Vindiciæ Hibernicæ: Or, Ireland Vindicated:: An Attempt to Develop and Expose a Few of the Multifarious Errors and Falsehoods Respecting Ireland, in the Histories of May, Temple, Whitelock, Borlase, Rushworth, Clarendon, Cox, Carte, Leland, Warner, Macauley, Hume, and Others: Particularly in the Legendary Tales of the Conspiracy and Pretended Massacre of 1641 |
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Page v
... Irish Rebellion . Folio . London , 1680 . Burnet . Bishop Burnet's History of His Own Times . 2 vols . folio . London , 1724 . Burton . History of the Kingdom of Ireland . By R. Burton . Westminster , 1811 . Baker . Chronicles of the ...
... Irish Rebellion . Folio . London , 1680 . Burnet . Bishop Burnet's History of His Own Times . 2 vols . folio . London , 1724 . Burton . History of the Kingdom of Ireland . By R. Burton . Westminster , 1811 . Baker . Chronicles of the ...
Page vi
... Irish Parliament . By Lord Mountmorres . 2 vols . 8vo . London , 1792 . Macauley . History of England . By Catharine Macauley . 9 vols . 4to . Lon- don , 1766 . Nulson . Collection of the Affairs of State . 2 vols . folio . London ...
... Irish Parliament . By Lord Mountmorres . 2 vols . 8vo . London , 1792 . Macauley . History of England . By Catharine Macauley . 9 vols . 4to . Lon- don , 1766 . Nulson . Collection of the Affairs of State . 2 vols . folio . London ...
Page xiv
... Irish , for forty years previous to the insurrection of 1641 , enjoy- ed a high degree of peace , security , happiness , and toleration , is as base and shameful a false- hood as ever disgraced the pages of history , and is no more like ...
... Irish , for forty years previous to the insurrection of 1641 , enjoy- ed a high degree of peace , security , happiness , and toleration , is as base and shameful a false- hood as ever disgraced the pages of history , and is no more like ...
Page xv
... Irish , as general a confiscation of their estates , and a new plantation of the country , was most seriously entertained , and for some time acted upon , by the Irish rulers and their officers . X. That the idea of a cessation of ...
... Irish , as general a confiscation of their estates , and a new plantation of the country , was most seriously entertained , and for some time acted upon , by the Irish rulers and their officers . X. That the idea of a cessation of ...
Page xvi
... Irish insurgents of 1641 deserv- ed to be stigmatized as traitors and rebels , then were the English revolutionists of 1688 , the Ame- rican of 1776 , and the French of 1789 , traitors and rebels of the very worst possible kind ; as ...
... Irish insurgents of 1641 deserv- ed to be stigmatized as traitors and rebels , then were the English revolutionists of 1688 , the Ame- rican of 1776 , and the French of 1789 , traitors and rebels of the very worst possible kind ; as ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres afford appear barbarous blood Borlase Carte castle CHAPTER Charles Clarendon committed conspiracy council court crown cruelty deponent deposeth depositions dropped letter Dublin earl England English estates evidence execution falsehood fraud hath Henry honour human hundred Idem insurrection Ireland Irish James Jurat jury killed king king's kingdom kingdom of Ireland labour lands Leland letter letters patents Long Parliament lord Clarendon lord deputy lord Strafford lords justices Mac-Mahon majestie's majesty majesty's massacre ment mercy Mountnorris Munster murdered nation natives O'Conally oath of supremacy offences oppression Papist pardon Parliament peace penalties perjury perpetrated persons plot plunder Popish present pretended priests prisoners Protestants rapine reader rebellion rebels religion rest Roman Catholics Rushworth saith seized Sir John Sir William Sir William Parsons slaughter soldiers statutes Strafford sword Temple thereof thousand tion town truth Tyrone Ulster Warner whole wholly wretched writers