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A History of the So-Called Jansenist
Church of Holland By the Rev. J.M. Neale, M.A. Oxford: John Henry and James Parker,
1858 Index. A. Acunha, Portuguese
ambassador at the Hague, 277. Albizzi, Cardinal,
attacks the Church of Holland, 167. Alsace, Cardinal
d’, 278. Alva, the
Duke of, his commencements, 110. Amor Poenitens, the,
171; analysis of its contents, 179, &c.; applause it receives, 183;
controversy about at Rome, 185; formally denounced, 189; condemned till
corrected, 189. Angélique, the
Mère, 24. Antwerp, Bishop
of, consecrates his brother without any assistant prelate, 255. Apostoli, the
letters so-called, 49. Appeals to
the Future Council, examples of, 46. Arboreus, his
intrigues, 138. Arckel, John
of, 67. Arnauld, Antoine,
the Doctor, his commencements, 14; letter to a duke and peer, 21; ejected
from the Sorbonne, 21; his description of Holland, 173, &c. Arnoldsen, Cornelius,
127. Articles of
Louvain (1677) adopted by the Church of Holland, 287. Augustinus, the,
11; contents of, 12. B. Babylon, Bishop
of: see Varlet. Baius, condemnation
of his propositions, 8. Barcelona, affair
of the Bishop of, 332. Barchman
Wuytiers, Cornelius John, Vicar-general, 261; elected
Archbishop, 262; his consecration, 267; his attempts at a union of the
Eastern and Western Churches, 270; his proposed mission to the Laos, 271; he
appoints Theodore Doncker Bishop of Haarlem, 273; miracle said to have been
wrought by him, 273; his death, 274. Baronius, opposed
to Molina, 8. Basle, Council
of, 71. Bellegarde, Dupac
de. 320; his death, 338. Berruyer, De, his
History of the People of God condemned by the Council of Utrecht, 304. Bishoprics, erection
of fourteen new, 104; discontent excited by, 105. Blood, the
Council of, 110. Bock, Jerome
de, Bishop of Haarlem, 284. Bon, John,
Bishop of Haarlem, 349. Bonaparte, Louis,
king of Holland, 343. Boniface, S., 62. Borgia, Abbé,
his negotiation with Archbishop Codde, 227. Bosche, Lubert
Ten, 90; his death-bed, 92. Boswell, James,
arrives at Utrecht, 294. Brinkerinck, John,
89. Broekman, Adrian
John, Bishop of Haarlem, 337; his death, 343. Broedersen, Nicolas,
his Tractatus Historici, 264. Brothers of the
Common Life, object of the Institute, 79. Brons, Wynand
John, President of the Fourth Congregation, 299. Bruhezen, John
de, Vicar-Apostolic, 117. Brune, Henry,
95. Buren, Amilius
de, 95. Bussi, Internuncio
at Brussels, his correspondence with the Chapters, 214; nuncio at Cologne,
230; his Instructions, which commenced the schism, 231. Buul, Henry
John, Bishop of Haarlem, 365. Byeveld, John,
Bishop of Deventer, 293; President of the Second Congregation, 299; his death,
337. Byevelt, John,
his persecution of the National party, 236; he is banished, 237. C. Capaccini, the
Nuncio, his mission, 359. Carthusians, thirty-one,
join the Church of Utrecht, 269. Case of
conscience, the, 35. Cathedral of
Utrecht, its reconciliation by the Cardinal de Boulogne, 169. Catti, conversion
of the, 62. Catz, Baldwin,
Archbishop of Philippi, 160; his insanity, 161; his death, 161. Catz, Jacob,
Pro-Vicar of Utrecht, 209; sketch of his life, 220; his death, 233. Chaise Dieu, description
