624 



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[No. 13^. 



8vo., price 12<. 



A MANUAL OF ECCLESI- 

 ASTICAL HISTORY, from the First to 

 the Twelfth Century inclusive. By the Rev. 

 E. S.FOULKBS. M.A., Fellow and Tutor of 

 Jesus CoUese, Oxford. 



The maiu i)lan of the work has been bor- 

 rowed from Spanlieim, a learned, though cer- 

 tainly not unbiassed, writer of the seventeenth 

 century : the matter compiled from Spondanus 

 and Spanheim, Mosheim and Fleury, Gieseler 

 and Diillinger, and others, who have been used 

 too often to be specified, unless when reference 

 to them appeared desirable Ifor the benefit of 

 the reader. Yet I believe I have never once 

 trusted to them on a point involving contro- 

 versy, without examming their authorities. 

 The one object that I have had before me has 

 been to condense facts, without either garbling 

 or omitting any that should be noticed in a 

 work like the present, and to give a fair and 

 impartial view of the whole state of the case — 

 Frejace. 



•- " An epitomist of Church History has a task 

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 precious to Church historians, which implies 

 a love for the Catholic cause, a reverence for 

 its saintly champions, an abhorrence of the 

 misdeeds which have defiled it, and a coufl- 

 dence that its ' truth is great, and will pre- 

 vail.' 



"And among other qualifications which may 

 justly be attributed to the author of the work 

 beforeus, this list and highest is particularly 

 observable. He writes in a spirit of manly 

 faith, and is not afraid of facing ' the horrors 

 and uncertainties,' which, to use his own 

 ■words, are to be found in Church history."— 

 From the Scottish EcclesiasticalJournal, Man, 

 1 852. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford, and 

 377. Strand, Loudon. 



THE HISTORY of the PAINT- 

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THE GREAT EXHIBITION 

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BRANDE'S DICTIONARY of 

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In 1 vol., medium Svo., price 14s. cloth, 



DR. ROGET'S THESAURUS 

 of ENGLISH WORDS and PHRASES 

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Foolscap Svo. price 6s. 



THE PRACTICAL WORKING 

 of THE CHURCH OF SPAIN. By the 

 Rev. FREDERICK MEYRICK, M.A., Fel- 

 low of Trinity College, Oxford. 



" Pleasant meadows, happy peasants, all holy- 

 monks, all holy priests, holy every body. Such 

 charity and such unity, when every man was 

 a Catholic. I once believed in this Utopia my- 

 self, but wiien tested by stern facts, it all melts 

 away like dream." — A. Welby Fiujin. 



" The revelations made by such writers as 

 Mr. Meyrick io Spain and Mr. Gladstone in 

 Italy, have at least vindicated for tlie Church 

 of England a providential and morally defined 

 position, mission, and purpose ia tire Catholic 

 Church." — Morniitf/ Chronicle. 



" Two valuable works ... to the truthful- 

 ness of which we are glad to add our own testi- 

 mony : one, and the most important, is Mr. 

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 of Spain.' This is the experience — and it is 

 the experience of everj' Spanish traveller — of a 

 thoughtful person, as to the lamentable results 

 of unchecked Romanism. Here is the solid 

 substantial fact. Spain is divided between 

 ultra-infidelity and what is so closely akin to 

 actual idolatry, that it can only be controver- 

 sially, not practically, distinguished from It : 

 and over all hangs a lurid cloud of systetnatic 

 immoralitv, simply frightful to contemplate. 

 We can offer a direct, and even personal, testi- 

 mony to all that Mr. MeyWck has to say. — 

 Christian liemembranrcr. 



" I wish to recommend it strongly."— T. K. 

 Arnold's Tlieological Critic. 



" Many passing travellers have thrown more 

 or less light upon the state of Romanism 

 and Christianity in Spain, according to their 

 objects and opportunities ; but we suspect these 

 'workings' are the fullest, the most natural, 

 and the most trustworthy, of anything that 

 has appeared upon the subject since the time 

 of Blanco White's Confessions."— Spectator. 



" This honest exposition of the practical 

 working of Romanism in Spain, of its every- 

 day effects, not its canons and theories, deserves 

 the careful study of all, who, unable to test the 

 question abroad, are dazzled by the distant 

 mirage with which the Vatican mocks many a 

 yearning soul that thirsts after water- brooks 

 pure and full."— Literary Gazette. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford, and 

 377. Strand, London. 



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