INDEX.
-
Abraham, Noah, and Moses said to have been alchymists, i. 95, 114.
-
Acre besieged in the Third Crusade, ii. 69;
-
its surrender to the Christians, 71.
-
Addison’s account of a Rosicrucian, i. 177;
-
his opinion on duelling, ii. 281.
-
Agricola, George, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 145.
-
Agrippa, Cornelius, memoir, and portrait of, i. 138;
-
his power of raising the dead and the absent, 142.
-
Aislabie, Mr., Chancellor of the Exchequer, his participation in the
South-Sea fraud, i. 73, 78;
-
rejoicings on his committal to the Tower, 79.
-
Alain Delisle. (See Delisle.)
-
Albertus Magnus, his studies in alchymy, i. 99;
-
portrait of, 100;
-
his animated brazen statue destroyed by Thomas Aquinas, 100;
-
his power to change the course of the seasons, 101.
-
Alchymists, the, or Searches for
the Philosopher’s Stone and the Water of Life, i. 94-220;
-
natural origin of the study of Alchymy, its connexion with
astrology, &c., i. 94;
-
alleged antiquity of the study, 95;
-
its early history, 96;
-
Memoirs of Geber, 96;
-
Alfarabi, 97;
-
Avicenna, 98;
-
Albertus Magnus, with portrait, Thomas Aquinas, 99;
-
Artephius, 102;
-
Alain Delisle, 102;
-
Arnold de Villeneuve, with portrait, 103;
-
receipt for the elixir vitæ ascribed to him, 103;
-
Pietro d’Apone, 104;
-
Raymond Lulli, with portrait, 105;
-
Roger Bacon, 110;
-
Pope John XXII., 111;
-
Jean de Meung, 112;
-
Nicholas Flamel, 113;
-
George Ripley, 118;
-
Basil Valentine, 119;
-
Bernard of Treves, 119;
-
Trithemius, 124;
-
Maréchal de Rays, 125;
-
Jacques Cœur, 132;
-
inferior adepts of the 14th and 15th centuries, 135;
-
progress of the infatuation in the 16th and 17th centuries, 137-189;
-
Augurello, 137;
-
Cornelius Agrippa, with portrait, 138;
-
Paracelsus, with portrait, 142;
-
George Agricola, 145;
-
Denis Zachaire, 146;
-
Dr. Dee, with portrait, and Edward Kelly, 152;
-
Dr. Dee’s “Shewstone” (engraving), 154;
-
the Cosmopolite, 163;
-
the Rosicrucians, 167;
-
Jacob Böhmen, 177;
-
+ Mormius, 178;
-
Borri, 179;
-
inferior Alchymists of the 17th century, 185;
-
their impositions, 188;
-
Alchymy since that period, 189-220;
-
Jean Delisle, 189;
-
Albert Aluys, 197;
-
the Count de St. Germain, 200;
-
Cagliostro, 206;
-
present state of Alchymy, 220.
-
Alexius I., Emperor, his treatment of the Crusaders, ii. 17-19;
-
imprisons the Count of Vermandois, 23;
-
is compelled to release him, 24;
-
his fear of the Crusaders, 25;
-
his treachery at Nice, 28;
-
neglects the Crusaders at Antioch, 35,
42.
-
Alexius III., usurping the Greek empire, is expelled by the
Crusaders, ii. 77.
-
Alexius IV. made Emperor of the Greeks by the aid of the Crusaders,
ii. 77;
-
his deposition and murder, 78.
-
Alexius Ducas (Murzuphlis) chosen Emperor instead of Alexius IV.,
ii. 78;
-
defeated by the French and Venetians, 79.
-
Alfarabi, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 97.
-
Almanac-makers: Lilly, Poor Robin, Partridge, Francis Moore, Matthew
Laensbergh, i. 240.
-
Aluys, Albert, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 97.
-
American laws against duelling, ii. 299.
-
Amsterdam, witches burnt at, ii. 160.
-
Animal Magnetism. (See Magnetism.)
-
Andrews, Henry, the original of “Francis Moore,” portrait,
i. 244.
-
Anna Comnena, her notices of the Crusaders, ii. 22,
25.
-
Anne, Queen, duels in her reign, ii. 289;
-
her efforts to suppress them, 292.
-
Antioch, besieged by the Crusaders, ii. 29;
-
is taken by treachery, 32;
-
sufferings of the Crusaders from famine and pestilence, 35;
-
pretended discovery of the Holy Lance (engraving), 37;
-
battle, and defeat of the Turks, 38;
-
retaken by Saladin, 63.
-
Aquinas, Thomas, his studies in Alchymy, i. 99;
-
he destroys an animated brazen statue, 100;
-
his magical performances, 101.
-
Arabia, the chief seat of the Alchymists, i. 96.
-
Arnold de Villeneuve. (See De
Villeneuve.)
-
Arras, view of the Town-hall, ii. 101;
-
persecution of the Waldenses at, 115.
-
Art, works of, destroyed by the Crusaders at Constantinople, ii. 79.
-
Artephius,
his extravagant pretensions as an Alchymist, i. 102.
-
Astrology, its prevalence in England, i. 243;
-
Augurello the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 137.
-
Augury, an almost exploded study, i. 272.
-
Aurea-crucians, a sect founded by Jacob Böhmen, i. 177.
-
Avicenna the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 98.
-
Bacon, Lord, portrait of, ii. 286;
-
his opposition to duelling, 285, 287.
-
Bacon, Roger, his pursuit of Alchymy, i. 110;
-
his scientific discoveries, 111.
-
Bagnone, Francisco, the magnetiser, i. 272.
-
Bailly, M., his account of Mesmer’s experiments, i. 281, 293.
-
Baldarroch Farm-house, “haunted,” ii. 235;
-
investigation by the elders of the kirk; the noises caused by
servant-girls, 237.
-
Baldwin (King of Jerusalem), joins the Crusaders at Nice, ii. 27;
-
becomes prince of Edessa, 30, 41;
-
succeeds Godfrey as King of Jerusalem, 48;
-
bible of his queen (engraving), 50.
-
Baldwin, Count of Flanders, chosen Emperor of the Greeks, ii. 80.
-
Ballads. (See Songs.)
-
Bamberg, view in; witches executed there, ii. 162.
-
Banditti in Italy, ii. 256.
-
Banking schemes of John Law, i. 4.
-
Bank of England, its competition with the South-Sea Company, i. 48, 66.
-
Baptism mocked in the witches’ “Sabbaths,” ii. 109.
-
Barbarin, Chevalier de, his experiments in animal magnetism, i. 286.
-
Barbarossa, the Emperor, commences the Third Crusade; his death, ii.
63, 64.
-
Barthelemy, Peter, his pretended vision and discovery of the “holy
lance;” its effect on the Crusaders; battle of Antioch, the Turks
defeated, ii. 35-40;
-
charged with falsehood, subjected to the fiery ordeal, and burnt
to death, 41.
-
Bastille, the. (See Paris.)
-
Bavaria, ordinance against moustaches, i. 302.
-
Beards forbidden to be worn; religious and political prejudices, i.
296-303.
-
Beckmann’s remarks on the tulip, i. 86.
-
“Beggar’s Opera,” its popularity and immoral influence, ii. 258.
-
Beranger’s Song, “Thirteen at Table,” i. 257.
-
Bernard of Treves, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 119.
-
Best and Lord Camelford, their fatal duel, ii. 297.
-
Bethlehem, Shrine of the Nativity (engraving), ii. 43;
-
Richard I. arrives there; view of the city, ii. 73.
-
Bible of the Queen of Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, (engraving),
ii. 50.
-
“Blue Beard,” the Maréchal de Rays his supposed prototype, i. 132.
-
Blunt, Sir John, Chairman of the South-Sea Bubble, his share in the
fraud, i. 63, 74,
77;
-
his examination by Parliament, 75;
-
his property confiscated, 81;
-
Pope’s sketch of him, 74.
-
Bodinus, his persecution of witches, ii. 159.
-
Boerhave, his belief in Alchymy, i. 185.
-
Bohemund, his courage displayed in the Crusades, ii. 21, 28, 30, 31, 35, 38, 39;
-
takes Antioch, by treachery in the garrison, 32;
-
is made Prince of Antioch, 32, 41.
-
Böhmen, Jacob, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 177.
-
Bonfires on Tower Hill, on the committal of the South-Sea schemers,
i. 79.
-
Booker, an astrologer, notice of, i. 244.
-
Boots, torture of the (engraving), ii. 131.
-
Borri, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 179.
-
Bourdeaux, haunted house at, ii. 221.
-
Bourges, house of Jaques Cœur (engraving), i. 134.
-
Boyd, Captain, killed in a duel, ii. 293.
-
“Brabant Screen,” the, a caricature of the South-Sea Bubble, i. 76.
-
Breda, siege of, i. 270.
-
Bremen, Nadel’s escape from prison, ii. 257.
-
Brinvilliers, Madame de, her atrocious murders; escape from France;
subsequent trial and execution, ii. 208-214;
-
relics of her fate anxiously sought after, 305.
-
Brown, Sir Thomas, portrait of; his belief in witchcraft,
ii. 151.
-
Bubble Companies, contemporaneously with the South-Sea Scheme, their
extravagant character, i. 52;
-
profits of the promoters, 53;
-
declared unlawful, 55, 86;
-
companies dissolved, 57.
-
“Bubble Cards,” or Caricatures, i. 60, 61.
-
Buckingham, Villiers, Duke of, his rise in the favour of James I.,
ii. 197;
-
portrait of, 198;
-
suspected to have poisoned the king, 201.
-
Byron, Lord, his trial for the murder of Mr. Chaworth in a duel, ii.
292.
-
Byron, Lord, his poetical villains, ii. 259.
-
Cagliostro, memoir of, i. 206;
-
his adventures in London, 209;
-
view of his house, 215;
-
implicated in the theft of the diamond necklace, tried and
acquitted, 216-220;
-
again in London, imprisonment and death at Rome, 220.
-
Cagliostro, the Countess, i. 208;
-
his accomplice; her wit, beauty, and ingenuity, 213-216.
-
Cambridge University, annual sermon against witchcraft, ii. 127.
