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INDEX.

poral matters by popes, &c., 1258-68,
&c., &c.,; its full claims, 1401; Mr.
T. Moore's notes on, 1422, '3.
Supremacy, the regal, asserted by the Act
of Henry VIII., A.D. 1536, 7, 685; the
refusal of the Oath of, made high
treason, 686; opposition to the Act
for, 688 seqq.; its concern chiefly
with temporal matters, 692, '3; the
power therein claimed, illustrated,
694; accompanied with payment of
certain taxes to the crown, 695; the
Oath of, accepted in Henry VIII's
time by various bps. at Clonmel, 701;
its support from the lay nobility, &c.,
of Id., 702 seqq.; Romish attempts to
account for their conduct noticed, 706
n.; the establishment of the regal su-
premacy the principal step towards
reform under Hy. VIII., 712; its sup-
port from Abp. Curwin, 741; its as-
sertion by Q. Elizabeth's Irish parlt.,
A.D. 1560, 753, '4; concurrence of the
body of Irish bps. in the act, 757, '8;
not acknowledged so early in some dio-
ceses of Id., 758 n.; distinguished
from spiritual supremacy by Jas. I.,
858; note of Abp. Ussher on, con-
nected with Baronius's charge of
schism against the early Irish, 933;
the supremacy of the old Irish kings,
1249; and of those of Britain, 1250;
said by Legate Sanders to have been
invented by Satan in Paradise, 1268;
cruelly vindicated by Henry VIII.,
1428; Mr. Moore's notice of its gene-
ral reception by the Irish chiefs under
him, 1431-3.

Sussex, the earl of, lord deputy of Id.,
742: instructed by Queen Elizabeth
to introduce the English worship in
Id., 747, '8; holds the Irish Refn.
parlt., 753 seqq.; visits England soon
after, 759; his expedition against
Shane O'Neill, 767.

Swayn, John, abp. of Armagh, his share

in the controversy with the abp. of
Dublin about cross bearing, 1111.
Switzerland, St. Columbanus's labours
in, 267.

Sword of St. Peter, how understood by
Columbanus, 308, 314.

Swords, the church of, probably no foun-
dation of S. Columbkille's, 77; ra-
vaged by the Danes, 416.

Sylloge, Ussher's, qd., 441 seqq., 1041,
&c., et passim.

Sylvius, Eneas, his History of Bohemia
qd., 968.

Synods, (see Council,) that of Drogheda,
under Primate Dowdall, A.D. 1556,
noticed, 1112, '13; of titular clergy
in do., A.D. 1614, with sanction of
Primate Lombard, 891 seqq.; its plan
for providing a new race of clergy for
Id., 894, 5; of Dublin, under Card.
Vivian, promotes the Anglo-Romish
interests, A.D. 1177, 602; of do., under
J. Comyn, A.D. 1186, its canons, &c.,
609, &c.; of do., under Card. John of
Salernum, 1051; of titulars in do.,
A.D. 1666, rejects the Irish Remon-
strance, 1410, '13; of Ephesus, or
Third General Council, noticed, 950
n.; of Fiadh Mac Engusa, 984; of
titulars in Kilkenny, A.D. 1614, 898,
'9; their acts, 1363-6; of titulars in
do., A.D. 1642, pronounces the great
rebellion a just war, 1239, '54; of Nice,
its condemnation of slanderers qd by
S. Columbanus, 949; of Trent, unat
tended by Irish bps., 702 n., excepting
titulars; (see Trent ;) of Tuam, under
Cadhla O'Duffy, 1093.

Tables of wood, used in the churches of
the old Irish, 611.

Tablet, the, (Romish paper,) on the ap-
pointment of P. Cullen to the titr.
primacy, 1252.

Tacitus, the historian, his mention of
the Irish as a mercantile people, 7.
Taghmon, (Co. Wexford,) origin of its

name, 170; ravaged by the Danes,
383.

Talbot, Peter, fourth titr. abp. of Dub-
lin, reproved by O. Plunket for med-
dling in politics, 1242; sketch of his
life, &c., 1255.

Taliessin, Welsh bard, A.D. 620, his at-
tack on the Roman clergy of that age,
142.

Tallaght, (Co. Dublin,) monastery of,

353.

Tarah hill, (Co. Meath,) St. Patrick's
preaching at, 33, 40; St. Ruadan's
cursing of the place, and its subse-
quent desertion, 70; the battle of,
413.

Tarquin the Proud, a hint taken from,
in the management of the Irish
Church, 1005.

