The English Government and the Huguenot Settlement, 1680-1702 |
Contents
ROYAL INITIATIVE | 59 |
THE JACOBEAN INTERLUDE | 112 |
CONCLUSION | 227 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Anglican anti-Huguenot Archbishop Archbishop Sancroft attitudes Bishop Bodleian Library brief collection Bristol Canterbury Catholic charity money Charles Charles II Compton Court Crown Edict of Nantes English government Englishmen established exclusion crisis exiles favor feltmakers France French Church French Committee French congregations French ministers French refugees gees given governmental granted Guildhall Record Office Henry History of England House of Commons Hugue Huguenot settlement Huguenot Society Ibid involved Ipswich Ireland issue James James II James's king king's letter Library Lords Commissioners Louis XIV Manuscripts ment Morrice naturalization bill newcomers nonconformist nonconformity pamphlet Parliament Parliamentary party persecutions political poor Privy Council Privy Council Register problem Protestant naturalization refu refugees reign religion religious Reneu Revocation royal rumors Ruvigny Savoy Scouloudi settle seventeenth century Society of London Stuart tellers testants Thomas Firmin Thomas Tenison Threadneedle Street tion Tory trade Walloon Whig William William III William Trumbull