of Wales, 146. Slays Kenwulf and Albright, and vanquishes the Eaft-angles, 147. Dies at Rome, ibid.
Independents, their tenets, iii. 116. Commended for their firmness, 294. Reflected on by Salmafius, 296. Their fuperiority over the other parties, vi. 412.
Inniaunus, depofed for his ill courses, iv. 22.
Job, the book of, a brief model of the epic poem, i. 120. John, the Baptift, in what fenfe called an angel, i. 189. John, king, why depofed by his barons, ii. 363.
John III, elected king of Portugal, his encomium, iv. 314. John IV, king of Portugal, letters to him, complaining of the tak ing and plundering English veffels, iv. 328, 329. Complimented by the council of ftate for favours received from him, 331. Let- ters to him from Oliver, 397. 404. 411. 412. 419. 420. 459. From Richard the protector, v.8.
John Phillips; his anfwer to the anonymous apology for the king and people, Latin, v. 351.
Jones, colonel Michael, his letter to the earl of Ormond, ii. 351. Jones, Richard, letters to, I. xxix. xxxii. xxxvi. xli.
Jofeph, of Arimathea, faid to have firft preached the Chriftian faith in this ifland, iv. 64.
Jofephus, his opinion that aristocracy is the beft form of government, iii. 133.
Jovinus fent deputy into this island by the emperor Valentinian,
Ireland inhabited and named Scotia by the Scots, before the north of Britain had that name, iv. 77.
Irenæus, cited to prove that Polycarp was made bishop of Smyrna by the apoftles. i. 67. His teftimony, when a boy, concerning. bifhops, as a fuperior order to prefbyters, not to be regarded, 68. His abfurd notions of Eve and the Virgin Mary, 70. If the pa- tron of epifcopacy to us, he is the patron of idolatry to the papists, ibid. Iric, a Dane, made earl of Northumberland, iv. 226. He is faid by fome to have made war againft Malcolın, king of Scots, 227. His greatness fufpected by Canute, he is banished the realm,
Judgments, for what caufe fent, unknown to man, iii. 75. Julian, the apoftate, forbad chriftians the ftudy of heathen learn- ing, i. 296.
Julius Agricola, the emperor's lieutenant in Britain, almost extir- pates the Ordovices, iv. 56. Finishes the conqueft of the ifle of Mona, ibid. His juftice and prudence in government, ibid. He brings the Britons to civility, arts, and an imitation of the Roman fafhions, 57. He receives triumphal honours from Titus, 58. He extends his conquefts to Scotland, fubdues the Orcades and other Scotch iflands, ibid. In feveral conflicts,
comes off victorious, 59-61. He is commanded home by Do- mitian, 62.
Julius Cæfar, has intelligence that the Britons are aiding to his enemies the Gauls, iv. 26. He fends Caius Volufenus to dif- cover the nature of the people, and ftrength of the country, 27. After him Comius of Arras, to make a party among the Bri- tons, 28. The ftout refiftance he meets with from them at his landing, ibid. He receives terms of peace from them, 30. Lofes a great part of his fleet, ibid. Defeats the Britons, brings them anew to terms of peace, and sets fail for Belgia, 32. The year following he lands his army again, 33. He has a very fharp difpute with the Britons near the Stowre, in Kent, ibid. Paffes the Thames at Coway stakes, near Oatlands, 36. He re-- ceives terms of peace from the Trinobantes, ibid. He brings Caffibelan to terms, ibid. He leaves the island, 37. Offers to Venus, the patronefs of his family, a corflet of British pearls, ibid. The killing him approved of by the best men of that age, 231.
Julius Frontinus, the emperor's lieutenant in Britain, iv. 55. Tames the Silures, a warlike people, ibid.
Julius Severus, governs Britain under Hadrian the emperor, iv. 63. Divides his conquefts here by a wall eighty miles long, as his ufual manner was in other frontiers, ibid.
Julius of Caerleon, a British martyr under Dioclefian, iv. 72. Junius, his wrong interpretation of a text, ii. 146. Jure, Thomas, Milton's tutor, letters to, I. i. iv.
Jurifdiction, in the church, moft truly named ecclefiaftical cenfure, i. 130. The nature and design of it, 191.
Juftice, how perverted by a train of corruptions, ii. 457. Above all other things the ftrongeft, iii. 90. Not in the king's power to deny it to any man, 278.
Juftin Martyr, his story of a Roman matron, ii. 219.
