A Concise History of Ireland: From the Earliest Times to 1908 |
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... HUGH ROE O'DONNELL , VII . HUGH O'NEILL EARL OF TYRONE , VIII . THE REBELLION OF HUGH O'NEILL , IX . THE BATTLE OF THE YELLOW FORD , X. THE EARL OF ESSEX , XI . LORD MOUNTJOY AND Sir George Carew , . XII . THE SIEGE AND BATTLE of ...
... HUGH ROE O'DONNELL , VII . HUGH O'NEILL EARL OF TYRONE , VIII . THE REBELLION OF HUGH O'NEILL , IX . THE BATTLE OF THE YELLOW FORD , X. THE EARL OF ESSEX , XI . LORD MOUNTJOY AND Sir George Carew , . XII . THE SIEGE AND BATTLE of ...
Page 52
... Hugh the son of Ainmirè reigned from 572 to 598. By him was summoned in 574 the celebrated convention of Druim - cete [ Drum - Ketta ] , now called the Mullagh or Daisy Hill , on the river Roe , near Limavady , which was attended by the ...
... Hugh the son of Ainmirè reigned from 572 to 598. By him was summoned in 574 the celebrated convention of Druim - cete [ Drum - Ketta ] , now called the Mullagh or Daisy Hill , on the river Roe , near Limavady , which was attended by the ...
Page 53
... Hugh ) Allen , the son of Fergal , be- came king , he engaged the Leinster army at Ballyshannon in Kildare , and nearly exterminated them ; A.D. 738 . CHAPTER V. RELIGION AND LEARNING . 131. The spread of CHAP . IV . 53 EARLY CHRISTIAN ...
... Hugh ) Allen , the son of Fergal , be- came king , he engaged the Leinster army at Ballyshannon in Kildare , and nearly exterminated them ; A.D. 738 . CHAPTER V. RELIGION AND LEARNING . 131. The spread of CHAP . IV . 53 EARLY CHRISTIAN ...
Page 62
... Hugh Finnliath , who succeeded Malachi in 863 , routed the Danes in several battles . He was suc- ceeded by Malachy's son Flann Sinna . For 40 years- from 875 to 915 — a period nearly coincident with Flann's reign , the Danes sent no ...
... Hugh Finnliath , who succeeded Malachi in 863 , routed the Danes in several battles . He was suc- ceeded by Malachy's son Flann Sinna . For 40 years- from 875 to 915 — a period nearly coincident with Flann's reign , the Danes sent no ...
Page 86
... Hugh de Lacy ; and Ulster to John de Courcy . In all the chief towns he left governors . He granted Dublin to the people of Bristol with De Lacy as governor , who is generally regarded as the first viceroy of Ireland . Having completed ...
... Hugh de Lacy ; and Ulster to John de Courcy . In all the chief towns he left governors . He granted Dublin to the people of Bristol with De Lacy as governor , who is generally regarded as the first viceroy of Ireland . Having completed ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards ancient Anglo-Irish appointed lord archbishop Armagh arms army attacked battle became began bill bishop Book Brehon Brehon law Brian brother brought called Cashel castle Catholics century CHAPTER church command Connaught Cork coyne and livery Danes death defeated Dermot Derry Desmond died Donall Dublin duke Dungannon earl of Desmond earl of Kildare England English parliament fighting Fitzgerald force fought France garrison Grattan Henry Hugh Irish language Irish parliament John Kilkenny killed king of Ireland king of Leinster land landlords Leinster Limerick lord justice lord lieutenant Mac Murrogh Malachi marched Meath ment monasteries Mountjoy Munster Murkertagh native O'Brien O'Conor O'Donnell O'Neill Ogham Ormond party passed Patrick Poynings prince prison Protestant province rebellion rebels reign religion rent sent settlers side siege soon succeeded surrendered tenants Thomond Tirconnell took town Ulster United Irishmen volunteers Waterford Wexford whole William
Popular passages
Page 237 - I will tell you one Thing further; that if Mr. Wood's Project should take, it will ruin even our Beggars: For when I give a Beggar a Half-penny, it will quench his Thirst, or go a good Way to fill his Belly; but the Twelfth Part of a Halfpenny will do him no more Service than if I should give him three Pins out of my Sleeve.
Page 158 - O'Neill, who had grown corpulent in his prison for want of exercise, was unable to keep pace with the others : and Hugh and the attendant had to help him on at intervals by walking one on each side, while he rested his arms on their shoulders. In this manner they toiled on wearily across the snowy waste through the whole of that Christmas night and the whole of next day without food, hoping to be able to reach Glenmalure without a halt. But they became at last so worn out with fatigue and hunger,...
Page 257 - That as Men and as Irishmen, as Christians and as protestants, we rejoice in the relaxation of the Penal Laws against our Roman Catholic fellow-subjects, and that we conceive the measure to be fraught with the happiest consequences to the union and prosperity of the inhabitants of Ireland.
Page 69 - Brodir had been a Christian man and a mass-deacon by consecration, but he had thrown off his faith, and become God's dastard, and now worshipped heathen fiends, and he was of all men most skilled in sorcery. He had that coat of mail on which no steel would bite. He was both tall and strong, and had such long locks that he tucked them under his belt. His hair was black.
Page 151 - ... ere one year and a half they were brought to such wretchedness, as that any stony heart would have rued the same. Out of every corner of the woods and glens they came creeping forth upon their hands, for their legs could not bear them ; they looked like anatomies of death, they spake like ghosts crying out of their graves...
Page 28 - Speaking of another Irish book, Mr. Westwood says : — " I have counted [with a magnifying glass] in a small space scarcely three quarters of an inch in length by less than half an inch in width, in the Book of Armagh, no less than 158 interlacements of a slender ribbon pattern formed of white lines edged with black ones.
Page 151 - The war had made Munster a desert. In the words of the Four Masters : — " The lowing of a cow or the voice of a ploughman could scarcely be heard from Dunqueen in the west of Kerry to Cashel." To what a frightful pass the wretched people had been brought by the constant destruction and spoiling of their crops and cattle, may be gathered from Edmund Spenser's description of what he witnessed with his own eyes :— "Notwithstanding that the same [province of Munster] was a most rich and plentiful...
Page 24 - It is astonishing that in so complex and rapid a movement of the fingers, the musical proportions can be preserved, and that throughout the difficult modulations on their various instruments, the harmony is completed with such a sweet velocity, so unequal an equality, so discordant a concord, as if the chords sounded together fourths or fifths.
Page 271 - It refers to the indictments as found 'for the crime of unlawful cohabitation committed' 'during the time' stated, divided into three periods, according to each indictment For so much of the...
Page 15 - The Brehon code forms a great body of civil, military, and criminal law. It regulates the various ranks of society, from the king down to the slave, and enumerates their several rights and privileges. There are minute rules for the management of property, for the several industries — building, brewing, mills, water-courses, fishing-weirs, bees and honey — for distress or seizure of goods, for tithes, trespass, and evidence. The relations of landlord and tenant, the fees of professional men —...