History of Ireland: From the Anglo-Norman Invasion Till the Union of the Country with Great Britain, Volume 2J. & J. Harper, 1837 - Ireland |
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Page 18
... peasantry by promising justice and protection . The royalist army , especially that portion commanded by Inchiquin , had treated the country people with studied injury and insult . Even the confederates , proud of their Norman descent ...
... peasantry by promising justice and protection . The royalist army , especially that portion commanded by Inchiquin , had treated the country people with studied injury and insult . Even the confederates , proud of their Norman descent ...
Page 41
... peasantry from the violence of the soldiers , and checked the sanguinary excesses of Actel and Sankey . * Like the other fanatics of * A single example of Sankey's mode of administering justice will be sufficient . One of his soldiers ...
... peasantry from the violence of the soldiers , and checked the sanguinary excesses of Actel and Sankey . * Like the other fanatics of * A single example of Sankey's mode of administering justice will be sufficient . One of his soldiers ...
Page 51
... peasantry by thousands ; others they had transported as slaves to the plantations ; numbers , as we have already seen , had entered into the service of foreign potentates . The design of shutting up The peasants themselves resigned all ...
... peasantry by thousands ; others they had transported as slaves to the plantations ; numbers , as we have already seen , had entered into the service of foreign potentates . The design of shutting up The peasants themselves resigned all ...
Page 53
... peasantry to pay for the support of the church . But the Cromwellians , though liberal enough with the tithes of the cultivators , were by no means in- clined to pay any thing out of their own pocket ; and when the parsons applied for ...
... peasantry to pay for the support of the church . But the Cromwellians , though liberal enough with the tithes of the cultivators , were by no means in- clined to pay any thing out of their own pocket ; and when the parsons applied for ...
Page 55
... peasantry , and his pos- terity still reap the fruits of his virtues , in the respect shown to his descendants . Cromwell intrusted the government of Ireland to his son Henry , and a wiser choice he could not have made . Under his ...
... peasantry , and his pos- terity still reap the fruits of his virtues , in the respect shown to his descendants . Cromwell intrusted the government of Ireland to his son Henry , and a wiser choice he could not have made . Under his ...
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arms attack attempt authority bill bishops body British castle Catholics cause cavalry Charles church clause clergy Clonmel command confederates council Cromwell Cromwellians declared defence dread Dublin Duke Earl effect Emmet enemy England English parliament Enniskilleners estates exertions faction favour forced French friends garrison gentry Ginckle governor honour House of Commons Inchiquin insurgents insurrection Ireland Ireton Irish army Irish parliament James justice king king's kingdom land leaders Limerick Lord Lord Castlereagh lord-lieutenant lords-justices Marquis measure ment minister murder nation O'Neill obtained officers oppression Ormond papists party patriots peasantry penal laws persons popery possession present Protestant Protestant ascendency puritans received regiments reign religion resistance Richard Nagle royal ruin Sarsfield scarcely Schomberg sent siege soldiers soon spirit surrender Thomas Addis Emmet thousand tion town treaty treaty of Limerick Trim Castle troops Tyrconnel Ulster Union United Irishmen violent vols Wexford William Youghal