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Front Page Titles (by Subject) INDEX OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO OR QUOTED, WITH OCCASIONAL BRIEF NOTICES OF THEIR WORKS AND LIVES. - The Works of John Robinson, vol. 3
INDEX OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO OR QUOTED, WITH OCCASIONAL BRIEF NOTICES OF THEIR WORKS AND LIVES. - John Robinson, The Works of John Robinson, vol. 3 [1851]Edition used:The Works of John Robinson, Pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, with a Memoir and Annotations by Robert Ashton, 3 vols (London: John Snow, 1851). Vol. 3.
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- A Just and Necessary Apology.
- Chapter I.: Of the Largeness of Churches.
- Chapter II.: Of the Administration of Baptism.
- Chapter III.: Of Written Liturgies.
- Chapter IV.: Of the Ecclesiastical Presbytery.
- Chapter V.: Of Holy Days.
- Chapter VI.: Of the Celebration of Marriage By the Pastors of the Church.
- Chapter VII.: Of the Sanctification of the Lord's Day.
- Chapter VIII.: Of the Exercise of Prophecy.
- Chapter IX.: Of Temples.
- Chapter X.: Of Things Indifferent.
- Chapter XI.: Of Civil Magistrates.
- Chapter XII.: Of the Church of England,
- Notice Respecting the Two Letters.
- On Religious Communion
- The Preface.
- Chapter I.: Of Private Communion.
- Chapter II.: Of Public Communion.
- Chapter III.: Of Flight In Persecution.
- Chapter IV.: The Outward Baptism Received In England Is Lawfully Retained.
- Chapter V.: Of the Baptism of Infants.
- Chapter VI.: A Survey of the Confession of Faith Published In Certain Conclusions By the Remainders of Mr. Smyth's Company After His Death. *
- The People’s Plea For the Exercise of Prophecy
- Preface.
- An Answer to the Arguments Laid Down By Mr. John Yates, Preacher In Norwich , to Prove Ordinary Prophecy In Public, Out of Office, Unlawful; Answered By John Robinson.
- A Treatise On the Lawfulness of Hearing Ministers In the Church of England
- On the Lawfulness of Hearing the Ministers of the Church of England. By John Robinson.
- A Letter to the Congregational Church In London
- An Appeal On Truth's Behalf.
- To Our Beloved, the Elders and Church At Amsterdam , Grace and Peace From God the Giver Thereof, and In Him Our Salutations .
- An Answer to a Censorius People
- Letter By Rev. Joseph Hall, B.d., Rector of Halstead, Called By Mr. Robinson “a Censorious Epistle.”
- An Answer to “a Censorious Epistle.”
- A Catechism
- An Appendix to Mr. Perkins’ Six Principles of Christian Religion.
- Appendix
- No I.: The Church In Southwark.
- No. II.: The Exiles and Their Churches In Holland.
- Chronological Index of Mr. Robinson's Works.
- Index of Subjects.
- Index of Authors Referred to Or Quoted, With Occasional Brief Notices of Their Works and Lives.
- Index of Important Texts of Scripture Illustrated Or Quoted.
INDEX OF AUTHORS REFERRED TO OR QUOTED, WITH OCCASIONAL BRIEF NOTICES OF THEIR WORKS AND LIVES.
- Æmilius paulus, historian, born at Verona, died in Paris 1529, i. 243.
- Agesilaus, King of Sparta, died b.c. 362, i. 104.
- Ainsworth, Rev. H., [see notice of, vol. iii. 462], i. 405, 407, 411; ii. 1, 50, 51, 59, 157; iii. 106, 107, 127.
- Alciatus, Andrew, a Milanese lawyer, died at Pavia in 1550, i. 79.
- Alison, Dr. R., a divine of the English Church, ii. 7, 47.
- Allen, Rev. W., D.D. [See Descendants of Robinson, i. lxxi.]
- Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, born 333, died 397, i. 73, 100, 131, 169, 190, 233, 243, 255.
- Anacharsis, A Scythian philosopher, flourished 600 years b.c. i. 54.
- Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, born in Piedmont, died in 1109, i. 210.
- Antisthenes, an Athenian philosopher, born b.c. 423, i. 177.
- Antoninus Marcus, philosopher and emperor, born 121, died 180, i. 139.
- Aristotle, the head of the Peripatetic School at Stagyra in Thrace, flourished, b.c. 384, i. 73, 130, 244, 252.
- Arminius, James, a Dutch divine, professor of divinity at Leyden, died 1609, iii. 52.
- Audæus, founder of the sect of Audæans, ii. 45.
