DDamian, Church of St., repaired by Francis,211,214.Danish invasion of England, its consequences,180.Dante, on Francis and poverty,215.Democracy, Christian, and monasticism,422.Desert, Jerome on attractions of,89.De Tocqueville, on self-subjection,143.Dhaquit, the Chaldean, quoted,20.Dharmapala, on the ascetic ideal in India,357.Dill, Samuel, on Rome's fall and the Christian Church,74,79,108,109.Domestic life, a field of forbidden fruit,394,398.SeeFamily-idealandJerome.Dominic, St., Innocent III. dreams of,216; early life of,230; his mother's dream,231; visits Languedoc,232; rebukes papal legates,234; his crusade against Albigensians,234; his relation to the Holy Inquisition,235; establishes his order,239; at Rome,239; his self-denial and death,240; canonized,241.Dominic, St., Nuns of,242.Dominicans, The, the Inquisition and,238; order of, founded,239; constitution of the order of,241; spread of,241; eminent members,242; three classes of,242; the preaching of,249; quarrel with the Franciscans,249; enter England,251; fatal success and decline of,253,256;on the stigmata of Francis,221; liberal education and,408.Ducis, on the Hermits,32.Duns Scotus, a Franciscan,228.Dunstan, reforms of,182; his character and life-work,186.EEast, monasticism in the,seeMonasticismandMonks.Echard, a Dominican,242.Eckenstein, Lina, on Morton's letter,339.Edersheim, on the Essenes,24.Edgar, King, aids Dunstan in reform,186.Education, The Mendicants and,248; the monks further, in England,253; the effect of monasticism on,407.Edward I. and III., confiscate alien priories,338.Egypt, The hermits of,33; Kingsley and Waddington on same,34.Elijah, and asceticism,30.Elizabeth, Princess, and the Act of Succession,298.Endowments of monasteries, abolished by first Mendicants,244; reason for some,361.England, Church of, separates from Rome,328; causes of, and by whom separation secured,340,342.SeeBritain.Essenes, asceticism of,23.Ethelwold, aids Dunstan,186.Eudoxia, Empress, banishes Chrysostom,117.Eustochium,seePaula.FFabiola, St., Lecky on her charities,105; her care for sick,105; her death,105.Family-ideal, of monastery, Taunton on,143.SeeDomestic Life.Fanaticism, Christianity hostile to,94; tendency toward, among early Christians,129.Farrar, on the luxury of Rome,75.Fasting, amusing instance of rebellion of monks against,120; Athanasius on,121.SeeSelf-denial,AsceticandAsceticism.Ferdinand, of Austria, educated by Jesuits,277.Feudalism, monasticism affected by,373.Finnian, the monk, quarrels with Columba,170.Fisher, G.P., on the stigmata of Francis,223.Fisher, execution of, by Henry VIII.,301,306.Filial love, strangulation of, by monks,397.Forsyth, on St. Francis,225.Foxe, on Thomas Cromwell,310.France, New, and the Jesuits,282.Francis, St., his birth and early years,208; his dreams and sickness,209; visits Rome,210; seeking light on his duty,210,211; sells his father's merchandise and keeps proceeds,211; renounces his father,212; assumes monkish habit,213; repairs Church of St. Damian,214; Dante on poverty and,215;visits Innocent III.,216; visits Mohammedans,217; a lover of birds,217; Longfellow's poem on a homily of,218; his temptations,218; the stigmata,219; death of,224; his character,225; his rule,226; on prayer and preaching,249; method of, forsaken,421.Franciscans, The, first year of,215; order of, sanctioned,216,217; three classes of,226; the rule of,226; Sabatier on rule of,227; the title "Friars Minor,"227; number of,228; St. Clara and,228; The Third Order of,229; quarrel over the vow of poverty,246; prosperity of,246; educational work of,248; quarrel with Dominicans,249; settle in England,251; Baluzii on success of,255; fatal success of,253.Fratricelli, sketch of the,247.Freedom, religious, want of,402.Friars, Begging,seeFranciscans,DominicansandMendicants.Friars Minor,227.Froude, on the Charterhouse monks,302,304; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the report of the Royal Commissioners,317; on the Catholics and the Reformation,346.Future punishment, the monks and the doctrine of,417.GGairdner, on Henry's breach with Rome,301.Galea, the Goth, awed by St. Benedict,137.Gardiner, burns heretics,311.Gasquet, on Thomas Cromwell,310; quotes Burke on the suppression,312.Gauls, monastic, complain to