-
Camelford, Lord, killed in a duel, ii. 297.
-
Camhel, Sultan, his generosity to the Christians, ii. 84, 85.
-
Campbell, Major, his duel with Capt. Boyd, and execution, ii. 293.
-
Candlemas Eve, superstitious customs, i. 258.
-
Cant phrases. (See Popular
follies.)
-
Cards. (See Fortune-telling.)
-
Caricatures, referring to the Mississippi Scheme (four
engravings), i. 25, 29, 37, 40, 44.
-
Caricatures of the South-Sea Bubble (seven engravings), i.
60, 61, 68, 70, 76, 82, 84.
-
Casaubon,
his account of Dr. Dee’s intercourse with spirits, i. 155.
-
“Chambre Ardente,” instituted by Louis XIV. for the trial of
poisoners, ii. 214, 283.
-
Change Alley during the South-Sea Bubble (engraving), i. 60.
-
Charlemagne, his edicts against witches, ii. 109.
-
Charles I. prevents a duel, ii. 287.
-
Charles II., his disgraceful conduct in reference to a duel, ii. 288.
-
Charles VI. of France, his studies in Alchymy, i. 117;
-
his work on that subject, 136.
-
Charles IX. of France, his patronage of Nostradamus, i. 246;
-
portrait of, ii. 119;
-
his belief in witchcraft, 120.
-
Chaworth, Mr., killed by Lord Byron in a duel, ii. 292.
-
Chemistry, its connexion with Alchymy; valuable discoveries of the
Alchymists, i. 207, 221.
-
Children in the Crusades; their personal bravery, ii. 45;
-
Children executed for witchcraft, ii. 163,
179, 181.
-
Christina, Queen of Sweden, her patronage of Alchymy, i. 183, 185.
-
Clermont, Urban II. preaches the Crusade there; cathedral of (engraving),
ii. 9.
-
Cock-Lane Ghost, history of the deception; views of the
“haunted house,” ii. 228, 230.
-
Cœur, Jaques, memoir of, i. 132;
-
his house at Bourges (engraving), 132.
-
Cohreddin, Sultan, his generosity to the Christians, ii. 84, 85.
-
Coke, Chief Justice, portrait of, ii. 199;
-
the poisoners of Sir Thomas Overbury tried by him, 198.
-
Collins, Joseph, contriver of mysterious noises at Woodstock Palace,
ii. 224.
-
Comets regarded as omens, i. 223, 225;
-
Conrad, Emperor of Germany, joins the Crusades, ii. 56;
-
reaches Jerusalem, 60;
-
returns to Europe, 62.
-
Constance, view of the town gate, ii. 116;
-
witches executed there, 117, 160.
-
Constantinople during the Crusades, ii. 17,
23-26, 56, 77-80;
-
Contumacy (refusing to plead to a criminal charge); its severe
punishment, ii. 199.
-
Cornhill at the time of the South-Sea Bubble (engraving),
i. 51.
-
Cosmopolite, the, an anonymous alchymist, memoir of, i. 163.
-
Cowley’s poetical description of the tulip, i. 86;
-
his lines on relics of great men, ii. 308.
-
Craggs, Mr. Secretary, portrait of, i. 64;
-
his participation in the South-Sea Bubble, 64,
71, 73, 77, 78;
-
his death, 80.
-
Craggs, Mr., father of the above, his participation in the fraud;
his death, i. 80.
-
Criminals, anxiety to possess relics of their crimes, ii. 306.
-
Cromwell, Sir Samuel, his persecution of “The Witches of Warbois,”
ii. 126.
-
Cross, trial or ordeal of the, ii. 264.
-
Cross, the true. (See Relics.)
-
Crusades, The, ii. 1-100;
-
differently represented in history and in romance; pilgrimages
before the Crusades, ii. 2;
-
encouraged by Haron al Reschid; pilgrims taxed by the Fatemite
caliphs; increase of pilgrimages in anticipation of the
millenium, 3;
-
oppressions of the Turks; consequent indignation of the
pilgrims, 4;
-
Peter the Hermit espouses their cause; state of the public mind
in Europe, 5;
-
motives leading to the Crusades, 6;
-
Peter the Hermit stimulates the Pope; his personal appearance,
7;
-
council at Placentia, 8;
-
the Pope preaches the Crusade at Clermont, 9;
-
enthusiasm of the people, 10;
-
increased by signs and portents, 11;
-
zeal of the women, 12;
-
crowds of Crusaders, 13;
-
“The truce of God” proclaimed; dissipation of the Crusaders, 14;
-
popular leaders; Walter the Penniless, and Gottschalk, 15;
-
conflicts with the Hungarians, 15, 16;
-
Peter the Hermit defeated; arrives at Constantinople, 17;
-
the Emperor Alexius; dissensions and reverses of the first
Crusaders, 18;
-
Peter the Hermit assisted by Alexius, 19;
-
fresh hordes from Germany and France; their cruelty to the Jews,
20;
-
defeated in Hungary; fresh leaders; Godfrey of Bouillon, Hugh
count of Vermandois, Robert duke of Normandy, Robert count of
Flanders and Bohemund, 21;
-
the immense number of their forces; Hugh of Vermandois
imprisoned, 23;
-
his release obtained by Godfrey of Bouillon, 24;
-
insolence of Count Robert of Paris; weakness of Alexius, 25;
-
the siege of Nice, 26;
-
barbarity of the Crusaders and Musselmen; anecdote of Godfrey of
Bouillon, 27;
-
Nice surrenders to Alexius; battle of Dorylœum, 28;
-
improvidence and sufferings of the Crusaders, 29, 30;
-
the siege of Antioch, 29, 31;
-
Crusaders reduced to famine, 30;
-
Antioch taken by treachery in the garrison (engraving),
32;
-
the city invested by the Turks, 34;
-
increasing famine and desertion, 35;
-
Peter Barthelemy, his pretended vision, and discovery of the
“Holy Lance” (engraving), 35-37, 40;
-
revival of enthusiasm, 38;
-
battle of Antioch, and defeat of the Turks, 38;
-
dissensions, 40;
-
fate of Peter Barthelemy, 41;
-
Marah taken by storm, 42;
-
shrine of the nativity at Bethlehem, (engraving), 43;
-
first sight of Jerusalem (engraving), 44;
-
the city besieged and taken, 45;
-
Peter the Hermit’s fame revives, 46;
-
Jerusalem under its Christian kings, 48;
-
Godfrey of Bouillon succeeded by Baldwin; continual conflicts
with the Saracens; Edessa taken by them, 50.
-
Second Crusade:—Society in Europe at its commencement,
52;
-
St. Bernard’s preaching; Louis VII. joins the Crusaders, 53-55;
-
receives the cross at Vezelai (engraving), 54;
-
is joined by Conrad emperor of Germany and a large army, 56;
-
their reception by Manuel Comnenus, 57;
-
losses of the German army, 58;
-
progress to Nice, and thence to Jerusalem, 60;
-
jealousies of the leaders; siege of Damascus, 61;
-
further
dissensions; the siege abandoned, 62.
-
Third Crusade:—Progress of chivalry, 62;
-
successes of Saladin, 63;
-
Barbarossa defeats the Saracens, 64;
-
Crusade joined by Henry II. and Philip Augustus, 64;
-
they meet at Gisors (engraving), 65;
-
the Crusade unpopular, 66;
-
delayed by war between France and England, death of Henry
II.; Richard and Philip proceed to Palestine, 67;
-
Richard attacks the Sicilians, 68;
-
arrives at Acre, 69;
-
siege and surrender of the city, 71;
-
dissensions, Philip returns to France, Saladin defeated at
Azotus, 72;
-
Crusaders reach Bethlehem (engraving), retreat
agreed on, 73;
-
Jaffa attacked by Saladin and rescued by Richard, peace
concluded, Richard’s imprisonment and ransom, 74.
-
Fourth Crusade, undertaken by the Germans; its failure,
75.
-
Fifth Crusade:—Foulque, Bishop of Neuilly, enlists the
chivalry of France; assisted by the Venetians; siege of Zara, 76;
-
Crusaders expel Alexius III. from Constantinople, 77;
-
Alexius IV. deposed, 78;
-
Murzuphlis defeated by the Crusaders and Venetians, 79;
-
Baldwin count of Flanders, elected emperor; Pilgrimages to
Jerusalem; children undertaking the Crusade are betrayed to
slavery, 80.
-
Sixth Crusade, prompted by the Pope, 81;
-
undertaken by the King of Hungary; pursued in Egypt;
Damietta taken, 82;
-
Cardinal Pelagius and John of Brienne, 83;
-
dissensions and reverses; Damietta abandoned, 84.
-
Seventh Crusade:—Undertaken by Frederick II. of
Germany, 84;
-
intrigues against him; he is excommunicated, 85;
-
crowns himself King of Jerusalem, 86;
-
supported by the Templars and Hospitallers (engraving),
86;
-
returns to Germany, 87.
-
Eighth Crusade, commenced in France, 87:
-
battle of Gaza; Richard earl of Cornwall; truce agreed on;
the Korasmins take Jerusalem, 88;
-
they subdue the Templars, but are extirpated by the Syrian
sultans, 90.
-
Ninth Crusade, began by Louis IX., 90;
-
joined by William Longsword (engraving), 91;
-
the Crusade unpopular in England, 91-97;
-
Damietta taken, 93;
-
battle of Massoura; Louis taken prisoner by the Saracens;
his ransom and return, 94;
-
excitement in France, 95.
-
Tenth Crusade, by Louis IX. and Prince Edward of
England, 95;
-
Louis dies at Carthage, 96;
-
Edward arrives at Acre, 97;
-
defeats the Turks at Nazereth; is treacherously wounded; the
legend of Queen Eleanor, 98;
-
her tomb at Westminster (engraving); a truce
concluded; Edward returns to England; subsequent fate of the
Holy Land, 99;
-
civilising influence of the Crusades, 100.
-
Currency in France, the Mississippi scheme, i. 4.
-
D’Aguesseau, Chancellor of France, his opposition to the Mississippi
scheme, i. 11;
-
portrait of; his financial measures, 33.
-
Damascus, besieged by the Crusaders (engraving), ii. 61.