- Augustine, an African Father, born in 354. His mother Monica was an example of maternal piety, i. 6, 8, 14,18, 19, 28,41, 72, 74, 83, 90, 94, 110, 119, 126, 130, 146, 155, 157, 165, 167, 168, 187, 192, 197, 198, 229, 230, 233, 251, 254, 255, 256, 258; iii. 33, 50, 61, 78.
- Bancroft, Dr., a tyrannical flatterer and bishop of King James, ii. 50, 81, 82, 93.
- Barlow, Bishop of Winchester, ii. 219.
- Barrowe, Henry. [See notices of, vol. iii. 106, 439.]
- Basil, Bishop of Cæsarea, born 326, i. 174.
- Bastingius, Jer., ii. 219.
- Bernard, a divine of the Romish Church, Abbott of the Monastery of Clairvaux, born in 1091, i. 20, 25, 62, 76, 78, 79, 110, 114, 126, 173, 175, 187, 193, 203, 256.
- Bernard, Richard, Vicar of Worksop, and afterwards Rector of Batcombe. [See ii. throughout.]
- Beza, Theo., born in 1519 in Burgundy, died 1605, i. 94, 210; ii. 219; iii. 32, 33.
- Bodinus, John, a French lawyer, born 1530, died 1596, i. 81, 111, 182, 215; iii. 42.
- Bæthius, a Roman philosopher, and profound scholar, i. 128, 143.
- Bradshaw, W., Rev., a celebrated Puritan, ii. 6; iii. 360.
- Broughton, Hugh, a celebrated polemical writer, born 1549, died 1612, iii. 10.
- Brook's Lives, [often quoted in editorial notices.]
- Browne, Robert, [see notice of, iii. 457], ii. 57.
- Bucanus, Guil., a celebrated continental divine of the 16th century, iii. 23, 27, 45.
- Bucer, Gerson, a learned divine of the sixteenth century, iii. 28, 33.
- Calvin, John, born at Noyon in Picardy in 1509, died 1564. His works form nine volumes folio, i. 31, 92, 149, 156, 177, 184, 196, 223, 230, 231, 242, 250; iii. 23, 26, 59.
- Carleton's, Bishop of Chichester, letters from Dort, i. 265; iii. 35, 62.
- Cartwright, Thos., a Puritan divine, born in 1555, persecuted by Archbishop Grindal, imprisoned, died at Warwick in 1603, i. 86, 132,164; ii. 81, 220; iii. 16, 333.
- Cassander, Geo., a German controversialist, born 1515, died 1566, i. 126.
- Cato, an illustrious Roman soldier and author, born b.c. 232, died 148, i. 226.
- Celsus, a famous physician at Rome, who wrote a Treatise of Rhetoric, i. 49.
- Chadderton's Sermons, Dr. Lawrence, ii. 81.
- Chemnitius, M., a Lutheran divine, born 1522, died 1586, i. 121, 201; iii. 45.
- Chrysostom, John, a Greek father, born at Antioch in 354, died at Pityus on the Euxine Sea, in the year 407. On account of his eloquence he was surnamed Chrysostom, i. e. Golden-mouthed, i. 49, 151, 160, 173, 177, 182, 206, 223, 241; iii. 42, 53.
- Cicero, the celebrated Roman orator, born b.c. 106, died b.c. 43, i. 31, 69, 73, 104, 131, 134, 148, 165, 168, 169, 203, 209, 215, 233, 235, 251.
- Cluse, De Les, a French preacher in Amsterdam, [see notice of, iii. 127], iii. 132, 148.
- Comenius, a divine at Amsterdam, born 1592, died 1671, i. 55.
- Cyprian, an African father, born at Carthage in the first half of the third century, i. 122, 172, 198; iii. 7, 23,41.
- Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, died 444, i. 60, 200.
- Daneus, Lambert, a celebrated divine, i. 160.
- Dionysius, Bishop of Alexandria, a disciple of Origen, i. 3.
- Donatus. [See notice of, ii. 44.]
- Dove, Dr., an English divine, ii. 184.
- Downame, Dr., Bishop of Derry, ii. 91, 184.
- Edwards, President, works referred to in note, i. 294.
- Epictetus, a stoic philosopher in the reign of the Emperor Domitian, originally a slave, i. 169.
- Erasmus, Desiderius, was born at Rotterdam in 1467, reputed the most learned man of his day in Europe; works, 10 vols. folio, i. 97, 119, 238, 247.
- Eusebius, Pamphilius, born in Palestine about 270, died about 338; author of Ecclesiastical History, &c.; works, 3 vols folio, i. 20, 27, 73, 83, 176, 217; iii. 49, 58, 328.
- Euring, William. [See notice of, iii. 283.]
- Ferus, i. 23.