Justin, the hiftorian, his account of the original of government, iii. 256.
Juflinian's law, the three general doctrines of it, ii. 180.
KEARLE, furrenders the kingdom of Mercia, to his kinsman Penda, iv. 131.
Keaulin, fucceeds his father Kenric, in the kingdom of the Weft- Saxons, iv. 110. He and his fon Cuthin flay three British kings. at Deorham, 115. Gives the Britons a very great rout at Fe- thanleage, ibid. Routed by the Britons at Wodenfbeorth, and, chafed out of his kingdom, dies in poverty, 116.
Kedwallay, or Cadwallon, a British king, joining with Penda the Mercian, flays Edwin in battle, iv. 132. Kedwalla, a Weft-Saxon prince, returned from banifhment, flays in fight Edelwalk, the South-Saxon, and after that Edric his fuc- VOL. VI.
ceffor, iv. 142. Going to the Ifle of Wight, he devotes the fourth part thereof to holy uses, ibid. The fons of Arwald, king of that ifle, flain by his order, ibid. He haraffes the country of the South-Saxons, 143. Is repelled by the Kentifh men, ibid. Yet revenges the death of his brother Mollo, ibid. Going to Rome, to be baptifed, he dies there about five weeks after his baptifm, 144.
Kelred, the fon of Ethelred, fucceeds Kenred in the Mercian king- dom, iv. 146. Poffeffed with an evil fpirit, dies in despair, ibid. Kelwulf, reigns king of the Weft-Saxons after Keola, iv. 121. Makes war upon the South-Saxons, 125. Leaves the kingdom to his brother's fons, ibid.
Kelwulf, adopted by Ofric the Northumbrian, to be his fuc- ceffor in the kingdom, iv. 147. Becomes a monk in Lindif- farne, 149..
Kened, king of the Scots, does high honour to king Edgar, iv. 200. Receives great favours from him, ibid. Is challenged by him upon fome words let fall, but foon pacifies him, 201.
Kenelm, fucceeding in the kingdom of Mercia, is murdered by order of his fifter Quendrid, iv. 159, 160.
Kenred, the fon of Wulfer, fucceeds Ethelred in the Mercian king- dom, iv. 145. He goes to Rome, and is there fhorn a monk, 146. Another Kenred fucceeds in the kingdom of Northum- berland, 80.
Kenric, the fon of Kerdic, overthrows the Britons that oppose him, iv. 104. Kills and puts to flight many of the Britons at Searef- birig, now Salisbury, 110. Afterward at Beranvirig, now Ban- bury, ibid.
Kentwin, a West Saxon king, chases the Welsh Britons to the fea- fhore, iv. 142.
Kenulf, has the kingdom of Mercia bequeathed him by Ecferth, iv. 156. He leaves behind him the praife of a virtuous reign, 159. Kenwalk, fucceeds his father Kinegils in the kingdom of the Weft Saxons, iv. 134. He is faid to have difcomfited the Britons at Pen, in Somersetfhire, 139. And giving battle to Wulfer, to have taken him prifoner, ibid. Leaves the government to Sex- burga his wife, 140.
Kenwulf, entitled Clito, flain by Ina the Weft Saxon, iv. 147. Kenwulf king of the Weft Saxons. See Kinwulf.
Keola, the fon of Cuthulf, fucceeds his uncle Keaulin in the West Saxon kingdom, iv. 116.
Keolwulf, the brother of Kenulf, the Mercian, after one year's reign driven out by Bernulf, a ufurper, iv. 160.
Keorle, overthrows the Danes at Wigganbeorch, iv. 166. Kerdic, a Saxon prince, lands at Kerdicfhore, and overthrows the Britons, iv. 104. Defeats their king Natanleod in a me- morable battle, ibid. Founds the kingdom of the Wet Saxons,
105. He overthrows the Britons twice at Kerdic's Ford, and at Kerdic's Leage, 106.
Kimarus, reckoned among the ancient British kings, iv. 20. Kinegils, and Cuichelm, fucceed Kelwulf in the kingdom of the West Saxons, iv. 125. They make truce with Penda the Mercian, 131. Are converted to the Chriftian faith, 133. Kinegils leaves his fon Kenwalk to fucceed, 134.
King, his ftate and perfon likened to Sampfon, i. 149. King and a tyrant, the difference between them, iii. 286. vi. 368. King of England, what actually makes one, ii. 294. Has two fuperiors, the law and his court of parliament, 443. As he can do no wrong, so neither can he do right but in his courts, iii. 2, 3.
