kings, i. 338. ii. 66,448, 449. The accounts given concern-
ing their leaders, ii. 66, 67. What it occasionally relates
of the Babylonians and other monarchies, ii. 357. Declares the necessity of set- ting bounds to princes. ii 353. Is clear concerning the an- tiquity of laws, ii. 401. Senate, their power, i. 335. ii. 112. Julius Cæsar slain in it, ii. 91. Set up by the people, ii. 123. How exposed and destroyed, ii. 125, &c.
Condemned Nero to be put to death, ii. 167. Killed Romulus, ii. 202. Strangers admitted into that of Rome, ii. 203. Abrogated the power of the decimviri, ii. 235. The best judges, ii. 241, 242. And people of Rome not to be bribed, ii. 296, 299. Of Rome like to be butchered,
and for what, ii. 254. Chosen for their virtues, ii. 301. Of what constituent parts it may be composed, ii. 371. The greatest part of them fell at the battle of Pharsa- lia, iii. 165. Of Sparta and Venice their great power, iii. 205. Senators and servants em- ployed in the public affairs of England, iii. 359. Sedition, Popular, i. 325. What, ii. 232.
What it implies, ii. 30. Said to be occasioned by learn- ing, ii. 80, 95, 157.
None hurtful to Rome until men got above the law, ii. 115, 116. From whence it arrise, ii. 226, 228.257.
Proceeding from malice, is seldom or ever seen in pop- ular governments, ii. 228. But always detestable, ii. 247. One of the greatest that ever
was at Rome was appeased, and how, ii. 254. When justified by God and man, ii. 233, 235, 237, 247. Most natural to absolute mon- archies, iii. 308, 309. From Solomon's time the Jews were perpetually vex- ed with them, ii. 248. To what some magistrates
gives this name, iii. 127. Seneff, the battle of it, ii. 333. Servants, of God, who, i. 421.
Raised to high degrees of hon-
our, ii. 437, 438.
None can be members of a commonwealth, i. 448. ii. 27, 28.
Ship Money, vide judges. Shires, for more ancient than Alfreds time, and what meant by them, iii. 225,
Singulis Major, universalis mi- nor, ii. 239. iii. 12, 13. Slaves, by nature, who, i. 316,
327, 373, 438. ii. 5, 437. Often times advanced, i. 438. ii. 104, 106, 156, 171. iii. 70.
No members of the civil so- ciety, ii. 118. Absolutely resign themselves to the will of others, and why, ii. 186, 187. What states became so to
their protectors, ii. 214. What tributes they are forced to pay, ii. 477.
What denotes a slave, iii. 73, 140, 141.
What the true badges of slaves, iii. 130, 131. Melancholly, when the worst
Usury, the cruelty of it, ii. 1 to. The mitigation of it composed intestine quarrels, ii. 284. W
Wantoness, from whence it pro- ceeds, ii. 120.
War and Peace, the kings of
Sparta ever had the power of either, ii. 47, 48. Translated by the collected body of the people, ii. 68—
War, the Hebrew government fitted them for war, ii. 206.
Of Charles, duke of Burgun- dy, with the Swiss Cantons,
Better performed in popular governments than in mon- archies, ii. 220.
It is disertatio per vim, ii.
When the people may engage
in it justly, ii. 233, 234. What to be accounted mak- ing of war, ii. 415, 416. Differs much from what it was formerly, ii. 462. There is such a thing amongst men as a just war, and why, ii. 16. Kings of Judah could not
make any without the con- sent of the Sanhedrim, iii.
Whether a subject may ex- amine whether it be just or not, iii. 137. Where the cause of it is ori- ginally just, and it proves successful, what right the generals have over their enemies, iii. 258.
The events of it various, iii. 275.
Wars, Civil, only made by mem-
bers of civil society, ii. 116,
None until the times of Mar- ius, Sylla and Cataline, ii.
Esteemed the last struglings
of expiring liberty, ii. 117. The root of the Romans, what, ii. 136.
In France, ii. 149, 150, 277, 278.
From whence they arise, ii. 226, 279, 280. Pretences for them common- ly false, ii. 230, 231. When they will always be frequent, ii. 271.
What reigns were most ac- companied with them, ii. 272, 273.
In Spain, ii. 278.
More in kingdoms than in commonwealths, ii. 283, 301, 306.
Not the greatest evil that be- fals nations, ii. 300. The Romans and Grecians gloried in freeing their country from a civil war, ii. 350, 331.