of the, 55. Chapter of
Haarlem, its boldness in defending its rights, 213; the Motivum
juris for, 219; it retires from the contest, 221; refuses to nominate a
Grand-Vicar, 262. Chapter of
Utrecht, how composed, 64; its anomalous condition, 143;
appeals against the Unigenitus, 240; its letter to all Catholic
bishops, 253; to all Universities, 254; to the nearest bishops, 255. — And
see Vicariate. Christian
Republic, the, of Rovenius, 151. Church of
Holland, its lowest ebb, 148; its state in 1701, 206; and 1836, 284. Churches, construction
of the, built in the persecution, 145. Cibo, secretary
to the Propaganda, discovery of his fraud, 175. Cistercians, fourteen,
join the Church of Utrecht, 269. Clement IX., pacification
of, 31; medal struck in honour of, 32. Clement X., his
courteous reception of Van Neercassel, 166. Clement XIV. suppresses
the order of Jesuits, 331; his death, 337. Codde, Peter,
Grand-Vicar of Utrecht, 199; sketch of his early life, 204; Archbishop of
Utrecht, 205; his dangerous illness and protest, 207; invited to the jubilee
at Rome, 209; his journey thither, 210; protest in his favour, 211; his
suspension, 212; his critical situation, 217; his return commanded by the
States, 217; his decision not to exercise his archiepiscopal authority, 220;
calumnies against him, 222; his last illness, 227; protest, 228; and death,
229. Collegiate churches
of mediaeval Holland, 77. Comminges, Bishop
of, his five articles adopted by the Church of Holland, 285. Concessiones
Ephesinae, 154. Convulsionists, 58. Cornet, Nicolas,
delates the Five Propositions, 15. Council of
Utrecht, Second: its convocation, 294; Acts, 300, seq.;
Canons of Discipline, 318; conclusion, 321; condemned at Rome, 326; and by
the Assembly of the French Clergy, 328, Cousebant, Joseph,
nominated for Utrecht, 200. Cracht, Stephen,
pastor at Amsterdam, 126. Crucifixion of
Convulsionists, 58. Cum Occasione, the
dogmatic constitution, 18. D. Daemen, Adam,
Archbishop of Adrianople, and Vicar-General, 225; his resignation, 226. Damen, Abbé,
attacks the validity of Steenoven’s consecration, 264. David of
Burgundy, Archbishop, 71. De Auxiliis, the
Congregation, 9. De Berghes, Archbishop
of Mechlin, 177. De Caylus of
Auxerre, his appeal never retracted, 57; he urges the consecration of
Steenoven, 255. De Cock, Andrew,
martyr, 149. ———, Theodore,
agent of the clergy at Rome, 202; his treachery, 208; he asserts the
non-existence of the Chapters, 214; his work against Codde, 238. Debitum
Pastoralis, privileges conferred on the Church of Utrecht by
the Bull, 72. De Haan, Francis,
President of the Third Congregation, 299. De Hauranne: see
S. Cyran. De Jong, Gisbertus,
Bishop of Deventer, 343. De la Torre, James,
elected Archbishop, 150; his banishment, 153; offers made to hip by the
Jesuits, 154; he goes to Rome, 154; his insanity, 157; his death, 157. De Metz, Zachary,
coadjutor to De la Torre, 156; his death, 157. De Rastignac, Archbishop
of Tours, his Pastoral Instruction on Christian Righteousness, 310. De Swaen, Dean
of Haarlem, defends the rights of the Chapter, 216. De Faucel, Van
Neercassel’s agent at Rome, 184. Deventer, 75;
re-erection of the bishopric of, 293. Diephold, Rodolph