-
Damietta besieged by the Crusaders, ii. 83,
93.
-
Dances of witches and toads, ii. 108, 109.
-
D’Ancre, the Maréchale, executed for witchcraft, ii. 166.
-
Dandolo, Doge of Venice, his encouragement of the Crusaders, ii. 76.
-
D’Apone, Pietro, his studies in alchymy; his command of money;
charged with heresy, is tortured, and dies in prison, i. 104;
-
D’Argenson, French minister of finance, a supporter of the
Mississippi scheme, i. 11, 42;
-
Dead, the. (See Raising the Dead.)
-
De Bouteville, a famous duellist, temp. Louis XIII., ii. 280;
-
beheaded by the justice of Richelieu, 281.
-
Dee, Dr., memoir and portrait of, i. 152;
-
his “shew-stone” in the British Museum (engraving), 154.
-
De Jarnac and La Chataigneraie, their famous duel, ii. 273.
-
Deleuze, M., his absurd theories on animal magnetism, i. 291.
-
Delisle, Alain, an alchymist, i. 102.
-
Delisle, Jean, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 189;
-
his success in transmuting metals, attested by the Bishop of
Senes, 193;
-
his imprisonment and death, 197.
-
Delrio, his persecution of witches, ii. 159.
-
De Meung, Jean, author of the Roman de la Rose, his study
of alchymy, his libel on the fair sex, i. 112.
-
Demons, popular belief in, ii. 105;
-
De Nogent, his description of Peter the Hermit, ii. 7;
-
of the enthusiasm of the first Crusaders, 12,
23.
-
De Rays, Maréchale, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 125.
-
De Rohan, Cardinal, his patronage of Cagliostro, i. 213-215;
-
his connexion with Marie Antoinette and the diamond necklace, 216-220.
-
D’Eslon, a pupil of Mesmer, i. 276, 280.
-
Desmarets, Minister of France, his belief in alchymy, i. 192.
-
Devil, the, old popular notions of, ii. 103;
-
various forms assumed by him, 106, 107;
-
presided at the witches’ “Sabbath,” 108;
-
his appearance to De Rays and Agrippa, i. 129,
142.
-
De Villeneuve, Arnold, his skill as a physician, astrologer and
alchymist (with portrait), i. 103.
-
D’Horn, Count, murders a broker, and steals his Mississippi bonds (engraving),
i. 21;
-
efforts to save his life, inflexibility of the Regent, his
execution, 22, 23.
-
Diamond, famous, purchased by the Regent Orleans, i. 27.
-
Diamond Necklace of Marie Antoinette, history of the theft, i. 206-220.
-
Diamonds worn by the Count St. Germain, i. 203;
-
his
power of removing flaws in, 204.
-
Digby, Sir Kenelm, a believer in the virtues of “weapon-salve,” i.
265.
-
Diseases cured by imagination, i. 262, 272;
-
Divination, its popularity; by cards, the tea-cup, the palm of the
hand, the rod, and other modes, i. 251.
-
“Domdaniel,” or Witches’ Sabbath. (See Witchcraft.)
-
Dorylæum, battle of, ii. 28.
-
Dowston, John, an English alchymist, i. 136.
-
Dramas on the adventures of thieves; their popularity and evil
influence, ii. 253, 257-260.
-
Dreams, interpretation of, i. 253.
-
Dreams on particular nights, i. 258.
-
Dream-books, their extensive sale, i. 254.
-
Du Pompadour, Madame, and the Count de St. Germain, i. 201.
-
Dupotet, M., his account of Mesmer’s experiments, i. 279, 285.
-
Drummer of Tedworth. (See Haunted
Houses.)
-
Du Barri, Vicomte, killed in a duel at Bath, ii. 293.
-
Duels and Ordeals, ii. 261-301;
-
the ordeal by combat, or trial by battle, its natural origin;
authorised by law, 262;
-
discouraged by the clergy, 263;
-
the oath upon the Evangelists, 264;
-
judgment by the cross, 264;
-
fire-ordeal, 265;
-
ordeals used by modern Hindoos, 265;
-
water ordeal, 265;
-
the corsned, or bread and cheese ordeal, 266;
-
ordeals superseded by judicial combats, 267;
-
duels of Ingelgerius and Gontran (engraving), 269;
-
De Montfort and the Earl of Essex, 270;
-
Du Guesclin and Troussel (engraving), 261, 271;
-
Carrouges and Legris, 272;
-
La Chataigneraie and De Jarnac, 273;
-
L’Isle-Marivaut and Marolles, 276;
-
the Dukes de Beaufort and de Nemours, 282;
-
Count de Bussy and Bruc, 282;
-
frivolous causes of duels, 270, 271, 276, 282, 292, 296;
-
their prevalence in France, 276, 277, 279, 280, 282;
-
the custom opposed by Sully and Henry IV.; council at
Fontainebleau (engraving), and royal edict, 277-279;
-
efforts of Richelieu to suppress duelling, 280;
-
De Bouteville, a famous duellist, beheaded by the justice of
Richelieu; opinion of Addison on duelling, 281;
-
duels in Germany, 282;
-
severe edict by Louis XIV., 283;
-
singular laws of Malta, 284;
-
judicial combat in the reign of Queen Elizabeth; Lord Bacon
opposes duelling, 285;
-
Lord Sanquir’s duel with Turner; his execution for murder;
combat between Lord Reay and David Ramsay prevented by Charles
I., 287;
-
Orders of the Commonwealth and Charles II. against the practice;
Duke of Buckingham’s duel with Earl Shrewsbury; disgraceful
conduct of Charles II., 288;
-
practice of seconds in duels fighting as well as principals, 280, 288;
-
arguments of Addison, Steele, and Swift, 288;
-
duels in England; Sir C. Deering and Mr. Thornhill; Duke of
Marlborough and Earl Pawlet; Duke of Hamilton and Lord Mohun;
trial of General Macartney, 289-292;
-
Wilson killed by John Law, i. 3;
-
Mr. Chaworth killed by Lord Byron, ii. 292;
-
Vicomte Du Barri by Count Rice, the Duke of York and Colonel
Lennox, 293;
-
Irish duels, 294;
-
Major Campbell executed for the death of Captain Boyd, 296;
-
Macnamara and Montgomery; duels of German students, 297;
-
Best and Lord Camelford, 297;
-
Frederick the Great and Joseph II. of Austria opposed to
duelling, 298;
-
other European edicts; laws of America, 299;
-
general reflections, 300.
-
Du Guesclin and Troussel, their duel (engraving,) ii. 261, 271.
-
Du Fresnoy’s history of the Hermetic Philosophy, i. 95, 96.
-
Duncan, Gellie, and her accomplices tried for witchcraft; their
absurd confessions, ii. 129-135.
-
Duval, Claude, popular admiration of; Butler’s ode to his memory,
ii. 255.
-
Earthquakes prophesied in London, i. 224,
230.
-
Edessa taken by the Crusaders, ii. 30;
-
retaken by the Saracens, 50.
-
Edward I., his great seal (engraving), ii. 97.
-
Edward II. joins the last Crusade, ii. 95;
-
arrives at Acre, 97;
-
treacherously wounded, 98;
-
his patronage of Raymond Lulli the alchymist, i. 108;
-
its supposed motive, 135.
-
Edward IV., his encouragement of alchymy, i. 135.
-
Edward VI., his patronage of Dr. Dee, i. 152.
-
Egypt, the Crusaders in, ii. 83, 84, 90, 92, 93.
-
Elias claimed as a Rosicrucian, i. 175.
-
Elixir Vitæ. (See Alchymists.)
-
Eleanor, Queen of Edward II., her tomb at Westminster (engraving),
ii. 99.
-
Elizabeth, Queen, her patronage of Dr. Dee, i. 153,
162.
-
Elwes, Sir Jervis, his participation in the poisoning of Sir Thomas
Overbury, his execution, ii. 194, 197, 199.
-
End of the world prophesied in the year 999, i. 222;
-
Epigrams on John Law and the Mississippi Scheme, i. 24, 37.
-
Essex, Countess of, afterwards Countess of Somerset. (See
Somerset.)
-
Executions for witchcraft. (See Witchcraft.)
-
Ezekiel claimed as a Rosicrucian, i. 175.
-
Falling stars regarded as omens, i. 223;
-
falling stars and other meteors before the Crusades, ii. 11.
-
Faria, the Abbé, the magnetiser, i. 294.
-
Fashion of short and long hair, beards, and moustaches, i. 296-303.
-
Female Crusaders. (See Women.)
-
Feudalism at the commencement of the Crusades, ii. 5.
-
Fian, Dr., tortured for witchcraft, ii. 131.
-
Finance in France; the Mississippi scheme, i. 2,
6.
-
Fire-ordeal.
(See Duels and Ordeals.)
-
Flamel, Nicholas, the alchymist, memoir of i. 113.
-
Florimond on the prevalence of witchcraft, ii. 115.
-
Flowers, fruits, and trees, their significance in dreams, i. 254.
-
Fludd, Robert, the father of the English Rosicrucians, memoir of, i.
173;
-
introduces “weapon-salve” in England, 265.
-
Follies of great cities; cant, or slang phrases, ii. 239-248.
-
Fontainebleau, council held by Henry IV. and edict against duelling
(engraving), ii. 278.
-
Food, its necessity denied by the Rosicrucians, i. 176.
-
Forman, Dr., his participation in the poisoning of Sir Thomas
Overbury, ii. 194.
-
Fortune-Telling, i. 242-258;
-
presumption of man; his anxiety to penetrate futurity, 242.
-
Judicial astrologers: Lilly, 243.
-
Astrology in France, Louis XI., Catherine de Medicis,
Nostradamus (portrait), 246;
-
the Medici family, 247;
-
Antiochus Tibertus, 247;
-
horoscope of Louis XIV. 249;
-
Kepler’s excuse for astrology, 249.
-
Necromancy, Geomancy, Augury, Divination,
250;
-
various kinds of divination; cards, the palm, the rod, &c.,
251;
-
interpretation of dreams, 253.
-
Foulque, Bishop of Neuilly, promoter of the fifth Crusade, ii. 76.