- Ficinus, Marcilius, lived in the fifteenth century, i. 32.
- Fox, the martyrologist, a native of Boston, born 1517, died 1587, ii. 220.
- Gellius, John, born at Florence in 1498, was a learned shoe-maker, a member of the academy at that city, an eminent Greek scholar; Dialogues are highly valued, i. 240.
- Giffard's book referred to, ii. 45, et alibi.
- Greenham, a Puritan divine at Drayton and Christchurch, born 1531, died 1591, i. 91, 169.
- Greenwood, John, B.A. [See notice of, iii. 439.]
- Gregory Nazianzen, Bishop of Constantinople, was born in 324; works, 2 vols folio, i. 27, 130, 132, 134, 140, 151, 155, 164, 190, 191, 198, 208, 228, 256.
- Grotius, Hugo, was the son of a Burgomaster at Delft, born in 1583; his works are numerous and learned, i. 101,156,192, 257; iii. 101.
- Hale's Letters from Dort, referred to, i. 265.
- Hall's Rev. Peter, “Harmony of Protestant Confessions,” referred to or quoted in editorial notices, i. 265, 273; iii. 9, 10, 17.
- Hall, Bishop. [See notice of, iii. 397.]
- Hanbury, Benjamin. Notices of his works often occur in editorial notes, ii. 59; iii. 84, 127, especially 453, 459, 463, 465.
- Hellwisse, [see a biographical sketch of, iii. 155], i. 342, 452.
- Herodotus, Greek historian, born at Halicarnassus, b.c. 484, i. 176.
- Hooper, Bishop of Gloucester, martyr in 1555, ii. 220.
- Hubert, i. 175.
- Ignatius, a disciple of the evangelist John, Bishop of Antioch, and a martyr, torn to pieces by lions at Rome,. 107; i. 60, 140, 169 iii. 49.
- Irenæus, Bishop of Lyons, a disciple of Polycarp, i. 48, 82.
- Isidorus, an exegetical writer at Pelusium, died a.d. 450, i. 165.
- Jacob, Henry, [see notice of, iii. 444; character of, 446], ii. 17, 82, 221, 397; iii. 58, 339.
- Jerome, a native of Prague, a disciple of John Huss, died a martyr in 1416, i. 46, 115, 122, 128, 133, 227, 242, 256; iii. 5.
- Johnson, Francis, Amsterdam, ii. 6, 50, 62, 397; iii. 25, 360, 441, et alibi.
- Josephus, the Jewish Historian, born a.d. 37, died 95, i. 90, 232, 242; iii. 299.
- Junius, Francis, Professor of Divinity at Leyden, i. 12, 44; iii. 14, 16, 49, 55, 61, 101, 149.
- Keckerman, Bartholomew, Professor of Philosophy, Dantzic, died 1609, i. 42, 95, 143; iii. 45.
- Knox, John, the celebrated Scotch reformer, i. 296.
- Lactantius, a father of the church; Constantine appointed him tutor to his son, i. 131, 149, 150, 179, 219, 220.
- Laertius, Diogenes, a Greek author, died a.d. 222, i. 121, 152, 239.
- Livius, or Livy, the celebrated Roman historian, born b.c. 59, died a.d. 17, i. 82, 138.
- Lucifer, Bishop of Cagliari in the fourth century, ii. 44.
- Luther, the celebrated German reformer, i. 48, 60.
- Macrobius, a Latin writer of the fourth century, i. 342.
- Maldonatus, a Spanish Jesuit, who wrote on original sin, and on grace, &c., ii. 219.
- Martial, the epigrammatic poet, born in Spain, died in 104, i. 125.
- Martyr, Justin, an early Greek writer, martyred at Rome, 165, iii. 49.
- Martyr, Peter, a native of Florence, a Professor of Divinity at Oxford in the reign of Edward VI., i. 57; ii. 447; iii. 58.
- Melancthon, Luther's companion, i. 49, 140, 233, 250; ii. 232, 446.
- Menander, a Greek poet, flourished at Athens, b.c. 342; i. 95, 236.
- Morneus, Philip, a French divine, i. 32, 45, 68, 104.
- Morton, or Murton, i. 266, 267, 449, 466.
- Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, often referred to in editorial notes.
- Neal, History of the Puritans. [See various notes.]
- Nicholas, Henry, the founder of the sect of the Familists, i. 390.
- Novatian. [See notice of, ii. 45.]
- Paget, John, a writer against the Separatists in Holland, iii. 127.
- Panormita, i. 96.
- Pareus, David, a celebrated German divine of the seventeenth century, i. 242 ; iii. 75.
- Parker, Matthew, an episcopal divine, iii. 33, 69.
