The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 1 |
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Page 4
... subjects , but are admitted freely to share the privileges of the nation in which they are absorbed , they forfeit nothing which they need care to lose , and rather gain than suffer by the exchange . It is possible that a nobler people ...
... subjects , but are admitted freely to share the privileges of the nation in which they are absorbed , they forfeit nothing which they need care to lose , and rather gain than suffer by the exchange . It is possible that a nobler people ...
Page 12
... subjects at home . Yet Ireland would neither resist courageously , nor would she honourably submit . Her chiefs and leaders had no real patriotism . In Scotland , though the nobles might quarrel among themselves , they buried their ...
... subjects at home . Yet Ireland would neither resist courageously , nor would she honourably submit . Her chiefs and leaders had no real patriotism . In Scotland , though the nobles might quarrel among themselves , they buried their ...
Page 17
... subjects . The work begun by the Danes was carried on and developed . Seaport towns - Dublin , Wexford , Waterford , Cork , Limerick of which the sea - rovers from the Baltic had laid the foundations , were enlarged , strengthened , sur ...
... subjects . The work begun by the Danes was carried on and developed . Seaport towns - Dublin , Wexford , Waterford , Cork , Limerick of which the sea - rovers from the Baltic had laid the foundations , were enlarged , strengthened , sur ...
Page 24
... became a kind of sovereign . He forgot more and more that he was come to Ireland to introduce English order and manners ; and to I. strengthen his authority and conciliate his subjects , CHAP 24 THE ENGLISH IN IRELAND .
... became a kind of sovereign . He forgot more and more that he was come to Ireland to introduce English order and manners ; and to I. strengthen his authority and conciliate his subjects , CHAP 24 THE ENGLISH IN IRELAND .
Page 25
James Anthony Froude. I. strengthen his authority and conciliate his subjects , CHAP . he left them to their own laws and their own ways , while they in turn became the instruments of his ambition . His Norman dependents followed the ex ...
James Anthony Froude. I. strengthen his authority and conciliate his subjects , CHAP . he left them to their own laws and their own ways , while they in turn became the instruments of his ambition . His Norman dependents followed the ex ...
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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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