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to Tallard during the negotiations on the Spanish succession at Loo, 105,
note. His new propositions on the death of the Prince of Bavaria, 146.
Subserviency of the Spanish ministers to (1699), 152. His considerate at-
tention to James II. in his last illness, 221, 222. Question as to his rec-
ognition of James III., 223-225. Announces his resolution to do so, to
James II., 226. Proclaims the Prince of Wales King, 226. Visits him in
state at St. Germains, 227. Attempts to excuse his conduct, 228.
Lewis, Prince of Baden; his victories over the Turks in 1689, iii. 345. And
again in 1691, iv. 53.

Lexington, Lord, ii. 505.

Leyburn, John, Vicar Apostolic in England, ii. 16, 116, 210. His advice to
James II., 363. Arrested by rioters, 437.

L'Hermitage; his account of the conduct of the English people in the finan-
cial crisis, iv. 565.

Licensing Act, iv. 278. The booksellers' petition against it, 288. Abolish-
ed, 433.

Lieutenancy, commissions of, iii. 435. Agitation in London caused by their
revisal, 436. Debates upon, 450.

Lilienroth, Swedish Minister; his conference with Dykvelt and Callieres,
iv. 583. Mediator at Ryswick, 631.
"Lillibullero," ii. 335.

Limerick, the Irish army collected at, iii. 525. Question of defending it,
525-527. Arrival of William III.; appearance and situation of the town,
529. The first siege; exploit of Sarsfield, 531. Baldearg O'Donnel arrives,
532. Assault repulsed; the siege raised, 534. Dissensions among the
defenders, iv. 59-63. Scarcity in, 63. Arrival of French succors, 63.
Second siege, 79. Capitulates; the conditions; the garrison have the
option of entering the French service, 84. Persuasions addressed to them,
86, 87. The majority volunteer for France, 88. Question regarding the
treaty, 99-103.

Lime Street, Roman Catholic chapel in, ii. 78.

"Limp," a Jacobite sign; its signification, iv. 339.

Lincoln, William III.'s visit to, iv. 488.

Lincoln, Edward Clinton, Earl of, ii. 506.

Lincoln's Inn Fields, houses in, i. 278. A resort of beggars and mounte-
banks, 280. Franciscan Establishment in, ii. 76.

Lindsay, Lieutenant; his part in the massacre of Glencoe, iv. 166, 169.

'Lisle, Alice, harbors fugitive rebels, i. 503. Her trial, 504, 505. Put to
death, 506. Her attainder reversed, iii. 302.

Lisle, John, assassinated, iii. 401.

Littlecote Hall, ii. 421.

Littleton, Sir Thomas, ii. 483. His speech on William III.'s use of the
veto, iv. 386. Supports Fenwick's attainder, 592. Made Lord of the
Treasury, 620. Chosen Speaker of the House of Commons, v. 114. Ap-
pointed Treasurer of the Navy, 143.

Liturgy, Laud's, for Scotland, i. 73. Proposed revisal of the Liturgy of the
Church of England, iii. 86, 375, 376.

Liverpool, i. 268.

Livingstone, Sir Thomas, surprises the Highlanders under Buchan, iii. 541.
Lloyd, David, a Jacobite emissary, iv. 44.

Lloyd, William, Bishop of Norwich, ii. 271. A nonjuror, iii. 358. His con-
versation with Sir John Trevor, iv. 28.

Lloyd, William, Bishop of St. Asaph, ii. 271, 272. (See Bishops, the
Seven.) Assures William III. of his support, 346. His disbelief of the

legitimacy of the Prince of Wales, 367. Assists at the coronation of
William and Mary, iii. 93. A member of the Ecclesiastical Commission,
364. Translated to the see of Worcester, v. 138.

Loans, government, antiquity of, i. 225.

Lobb, Stephen, ii. 174.

Lochbuy, Maclean of, iii. 263.

Lochiel. See Cameron, Sir Ewan.
Locke, John; keeps aloof from the plots of the British refugees on the Con
tinent in 1685. i. 429 Ejected from his Fellowship; his letter on Tolera-
tion, 430. Excepts Roman Catholics from claim to Toleration, ii. 7. His
dedication to the Earl of Pembroke, iii. 435. His alleged part against
renewing the Licensing Act, iv. 484, note. Takes part in the discussions
on the currency, 504. His paper in answer to Lowndes; his proposed
expedient, 506.

Lockhart, Sir George, Lord President of the Court of Session, ii. 92. Re-
sists James II.'s policy, 94. Lord President of the Court of Session; his
murder, iii. 229.

Lockhart, Sir William, iii. 235.

Lollards; their movement premature, i. 35.

