Index of Gardiner's History of England
Toleration,
- difficulties in the way of, in the 16th century,
- growing feeling in favour of,
- Elizabeth's partial acceptance of,
- difficulties in the way of its concession to the Catholics,
- Cranborne's objection to,
- abandonment of James's attempt to carry out,
- practical enjoyment of, in Ireland under Elizabeth,
- opinion of the Irish Council on,
- Chichester's opinion on,
- views of Pym on,
- growing possibility of establishing,
- is conceded to the French Protestants after the surrender of Rochelle,
- is rejected in Massachusetts,
- difficulties in the way of,
- progress of in Germany, France, and the Netherlands,
- comparison between its prospects in England and France,
- its chances in New England,
- is accepted in Rhode Island,
- impossibility of completely securing in Massachusetts,
- is secured in Maryland,
- the members of the Long Parliament unfamiliar with the idea of,
- writings of Henry Burton and Lord Brooke in defence of,
- demanded by the Irish Catholics,
- the Commons issue a declaration against,
- both Houses declare that only the religion established by the laws of England shall receive it, either in England or in Ireland,