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Object Oriented Design With UML and Java 1st Edition Kenneth Barclay PDF Download

The document provides information about the book 'Object Oriented Design with UML and Java' by Kenneth Barclay, including its publication details and a brief overview of its contents. It covers topics such as object technology, object-oriented analysis and design, implementation with Java, and various case studies. Additionally, it includes references to other related books available for download.

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Object Oriented Design with UML and Java 1st Edition
Kenneth Barclay Digital Instant Download
Author(s): Kenneth Barclay, John Savage
ISBN(s): 9780750660983, 0750660988
Edition: 1
File Details: PDF, 5.18 MB
Year: 2004
Language: english
Object-Oriented Design with UML and Java
To Irene – K.B.
To Salwa – J.S.
Object-Oriented Design
with UML and Java

K. Barclay
J. Savage

Amsterdam • Boston • Heidelberg • London • New York • Oxford • Paris


• San Diego • San Francisco • Singapore • Sydney • Tokyo
Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann
Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP
200 Wheeler Road, Burlington, MA 01803

First published 2004

Copyright © 2004, Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form


(including photocopying or storing in any medium by electronic means
and whether or not transiently or incidentally to some other use of this
publication) without the written permission of the copyright holder
except in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of a licence issued by the Copyright
Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London, England W1T 4LP.
Applications for the copyright holder’s written permission to reproduce
any part of this publication should be addressed to the publisher.

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ISBN 0 7506 6098 8

For information on all Elsevier Butterworth-Heinemann


publications visit our website at http://books.elsevier.com

Typeset by Charon Tec Pvt. Ltd, Chennai


Printed and bound in Great Britain
Contents
Preface ix
1 Object Technology 1
1.1 Background 2
1.1.1 Modelling 2
1.1.2 UML 3
1.1.3 Analysis and design models 3
1.1.4 Development process 4
1.2 Using the UML 4
1.2.1 Objects: combined services and data 5
1.2.2 Objects make excellent software modules 8
1.2.3 Object interaction is expressed as messages 9
1.3 Classes: sets of similar objects 10
1.3.1 Specialization 12
1.3.2 Polymorphism 14
1.4 Tools 16
1.5 Summary 17
1.6 Exercises 17
2 Object-Oriented Analysis and Design 19
2.1 Fundamentals of an OOAD 19
2.1.1 A lightweight process 20
2.2 Illustration 23
2.2.1 Realizing the use-cases 25
2.3 Toward design 32
2.4 UML diagrams 33
2.4.1 Use-case diagrams 33
2.4.2 Interaction diagrams 34
2.4.3 Sequence diagrams 34
2.4.4 Collaboration diagrams 36
2.4.5 Activity diagrams 36
2.5 Class diagrams 38
2.5.1 Representation of objects 38
2.5.2 Association of objects 38
2.5.3 Composite aggregation of objects 42
2.5.4 Shared aggregation 43
2.6 Summary 44
2.7 Exercises 45

v
vi Contents

3 Implementing Objects with Java 49


3.1 Introduction 49
3.2 Illustration 49
3.2.1 Mandatory profile 56
3.3 Building an application 57
3.4 Implementing architectural relationships 59
3.4.1 Introduction 60
3.4.2 The bank problem revisited 60
3.5 Establishing the architecture 63
3.5.1 The mandatory profile revisited 64
3.6 The example application 65
3.7 Summary 68
3.8 Exercises 68

4 Case Study: A Library Application 73


4.1 Specification 73
4.2 Iteration 1 73
4.2.1 Establish use-cases 74
4.2.2 Analysis 75
4.2.3 Design 78
4.2.4 Implementation 83
4.2.5 Reconcile model diagrams 97
4.3 Iteration 2 98
4.3.1 Establish use-cases 98
4.3.2 Analysis 101
4.3.3 Design 103
4.3.4 Implementation 103
4.3.5 Reconcile model diagrams 111
4.4 Iteration 3 112
4.4.1 Establish use-cases 112
4.4.2 Analysis 113
4.4.3 Design 115
4.4.4 Implementation 117
4.4.5 Reconcile model diagrams 122
4.5 Summary 126
4.6 Exercises 127

5 Specialization 131
5.1 Specialization 131
5.2 Inherited methods 133
5.3 Redefined methods 135
5.4 Polymorphism 136
5.5 Polymorphism at work 146
5.6 Protected features 148
5.7 The abstract class 149
5.8 The interface class 153
Contents vii

