Acclamation, Acton on,83;Plantier on,204;fears of, at first session,296;Manning on,302;De Luca on,358;again suggested,480,481;checked by American bishops,490.Acton, Lord, on counsel given by cardinals,59;on the seventeen questions,119;view of Antonelli,231;on the views of the Curia,232,233;on secrecy,365;on how information leaked out,367.Antonelli, Cardinal, Newman's notion of as to Syllabus,123;answers Schwarzenberg,181;his position towards the Council,340;reply to Beust,447;reply to Daru,448.Aristocracy, in Papal States; old not to be restored in new theocracy,353.Armenians, in Rome, arrests, interdict, and flight from monastery,516-520.Arnim, Count, to Bismarck; acts as mediator,657.Audu, Patriarch of Babylon, speech of,377;ordered alone to the Vatican,377;night scene with the Pope,461-464.Austrian bishops refuse to keep the law,207.Babylon, Patriarch of,seeAudu.Baptism, political effects of,87,371,372.Bell, for Presidents, mystic symbols on, snake assailing bark of St. Peter,237.Bellarmine, on bishops opposing Pope,396.Beust, Count, Austrian minister, reply to Hohenlohe,185;despatch to Rome,445;reply to Antonelli,447;defines the position of the State,453.Bianchi, Procurator-General of the Dominicans, sermon in St. Peter's preceding the Council,242.Bishops, relation of, to the Pope,77;his prefects,78;bearing discordant testimony to the faith, i.,227;disabilities of, in the Council,322,325,333,344,367,398,399,400,404,418,468,470;memoranda of, on proposed decrees,534;their oath,604.Bismarck, to Arnim on relations of Vatican and Germany,378.Blacas, Duke of, the Crusader, his death and exemption from purgatory,150.Bull, convoking Council,143;limiting censures (Apostolicae Sedis),335;hierarchical, fiscal, and political aspects of this Bull,336-339;suspending Council,663.Campagna, the,90.Canon Law, the common law of a country with or without consent of its Parliament,48;ought to be the law of the State,209.Canons, the famous twenty-one published, and consequent alarm,431ff.;new and all-important one, first proposed by guile and next forced through,244.Cardinals ordered to write secret notes as to the question of a future Council,2;contents of notes,57-59.Catechism, changes in,463ff.;vote upon the new,533.Cecconi, Archbishop of Florence, subject of his history,2.Church and State, subordination of State,19ff.,41,42,245,340,439,451,580;ideal of such subordination realized in Papal States,88.Church, right of, to inflict pains and penalties,20,41,50,29;Montalembert on,155;Lacordaire forced to profess,162;embodied in the Inquisition,234;consent of, to dogmas declared unnecessary,615.Civilization means the civil system,15;Christian civilization means Pope over all princes,41.Civiltá Cattolica, commencement of,14;its mission,15;first manifesto,15ff.;on Syllabus,43;quoted,passim.Clergy, morals and training of,168,412,423,424ff.Collingridge, Arthur, English Crusader,140.Comma, vote upon,494.Commissions, six secret ones at work,180.Communication of Pope with the faithful, what is meant by,24,340,581.Concordats,201.Council, Vatican, first formal preparations,2;notes of cardinals upon,57-59;of selected bishops upon,65ff.;preparations for, interrupted by Sadowa,72;postponed in 1867,73;publicly intimated,113;objects and composition of,483;fears of political effects,170;manifestoes preparatory to,171,192,196;first session,271-307;second session,379;third session,520;fourth session of,629;seeProcedure, Rules of.Creed, that of Pius IV. altered the decrees of Trent,128;a new one read at Vatican Council,381;old and new together,382.Crotti, Count, refuses to take the oaths to Italy,82.Crusade of St. Peter, efficiency of Crusaders,132;religious incitements to,133;tales of,138;the Pope in camp,149;preaching the Crusade,150;Crusaders exempt from purgatory,151;Allet's order,172;France commended for,588;to subdue the world,653;Crusaders leave Rome,660.Darboy, Archbishop of Paris, reprimand of,78;discusses