Sleda, erects the kingdom of the Eaft-Saxons, iv. 105. Smectymnuus, animadverfions upon the Remonftrant's Defence againft, i. 153. Author's reafons for undertaking its apology, 207. Smith, Sir Thomas, in his commonwealth of England, afferts the government to be a mixed one, iii. 259.
Smith, Sir Thomas, fent ambaffador from king James to the emperor of Ruffia, iv. 310. His reception and entertainment at Mosco, 311. Sobietki, John, elected king of Poland, iv. 314.
his virtues and thofe of his ancestors, 316. Socinians, their notions of the Trinity, iv. 262. Soldiers, their duties, vi. 420.
Solomon, his fong, a divine pastoral drama, i. 120.
keep the king's commandment, explained, iii. 134. Compared with king Charles, 160.
Songs, throughout the law and prophets, incomparable above all the kinds of Lyric poefy, i. 120.
Sophocles, introduces Tirefias complaining that he knew more than other men, i. 115.
Sorbonifts, devoted to the Roman religion, quoted by Salmafius, iii.
South-Saxon, kingdom, by whom erected, iv. 104. South Saxons, on what occafion converted to the chriftian faith, 141. Sozomen, his account of the primitive bishops, iii. 43. Commends a christian foldier for killing Julian the apoftate, 205.
Spain, king of, fee Philip IV.
prime minifter of, letter from Oliver to, iv. 374-
Spalatto, bifhop of, wrote against the Pope, yet afterwards turned papift, i. 203..
Spanheim, remarks on his notions of divorce, ii. 201.
Spanheim, Ezekiel, letter to, i, xxvii.
Spaniards, Manifefto against their depredations, v. 17. vi. 90.
Spanish ambaffador, letters from the parliament to the, iv. 335, 344, 349, 356, ibid. 365, 367.
Sparta, kings of, fometimes put to death by the laws of Lycurgus,
Spelman, Sir Henry, condemns the taking of fees at facraments, mar- riages, and burials, iii. 369.
Spenfer, in his eclogue of May, inveighs against the prelates, i. 197. His defcription of temperance, 300.
States of the United Provinces, treated by us in an unfriendly man- ner, from principles instilled by the prelates, i. 38, 39. Oli- ver's letter to them in favour, of the Piedmontois, iv. 383. His other letters to them on different fubjects, 398, 402, 403, 408, 416, 441, 442.
Staterius, king of Albany, is defeated and flain in fight by Dunwallo Molmutius, iv. 17.
Stilicho, repreffes the invading Scots and Picts, iv. 76.
Strafford, earl of, an account of his behaviour and conduct, ii. 412. Who guilty of his death, 416.
Studies, what fort proper for the education of youth, i. 277, &c. Stuff and Withgar, the nephews of Kerdic, bring him new levies, iv. 105. They inherit what he won in the Ifle of Wight, 109. Sturmius, John, his teftimony concerning Martin Bucer, ii. 65. Subject, of England, what makes one, ii. 294.
Suetonius Paulinus, lieutenant in Britain, attacks the Ifle of Anglesey,
Suidhelm, fucceeds Sigebert in the kingdom of the East-Saxons, iv. 138. He is baptized by Kedda, ibid.
Sulpitius Severus, what he fays of a king, iii. 219. Superftition, the greatest of burdens, i. 337.
Swane, makes great devaftations in the weft of England, iv. 211. He carries all before him as far as London, but is there repelled, 214. Styled king of England, 217. He fickens and dies, 218. Swane, the fon of earl Godwin, treacherously murders his kinfman Beorn, iv. 237, 238. His peace wrought with the king by Aldred bishop of Worcester, 238. Touched in conscience for the flaughter of Beorn, he goes barefoot to Rome, and returning home dies in Lycia, 243.
Sweden, king of. See Charles Gustavus.
Swithred, the laft king of the Eaft-Saxon kingdom, driven out by Ecbert the Weft-Saxon, iv. 150, 161.