5.9 The interface at work 157


5.10 Summary 160
5.11 Exercises 161

6 Case Study: The Library Application Revisited 167


6.1 Specification 167
6.2 Iteration 1 167
6.2.1 Establish use-cases 168
6.2.2 Analysis 172
6.2.3 Design 173
6.2.4 Implementation 175
6.2.5 Reconcile model diagrams 181
6.3 Iteration 2 181
6.3.1 Establish use-cases 182
6.3.2 Analysis 182
6.3.3 Design 182
6.3.4 Implementation 185
6.3.5 Reconcile model diagrams 193
6.3.6 A review of iteration 2 193
6.4 Iteration 3 197
6.4.1 Establish use-cases 197
6.4.2 Analysis 198
6.4.3 Design 199
6.4.4 Implementation 200
6.4.5 Testing 201
6.5 Summary 202
6.6 Exercises 202

7 Graphical User Interfaces 205


7.1 Overview of Swing 205
7.2 Rebuilding the library case study 207
7.3 Events 211
7.4 Menu bar 216
7.4.1 Responding to a menu selection 218
7.5 Application menus 221
7.6 Application buttons 230
7.7 Dialogs 235
7.8 Summary 238
7.9 Exercises 238

8 Design Patterns 241


8.1 Delegation 241
8.2 Interface 250
8.3 Iterator 254
8.4 Adapter 255
8.5 Singleton 257
viii Contents

8.6 Visitor 258


8.7 Observer 261
8.8 Template method 265
8.9 Abstract factory 266
8.10 Decorator 268
8.11 Summary 273
8.12 Exercises 273

9 Case Study: A Final Review 277


9.1 Refactoring 277
9.2 Iteration 1 278
9.3 Iteration 2 281
9.4 Iteration 3 286
9.5 Iteration 4 289
9.6 Summary 295
9.7 And finally 296
9.8 Exercises 296

Bibliography 299
Appendix A: Setting up the Environment 301
Appendix B: ROME 305
Appendix C: Package textio 329
Appendix D: UML Notation and Java Bindings 335
Appendix E: The Java Collections Framework 347
Appendix F: Programming with Java 363
Appendix G: Object-Oriented Programming with Java 379
Appendix H: Procedural Code in Java 393
Index 399
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178.
Thomas More, by his grandson, p. 187.

179.
Ibid. p. 193.

180.
‘In horto suo.’—Rymer, vi. p. 171.

181.
Foxe, Acts, v. pp. 184, 185.

182.
Chrysostom, in opere imperfecto.

183.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 203.

184.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 225.

185.
Romans, vi. 14.

186.
Latimer, Works, ii. p. 326 (Parker Soc.).

187. Foxe, Acts, vii. p. 454.

188.
‘Plures longe fures esse quam pastores.’—Foxe, Acts, vii. p.
479.

189.
‘Quibus latronibus suffocandis ne Angliæ totius canavum
sufficere prædicabas.’—Ibid. p. 478.
190.
Strype, i. p. 245.

191.
Strype, i. p. 245.

192.
‘Crimina seu excessus graves personaliter responsurus.’—Ibid.
p. 455.

193.
‘Oportet pati et sic intrare.’—Latimer, Works, ii. p. 351 (Parker
Soc.).

194.
‘Tempestive, itempestive, privatim, publice.’—Ibid.

195.
‘Etiam si male vivant.’—Latimer, Works, ii. p. 466 (Parker Soc.);
and Foxe, Acts, vii. p. 456.

196.
‘I heard a pen walking in the chimney behind the cloth.’—
Latimer, Sermons, i. p. 294.

197. Foxe, Acts, vii. p. 455.

198.
‘Non dicit omnia quæ vobis ipsis videntur prædicanda.’—Foxe,
Acts, iii. p. 747.

199.
‘Donec respirare licebit, stare non desinam.’—Ibid.

200.
‘Tertio requisitus ut subscriberet, recusavit.’—Wilkins, Concilia,
iii. p. 747.
201.
Strype, Records, i. p. 180.

202.
Luther, Wieder die himmlischen Propheten, and Explication du
6me chapitre de St. Mathieu.

203.
‘Fuit absolutus a sententia excommunicationis.’—Wilkins,
Concilia, iii. p. 747.

204.
Tyndale, Treatises, p. 38; Strype, Memorials, i. 257, iii., bk. i. p.
257; bk. ii. pp. 30, 136.

205.
1 Kings xxi. 19.

206.
Tyndale, Treatises, p. 38. Stowe, Annals, 562.

207. Foxe Acts, iv. p. 697.

208.
Both Strype (Memorials, i. p. 35) and Foxe (Acts, iv. p. 698)
say, and whipped him; but More denied it.

209.
‘Sir Thomas More being present himself, till in a manner he had
lamed him.’—Foxe, Acts, iv. p. 698.

210.
1 John i. 7.

211.
Ibid. ii. 1.
212.
Foxe, Acts, iv. p. 700.

213.
‘Stood up there before the people in his pew with weeping
tears.’—Foxe, Acts, iv. p. 702.

214.
‘He would not feel such a hell again as he did feel.’—Ibid.