In Machiavel's account they
are called a disease, iii. 324. Wards, that court, how the insti- tution of it was perverted, i. 411. Westminster, what its privileges in point of elections, iii. 300. Wickedness, makes men cow- ards, ii. 346, 347. Will, is ever drawn by some Will, real good or the appear- ance of it, i. 382, 383. The dividing of the world left to the will of man, i. 394, 395.
Passing for law, the effects of
Spain hereditary, ii. 49. iii.
When one kingdom compre- hended all Spain, ii. 109. How the crown was disposed of according to the humour. of the people, ii. 109, 110,
The only title Isabella had to the crown, was derived from illegitimacy, iii. 121. How the king may deserve
the name of being head of his people, iii. 317. Spaniards, their valour against the Carthaginians and Ro- mans, and their overthrow by two lewd tyrants, ii. 223. The condition to which they reduced Naples, Sicily, the West-Indies, &c. ii. 305.
Spartan kings, what they were subject to from the people, ii. 44, 46, 48.
Together with their power, ii.
Government in what it con- sisted, ii. 138.
Had kings before the times of Hercules and Achilles, ii. 47.
Sacrificed their lives in de- fence of their country, ii.
Never heard an enemy's trum- pet for 880 years, ii. 205. Whether descended from the
Hebrews, and what power the collective body of the people had over-them, ii. 356.
The poverty and simplicity of their kings, ii. 451. Their legislature was in the people, iii. 25.
Stability, the effect of good or- der in that which is good, i. 384. ii. 86, 87.
Wherein it consists in man, ii. 86.
There can be none in abso- lute kingdoms, ii. 94, 253, 276, 280.
Produces strength, ii. 95. Not wanting in Venice, ii. 99. Nor among the Romans, ii.
Preferred by Xenophon to Star Chamber, its jurisdiction
Athens, ii. 157, 158. Framed a most severe disci-
pline, ii. 203. Never any sedition against their kings. ii. 356. Called an aristocracy by all the Greek authors, ii. 370, 371. Appointed limits to the power of their kings, ii. 374. iii. 288, 319.
Had no law against adultery,
and why, ii. 398. Spartans, whom they brought from Thebes and Epirus to be their kings, i. 379. Jealous of Lycurgus, and why, ii. 226.
abolished, iii. 205. States-General, vide Holland. Statues, from whom they receive
their authority and force, iii. 347. vide acts of par- liament. Stipulations, are not personal but national, iii. 339. Surez, his saying about Adam, i. 447. Subjection, lineal, never anciently dreamed of, i. 444.
To the power however acquir- ed, ii. 233.
And protection are relatives, iii. 166.
Submission, all manner of it is a restraint of liberty, ii. 183.
Of justice comprehends the legislative and executive power, ii. 24. What is signified by the mil- ́itary sword, ii. 24, 25. Questions about titles to crowns often determined this way, iii. 120. Where edicts are hesitated at by the parliament at Paris, this power has been made use of to compel, iii. 375. Sylla, the crimes of his life, and miseries of his death, ii. 286, 287.
If not a tyrant, there never was any one in the world, ii. 307. Resigned his power, but too late for Rome's recovery, ii. 307.
T Tacitus, his melancholly ac- count of Rome, i. 426. ii. 104, 107, 164, 190, 192. Speaks of the burthen of ab-
solute power, i. 452. Mentions a sort of kings used by the Romans to keep na- tions in servitude to them- selves, ii. 112.
laws grew innumerable, ii.
Tamerlane, said he was not a
man, but the scourge of God, and the plague of mankind, iii. 79. Tarquin, the expulsion of him from Rome, i. 331. iii. 170. The first that reigned sine jussu populi, ii. 24. Came in by treachery and murder, ii. 100, 124, 154, 241.
How the people delivered themselves from him, ii.
141, 186, 187, 284, 285. What followed from his being expelled, ii. 228, 436. His counsel concerning the poppies and Periander's heads of corn, ii. 265. Taxes, upon what accounts to
be given, but not to oppress the people, ii. 452. Tenants, how they look upon
their lords, iii. 293, 294. Tenure, none in England owes any but by virtue of a con- tract, made either by him- self or his predecessors, ii.
Those of turpitude, how abol-
Of the commons, as ancient as many of the nobilities, iii. 219. Tertullian, several sayings out of his Apologetics, ii. 471, 472.
The design of his apology and treatise of Scapula, ii. 472, 473.
Calls the whole people of Carthage, antiquate nobles, nobilitate felices, iii. 251.
When he says the Roman Thanestry, the law of it, ii. 49.
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