Page:Historical Essays and Studies.djvu/537

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
INDEX
525


Harrington, 380; as a political theorist,

Harrison, Mr., consulted by George Eliot as to law in Felix Holt, 284 Hase, 333 Hausser, work on fall and rise of Ger- many between death of Frederic and overthrow of Napoleon, 376 Hawthorne, 418 Hecker, 333 Hegel, G. W. F. , 371, 379 Acton's estimate of, 360 Michelet, disciple of, 283 philosophy of history, 328 view of Christianity, 362 Heine, Heinrich, definition by, of Ecker- rnann, 297 Hehnholtz, discovery preceded byothers, 287 George Eliot's indifference to, 297 Young inspired b) - , 287 Hennell, Sara, friendship with and influence on George Eliot, 277-

Henrietta Maria, d. of Henry IV. of France, Queen of England, her efforts to convert her children, 86-7 and Aubigny's cardinalate, 92, 94 and the religion of Charles II. , 95, 102 Henry I. (the Fowler) and Emperor of Germany, epoch-making nature of Waitz's essay on, 375 Henry VII., King of England, action and feeling of, in regard to the marriage of Henry VIII. with Catharine, 33 ; his own idea of marrying Catharine, 18 ; Brief concerning her marriage ad- dressed to, mystery of, 48-9 claim to the throne, 9 Henry VIII., King of England, Wolsey and the Divorce of, 1 and the Church — attitude of, to ecclesiastical autho- rity, 2 ; his demand for legatine standing for Wolsey, 3 ; his attitude toward Papal sanction for Divorce discussed, 21, 26 ; the presentment of his case, 33 ; his loyalty to the Church, 27 ; how acknowledged, 27-8 ; his ecclesiastical and other supporters in the Divorce, 28 et seq. and the Divorce and second mar- riage — attitude of, to the Divorce before and after 1527., 9 6* note, 12, 14, 16 6° note, et seq.; ap- proaches of, to the Pope, 10, , 24 ; position then assumed by, 17 ; he informs the Queen of his intentions, 19 objections to his first marriage, 10, 17, 18 and Divorce, 16; his own scruples, partly ethical, 17, 34, partly physical, 9, 16 6° notes ; their reality believed in, writers' ten- dency to prove, 28 et seq. ; his hypocritical use of them, 36 et seq. ; views on, of Brewer anil others, 56 possible second wives for, 14, 15 success of his Divorce schemes, 39-

marriage of, with Anne Boleyn, ques- tion of date of, 45 schemes and desires of, for the crown of France, 4, 5 ; collapse of, 7 Herbert Sidney, 420 Hergenrother, 428 Hermann, on the written sources of political economy, 388 Herodotus, 339 Hesse, the Landgrave of, his bigamy and his justification thereof, 50 Grand Duke of, as agent provo- cateur of war of 1870., 211 Heyse, George Eliot said to have borrowed from, 287 Hippocrates, Buckle's ignorance of, 332 Hirnhaim, cited on genuine historical research, 461 History, judgments of, compiler's care necessary, 487 basis of judgment of men, parties and systems in, 494 definition in, 488 definition of, 436, 437, 500, 502 ; by Napoleon, 455 Giesebrecht's method of compiling, -502 makers of, 406-502 mediaeval, Giesebri_cht's reputation as compiler of, 496, 497 Perthes collection of European his tories, 499 reduction of, to status of science, 305, , 320 compilers of, malignity and credulity of contemporaries to be reckoned with, 431 History of Rome in the Middle Ages [by Gregorovius], 66 Hofler, critic of Ranke, 358 Hohenstaufen, Frederic of, Giesebrecht's account of, 497 House of, Giesebrecht's devotion to, °*