-
France, its finances in the eighteenth century; the Mississippi
scheme, i. 5, 6;
-
the Crusade preached there, ii. 8;
-
the cathedral of Clermont (engraving), ii. 9;
-
executions for witchcraft, ii. 119,
122, 174;
-
existing belief in witchcraft there, ii. 189;
-
the slow poisoners in, ii. 208;
-
immense rage for duelling in France, 276,
277, 279,
280;
-
alchymy in France. (See the Alchymists,
Paris, Tours, &c.)
-
Franklin, an apothecary, his participation in the murder of Sir
Thomas Overbury, ii. 195, 198, 199.
-
Frederick the Great, his opposition to duelling, ii. 298.
-
Frederick II., Emperor of Germany, undertakes the Crusade, ii. 84;
-
crowns himself king at Jerusalem, 86;
-
returns to Germany, 87.
-
Frederick III. of Denmark, his patronage of alchymy, i. 183.
-
Gambling speculations. (See Mississippi
Scheme and South-Sea Bubble.)
-
Garinet, Jules, his Histoire de la Magie en France, ii. 105, 109, 122, 189, 221.
-
Gateway of Merchant-Tailors’ Hall, with South-Sea speculators (engraving),
i. 62.
-
Gay, the poet, his shares in the South-Sea Company, i. 65.
-
Geber, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 96;
-
his scientific discoveries; English translation of his work, 97.
-
Geomancy described, i. 250.
-
Geoffrey, M., his exposure of the tricks of alchymists, i. 188.
-
George I., his speeches and proclamation on the South-Sea Bubble, i.
47-55, 69;
-
his grief on the death of the Earl of Stanhope, i. 75.
-
George III. refuses to pardon Major Campbell for the death of Capt.
Boyd in a duel, ii. 294.
-
Germany, executions for witchcraft, ii. 118;
-
duelling in, 282, 298;
-
alchymy in, encouraged by the emperors, i. 119,
135, 158;
-
the Rosicrucians in, 178;
-
animal magnetism in, 290.
-
Gesner, Conrad, the first tulip cultivator, portrait of, i.
85.
-
Ghosts. (See Haunted Houses.)
-
Gibbon, Edward, grandfather of the historian, his participation in
the South-Sea fraud, i. 73, 77;
-
heavily fined, 81;
-
his grandson’s account of the proceedings, 81.
-
Gisors, meeting there of Henry II. and Philip Augustus (engraving),
ii. 65.
-
Glanvill, Rev. J., his work on witchcraft, ii. 148,
224.
-
Glauber, an alchymist, i. 187.
-
Glen, Lincolnshire, belief in witches there, ii. 185.
-
Gnomes. (See the Rosicrucians.)
-
Godfrey of Bouillon, his achievements in Palestine (engraving),
ii. 21-24, 26, 27, 29, 31, 33, 35, 38, 39, 42, 46, 48.
-
Gold, sought by the Alchymists. (See Alchymists.)
-
Gottschalk, a leader of the Crusaders, ii. 15,
20.
-
Gowdie, Isabel, her confession of witchcraft, ii. 136.
-
Grafton’s Chronicle, account of Peter of Pontefract, i. 235.
-
Greatraks, Valentine, his wonderful cures, i. 269-272.
-
Great Seal of Edward I. (engraving), ii. 97.
-
Gregorian chant, its merit tested by the ordeal of fire, ii. 266.
-
Guise, the Duke of, his attempt to poison Gennaro Annese, ii. 202.
-
Guizot, M., his remarks on the Crusades, ii. 51.
-
Gustavus Adolphus an alchymist, i. 187.
-
Guy of Lusignan, King of Jerusalem, besieges Acre, ii. 69.
-
Hair, its length influenced by religious and political prejudices;
legislative enactments, i. 296;
-
short hair of the Normans (engraving), i. 297, 303;
-
St. Wulstan’s antipathy to long hair, 297;
-
Serlo cuts off the hair of Henry I. (engraving), 296, 298;
-
Louis VII. and his queen, 299;
-
William “Longbeard,” 300;
-
Roundheads and Cavaliers, 301;
-
Peter the Great taxes beards, 301.
-
Hale, Sir Matthew, portrait of, ii. 148;
-
his belief in witchcraft, 157.
-
Hamilton, Duke of, his duel with Lord Mohun, ii. 290.
-
Harcouet, his receipt for the Elixir Vitæ, i. 103.
-
Harley, Earl of Oxford, the originator of the South-Sea Company, portrait
of, i. 46.
-
Haroun al Reschid, the Caliph, his encouragement of Christian
pilgrims, ii. 3.
-
Hastings, recent belief in witchcraft there, ii. 187.
-
Hatton,
Lady, her reputation for witchcraft; her house in Hatton Garden, (engraving),
ii. 186.
-
“Haunted Houses,” popular belief
in, ii. 217-238;
-
a house at Aix la Chapelle, cause of the noises discovered, ii.
218;
-
alarm caused by a rat, 219;
-
the monks of St. Bruno, their trick to obtain the haunted palace
of Vauvert, 220;
-
houses at Tours and Bordeaux, 221;
-
the story of Woodstock Palace, 222;
-
Mr. Mompesson’s house at Tedworth, 224;
-
the “Cock Lane Ghost,” history of the deception; believed in by
the learned (engravings), 228;
-
the Stockwell ghost, 234;
-
Baldarroch farm-house, 235;
-
effect of education and civilisation, 238.
-
Hawkins, Mr., engravings from his Collection of
Caricatures, i. 29, 44.
-
Haygarth, Dr., his exposure of Perkins’s “Metallic Tractors,” i. 289.
-
Hell, Father, his magnetic cures; his connexion with Mesmer, i. 283.
-
Henry I., his hair cut short by Serlo, his chaplain (engraving),
i. 262, 264.
-
Henry II. joins the third crusade (engraving), ii. 64.
-
Henry VI. issues patents to encourage alchymy, i. 118, 135.
-
Henry VIII., his invitation to Cornelius Agrippa, i. 140.
-
Henry, Prince, son of James I. suspected to have been poisoned, ii.
200.
-
Henry II. of France, his patronage of Nostradamus, i. 246;
-
said to have prohibited duelling, ii. 273,
275;
-
his death in the lists, 276.
-
Henry IV. of France, portrait of, ii. 277;
-
his opposition to duelling, 277, 279.
-
Hermes Trismegistus, the founder of alchymy, i. 95.
-
Hermetic Philosophy. (See the Alchymists.)
-
Heydon, John, an English Rosicrucian, i. 175.
-
Heywood, his life and prophecies of Merlin, i. 233.
-
Highwaymen. (See Thieves.)
-
Hogarth’s caricature of the South-Sea Bubble (engraving),
i. 82.
-
Holland, the tulip mania. (See Tulip
Mania.)
-
Holloway’s lectures on animal magnetism, i. 287.
-
Holt, Chief Justice, his opposition to the belief in witchcraft, ii.
152.
-
“Holy Lance,” the, its pretended discovery (engraving), ii.
37.
-
Hopkins, Matthew, the “witch-finder general,” his cruelty and
retributive fate, (engraving), ii. 143-146.
-
Horoscope of Louis XIV., i. 249.
-
Hugh count of Vermandois imprisoned at Constantinople, ii. 21, 23;
-
at the siege of Nice, 26;
-
quits the Crusaders, 42.
-
Human remains ingredients in charms and nostrums, i. 272.
-
Hungary plundered by the Crusaders, ii. 15,
16, 20, 21.
-
Hutchinson, Dr., his work on witchcraft, ii. 123.
-
Imps in the service of witches. (See Demons
and Witchcraft.)
-
Ingelgerius count of Anjou, his duel with Gontran (engraving),
ii. 269.
-
Innocent III. and IV., promoters of the Crusades, ii. 75, 80, 81.
-
Innocent VIII., his bull against witchcraft, ii. 117.
-
Innspruck, view of (engraving), i. 181.
-
Invisibility pretended by the Rosicrucians, i. 169,
178.
-
Isaac Comnenus attacked by Richard I., ii. 69.
-
Isaac of Holland, an alchymist, i. 136.
-
Isnik, the Crusaders defeated at (with view of Isnik), ii.
19.
-
Italy, slow poisoning in (see Poisoning);
-
the banditti of, ii. 256.
-
Jaques Cœur the alchymist, memoir of, i. 132.
-
Jaffa besieged by Saladin, and saved by Richard I., ii. 74;
-
view of, ii. 89;
-
defended by the Templars against the Korasmins, ii. 90.
-
James I., his belief in the virtue of “weapon salve,” i. 266;
-
portrait of, ii. 134;
-
charges Gellie Duncan and others with witchcraft, 129;
-
their trial, confessions and execution, 129-135;
-
his work on “Demonology,” 139;
-
his supposed secret vices; his favoritism to the Earl of
Somerset, the poisoner of Sir Thomas Overbury; himself thought
to have died by poison, 193-202;
-
his severity against duelling, 287.
-
Jean De Meung. (See De Meung.)
-
Jerusalem (and see Crusades), engravings,
ii. 44, 47, 49;
-
first pilgrims to, ii. 2;
-
besieged and taken by the Crusaders, 45;
-
its state under the Christian kings, 48,
49;
-
council of the second Crusade there, 60;
-
captured by Saladin, 63.
-
Jewell, Bishop, his exclamations against witchcraft, ii. 124.
-
Jews plundered and murdered by the Crusaders, ii. 20.
-
Joan of Arc, her execution (engraving), ii. 114.
-
John XXII. (Pope), his study of Alchymy, i. 111.
-
Johnson, Dr., on the “Beggar’s Opera,” ii. 258.
-
Joseph II. of Austria, his opposition to duelling, ii. 298.
-
Judicial astrology. (See Astrology.)
-
Judicial combats. (See Duels.)
-
Karloman, King of Hungary, his contest with the Crusaders, ii. 20.
-
Kelly, Edward, the Alchymist, memoir of, i. 152.
-
Kendal, Duchess of, her participation in the South-Sea fraud, i. 76, 77.
-
Kent, Mr., accused of murder by the “Cock Lane Ghost,” ii. 229.
-
Kepler, his excuse for astrology, i. 250.