Taxation, eccl. of the bps. and clergy of
Id. in 1306, 679, 1114 n.; a synopsis
of the record connected with it, 1152
seqq.

Taxes, the Irish clergy not indebted to,
for maintenance, 1069.
Templars, the, excused from payment of
the Saladin tenth, 1163.
Temporalities of a see, what, 620; those
of the Irish Church independent of
papal supremacy, 1069.

Temptation, the, of Christ in the wil-
derness, theatrically represented, 739.
Temur, i.e. Tarah, 41.

Tenby, (in Wales,) built on the site of a
Flemish settlement, 1031.

Tennis court, a church made a, 1362.
Tenths, papal, or Saladin, account of,

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ings for the dead, 50; his mention of
British Christianity in the third cen-
tury, 112.
Testamentary law of the Synod of Cashel,
517; origin of the Church's power to
regulate matters of the kind, 693.
Thaddeus, (Thady,) Irish teacher in
Wales, in the 6th cent., 125.
Theatrical representations of Scripture
events, ancient use of, 594, 738.
Theft, a character of the native Irish,
according to Sir F. Bacon, 870.
Theobald, abp. of Canterbury, conse
crates Patrick bp. of Limerick, 434.
See 490.
Theodebert, king of Austrasia, 260 seqq. ;
his kindness to S. Columbanus, 266;
his war with King Theoderic of Bur-
gundy, 269; and death. ib.

Theoderic, or Thierry, king of Burgun-
dy, his high esteem for S. Columbanus,
260, 261; who reproves him for his im-
pure life, ib.; his persecution of the
saint, 261-5; his death, 272.
Theodore, abp. of Canterbury, his dedi-
cation of the church of Lindisfarne,
210; his opposition to Wilfrid's influ-
ence, 221; and to Roman authority,
ib., 222; his patronage of learning,

329.

Theodore of Mopsuestia, and Theodore-
tus, their condemnation, 938.
Theodore of Cæsarea instigates Justi-
nian to condemn the Three Chapters,
951 n.

Theoderic, Emperor, his nomination of
Pope Symmachus, 1079.
Thomas, St., (a'Becket,) the abbey of,
(in Dublin,) founded by order of Hen-
ry II., 567; his murder noticed in the
Irish Appeal, 635.

Thomond, carl of, the title conferred on
O'Brien by Henry VIII., 710.
Thonory, John, bp. of Ossory, his un-
righteous gains, and unfortunate loss
of them afterwards, 1214.

Thorns, Christ's crown of, a relic of,
said to have been kept in Dublin in
the 14th century, 587.
Three Chapters, St. Columbanus's fa-
mous letter to P. Boniface IV. on,
271, 304 seqq.; given in full, 940 seqq.
Tigernach, abbot of Clonmacnoise, ac-
count of, 435, '6.

Tillemont, his judgment relative to the
history of St. Patrick, 12; his testi-
mony to the fame of S. Brigid, 64 n.
Timoleague monastery plundered by H.
O'Neill's followers, 833.
Timolin, ravaged by the Danes, 383; the
Austin monastery of, 571.
Tinmuth, John, his account of S. Kente-
gern qd., 1006, 1250.

Tintern Abbey, (Co. Wexford,) founded,
570; supplied with English monks,
575.

Tipperary, visited by Abp. Browne for
controversial preaching, 699 seqq.;
Desmond's estates in, confiscd., 802; a
provincial synod in, enacts a rule de-
nouncing English taxes, and such as
should pay them, 651; anciently called
the County of Crosse, 1354, 9.
Tirrey, Dominick, bp. of Cork, supposed
favourer of the Refn., 1216.
Tithes, the payment of, neglected by the
old Irish before the Conquest, 462, 514
n., 521, 538, 558, 1088; order for their
payment in the Synod of Kells, 485,
1424; enjoined again by act of the
Synod of Cashel, 516, 1067; ordered
also in the ancient Irish canons, 521;
the Cashel decrees on them, &c., sug-
gested to the Ir. bps. by Pope Alexan-
der III. as a motive to obedience to
Henry II., 536, 1087; the law enlarged
in the Synod of Dublin, 612; carefully
attended to by the careless Irish
clergy of A.D. 1593, 814, 5; tithes
paid to the titular clergy in 1612, &c.,
871, 1354, 5; O'Conor's statement as
to the first mention of them in the

Irish Annals, 1043; Dr. Doyle's ac-
count of their first imposition, 1066;
their distinctness from other existing
property, 1068, 9; never amounted to
a tenth, 1068 n., 1072; their abolition
only a pretended benefit to the people,
1070; a rent, and commuted to a rent-
charge, ib., 1071, '2.