215.
Strype, Annals, i. p. 372.

216.
Ibid.

217. Foxe, Acts, iv. p. 705.

218.
Ibid.

219.
Foxe, Acts, iv. p. 706.

220.
Ibid. v. p. 32.

221.
‘Protestamur quod nolumus alicui statuto edito in
derogationem Romani pontificis consentire.’—Wilkins, Concilia,
iii. p. 746.

222.
There is a letter of his dated from Hampton Court, 12th June,
1531.
223.
Cotton Ms., Vitellius, bk. xxi. p. 54.

224.
‘Commendatus primoribus civitatis facundia sua.’—Camerarius
Melanchthonis Vita, p. 285.

225.
‘It excludeth them from the office of justifying.’—Homily of
Salvation. Cranmer, Works, ii. p. 129 (Parker Soc.).

226.
‘Christ is corporally in heaven and spiritually in his lively
members.’—Cranmer, On the Lord’s Supper, p. 33.

227. Lutheri Opp. xxii. p. 1808.

228.
Cranmer, Works, p. 219 (Parker Soc.).

229.
‘Hæc erat neptis uxoris Osiandri.’—Godwin, Annales Angl. p.
167.

230.
1 Timothy iv. 3.

231.
Seckendorf, Hist. Lutheranismi, 1532.

232.
Cranmer, Remains, p. 232.

233.
Cranmer, Remains, p. 332.
234.
Foxe, Acts, viii. p. 65.

235.
‘Thinking that he would be forgetful of me in the meantime.’—
Cranmer, Remains, p. 216.

236.
‘I found in no town, man, woman, nor child, meat, drink, nor
bedding.’—Cranmer, Remains, p. 223.

237. Ibid, p. 225.

238.
Le Grand, Histoire du Divorce, i. p. 229.

239.
History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century, tom. ii.
bk. ii. ch. xxi.

240.
This is the date given by Hall, Chronicles, fol. 209; Holinshed,
Chronicles, iii, p. 629; Strype, Cranmer’s Mem. p. 16; Collyers,
ii. p. 71. Others hesitate between November and January
(1533); Burnet, i. p. 121; Herbert, p. 369; Benger, p. 336, &c.

241.
‘They judge him a man right worthy to be high in favor and
authority with his prince.’—State Papers (Henry VIII.) vii. p.
391.

242.
Foxe, Acts, viii. p. 66.

243.
‘Aliquid intus.’
244.
‘I am unwilling to be made a bishop.’ ‘I desire you to be a
bishop.’—Fuller, Eccl. Hist. bk. v. p. 184.

245.
Foxe, Acts, viii. p. 66.

246.
Cranmer, Remains, p. 223.

247. Ibid.

248.
Bossuet makes this remark when speaking of Cranmer’s oath.
—Histoire des Variations, liv. vii. p. 11.

249.
‘Quas bullas obtulit tum regi.’ Lambeth MS. No. 1136.

250.
‘Palam et publice et expresse protestor.’—Wilkins, Concilia, iii.
p. 757.

251.
‘Quas protestationes in omnibus clausulis et sententiis dictorum
juramentorum repetitas et recitatas volo.’—Wilkins, Concilia, iii.
p. 757.

252.
‘Eandem sedulam perlegit.’—Lambeth MS. No. 2106.

253.
‘Qua protestatione per eundem reverendissimum tertio facta.’—
Ibid.
254.
‘In the presence of so much people as the church could hold.’—
Card. Pole.

255.
‘Il faut marcher rondement en toutes choses.’

256.
Concilium Tridentinum, Sessio prima.

257. Resolutions of certain bishops. Burnet, Records, bk. iii. art. 21;
Cranmer, Remains, p. 117.

258.
‘Multo, minus scandalosum fuisset, dispensare cum Majestate
vestra super duabus uxoribus.’—Record Office MS.

259.
Bossuet, Hist. des Variations, liv. vi.

260.
‘Compelled to lie in the straw.’—State Papers (Henry VIII.), part
vii. p. 394.

261.
‘Utterly resolve to do pleasure to your Highness.’—Benet to
Henry VIII., State Papers, pp. 401, 402.

262.
‘He would it had cost him a joint of his hand.’—Ibid.

263.
‘Your Grace should give no credence thereto, for it is but
dissimulation.—Ibid. p. 422.

264.
Cranmer, Remains, p. 246.
265.
‘The purity of her life, her constant virginity.’—Burnet, Records,
iii. p. 64; see, also, Wyatt, Memoirs of Anne Boleyn, p. 437.

266.
Henry’s instructions to the Earl of Rochford are written in
French, probably that they might be shown to Francis.—State
papers, vii. pp. 429-431.

267. State Papers, vii. p. 421. A note mentions that the document
cannot be found. It is evidently the brief given by Le Grand,
Preuves du Divorce, p. 558.

268.
‘Te et ipsam Annam, excommunicationis pœna, innodatos
declaramus.’—Le Grand, Preuves, p. 567.

