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Effiat, D', assists in defeating the Savoyard
forces at Veillane, iii. 491
Eglantine, Fabre d', tried and executed, iv.
642-644

Egmont, Count, at the battle and siege of St.
Quentin, ii. 626. Defeats the French at
Gravelines, 632. Imprisoned by Alva, iii.

91

Egmont, Count of, joins the League under the
Duke of Mayenne, iii. 264. Killed at Ivry,

266

Egypt, unsuccessful expedition of the Crusaders
to, i. 193, 201. Landing of St. Louis and
the Crusaders at, 233. Invasion of, deter-
mined by the Directory, v. 44, et seq. Buo-
naparte lands at Aboukir, and after numerous
battles returns to France, leaving Kleber in
command, 66. Treaty of El Arisch, 93. The
treaty broken by the French, and battle of
Heliopolis fought, 94. Death of Kleber, and
the army commanded by Menou, 94. Battle
of Aboukir, 94. Surrender and evacuation
of Egypt, 94, 95. Formation of the hereditary
viceroyalty of, 530. The pachalic declared
by the Sultan forfeited, 538

Elba, ravaged by the Turks, ii. 632. Conquered

by France, iii. 574. Given to Napoleon, v. 232
Elbe, the Normans repulsed on the, i. 46
Elbeuf, Marquis d', defeated by Coligny at
Châteaudun, iii. 67

Elbœuf, Duke of, denounced by Richelieu, iii.
502. Hastens to Paris, 592

Eleanor, heiress of Aquitaine, marries Louis
VII. of France, i. 128. Joins the Second
Crusade, 137. Divorced, 140. Marries Henry
Plantagenet, afterwards Henry II. of Eng-
land, 140. Ransoms Richard I. from the
Emperor of Germany, 160. Supports the
claim of King John of England to Brittany,
Maine, and Anjou, 163

Eleanor of Provence, married to Henry III. of
England, i. 216. Loss of her dowry, 230.
Raises an army against the English barons,
253

Election law, disturbances on account of, v. 305
Electoral reform, proposition for, v. 518. Call
for, 579

Electors, the Imperial, in 1519, ii. 465
Eleonora, sister of the Emperor Charles V., pro-
posal to marry her to the Constable Bourbon,
ii. 488. And to Francis I., 489. To whom
she is betrothed, 491. Married to Francis I.,
520. Her melancholy fate, 520 note
Elizabeth, Queen of England, proposal to marry
her to the Duke of Angoulême, ii. 533. And
afterwards to Don Carlos of Spain, 616. Aids
the Huguenots, iii. 24. Overcomes the army
sent from France into Scotland, 24. Probably
cognizant of the conspiracy of Amboise, 24.
Her advice to Charles IX., 34. Endeavours
of Admiral Coligny to obtain from her a dis-

EME

avowal of the Council of Trent, 45. Con-
cludes a treaty with the Prince de Condé anl
the Huguenots, 68. And with Charles IX
81. Sends succours to Coligny, 109. Coa-
cludes the treaty of St. Germain's, 111. Pre-
ject to marry her to the Duke of Anjou, 112.
Her fickle policy, 125. Anjou retreats from
the marriage, 125. The Duke d'Alençon.
his brother, proposed as a suitor, 125, 1*
Elizabeth demands the restoration of Calas,
126. Withdraws from her designs on Fis
ing, and from the proposed marriage with
the Duke d'Alençon, 133. Her indignati
at the St. Bartholomew massacre, 147. But
bandies compliments with the French cour
150. Signs the Concordat of Magdeburg
199. Sends supplies to the Huguenots, 209,
And to Henry IV., 255, 259, 280. Wars
Henry against the Cardinal of Bourbon, 259.
Recommends the siege of Rouen, 280. Im-
plored by the Duke of Nevers to send Lin
reinforcements, 317. Her discontent with
Henry IV., 321. Refusal of her offer ta
succour Calais, 322. Lends money to the
King of France, 324. Sends an expedition.
under Essex, to Cadiz, 325. Sends Sir R
bert Cecil to negotiate at Vervins, 344. Her
lecture to Maréchale Biron, 354. Whom S.
recommends for severe punishment, 356. H
death, 363. Her idea of the policy of an inde
pendent monarch in Europe, 365. Her inter
view with Sully, 366

Elizabeth, Empress of Russia, declines a s-
sidy from England, iv. 265. Threate
Frederick of Prussia, 266. Defeats his army
at Jägerndorf, 270. Offers of England for
her neutrality, 281. Her death, 286
Elizabeth, Queen of Philip Augustus, her det',

i. 161.