London, indignation in, against Charles I., i. 85. The Plague and Fire, 150.
Proceedings against the corporation, 175. Disfranchised, 203. Consump-
tion of coal in, 247. The London clergy, 258. London in the time of
Charles II., 271-289. Population; customs, 271. The city, 272. Archi-
tecture; the streets, 273. The merchants; subsequent change in their
habits, 274. Festivities, 276. Power of the city, 277. The trainbands,
277. Fashionable part of, 278. Shop signs, 281. By night; police; light-
ing, 281. Coffee-houses, 286. Sanitary improvement, 320, 330. Fails to
support Monmouth, 451. Roman Catholic establishments in (1686), ii. 77.
Agitation against them, 80. The Corporation; dismissal of officers, 260.
Meeting of the metropolitan clergy, 269. They refuse to read the Decla-
ration of Indulgences, 271. Illumination for the acquittal of the bishops,
302. Restoration of the Charter, 363. Disturbances in, 383. Agitation
against the Papists, 412. Transactions after the flight of James II., 431.
Riots, 410. The "Irish night," 440. Raises a loan for William, 463.
Returns Whig Representatives to the Convention, 471. Illuminated for
the Proclamation of William and Mary, iii. 1. Election of 1690, iii. 423.
Alarm on the news of the defeat off Beachy Head, 482. Offers assistance
to the Queen, 484. Effect of the news of the battle of the Boyne, 511.
The Jacobite press, 520. Excitement in, on the loss of the Smyrna fleet,
iv. 322. Jacobite agitation, 334, 338. Various reports during the siege
of Nemur, 473. Wagers on the event of the war, 474. Election (1695),
491. Rejoicings for the Peace of Ryswick, 640. Attempted Proclama-
tion f James III. in, v. 229. Election of the Whig candidates (1701),
233.

London Bridge, Old, i. 272.

Londor lerry, history and description of, iii. 112. Its gates closed against
Lord Antrim, 113. Protestants take refuge there, 129. Defences of, 150.
Succors arrive from England, 150. Attempted betrayal by the governor;
defence taken up by the inhabitants, 151. Character of the inhabitants,
154. Measures for the defence, 155. Commencement of the siege, 158.
Assanlt repulsed, 157. The blockade, 158. Distress in the town, 180.
Negotiations with Richard Hamilton, 183. Extreme famine, 183.
lieved, and the siege raised, 187. Rejoicings, 188. Relics of the siege,
and celebrations in memory thereof, 190.

Long, Thomas; his pamphlet, "Vox Cleri," iii. 390.
Longler t Hall, i. 453. Retirement of Bishop Ken at, iv. 33.

Re-

Lonsda'e, Earl of (Sir John Lowther), ii. 24. Made first Lord of the Treas-
ury, ii. 427. His speeches on the Revenue, 441. One of the Council

of Ni ie, 473. Abuse of, by the Whigs, 569. Parliamentary attack upon,
iv. 9. Appointed Lord of the Admiralty, 148. Speaks in defence of
Lord Nottingham, 244. Resists the Triennial Bill, 275. Appointed Lord
Privy Seal, v. 143. Joins in the resistance of the Peers to the Resump-
tion ill, 212.

Loo, W liam III.'s mansion at, i. 142. Negotiations at, between William

III. and the Count of Tallard on the Spanish Succession, v. 101. The
treaty signed, 109.

Lords Lieutenant, duties expected from, by James II., ii. 247. Many of
them dismissed, 254.

Lorges, Duke of, sacks Heidelberg, iv. 343.
Lorraine, Duke of; his death, iii. 561.

"Lottery loan," iv. 390.

Louvois, French Minister of War, ii. 353.

Advises the devastation of the

Palatinate, iii. 97. His jealousy of Lauzun, 130.

His advice to James

II., 130. Provides means for the siege of Mons, iv. 11. His death, 175.
His talents as War Minister; adverse to the plan of invading England, 176.
His plot for the assassination of William, 228.

Lovelace, John, Lord, ii. 387. Rises for William, 388. Made prisoner, 388.
Liberated by the people of Gloucester; marches to Oxford, 415. His
threat to the Lords, 500.

Low Church party, iii. 55-57.

Lowick, Edward; his share in the assassination plot, iv. 523. Executed,

540.

Lowndes, William; his mistaken views of the currency, iv. 503. Locke's
refutation of, 504.

Lowther, Sir John. See Lonsdale, Earl of.

Lucas, Charles, character of his Irish patriotism, iv. 93.

Lucas, Lord, appointed Lieutenant of the Tower, ii. 431.

Ludlow, Edmund, refuses to take part in the Whig plots, i. 420. His Swiss
retirement, iii. 401. Returns to London, 402. Proclamation for his ap-
prehension, 403. His flight; his tomb at Vevay, 403.

Lumley, Richard, Lord, 467. Pursues Monmouth, 486. Joins the revo-
lutionary conspiracy, ii. 318. Signs the invitation to the Prince of
Orange, 320. Seizes Newcastle for William, 414.