Titular bps. of Id.; see Waucop, Creagh,
Mac Gauvran, &c.; a titr. of Cashel,
after a murderous attack on the true
archbishop, 1215, 1383 n.; proceeds to
employ himself as a rebel agent in fo-
reign parts, 777, 1435, 6; a titular of
Killaloe joins the papal robber gang in
their expedition for Id., 788-'90; and
arrives from Spain with aid for the
Geraldines, 801; Oviedo, titr. of Dub-
lin, brings money and ammunition to
the rebels in H. O'Neill's murde
derous and fanatical war, 827; pro-
ceedings of E. Mac Eggan, &c., in
the same, 835, 1294 seqq.; only four
titulars in Id. in 1621, 903; general
character of the body noticed, 908
seqq.; synopsis of the primordial por-
tion of their succession, from A.D.
1560 to A.D. 1660, 1366-'87; some
created to beg for H. O'Neill, &c.,
1348; and some to beg for themselves,
909; and some to oppose the Loyal
Irish Remonstrance, 1398.

Tobacco introduced into Id., 803; dens
for smoking it established under a ca-
thedral, &c., 1363.

Todd, Rev. W. G., his Church of St.
Patrick referred to, 273, 307.
Tolbiac, battle of, between Theodebert
and Theoderic, 269.

Toleration practised under Q. Eliza-
beth's government, 761 n, 843-'5, 857.
Tongues, of all nations, fit for the wor-
ship of God, 966.

Tonsure, of the ancient Ir. saints, 60,
61; of the Roman Christians, 184, 5;
the difference between them, 197, '8;

the Irish, said by the Romans to have
been derived from Simon Magus, 200;
of the primitive monks, its nature,
235.

Townsend, Rev. Geo., D.D., his Accu-
sations of History against Rome qd.,
1397.

Tradition, not used by St. Patrick as
the foundation of doctrines, 43; that
of their first teachers appealed to by
the old Irish in opposition to the
usages of Rome, 156, 182; alleged by
Dungal in favour of the invocation of
saints, 396.

Trahaern ap Caradoc and his allies beat-
en by an Irish force, 1024.
Transmiss of an Irish act of parlt., what,
1191 n.

Transubstantiation, unknown to the
Irish before the 9th cent., 367; first
propagated by Paschasius Radbert,
401; opposed by J. Scotus Erigena,
402, 3; inculcated by Primate Mala-
chy, and received by the Irish of his
time, 481, 582; Sir Anthony St. Le-
ger accused of ridiculing, 742; attri-
buted by Mr. Moore to the old Irish,
1421; his views of J. S. Erigena, &c.,
1425; supported by the faggot, by
Henry VIII., 1428.

Travers, bp. of Leighlin, appointed by
Ed. VI., 719; favours the Refn., 722;
his deprivation and death, 740.
Trebia river, (Italy,) its connection with
Hannibal and S. Columbanus, 271.
Trent Synod, attended by none of the
lawful prelates of Id., 702 n.; Waucop
received there as primate of Id., but
not accepted as such by the Irish,
714, 5 n.; names of bishops connected
with Id. said to have attended there,
1213, 1217, 1379, '85; Waucop's pre-
sence there quoted by Mac Mahon,
with manifest confusion, in his Jus
Prim. Arm., 1228; Mr. Moore's men-
tion of Waucop noticed, 1437; the

Trent marriage regulations introduced
into Id. by titular authority, in ▲.D.
1614, 894, 9, 1363.

Triburnia, diocese of, 994, 1001, *2.
Trim, (see Newtown,) the see of, 996;
the ecclesiastical confederation of 1291,
formed in, 627, '8, 1150; its deed of
combination, 1115-'8; the parliament
of, A.D. 1447, directs the loyal English
subjects how to trim their whiskers,
664, '5.

Trinity, Church of the Holy, or Christ
Church, Dublin, its foundation, 421;
the Black Book of, qd., ib. ; introduc-
tion of the Liturgy in English there,
under Ed. VI., 722; consecration of
Bale and Goodacre in, by the reformed
ritual, 730; re-introduction of the
English liturgy there, under Eliza-
beth, 749; a notable Romish miracle
attempted there in consequence, ib.,
seqq. See Christ Church; also p.

1149.