Elizabeth, Princess of France, married by p
to Philip II. of Spain, ii. 647. Conducted:
Spain by the King of Navarre, iii. 13. As
Queen of Spain, meets her mother at Bay-
onne, iii. 87. Her death, 113

Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV. of England
affianced to Charles, son of Louis XI, n
314

Elizabeth Farnese, married to Philip V.
Spain, iv. 147. Governs her husband, 14.
Her intrigues and ambition, 150.
Her d
tivity in the interest of her son, Don Carlos,
191. Applies to the Emperor, 191. Gars
a crown and kingdom for her son, 205. H
extravagant aims notwithstanding, 205
Elizabeth, Madame, her interview with instr
gents of the 20th of June, iv. 493. Declar
her faith in Danton, 504
Elme, fortress of, taken by the papal legate
and the garrison put to the sword, i. 294
Emery, Sieur d', finance minister, creates a
tumult in Paris, iii. 562, 563. His financi

measures, 567.

EMI

Introduces a high octroi on
all commodities entering Paris, 579. Dis-
content in consequence, 579. His measures
of 1648, and their consequences, 581
Emigrés, decrees against, iv. 470, 472. Re-en-
actment of sanguinary laws against, v. 38.
Act of indemnity to, 342, 344
Emperors of Germany, robes and ornaments

worn at the coronation of the, iv. 219 note.
Empire, attempts to resuscitate an, i. 1.

Dif-
ference between a nation and an, 2. End of
the empire founded by Charlemagne, 41.
Division of the empire into east and west,
43. Little power left to the Emperor in the
fifteenth century, ii. 215. Foundation of the
empire of Napoleon Buonaparte, and of that
of Louis Napoleon, v. 117, 665.
'Encyclopédie,' appearance of the first volume
of the, iv. 258. Edict against all concerned
in it, 269. Scope of the work, 294, 295. Its
most essential portion, 295

Enghien, Duc d' (son of the Prince of Condé),
marries a niece of Cardinal Richelieu, iii.
532. Appointed to the command of the
army of Flanders, 557. Defeats the Spaniards
at Rocroy, 557. At the battle of Nordlingen,
570. Besieges and takes Dunkirk, 572. Suc-
ceeds his father as Prince of Condé. See
Louis, le grand Condé.'
Enghien, Duke d', his arrest and death, v. 114,

115

Enghien, Count d', captures Gravelines, ii. 19.
Put to death at Ghent, 19

Enghien, Count d', entrusted by Francis I.
with the command in Piedmont, ii. 559. Oc-
cupies Carmagnola, 560. Defeats the Impe-
rialists at the battle of Cerisolles, 560, 561.
Killed, 587

Enghien, Count d', brother of the preceding,
gift from the Duke of Guise to, 593. Killed
at St. Quentin, 626

England, preparations of Robert the Devil for
an expedition against King Canute in, i. 88.
Norman conquest of, 93. Condition of the
kingdom in the twelfth century, 129. Com-
pared with the France of that period, 130.
Civil war in, on the death of Henry L., 131.
How regarded by Henry II., Richard I., and
John, i. 150. Immunities obtained from
their kings by the population of this period,
151. The peculiar system of monarchy in
England, 171. Transferred by the Pope
from John of England to Philip Augustus
of France, 187. Arrangements of Philip
Augustus for a descent upon, 187.
kingdom handed over to the Pope, 188.
The crown offered by the barons to Prince
Louis (afterward Louis VIII.), and accepted,
192. Landing of the French under Louis,
193. Who is defeated and compelled to
evacuate the country, 193. Impatience of

The

ENG

the kingdom at the ill-usage of Rome, 229.
National animosities between English and
French, in the thirteenth century, 298. A
quarrel with England picked by Philip the
Fair, 306. A fleet fitted out by the Cinque
Ports, which destroys the French fleet, 306,
307.
308.