269.
‘Granted by the pope at the suits of the imperials.’—State
Papers, vii. p. 454.

270.
‘He can hardly believe it to be true rather than to be
counterfeited.’—Ibid. p. 421.

271.
‘In derogation both of justice and the affection lately shown by
his Holiness unto us.’—Ibid.

272.
Ibid.

273.
State Papers, vii. p. 454.
274.
Statute against appeals, 24 Henry VIII. cap. 12; Collyers, Ch.
History, ii.

275.
Wilkins, Concilia Mag. Britanniæ, iii. pp. 756-759. Rymer,
Fœdera, vi. p. 179.

276.
State Papers (Henry VIII.), i. p. 390.

277. ‘Your sufferance and grants.’—State Papers (Henry VIII.), i. p.


390.

278.
The two letters are in the State Paper Office; they are in
Cranmer’s handwriting, and appear to have been read, both of
them, by the king. Our hypothesis touching these letters differs
from that of Mr. Froude (Hist. England, i. p. 440). State Papers
(Henry VIII.), i. pp. 390, 391.

279.
‘Vere et manifeste contumacem.’—State Papers (Henry VIII.) i.
p. 394.

280.
‘My lord of Canterbury handleth himself very uprightly.’—Ibid.
p. 395.

281.
‘A great bruit and voice of the people.’—Cranmer, Remains, p.
342.

282.
‘Non licere in eodem prætenso matrimonio remanere.’—
Wilkins, Concilia, iii. p. 759; Rymer, Fœdera, vi. p. 182.
283.
Cranmer, Remains, p. 245.

284.
Mr. Froude says that Anne went to the Tower on the 19th of
May, and that she quitted it for Westminster on the 31st, so
that she resided there for eleven days (History of England, i.
pp. 450, 451). That appears hardly probable, and is in
contradiction to Cranmer’s narrative, where we read: ‘Her
grace came to the Tower on Thursday at night.... Friday all day
the king and queen tarried there.... The next day, which was
Saturday, the knights rid before the queen’s grace towards
Westminster.’—Letters, p. 245.

285.
‘Lambert delivered ... by the coming of Queen Anne.’—Foxe,
Acts, v. p. 225.

286.
‘To the clear alienation of a great part of Christendom from
that see.’—State Papers, vii. p. 477.

287. ‘That the matrimony was and is naught.’—Ibid. p. 498.

288.
‘Serving for the common utility.’—Tyndale to Fryth, Works, iii. p.
74.

289.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 10.

290.
Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 421.

291.
‘He would never seem to strive against the papists.’—Foxe,
Acts, v. p. 9.
292.
Fryth, A Declaration of Baptism, p. 287.

293.
See Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 91. Preface to the Reader.

294.
Anderson, Annals of the Bible, i. p. 338.

295.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 5.

296.
Earl of Derby’s Translation.

297. He added: ‘Now have I experience of the faith which is in


you.’—Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 257.

298.
Ibid. p. 324.

299.
Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 321.

300.
Confutation of Tyndale’s Answer, by Sir Thomas More, lord-
chancellor of England (1532).

301.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 133.

302.
Ibid. p. 9.

303.
Strype. i. p. 316.
304.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 6.

305.
Preface to More’s Confutation, Bible Ann. i. p. 343.

306.
‘He was so loaded with iron that he could scarce sit with any
ease.’—Burnet, i. p. 161.

307. Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 342.

308.
Ibid. p. 338.

309.
The Subsidy or Bulwark; Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 242.

310.
‘I am in continual fear, lest the lieutenant or my keeper should
espy any such thing by me.’—Ibid.

311.
‘If any notable thing had been in my mind, it was clean lost.’—
Ibid.

312.
The Subsidy or Bulwark; Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 241.

313.
The Subsidy or Bulwark; Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 211.

314.
Ibid. p. 259.

315.
Strype.
316.
Tyndale and Fryth; Works, iii. p. 288.

317. Cranmer’s Letters and Remains, p. 246.

318.
Tyndale to Fryth: Foxe, v. p. 132; Anderson, Annals of Bible, i.
p. 357.

319.
‘For there should be no concourse of citizens.’—Foxe, Acts, viii.
p. 696.

320.
The narrative from which we learn these particulars is given in
the eighth volume of Foxe’s Acts, and seems to have been
written by the gentleman himself. The circumstance that it is
drawn up so as to compromise neither himself nor Cranmer is
of itself a confirmation.

321.
Foxe, Acts, viii. p. 696.

322.
Foxe, Acts, viii. Appendix.

323.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 12.

324.
‘Mit den Zähnen zu bissen.’—Plank. iii. p. 369.

325.
‘And surely I myself sent for him three or four times to
persuade him.’—Cranmer, Remains, Letters, p. 246.
326.
‘There was no man willing to answer him in open
disputation.’—Foxe, Acts, viii. p. 699.