de, his contest for the archbishopric, 69. Direito do
Padroado, 175. Dirutius, Remigius,
first Bishop of Deventer, 107. Discernants, 58. Dogmatic fact, the
meaning of a, 21. Dolgorouki, Princess,
her reception by Archbishop Barchman, 270. Dominus ac
Redemptor, the Bull, 331. Doncker, Theodore,
slain by a Papal Brief, 267; preaches on the Brief, 268; Bishop of Haarlem
elect, 273. Dort, Synod
of, 139. Dubois, Cardinal,
his wealth, 60; his fearful death, 50. ——— Nicholas,
his retractation, 175. Duivenvoord, Henrietta
de, 142. Dusseldorp, Francis,
138. Dyke of
Couvestein, battle of the, 118. E. Eastern Church, the,
censured by the Council of Utrecht, 301. Ecclesiastical
problem, the, 35. Edict of Nantes,
its revocation, 190; persecution in Holland
consequent on, 190. Efficacious
grace, 21. Egmont, George
of, Archbishop of Utrecht, 73. Embrun,
pseudo-Council of, 52. Emmerik, Van
Neercassel at, 194. Enchvoort, William,
Archbishop of Utrecht, 73. Erasmus, Desiderius,
a scholar of the Brothers of the Common Life, 99. Exposition de la
Foi, Bossuet’s, adopted by the Council of Utrecht,
298. Ex quâ die, the
Bull, 367. F. Fact and right, distinction
between, 30. Fagan, Luke,
Bishop of Meath, ordains on the Chapters’ letters dimissory, 235; his device
to screen himself from enquiry, 236. Families, the
six, of the Brothers of the Common Life, 101. Figurists, the
sect of, 58. Fitz-James, Bishop
of Soissons, his Pastoral Instruction, 305; adopted by the Council of
Utrecht, 306. Five
Propositions, the, from the Augustinus, 15;
condemned, 18. Flight of the
clergy in the Reformation, 124. Four Bishops, appeal
of the, against the Unigenitus, 48. Fraterheeren, another
name for the Brothers of the Common Life, 96. G. Galen, Bishop
of Munster, 65. Giffard, Bishop
of Madaura, declines to assist the Chapter, 235. Glan,
Van Neercassel’s funeral at, 196. God, how
often we are compelled to love, 25. Gouda, stained
glass in the church of, 74. Gorcum, the
nineteen martyrs of, 111. Grace, the
doctrine of, supported by the Church of Holland, 8; systems of S. Augustine
and S. Thomas, and Molina about, 16; traditional teaching of the Church of
Holland on, 164. Grammont, Count
de, 20. Granvelle, Cardinal
de, 105. Grimaldi, Cardinal,
in favour of the Amor Poenitens, 186. Groenendael, collegiate
church of, 68. Grolle, Grotius’s
history of its siege, 141. Groote, Geert,
his birth, 75; his conversion, 76; his sermons, 77; he is inhibited from
preaching, 77; his death, 81; his works, 82. Gueux, the,
harsh conduct pursued with respect to, 109. Gyselinck, John
Baptist, president of the Fifth Congregation, 300. H. Haarlem, the
Nones of, 112; Chapter of, its vigour in defending its rights, 154; retires
from the contest, 221. Habert, Bishop
of Vabres, 13. Heiligerlee, battle
of, 110. Heykamp, Herman,
Bishop of Deventer, 374. Hierarchy, Intrusion
of the new, 367. Hieronymians, Brothers
of the Common Life, why so called, 96. High Mass, music
forbidden during the Canon by the Council of Utrecht, 319. Histoire du
Peuple de Dieu, the, 305. Hochkirchen, Antony,
attempts to reconcile the Church of Utrecht with Rome, 291. Holland, invasion
of, by Louis XIV., 168. Hooks and
Codfish, the, 65. Howard, Cardinal,