Switzerland, letter to their evangelical cantons from the English commonwealth, iv. 363. From Oliver, 385, 394, 449.
TACITUS, falfely quoted by Salmafius, iii. 228. One of the greatest enemies to tyrants, ibid.
Tarentum, prince of, Oliver's letter to him, iv.
377. Tarquins, enemies to the liberty of Rome, iii. 416.
Taximagulus, a petty British king, one of the four that affaulted. Cæfar's camp, iv. 37.
Tenuantius, one of the fons of Lud has Cornwall allotted him, iv. 23. Made king after the death of Caffibelan, 40.
Tenure of Kings and Magiftrates, ii. 271.
Tertullian, his opinion of divorce, ii. 220.
Tetrachordon, on the four chief Places in Scripture treating of Marriage, or Nullities in Marriage, ii. 111.
Teudric, a warlike king of Britain, faid to have exchanged his crown for a hermitage, iv. 116. To have taken up arms again in aid of his fon Mouric, ibid.
Theobald, the brother of king Ethelfrid, flain at Degfastan, iv. 122. Theodore, a monk of Tarfus, ordained bishop of Canterbury, iv.
140. By his means the liberal arts and the Greek and Latin tongues flourished among the Saxons, ibid.
Theodofius, the emperor, held under excommunication for eight. months, by St. Ambrofe, bishop of Milan, i. 52. His law con- cerning divorce, ii. 225. Decreed the law to be above the em- peror, l. 94. Theodofius, fent over by Valentinian, enters London victoriously, iv. 74, 75. Sends for Civilis and Dulcitius, 75. Punishes Va- lentinus a Pannonian confpiring against him, ibid. Returns with applaufe to Valentinian, ibid. Theodofius, the fon of the former, preferred to the empire, iv. 76. Overcomes and flays Maximus, ufurping the empire, ibid.
Thurfert, and divers other Danith lords, fubmit to king Edward the elder, iv. 188.
Tiberius, his cruel with, i. 94. Had no right to the fucceffion,
Timothy, received ordination by the hands of the presbytery, i. 93、 Not bishop of any particular place, 187.
Tingoefia, difcovered by the Ruffians, iv. 284. Manners of the Tingoefi, ibid.
Tithes, why to be abolished under the Gospel, iii. 354, &c. Dif- allowed by foreign proteftants, 354. Authorities brought by the advocates for tithes, 357.
Titilus, fucceeds his father Uffa in the kingdom of the East-angles,
Togodumnus, the fecond fon of Cunobeline, fucceeds in the king- dom, iv. 41. Is overthrown by Aulus Plautius, 42. Slain in
Toledo, council of, allow of no cause of divorce, except for fornica- tion, ii. 251.
Toleration, of differences not fundamental, recommended, i. 326. Tofti, the fon of Godwin, made earl of Northumberland, in the room of Siward, iv. 245. He fwears brotherhood with Malcolm, king of Scotland, 246. Goes to Rome with Aldred, bishop of York, ibid. The Northumbrians expel him, 247. A story of great outrage and cruelty, committed by him at Hereford, 248. Driven out of the country by Edwin and Morcar, 252. Joining with Harold Harvager, king of Norway, against his brother, is flain together with Harvager in the battle, 254. Tours city, whence named, iv. 10.
Trade flourishes moft in free commonwealths, iii. 428.
Traditions of the church, diffonant from the doctrine of the apostles, in point of epifcopacy, i. 72, 73. Counted nearly equal to the written word in the ancient church, ii. 166. Strictly com- manded to be rejected, iv. 259.
Trajan, his fpeech to the general of his pretorian forces, ii. 280. iii. 249. Pliny's compliment to him, 230.
Transilvania, prince of, Oliver's letter to him, iv. 38ɔ.
Trebellius Maximus, fent into Britain in the room of Petronius Tur- pilianus, iv. 55.