327. Bishop Hooper, Early Writings, p. 245.

328.
‘Ego Frythus ita sentio, ita dixi, scripsi, affirmavi, &c.’—Foxe,
Acts, v. p. 14.

329.
Ibid. p. 15.

330.
‘All the Germans, both of Luther’s side and also of
Œcolampadius.’—Tyndale and Fryth, Works, iii. p. 455.

331.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 18.

332.
Becon, Works, iii. p. 11.

333.
Foxe, Acts, v. p. 10.

334.
Becon, Jewel of Joy (Parker Soc.), p. 420.

335.
‘She gave me a look as to that she should marvell thereof.’—
State Papers, vii. p. 451.

336.
‘Setting forward to ride out a hunting.’—State Papers, vii. p.
451.
337. ‘Taking me aside, showed unto me secretly.’—Ibid. p. 457.

338.
‘So sore for him to stand still and do nothing.’—Ibid. p. 469.

339.
State Papers (Henry VIII.), vii. p. 496.

340.
State Papers, (Henry VIII.), vii. p. 501.

341.
‘Sed tantum annuit capite.’—Ibid. p. 502.

342.
This official document is given in the State Papers, i. p. 407. An
examination of the manuscript in the Harleian collection, shows
that the s was added afterwards in the two following passages:
‘bringing forth of a princes’ and ‘preservation of the said
princes.’

343.
Le Grand, Hist. du Divorce, i. p. 269.

344.
Ibid. p. 587.

345.
‘Making a plairemouth with his lip.’—Foxe, Acts, v. p. 152.

346.
Cranmer’s Memorials, Appendix, p. 8.

347. ‘The pope whose sight is incredulous quick, eyed me.’—Burnet,


Records, iii. p. 38.
348.
Ibid. p. 51.

349.
‘His Holiness, delivering it to the datarie, commanded him to
read it.’—Burnet, Records, iii. p. 23.

350.
Burnet, Records, iii. pp. 37-46; Rymer, Acta, vi. pars ii. p. 188.

351.
‘Legitimo defensionis clypeo protegere.’—Rymer, Acta, vi. pars
ii. p. 188.

352.
‘He fell in a marvellous great choler and rage.’—Burnet,
Records, iii. p. 54.

353.
Ibid.

354.
‘Wherein the pope snarling.’—Ibid. p. 42.

355.
‘The French king making very low curtisie, putting off his
bonnet and keeping it off.’—Burnet, Records, iii. p. 42.

356.
‘Questi signori Inglesi sono stati quà per intimare certi
provocationi et appellationi. . . . e di fare altre cose.’—Ibid.

357. Le Grand, Histoire du Divorce, i. p. 268.

358.
Burnet, Records, iii. p. 42.
359.
Ibid, i. p. 130.

360.
‘Immitis et crudelis pastor.’—Rymer, Acta, p. 188.

361.
Cranmer’s appeal was not written till later, except there be
some error in the date. Burnet, Records, iii. p. 24.

362.
‘Hæc omnia a pontifice cum rege amotis arbitris tractata.’—
State Papers (Henry VIII.), vii. p. 222.

363.
‘De summa animorum conjunctione.’—Ibid. p. 523.

364.
Strype, Eccles. Mem. i. p. 22.

365.
Strype, Eccles. Mem. p. 226 (Oxf. 1822).

366.
State Papers (Henry VIII.), t. vii. p. 526.

367. Burnet, Records, iii. p. 69.

368.
State Papers, vol. vii. p. 526.

369.
Le Grand, Preuves, p. 591.

370.
‘He eloquently declared our king’s message.’—Lord Herbert,
Life of Henry VIII. p. 396, fol.
371.
‘That the emperor would be the executor.’—Ibid. p. 553.

372.
For Cromwell’s early history, see the History of the
Reformation, vol. v. bk. xx. ch. xiv.

373.
Lord Cromwell to Parker.

374.
‘Not fit for any of the Peers to appear and answer at the bar of
the House of Commons.’—Collyers, ii. p. 83.

375.
Collyers, ii. p. 84.

376.
‘Neither the king, his successor, nor his subjects to apply to the
see of Rome.’—Collyers, ii. p. 84.

377. Ibid. p. 85.

378.
‘Solum Romanum episcopum et fratrem, ut primis episcopis
mos erat.’—Wilkins, Concilia, iii. p. 782.

379.
Herbert, Life of Henry VIII. p. 396. Burnet, Hist. Ref. i. p. 131.

380.
‘What could not be done in less than three consistories, was
now despatched in one.’—Herbert, p. 397.

381.
‘Christi nomine invocato, in throno justitiæ pro tribunali
sedentes.’—Foxe, Acts, v. p. 657.
382.
‘Une bonne chose et une bonne loi.’ MS. du procès
inquisitionnel de Lyon (Archives de Berne), pp. 200-202.

383.
About 1836.

384.
Registre du Conseil, ad locum.

385.
‘Et illic en faire à son plaisir.’

