Calendar of the Carew Manuscripts Preserved in the Archiepiscopal Library at Lambeth: 1575 - 1588, Volume 2 |
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Page xi
English gentlemen were continually forming friendships and intermarriages with
Irish chiefs and their families.f English deputies, aware of the * “The poor English
earth-tillers in the English Pale, who cannot skill “upon penury nor wretchedness
...
English gentlemen were continually forming friendships and intermarriages with
Irish chiefs and their families.f English deputies, aware of the * “The poor English
earth-tillers in the English Pale, who cannot skill “upon penury nor wretchedness
...
Page xxviii
... it regulated the size of noblemen's and gentlemen's shirts, and took under its
protection hats, caps, French hoods and tippets. Saffron cloth and embroidery
were little better than constructive treason. To listen to Irish lays or give alms to an
...
... it regulated the size of noblemen's and gentlemen's shirts, and took under its
protection hats, caps, French hoods and tippets. Saffron cloth and embroidery
were little better than constructive treason. To listen to Irish lays or give alms to an
...
Page xxix
“Harpers, rhymers, Irish chroniclers, bards, and “isshallyn commonly go with
praises to gentlemen in the English Pale, “ praising in rhymes, otherwise called
danes, their extortions, robberies, “ and abuses, as valiantness, which rejoiceth
them ...
“Harpers, rhymers, Irish chroniclers, bards, and “isshallyn commonly go with
praises to gentlemen in the English Pale, “ praising in rhymes, otherwise called
danes, their extortions, robberies, “ and abuses, as valiantness, which rejoiceth
them ...
Page xxxvii
... all the King's subjects of the said four shires be near hand “Irish, and wear their
habits and use their tongue, so as they are clean “gone and decayed; and there
is not eight of the lords, knights, esquires, “ and gentlemen of the four shires but ...
... all the King's subjects of the said four shires be near hand “Irish, and wear their
habits and use their tongue, so as they are clean “gone and decayed; and there
is not eight of the lords, knights, esquires, “ and gentlemen of the four shires but ...
Page xxxix
S He says:— “The King, thinking the realm of Ireland expedient to have a wise,
circumspect, prudent, valiant, and a stalworthy gentleman to * See S.P. II. 49, 50 ;
see also p. 89. f It was during his administration that the proposition was set on ...
S He says:— “The King, thinking the realm of Ireland expedient to have a wise,
circumspect, prudent, valiant, and a stalworthy gentleman to * See S.P. II. 49, 50 ;
see also p. 89. f It was during his administration that the proposition was set on ...
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