FLORENCE:
condition of the Republic in 1494, i.
10;
Siege of the town (1530), 30 sq.;
capitulation, 46;
under the rule of Spain, ib.;
extinction of the Republic, 47;
the rule of Cosimo I., 49.
FORMALISM, the development of, i. 66.
FOSCARI, Francesco, the dogeship of, i. 9.
FRANCIS I.: his capture at Pavia, i. 9, 13.
FRECCI, Maddalo de’, the betrayer of Tasso’s love-affairs, ii. 51.
FREDERICK II., Emperor: his edicts against heresy, i. 163.
FREETHINKERS, Italian, i. 73 sq.
FULGENZIO, Fra, the preaching of at Venice, ii. 207;
his biography of Sarpi, ib.
FULKE GREVILLE, a supper at the house of, described
by Giordano Bruno, ii. 142, 147.
G
GALLICAN CHURCH, the: its interests in the Council of Trent, i. 126.
GALLUZZI’S record of Jesuit attempts to seduce youth, i. 284.
GATTINARA, Cardinal, Grand Chancellor of the Empire, i. 31.
GAMBARA, Veronica, i. 41.
GENERAL Congregation of the Jesuits, functions of the, i. 273.
GENERAL of the Jesuits, position of, in regard to the Order, i. 272.
GENOA, becomes subject to Spain, i. 18.
GENTILE, Valentino, i. 73.
GERSON’S Considerations upon Papal Excommunications,
translated by Sarpi, ii. 200.
‘GERUSALEMME Conquistata,’ Tasso’s, ii. 75, 114 sq., 124.
‘GERUSALEMME Liberata:’ at first
called Gottifredo, ii. 35;
its dedication, 38, 47 sq.;
submitted by Tasso to censors, 43;
their criticisms, 43 sq., 50;
successful publication of the poem, 71;
its subject-matter, 92;
the romance of the epic, 93;
Tancredi, the hero, 94;
imitations of Dante and Virgil, 95 sqq.;
artificiality, 100;
pompous cadences, 101;
oratorical dexterity, 102;
the similes and metaphors, ib.;
Armida, the heroine, 106.
GHISLIERI, Michele, see PIUS V.
—–Paolo, a relative of Pius V., i. 147.
GIBERTI, Gianmatteo, Bishop of Verona, i. 19.
GILLOT, Jacques, letter from Sarpi to, on the relations
of Church and State, ii. 203.
GIOVANNI FRANCESCO, Fra, an accomplice in the attacks on Sarpi, ii. 214.
‘GLI ETEREI,’ Academy of, at Padua, ii. 26.
GOLDEN crown, the, significance of, i. 34.
GONGORISM, i. 66.
GONZAGA, Cardinal Ercole, ambassador from Clement
VII.
to Charles V., i. 19.
—–Cardinal Scipione, a friend of Tasso, ii. 26, 42, 46, 67, 73.
—–Don Ferrante, i. 25.
—–Eleanora Ippolita, Duchess of Urbino, i. 37.
—–Federigo, Marquis of Mantua, i. 26.
—–Vincenzo, obtains Tasso’s
release, ii. 73;
the circumstances of his marriage, i.
386.