Trinity, arian and focinian notions of the, iv. 262.
Trinobantes, fall off from Caflibelan, fubmit to Cæfar, and recom- mend Mandubratius to his protection, iv. 36. With the Ice- nians rife up against the Romans, 51.
True Religion (Of), Herefy, Schifm, Toleration, and the best Meaus against the Growth of Popery, iv. 259.
Truth, the daughter of Heaven, nurfed up between the doctrine and difcipline of the Gofpel, i. 67. Love of truth, true eloquence, 268. Errours of fervice to the attainment of, 298. Of her coming into the world, and her treatment there, 319. Needs no ftratagem to make her victorious, 327. According to Zoro- babel, the strongest of all things, iii. 90. Truth and justice compared, ibid.
Tullius Marcus, no friend to kings, iii. 139. Cæfar in the fenate, 231, 253. Affirms that all power proceeds from the people, 268.
Tumults, at Whitehall, not fo dangerous as thofe at Sechem, ii. 421. Who the probable caufe of them, ibid. The effects of an evil reign, 422.
Turkil, a Danish earl, affaults Canterbury, but is bought off, iv. 214. He fwears allegiance to king Ethelred, that under that pretence he might stay and give intelligence to Swane, 216. He
leaves the English again, and joins with Canute, 219. His greatnefs fufpected by Canute, he is banished the realm, 227. Turkitel, a Danish leader, fubmitting to king Edward, obtains leave of him to go and try his fortune in France, iv. 186. Turks, what privileges they enjoy. iii. 82.
Tuscany, great duke of, fee Ferdinand.
Typographical luxury complained of by Milton, I. xxx. Tyranny, the oppofers of it defcribed, i. 248.
Tyrants, reafons for punishing them, ii. 271, &c. What they are, 284. Held not only lawful, but glorious and heroic to kill them, by the Greeks and Romans, 285. Inftances of feveral punished in the Jewith times, ibid. 287. How they have been treated in chriftian times, 287. Fear and envy good men, iii. 34. More commendable to depofe than to fet up one, 149. Examples of feveral depofed and put to death by chriftians, 203, &c. Sub- mitted to by neceffity only, 216. Divine honours afcribed to fuch as killed them by the Grecians, 225. Definition of a ty- rant by Ariftotle, 301. Eafily extirpated in Greece and Rome, vi. 362.
VALENTINIAN, his law of divorce, ii. 225. Sends over feveral deputies fucceffively into this ifland, iv. 74.
Valerius Afiaticus, vindicates the killing Caligula, iii. 232.
Valerius Publicola, for what reafon he devised the Valerian law, iii. 232.
Vane, Charles, fent as agent from the English commonwealth to Lisbon, iv. 329.
Vatablus, his opinion of divorce, ii. 146.
Vectius Bolanus, fent into Britain in the room of Trebellius Maxi- mus, iv. 55.
Vellocatus, married by Cartifmandua, iv. 48.
Venice, letters to the duke and fenate, from the English council of ftate, iv. 343, 359. Others from Oliver, 391, 439.
Venutius, a king of the Brigantes, deferted by his wife Cartifmandua, iv. 48. He rights himfelf against her by arms, ibid. Makes war fuccefsfully against thofe taking part with his wife, 49. Verannius, fucceeds A. Didius in the British wars, iv. 49. Vefpafian, fighting under Plautius against the Britons, is refcued from danger by his fon Titus, iv. 44. For his emiment fervices here, he receives triumphal ornaments at Rome, ibid. Uffa, erects the kingdom of the Eaft-angles, iv. 105. From him his fucceffors called Uffings, ibid.
Victorinus, a Moor, appeafes a commotion in Britain, iv.69. Victorinus, of Tolofa, made prefect of this ifland, iv. 77.
Vittred, the fon of Ecbert, obtaining the kingdom of Kent, fettles all things in peace, iv. 143. After 34 years reign, he deceaseth, 146. VOL. VI.
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