GUICCIARDINI, Francesco, i. 33.
GUISE, Duke of: his defeat by Alva, i. 103;
his murder, 129.
GUZMAN, Domenigo de (S. Dominic), founder of the Dominican Order, i. 162.
H
HEGEMONY, Spanish, economical and social condition
of
the Italians under, i. 50;
the evils of, 61.
HENCHENEOR, Cardinal William, i. 36.
HENRI III., favor shown to Giordano Bruno by, ii. 139.
HENRI IV., the murder of, i. 297.
HENRY VIII.: his divorce from Katharine of Aragon, i. 44.
HEROICO-comic poetry, Tassoni’s Secchia Rapita,
the first example of, ii. 303.
‘HISTORY of the Council of Trent,’ Sarpi’s, ii. 222 sqq.
HOLY Office, see INQUISITION.
HOLY Roman Empire, the, ii. 393.
HOMATA, Benedetta, attempted murder of by Gianpaolo Osio, i. 323 sqq.
HOMICIDE, lax morality of the Jesuits in regard to, i. 306 n.
HOSIUS, Cardinal, legate at Trent, i. 118.
HUMANISM, the work of, ii. 385, 391;
what it involved, 392;
Rationalism, its offspring, 404.
HUMANITY, the past and future of, ii. 408 sqq.
I
IL BORGA, a censor of the Gerusalemme Liberata, ii. 43.
‘IL Candelajo,’ Giordano Bruno’s comedy, ii. 131, 183.
IL GUERCINO (G.F. Barbieri), Bolognese painter,
ii. 365;
his masterpieces, 367.
‘IL PADRE di Famiglio,’ Tasso’s Dialogue, ii. 63.
‘IL Pentito,’ Tasso’s name as one of Gli Eterei, ii. 26.
INGEGNERI, Antonio, a friend of Tasso, ii. 64;
publishes the Gerusalemme, 71.
INDEX Expurgatorius:
its first publication at Venice, i. 192;
effects on the printing trade there, 193;
the Index in concert with the Inquisition,
194;
origin of the Index, 195;
local lists of prohibited books, ib.;
establishment of the Congregation of the
Index, 197;
Index of Clement VIII., 198;
its preambles, ib.;
regulations, 199 sq.;
details of the censorship and correction
of books, 201;
rules as to printers, publishers, and
booksellers, 203;
responsibility of the Holy Office, 204;
annoyances arising from delays and ignorance
on the part of censors, 205;
spiteful delators of charges of heresy,
207;
extirpation of books, 208;
proscribed literature, 209;
garbled works by Vatican students, 210;
effect of the Tridentine decree about
the Vulgate, 212;
influence of the Index on schools and
lecture-rooms, 213;
decline of humanism, 218;
the statutes on the Ratio Status,
220;
their object and effect, 221;
the treatment of lewd and obscene publications,
223;
expurgation of secular books, 224.