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The Age of Louis XIV

Page 119

by Will Durant


  dissolved by Cromwell, 190

  divorce laws, 222–23

  episcopacy controversy, 218

  House of Lords abolished (1649), 183

  and Jews, 459, 460, 461

  Milton’s participation in, 218, 222–24, 226

  Pride’s Purge (1648), 183, 187, 192, 193

  public discontent with, 184

  restrictions on press and pulpit, 189, 224, 226

  Rump (1648–53), 183, 202, 203

  and Scottish revolt, 187–89

  taxation, 183

  UNDER CROMWELL (1653–58): 198–99, 231

  and army, 192

  Cromwell named Lord Protector, 191

  dissolutions, 192, 193, 230

  nominated (“Barebone’s”) P., 190–91

  INTERREGNUM (1658–60): 202, 205

  and army, power struggle with, 203

  dissolved by Monck, 203–4

  Milton opposes recall of Charles, 232–33

  royalist P. elected (1660), 205

  UNDER CHARLES II (1660–85): 234, 261, 333

  amnesty debate, 245–46

  and Anglican Church, 247, 252–53

  anti-Catholic laws, 251, 278–79, 281, 282

  “Cavalier P.” (1661–79), 246, 282

  commercial, industrial interests, 258–59, 261, 276

  “Convention P.,” 244–46, 252

  corruption and bribery in, 273, 280

  dissolutions, 246, 282, 284, 285

  and Dutch Wars, 43, 276–77, 278

  Exclusion bills, 282–85

  passim; impeachments, 277, 282

  and King, peaceful relations with, 247, 276

  and King, quarrels with, 252–53, 256, 259, 276–79

  passim, 282–85

  passim; “Oxford P.” (1681), 284–285

  and royal prerogative, 246–47

  and taxation jurisdiction, 245

  “Whig P.” (1679), 282

  UNDER JAMES II (1685–88): 290–94, 299

  anti-Catholic legislation, 290 (see also Test Act)

  “Convention” at Coventry, 297, 300, 301

  and Declarations of Indulgence, 292, 293, 294

  and legislative supremacy, 288

  William III invited to throne, 297–98

  UNDER WILLIAM III (1689–1702): 302, 304, 692, 705

  anti-Catholic legislation, 302, 303

  “Convention P.” (1689), 297

  corruption and bribery, 305, 581

  and Irish govt., 303

  and King, conflicts with, 305

  religious toleration measures (1689, 1696), 301–2

  UNDER ANNE (1702–14): 309, 351

  declaration of war on France (1702), 706

  and Hanoverian succession, 310

  and Marlborough indictment, 309–10

  power struggle with ministries, 307, 310

  parliamentary union with Scotland (1707), 308

  HOUSE OF LORDS: 226, 281, 282, 284

  abolition of (1649), 183

  Church legislation, 218, 252–253

  Commons lessens power of, 247

  punishment of Commonwealth men, 245

  re-establishment of (1660), 205, 246

  Scottish members, 308

  parliamentary privilege vs. royal prerogative, 245–47, 276–79, 285, 288, 289, 292–94, 298–99, 305, 307, 310–11, 565, 581, 582