Lundy, Robert, appointed Governor of Londonderry by Mountjoy, ili. 116.
Professes his adherence to the Government of William and Mary, 129.
Repulsed by Hamilton at Strabane, 148. His treachery, 149, 151. His
flight, 152. Sent to the Tower, 178.

Lunt, turns informer against Lancashire Jacobites, iv. 415. His evidence
at Manchester, 419.

Luttrell, Colonel Henry, iii. 161. His intrigues at Limerick, iv. 60. De-
puted to St. Germains, 61. Opens a correspondence with the English, 77.
Deserts James; assassinated, 87.

Luttrell, Colonel Simon, iii. 161. Ejects the Fellows of Trinity College,
Dublin, 175. Governor of Dublin for James, 488. A member of the
deputation from Limerick to St. Germains, iv. 61. Remains faithful to
James, 88.

Luttrell, Narcissus; his diary, iii. 2, note.
Luxemburg, seized by Lewis XIV., i. 215.
Luxemburg, Francis Henry, Duke of, gains the battle of Fleurus, iii. 482, 524.
Commands at the siege of Mons, iv. 11. His campaign against William
III. in Flanders, 52. Čovers the siege of Namur, 215. His personal pecu-
liarities, 220. Receives information of the Allies' plans, 221. Surprised
by William at Steinkirk, 222. Retrieves the day, 223. Advises Lewis
XIV. to give battle, 224. Threatens Liege, 226. Gains the battle of
Landen, 324-328. His inactivity after the battle, 329. His campaign of
1694, 413. His death, 431.

Lyme Regis, Monmouth lands at, i. 451.

M.

Macarthy. See Mountcashel, Viscount.

Macclesfield, Char.es Gerard, Earl of, ii. 356. Opposes the Abjuration Bil
iii. 454.

Macdonald, Mac Ian, of Glencoe, iii. 261; iv. 158. His quare. with the
Earl of Breadalbane, 155. Takes the oaths to the Government after the
appointed day, 157. The fact of his having taken the oaths suppressed,
163. Slain at Glencoe, 169.

Macdonald of Glengarry, iii. 261. His quarrel with Sir Ewan Cameron,
269. At the battle of Killiecrankie, 283. His quarrel with a Lowland
gentleman, 542. At the conference at Glenorchy, iv. 153. Takes the
oaths to William III.'s Government, 156. Examined by the Glencoe
Commissioners, 480.

Macdonald, Colin of Keppoch, iii. 257. Threatens Inverness, 258. Joins
Dundee, 261. Examined by the Glencoe Commissioners, 458.
Macdonald of Sleat, iii. 262. Retires from the Highland army, 295.
Macdonalds, their ancient ascendency in the Highlands, iii. 249. Their
claim to be Lords of the Isles, 255. Their feud with the citizens of In-
verness, 256.

Mackay, General Andrew, ii. 376. His Skirmish with the Irish troops at
Wincanton. Sent by William III. to Scotland, iii. 225. His cam-
paign in the Highlands, 264. His plan for a fortress at Inverlochy, 265.
Suspends operations, 271. Marches northwards, 280. Arrives at Killie-
crankie, 282. Defeated by Dundee, 285. His retreat, 287. Reorganizes
his force, 288. Defeats the Highlanders at St. Johnston's, 293. Thwarted
by the Scotch administration, 295. Supported by William, 296. Builds
Fort William, 542. Serves under Ginkel in Ireland, iv. 64. Forces the
passage of the Shannon at Athlone, 69. Turns the Irish flank at Aghrim,
73. At the battle of Steinkirk, 224. His fall, 225.

Mackenzie, Sir George, Lord Advocate, ii. 95. Dismissed, 96.
Hated by
the Covenanters, iii. 219. His speech in the Scotch Convention against
the deposition of James II., 226.

Mackintosh, Sir James, his collection of Newsletters and other documents,
i. 306 and note, 346, note. His opinion on the Roman Catholic question,

ii. 184.

Mackintoshes, the, 256.

Maclachlan, Margaret, murder of, i. 393.

Macleans, the, iii. 252, 262.

Macnaghtens, the, iii. 252, 262.

Madrid, Bread-riots in, v. 148.

Magdalene College, Cambridge, MSS. at, i. 235, note. See Pepysian Li-
brary.

Magdalene College, Oxford, ii. 222. Its loyalty, 223. Its wealth; vacancy
of the Presidency, 224. The Fellows cited before the High Commission,
226. Interview of the Fellows with James II., 230. Penn's negotiations
with, 232 and note, 233 and note. Special commissioners sent to, 233.
Bishop Parker installed President, 234. The Fellows ejected, 235. Turned
into a Popish seminary, 236. Concessions of James in regard to, 363.
Announced restoration of the Fellows, 363.

