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514 Bull concerning Henry VIII. 's Divorce desired by Wolsey, its provisions, Bullarium Magnum, infrequent refer- ences to, by Creighton, 441 unreliability as authority, 427 Bulwer (Lord Lytton), anecdote of, 489; oratorical powers of, 481 ; see also Lytton Bunsen, Chevalier de, 332 Burchard, Hans, on the death of Pope Alexander VI., 431 Burckhardt, Jacob, Renaissance, a German history of art, 391 Burgundian alliance, the, 6 Burke, E., on theorists, 492 Buzot, politics of, 492 Byron, Lord, plagiarism of, from Cole- ridge, 287 Cabal, division of, as to foreign alliances, 116 Cadiz, revolution of, 230 Cassarius, 431 Cairns, Lord, oratorical powers of, 481 Cajetan, 441 Calhoun, Mr., Southern (U.S.) leader, 483 ; urges the right to secede, 138 Calvin, 342 Cambac6res, records by, of Napoleon, 442 Campana, Francesco, and the dangerous decretal, 44 Campbell, Mr. (U.S.A.), as envoy to Juarez, 165 Campeggio, Cardinal, associated in Henry VIII. 's Divorce Com- mission with Wolsey, 40 ; his instructions, 43 (& see 41 note) ; acted on, 55 ; Queen Catherine's confession to him, 47 Canrobert, sortie of, from Metz, 246 Carboneria, the, 191 Cardinals, conspiracy of, 1517., 433-4 French, action of, 1527., 20 Carlyle, Thomas, George Eliot's ill- concealed dislike of, 288 historical style of, estimated by Creighton, 436 ignored by Lord Houghton, 423 Carnot, character of, Lanfrey's view of, followed by Morse Stephens, 492 popularity of, criticised by La R6- veillere, 445 Casale, share of, in the Divorce of Henry VIII., n, 22, 40 Castelar, and his method of historical deduction, 489 Castlemaine, Lord, on precedence at Rome, 464 Castlereagh, Lord, Talleyrand's de- preciation of, 398 Catalonia, French annexation of, sug- gested by Talleyrand, 399 Catharine of Aragon, Queen of England — first marriage claimed to be nomi- nal, the view held generally in England, 18 ; and by her father, 34 second marriage, the objections urged against it, 10, 17, 18, 147 ; her own position in regard to Fisher's council, 18, 43, 46 el sea. ; her confession to Campeg- gio not admitted as evidence, 47 premature agency of, its effect on the king, 9, 16 her wish as to Mary's marriage, and its reason, 10 Catherine of Braganza, Queen of England, marriage of, 90 ; her interest in the religion of Charles II., 95, 102; and consequently in Aubigny's cardinalate, 92 Catholic disabilities in England after the Restoration, 93-4 dislike of the Jesuits, 94 theology, historical method of writers on, the converse of Protestant writers, 368 Catholicism, leaning of George Eliot towards, 300-301 points in, contended against by princes governing Protestants, 96, 104 Catholics, English, of the seventeenth century, faults in, and the conse- quences, 121 and the policy and religion of Cavour, 202 Caulaincourt, records by, of Napoleon, 442 Talleyrand's respect for, 398 Cavalry, German, 243 Cavour, Count Camillo, see also Azeglio and Ratazzi character and work of, 176, 203 his detestation of extremes in politics, 178 patriotism of, considered local by Mazzini, 190 political principles of, the chief, 182 ; voiced by Sineo, 195 the special character of his success as statesman, 174, 179 ; his origin, 175 ; early and lifelong opinions, 175 ; sequence of events of his life, 175 et sea.