St. Martin,120.Germany, monasticism enters,122.Gervais, reason for his donations,361.Gibbon, on bones of Simeon,57; on Egyptian monks,62; on Roman marriages,110; saying of, applied to Ambrose,116; on military orders,199; quotes Zosimus,348; on the monastic aim,362; on the character of the monks,388.Gindeley, on the Jesuits and the Thirty Years' War,277.Giovanni di San Paolo, on gospel perfection,226.Glastonbury, fall of Abbey of,314.Gnostics, and asceticism,27,366.Godfrey de Bouillon, endows Hospital of St. John,201.Godric, his unique austerities,132.Goldsmith, on the English character,166.Grand Chartreuse, monastery,189.Greece, asceticism in,20.Greeks, ancient, asceticism among the,21.Greek Church, monasticism of the,64,67.Green, J.R., on the preaching friars,254; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the suppression,323.Gregory of Nazianza, on ascetic moderation,65.Gregory, Pope, I.,138; II.,135; VII.,160,178; IX.,241; X.,245.Gregory, St., Monastery of, rules of,141.Griffin, Henry, on the Royal Commissioners,311.Grimke, on historic movements,84.Guigo, rules of,190; on vow of obedience,383.Guizot, on state of early Europe,149; on the Benedictines,404; on monastic education,407.Gustavus, contrasted to monks,394.Guzman,seeDominic.HHallam, on the Albigensians,233,235; on the suppression,334; on charity of the monks,349.Happiness, the key to,392.Hardwick, on the Albigensian doctrines,233.Harnack, on early ascetics,28; on nominal Christianity of Rome,77; on life-ideal in the early church,129; on monasticism and the church,414.Hell, the monks' teachings about,417.Helvidius, on celibacy,113.Henry, King, II., and the British church,165; III., invites students to England,252; IV., confiscates alien priories,338.Henry VIII., and the independence of English church,163; and the fall of the monasteries,286; opinions respecting his character,288,290; inconsistencies of,291; "Defender of the Faith,"293; his divorce from Catharine,293; breach with Rome,294,300; dangers to his throne,295; monks enraged at,296; as "Head of the Church,"297,298; Act of Succession,298; Oath of Supremacy,298,301; excommunicated,306; the struggle for power,324; suppresses "Pilgrims of Grace,"326; his use of monastic revenues,328,330; Coke on his promises to Parliament,329; his motives for the suppression,332; Hooper on reforms of,339; an unconscious agent of new forces,344; two epochs met in reign of,346; Lecky on his use of monastic funds,411.Heresy, growth of, in thirteenth century,206; monks attempt extirpation of,261,402; Jesuits and,276,409.Heretical sects, attack vices of monks,245.Hermit life, founder of,35; unsuited to women,107.Hermits, The, of India,20; of Egypt,33; their mode of life,49; visit Rome,71; effect of story of, in Rome,71,80,84; of Augustine,246.Hilarion, the hermit,49.Hildebrand,seeGregory VII.Hill, on manual labor,142; on fall of monasticism,345.History, monastic contributions to,406.Hoensbroech, Count Paul von, on Jesuitical discipline,268.Holiness, false views of,421.SeeSoul-purityandSalvation.Holy Land, motives for exodus to,97.Holy Maid of Kent,337.Home-life, not to be despised,420.Honorius, III., Pope, sanctions Franciscan Order,217; confirms Dominican Order,239.Hooper, Bishop, on Henry's reforms,339.Hospital, Knights of,seeKnights.Hospitals, founded by Fabiola,105; Lecky on,105; result of woman's sympathy,111.Houghton, Prior,seeCharterhouse.Household duties, Jerome on,114.SeeDomestic Life.House of Lords, majority in the, changed,347.Houses, Religious,seeMonasteries.Hugh, St., of Lincoln, and the swan,157; Ruskin on,189.Human affection, monks indifferent to,394,397.Hume, on the suppression,333.Hypatia, Kingsley's, quoted,61; death of,48.IIdeal, monastie,354.SeeMonasticism.Ignatius, St.,seeLoyola.Independence, Jesuitism and personal,270; of thought, renounced by monks,394.SeeFreedom,Liberty.India, asceticism in,18,357.India, monasticism in,18,357,358; causes of same,355.Individual, influence of the,91; effect of self-sacrifice upon the,390; effect of solitude upon the,393.Industry, modern, not to be despised,420.Innocent, Pope, III.,216,234,239,242; IV.,250; VIII.,339.Inquisition, The Holy, the Albigensian crusade and,233; relation of Dominicans toward,235; its establishment and