386.
‘Ni tirer ni nager’ (neither pull nor steer), alluding to the
peculiar mode of rowing employed on the lake.

387. Berne MSS., Hist. Helvet. v. p. 125.

388.
‘About eight years ago,’ says an authority of 1534 (MS. du
procès inquisitionel de Lyon). The reading of the MS. is Toquer,
which is probably not the correct spelling of the German name.

389.
‘Ou du moins était-ce comme rien.’

390.
‘Soit en dînant, soit en soupant.’—MS. de Lyon.

391.
MS. du procès de Lyon, pp. 294-297.

392.
‘Les mettent en train.’—MS. du procès de Lyon, p. 185.
393.
Sœur Jeanne. Levain du Calvinisme, p. 68.

394.
Registres du Conseil des 10, 11, 12 Juillet. Froment, Gestes de
Genève, pp. 62, 63. Roset MS.

395.
‘Fort échauffé pour sa propre personne, plus que froid pour
l’église.’—Registre du Conseil du 13 Juillet; Froment, Gestes de
Genève, p. 63, Berne MS.

396.
Registre du Conseil du 13 Juillet 1533.

397. Le Curé Besson: Mémoires pour l’Histoire Ecclésiastique du


Diocèse de Genève, p. 63.

398.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 63.

399.
Roset MS.

400.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, pp. 62, 63.

401.
Le Curé Besson, Mémoires pour l’Histoire Ecclésiastique du
Diocèse de Genève, p. 63.

402.
Briève Relation de la Révolte de la Ville de Genève. MS. in the
Archives Générales du Royaume d’Italie, paquet 14.
403.
Letter to Lord Townsend, by the Secretary of State Chouet.
Berne MSS. vi. 57.

404.
It was also on the 14th of July, two centuries and a half later
(1789), that the reign of the feudal system came to an end.

405.
‘I care no more for him than for Baume,’ that is, not at all. This
expression owes its origin to the name of La Baume, last
bishop of Geneva. Glossaires Genevois de Gaudy et de J.
Humbert.

406.
Registre du Conseil des 6, 7, 8, 12, 17, Août et 4 Septembre
1533.—Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 60. Roset MS. liv. iii. ch.
xvi.

407. ‘La main me fourmille que je n’agisse contre les traîtres!’

408.
‘Nullement délicate ni mignarde.’—Froment, Gestes de Genève,
p. 68. Registre du Conseil du 12 Octobre 1535.

409.
‘A la façon des provins.’

410.
Religio licita.

411.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 66.

412.
‘Fort envenimés contre les deux réformateurs.’
413.
‘Ne voulant pas moins que la jacture de leur vie.’

414.
Froment, Gestes, p. 66.

415.
‘Neminem clam, palam, occulte vel publice sacram paginam,
sacrum Evangelium exponere aut alias quomodocumque
dicere.’—Gaberel, Lettres patentes de l’Evêque. Pièces
justificatives, i. p. 42.

416.
The Hidden Truth. The Brotherhood of the Holy Ghost. The
Manner of Baptism. The Supper of Jesus Christ. The
Tradesmen’s Book.

417. MS. du procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 6 et 7.

418.
Berne MSS. Hist. Helv. v. 12.

419.
‘Il était enflambé.’—Froment, Gestes.

420.
‘Velut alter Atlas qui instanti causæ catholicæ succollaret.’—
Geneva Restituta, p. 63.

421.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, pp. 66-68. La Sœur Jeanne,
Levain du Calvinisme, p. 70.

422.
See the documents attached to the trial, in the Registres du
Conseil du 27 Janvier 1534.
423.
‘Prêchant à des compagnies induisant de toute sa possibilité,
&c.’—MS. du procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 29.

424.
Ibid. p. 37.

425.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, pp. 69-71. Gautier MS.

426.
‘Les femmes comme enragées . . . de grande furie, lui jetant
force pierres.’—Froment, Gestes merveilleux de Genève, pp.
71-74. Sœur Jeanne, Levain du Calvinisme, p. 70. Gautier MS.

427. Registre du Conseil du 2 Décembre 1533.

428.
Lettres certaines d’aucuns grands troubles et tumultes advenus
à Genève, avec la disputation faite l’an 1534. This pamphlet is
dated April 1, 1534, and is from the pen of Farel, though the
printer describes it as being by a notary of Geneva.

429.
Lettres certaines d’aucuns grands troubles et tumultes advenus
à Genève, avec la disputation faite l’an 1534, avant-propos.

430.
Thiers on the Insurrection in Spain.

431.
MS. du procès inquisitionnel de Lyon. Archives de Berne, pp.
38, 198, 229, 285.

432.
Registre du Conseil du 22 Décembre 1533. Froment, Gestes
merveilleux de Genève, p. 78. Sœur Jeanne, Levain du
Calvinisme, p. 71. Lettres certaines d’aucuns grands troubles,
&c.

