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INDEX
H
Henry V (Germany) --the Concordat of
Worms, (Sept.23); the excommunication of, (Sept.16)
Henry VII (England) --Death of, (July 28)
Henry VIII (England) --his marriage to
Catherine of Aragon, (July 28); the birth of "Bloody" Mary Tudor,
(Feb.18); his divorce from Catherine to marry Anne Boleyn, (Oct.16); the
vacillation of Clement VII results in the split between England and
Rome, (Nov.18); his marriage to Catherine Howard, and his fourth
divorce, (July 28); regulates the maximum interest rate on loans at ten
percent, (July 6); destroys the Canterbury shrine of Henry II, and his
subsequent handling of the former Archbishop as a traitor, and the
burning of his remains, (Dec.29); the Six Articles, (Jan.28); publicly
burns the writings of Luther, (May 12); the first to repeal the act, "De
Haeretico Comburendo", (Feb.18); his arrest of Thomas Wolsey on the
charge of treason, and his subsequent death, (Nov.29); charges his
emissaries to hunt down William Tyndale, (May 12); Death of, (Jan.28);
cf. (July 15)
Henry de Beaufort --his invasion of
Bohemia to crush the Hussites, (Feb.16)
Henry of Guise --the revolt of Paris and the subsequent entrapment of
the king, (May 18); the Eighth Huguenot War, (Oct.20)
Henry of Upsula--"The Apostle to the Finns"- the murder of, (Jan.20)
Henry, Matthew --Birth of (Oct.28); the
conversion of, (Dec.17); the ordination of, (May 9); his Presbyterian
ordination, (Dec.17); death of his wife, (Feb.14); the birth and death
of his first son, (Apr.12); his remarriage, (July 8); his son, Philip,
is born, (May 3); a fourth child is born, (June 24); opens a new meeting
house, (Aug.8); Robbed, (May 9); begins his notes on the Old Testament,
(Nov.12); faints while reading Scripture, (Aug.27); his last sermon,
(June13); Death of (June 22); cf. (July 13)
Henry, Patrick --first enters the
courtroom, (Dec.1); his definition of the Church and Clergy, (Dec.1);
his defense of three Baptist preachers, (June 4)
Henry, Philip --the conversion of his son
Matthew through a sermon, (Dec.17); ejected from his church by the Act
of Uniformity, (Dec.17); ejected from his home by the Five Mile Act,
(Dec.17)
Hermansson, Oskar lterman --condemned to
death by Muslim rebels, (Apr.17)
Hernandez, Julian –(Dec.22)
Herod the Great --murders his three sons, (Apr.1); the "Murder of the
Innocents," (Apr.1); Death of, (Apr.1)
Heroes of Hebrew History –(July 19)
Herrequelo, Antonia de –(May 21)
Hesse, The Landgrave of --his cruelty in impressing soldiers for
mercenary means, (May 4)
Hexameron –(Jan.1)
Heyden, Gaspar Van Der --the conversion
of, (May 7); the martyrdom of his pastor, and the subsequent bishopric,
(May 7); Death of, (May 7)
Heyer, John Christian Frederick –(Nov.7)
Heywood, Oliver --cf. (June 23)
Hierocles --his outrages against the Church, (Feb.23); accused and
struck by Aedesius whom he puts to death, (Feb.23)
Hieronymous, Eusebius Sophronius (See:
Jerome)
Higher Criticism --its ruining effect
upon Germany, (Feb.28); W. Robertson-Smith dismissed from Aberdeen
College on account of, (July 3); opposed by David Brown, (July 3);
Ferrar Fenton assails as "wild delusion or deliberate swindle", (Dec.4);
ignored by Johann Friedrich Karl Keil, (May 5)
Hilarianus, Governor --the condemnation
of Perpetua, Felicitas, Revocatus, Saturninus, and Saturus, (Mar.7)
Hildebrand -{see: Gregory VII)
Hill, General Ambrose –(May 6)
Hill, Rowland --Birth of, (Aug.23); helps
found the Religious Tract Society, (Apr.11); builds Surrey Chapel,