Trinity College, Dublin, Bp. Bedel for
a time provost of, 782; meeting held
for its first establishment, 811; its
foundation, 812; how regarded by the
Romanists of that period, ib., 813;
saved from the Jesuits under James
II. by a titr. primate of Id., 1245.
Tripartite Life, the, of St. Patrick,
what, 11; qd., 982 n.

Troy, Dr. J. T., fourteenth titr. abp. of
Dublin, 1257.

Tuam, the first bp. of, 69; certificate of
the prelates of, to Pope Innocent III.,
qd., 420; the see of, 452 n.; the scene of
outrages of some of the Irish, 454;
made an abpk., and beautified with a
Romish pall, 482; (see 576, 661, 667,
for other notices connected with the
place;) an abp. of, receives Henry
VIII.'s supremacy, 701; P. Paul's
bull against Henry ordered by him to
be posted up there, 709; Cadhla
O'Duffy's synod there in A.D. 1172,

1092; the see of, mere Irish in A.D.
1540, 1181.

Tuda, appointed bp. of Holy Island, or
Lindisfarne, 186.

Turgesius the Dane, his atrocities in Id.,
380 seqq.; his death, 385; his tyranny
said to have been represented in a pro-
phetic vision to S. Patrick, 58.
Turks, and loyal subjects of England,
alike worthy of extermination in
Rome's eyes, 791, 1264, 73, 74, '83,
'87, 1303.

Turlogh, a grandson of Brian Boru, falls

at Clontarf, 416.

Turlogh (O'Brian,) grandson of Brian
Boru, king of Id., 422; his good cha-
racter, 423; Lanfranc's letter to him,
ib.; joins with the clergy and people
of Dublin in electing Donatus bp. of
that see, 426; P. Gregory's VII.'s let-
ter to him, 427, 980; his death, 428.
Turlogh O'Conor, king of Id., A.D. 1152,
485; his war with Dermod Mac Mo-
rogh, 494.

Turner, Englishman, selected for pri-
mate of Id. under Ed. VI., 727; his
character, 728; he declines the propo-
sal, and why, 729.

Turvill, J., bp. of Ossory, A.D. 1250,
employed by the pope as his agent, to
aid the English against the native
Irish, 624.

Twentieth Part, the Act for the, under
Henry VIII., 686.

Tyrconnel, Earl of, title bestowed on
O'Donel by Henry VIII., 710. See 866.
Tyrone, Earl of, title bestowed by Henry

VIII. on Con O'Neill, &c., 710; given
to H. O'Neill, 808; abjected, 827.
"Tyrone is coming," a watchword of se-
dition, A.D. 1613, 1344.

Tyrone, Co., desolation of, in Lord
Mountjoy's time, 1299.

Ufford, J., bp. of Enaghdun, his unavail-
contest for the see, 1175.

Ulster, ancient kingdom of, 378; visita-

tion of, by Primate Celsus, 476; in-
vaded by J. de Courcy, 600; the peo-
ple of, invite Bruce to head them in
war, 631; O'Neyl, king of, 635; kept
in trouble under Ed. VI. and Mary by
the O'Neills, 765 seqq.; deprived, by
their wars, of divine service, 856;
plantation of, 867 seqq.; royal visita-
tion of, 904; the Ulster Inquisitions
of A.D. 1609, 1063 n.
Ultramontane doctrines and principles,
illustrated in the recent case of nomi-
nation to the titular primacy of Id.,
1251, 2; P. Walsh's general account
of them, 1400, '1; Mr. Moore's notice
of their early effect in helping to en-
slave Id. to Engd, 1426.

Unction, Extreme. See Extreme Unc-
tion.

Uniformity in divine service, in Id. and
with England, first enacted in the Sy-
nod of Cashel, 522; Act of Q. Eliza-
beth for, 754; its unfortunate arrange-
ment as to the Latin and Irish lan-
guages, 755, 6; enforced in Dublin
under K. James, 854; our present
uniformity with Engd. owing partly
to Primate Bramhall, 1064. See 921,
922.

Union, the, of Gt. Britain and Id., the
5th Art. of qd., 1414.

"United Church of Engd. and Id.," note
on the use of the expression, 919 seqq.,
1414 seqq.

Unity of the Church, St. Cummian's ar-
guments on the, 158; that which ex-
isted in the Anglo-Romish times not
unlimited, 638, 644, 1425-'7; St. Co-
lumbanus inculcates the importance
of maintaining unity and love between
Christians differing in their religious
practices, 298.
Urban. See Pope.

Ussher, Abp., 1113; his Religion of the
Ancient Irish, Sylloge, &c., qd., pas
sim; his MSS. collections, 891, &c.,

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