-
Kerbogha, leader of the Turks defeated at Antioch, ii. 34, 38, 39.
-
Kerr, Robert, afterwards Earl of Somerset. (See Somerset.)
-
Kircher abandons his belief in alchymy, i. 185,
183;
-
his
belief in magnetism as a remedy for disease, 264.
-
Knight, ——, Treasurer of the South-Sea Company, his apprehension and
escape, i. 76.
-
Knox, John, portrait of; accused of witchcraft, ii. 128.
-
Koffstky, a Polish alchymist, i. 136.
-
Labourt, France, 200 witches executed, ii. 166.
-
La Chataigneraie and De Jarnac, their famous duel, ii. 273.
-
La Chaussée, the accomplice of Madame de Brinvilliers, his
execution, ii. 212.
-
Lady-day, superstitions on, i. 258.
-
Lamb, Dr., the poisoner, attacked and killed in the streets (engraving),
ii. 202.
-
“Lancashire witches” executed, ii. 141.
-
Laski, Count Albert, his reception by Queen Elizabeth, his studies
in alchymy, i. 155;
-
is victimised by Dee and Kelly, 157.
-
Lavigoreux and Lavoisin, the French poisoners executed, ii. 215.
-
Law, J., projector of the Mississippi scheme, his romantic history,
i. 1;
-
his house in the Rue de Quincampoix, Paris (engraving),
i. 13.
-
Law, Wm., his participation in the Mississippi scheme, i. 9, 42.
-
Le Blanc, the Abbé, on the popularity of Great Thieves, ii. 251.
-
Lennox, Col., his duel with the Duke of York, ii. 293.
-
Liège, Madame de Brinvilliers arrested there, ii. 213.
-
Lille, singular charges of witchcraft at, ii. 169.
-
Lilly, the astrologer, account of, i. 243.
-
Lipsius, his passion for tulips, i. 86.
-
London, the plague of 1665, i. 228;
-
Longbeard, William, cause of his name, i. 300.
-
Longsword, William (engraving), joins the ninth Crusade,
ii. 91.
-
Loudun, the curate of, executed for witchcraft, ii. 168.
-
Louis VII. cuts short his hair, and loses his queen, i. 299;
-
joins the Crusaders, ii. 53;
-
is consecrated at St. Denis, 55;
-
reaches Constantinople and Nice, 58;
-
his conflicts with the Saracens, 59;
-
arrival at Jerusalem, 60;
-
his sincerity as a Crusader, 61;
-
returns to France, 62.
-
Louis IX. undertakes the ninth Crusade, ii. 90;
-
his valour at the battle of Massoura, 94;
-
taken prisoner, 94;
-
his ransom and return, 94;
-
his second Crusade, 95;
-
effigy of (engraving), 220.
-
Louis XI., his encouragement of astrologers, i. 246.
-
Louis XIII., prevalence of duelling in his reign, ii. 280.
-
Louis XIV., his bigotry and extravagance, i. 5,
6;
-
remonstrated with by his Parliament on his leniency to supposed
witches, ii. 171;
-
portrait of, 177;
-
establishes the “chambre ardente” for the trial of poisoners, 214, 283;
-
his horoscope, 249;
-
his severe edict against duelling, 283.
-
Louis XV., his patronage of the Court St. Germain, i. 201, 204.
-
“Loup-garou” executed in France, ii. 120.
-
Loutherbourg, the painter, his alleged cures by animal magnetism, i.
288.
-
Lulli, Raymond, a famous alchymist, his romantic history, with portrait,
i. 105;
-
his treatment by Edward II., 135.
-
Lyons, view of, ii. 160.
-
Macartney, General, second to Lord Mohun, his trial for murder, ii.
292.
-
Mackenzie, Sir George, portrait of, ii. 138;
-
his enlightened views on witchcraft, 137.
-
Macnamara and Montgomery, frivolous cause of their fatal duel, ii.
297.
-
Magnetisers, the, i. 262-295;
-
effect of imagination in the cure of diseases, i. 262, 272.
-
Mineral Magnetism: Paracelsus its first professor, 263;
-
diseases transplanted to the earth; Kircher; “weapon-salve,” 264;
-
controversy on its merits, 265;
-
Sir Kenelm Digby’s “powder of sympathy,” 266;
-
other delusions, 268.
-
Animal Magnetism: wonderful cures by Valentine
Greatraks, i. 269-272;
-
Francisco Bagnoni, Van Helmont, Gracian, Baptista Porta, &c.,
272;
-
Wirdig, Maxwell, 273;
-
the convulsionaires of St. Medard, i. 273;
-
Father Hell, 274;
-
Anthony Mesmer, his history and theory, 275;
-
Mesmer, 276-283;
-
D’Eslon adopts his views, 278, 280, 281;
-
encouragement to depravity afforded by his experiments, 282, 293;
-
exposures by MM. Dupotet and Bailly, 279,
281;
-
Marquis de Puysegur, 283;
-
Chevalier de Barbarin, 286;
-
Mainauduc, Holloway, Loutherbourg, 287,
288;
-
Perkins’s “Metallic Tractors” exposed by Dr. Haygarth, 289;
-
absurd theories of Deleuze, 291;
-
the Abbé Faria, fallacies of the theory of, 294.
-
Mainauduc, Dr., his experiments in animal magnetism, i. 287.
-
Malta, its singular laws on duelling, ii. 284.
-
Mansfield, Lord, trial of the “Cock-lane Ghost” conspirators before
him, ii. 234.
-
Manuel Comnenus, his treatment of the Crusaders, ii. 56, 58, 59.
-
Marie Antoinette, history of the diamond necklace, i. 216-220.
-
Marlborough, Duke of, his duel with Earl Pawlet, ii. 289.
-
Massaniello, relics of his fate treasured by the populace, ii. 305.
-
Massoura, battle of, the Saracens defeated, ii. 94.
-
Mayer, Michael, his report on the Rosicrucian doctrines, i. 168.
-
Maxwell, William, the magnetiser, i. 273.
-
Medicis, Catherine di, her encouragement of astrologers, i. 246.
-
Medici family, predictions respecting them, i. 247.
-
Merchant Taylors’ Hall, view of gateway, i. 62.
-
Merlin, his pretended prophecies, i. 232;
-
his miraculous birth, 236;
-
Spenser’s description of his cave, 237.
-
Mesmer,
Anthony, the founder of animal magnetism, his history and theory, i.
275;
-
his theory and practice, 276;
-
elegance of his house at Paris, 278;
-
infatuation of his disciples, 282.
-
Metals, transmutation of. (See Alchymists.)
-
Meteoric phenomena, their effect in inciting to the Crusades, ii. 3, 11.
-
Meteors regarded as omens, i. 223.
-
Milan, plague of 1630 prophesied, i. 225;
-
fear of poisoners, Mora and others executed, 226;
-
appearance of the devil, 227.
-
Millenium, the, universally expected at the end of the tenth
century, ii. 3.
-
Mississippi Scheme, the, its
history, i. 1-44;
-
financial difficulties in France, expedients of the Regent
Orleans, i. 6;
-
official peculation and corruption, 7;
-
John Law’s propositions; his French cognomen, “Lass;” his bank
established, 9;
-
his notes at a premium; branch banks established; Mississippi
trading company established; bank made a public institution;
extensive issue of notes, 10;
-
opposition of the Parliament, 11;
-
the Regent uses coercion; Mississippi shares rise, 12;
-
the Company of the Indies formed; magnificent promises; immense
excitement and applications for shares; Law’s house in the Rue
de Quincampoix (engraving), 13;
-
hunchback used as a writing-desk (engraving), 15;
-
enormous gains of individuals, 14, 16, 19, 20, 26;
-
Law’s removal to the Place Vendôme, 14;
-
continued excitement, 15;
-
removal to the Hotel de Soissons (engraving), 15;
-
noble and fashionable speculators, 17;
-
ingenious schemes to obtain shares (engraving), 18;
-
avarice and ambition of the speculators; robberies and murders,
20;
-
a broker murdered by Count d’Horn, and robbed of shares (engraving),
21;
-
temporary stimulus to trade, and illusive prosperity; Law
purchases estates, and turns Catholic, 24;
-
his charity and modesty, 25;
-
caricatures of him, as Atlas, 25;
-
“Lucifer’s new row barge,” 29;
-
in a car drawn by cocks, 40;
-
increase of luxury in Paris, 26;
-
the Regent purchases the great diamond, 27;
-
symptoms of distrust; coin further depreciated, 28;
-
use of specie forbidden, at Law’s suggestion, 29;
-
popular hatred excited, 30;
-
fall of shares, 31;
-
conscription for the Mississippi gold mines (engraving),
31;
-
further issue of notes, and increased distrust and distress, 32;
-
payment stopped, and Law dismissed from the ministry, 33;
-
his danger from the populace, 33, 35, 38;
-
D’Aguesseau’s measures to restore credit (portrait), 34;
-
run on the Bank, 34;
-
fatal accidents in the crowd, 34;
-
the Mississippi and India companies deprived of their
privileges, 39;
-
Law leaves France, 40;
-
D’Argenson’s dismissal and unpopularity, 42;
-
Law’s subsequent history and death, 43;
-
caricatures of the scheme in its success and failure, 25, 29, 37, 40, 44.
-
Modern prophecies, i. 222-241.
-
Mohra, in Sweden, absurd charges of witchcraft, and numerous
executions, ii. 177.
-
Mohun, Lord, his duel with the Duke of Hamilton, ii. 290.
-
Mompesson, Mr., his “haunted house” at Tedworth, ii. 224.
-
Money Mania. (See the Mississippi
Scheme and South-Sea Bubble.)
-
Montesquieu “Esprit des Loix,” ii. 262-267.
-
Montgomery and Macnamara, frivolous cause of their fatal duel, ii.
297.
-
More, Hannah, on animal magnetism, i. 287.
-
Mormius, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 178.
-
Mortlake, Dr. Dee’s house at, i. 153, 162.
-
Moses cited by alchymists as an adept, i. 95;
-
claimed as a Rosicrucian, 175.
-
Moustaches, fashion of wearing, i. 302.
-
Mummies, an ingredient in charms and nostrums, i. 271.