England tricked out of Guienne, 307,
Relations between France and Eng-
land during the reign of Edward II., 380.
Causes of the war of Edward III. with
France, 382, 389. Military condition of the
two kingdoms at this period, 386. The first
naval battle between France and England,
409. Arrangement of John, Duke of Nor-
mandy, with his subjects for the invasion of
England, 424. Difference of kingly power
in England and in France, ii. 1. State of
England at the close of the fourteenth cen-
tury, 10. Determination of the lower classes
to avoid unjust taxation, 15. The northern
counties invaded by the Admiral de Vienne,
35. Charles VI.'s preparations for an expe-
dition to, 36. Slow progress of the doctrines
of Wicliffe in, 74. Moderation of the Eng-
lish in France in 1412, 88, 89. The English
expelled by Charles V. of France from their
hereditary dominions on the Continent, 109.
Causes of English superiority at the battle
of Agincourt, 115. The English coast ra-
vaged by the fleets of the Armagnacs, 122.
Difficulties of the English armies in France
in garrisoning towns, 144, 145. The English
pressed on all sides by the French, 187.
And deserted by the Duke of Burgundy,
188-192. Paris taken from them, 194.
The only two towns remaining to them, 196.
The political destiny of England, France,
and Germany, contrasted, 215, 216.
English driven out of Normandy, 226–228.
And finally out of Gascony, 228-231. The
English policy of Louis XI., 259. Antagon-
ism between the Houses of York and Lan-
caster, 259, 260. Success of Edward IV.,
261. The last great attempt of England to
crush France by invasion, 313, 314. The
nobles of England purchased and pensioned
by France, 332. Result to England of the
bad faith and irresolution of Edward IV.,
341. Difference between the Three Estates
of England and France, 356. Struggle in
England in the reign of Edward VI., 602,
603. Treaty between Louis XIII. of France
and Philip IV. of Spain for the invasion of
England, iii. 473. Condition of England,
compared with that of France, in the middle
of the seventeenth century, 631. War between
England and Holland, 661. Formation of
the Triple Alliance, 665. Treachery of Charles
II., 673. Condition of England at the latter
part of the seventeenth century, iv. 11. Im-
migration of Huguenots into, 19. Conclusion

The

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ENR

of a new treaty with Holland, 104. Supremacy of the Tories in England, 107. Negotiations at Utrecht, 108. Offers of France to England, 109. Peace of Utrecht, 116. Glory obtained by England by the war of the Spanish succession, 119. Accession of the House of Hanover, 131. Stationary policy of England and France, 142. Conclusion of a new Triple Alliance, 148. England at war with Spain, 154. Importance of the colonies and foreign commerce of England, 164, 165. Conclusion of a treaty between England and Spain, 182. Joins France and Prussia against Austria and Spain, 193. Peace concluded, 199. Rise of colonial rivalry between England and France, 211. War between England and Spain, 212. True policy of England in the time of Walpole, 223. War declared against England by France, 226. Superiority of the English at sea, 240. Destruction of the French fleet destined for the invasion of England, 277. Quarrel between England and her American colonies, 352. War with France arising out of these events, 356. Proposed invasion of England, 356, 357. Spain joins the FrancoAmerican alliance, 357. Commercial treaty with France, 381. See Assembly; Directory; Napoleon I., &c., for continuation of references to English history.

Enragés, the Duke of Orleans' club so called,

iv. 407

Enrique, Don, proposed as a husband for Queen
Isabella, v. 568, 569

Ensheim, exploit of Turenne at, iii. 691
Ensisheim, treaty of, ii. 220

Entragues, Henriette d', becomes mistress of
Henry IV., iii. 352. Created Marquise de
Verneuil, 352. Plots the assassination of the
King, 357

Entresol,' the, formed in Paris, iv. 210 Envoys from France to Turkey murdered, ii.

552

Epernay, burned by mercenary free corps, i. 486. Siege of, iii. 289

Epernon, La Valette (favourite of Henry III.), created Duke of, iii. 196. Created Admiral and Duke of Normandy, 214. Marked for proscription, 220. Refuses to recognise Henry IV. as king, 255. Fails to support the League in Provence, 309. Submits to Henry IV., 320. Compels the Parliament to declare Marie de Medicis regent, 385. Enmity of Condé and Bouillon to him, 408, 409. Encourages Marie de Medicis to escape from confinement, 421. Receives her in Angoulême, 422. Displaced there by Richelieu, 423. Secured by the King, 426. Blockades La Rochelle, 431

Epernon, Duke d', his disputes with the Bordelais, iii. 601. Compelled to withdraw from

EST

the city, 601. Recalled from his governorship, 603

Epignac, D', Archbishop of Lyons, his advice to the Duke of Guise, iii. 223. Confined in the Oubliettes, 231. Opposes the demands of the King of Spain, 263. His opposition to Henry IV. as king, 294. Takes the Duke of Nemours prisoner, 308