  Parthenon, Athens, 162, 424, 657

  Partridge, John (1644–1715), 352

  Pascal, Blaise (1623–62), 55–67, 75, 80, 129, 153, 163, 312, 374, 670

  and atmospheric pressure, 56, 511

  and barometer, 56, 498

  on belief as a wise wager, 65, 251

  and binomial theorem, 533*, and Boileau, 66, 148, 149

  and calculus, 57, 499, 500

  and casuistry of Jesuits, 47, 48, 59–60, 85

  computing machine of, 56, 662

  death of, 67

  and Descartes, 56, 511, 599

  “The heart has its reasons,” 64, 148, 529

  and Jansenism, 50, 57–60, 69

  joins Port-Royal, 59

  on religion and reason, 62–66, 602

  Pascal, Étienne (d. 1651), 55–57

  passim , 496

  Pascal, Gilberte, see Périer, Gilberte Pascal

  Pascal, Jacqueline (1626–61), 55–58

  passim , 67

  Passau, bishopric of, 423

  Pasteur, Louis (1822–95), 520

  Paterson, William (1658–1719), 304

  Patin, Guy (1601–72), 527

  Patkul, Johann Reinhold von (1660–1701), 369, 374, 383, 385

  Patriarcha, or The Natural Power of Kings Asserted (Filmer), 253, 579

  Paul, Saint (d. 67), 53, 78, 128, 209, 476

  Peace of the Church (1668–79), 68

  peasantry: Dutch, 166

  in England, 22, 258, 299, 303

  in France, 21–22, 26, 44, 73, 82, 160, 708–9

  in Germany, 22

  in Ottoman Empire, 426

  in Poland, 371, 374

  in Russia, 375, 383, 392, 400, 404, 405

  in Spain, 707

  in Sweden, 366

  Peasants’ War (Germany, 1524–25), 80

  Pecquet, Jean (1622–74), 522

  Pédant joué, Le (Cyrano de Bergerac), 600

  Pedro II, King of Portugal (r. 1683–1706), 446

  Pelagian heresy, 55

  Pembroke College, Cambridge, 265

  Penn, Admiral Sir William (1621–70), 200, 255, 256

  Penn, William (1644–1718), 255–56, 291, 416

  Pennsylvania colony, 256, 259

  penny post service, 275

  Pensées de M. Pascal . . . , 62–65, 80, 129

  Pensées diverses sur la comète (Bayle), 606

  Pepys, Samuel (1633–1703), 166, 266, 272, 273, 274, 275, 277, 329, 332–35

  and Newton, 544, 545

  and Royal Society, 335, 495, 539

  and surgery, 333, 528

  quoted on Charles II’s court, 248–49, 250, 271

  on Dryden, 322, 326

  on Harrison execution, 245

  on London Fire (1666), 266

  on the plague, 261, 262

  Pereslavl, Lake, 378

  Pereyaslav, Poland, 467

  Pericles (d. 429 B.C.), 87, 161, 657

  Périer, Florin, (fl. 1648), 56

  Périer, Gilberte Pascal (1620–87), 55, 66

  Périer, Marguerite (d. 1733), 61

  Périgord, 81, 708

  Péronne, 717

  Pernau (Parnu), 384

  Perpignan, 504

  Perrault, Charles (1628–1703), 78, 91, 161–62

  Perrault, Claude (1613–88), 23, 161, 496, 498, 524

  Perrault, Pierre (1608–80), 507

  Perrin, Pierre (1620–75), 33

  Persia, 409, 509

  Persius (Aulus Persius Flaccus: A.D.34–A.D. 62), 327

  Perpetual Edict (Holland, 1667), 175

  Pertharite (Corneille), 131

  Pesaro, Italy, 439

  Peter I the Great, Czar of Russia (r. 1682–1725), 377–83, 391–410, 414

  army and navy built by, 383, 397

  birth of, 377

  character of, 391–93

  childhood and education, 377–378, 391

  coup d’état of, 378

  court of, 393–94

  death of, 409

  and Jews, 468–69

  Persian campaign of, 409

  portraits of, 405

  and religion, 379, 382, 393, 399, 404

  ships, interest in, 379, 380–82, 383, 401

  and son Alexis, 406–8

  and stepsister Sophia, 377, 378, 382–83, 398

  and Streltsi massacre, 382–383, 392

  Sweden, war with, 369, 383–90, 405

  travels to West, 380–82, 405–6, 407, 520, 677

  and Turks, 379, 383, 388

  and Westernization of Russia, 378, 379, 381–82, 393, 397–404, 406, 409, 410

  and women, 39
4–95

  Peter Petrovich (d. 1719), 407, 408

  Petersburg, Russia, see St. Petersburg

  Petit, Vincent (goldsmith: 17th cent.), 95

  petites écoles, 52, 61, 69, 486

  Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca: 1304–74), 220

  Petre, Sir Edward (1631–99), 280, 288, 291, 293

  Petty, Sir William (1623–87), 187, 257, 497, 502

  Phaedrus (1st cent.), 145

  Phalaris (c. 570–c. 554 B.C.), 491

  pharmacopeia, 524, 526

  Phèdre (Racine), 128, 137, 139, 140, 142, 143

  Phèdre et Hippolyte (Pradon), 139

  Pheidias (c. 490–432 B.C.), 162

  Phélypaux, Louis, see Pontchartrain, Seigneur de

  Philip II, King of Spain (r. 1556–98), 436, 451, 460

  Philip III, King of Spain (r. 1598–1621), 12, 455, 699

  Philip IV, King of Spain (r. 1621–65), 11, 34, 42, 200, 699

  Philip V, King of Spain (r. 1700–46

  earlier, Duke of Anjou), 437, 449, 453, 701–5, 708, 710–14

  passim, 716

  Philippine Islands, 699

  Philippsburg, Palatinate, fortress of, 692

  Philosopher of Rotterdam Accused . . . (Jurieu), 612

  Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica (Newton), see Principia Mathematica