-
Munting’s history of the tulip mania, i. 87.
-
Nadel, Mausch, a German robber, ii. 257.
-
Naiades. (See the Rosicrucians.)
-
Nantwich, Nixon’s prophecy of its fate, i. 240.
-
Naples, arrest and execution of La Tophania, the slow poisoner, ii.
207.
-
Napoleon’s willow at St. Helena and other relics, ii. 307.
-
Naudé, Gabriel, his exposure of the Rosicrucians, i. 173.
-
Necromancy, its connexion with alchymy, i. 129;
-
danger of its practice, 250.
-
New England, women, a child, and a dog, executed as witches, ii. 180.
-
Nice besieged by the Crusaders, ii. 26.
-
Nixon, Robert, the Cheshire prophet, i. 238.
-
Noah, the patriarch, a successful alchymist, i. 95.
-
Noises. (See Haunted Houses.)
-
Normandy, witches in, ii. 172.
-
Nostradamus, the astrologer; his prophecies (portrait), i.
246.
-
Oath on the Evangelists and holy relics, a test of innocence, ii. 264.
-
Odomare, a French alchymist, i. 136.
-
Official peculation in France under the Regent Orleans, i. 7.
-
Omens: winding-sheets, howling dogs, death-watch, “coffins,”
shivering, walking under ladders, upsetting salt, thirteen at table,
piebald horses, sneezing, dogs, cats, bees, itching; Oriental belief
in omens, i. 255.
-
Oneiro-criticism; interpreting dreams. (See Dreams.)
-
Ordeals. (See Duels and Ordeals.)
-
Orleans, Duke of. (Regent of France) portrait of; his
patronage of the Mississippi Scheme, i. 5;
-
his financial errors, 10, 12, 33, 41;
-
enforces the execution of Count D’Horn for murder, 23;
-
his purchase of the celebrated diamond, 27;
-
his ill-treatment of Law, 33.
-
Orleans, Duchess of, her remarks on the Mississippi scheme, i. 5, 19, 24, 35, 36.
-
Ortholani,
a French alchymist, i 136.
-
Overbury, Sir Thomas, portrait of, ii. 195;
-
poisoned by the Earl and Countess of Somerset and their
accomplices, 193-201.
-
Palestine. (See the Crusades.)
-
Palmistry. (See Fortune-Telling.)
-
Paper currency, introduced in France by John Law, i. 4.
-
Paracelsus, memoir and portrait of, i. 142;
-
his singular doctrines, 145;
-
the first of the magnetisers, 262.
-
Paris, the Palais Royal (engraving), i. 12;
-
John Law’s house, Rue de Quincampoix (engraving), 13;
-
Hotel de Soissons (engraving), 16;
-
incidents of the Mississippi scheme (four engravings),
i. 15, 18, 21, 31;
-
the Place de Grêve (engraving), ii. 192;
-
the Bastile (engraving), ii. 209;
-
house of Nicholas Flamel, in the rue de Marivaux, i. 118;
-
the Rosicrucians in, i. 170-173;
-
Mesmer’s house; his experiments, 278.
-
Parsons and his family, concoctors of the “Cock Lane Ghost”
deception, ii. 228.
-
Paul’s Cross, Dr. Lamb, the poisoner, attacked and killed there (engraving),
ii. 202.
-
Persecution of alleged witches. (See Witches.)
-
Peter the Great taxes beards (portrait), i. 267.
-
Peter the Hermit. (See the Crusades.)
-
Peter of Lombardy, an alchymist, i. 136.
-
Peter of Pontefract, his false prophecies described by Grafton, i.
234.
-
Petronella, the wife of Nicholas Flamel, i. 116.
-
Philalethes, Eugenius, a Rosicrucian, i. 175.
-
Philip I. excommunicated, ii. 8.
-
Philip Augustus joins the third crusade (engraving), ii. 64, 66;
-
his jealousy of Richard I., 69, 71;
-
returns to France, 72.
-
Philip IV., portrait of, ii. 112;
-
his persecution of the Templars, ii. 113.
-
Philosopher’s stone, searchers for the. (See Alchymists.)
-
Pietro D’Apone. (See D’Apone.)
-
Pigray on witchcraft in France, ii. 122.
-
Pilgrimages to Jerusalem before the Crusades, ii. 2.
-
Pilgrim’s staff (engraving), ii. 56.
-
Place de Grêve (engraving), ii. 192;
-
Madame de Brinvilliers; La Chaussée and others executed there
for poisoning, 212, 213, 215.
-
Plague at Milan prophesied, i. 225.
-
Plays on the adventures of thieves, their evil influence, ii. 253, 257.
-
Poisoning, in Greece and Rome; its
spread in Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries;
declared high treason in England, ii. 192;
-
Sir Thomas Overbury poisoned; full history of his case, with portraits
of Overbury, the Earl and Countess of Somerset, Lord Coke, and
Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, 193-201;
-
suspicious death of Prince Henry, son of James I., 200;
-
Buckingham said to have poisoned James I., 201;
-
fate of Dr. Lamb, the poisoner (engraving), 202;
-
slow poisoning in Italy, its general prevalence; employed by the
Duke of Guise; much used by Roman ladies to poison husbands, 203;
-
trial and execution of La Spara and others; other women
punished, 204;
-
atrocious crimes of La Tophania; the nature of her poison;
protected in sanctuary by the clergy of Naples; seized by the
viceroy, tried, and executed, 206-208.
-
In France: Exili, Glaser, and Sainte Croix, the first criminals,
208;
-
Madame de Brinvilliers and Sainte Croix; their crimes and
punishment, 208-214;
-
M. de Penautier charged with poisoning; popular mania for the
crime, 214;
-
Lavoisin and Lavigoreux executed, 215;
-
charges against the Marshal de Luxembourg and the Countess of
Soissons; recent revival of the crime in England, 216.
-
Pope, his sketch of Sir John Blunt, Chairman of the South-Sea
Company, i. 74.
-
Popular Follies of Great Cities,
ii. 239-248.
-
Cant or slang phrases:
-
“Quoz,” 240;
-
“What a shocking bad hat,” 240;
-
“Hookey Walker,” 241;
-
“There he goes with his eye out,” 242;
-
“Has your mother sold her mangle?” 242;
-
“Flare up,” 242;
-
“Does your mother know you’re out?” 244;
-
“Who are you?” 244.
-
Songs:
-
“Cherry ripe,” 246;
-
“The Sea,” 247;
-
“Jim Crow,” 247.
-
Portraits.—John Law, i. 1;
-
the Regent Orleans, 5;
-
D’Aguesseau, 34;
-
D’Argenson, 42;
-
Earl of Sunderland, 80;
-
Harley Earl of Oxford, 46;
-
Sir Robert Walpole, 49;
-
Mr. Secretary Craggs, 64;
-
Conrad Gesner, the first tulip cultivator, 85;
-
Albertus Magnus, 100;
-
Arnold de Villeneuve, 103;
-
Raymond Lulli, 105;
-
Cornelius Agrippa, 138;
-
Panacelsus, 142;
-
Dr. Dee, 152;
-
Philip IV., ii. 112;
-
Charles IX., 119;
-
John Knox, 128;
-
James I., 134;
-
Sir George Mackenzie, 138;
-
Pietro d’Apone, 140;
-
Sir Matthew Hale, 148;
-
Sir Thomas Brown, 151;
-
Louis XIV., 177;
-
Henry Andrews, the original of “Francis Moore,” i. 244;
-
Nostradamus, 246;
-
Peter the Great, 267;
-
Sir Thomas Overbury, ii. 195;
-
Villiers duke of Buckingham, 198;
-
Lord Chief Justice Coke, 199;
-
Earl and Countess of Somerset, 200,
201;
-
Henry IV. of France, 277;
-
Lord Bacon, 286.
-
Political prejudices and enactments against long hair and beards, i.
296-303.
-
Poetry and romance, their obligations to the Rosicrucians, i. 179.
-
Powell, Chief Justice, his opposition to the belief in witchcraft,
ii. 152.
-
Prophecies: Plague of Milan, i. 225;
-
plague of London, 1665, inundation of London, 1528, 228;
-
great fire, 1666; earthquake, 1842, 230;
-
Mother Shipton, with view of her cottage, 232, 241;
-
Merlin, 232-238;
-
Peter of Pontefract, 234;
-
Robert Nixon the Cheshire prophet, 238;
-
almanac-makers, 240 (see Fortune-Telling);
-
end of the world, 222, 224;
-
earthquakes, 224.
-
(See Modern Prophecies,
the Crusades, Peter
Barthelemy, &c.)
-
Puysegur, the Marquis de, his discovery of clairvoyance; his
magnetic elm, i. 283-286.
-
Raising
the dead and absent, a power ascribed to Cornelius Agrippa, i. 142;
-
Raleigh, Sir Walter, an inveterate duellist, abandons the custom,
ii. 297.
-
Raymond of Toulouse, a leader of the first crusade, ii. 21, 26, 29, 31, 34, 45, 46;
-
his supposed collusion with Peter Barthelemy, 35, 37, 41;
-
at the siege of Jerusalem, 46.
-
Raymond Lulli. (See Lulli.)
-
Reinaldo, a leader of the first crusade, ii. 18.
-
Relics, brought by the early
pilgrims from Palestine, ii. 2;
-
swearing on, a test of innocence, 264;
-
fragments of the true cross; bones of saints; tears of the
Saviour; tears and milk of the Virgin; Santa Scala at Rome;
relics of Longbeard, Massaniello, La Brinvilliers, Dr. Dodd,
Fauntleroy, Thurtell, Corder, Greenacre, Thom, Shakspere,
Napoleon, Waterloo, 302-308.
-
Religious prejudices and ordinances against long hair and beards, i.
296-303.
-
Rhodes, Richard I. at (engraving), ii. 69.
-
Rice, Count, tried for killing Du Barri in a duel, ii. 293.
-
Richard I. sets out for Palestine, ii. 67;
-
attacks the Sicilians, 68;
-
arrives at Rhodes (engraving), 69;
-
his queen Berengaria (engraving), 70;
-
captures Acre, 71;
-
reaches Bethlehem (engraving), 73;
-
his concern on being obliged to retreat, 74;
-
his reputation in Palestine, 74.