433.
Recent investigations indicate that this house was situated in
the Rue basse du Marché, in front of the Terraillet.

434.
‘Les méchants se bâtissent des triomphes en l’air, et tous ces
bruits ne sont finalement que fumée.’—Lettres certaines.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 79. Sœur Jeanne, Levain du
Calvinisme, p. 73.

435.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 79. MS. du procès
inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 226.

436.
‘De vie d’hommes, n’avait été fait si bel office.’ Registre du
Conseil des 23 et 24 Décembre et du 27 Janvier, 1534.—La
Sœur Jeanne, Levain du Calvinisme, p. 74.

437. Registre du Conseil des 27 et 28 Décembre.—Gautier MSC.—


Ruchat, iii. p. 245.

438.
MSC. de Roset, liv. iii. ch. xvii.—Registre du 1 Janvier, 1534.—
Spon. i. p. 50.—Ruchat, iii. p. 244.—Roset and Farel, both
contemporaries, and in a position to know the truth, report the
fact that the Holy Scriptures were to be burnt. The minutes of
the council do not mention it; but the secretary occasionally
toned down what seemed too strong for a council the majority
of which was at that time catholic.

439.
Prendre ses mitaines, a figurative expression for prendre ses
mesures.—Lettres certaines, &c.
440.
Froment, Actes de Genève, p. 80.

441.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 80.

442.
Farellus, Fromentius, Viretus intra privatos parietes in
prædicando Dei verbo. Geneva restituta, p. 65.

443.
MSC. de Roset, Chron., lib. iii. ch. xviii.—Froment, Gestes de
Genève, pp. 80, 81.—Registre du Conseil du 5 Janvier.

444.
Registre du Conseil des 7 et 8 Janvier, 1534.—Froment, Gestes
de Genève, pp. 80, 81.—Ruchat, iii. p. 245.

445.
Registre du Conseil des 10, 11, 12 Janvier, 1534.—Ruchat, iii.
p. 251, 252.—MSC. de Gautier.

446.
Registre du Conseil des 25 et 26 Janvier, 1534.—MSC. de
Roset, liv. ii. ch. xviii. etc.

447. Registre du Conseil du 27 Janvier, 1534.—Lettres certaines


d’aucuns grands troubles.

448.
Furbito homine sinuoso, cui firma latera, frons ferrea.—Geneva
restituta, p. 68.

449.
Pictæ tectoria linguæ.—Persius.
450.
Farello pro veritate strenue stante, etc.—Geneva restituta.

451.
Deuteronomy xvii. 8-10.

452.
Deuteronomy iv. 2.

453.
Farel indicated the passages taken from the following chapters:
Hebrews v. to x.; Romans xiv.; Matthew v.; Luke xxiv.; John v.
viii. xii. xiv.; Romans xv.; Galatians i.; Deuteronomy xviii.

454.
Lettres certaines, &c., by Farel.

455.
Au lieu de porter la Parole de Dieu, portent la bourse.

456.
Lettres certaines.

457. MSC. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 80.

458.
Ibid. p. 81.

459.
Lettres certaines d’aucuns grands troubles, &c. This work,
which is dated Geneva, 1st April 1534, and consequently
appeared two months after the discussion, is the principal
source whence we have taken our account of these
discussions.

460.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 86.
461.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 85.

462.
Ibid.

463.
Farel shall depart, Viret shall veer (go away); Froment (corn)
shall be ground in the mill; God will help us, and the devil shall
run away with them all. Froment’s Gestes de Genève, pp. 84-
86.

464.
Crespin, Actes des Martyrs, p. 114.

465.
MSC. de Roset, liv. iii. ch. xxi.—MSC. de Gautier.

466.
Registre du Conseil des 8 et 10 Février, 1534.

467. Lettres certaines, 1534.

468.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 245.—Chron. msc. de Roset.—
Hist. msc. de Gauthier.—Registre du Conseil.

469.
Registre du Conseil du 3 Février, 1534.—MSC. de Roset, Chron.
liv. iii., ch. xix.—MSC. de Gautier.

470.
Registre du Conseil du 3 Février, 1534. Spon. i. p. 516. Ruchat,
iii. p. 276. Balvignac, Mèm. d’Archeologie, iv. pp. 101-102.
471.
Registre du Conseil des 3 et 8 Février, 1534. Ruchat, iii. p. 277.
Mém. de Gautier.

472.
‘Quand se virent l’un l’autre, ne se purent tenir de pleurer.’—La
Sœur Jeanne, Levain du Calvinisme.

473.
Ibid. pp. 82-83.

474.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 32.

475.
Registre du Conseil des 8 et 10 Février, 1534.

476.
1 Timothy iv. 3.

