Lives of illustrious ... Irishmen, ed. by J. Wills, Volume 1, Part 21841 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 48
Page 257
... entered into a contract to land in Ireland in the ensuing spring , with a large force , provided he might obtain special permission for this pur- pose from king Henry . Dermod now conceived his purpose secured . To return to Ireland ...
... entered into a contract to land in Ireland in the ensuing spring , with a large force , provided he might obtain special permission for this pur- pose from king Henry . Dermod now conceived his purpose secured . To return to Ireland ...
Page 258
... entered the territory which had thus been seized by Dermod . The event was quickly decided . Dermod , terror - struck at the approach of his inveterate enemies , and having no adequate means of resistance , fled before their appearance ...
... entered the territory which had thus been seized by Dermod . The event was quickly decided . Dermod , terror - struck at the approach of his inveterate enemies , and having no adequate means of resistance , fled before their appearance ...
Page 262
... entered more fully into the detail of the first engagement with the army of Donald , it may be felt the less necessary to dwell on the particulars of the next . Donald fortified himself with a strong entrenchment and palisade of wooden ...
... entered more fully into the detail of the first engagement with the army of Donald , it may be felt the less necessary to dwell on the particulars of the next . Donald fortified himself with a strong entrenchment and palisade of wooden ...
Page 265
... entering into a compromise on that occasion carried with it fatal con- sequences , can it with equal reason be insisted on , that he had the choice of any other course . So far as his own immediate acts admit of inference , it was his ...
... entering into a compromise on that occasion carried with it fatal con- sequences , can it with equal reason be insisted on , that he had the choice of any other course . So far as his own immediate acts admit of inference , it was his ...
Page 274
... entered the council of the English with the stern composure of his character , and delivered , with firm- ness , an answer which he may honestly have approved . It was this : - That all the forts held by the English should be ...
... entered the council of the English with the stern composure of his character , and delivered , with firm- ness , an answer which he may honestly have approved . It was this : - That all the forts held by the English should be ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appointed arms army battle Braosa brave brother Burgo castle Cathal cause character circumstances command conduct Connaught consequence Courcy course danger daughter death Dermod DIED A. D. Dublin earl of Desmond earl of Kildare earl of Ormonde effect enemy England faction father favour Feidlim Fitz-Stephen force fortune Gerald Geraldines governor Henry VIII historians honour hostilities Hugh de Lacy Ireland Irish barons Irish chiefs John Kilkenny king Henry king's knights lands leader Leinster Leland Limerick Lodge lord deputy lord justice lord Thomas marched married Maurice Fitz-Gerald Meath mentioned Montmorres Munster native chiefs notice numbers O'Conor O'Niall occasion oppression Ossory party period person possession prince province prudence Raymond received resistance Richard Richard de Burgo rival Robert Fitz-Stephen Roderic Roderic O'Conor secure seized sent Sir Armoric slain soon spirit Strongbow submission success territory Thomond tion took Ulster valour Walter de Burgo Waterford Wexford
Popular passages
Page 441 - Henry's deputy; I am his foe; I have more mind to conquer than to govern, to meet him in the field than to serve him in office.
Page 406 - EJward, by his knowledge of languages and other courtly accomplishments, that the king pronounced him to be the "goodliest knight he had ever beheld, and the finest gentleman in Europe;" adding that, " if good breeding, nurture, and liberal qualities were lost in the world, they might all be found in John, earl of Ormond...
Page 462 - Ireland the Catholic faith is overcome ;' therefore, for the glory of the mother Church, the honour of St. Peter, and your own secureness, suppress heresy and his holiness's enemies...
Page 416 - That fires the length of Ophiucus huge In the Arctic sky, and from his horrid train Shakes pestilence and war."— Milton. AMONG other great results which have marked the history of Halley's comet, it has itself been a criterion of the existing state of the mathematical and astronomical sciences. We have just seen how far the knowledge of the great laws of physical astronomy...
Page 462 - Lazerianus, an Irish archbishop of Cashel. It saith, that the church of Rome shall surely fall when the Catholic faith is once overthrown in Ireland.
Page 496 - He died in 1614, in the 82d year of his age, and was buried in the choir of St Canice's church, Kilkenny.
Page 285 - The custom of that age warrants us to affirm the contrary, and to assert that the eldest son (especially) assumed for his surname the Christian name of his father, with the addition of Fitz, &c., of which many instances occur in this very family; and this continued in use till surnames began to be fixed about the time of king Edward I."* We do not consider the question material to be settled here, and quote so far for the sake of the incidental matter. On the revolt of a Welsh prince, Fitz- WT alter...
Page 389 - ... court, through the friendship of the earl of Ormonde, so effectively as to obtain, in 1444, a patent for the government of the counties of Limerick, Waterford, Cork, and Kerry, f with a licence, on the ground of this duty, to absent himself during life from all parliaments, sending a sufficient proxy ; and to purchase any lands he pleased, by what service soever they were holden of the king.J He married a daughter of Ulick de Burgo (Mac William Eighter), by whom he left two sons and two daughters,...
Page 302 - might have urged him still to persevere ;" Roderic showing a sagacity, as clear as his protracted resistance with inadequate materials had shown a heroism, wisely and considerately resolved to preserve his province from ravage, by a dignified submission on a most favourable treaty. With this view he sent Lawrence, whose instrumentality of itself carries with it approbation, to negotiate with Henry. A council was summoned by Henry to meet Lawrence, with the archbishop of Tuam and the abbot of St...
Page 282 - ... called from the diocese of Arras in Flanders). The chapel of St. Michael's, formerly attached to the cathedral, was built by Donat, who also built the chapel of St. Nicholas, on the north side of the cathedral, together with the transept and nave. The choir, the steeple, and two chapels, the one dedicated to St. Edmund, king and martyr, and to St. Mary the White, and the other to St. Laud...