-
Richelieu an alchymist, i. 198;
-
his opposition to duelling, ii. 279,
280.
-
Ripley, George, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 118.
-
Robert duke of Normandy, a leader of the Crusades, ii. 21, 31, 39, 46.
-
Robert count of Flanders, a leader of the first Crusade, ii. 21, 30, 31.
-
Robert of Paris (Count), his insolence to the Emperor Alexius, ii.
25;
-
killed at the battle of Dorylæum, 29.
-
Robin Hood, popular admiration of, ii. 250.
-
Robinson, Ann, the Stockwell “Ghost,” ii. 234.
-
Rochester, Viscount, afterwards Earl of Somerset. (See Somerset.)
-
Roger Bacon. (See Bacon.)
-
Romance and poetry, their obligations to the Rosicrucians, i. 179.
-
Rosenberg (Count), a patron of Dr. Dee, i. 159.
-
Rosicrucians, the, their romantic doctrines; history of their
progress, i. 167;
-
their poetical doctrines, sylphs, naiades, gnomes, and
salamanders, 172, 179.
-
Rouen, view in, ii. 171;
-
the Parliament remonstrate with Louis XIV. on his leniency to
suspected witches, 172.
-
Rudolph (I. and II.), Emperors, their encouragement of alchymy, i.
158, 165.
-
Rupecissa, John de, a French alchymist, i. 136.
-
Russia, tax on beards imposed by Peter the Great, i. 301.
-
“Sabbaths,” or meetings of witches and demons, ii. 107, 133.
-
Sainte Croix, the slow poisoner in France, his crimes and death, ii.
208, 211.
-
Saints, relics of, ii. 304.
-
Saladin, his military successes, ii. 63;
-
his defence of Acre, 69, 71;
-
defeated at Azotus, 72;
-
and at Jaffa, 74.
-
“Saladin’s tithe,” a tax enforced by the Crusaders, ii. 65.
-
Salamanders. (See the Rosicrucians.)
-
Santa Scala, or Holy Stairs, at Rome, ii. 304.
-
Schinderhannes, the German robber, ii. 256.
-
Scotland, witchcraft in. (See Witchcraft.)
-
Scott, Sir Walter, his anachronisms on the Crusades, ii. 74, 98.
-
“Scratching Fanny,” or the Cock Lane Ghost; her remains in the
vault of St. John’s Church, Clerkenwell, ii. 230.
-
Seal of Edward I. (engraving), ii. 97.
-
Seifeddoulet, the Sultan, his reception of Alfarabi, the alchymist,
i. 98.
-
Semlin attacked by the Crusaders, ii. 15.
-
Sendivogius, a Polish alchymist, i. 164,
165.
-
Senés, Bishop of, his report on Jean Delisle’s success in alchymy,
i. 193.
-
Serlo cuts off the hair of Henry I. (engraving), i. 296, 298.
-
Seton, the Cosmopolite, an alchymist; memoir of, i. 163.
-
Sevigné, Madame, her account of Madame de Brinvilliers, ii. 208, 213.
-
Shakespere’s Mulberry-tree, ii. 307.
-
Sharp, Giles, contriver of mysterious noises at Woodstock Palace,
ii. 224.
-
Shem, the son of Noah, an alchymist, i. 95.
-
Sheppard, Jack, his popularity—lines on his portrait by Thornhill,
ii. 252;
-
evil effect of a novel and melo-dramas representing his career,
253.
-
Sherwood Forest, and Robin Hood (engraving), ii. 249, 250.
-
Shipton, Mother, her prophecy of the fire of London, i. 230;
-
her popularity, 231;
-
view of her cottage, 241.
-
Simeon, the Patriarch, a promoter of the Crusades, ii. 7.
-
Slang phrases. (See Popular
Follies.)
-
Slow Poisoners, the. (See Poisoning.)
-
Smollett, on history and the South-Sea Bubble, i. 67.
-
Soliman the Sultan, his conflict with the Crusaders, ii. 18.
-
Somerset, the Earl of (poisoner of Sir Thos. Overbury), portrait
of, ii. 200;
-
his origin and rise at court; supposed vicious connexion with
James I.; his intrigue and marriage with the Countess of Essex;
the murder of Overbury; the earl’s trial and sentence, 193-201.
-
Somerset, the Countess of, her participation in the murder of Sir
Thos. Overbury, with portrait, ii. 201.
-
Songs:
-
on the Mississippi scheme, i. 36;
-
on the South-Sea Bubble, 50;
-
on famous thieves, ii. 260;
-
on witchcraft, popular in Germany, 165;
-
popularity of “Cherry Ripe,” “The Sea,” “Jim Crow,” 246.
-
Songs, Beranger’s “Thirteen at Table,” i. 257.
-
Songs
of the Rosicrucians, i. 168, 204.
-
Sorcery. (See Witchcraft and Alchemy.)
-
Sorel, Agnes, her patronage of Jacques Cœur, the alchymist, i. 132.
-
South-Sea Bubble, history of, i.
45-84;
-
the Company originated by Harley, Earl of Oxford; its primary
object, 45;
-
visionary ideas of South-Sea trade; restrictions imposed by
Spanish Government, 46;
-
proposals to Parliament to reduce the debt; capital increased to
twelve millions; success of the Company, 47;
-
its application to take the whole state debt; counter
application by the Bank of England; the former adopted by
Parliament; stock rises from 130 to 300, 48;
-
Sir R. Walpole’s warning; directors’ exertions to raise the
prices, 49;
-
bill passed; great demand for shares, 50;
-
other bubble schemes started and encouraged, 51,
52;
-
eighty-six of them dissolved, 55, 57;
-
shares at 400; fall to 290, but raised by the directors’
schemes, 51;
-
dividend declared; increased excitement, 52;
-
Swift’ lines on Change Alley; extent of the delusion; frauds of
schemers, 54;
-
fears of the judicious; bubble companies proclaimed unlawful, 55;
-
continued excitement; stock at 1000, 62,
63;
-
Sir John Blunt, the chairman, sells out; stock falls; meeting of
the company; Mr. Secretary Craggs supports directors, 63;
-
increased panic; negociation with Bank of England, 64, 65;
-
they agree to circulate the company’s bonds, 66;
-
total failure of the company; social and moral evils of the
scheme, 67;
-
arrogance of the directors; petitions for vengeance on them;
King’s speech to Parliament, 69;
-
debates thereon, 69, 71;
-
punishment resolved on, 70;
-
Walpole’s plan to restore credit; officers of the company
forbidden to leave England, 71;
-
ministers proved to have been bribed by shares, 73, 77;
-
directors apprehended; treasurer absconds, 73;
-
measures to arrest him, 73, 74;
-
directors expelled from Parliament, 74;
-
chairman’s examination, 75;
-
treasurer imprisoned at Antwerp, but escapes, 76;
-
reports on the details of the fraud, 76;
-
Mr. Stanhope, Secretary to Treasury, charged but acquitted;
dissatisfaction thereon, 78;
-
Mr. Aislabie, Chancellor of the Exchequer, committed to the
Tower, and consequent rejoicings (engraving), 79;
-
Sir George Caswall punished; the Earl of Sunderland acquitted;
death of Mr. Secretary Craggs, and his father, participators in
the fraud, 80;
-
heavy fines on the directors; account of these proceedings by
Gibbon the historian, 81;
-
measures adopted to restore credit, 83;
-
caricatures by Hogarth and others (seven engravings),
60, 61, 68, 70, 76, 82, 84.
-
South-Sea House, view of, i. 45.
-
Spara, Hieronyma, the slow poisoner of Rome, her trial and
execution, ii. 205.
-
Speculations. (See Money Mania,
the Mississippi Scheme, South-Sea Bubble, and Bubble Schemes.)
-
Spenser, his description of Merlin and his cave, i. 232, 237.
-
Spirits. (See Demons, Witchcraft, Cornelius
Agrippa, Paracelsus, &c.)
-
Sprenger, a German witch-finder; his persecutions, ii. 118-159.
-
St. Bernard preaches the second Crusade, ii. 53,
55;
-
his miracles, 56;
-
failure of his prophecies, 62.
-
St. Dunstan and the devil, ii. 103.
-
St. Evremond, his account of the impositions of Valentine Greatraks,
i. 270.
-
St. Germain (Count de), the alchymist, memoir of, i. 200;
-
his profusion of jewels, 203;
-
his pretensions to long life, 205.
-
St. John’s Eve, St. Mark’s Eve, St. Swithin’s Eve, superstitious
customs, i. 258.
-
Stanhope, Earl, supports the proposition to punish the directors of
the South-Sea Company, i. 72, 73;
-
is stigmatised in Parliament, and dies suddenly, 75.
-
Stanhope, Charles, secretary to Treasury;
-
his participation in the South-Sea fraud, i. 77,
78;
-
his acquittal by parliament, and consequent disturbances, 78.
-
Stedinger, the, a section of the Frieslanders; their independence;
accused of witchcraft by the Pope, and exterminated by the German
nobles, ii. 110, 111.
-
Stephen, king of Poland, his credulity and superstition, i. 159.
-
Stock jobbing. (See South-Sea
Bubble.)
-
“Stock Jobbing Cards,” or caricatures of the South-Sea Bubble (two
engravings), i. 60, 61.
-
Stonehenge ascribed to Merlin, i. 237.
-
Suger dissuades Louis VII. from the Crusade, ii. 55-62.
-
Sully, his wise opposition to duelling, ii. 279
-
Sunderland, Earl of, portrait of, i. 80;
-
his participation in the South-Sea Bubble, i. 50, 77, 78;
-
discontent at his acquittal, 80.
-
Superstitions on the 1st of January, Valentine Day, Lady Day, St.
Swithin’s Eve, St. Mark’s Eve, Candlemas Eve, Midsummer, St. John’s
Eve, 29th February, 258.
-
Surrey and the fair Geraldine; the vision shewn by Cornelius
Agrippa, i. 142.
-
Sweden, executions for witchcraft, ii. 177.
-
Sylphs. (See the Rosicrucians.)
-
Syria. (See the Crusades.)