management,238.Intellectual progress, monasticism opposed to true,407; in Europe,409.Introspection, evil effects of morbid,392.Iona, Monastery of,168.Ireland, St. Patrick labors in,123; monasteries of, as centers of culture,169.Isidore, the hermit, visits Rome,72.Itineracy, substituted for seclusion in cloister,244.JJacob of Vitry, on abuses of charity,411.James, the Apostle, quoted on rich men,377.Jerome, St., his life of Paul of Thebes,35; on Pachomian monks,59; his letter to Rusticus,59; on solitude,61;on number of Egyptian monks,63; on clergy of the fourth and fifth centuries,77; in his cell,85; Schaff on,86; his birth and early life,86; his travels, and austerities,87,92; organizes monastic brotherhood,88; his literary labors,88; glorifies desert life,89; influences Rome,91; his temptations,93; his fondness for the classics,95; his biographies of Roman nuns,96; his life of St. Paula,97, and of Marcella,102; on folly of Roman women,108; on marriage and celibacy,112; on household duties,113; attacks the foes of monks,127; on vices of monks,128; on monastic aim,360; on the natural,366.Jesuits,seeJesus, The Society of.Jesuits, The Pagan,22,426.Jesus Christ, the Essenes and,26; quoted by early ascetics,31, and by Jerome,92; teachings of, used by monks,366,376; his doctrine of wealth,377; his attitude toward rich men,379; the doctrine of the cross and,418.Jesus, The Society of, Sherman on nature of,258; rejects seclusion,258; Bishop Keane on,259,273; how differs from other monastic communities,259; founded by Loyola,264; constitution and polity of,265; grades of members of,265; vow of obedience in,266; von Hoensbroech on,268; confession in,269; Carlyle on obedience in,271; casuistry of,272,429; its doctrine of probabilism,274; the Roman Church and,275; Roman foes of,276; mission of,276; its attitude toward Reformation,277; the Thirty Years' War and,277; calumnies against,279; Clement XIV. dissolves,279; expulsion of, from Europe,279; missionary labors of,280; Parkman contrasts, with Puritans,281; failure of,283; restoration of,283; causes for rise of,374; hostility of, to free government,402; liberal education opposed by,409.SeeLoyola.Jewish asceticism,23.Jocelin, quoted by Carlyle,145.John, King, confiscates alien priories,338.John, St., Knights of,seeKnights.John, St., of Calama, visits his sister in disguise,397.John, the Apostle, on love of the world,377.John the Baptist, and asceticism, 30.Johnson, on Monastery of Iona, 168.Joseph, St., Church of, in England, 163.Josephus on the Essenes,23.Jovinian, hostility of, toward monks,127; compared by Neander to Luther,127.Julian, Emperor, the exodus of monks and the,127.Juvenal, satire of, on Roman women,82.
D
D
Damian, Church of St., repaired by Francis,211,214.Danish invasion of England, its consequences,180.Dante, on Francis and poverty,215.Democracy, Christian, and monasticism,422.Desert, Jerome on attractions of,89.De Tocqueville, on self-subjection,143.Dhaquit, the Chaldean, quoted,20.Dharmapala, on the ascetic ideal in India,357.Dill, Samuel, on Rome's fall and the Christian Church,74,79,108,109.Domestic life, a field of forbidden fruit,394,398.SeeFamily-idealandJerome.Dominic, St., Innocent III. dreams of,216; early life of,230; his mother's dream,231; visits Languedoc,232; rebukes papal legates,234; his crusade against Albigensians,234; his relation to the Holy Inquisition,235; establishes his order,239; at Rome,239; his self-denial and death,240; canonized,241.Dominic, St., Nuns of,242.Dominicans, The, the Inquisition and,238; order of, founded,239; constitution of the order of,241; spread of,241; eminent members,242; three classes of,242; the preaching of,249; quarrel with the Franciscans,249; enter England,251; fatal success and decline of,253,256;on the stigmata of Francis,221; liberal education and,408.Ducis, on the Hermits,32.Duns Scotus, a Franciscan,228.Dunstan, reforms of,182; his character and life-work,186.
Damian, Church of St., repaired by Francis,211,214.
Danish invasion of England, its consequences,180.
Dante, on Francis and poverty,215.
Democracy, Christian, and monasticism,422.
Desert, Jerome on attractions of,89.
De Tocqueville, on self-subjection,143.
Dhaquit, the Chaldean, quoted,20.
Dharmapala, on the ascetic ideal in India,357.
