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362; description of the debate in Consistory on the Bull of Deposition, 369. Benet, Dr., English agent at Rome, 104. Bishop's courts, the, reformation of, 185. Bishops, English: their qualified acceptance of the Royal Supremacy, 161; their official opinions on the divorce question, 166; unanimous against the Annates Bill, 187. Bilney, Thomas, burnt as a heretic, by a bishop's order, 255. Blackfriars, the trial of the divorce cause before the Legatine court at, 49; the Papal supremacy on its trial there, 100. Boleyn, Sir Thomas (Anne Boleyn's father; afterwards Earl of Wiltshire): opposed to his daughter's advancement, 48. See also _Wiltshire, Earl of_. Boleyn, Lady, 47; the charge of her being unduly intimate with Henry VIII., 55, 57. Boleyn, Anne: account of her family and her early life, 47; alleged amour with Henry Percy, _ib._; hatred of Wolsey, 48; her personal appearance, _ib._; attempt to influence Henry in appointing an Abbess, 71; annoyance at Wolsey's getting a pension after his fall, 132; pleasure at the signs of Henry's breach with the Papacy, 152; said (by Chapuys) to be favouring the Lutherans, 163; unpopularity arising from her insolence and her intrigues, 167; objects to the Princess Mary being near her father, 174; created Marchioness of Pembroke, 193; compliments paid her by the French king, 194; present at the interview between Henry and Francis, 195; continued unpopularity, 201; agrees to a private marriage, 203; a staunch Lutheran, 207; announcement of her being _enceinte_, 211; her coronation, 230; gives birth to a daughter, 238; Bill establishing the succession in her offspring by Henry, 262; attempts to force Princess Mary to acknowledge her as Queen, 266; alleged threats against Mary, 262, 266, 269, 279; suspected evil intentions against Catherine, 277; meets a rebuff in the acquittal of Lord Dacre, 284; violence and insolence to the King through jealousy, 296; and to his principal Ministers, 297; urges Henry to bring Catherine and Mary to trial under the Succession Act, 312; joy at Catherine's death, 382; friendly message to Mary, 383; Anne's continued unpopularity, 385; letter to Mrs. Shelton about Mary, 387; a second miscarriage, 388; a long catalogue of misdeeds charg
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