Miscellaneous papers: The book of Howth. The conquest of Ireland, by Thomas Bray, etcLongmans, Green, Reader, & Dyer, 1873 - Great Britain |
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Page x
... common with all the most distinguished of his competitors , there is no doubt whatever . If , in spite of some defects of character and temper , the deep and profound impression , not unmixed with as profound regret , which she left in ...
... common with all the most distinguished of his competitors , there is no doubt whatever . If , in spite of some defects of character and temper , the deep and profound impression , not unmixed with as profound regret , which she left in ...
Page xx
... common people from the exac- tions and oppressions of their lords , to restrain the tyranny and extortion of their captains , as they were called , and of idle Irish gentlemen , too indolent to work , too poor to live without it . + ...
... common people from the exac- tions and oppressions of their lords , to restrain the tyranny and extortion of their captains , as they were called , and of idle Irish gentlemen , too indolent to work , too poor to live without it . + ...
Page xxiv
... common with princes ( saith Tacitus ) to will contradictories . Sunt plerumque regum voluntates vehementes et inter se contrariæ . For it is the solecism of power to think to command the end , and yet not to endure the mean . " Essay ...
... common with princes ( saith Tacitus ) to will contradictories . Sunt plerumque regum voluntates vehementes et inter se contrariæ . For it is the solecism of power to think to command the end , and yet not to endure the mean . " Essay ...
Page xxxviii
... common socage ; to erect a house of stone or brick , with a bawn , on every proportion of 1,500 acres ; for the building of which they were to have an allowance of timber from the escheated lands . They were to enter into a covenant to ...
... common socage ; to erect a house of stone or brick , with a bawn , on every proportion of 1,500 acres ; for the building of which they were to have an allowance of timber from the escheated lands . They were to enter into a covenant to ...
Page xliv
... common sort to a state of absolute slavery , and to a necessity of following their chiefs whenever they pleased to rebel . For they had no estates of freehold and inheritance , nor any security of enjoying what belonged to them ; their ...
... common sort to a state of absolute slavery , and to a necessity of following their chiefs whenever they pleased to rebel . For they had no estates of freehold and inheritance , nor any security of enjoying what belonged to them ; their ...
Common terms and phrases
60 apiece acres ancient balliboes Baron bawn of lime Bishop building built burgesses called Carew castle Cavan charge church Commissioners common Copy Crown customs Demesnes Deputy and Council Derry divers Dublin dwell Earl of Ormond Edited Edward Eliz Elizabeth Endd England English escheated estates Exchequer families fee farm FitzGerrald flankers foot Freeholders Galway granted hath heirs Henry Henry VIII horse inhabitants Ireland Irish island James Justice Kierry King King's letters kingdom knights lease Lessees letters patent lime and stone Lord Deputy Lordship Magwire Majesty Majesty's manors Munster O'Neale oath of supremacy officers Parliament passed persons plantation Planted with British possession precinct proportions Recusants reign Rent reserved Richard Morison Scotland seigniory sheriffs Sir John Davies Sir Richard Sir Thomas statute taken tenants thereof Thomond timber town Ulster undertakers undertenants unto Waterford wherein William