Dill, Samuel, on Rome's fall and the Christian Church,74,79,108,109.
Domestic life, a field of forbidden fruit,394,398.SeeFamily-idealandJerome.
Dominic, St., Innocent III. dreams of,216; early life of,230; his mother's dream,231; visits Languedoc,232; rebukes papal legates,234; his crusade against Albigensians,234; his relation to the Holy Inquisition,235; establishes his order,239; at Rome,239; his self-denial and death,240; canonized,241.
Dominic, St., Nuns of,242.
Dominicans, The, the Inquisition and,238; order of, founded,239; constitution of the order of,241; spread of,241; eminent members,242; three classes of,242; the preaching of,249; quarrel with the Franciscans,249; enter England,251; fatal success and decline of,253,256;on the stigmata of Francis,221; liberal education and,408.
Ducis, on the Hermits,32.
Duns Scotus, a Franciscan,228.
Dunstan, reforms of,182; his character and life-work,186.
E
E
East, monasticism in the,seeMonasticismandMonks.Echard, a Dominican,242.Eckenstein, Lina, on Morton's letter,339.Edersheim, on the Essenes,24.Edgar, King, aids Dunstan in reform,186.Education, The Mendicants and,248; the monks further, in England,253; the effect of monasticism on,407.Edward I. and III., confiscate alien priories,338.Egypt, The hermits of,33; Kingsley and Waddington on same,34.Elijah, and asceticism,30.Elizabeth, Princess, and the Act of Succession,298.Endowments of monasteries, abolished by first Mendicants,244; reason for some,361.England, Church of, separates from Rome,328; causes of, and by whom separation secured,340,342.SeeBritain.Essenes, asceticism of,23.Ethelwold, aids Dunstan,186.Eudoxia, Empress, banishes Chrysostom,117.Eustochium,seePaula.
East, monasticism in the,seeMonasticismandMonks.
Echard, a Dominican,242.
Eckenstein, Lina, on Morton's letter,339.
Edersheim, on the Essenes,24.
Edgar, King, aids Dunstan in reform,186.
Education, The Mendicants and,248; the monks further, in England,253; the effect of monasticism on,407.
Edward I. and III., confiscate alien priories,338.
Egypt, The hermits of,33; Kingsley and Waddington on same,34.
Elijah, and asceticism,30.
Elizabeth, Princess, and the Act of Succession,298.
Endowments of monasteries, abolished by first Mendicants,244; reason for some,361.
England, Church of, separates from Rome,328; causes of, and by whom separation secured,340,342.SeeBritain.
Essenes, asceticism of,23.
Ethelwold, aids Dunstan,186.
Eudoxia, Empress, banishes Chrysostom,117.
Eustochium,seePaula.
F
F
Fabiola, St., Lecky on her charities,105; her care for sick,105; her death,105.Family-ideal, of monastery, Taunton on,143.SeeDomestic Life.Fanaticism, Christianity hostile to,94; tendency toward, among early Christians,129.Farrar, on the luxury of Rome,75.Fasting, amusing instance of rebellion of monks against,120; Athanasius on,121.SeeSelf-denial,AsceticandAsceticism.Ferdinand, of Austria, educated by Jesuits,277.Feudalism, monasticism affected by,373.Finnian, the monk, quarrels with Columba,170.Fisher, G.P., on the stigmata of Francis,223.Fisher, execution of, by Henry VIII.,301,306.Filial love, strangulation of, by monks,397.Forsyth, on St. Francis,225.Foxe, on Thomas Cromwell,310.France, New, and the Jesuits,282.Francis, St., his birth and early years,208; his dreams and sickness,209; visits Rome,210; seeking light on his duty,210,211; sells his father's merchandise and keeps proceeds,211; renounces his father,212; assumes monkish habit,213; repairs Church of St. Damian,214; Dante on poverty and,215;visits Innocent III.,216; visits Mohammedans,217; a lover of birds,217; Longfellow's poem on a homily of,218; his temptations,218; the stigmata,219; death of,224; his character,225; his rule,226; on prayer and preaching,249; method of, forsaken,421.Franciscans, The, first year of,215; order of, sanctioned,216,217; three classes of,226; the rule of,226; Sabatier on rule of,227; the title "Friars Minor,"227; number of,228; St. Clara and,228; The Third Order of,229; quarrel over the vow of poverty,246; prosperity of,246; educational work of,248; quarrel with Dominicans,249; settle in England,251; Baluzii on success of,255; fatal success of,253.Fratricelli, sketch of the,247.Freedom, religious, want of,402.Friars, Begging,seeFranciscans,DominicansandMendicants.Friars Minor,227.Froude, on the Charterhouse monks,302,304; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the report of the Royal Commissioners,317; on the Catholics and the Reformation,346.Future punishment, the monks and the doctrine of,417.
