Book, Chapter
1 0, Int | follows an account of the state of the English episcopate
2 I, II | the meantime, the strong state of the Trinovantes, with
3 I, III | brought by him upon the Roman state, he almost lost Britain;
4 I, V | many wars, he governed the state vigorously, but with much
5 I, V | adjudged an enemy of the State; but Bassianus, having taken
6 I, XIII | famine and pestilential state of the air destroyed thousands
7 I, XXII | with the existing peaceable state of things, all the bonds
8 II, I | up there, concerning the state of our resurrection. For
9 II, IV | as yet in so unsettled a state, might begin to falter,
10 II, VI | many prayers to God for the state of the Church, he fell asleep;
11 II, XV | faith; and thus his latter state was worse than the former;
12 III, XXVI | the bishopric, and of the state of the church under those
13 III, XXIX | ought to be done about the state of the English Church, for
14 IV, IX | of her tongue; in which state having continued three days
15 IV, XI | stood and inquired about the state of the sick man they had
16 IV, XVIII | informed concerning the state of the Church in Britain,
17 IV, XXV | to the danger of their state, or to gain the friendship
18 IV, XXVI | nobly retrieved the ruined state of the kingdom, though within
19 V, XX | teaching restore to its former state that which was corrupted
20 V, XXI | right choice concerning the state of this world, how much
21 V, XXI | were sent by command of the State throughout all the provinces
22 V, XX III| XX III. Of the present state of the English nation, or
23 V, XX III| This is for the present the state of all Britain; about two
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