defends the Church of Holland, 201. Hoynck, van
Papendrecht, his history of the Church of Utrecht, 263. Huissen, Van
Neercassel at, 170, 192. I. Ineffabilis, the
Bull, Protest of the Church of Holland against, 374. In Eminenti, the
Bull, 13. Inquisition, establishment
of the, 109. Innocent X., Pope,
16. ——— XIII., addressed
by the Chapter of Utrecht, 248. J. Jansenism, decline
of French, 56. Jansenius, Cornelius,
a sketch of his life, 4; his monument broken down, 29; his journey to Spain,
142. Jemminghem, battle
of, 111. Jesuits, corrupted
morals of the, 25; enter Holland, 119; intrigues of the, 123, and passim; suppression
of the, 331. Jube, the
Abbé, his mission into Russia, 270. K. Kafenza, Archbishop
of, his account of the Klopjes, 146. Kempis, Thomas
à, 97; the “Imitation” not written by him, 98. Kettel, John,
the cook, 91. Klopjes, the,
145; placards against the, 147. Krys, Jacob,
interests the Bishop of Babylon in the Church of Holland, 242. L. Ladies of
Charity, the, 5. Laus tibi
Christe, the Sequence, 93. Lay
Controvertists, school of, 147. Le Camus, Cardinal,
in favour of the Amor Poenitens, 186. Le Clerc, Peter,
his protest to the whole Church, 294; condemned by the Council of Utrecht,
300; he is excommunicated, 323. Lecture of
six weeks, the, 176. Le Tellier, Jesuit,
the real author of the Unigenitus, 39. Leeuwarden, the
States of Friesland oppose the re-erection of the Bishopric of, 292. Lindeborn, John,
Grand-Vicar of Utrecht, 199. Lorraine, labours
of S. Vincent de Paul in, 2. Louis XIV., death
of, 46. Louvain, idea
of the University of, 176. Luffy, Godfrey,
agent of the Chapter of Haarlem at Rome, 202. M. Maurice, Prince,
his tyranny, 139; his death, 141. Mixed marriages,
question of, 162, 320. Martin V., his
decision reversed by Eugenius IV., 70. Medenblick, Rumold,
135. Meganck, Francis,
Dean of the Chapter, President of the First Congregation, 299. Meindaerts, Peter
John, his ordination, 235; his consecration to the archbishopric, 282; brief
against him, 283; convokes a provincial council, 295; his death, 329. Mierlo, Godfrey
de, Archbishop of Haarlem, 114. Mookerheyde, battle
of, 111. Molina, his
Concord of Free-will, 8; system of, 10. Motivum juris
pro Capitulo Harlemensi, the, 219. Montpellier, Bishop
of, 51. Münster, Treaty
of, 152. N. National Church,
statistics of, in 1701, 206; in 1736, 284. Nazalli, Archbishop,
Nuncio to the Hague, 350. Nellemanns, Nicolas,
Bishop of Deventer, 338; his death, 343. Nicolini, the
Marquis, negotiations of, 292. Nieulant, Nicolas,
First Bishop of Haarlem, 106. Nieuwenhuis, John,
Bishop of Haarlem, 343. Noailles, Cardinal
de, 34, 49. Noordstrand, Isle
of, 172. Norbert, Father,
negotiations of, 292. Nymegen, Peace
of, 170. O. Oldenzaal reconquered
by Spain, 130. ——— Collegiate
Church of, its desecration, 141. Onderwys voor de
Eerste Communie, 311. Oudshoorn, his
election as Bishop of Utrecht, 66. P. Palafox, B.
Juan de, 399. Paludanus, Augustinian,
candidate for the Vicariate Apostolic, 153. Paris, miracles
attributed to the Deacon, 56. Parroquet, the
Church of the, 145. Passart, Flavie
her perfidy, 30. Passionei, Cardinal,
defends the Church of Holland, 285. Pastoralis
Officii, the Bull, 49. Paul, S.