Fabiola, St., Lecky on her charities,105; her care for sick,105; her death,105.
Family-ideal, of monastery, Taunton on,143.SeeDomestic Life.
Fanaticism, Christianity hostile to,94; tendency toward, among early Christians,129.
Farrar, on the luxury of Rome,75.
Fasting, amusing instance of rebellion of monks against,120; Athanasius on,121.SeeSelf-denial,AsceticandAsceticism.
Ferdinand, of Austria, educated by Jesuits,277.
Feudalism, monasticism affected by,373.
Finnian, the monk, quarrels with Columba,170.
Fisher, G.P., on the stigmata of Francis,223.
Fisher, execution of, by Henry VIII.,301,306.
Filial love, strangulation of, by monks,397.
Forsyth, on St. Francis,225.
Foxe, on Thomas Cromwell,310.
France, New, and the Jesuits,282.
Francis, St., his birth and early years,208; his dreams and sickness,209; visits Rome,210; seeking light on his duty,210,211; sells his father's merchandise and keeps proceeds,211; renounces his father,212; assumes monkish habit,213; repairs Church of St. Damian,214; Dante on poverty and,215;visits Innocent III.,216; visits Mohammedans,217; a lover of birds,217; Longfellow's poem on a homily of,218; his temptations,218; the stigmata,219; death of,224; his character,225; his rule,226; on prayer and preaching,249; method of, forsaken,421.
Franciscans, The, first year of,215; order of, sanctioned,216,217; three classes of,226; the rule of,226; Sabatier on rule of,227; the title "Friars Minor,"227; number of,228; St. Clara and,228; The Third Order of,229; quarrel over the vow of poverty,246; prosperity of,246; educational work of,248; quarrel with Dominicans,249; settle in England,251; Baluzii on success of,255; fatal success of,253.
Fratricelli, sketch of the,247.
Freedom, religious, want of,402.
Friars, Begging,seeFranciscans,DominicansandMendicants.
Friars Minor,227.
Froude, on the Charterhouse monks,302,304; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the report of the Royal Commissioners,317; on the Catholics and the Reformation,346.
Future punishment, the monks and the doctrine of,417.
G
G
Gairdner, on Henry's breach with Rome,301.Galea, the Goth, awed by St. Benedict,137.Gardiner, burns heretics,311.Gasquet, on Thomas Cromwell,310; quotes Burke on the suppression,312.Gauls, monastic, complain to St. Martin,120.Germany, monasticism enters,122.Gervais, reason for his donations,361.Gibbon, on bones of Simeon,57; on Egyptian monks,62; on Roman marriages,110; saying of, applied to Ambrose,116; on military orders,199; quotes Zosimus,348; on the monastic aim,362; on the character of the monks,388.Gindeley, on the Jesuits and the Thirty Years' War,277.Giovanni di San Paolo, on gospel perfection,226.Glastonbury, fall of Abbey of,314.Gnostics, and asceticism,27,366.Godfrey de Bouillon, endows Hospital of St. John,201.Godric, his unique austerities,132.Goldsmith, on the English character,166.Grand Chartreuse, monastery,189.Greece, asceticism in,20.Greeks, ancient, asceticism among the,21.Greek Church, monasticism of the,64,67.Green, J.R., on the preaching friars,254; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the suppression,323.Gregory of Nazianza, on ascetic moderation,65.Gregory, Pope, I.,138; II.,135; VII.,160,178; IX.,241; X.,245.Gregory, St., Monastery of, rules of,141.Griffin, Henry, on the Royal Commissioners,311.Grimke, on historic movements,84.Guigo, rules of,190; on vow of obedience,383.Guizot, on state of early Europe,149; on the Benedictines,404; on monastic education,407.Gustavus, contrasted to monks,394.Guzman,seeDominic.
Gairdner, on Henry's breach with Rome,301.
Galea, the Goth, awed by St. Benedict,137.
Gardiner, burns heretics,311.
Gasquet, on Thomas Cromwell,310; quotes Burke on the suppression,312.
Gauls, monastic, complain to St. Martin,120.
Germany, monasticism enters,122.
Gervais, reason for his donations,361.