  Philosophiae Sacrae Scripturae interpres (Meyer), 623

  Philosophical Commentary . . . (Bayle), 484, 607–8, 613

  Philosophical Considerations touching Witches and Witchcraft (Glanvill), 482

  Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, The, 497, 498

  Philosophie de Newton, La (Voltaire), 536

  philosophy, 55, 128, 311, 351, 492, 529, 539, 548–597, 598–619, 678

  of aesthetics, 592–93

  and censorship, 483

  of church and state, 557–59, 591, 606, 628–29

  definition of, 550, 598

  of government and law, 548, 554–57, 563, 564–566, 579–83, 612, 650–53, 658–60

  of history, 78

  Leibniz’, 667–75, 678–79

  and religion, conflict with, 59, 63–66, 118, 474, 478, 566–572, 588–89, 591, 598–99, 612, 613, 629

  and religion, reconciliations, 571–75, 588–89, 593–597, 599, 602–5, 629–30, 636–41, 656, 660, 664–667, 669–75

  Spinoza’s, 620–57

  phosphorus, 516

  physics, 495–99

  passim, 501, 509–15, 528, 529, 534–36, 547

  Physiologie des Menschen (Müller), 646

  physiology, 522–24 , 495, 500, 528

  Pia desideria (Spener), 416

  Picard, Jean (1620–82), 503, 513, 538

  Piedmont, massacre of Vaudois (Waldensians) in, 73, 194, 232, 430

  Pietism, 53, 83, 167, 485, 660

  origin of name, 416

  Pignerol (Pinerolo), fortress of, 19

  Pigot, Thomas (fl. 1673), 513

  Pilgrim’s Progress (Bunyan), 210–11 , 360

  Pinto, David (fl. 1650), 458

  Piotrków province, Poland, 467

  Piryatin, Poland, 467

  Pisa, Italy, 434, 455

  Pistoia, Italy, 431

  Pitti Gallery, Florence, 434

  Pitt, William, the Elder, Earl of Chatham (1708–78), 337

  Pius V, Saint (Michele Ghislieri), Pope (r. 1566–72), 430, 456, 457

  plague, 261, 262, 456, 467, 525, 526, 528, 536

  Plaideurs, Les (Racine), 137

  Plain Dealer, The (Wycherley), 316

  Plaisirs de l’île enchantée, Les (Molière), 114

  Plan for the English Commerce, A (Defoe), 338

  Plato (427–347 B.C.), 193, 218, 570, 653, 654, 657, 667, 678

  Platonists, English, see Cambridge Platonists

  Plautus, Titus Maccius (c. 255–184 B.C), 108, 124

  Pliny the Elder (Caius Plinius Secundus: A.D. 23–79), 607

  Pliny the Younger (Caius Plinius Caecilius Secundus: A.D. 62?–C. 113), 607

  Plunket, Oliver, Archbishop of Armagh (1629–81), 280, 283

  Plutarch (46?–120?), 570

  Pococke, Edward (1604–91), 492

  Poitou, dragonnades in, 71–72

  Poland, 369–74, 466

  Cossack rebellion against, 366, 370

  and Jews, 464–68

  and Russia, 370–371, 409

  and Socinians, 167

  and Sweden, 366, 367, 369, 372, 374, 383, 385, 387, 467

  and the Turks, 371–74, 422–25

  Political Arithmetic (Petty), 502

  Political History of the Devil (Defoe), 338

  Polo, Marco (1254?–1324), 304*

  Polonnoye, Poland, 467

  Polotsk, Poland, 468

  Poltava, battle of, 387, 397

  Polyeucte (Corneille), 143

  polygamy, 78, 238, 324–25, 411

  Pomerania, 367, 369, 387, 412

  Pommereux, Mme. de, 11

  Pomponazzi, Pietro (1462–1525), 628

  Pomponne, Simon Arnaud, Marquis de (1618–1699), 662

  Pondicherry, 699

  Pontchartrain, Louis Phélypeaux, Seigneur de (1643–1727), 691, 693, 697–98, 701

  Pontchâteau, Baron de, 52

  Pope, Alexander (1688–1744), 271, 307, 311, 316, 323, 330, 492, 529, 591

  French influence on, 148, 312

  and Addison, 345, 346

  and Swift, 352, 354, 356, 358

  his epitaph for Newton, 546

  “proper study of mankind,” 587

  pope, infallibility of, 49, 55

  “Popish Plot” Terror, 256, 280–84, 287, 300

  Pöppelmann, Matthäus Daniel (1682–1736), 418

  population growth, 502

  porcelain, 93, 95, 419

  Porta, Giambattista della (1538?–1615), 517

  Port Mahon, Minorca, 715

  Port-Royal, 10, 47, 50–53, 61, 81, 83, 96, 146, 149, 153, 156, 486

  and Jansenism, 48, 54–55, 67

  miraculous cure at, 61

  nuns dispersed, abbey razed, 68

  Pascal and, 57, 58–59, 62

  Racine and, 69, 133–34, 139–42

  passim

  Portsmouth, Duchess of, see Kéroualle, Louise Renée de