(Aug.23); advocates vaccination, (Aug.23); forms the London Sunday
School Union, (July13); opposes the Arminianism of John Wesley,
(Aug.14); Death of, (Apr.11)
Historicism --denounced by Pius XII,
(Aug.12)
A History of the Baptists Traced by Their Vital Principles and
Practices from the Time of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to the
Present –(Jan.20)
The History of the Reformation In Europe in the Time Of Calvin
–(Oct.20)
The History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century –(Oct.20)
The History of the Trouble of the Cevennes—(June 15)
Hitler, Adolf --his assumption of
dictatorial powers, (Jan.31); prohibits freedom of speech and of the
Press, and prohibits public meetings, (Jan.31); signs a Concordat with
the Vatican guaranteeing religious freedom for German Catholics,
(July20); his persecution of Jews and Christians, (Apr.1)
Hoadley, Bishop Benjamin --the Bangorian
Controversy, (Mar.31); resisted by William Law, (Mar.31)
Hochstratten, Jakob Yon –(July 1)
Hodge, A. A. --cf. (June 19)
Hodge, Casper Wistar --cf. (Aug.12)
Hodge, Charles --taught by Neander, (June
19); taught by Hengstenberg, (June 19); taught by Tholuck, (June 19);
elected professor of Prince-ton, (Aug.12); teaches George Burrowes,
(Apr.3); Death of (June 19); cf. (Mar.5)
La Hogue, Battle of –(May 24)
"Hold the Fort" –(Dec.29)
Holland --accepts Protestantism, (July
15); denies Roman Catholics the right to public worship, (July 15);
declares Independence from Spain, (July 26); Alva arrives to suppress
heresy with the sword, (Aug.22); Alva flees, (July 15); the First
National Synod of the Dutch Re-formed Church, (June 2-18); assists the
Waldensians, (Aug.1-4); grants free asylum and full citizenship to those
fleeing religious persecution, (May 1); the Remonstrants present their
Five Points of Arminianism, (Oct.10); Abraham Kuyper restores the
Reformed Church in Holland, (Oct.29)
Holmes, Obadiah --whipped for refusing to
pay the fine incurred when he protested the demand for Episcopal
worship, (July 20)
Holy Dying – (Aug.13)
"Holy Ghost With Light Divine" –(Feb.25)
Holy Living –(Aug.13)
Holyoke, Rev. Edward --of George Whitefield and Gilbert Tennent, (May
28)
Homberg Church Order –(Oct.21)
Honorius I --his Death and the subsequent outbreak of rebellion,
(Oct.12)
Honorius III --the failure of the Fifth Crusade, (Sept.29)
Honorius, Emperor --threatens Pelagius with banishment, (Apr.30)
Hood, James Walker –(May 30)
Hooker, Richard --pens The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity,
(Nov.2); Death of, (Nov.2)
Hooker, Thomas --at the Westminster
Assembly, (July 1); opens a school with John Eliot as assistant, (July
7); flees to Holland, (Oct.); narrowly escapes to Massachusetts, (July
7); arrives in Boston, (Sept.4); assists in framing the Fundamental
Orders of Connecticut, (July 7); opposes the religious toleration of
Roger Williams, (July 7); tries unsuccessfully to convince Roger
Williams of his errors, (Oct.9); cf. (May 1); his election sermon, (May
31); opposes Presbyterianism among Congregationalists, (July 7); Dies of
the Plague, (July 7); cf. (June 7); (Aug.30)
Hooper, Bishop John --his opposition to
the charging of interest On loans, (July 6); his preaching against
vestments and his sub-sequent sentence to the Fleet, (Feb.9); cited with
John Rogers by Mary Tudor, (Feb.9); Death of, (Feb.9)
Hooper, William --of George, Washington,
(Dec.22)
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