Vincent de, 3. Pavilion, Bishop
of Aleth, 29. Perrier, Marguerite,
miracle of, 27. Persecution,
the, of 1630,144; of 1685, 190. Petersen, Cunerus,
Bishop of Leeuwarden, 114. Petersen, Gerlach,
the second to à Kempis, 88. Petrus Aurelius,
the, 6. Pichon, Father,
his work on Frequent Communion, 309. Placards against
the exercise of the Roman Catholic religion, 119. ———
ecclesiastics, 147. Plague, the, at Deventer, 80. Port-Royal, the
recluses of, 14. ——— des
Champs, destruction of, 36; desecration of the cemetery, 37. Postulaets-gulden,
70. Potcamp, Gerard,
Vicar-Apostolic, 223; his death, 224. Pitra, Dom,
misstatements of, 162, 171, 224. Predestination, gratuitous,
asserted by the Bull Demissas preces, and by the Council of Utrecht,
300. Primacy, the
Roman, decree of the Council of Utrecht on the subject, 302. Printing, its
employment by the Brothers of the Common Life, 100. Rohrbacher, the
Abbé, his book called A History of the Catholic Church, 39. Probabilism condemned
by the Council of Utrecht, 314. Proostenhuis, the,
at Mydrecht, 118. Protestant violation
of oaths with respect to Catholics, 112. Provincial Letters,
the, 22. Pure Nature, the
state of, 13. Q. Quesnel, Pasquier,
his Moral Reflections, 33; sketch of his life, 34. Questions, the
three, put to candidates for the Common Life, 89. R. Radewijnzoon, Flores,
successor of Geert Groote, 82; his studies in Bohemia, 83. Regius, Martinus,
127. Respectful
silence, the meaning of, 35. Rights of
the Canons not infringed by the cession of temporal sovereignty, 72. Right of
patronage, 174. Rovenius, Henry,
137. ——— Philip, Dean
of Oldenzaal, 130; nominated to the archbishopric, 138; consecrated, 140;
fixes his residence at Utrecht, 142; erects the Vicariate, 143; his narrow
escape, 148; his banishment, 149; he approves the Augustinus, 150; his
death, 151. Rugens, John
Martin, missionary in Norway, 151. Ruysbroek, John,
68. S. Salvavarilla, William
de, 79. Samenspraek
tusschen Pieter Regthart, &c., 248. Sardinia, Church
of, supports the Church of Utrecht, 324. S. Charles
Borromeo, his instructions to confessors, 311. Schenk, Frederic,
Archb. of Utrecht, 105; his death, 114. Schep, William,
nominated for Utrecht, 200. Schism, the
great Roman, 79; commencement of that in Holland, 231. Scholars formed
by the Brothers of the Common Life, 98. S. Cyran, the
Abbé, 3; imprisonment of, 6. Separated clergy,
rights of the, preserved intact by the Council of Utrecht, 297. Sermons, Ultramontane,
at the commencement of the schism, 232, Sextius, Sibrand,
126, 138. S. Gertrude in
den Hoek, church of, 145; at Utrecht, church of, — opening
of the Council in it, 295. Sisters of
Charity, institution of the, 3. S. Medard, scenes
in the cemetery of, 57. Smith, Dr.,
Archbishop of Chalcedon, 6. Soanen, Bishop
of Senez, 51; his protest against his judges at Embrun, 53; his appeal
overruled, 54; his condemnation, 55. Sorbonne, the,
— its appeal against the Unigenitus, 48. Staer, John,
put forward by the Jesuits for Utrecht, 202. Stappart, affair
of, 132. Steenoven, Cornelius,
agent from the Chapter to Bussi, 232; his election, 251; he writes to the
Pope, 252; his consecration, 256; his letter to Benedict XIII., 257; his
consecration declared execrable, 258; his last protest, 259; his death, 260. Sticht, the,
of Utrecht, 63. Stouthandel, Agatha,
miracle of, 273. Suda, James
of, endeavours to obtain the See of Utrecht, 67. Sufficient
Grace, Thomist and Molinist meaning of, 23. Suitbert, Saint,
62. Super Universas,
the Bull, 104. Sweder de
Culenburg, his contest for the archbishopric, 69. T. Temporal sovereignty
of the See resigned by Henry of Bavaria, 72. Tencin, Archbishop,
his infamous character, 53. Theodosius, Archbishop
of Novgorod, in favour of the union with Rome, 269. Thierry de
Viaixnes, 35, 230, 255. Three bishops
— question of their necessity to a valid consecration, 264. Tosini, Abbé,