  Portsmouth, England, 246, 248

  Portugal, 25, 248, 446–48, 454, 457, 702, 706

  Possoshkov, Ivan (d. 1726), 404

  Post Boy, The (newspaper), 313

  Postman, The (newspaper), 342

  Potocki, Waclaw (1622?–97), 374

  Potsdam, Edict of (1685), 414

  pottery, Dutch, 168

  Poussin, Nicolas (1594–1665), 90, 96, 97, 98, 170, 171, 435

  Powell, Mary, see Milton, Mary Powell

  Powell, Richard (d. 1646), 222–24, 242

  Powis, William Herbert, 1st Marquis of (1617–96), 280

  Poznań, Poland, 465, 467

  Pozzo, Andrea dal (1642–1709), 435

  Pradon, Nicolas (1632–98), 139

  Prague, 418, 464, 525

  Prandtauer, Jakob (1658–1726), 418, 427

  Praxiteles (fl. 340 B.C.), 99, 162

  Précieuses ridicules, Les (Molière), 31, 108–9, 148, 150

  predestinarianism, see free will

  Presbyterians, English, 184, 193–94, 204, 222–23, 246, 252, 301, 328–29, 590

  excluded from Parliament (1648, 1660), 183, 193, 203–4

  opposition of to other sects, 198, 218–19, 254, 256, 278

  Restoration policies toward, 253, 278, 292

  Presbyterians, Scottish, 183, 187, 188, 194, 218

  pressure cooker, 517

  Pride, Thomas (d. 1658), 183, 193, 203

  Priestley, Joseph (1733–1804), 516

  Primaticcio, Francesco (1504–70), 99

  Princesse de Clèves, La (La Fayette), 150–51, 158

  Principia Mathematica (Newton), 311, 359, 491, 492, 504–5, 511, 531, 533, 534, 539, 540–543, 544, 546, 657

  Principles of First P
hilosophy (Descartes), 673

  Principles of Human Knowledge, The (Berkeley), 542, 594

  Prior, Matthew (1664–1721), 312, 327, 353, 437

  Prix de Rome, 88

  probabilism, doctrine of, 47–48, 59

  probabilities, calculus of, 57, 499

  Processus Integri (Sydenham), 527

  Propositiones de Motu (Newton), 539

  Propylaea, Athens, 424

  Pro se Defensio (Milton), 232

  prostitution, 17, 28, 29, 525

  Protestantism and Protestants, 70–71, 85, 179, 200, 367, 432, 483, 493, 606, 608

  Bossuet’s history of, 80–81, 85

  and Catholicism, struggle against, 75, 85, 329, 423

  and Catholicism, unity with (proposed), 432, 664–67

  in England, 329, 715, see also Anglican Church, Dissenters, Presbyterians, Puritans, Quakers

  of Europe, united against France, 75, 85, 279, 305

  in France, 23, 49, 232, 430, see also Huguenots

  in Germany, 71, 75, 80, 413–16

  passim, 422, 432, 464, 483, 664–67, see also Lutherans

  in Hungary, 421, 423

  in Ireland, 186, 187, 303

  in Italy, 430

  in Poland, 366, 374

  in Scotland, 189, see also Presbyterians

  in Spain, 449

  in United Provinces, 71, 164, 167, 175, 279, see also Calvinists

  and War of Spanish Succession, 75, 305, 713, 715

  protocol, 28, 32

  Protogaea (Leibniz), 676

  protozoa, 520–21

  Provence, 152, 710

  Provincial Letters (Pascal), 47, 55, 59–60, 61, 67, 79, 85, 117, 129, 149

  Provoked Wife, The (Vanbrugh), 317–18

  Prussia, 387, 389, 412–15, 706

  see also Brandenburg

  Prut, Treaty of the (1711), 388

  Prynne, William (1600–69), 462

  Pskov, 375

  psychology, 588, 593, 599, 603, 669

  Hobbes’s, 550–53, 562

  Leibniz’, 667–69, 678

  Locke’s, 551, 579, 581, 583–88, 667–69

  Spinoza’s, 643

  Psyché (tragedy-ballet), 125

  “psychosomatic” theory, 524

  Pufendorf, Samuel von (1632–94), 658–59

  Puget, Pierre (1622–94), 100–1

  Pulchérie (Corneille), 132

  Purcell, Daniel, 268

  Purcell, Henry (1658–95), 33, 250, 267–68

  Puritans, 196, 252, 290, 328, 329, 343, 416, 566

  Anglican persecution of, 254, 301

  attitude on arts, books, recreation, 195, 207–8, 266

  and Bible, 194–95, 207

  and Charles II, 246, 252

  in Commonwealth, 183, 190, 244

  intolerant of other churches, 187, 193–94, 198–199, 256, 272, 560

  and Declarations of Indulgence, 278, 292

  and the Jews, 459–62, 470

  and Milton, 212, 218–20, 226, 242

  and morality, 195, 207, 268, 273

  Root and Branch faction of, 218

  and theater, 195, 314

 

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