-
Tancred, his achievements in the first Crusade, ii. 26, 35, 38, 39, 45.
-
Tax on beards imposed by Peter the Great, i. 301.
-
Tedworth, Wiltshire, the “haunted house” there; narrative of the
deception, ii. 224.
-
Tempests caused by witches, ii. 102, 106, 133, 134.
-
Templars, Knights, subdued by Saladin, ii. 63;
-
support Frederick II. in the seventh Crusade, 86;
-
their subsequent reverses, 87, 90, 99;
-
accused of witchcraft, 112;
-
persecuted by Philip IV.; the grand master burnt, 113.
-
Têtenoire, a famous French thief, ii. 255.
-
Theatrical productions, on the lives of robbers; their pernicious
influence, ii. 253-257.
-
Thieves, Popular admiration of Great,
ii. 249-260;
-
Robin Hood, ii. 250;
-
Dick Turpin, 251;
-
Jack Sheppard, 252;
-
Jonathan Wild, 254;
-
Claude Duval, 255;
-
Aimerigot Têtenoire, 255;
-
Cartouche; Vidocq, 256;
-
Italian banditti, 256, 257;
-
Schinderhannes and Nadel, 257;
-
evil influence of the “Beggars’ Opera” and other plays on the
subject of thieves 253, 257, 258;
-
Lord Byron’s “Corsair” and Schiller’s “Robber,” 259.
-
Thomas Aquinas. (See Aquinas.)
-
Tiberias, battle of, ii. 63.
-
Tibertus, Antiochus, his wonderful prophecies, i. 248.
-
Toads dancing at the witches’ “Sabbaths,” ii. 108.
-
Tophania, La, a famous poisoner in Italy, her crimes and execution;
the nature of her potions, ii. 206.
-
Torture, its cruelty exposed by the Duke of Brunswick, ii. 170.
-
Toulouse, witches burnt at, ii. 160.
-
Tournaments and judicial combats. (See Duels.)
-
Tours, haunted house at, ii. 221.
-
Tower Hill, bonfires on the committal of participators in the
South-Sea Bubble (engraving), i. 79.
-
Tower of London, Raymond Lulli the alchymist said to have practised
there, i. 109;
-
poisoning of Sir Thomas Overbury, ii. 195.
-
Transmutation of metals. (See Alchymists.)
-
Trees, their significance in dreams, i. 254;
-
susceptible of magnetic influence, 284.
-
Trial by Battle. (See Duels and
Ordeals.)
-
Trithemius, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 124.
-
Trois-Echelles executed for witchcraft, ii. 120.
-
Troussel, William, his duel with the Constable Du Guesclin (engraving),
ii. 261, 271.
-
“Truce of God,” the, proclaimed by the first Crusaders, ii. 14.
-
“True Cross,” fragments of the, ii. 3, 71.
-
Tulip Mania;
-
the flower first introduced into Europe by Gesner, portrait
of Gesner, i. 85;
-
great demand for plants in Holland and Germany, introduced in
England from Vienna, the flower described and eulogised by
Beckmann and Cowley, 86;
-
rage for bulbs in Holland and their enormous prices, 87;
-
amusing errors of the uninitiated, 88;
-
marts for the sale of bulbs, jobbing and gambling, ruinous
extent of the mania and immense profits of speculators, 89;
-
“tulip-notaries” appointed, sudden loss of confidence and fall
of prices, meetings, deputation to the government, 90;
-
unfulfilled bargains repudiated by the law courts, 91;
-
the mania in England and France, 91;
-
subsisting value of choice bulbs, 92.
-
Tunis invaded by the Crusaders, ii. 96.
-
Tunbridge Wells, a witch doctor there in 1830, ii. 189.
-
Turner, Mrs. her participation in the poisoning of Sir Thomas
Overbury, ii. 194, 198,
199.
-
Turpin, Dick, popular admiration of, ii. 251.
-
Undines. (See the Rosicrucians.)
-
Urban II. preaches the Crusade (frontispiece), ii. 7.
-
Valentine, Basil, the alchymist, memoir of, i. 119.
-
Valentine’s Day superstitions, i. 258.
-
Vauvert, the ruined palace at, haunted, ii. 220.
-
Vezelais, cathedral of (engraving), ii. 54.
-
Villars, Marshal, his opposition to the Mississippi scheme, i. 16.
-
Vulgar phrases. (See Popular
Follies.)
-
Visions, pretended. (See Barthelemy,
Agrippa, and Dr. Dee.)
-
Waldenses, the, persecuted and burnt at Arras, ii. 115.
-
Walpole, Sir Robert, his warning of the evils of the South-Sea
bubble, portrait of him, i. 49-55;
-
his measures to restore credit, 70, 71.
-
Walter the Penniless, a leader of the first Crusade, ii. 15, 18.
-
Warbois, the witches of, absurd charges against them, their
execution, ii. 125.
-
“Water of Life,” searchers for. (See Alchymists.)
-
Water ordeal. (See Duels and
Ordeals.)
-
“Weapon-salve,” controversy respecting, i. 265.
-
“Wehr-wolves” executed, ii. 120, 168.
-
Westminster Abbey, Raymond Lulli, the alchymist, said to have
practised there, i. 109;
-
tomb of Queen Eleanor (engraving), ii. 99.
-
Weston, Richard, an accomplice in the poisoning of Sir Thomas
Overbury, ii. 194, 198,
199.
-
Wharton, Duke of, his speeches on the South-Sea Bubble, i. 50, 75.
-
Whiston, his prophecy of the end of the world, i. 223.
-
William of Tyre preaches the Crusade, ii. 63,
65.
-
Wilson, ——, killed in a duel by John Law, i. 3.
-
Wirdig, Sebastian, the magnetiser, i. 273.
-
Witchcraft:—Account of the witch
mania, ii. 101-191;
-
popular belief in witches, ii. 102;
-
their supposed compacts with the devil; popular notions of the
devil and demons, 103;
-
witches could secure their services, 107;
-
their meetings or “Sabbaths,” 107, 133, 166, 169, 171;
-
frequent persecution on the pretext of witchcraft, 110;
-
the Stedinger, a section of the Frieslanders, exterminated on
that charge, 110;
-
the Templars accused of witchcraft; the Grand Master and others
burnt; execution of Joan of Arc (engraving), 113;
-
combined with heresy as a charge against religious reformers, 114;
-
the Waldenses persecuted at Arras; their confessions under
torture; belief common to Catholics and Reformers; Florimond on
the prevalence of witchcraft, 115;
-
witches executed at Constance; Bull of Pope Innocent VIII.;
general crusade against witches, 117;
-
Sprenger’s
activity in Germany; Papal commissions, 118;
-
executions in France; sanctioned by Charles IX., 119, 122;
-
Trois Echelles, his confessions and execution, 120;
-
“men-wolves,” executed, 121;
-
English statutes against witchcraft, 123;
-
Bishop Jewell’s exclamations, 124;
-
the witches of Warbois; absurd charges and execution of the
victims, 125;
-
annual sermon at Cambridge, ii. 127;
-
popular belief and statutes in Scotland, 127,
154;
-
charges against the higher classes; against John Knox, 128;
-
numerous executions; trial of Gellie Duncan and others, 129;
-
James I., his interest in the subject; Dr. Fian tortured (engraving),
131;
-
confessions of the accused, 132;
-
their execution; further persecution, 135;
-
case of Isabel Gowdie, 136;
-
opinions of Sir George Mackenzie (portrait), 136, 155;
-
death preferred to the imputation of witchcraft, 137, 139;
-
King James’s “Demonology,” 139;
-
the “Lancashire witches” executed, 141;
-
Matthew Hopkins, the “witch-finder general” (engraving),
143;
-
his impositions, cruelty, and retributive fate, 148;
-
“common prickers” in Scotland, 146;
-
Mr. Louis, a clergyman, executed, 147;
-
Glanville’s Sadducismus Triumphatus, 148;
-
witches tried before Sir Matthew Hale (portrait); Sir
Thomas Brown’s evidence (portrait); conviction and
execution, 148-152;
-
trials before Chief Justices Holt and Powell, 152, 153;
-
the last execution in England, in 1716, 153;
-
Scotch laws on the subject, 154;
-
various trials in Scotland 155-158;
-
last execution in Scotland, in 1722, 158;
-
proceedings of Sprenger in Germany, Bodinus and Delrio in
France, 159;
-
executions at Constance, Toulouse, Amsterdam, and Bamberg, 160-162;
-
numerous executions at Wurtzburg, including many children, 163;
-
others at Lendheim, 164;
-
the “Witches’ Gazette,” a German ballad, 165;
-
the Maréchale D’Anere executed, 166;
-
200 executions at Labourt, 166;
-
“weir-wolves,” belief in, 168;
-
Urbain Grandier, curate of Loudun, executed, 169;
-
singular cases at Lisle, 169;
-
the Duke of Brunswick’s exposure of the cruelty of torture, 170;
-
diminution of charges in Germany, 171;
-
singular remonstrance from the French Parliament to Louis XIV.
on his leniency to witches, 171;
-
executions at Mohra, in Sweden, 177;
-
atrocities in New England; a child and a dog executed, 180;
-
the last execution in Switzerland in 1652, 182;
-
the latest on record, in 1749, at Wurtzburg, 184;
-
witches ducked in 1760, 185;
-
Lady Hatton’s reputation for witchcraft; her house in Cross
Street, Hatton Garden, (engraving), 186;
-
the horse-shoe a protection against witches, 187;
-
belief in witchcraft recently and still existing, 187;
-
witch-doctors still practising, 189;
-
prevalence of the superstition in France, 189;
-
“floating a witch” (engraving), 191.
-
Women accompanying the Crusades in arms, ii. 12,
57, 67.
-
Woodstock Palace a “haunted house;” account of the noises, and their
cause, ii. 222;
-
Wulstan, Bishop, his antipathy to long hair, i. 297.
-
Wurtzburg, numerous executions for witchcraft, ii. 162, 184;
-
York, Duke of, his duel with Col. Lennox, ii. 293.
-
Zara besieged by the Crusaders, ii. 76.
-
Zachaire, Denis, the Alchymist, his interesting memoir of himself,
i. 146.