Kings and Magiftrates, Tenure of, ii. 271.
Kings, to fay they are accountable to none but God, overturns all Jaw and government, ii. 279. Their power originally conferred on them, and chofen by the people, 281, 284. Though ftrong in legions, yet weak at arguments, 392. Their office to fee to the execution of the laws, 442. Firft created by the parlia- ment, 471. Examples of kings depofed by the primitive British church, iii. 93. Chrift no friend to the abfolute power of kings, 161.
Kings, Hebrew ones, liable to be called in queftion for their ac- tions, iii. 144, 145.
Kings, Scottish, no less than fifty, imprisoned or put to death, iii. 234.
Kings, turning monks, applauded by monkish writers, iv. 149. Kings-evil, by whom firft cured, iv. 250.
Kinmarcus, fucceeds Sifilius in the kingdom, iv. 17.
Kinwulf, or Kenwulf, (Sigebert being thrown out, and flain by a fwineherd,) faluted king of the Weft Saxons, iv. 151. Behaves himself valouroufly in feveral battles against the Welth, 152. Put to the worst at Befington, by Offa the Mercian, ibid. Is routed and flain by Kineard, whom he had commanded into banish- ment, 153.
Knox, John, his depofing doctrine, ii. 291, 378.
Kymbeline, or Cunobeline, the fucceffor of Tenuantius, faid to be brought up in the court of Auguftus, iv. 41. His chief feat Camalodunum, or Maldon, ibid.
LACEDEMON, museless and unbookish, minded nothing but the feats of war, i, 291.
Lactantius, his opinion of divorce, ii. 221.
Laity, by confent of many ancient prelates, did participate in church offices, i. 136.
Language, its depravation portends the ruin of a country, I. xii. Laughter, the good properties of it, i. 234.
Law, of God, agreeable to the law of nature, iii. 209. Law, cannot permit, much less enact, permiffion of fin, ii.4. That given by Mofes, juft and pure, 180. Law defigned to prevent not reftrain fin, 183. Superior to governors, iii. 170. No- thing to be accounted law that is contrary to the law of God, 275.
Laws, common and civil, fhould be set free from the vaffalage and copyhold of the clergy, i. 48, 49. The ignorance and iniquity of the canon law, 351.
Lawyers, none in Ruffia, iv. 278.
Laymen, the privilege of teaching anciently permitted to them, i. 136.
Learning, what fort recommended to minifters, iii. 387.
Learning and Arts, when began to flourish among the Saxons, iv.
Leda, marquis of, letter from the council of state to him, iv. 366. Leil, fucceeds Brute Greenfhield, and builds Caerleil, iv. 13. Leir, king, his trial of his daughters affection, iv. 14. Is restored to his crown by his daughter Cordeilla, 16. Lent, its firft eftablishment in Britain, iv. 134.
Leo, emperor, his law concerning divorce, ii. 227. Leo of Aizema, letter to, I. xxvi.
Leof, a noted thief, kills king Edmund, iv. 196. Is hewed to pieces, 197.
Leofric, duke of Mercia, and Siward of Northumberland, fent by Hardecanute against the people of Worcester, iv. 234. By their counsel king Edward feizes on the treasures of his mother, queen Emma, 236. They raife forces for the king against earl God- win, 240. Leofric's death and character, 246.
Leofwin, fon of earl Godwin, after his father's banishment, goes over with his brother Harold into Ireland, iv. 241. He and Harold affist their father with a fleet against king Edward, 242. He is flain with his brothers Harold and Girtha in the battle against William duke of Normandy, 256.
Leontius, bishop of Magnesia, his account of bishops not to be de- pended on, i. 61, 63.
Leopold, archduke of Auftria, letters to him from the parliament, iv. 330. From Oliver, 461.
Letters, familiar, from the author to his friends, i. i.-xliii. The fame in Latin, vi. 109-143.
Letters of State, in the name of the Parliament, iv. 323. v. 9. The fame in Latin, v. 390. vi. 88. In the name of Oliver the protector, iv. 371. The fame in Latin, vi. 1. In the name of Richard the protector, v. 1. The fame in Latin, vi. 80. Lewis, king of France, Oliver's letters to him, iv. 386, 392, 400, 405, 418, 422, 446, 452, 454, 456. Letters to him from Richard the protector, v. 1, 6.
Liberty, fit only to be handled by juft and virtuous men, i. 82.
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