whether a Liberal prince may or may not be absolved,156;refuted at Rome,156;his forecast of Perils in the Council,215;speaks,416;a speech of, in full,555.Daru, Count, minister of France, opinions of,400;threatens to withdraw French garrison,442;important despatch,447;reply to Antonelli,450ff.;suddenly retires,460.Death, good hope in, for Cardinals,372;less hope for bishops,373.Decrees, purport of those of Vatican Council,491;conclusion to first imposed,493;Canon in second imposed,597;text of, Appendix C.Directing Congregation, secret proceedings of,165;deprives bishops of right of proposing measures, enforces secrecy, holds fifty meetings,385.Direct power and indirect, doctrine of,449.Discussion not anticipated by the Curia,342-350.Döllinger, his position and reputation,180;abused by Ultramontanes,422,472;his first open manifesto,425;addresses to,471;declares that majorities cannot make dogmas,484.Dufournel, two brothers, Crusaders, their martyrdom and honours,186ff.Dupanloup, Bishop of Orleans, his manifesto,215-222;lectured by Deschamps,222;reply to Deschamps,427;refused theimprimaturin Rome,426;personal attacks upon,457.Encyclical of December 8, 1864,5.Excommunication blasts the soul, according to Pius IX,32.Faculties, Quinquennial,55,77,169.Falcimagne, Abbé, contends that a Liberal prince may not be absolved,159.Florence abused by Veuillot,85.Free Church in a Free State, origin of the phrase,33;what Free Church means,48.Freemasons denounced,79.Friedrich, Professor, replies to Manning,226;hisTagebuch,240;his journey,241,242;on program,317;on decrees on faith,347;on Jesuits,365;on Roman monks,394;on morals of the clergy,412ff.;his internal conflict,474;on decree on infallibility,476;on the inevitable sunbeam,547.German bishops, ambiguous manifesto of, at Fulda,204;dismissed by Nardi,346,348;on infallibility,405.German language, put out of priests' schools,194.German notables (Catholic), meeting of, in Berlin,205.Goldoni, the Crusader, his death and exemption from purgatory,151.Governments, proper place of, in education,16;warned by Manning,225;byCiviltá,352;their duty as to infallibility,455.Gratry, Father, letters of,422.Guidi, Cardinal, speech of,583;excitement caused by,584;scene with the Pope,585;votesPlacet,632.Guillemin, the Crusader, anecdote of,72;death and posthumous honours,139-141.Hefele, Bishop of Rottenburg, gives confused advice,321;on Pope Honorius,500;states the dilemma prepared by the Pope for the bishops of the minority,604.Hergenröther, among the men whom Schwarzenberg deemed weak,181;held up in England as an authority.id.;asserts that bishops in Vatican Council had freedom of proposition,320;his Anti-Janus,395.History, official, how written,592,593.Hohenlohe, Cardinal, his dinner parties,417ff.Hohenlohe, Prince, minister of Bavaria, his circular to cabinets,184.Italians, excommunicated,31;abused,188,211,402.Italy in 1846,8;again in 1848,9;in 1854,28;in 1862,34;in 1867,84,85.Immaculate Conception, effects of the proclamation upon polity,3.Immunity, purport of,39,48.Indulgences,186.Infallibility, foreshadowed,182;address in favour of,402;counter address,404;opposed on principle,405;decision to bring it forward,477;new doctrine in many sees,505;danger of, to States, hinted by bishops,508;to be brought on out of order,529;responsibility for, disowned by many bishops,530.Inquisitor, a canonised,73,171.Instruction, freedom of, illustrated,16ff.Isabella, Queen of Spain, promises to Pope armed aid,173;receives the golden rose,177.Janus,182,197.Jesuits, morals of,415.Jong, Peter, the Crusader, his martyrdom,150.Kenrick, Archbishop of St. Louis, on the committees,334;speaks,360;shows how the conclusion to the first decree was passed,493;on infallibility,536;questions catholicity of the Council,538;refutes Cullen,549;on why British government conceded Catholic emancipation,566;on oaths and declarations,569;describes first teaching of infallibility in