his Storia e sentimento sopra il Giansenismo, 233. Treatise on
Missions, the, of Rovenius, 150. U. Unigenitus, abstract
of the, by Rohrbacher, 40; by Guettee, 42; opposition to the, 45; appeal of
the four bishops against the, 239. Universal redemption
taught by the Council of Utrecht, 307. Utrecht, an
archbishopric, 62; reduced to a bishopric, 63; temporal power of the bishops
of, 63; degeneracy of its medieval bishops, 65; public exercise of the
Catholic religion abolished in, 113. V. Van Brienen, Abraham,
154. Van Cort, Oratorian,
172. Van der Croon, Theodore,
pastor at Gouda, elected Archbishop, 276; writes to Clement XII., 277; his
consecration, 277; his correspondence with the Cardinal D’Alsace, 278; his
defence, 279; his death, 281. Van der Gronde, John,
87. Van Dorschot, Adrian,
134. Van Erkel, John
Christian, cited to appear at Cologne, 230; excommunicated, 231; his defence
of Codde, 238; he is elected Dean, 239; his Dialogues on the Schism, 248; his
Defensio Ecclesiae Ultrajectinae, 264; death of, 292. Van Espen, Zegers
Bernard, his commencements, 175; sketch of his early life, 176 — 178; his Dissertatio
de Misero Ecclesiae Ultrajectinae Statu, 249; his Responsio
Epistolaris, 265; it is condemned, 265; he flies to Maestricht, 266; his
death at Amersfoort, 274. Van Gent, Admiral,
143. Van Heussen, Hugh
Francis, elected Archbishop, 198; difficulties as to his confirmation, 199;
excluded by the Cardinals, 203; his joy on the occasion, 204; Dean of
Utrecht, 233; his death, 238. Van Mook, Godfrey,
secretary to Rovenius, 149. Van Neercassel, John,
his early history, 159; Bishop of Castoria, and coadjutor of Catz, 160;
succeeds to the archbishopric, 161; his decision on mixed marriages, 162; his
correspondence with the French Jansen-ists, 161; he goes to Rome, 166; to
Paris, 169; in exile, 170; his works, 171; his decision as to the patronage
of livings, 174; his Amor Poenitens, 178; his correspondence with
Arnauld, 184; his last visitation, 191; his death, 195. Van
Nieuwenhuisen, Walter Michael, elected Archbishop, 331;
his death, 339. Van Os, Willibrord,
Archbishop, 345. Van Rhijn, John
Jacob, Archbishop of Utrecht, 340; his death, 344. Van Santen, John,
Archbishop, 356. Van Stiphout, John,
Bishop of Haarlem, 285; his death, 337. Van Velde, Martin,
martyr, 149. Van Vianen, President
of the University of Louvain, 177. Van
Wevelinckhoven, Florentius, Archbishop of Utrecht, 76. Van Wyck, put
forward by the Jesuits for Archbishop, 201. Van Zeller, Procurator
of the Council of Utrecht, 296. Van Zerbolt, Gerard,
88. Varlet, Dominique
Marie, Vicar-General of Louisiana, 241; Bishop of Babylon, 241; confirms at
Amsterdam, 243; arrives at Schamake, 244; suspended, 245; returns to
Amsterdam, 246; his appeal to the Future Council, 247; consecrates Archbishop
Steenoven, 256; visits the Helder, 266; his second apology, 264; attempt to
carry him off from the Castle of Zeist, 277. Viaixnes, Thierry
de, urges the election of an archbishop, 250. Vicariate, erection
of the, 142. Vineam Domini,
Sabaoth, the Bull, 36. Vosmeer, Sasbold,
official to the Grand-Vicar, 117; Grand-Vicar, 118; Vicar-Apostolic,
119;.Archbishop of Utrecht, under the title of Archbishop of Philippi, 121;
banished, 122; his contests with the Jesuits, 123; his Concordat with them,
128; his Pastoral against them, 129; his death, 135. Vosmeer, Tilman,
120. W. Wachtelaer, John,
135. Warmond, church
of, 229. Willibrord, Saint,
Apostle of Friedeland, 62. Windesheim, Canons of, their union with the
Brothers of the Common Life, 101. Writers, the
principal, of the separated Church of Holland, 378. Wyk-by-duursted,
64. Wynhovius, another
name for Rovenius, 142. Z. Zegers, publisher
of the Augustinus, 11. Zutphen, Gerard
of, 95. Zuyder Zee, the
sluice-gates opened, 169. |
John Mason Neale, 1818-1866 |