Gibbon, on bones of Simeon,57; on Egyptian monks,62; on Roman marriages,110; saying of, applied to Ambrose,116; on military orders,199; quotes Zosimus,348; on the monastic aim,362; on the character of the monks,388.
Gindeley, on the Jesuits and the Thirty Years' War,277.
Giovanni di San Paolo, on gospel perfection,226.
Glastonbury, fall of Abbey of,314.
Gnostics, and asceticism,27,366.
Godfrey de Bouillon, endows Hospital of St. John,201.
Godric, his unique austerities,132.
Goldsmith, on the English character,166.
Grand Chartreuse, monastery,189.
Greece, asceticism in,20.
Greeks, ancient, asceticism among the,21.
Greek Church, monasticism of the,64,67.
Green, J.R., on the preaching friars,254; on Thomas Cromwell,309; on the suppression,323.
Gregory of Nazianza, on ascetic moderation,65.
Gregory, Pope, I.,138; II.,135; VII.,160,178; IX.,241; X.,245.
Gregory, St., Monastery of, rules of,141.
Griffin, Henry, on the Royal Commissioners,311.
Grimke, on historic movements,84.
Guigo, rules of,190; on vow of obedience,383.
Guizot, on state of early Europe,149; on the Benedictines,404; on monastic education,407.
Gustavus, contrasted to monks,394.
Guzman,seeDominic.
H
H
Hallam, on the Albigensians,233,235; on the suppression,334; on charity of the monks,349.Happiness, the key to,392.Hardwick, on the Albigensian doctrines,233.Harnack, on early ascetics,28; on nominal Christianity of Rome,77; on life-ideal in the early church,129; on monasticism and the church,414.Hell, the monks' teachings about,417.Helvidius, on celibacy,113.Henry, King, II., and the British church,165; III., invites students to England,252; IV., confiscates alien priories,338.Henry VIII., and the independence of English church,163; and the fall of the monasteries,286; opinions respecting his character,288,290; inconsistencies of,291; "Defender of the Faith,"293; his divorce from Catharine,293; breach with Rome,294,300; dangers to his throne,295; monks enraged at,296; as "Head of the Church,"297,298; Act of Succession,298; Oath of Supremacy,298,301; excommunicated,306; the struggle for power,324; suppresses "Pilgrims of Grace,"326; his use of monastic revenues,328,330; Coke on his promises to Parliament,329; his motives for the suppression,332; Hooper on reforms of,339; an unconscious agent of new forces,344; two epochs met in reign of,346; Lecky on his use of monastic funds,411.Heresy, growth of, in thirteenth century,206; monks attempt extirpation of,261,402; Jesuits and,276,409.Heretical sects, attack vices of monks,245.Hermit life, founder of,35; unsuited to women,107.Hermits, The, of India,20; of Egypt,33; their mode of life,49; visit Rome,71; effect of story of, in Rome,71,80,84; of Augustine,246.Hilarion, the hermit,49.Hildebrand,seeGregory VII.Hill, on manual labor,142; on fall of monasticism,345.History, monastic contributions to,406.Hoensbroech, Count Paul von, on Jesuitical discipline,268.Holiness, false views of,421.SeeSoul-purityandSalvation.Holy Land, motives for exodus to,97.Holy Maid of Kent,337.Home-life, not to be despised,420.Honorius, III., Pope, sanctions Franciscan Order,217; confirms Dominican Order,239.Hooper, Bishop, on Henry's reforms,339.Hospital, Knights of,seeKnights.Hospitals, founded by Fabiola,105; Lecky on,105; result of woman's sympathy,111.Houghton, Prior,seeCharterhouse.Household duties, Jerome on,114.SeeDomestic Life.House of Lords, majority in the, changed,347.Houses, Religious,seeMonasteries.Hugh, St., of Lincoln, and the swan,157; Ruskin on,189.Human affection, monks indifferent to,394,397.Hume, on the suppression,333.Hypatia, Kingsley's, quoted,61; death of,48.
Hallam, on the Albigensians,233,235; on the suppression,334; on charity of the monks,349.
Happiness, the key to,392.
Hardwick, on the Albigensian doctrines,233.
Harnack, on early ascetics,28; on nominal Christianity of Rome,77; on life-ideal in the early church,129; on monasticism and the church,414.
Hell, the monks' teachings about,417.
Helvidius, on celibacy,113.
Henry, King, II., and the British church,165; III., invites students to England,252; IV., confiscates alien priories,338.