Epinal ceded to the Duke of Calabria, ii. 275 Epresmenil, his speeches in Parliament, iv. 390, 395. Arrested, 398. His opposition to tolerance to the Protestants, 397. Draws up a set of resolutions, 407

Erasmus, his controversy with the monks, . 512. Offered by Francis I. the control of the Tr.lingual College, 513. Denounced as a Protestant, 516

Erfurt, interview of Buonaparte with Alexander at, v. 150, 156

Ernest Augustus, Bishop of Osnaburg, created Elector of Hanover, iv. 81

Erpo, Count of Bourges, mortgages his territories to Philip I., i. 116 Esmandreville, Huguenot president, iii. 69 Espartero, General (Duke of Victoria), defeats the army of Don Carlos, v. 519. Signs convention of Bergara, 520. A Liberal, 52. Objects to the conduct of French envoy. M Salvandy, 565. On account of his opposing the Moderado, obliged to fly for his life, 566 Esprit, Pont St., fortress of the, taken by the Free Companies, i. 499

Esprit, Saint, foundation of the order of,

192

Essarts, Des, provost of Paris, arrests Montagu ii. 78. The provostship taken from him, & Returns to Paris, and joins the Burgundians. 84. Charges brought against him by the Carmelite, Pavilly, 92. Escapes from Paris 93. Returns and seizes the Bastille, 98. Where he is besieged, 93. Surrenders, 93, 94. Executed by the Parisians, 99

Essé, D', General, killed, ii. 614 Essex, Earl of, sent by Queen Elizabeth to the aid of Henry IV., iii. 275. Sent in 1592 with further supplies to Henry IV., 28 Appointed to the command of the Enghs levies for the succour of Calais, 322. He expedition to Cadiz, 325

Essling, battle of, v. 163 Estaing, Admiral Count d', commands a flet for the West Indies, iv. 356. His engag ment with Lord Howe, 357. Repulsed befor Savannah, 357

Estates, the first instance of the separation af the, i. 291. The Three, summoned for th first time, 322. Meeting after the capture e King John, 465. Their proceedings, 46 The old councillors proscribed by them, 46 Adjourned by the Duke of Normandy, 467 Formation and functions of the Council c

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Thirty-six, 469.

EST

Absence

The acts of the Estates
cancelled by the captive King in England,
470. Reconvoked by the regent Charles, 471.
The sanguinary acts of the mob under Marcel
approved of by them, 475. Convoked by the
Dauphin in 1413, ii. 90. Harangues of
Benoit, Gentien, and of the Carmelite, Pavilly,
90. Ordonnances of Charles VII. necessi-
tating their sanction in levying tailles and
aides, 199. Meeting at Tours in 1468, 288.
Convoked by Anne of Beaujeu, 352. Meet-
ing of the, summoned by Anne of Beaujeu,
356. Their formation at this time, 356.
Grievances of the Commons, 358.
of results of the meeting, 361, 362. League
formed to restore the authority of the, 366.
Summoned at Lyons in 1494, 381. Net con-
voked by Louis XII., who, however, diminishes
the taxes, 397. Meeting of, at Tours, 1506,
422. Meeting at Meaux, iii. 29. Assembled
by Charles IX., 34. Convoked at Blois, 179,
182. Assembly of 1580 at Blois, 223. Con-
voked in Paris for the purpose of electing a
king, 290. Dissolution of the Estates of the
League, 305, 306. Character of the assembly,
306. Meeting at Rouen under Henry IV.,
327. Formation of the Council of Reason,
328. Meeting of 1614, 400. Their different
pretensions at this meeting, 401. Set aside
in France by Louis XIII., 418. Assembly
of notables of 1626, 469. The Estates of
the provinces crushed by Richelieu, 502, 503.
The representative system not popular in
France in the 17th century, 593. The States
General demanded by Parliament, iv. 390.
Summoned for 1789, 402, 404. Meets, 413
Estrapade, punishment of the, for heretics, ii. 531
Estrées, Gabrielle d', mistress of Henry IV.,
iii. 289, 313. Her quarrel with Sully, 350.
Her death, 351
Estrées, Marshal d', temp. Louis XV., commands.
the French army against Prussia, iv. 269
Etampes acquired by Louis, Duke of Brittany,
ii. 275. Battle of, iii. 621

