The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 1 |
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Page 15
... considered honourable was fighting and plunder ; and each tribe roamed within its own limits , supported either by the pillage of its neighbours or the wild cattle which wandered through the forests . They had some human traits . They ...
... considered honourable was fighting and plunder ; and each tribe roamed within its own limits , supported either by the pillage of its neighbours or the wild cattle which wandered through the forests . They had some human traits . They ...
Page 25
... considered vain and impolitic ; but the framers of these statutes understood the conditions more clearly than those who condemn them . The interfusion of races did not mean the elevation of the Irish to the level of their rulers , but ...
... considered vain and impolitic ; but the framers of these statutes understood the conditions more clearly than those who condemn them . The interfusion of races did not mean the elevation of the Irish to the level of their rulers , but ...
Page 29
... considered , as their de- scendants considered on the deposition of James the Second , that , though attached to the English Crown , they were not attached to England , and had a right to determine for themselves who was or was not the ...
... considered , as their de- scendants considered on the deposition of James the Second , that , though attached to the English Crown , they were not attached to England , and had a right to determine for themselves who was or was not the ...
Page 46
... considered , loyal subjects of an excommunicated sovereign . To be a good Catholic was , in the nature of things , to be unfaithful to the secular prince . All Protestant governments were obliged to regard the adherents of the Roman see ...
... considered , loyal subjects of an excommunicated sovereign . To be a good Catholic was , in the nature of things , to be unfaithful to the secular prince . All Protestant governments were obliged to regard the adherents of the Roman see ...
Page 48
... considered that the Catholic powers had work enough on their own hands ; that , if the magistracy , the public offices , and the learned profession were kept strictly in the hands of conformists , the Pale would become gradually ...
... considered that the Catholic powers had work enough on their own hands ; that , if the magistracy , the public offices , and the learned profession were kept strictly in the hands of conformists , the Pale would become gradually ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Uniformity allowed Antrim Archbishop arms army Articles of Limerick bill Bishop BOOK Celts CHAP Charles chiefs Church Church of Ireland Clarendon clause clergy colonists Connaught Court Cromwell crown declared Derry Dissenters Drogheda Dublin Castle Earl enemies England English Parliament Enniskillen estates favour force forfeitures Galway gentlemen Geraldines hands Henry honour House of Commons Ibid insurrection Ireland Irish Catholics Irish Council Irish Parliament James Kilkenny killed King King's kingdom land leaders liberty Limerick lived Lords Justices loyal majesty majesty's massacre ment Munster murdered nation never O'Neill oath Ormond Outlawries Bill Pale Papists Parlia party passed peace persons Popery possession Presbyterians priests Protestant Protestantism provinces Queen rebellion rebels Record Office refused religion resolution restored Scots sent settled settlement settlers Sir Harry Vane Sir Phelim soldiers Statutes sword testants tion Tyrconnell Tyrone Ulster Viceroy William СНАР
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