Henry VIII., and the independence of English church,163; and the fall of the monasteries,286; opinions respecting his character,288,290; inconsistencies of,291; "Defender of the Faith,"293; his divorce from Catharine,293; breach with Rome,294,300; dangers to his throne,295; monks enraged at,296; as "Head of the Church,"297,298; Act of Succession,298; Oath of Supremacy,298,301; excommunicated,306; the struggle for power,324; suppresses "Pilgrims of Grace,"326; his use of monastic revenues,328,330; Coke on his promises to Parliament,329; his motives for the suppression,332; Hooper on reforms of,339; an unconscious agent of new forces,344; two epochs met in reign of,346; Lecky on his use of monastic funds,411.
Heresy, growth of, in thirteenth century,206; monks attempt extirpation of,261,402; Jesuits and,276,409.
Heretical sects, attack vices of monks,245.
Hermit life, founder of,35; unsuited to women,107.
Hermits, The, of India,20; of Egypt,33; their mode of life,49; visit Rome,71; effect of story of, in Rome,71,80,84; of Augustine,246.
Hilarion, the hermit,49.
Hildebrand,seeGregory VII.
Hill, on manual labor,142; on fall of monasticism,345.
History, monastic contributions to,406.
Hoensbroech, Count Paul von, on Jesuitical discipline,268.
Holiness, false views of,421.SeeSoul-purityandSalvation.
Holy Land, motives for exodus to,97.
Holy Maid of Kent,337.
Home-life, not to be despised,420.
Honorius, III., Pope, sanctions Franciscan Order,217; confirms Dominican Order,239.
Hooper, Bishop, on Henry's reforms,339.
Hospital, Knights of,seeKnights.
Hospitals, founded by Fabiola,105; Lecky on,105; result of woman's sympathy,111.
Houghton, Prior,seeCharterhouse.
Household duties, Jerome on,114.SeeDomestic Life.
House of Lords, majority in the, changed,347.
Houses, Religious,seeMonasteries.
Hugh, St., of Lincoln, and the swan,157; Ruskin on,189.
Human affection, monks indifferent to,394,397.
Hume, on the suppression,333.
Hypatia, Kingsley's, quoted,61; death of,48.
I
I
Ideal, monastie,354.SeeMonasticism.Ignatius, St.,seeLoyola.Independence, Jesuitism and personal,270; of thought, renounced by monks,394.SeeFreedom,Liberty.India, asceticism in,18,357.India, monasticism in,18,357,358; causes of same,355.Individual, influence of the,91; effect of self-sacrifice upon the,390; effect of solitude upon the,393.Industry, modern, not to be despised,420.Innocent, Pope, III.,216,234,239,242; IV.,250; VIII.,339.Inquisition, The Holy, the Albigensian crusade and,233; relation of Dominicans toward,235; its establishment and management,238.Intellectual progress, monasticism opposed to true,407; in Europe,409.Introspection, evil effects of morbid,392.Iona, Monastery of,168.Ireland, St. Patrick labors in,123; monasteries of, as centers of culture,169.Isidore, the hermit, visits Rome,72.Itineracy, substituted for seclusion in cloister,244.
Ideal, monastie,354.SeeMonasticism.
Ignatius, St.,seeLoyola.
Independence, Jesuitism and personal,270; of thought, renounced by monks,394.SeeFreedom,Liberty.
India, asceticism in,18,357.
India, monasticism in,18,357,358; causes of same,355.
Individual, influence of the,91; effect of self-sacrifice upon the,390; effect of solitude upon the,393.
Industry, modern, not to be despised,420.
Innocent, Pope, III.,216,234,239,242; IV.,250; VIII.,339.
Inquisition, The Holy, the Albigensian crusade and,233; relation of Dominicans toward,235; its establishment and management,238.
Intellectual progress, monasticism opposed to true,407; in Europe,409.
Introspection, evil effects of morbid,392.
Iona, Monastery of,168.
Ireland, St. Patrick labors in,123; monasteries of, as centers of culture,169.
Isidore, the hermit, visits Rome,72.
Itineracy, substituted for seclusion in cloister,244.