Maine, Duke of, a natural son of Lewis XIV., iv. 466. His cowardice,
470.

Maintenon, Madame de, saves Trêves from destruction, iii. 98. Uses her
influence with Lewis XIV. to recognize James III., v. 223.

Maloney, an Irish Bishop, ii. 122, note.

Manchester, Charles Montague, Earl of, joins the rising for the Prince of
Orange in the North, ii. 398. Sent ambassador to Paris, v. 144. Sends
news to William III. of the proclamation of James III., 227. Recalled
from Paris, 228.

Manchester, i. 265. Special commission at, in 1694, iv. 417. Acquittal of
the prisoners, 418.

Manheim, destroyed by the French, iii. 98.

Manley, John, his speech against the attainder of Fenwick, iv. 591.
Mansuete, Father, ii. 172.

Manufactories, wages in, i. 326. Ballals regarding, 327, note.
labor in, 328.

Marlborough, mound at, i. 225, note.

Children's

The Duke of Somerset's house at,

iii. 536.
Marlborough, John Churchill, Duke of; his rise and character, i. 361. Am-
bassador extraordinary to France, 362. His operations against Monmouth,
467. At the battle of Sedgemoor, 479. His pity for the convicted rebels,
510. Sits on the trial of Lord Delamere, ii. 32. His communications with
Dykvelt; his motives for deserting James II., 198. His letters to William
III, 203, 344. Conspires against James, 392. Attends James, 400.
His desertion, 401. Com nands the English brigade under Waldeck; re-
pulses the French at Walcourt, iii. 346. Complaints of his avarice, 347.
His relations with the Princess Anne, 444. Supports the Abjuration Bill,
454. One of the Council of Nine, 473. Advises the sending reinforce
ments to Ireland, 525. His expedition to Ireland, 537. His dispute with
the Duke of Wurtemberg; takes Cork, 538. Takes Kinsale, 539. His
reception by William on his return, 539. Hated by the Jacobites; his
ties to William, iv. 47. Seeks an interview with Colonel Sackville; his
pretended repentance for his desertion of James II., 48. His treasonable
betrayal of secrets, 49. His promises to James, 50. Receives a written
pardon from James, 50. Accompanies William to the Continent, 50. His
correspondence with James. 51. His plot for the restoration of James,
127. Calculates on the army's jealousy of foreigners, 129. Distrusted
and betrayed by the Jacobites, 132, 133. Disgraced, 133. Various re-
ports of the cause of his disgrace, 133. His signature forged by Robert
Young, 199. Sent to the Tower, 200. Released; public feeling in favor
of, 203. Robbed by highwaymen, 237. Excites discontent against the
Dutch, 246. His opposition to Government, 273. His communications
with Middleton, 312. Supports the Bill for regulating State Trials, 381.
Betrays the intended expedition to Brest 407 and note. His motives,
408, 409. Offers his services to William, and is rejected, 410. Change in his
views caused by the death of Mary, 451. Promotes the reconciliation of
the Princess Anne with William, 452. Implicated in Fenwick's confes-
sion, 574. His demeanor, 577. His speech in the House of Lords, 603.
William III.'s reconciliation with, v. 93. His motives for fidelity, 94. His
support of the Court, 135. Uses his influence in favor of Burnet when
attacked in the House of Commons, 198. His share in passing the Re-
sumption Bill, 217.

Marlborough, Sarah, Lady, ii. 199. Her influence over her husband, 199.
Her friendship with the Princess Anne, 199. Her influence over the
Princess, iii. 443. Her wilfulness, 444. Her love of gain, 445. Forms a
Princess's party, 446. Attends the Princess Anne to Kensington, iv. 135.
Marsiglia, battle of, iv. 343.
Marston Moor, battle of, i. 91.

assignment of
Her jealousy
Suspected to
Birth of her
Her letters to

Mary of Modena, Queen; her rapacity, i. 514. Obtains an
rebel prisoners, 515. Rapacity of her maids of honor, 515.
of Catharine Sedley, ii. 55. Her dislike of Rochester, 55.
have been bribed by Tyrconnel, 133. Her pregnancy, 241.
son, 281.
Her flight; her reception by Lewis XIV., 467.
her correspondents in London betrayed to William III., iii. 468. Her let-
ter to Montgomery, 551. Gives birth to a daughter, iv. 181. Question
respecting her jointure, 634, 635, 636, note. The payment of her jointure
made conditional on the reinoval of James II. from St. Germains, v. 71.
Her interview with Madame de Maintenon, 222.
Mary, Princess, (afterwards Queen); educated a Protestant, i. 163. Marries
William of Orange, 228. Specimen of her careless use of the English
language, 308, note Her relations with her husband, ii. 135. Which
are cleared up by Burnet, 150. Her attachment to her husband, 150.
Her disapproval of the Declaration of Indulgence, 182. Subscribes for

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