477. Lettres certaines, &c. Registre du Conseil des 11, 12, 13, 15
Février, 1534. Froment, Gestes, p. 87.

478.
‘Vagans et vacillans, sententiæ satisfacere neglexit.’—Registre
du Conseil du 15 Février, 1534.

479.
‘Nugis solitus plebis aures suspendere satageret.’—Geneva
restituta, pp. 6-9.

480.
‘Impostor suggestu deturbatus.’—Geneva restituta, pp. 6-9.

481.
Registre du Conseil des 15, 16, 20 Février. Froment, Gestes de
Genève, p. 88. La Sœur Jeanne, Levain du Calvinisme, p. 78.
482.
Registre du Conseil des 15 et 16 Février, 1534.

483.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 331.

484.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 331-332.

485.
The word Gebenna occurs frequently in ancient documents.

486.
‘Nous ne voulons plaire, nous, ni à Monsieur ni à Madame.’—
Froment, Gestes de Genève, pp. 83-84.

487. MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 231, 232, 236.

488.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 233, 234.

489.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 235, 236.

490.
‘Jurisdictionem habet universalem in toto mundo papa, nedum
in spiritualibus sed temporalibus.’—De planctu ecclesiæ, lib. i.
cap. xiii.

491.
‘Papa vice Dei, est omnium regnorum provisor.’—Aug.
Triumphus, Summa de potestate ecclesiasticâ, Qu. xlvi. art. 3.

492.
Revelation xiii.-xx.
493.
Froment, an eye-witness, says (Gestes de Genève, p. 82) that
Farel preached ‘in the grand auditory of the convent of Rive,
without entering the church.’ Father Courtelier, in his evidence
at Lyons (Procès inquisitionnel, p. 322), says that Farel
preached ‘in the same church and pulpit as himself.’ But
Froment’s evidence is corroborated by the Register of the
Council of Geneva, which says, that the meeting was held in
the cloister or auditory. Courtelier, no doubt only meant to say
that Farel preached in the same edifice as himself, without
strictly designating the place.

494.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 323.

495.
Sane me, tam vehementer conturbarunt tua illa fulgura.’—
Calvini Epp.

496.
Ancillon, Vie de Farel.

497. ‘Savourer la grâce ... avalée sans la goûter.’

498.
M. Archinard: Edifices religieux de l’ancienne Genève, p. 108.

499.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 226-227.

500.
Registre du Conseil du 6 Mars, 1534. Froment, Gestes de
Genève, p. 91. MS. de Gautier.

501.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 199, 200, 204.
502.
Registre du Conseil du 10 Mars, 1534.

503.
MS. de Gautier. Registre du Conseil du 18 Mars, 1534.

504.
She dated her letter, De Genève, trois semaines avant Pâques,
and signed it: La toute votre femme chérie, Baudichone.—MS.
du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 23-24.

505.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 11-12.

506.
‘Puisse à Dieu seulement que le pauvre prisonnier pousse outre
et déclare sans crainte ce qui doit être dit du bon Sauveur.’—
Lettre aux fidèles de Paris. (MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de
Lyon.)

507. Geneva, April 25, 1534. MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon.

508.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 147.

509.
All those particulars, as well as those which follow, are taken
literally from the depositions of the witnesses, made on oath,
before the court of Lyons, and are to be found in pages 132-
147 of the official manuscript.

510.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, déposition de Pécoud,
pp. 159-163.

511.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 209, 211, 217, 218.
512.
Vol. i. p. 576.

513.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon. There are three
depositions with regard to these facts: those of Barbier the
priest, pp. 267-270; of the furrier Simon de Montverban, pp.
274-278; and of friar Lyonnel, pp. 305-312.

514.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 282-285.

515.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, pp. 298-300, 413-414.

516.
Froment, Gestes de Genève, p. 241.

517. ‘Iceluy fut épié et recommandé.’—Froment, Gestes de Genève,


p. 241.

518.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel de Lyon, p. 424.

519.
Ibid. p. 1.

520.
All the procès-verbaux or minutes have his signature, with a
curious flourish (parafe) exactly alike on each.

521.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 5-6.

522.
‘Panam et vinum in cœna esse verum corpus et sanguinem
Christi.’ Ant. Smalcad. Catech. major, &c.
523.
‘Intelligimus spiritualem, supernaturalem, cœlestem modum.’—
Formula Concordiæ.

524.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 6-9.

525.
‘Embastonné et muni d’un allécret.’—MS. du Procès
inquisitionnel.

526.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 34-41.

527. Ibid. p. 46.

528.
‘Le donnaient au diable.’—MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 87-
88.

529.
‘Fort dolosés.’—MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 52, 53.

530.
Henri Guyot, Benoît Rochefort, Pierre Manicier, and Simon
Penet. MS. du Procès inquisitionnel.

531.
Ibid. pp. 47-50.

532.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 59-61.

533.
MS. du Procès inquisitionnel, pp. 62-65.
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