J
J
Jacob of Vitry, on abuses of charity,411.James, the Apostle, quoted on rich men,377.Jerome, St., his life of Paul of Thebes,35; on Pachomian monks,59; his letter to Rusticus,59; on solitude,61;on number of Egyptian monks,63; on clergy of the fourth and fifth centuries,77; in his cell,85; Schaff on,86; his birth and early life,86; his travels, and austerities,87,92; organizes monastic brotherhood,88; his literary labors,88; glorifies desert life,89; influences Rome,91; his temptations,93; his fondness for the classics,95; his biographies of Roman nuns,96; his life of St. Paula,97, and of Marcella,102; on folly of Roman women,108; on marriage and celibacy,112; on household duties,113; attacks the foes of monks,127; on vices of monks,128; on monastic aim,360; on the natural,366.Jesuits,seeJesus, The Society of.Jesuits, The Pagan,22,426.Jesus Christ, the Essenes and,26; quoted by early ascetics,31, and by Jerome,92; teachings of, used by monks,366,376; his doctrine of wealth,377; his attitude toward rich men,379; the doctrine of the cross and,418.Jesus, The Society of, Sherman on nature of,258; rejects seclusion,258; Bishop Keane on,259,273; how differs from other monastic communities,259; founded by Loyola,264; constitution and polity of,265; grades of members of,265; vow of obedience in,266; von Hoensbroech on,268; confession in,269; Carlyle on obedience in,271; casuistry of,272,429; its doctrine of probabilism,274; the Roman Church and,275; Roman foes of,276; mission of,276; its attitude toward Reformation,277; the Thirty Years' War and,277; calumnies against,279; Clement XIV. dissolves,279; expulsion of, from Europe,279; missionary labors of,280; Parkman contrasts, with Puritans,281; failure of,283; restoration of,283; causes for rise of,374; hostility of, to free government,402; liberal education opposed by,409.SeeLoyola.Jewish asceticism,23.Jocelin, quoted by Carlyle,145.John, King, confiscates alien priories,338.John, St., Knights of,seeKnights.John, St., of Calama, visits his sister in disguise,397.John, the Apostle, on love of the world,377.John the Baptist, and asceticism, 30.Johnson, on Monastery of Iona, 168.Joseph, St., Church of, in England, 163.Josephus on the Essenes,23.Jovinian, hostility of, toward monks,127; compared by Neander to Luther,127.Julian, Emperor, the exodus of monks and the,127.Juvenal, satire of, on Roman women,82.
Jacob of Vitry, on abuses of charity,411.
James, the Apostle, quoted on rich men,377.
Jerome, St., his life of Paul of Thebes,35; on Pachomian monks,59; his letter to Rusticus,59; on solitude,61;on number of Egyptian monks,63; on clergy of the fourth and fifth centuries,77; in his cell,85; Schaff on,86; his birth and early life,86; his travels, and austerities,87,92; organizes monastic brotherhood,88; his literary labors,88; glorifies desert life,89; influences Rome,91; his temptations,93; his fondness for the classics,95; his biographies of Roman nuns,96; his life of St. Paula,97, and of Marcella,102; on folly of Roman women,108; on marriage and celibacy,112; on household duties,113; attacks the foes of monks,127; on vices of monks,128; on monastic aim,360; on the natural,366.
Jesuits,seeJesus, The Society of.
Jesuits, The Pagan,22,426.
Jesus Christ, the Essenes and,26; quoted by early ascetics,31, and by Jerome,92; teachings of, used by monks,366,376; his doctrine of wealth,377; his attitude toward rich men,379; the doctrine of the cross and,418.
Jesus, The Society of, Sherman on nature of,258; rejects seclusion,258; Bishop Keane on,259,273; how differs from other monastic communities,259; founded by Loyola,264; constitution and polity of,265; grades of members of,265; vow of obedience in,266; von Hoensbroech on,268; confession in,269; Carlyle on obedience in,271; casuistry of,272,429; its doctrine of probabilism,274; the Roman Church and,275; Roman foes of,276; mission of,276; its attitude toward Reformation,277; the Thirty Years' War and,277; calumnies against,279; Clement XIV. dissolves,279; expulsion of, from Europe,279; missionary labors of,280; Parkman contrasts, with Puritans,281; failure of,283; restoration of,283; causes for rise of,374; hostility of, to free government,402; liberal education opposed by,409.SeeLoyola.
Jewish asceticism,23.
Jocelin, quoted by Carlyle,145.
John, King, confiscates alien priories,338.
John, St., Knights of,seeKnights.
John, St., of Calama, visits his sister in disguise,397.
John, the Apostle, on love of the world,377.
John the Baptist, and asceticism, 30.
Johnson, on Monastery of Iona, 168.
Joseph, St., Church of, in England, 163.
Josephus on the Essenes,23.
Jovinian, hostility of, toward monks,127; compared by Neander to Luther,127.
Julian, Emperor, the exodus of monks and the,127.
Juvenal, satire of, on Roman women,82.