Etampes, Duchess of, mistress of Francis I., ii.
495, 507. Advises Francis I. to detain
Charles V., 545. Her enmity to Chancellor
Poyet, 550. Opposes the Guises, 550. Hated
by the Dauphin, 565
Etaples, treaty of, ii. 375

Etienne, Rabaud St., executed, iv. 636
Etruria, King of, made monarch of Algarves by
Napoleon, v. 152

Eu, capture of, from the Normans, i. 58. Burned

by the English, 408. Captured by Charles
the Rash, ii. 302. The county of, reverts to
the Duke of Guise, iii. 110

Eu, Count of, killed at Courtray, i. 327
En, Count d', Constable, defeated by Edward

III. at Caen, i. 423. Surrenders to Thomas
of Holland, 424. His residence at the Eng-

EUS

lish court as a prisoner, 446. Goes to Paris,
where he is seized and decapitated, 447
Eu, Count d', the office of constable given to
the, ii. 44. Joins the crusade against the
Turks, 46. Taken prisoner at Nicopolis, 46.
Taken prisoner at Agincourt, 114. Refuses
to admit the League into Paris, 273

Eudes, Duke of Aquitaine, becomes almost
independent of Pepin, i. 14. Checks the
advance of the Saracens, 14. Flies before
Charles Martel, 15. Compelled by Charles
Martel to pay homage, 17

Eudes III., Duke of Burgundy, joins a crusade
against the Albigenses, i. 176

Eudes IV., Duke of Burgundy, maintains the
rights of his niece Jeanne, daughter of Louis
X., i. 368. An arrangement with Philip of
Poictiers, the regent, 369. Whose daughter
he marries, and obtains Franche Comté, 370.
Induced to assume the Cross, 395

Eudes, Count of Paris, his defence of the city
against the Normans, i. 50. Elected king,
51. Attacks of the neighbouring nobles, 51.
The great famine of 889, 52. Heads an army
to the countries beyond the Loire, 52. Charles
the Simple proclaimed king during Eudes'
absence, 52. Eudes' death, 52

Eudes, Count of Champagne, disputes Swiss
Burgundy with Conrad II., i. 90.* Slain, 90
Eudes, imbecile brother of Henry I., seized by
the sons of the Count of Champagne, i. 91
Eugène, Prince, his part in the battle of Mar-
saglia, iv. 48. Takes command of the Im-
perial army, 84. Defeats the Turks at Zenta,
84.
Baffles the French in the Milanese, 84.
And defeats them at Chiari, 84. Captures
Villeroy in Cremona, 86. Encamps at Schel-
lenberg, 90. His part in the battle of Blen-
heim, 90, 91. Defeats the French before
Turin, 96. Invades Provence, but retreats
from Toulon, 98. Besieges and takes Liile,
100. With Marlborough at Malplaquet, 103.
Goes to Londen, 109. His advice there re-
jected, 109. Abandoned by the English, 113.
Invests Landrecies, 114. Advises the Em-
peror to continue the war with France alone,
118. Unable to succour Landau, 118. Nego-
tiates the peace of Radstadt, 119

Eustace of Boulogne joins the First Crusade,

i. 104

Eustace, son of King Stephen of England,
married to the sister of Louis VII., i. 136
Eustace de St. Pierre, the citizen of Calais, his

noble conduct, i. 435, 436. Transfers his
allegiance to the English king, 437
Eustace de Ribeaumont, his personal encounter
with Edward III., i. 438. Who presents
him with a chaplet of pearls, 438. His
report on the English position at Poitiers,
461. His advice to the King as to the
mode of attack, 462. Killed in the battle, 464

EVE

Evans, General Sir De Lacy, and his legion
crush the Carlist insurrection, and captures
Bilbao, v. 519

Everingham, Sir Thomas, joins the Burgundians
with a body of English archers, ii. 338. Routs
the French at Guinegate, 339

