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John Knox and the Reformation
273
Cf. Pollen, Papal Negotiations, 163, 164.
274
Knox, ii. 346.
275
Ibid., ii. 358.
276
Bain, i. 675.
277
Froude, ii. 144 (1863).
278
Registrum de Panmure, i. – xxxii., cited by Maxwell; Old Dundee, 162. Book of the Universal Kirk, 26.
279
Knox, ii. 364-367; ii. 531, 532; Keith, iii. 140, 141.
280
Spanish Calendar, i. 314.
281
Bain, i. 684-686.
282
Knox, ii. 367-369.
283
Knox, ii, 370.
284
Bain, i. 686.
285
Ibid., i. 687.
286
Knox, li. 361; Bain, i. 693. Lethington’s argument against Lennox’s claim, March 28, 1563.
287
Knox, ii. 371.
288
Bain, ii. 7.
289
Knox, ii. 370-377.
290
Ibid., ii. 377-379.
291
Bain, ii. 9, 10.
292
Knox, ii. 381.
293
Ibid., ii. 387-389.
294
Bain, ii. 24.
295
Ibid., ii. 25.
296
Spanish Calendar, i. 338.
297
Bain, ii. 19, 20.
298
Bain, ii. 26; Knox, ii. 393, 394.
299
Hume Brown, Scotland under Queen Mary, p. 99.
300
Pitcairn, Criminal Trials, i. 434.
301
Dr. M‘Crie accepts, like Keith, a story of Spottiswoode’s not elsewhere found (M‘Crie, 204), but innocently remarks that, as to the brawl in chapel, Spottiswoode could not know the facts so well as Knox! (p. 210). Certainly twenty-two attendants on the Mass were “impanelled” for trial for their religious misdemeanour. Knox, ii. 394, note I.
302
Knox, ii. 397.
303
Randolph to Cecil; Bain, ii. 28, 29.
304
Knox, ii. 399-401.
305
Keith, ii. 210. The version in Bain, ii. 30, is differently worded.
306
Knox, ii. 403.
307
Knox, ii. 399-415.
308
Pitcairn, Criminal Trials, i. 434, 435.
309
Randolph, December 31; Bain, ii. 33; Knox, ii. 415.
310
Randolph, February 19, 1564; Bain, i. 113, 125.
311
Knox, ii. 415, note 3.
312
Knox, ii. 417-419.
313
Bain, i. 680; ii. 54.
314
Knox, ii. 291, 292.
315
Lethington spoke merely of “controversies” (Knox, ii. 460). I give the confessed meaning of the controversy.
316
Compare Knox, ii. 291, as to the discussion at Makgill’s house in November 1561.
317
Knox, ii. 460, 461.
318
Original Letters, Parker Society, Bullinger to Calvin, March 26, 1554, pp. 744-747.
319
Knox, ii. 441, 442.
320
The very programme of the General Assembly for the treatment of Catholics, in November 1572. See p. 269 infra.
321
Knox, v. 462-464.
322
Knox, ii. 441.
323
Ibid., ii. 442, 443.
324
Randolph to Cecil, February 27, 1565; Bain, ii. 128.
325
Knox, ii. 497.
326
Ibid., vi. 224, 225.
327
Knox, vi. 273; ii. 499.
328
Ibid., ii. 514.
329
Ibid., vi. 402.
330
Book of the Universal Kirk, 34.
331
Knox, vi. 416.
332
Bain, ii. 254, 255.
333
Stevenson, Selections, 153-159.
334
Papal Negotiations, xxxviii. – xliii.
335
Keith, ii. 412-413.
336
Knox, ii. 524.
337
Knox, i. 235.
338
Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 231.
339
Randolph to Cecil, March 21, 1566. Bain, ii. 269, 270. Diurnal, March 17, 1566. Knox’s prayer, Knox, vi. 483, 484.
340
Bain, ii. 269, 270.
341
See Calvin’s letter of January 24 or April 1, 1564, Corpus Reformatorum, xlviii. 244-249.
342
Life of Knox, 235, note 3; cf. Knox, ii. 533.
343
Burnet, History of the Reformation, iii. 360.
344
Knox, ii. 544-560.
345
Knox, vi. 545-547.
346
State Papers, Mary, Queen of Scots, vol. xiii., No. 20, MS.
347
Book of the Universal Kirk, 61-67.
348
Stevenson, Illustrations of the Reign of Queen Mary, 208.
349
Knox, ii. 563.
350
Stevenson, 221.
351
Ibid., 240, July 21.
352
Chalmers’s “Life of Mary,” ii. 487.
353
Knox, vi. 558-561.
354
If born in 1513-15, he was only about fifty-three to fifty-five.
355
Knox, vi. 567.
356
Knox and the Church of England, 230.
357
Strype’s Grindal, 168-179 (1821).
358
Corp. Ref., xlvii. 417, 418.
359
Strype’s Grindal, 507-516.
360
Zurich Letters. 1558-1602, pp. 152-155.
361
Strype’s Grindal, 180. Also the letter of Grindal in Ellis, iii. iii. 304
362
Knox, ii. 247-249.
363
Knox and the Church of England, 298-301.
364
Knox, vi. 559.
365
Ibid., vi. 568.
366
M‘Crie, 248.
367
Bannatyne’s Memorials, 5-13 (1836).
368
Calderwood, ii. 515-525.
369
Bannatyne’s Transactions, 70-82. Bannatyne was Knox’s secretary, and fragments dictated by the Reformer appear in his pages.
370
Melville’s “Diary,” 20-26.
371
Knox, vi. 606-612.
372
Bannatyne, 223, 224 (1836).
373
Knox, vi. 620-622.
374
Ibid., 236
375
Bannatyne, 268.
376
Ibid., 273.
377
Ibid., 278.
378
John Knox, ii. 282, 283.
379
Cf. Leicester’s letter of October 10, 1574, in Tytler, vii. chap, iv., and Appendix.
380
Tytler, vii. chap. iv.; Appendix xi, with letters.
381
Knox, ii. 356; Bannatyne, 281, 282.
382
Morton to Killigrew, August 5, 1573.
383
Bannatyne, 283-290.
384
There was another Falsyde.
385
See the letter in Maxwell’s Old Dundee, 399-401.
386
Bain’s Calendar is misleading here (vol. i. 202). Why Mr. Bain summarised wrongly in 1898, what Father Stevenson had done correctly in 1863 (For. Cal. Eliz,, p. 263) is a mystery.
387
See the “Prefatio,” Knox, i. 297, 298. In this preface Knox represents the brethren as still being “unjustly persecuted by France and their faction.” The book ends with the distresses of the Protestants in November 1559, with the words, “Look upon us, O Lord, in the multitude of Thy mercies; for we are brought even to the deep of the dungeon.” —Knox, i. 473.
388
Knox, vi. 22, 23.
389
M‘Crie’s Knox, 360.
390
Knox, i. 317-319.
391
Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 6.
392
John Knox, ii. 4.
393
Scot. Hist. Review, January 1905.
394
Lesley, ii. 40, Scottish Text Society, 1895.
395
In the French Archives MS., Angleterre, vol. xv.
396
Melville, 79 (1827).
397
Spottiswoode, i. 320.
398
Keith, i. 493, 494 (1835).
399
Angl. Reg., xvi., fol. 346.
400
Teulet, i. 407.
401
Ibid., i. 410.
402
For. Cal. Eliz., 1559-60, p. 453.
403
Ibid., p. 469.
404
Ibid., p. 480.
405
MS. Record Office; cf. For. Cal. Eliz., 1558 59, 408, 409.