- Patricius, Francis, an Italian author of the sixteenth century, i. 128.
- Payne, Dr. George, quoted. [See note, i. 294.]
- Perkins, William, a Puritan divine of Cambridge, [see notice of, iii. 425], i. 16, 62,193, 202, 257, 467, 468; ii. 446; iii. 23, 61, 425, et alibi.
- Philo-Judæus, a learned Jewish, writer, flourished in the first century, i. 5, 112.
- Philpot, Bishop, the martyr, i. 194.
- Pindarus, the prince of lyric poets, flourished, 500 b.c., i. 119.
- Piscator, the celebrated commentator, born 1546, died 1626, iii. 23.
- Plato, Athenian philosopher, flourished, 430 b.c., i. 92, 219, 226, 249.
- Plautus, a Romaa writer, died b.c. 184, i. 76.
- Pliny, the natural historian, born a.d. 23, perished at Herculaneum 79, i. 137, 164, 165.
- Plutarch, a celebrated historian, a native of Cheronea, in Bœotia, died 140, i. 23, 79, 88, 92, 97, 101, 120, 121, 134, 161, 172, 173, 216, 228, 234, 237, 251, et alibi.
- Politian, a learned Tuscan historian, poet, and critic, died 1494, i. 89, 173, 193.
- Polybius, a Greek historian, died b.c. 121, i. 133.
- Ringelberd, a Dutch, divine of the sixteenth century, i. 114.
- Sadeel, Anthony, a celebrated divine, Hebrew Professor at Geneva, whose works are published in three vols. folio, ii. 447; iii. 14, 58.
- Sallust, a Latin author, born b.c. 86, died b.c. 34, i. 132.
- Scaliger, a voluminous writer, bom 1540, died 1609, i. 5, 38, 59, 60, 64, 72, 172, 224, 225, 235, 256; iii. 22.
- Scott, Rev. Thomas, referred to in note, i. 265.
- Seneca, a Roman philosopher, flourished in the beginning of the first century, i. 20, 67, 78, 86, 102, 122, 146, 159, 160, 172, 180 193, 216, et alibi.
- Smyth, John, the Separatist at Amsterdam, who became a Baptist, i. 452; ii. 1, 62, 157, 216; iii. 168, 169, et alibi.
- Snecanus, Gellius, a celebrated divine of the sixteenth century, iii. 37, 75.
- Socrates, the Athenian philosopher, born b.c. 469, died b.c. 399, i. 79.
- Stoebus, John, a Greek author of the fifth century, i. 239.
- Stoughton, Rev. J., “Spiritual Heroes,” quoted in note, iii. 446.
- Suetonius, the Roman historian of the second century, i. 103, 180, 232, 235.
- Sumner's Memoirs of the Pilgrims at Leyden. [See Robinson's Memoir, i.]
- Tacitus, the celebrated historian, i. 148.
- Terence, a Roman poet, an African by birth, died b.c. 159, i. 22, 129, 146, 224, 251.
- Tertullian, a father of the church, flourished under the emperors Severus and Caracalla, i. 12, 25, 31, 40, 47, 49, 50, 72, 77, 91, 108, 146, 188, 200, 252, et alibi; iii. 7, 13, 19, 25, 28, 40 49, 78.
- Thales, the founder of the Ionic sect of philosophers, died b.c. 545, i. 2, 33.
- Theodoret, an ecclesiastical historian and commentator, &c.; works, 4 vols. folio, i. 104.
- Tremelius, joint translator of the Scriptures with Junius, iii. 149.
- Udal, John, [see notice of, ii. 220.]
- Underhill, E. B., Esq., frequently referred to in editorial notea, i. 452; iii. 456, 459, et alibi.
- Ursinus, A German Divine, Professor at Heidelberg i. 59, 417; iii. 23.
- Varro, Roman writer, died b.c. 29, iii. 54.
- Virgil, Polydorus, Latin historian, born at Urbino, died 1596, iii. 45.
- Whitaker, Dr., a writer against Popery, died 1595, i. 45, 47, 56; iii. 36, 39.
- Whitgift, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii. 220.
- Williams, Dr. Ed., “Treatise on Equity and Sovereignty,” note, i. 294.
- Willoughby, Lord, i. 82, 92.
- Wolflus, John, a Latin Divine of the sixteenth century, iii. 40, 59.
- Yates, J., B.D., biographical notice of, iii. 283.
- Young's Chronicles, ii. 59, and iii., frequently.
- Zanchius, Petrus, i. 64, 77, 80; ii. 447; iii. 33, 62.
- Zuinglius, the celebrated Swiss reformer, ii. 218.
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