Evreux, occupied by Hugh the Great, i. 59.
Taken by Louis the Fat, 119. But burnt by
Henry I. of England, 119. Taken by Philip
Augustus for Prince (afterwards King) John
of England, 160. Given up to his brother by
John, 160. Its French garrison slaughtered,
160. Burned by the French under King
John, 460. Recovered by Philip of Navarre,
468. Retained by Charles the Bad, 508.
Defeat of Girondist forces at, iv. 594
Evreux, Count of, his rivalry with his brother
Charles of Valois, i. 372
Excelmans, General, suspected and tried as a
spy, v. 240.
His treatment by the Red Re-

publicans, 469
Excommunication, social tyranny of the power
of, of the clergy, i. 266, 396. The papal
right of, declared by the Diet of Frankfort
to be abolished, 398. Power of, limited by
the Council of Basle, ii. 218
Exeter, Thomas Beaufort, Duke of, commands
the English garrison in Harfleur, ii. 111. At-
tacked by the Constable d'Armagnac, 119
Exilles, the French driven out of, iv. 99. Ceded
to the Duke of Savoy, 117
Eylau, battle of, v. 134, 135

ABRE, one of the first French Protestants, ii.

preaching Meaux,

draws to Nerac, 515.
Sorbonne, 516

Denounced to the

Fabre, member of the Convention, iv. 535
Fabvier, Colonel, crosses the Bidassoa, v. 327
Falaise, seized and held by Robert the Devil, i.

87. Besieged by Duke Richard III., who is
murdered in the castle, 88. Arthur, Duke
of Brittany, committed to the castle of, 164.
Declares for the Huguenots, iii. 67
Falkland Islands seized by Spain, iv. 323
Falloux, M., insists on the abolition of the Ate-
liers, v. 625. Minister of public worship, 637
Family Compact, the, iv. 283

Famine in France, iv. 48; v. 578
Farel, one of the first French Reformers, ii.
515. Preaches the doctrines at Meaux, 515.
Withdraws to Dauphiné, 515. Escapes to
Montbeliard, 528

Fargis, De, French envoy at Madrid, concludes
a treaty with Spain, iii. 463

Farnese, Cardinal, invokes a general council, ii.
579

Farnese, Horatio, son of the Duke of Parma,
marries Diana, natural daughter of Henry II.
of France, ii. 613

FEL

Fastolf, Sir John, has charge of a convoy to
the English before Orleans, ii. 157. Defeats
the King's forces at the battle of Herrings,
158. Reinforces the English on the Loire,
168. Defeated by Jeanne d'Arc at Patay, 168
Faucher, brothers, murdered by French Royal |
ists, v. 265

Faucher, Léon, examines the state of the public
works, &c., v. 625. Becomes home minister,
637

Faur, Du, judge, his speech to the King, ii.
646. Arrested, 647

Favas, undertakes to seize the mouths of the
Garonne, iii. 434

Favras, his plot, iv. 450. And execution

45

Favre, Jules, loses his appointment of hom:
minister, v. 618

Fayette, M. de la, defeated and taken prisoner
at the battle of Verneuil, ii. 150, 151. Jons
the Count of Clermont at the battle of Her
rings, 158. Advocates peace with England,

203

Fayette, Marquis de la. See Lafayette. When
General, sent as delegate to Allied Powers,
v. 257, 259. Refused entrance to Chamber
of Deputies, 260. President of the Co-
gregation, 314. His flight, 315. Saved
by fidelity of his brother conspirators, 318
Receives indemnity money, 346. Prose
cuted for his oration on Manuel, 363. WA
comed at Paris, 381. Proposes a provision
government, 397. Takes command of Na-
tional Guards, 403. Orders the liberation (é
the Duke of Chartres, 408. Deprecates pre
cipitate measures, 410. Introduces the Del
of Orleans to the people, 412. His convers
tion with the duke about American instin-
tions and popular government, 412. Speaks
against changes in Charter, 416. Disagree
ing with the government, resigns his com
mand of the National Guards, 431. H
dismissal, 432. Disgusted with exhibition:
Red Republicans, 469. His death, 485
Fayette, La, Mademoiselle, Louis XIII's pla
tonic affection for, iii. 529. Enters a conve
529. Visited there by the King, 531
Faypoult, finance minister of the Directory,v.
Fédérés of the South, Barbaroux proposes the

coming to Paris, iv. 497. Their camp
Paris, 502. Their oath of allegiance advis
by Robespierre, 502. Demand the déchear-
of the King, 503. Look for orders to t
Jacobins and Mountain, 503. Second bat
of, arrives at Paris, 506. Their encou?".
with the National Guards, 507. Threat
deputies who voted Lafayette's acquittal, & ~
Fehrbelin, battle of, iii. 692
Feltre, Duke of. See Clarke

Felix V., Pope, elected by the Council of B de
ii. 217. Resigns the tiara, 221

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