Maynooth,554.Ketteler, Bishop of Mainz, his table talk,420.Kings, subordinate to ecclesiastical authority,20,21,23,39,41,42,46,48,136,191.Kings, subordinate to ecclesiastical authority,20,21,23,39,41,42,46,48,136,191;not to be tolerated after Council, if they do not rightly govern,268,439;two in every Catholic country,48,133,191;not to be convoked to the Council,135,183.Kleutgen, the Jesuit, story of,482.Lay States deprecated,88.Ledochowski made Primate of Poland and representative of King of Poland,483.Liberal Catholics, first used and then cast off,154;policy of,74;denounced,46,47,194,210,322;condemned under the head of naturalism,47.Liberalism condemned,43,46,47,189,590.Liberty of the Press condemned,30,86,158.Liberty, religious, the Ultramontane view of,25;is a plague,30,160.Liverani, Prelate and Protonotary of the Holy See, on Papal States,9;on morals of the Court,108;and of the City,109.Majority, as a rule of faith new,469.Manning, Cardinal, his account of the confirmation of the Syllabus,108;on the consequences to civil authorities,121,122;his manifesto,222;he finds the Papal Church not narrow enough,223;replied to by Friedrich,226;Vitelleschi on,302,308,403;his testimony to the decorum and freedom of the Council,495;his speech on infallibility,564;confuted by Kenrick,id.;on deputation to Pope to harden his heart,613;present from his fellow labourers the Jesuits,641.Maret, Bishop of Sora, his work,198;reviewed by Schulte,200.Margotti, Don, editor ofUnitá Cattolica, on Ollivier,400.Marriage, a source of revenues and power,55.Menzel, Professor, forecasts of doctrinal change,173.Menzel, Wolfgang, cited in two or three places.Michaud, Abbé, takes part in the debate on the lawfulness of absolving a Liberal prince,158;on changes of catechism,464.Military spectacle for bishops,316.Milton on Romish ceremonies,304.Minority, annoyances of,458;proposal that they should quit the Council after guile practised on July 5th,599;flight of,389;represented more Catholics than majority,620.Montalembert, on the reaction of 1852 and years following,22,74;opposes Italy,32;on new Ultramontanism,74;his posthumous work,153;traces ruin of Spain to absolutism and the Inquisition,178;his strong opposition to infallibility,192;his dying manifesto,484;Pope forbids a high mass for him,487.Moreno Garcia, President of Ecuador, a model ruler,236.Mortal sin, a new one,399.Munich, replies of Faculties of Theology and Law to the questions of the king,180.Napoleon III, policy of,233.Nationalism a fault,77.Naturalism a heresy which includes two degrees of Liberal Catholicism,47,87.Natural order and supernatural order, illustration of the terms,58,59.Newman, Dr., on the Syllabus,123ff.;declines invitation to Rome,135;his alarm at the prospect of the new dogma,510;rallied and exorcised by theCiviltá,514;retort of Veuillot upon,515.O'Connell on the doctrine of Papists properly so called,122.Ollivier, Emile, Prime Minister of France, policy of,233,234;his proper course prescribed by Veuillot,393;changes the policy inaugurated by Daru,460.Opposition, the existence of, denied,314;its existence confessed,315;efforts to disorganize,334;found so grave that it must be put down,409.Orientals invited to Council,144;their response,145-148.Papacy a universal monarchy, and over all princes,37,39,41,42,119,145,192,451,452;crimes of, against Italy,662.Papal States, the model state for the whole world,87,189,589ff.;no wrong act can be done in them by authority,88;plains of,91;dwellings of,91;people of,92;villages of,93;implements, cattle, and towns,93-100;classes,101-103;moral character of capital,106.Parliamentary government decried,188,191,210,266,401,454.Parliament, English and Irish members of, are to have obligations imposed,689.Perfect Society, the Church a,39.Petitions and protests of bishops of the minority,317,367,369,407,408,468,504.Pius IX., his States disturbed,9;witnesses general commotions,9;calls for armed aid,10;