FOOTNOTES:
[360] The story of the bleeding Christ is in Strype’s Life of Parker. The item about the Bibles is given by Mant on the authority of the Loftus MS.
[361] Sussex to Cecil, Dec. 25, 1561; Lord Deputy and Council to the Queen, Sept. 2, 1562; Loftus to Cecil, Nov. 3, 1566, and March 21, 1567; Richard Creagh to Sidney, Dec. 25, 1566.
[362] The Queen to Lord Deputy Sidney, July 6, 1567, authorising him to make Terence Daniel Primate; Terence to Cecil, Oct. 5, accepting the charge. In a letter to Lord R. Dudley, July 23, 1564, Sir T. Wrothe says Daniel ‘would promise to do much with Shane O’Neill, and some think he could perform it.’
[363] Brady’s Episcopal Succession. Lord-Lieutenant and Council to the Queen, July 16, 1561.
[364] Brady’s Episcopal Succession. Creagh’s own statement in Spicilegium Ossoriense, i. 41, from the Vatican archives; his examinations, in the Irish State Papers, Feb. 22, March 17 and 23, 1565.
[365] Most of the documents relating to Creagh are collected in Spicilegium Ossoriense, vol. i. pp. 38-58. Holing’s account is at p. 84. The Jesuit makes Creagh’s escapes miraculous, but admits that he was on parole not to leave the Tower. This may account in some degree for the severity with which he was afterwards treated. See also a story, which may be apocryphal, in O’Sullivan Beare, tom. ii. lib. iv. cap. 10.
[366] Brady; Loftus to Cecil. July 16, 1565; Holing in Spicilegium Ossoriense.
[367] Brady; Cotton’s Fasti.
[368] Brady; Cotton.
[369] Brady; Cotton; Holing in Spicilegium Ossoriense.
[370] Brady; Cotton; Ware; Alexander Craik to Lord R. Dudley, April 30, 1561; to Cecil, Jan. 2 and 10, Feb. 10 and 18, April 23, 1562, and Aug. 5, 1563; Robert Daly to Cecil, July 2, 1565.
[371] Brady; Cotton; Instructions to Sir H. Sidney, July 4, 1565; Shirley’s Original Letters, p. 101; Graves’s History of St. Canice’s Cathedral, p. 295.
[372] Brady; Cotton; Memoranda of private suits, July 16, 1559.
[373] Brady collects most that is known about this curious rivalry; see also Spicilegium Ossoriense, i. p. 83, and Hooker under the year 1567. For MacCaghwell, see Loftus to Cecil, July 3 and Nov. 7, 1566, and Shirley’s Original Letters, p. 132.
[374] Brady; Cotton; Captain Gilbert Yorke to Walsingham, Dec. 5, 1579; and several letters of Bishop Middleton, with recriminating answers on the part of the townsmen.
[375] Brady and Cotton.
[376] Brady and Cotton.
[377] Brady; Cotton. Ware mentions a Bishop-elect of Kilfenora in 1585, but the appointment seems to have come to nothing. No doubt the see was extremely poor.
[378] Brady and Cotton.
[379] The above is from a close comparison of the data in Cotton and Brady, and in the Parliamentary Lists in Tracts Relating to Ireland, vol. ii. The twenty prelates mentioned in the list of 1560 are thus disposed of:—
| Conformed | 2 |
| Deprived | 2 |
| Never confirmed by the Popes | 2 |
| More or less doubtful | 14 |
| Total | 20 |
[380] Lord Deputy Sidney and Council to the Privy Council, April 15, 1566.
[381] Hogan’s Hibernia Ignatiana, pp. 15 to 20. Wolfe’s commission to Thady Newman is in the R.O., Dec. 7, 1563; Interrogatories for Kian O’Gara and others, May 1572; Matthew Seaine, Bishop of Cork, to Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam, in the latter’s letter to Burghley, Oct. 13, 1573.
INDEX
TO
THE SECOND VOLUME.
Achonry, see of, [367]
Affane, [86], [87], [92], [237]
Agard, Captain Francis, seneschal of the Tooles’ and Byrnes’ country, [228], [229], [311], [366]
Aherlow, Glen of, [168], [185], [186], [188], [191], [221], [223], [224], [233]
Alcala, [200]
Alen, John, [297]
— Sir John, [1]
— Thomas, [1]
Alva, Duke of, [191], [192], [200], [202], [204], [216], [258]
Amboise, [8]
American Indians, [34]
Anjou, Henry, Duke of, Monsieur (afterwards Henry III.), [206]
Antrim County, [40], [213], [239];
see Clandeboye.
Aranjuez, [226]
Ardagh, see of, [367], [368], [370]
Ardglass, [60]
Ards, in Down, [149], [211], [232], [233], [247], [304]
Argyle, Earl of, [7], [11], [19], [77], [91], [107], [128], [149]
— Countess of, [75]
Armagh, [108], [126], [149], [305]
— County, [304]
— church and see of, [15], [23]-[26], [29], [32], [41], [55], [59]-[61], [63], [109], [118], [150], [176], [355];
for Archbishops, see Loftus, Lancaster, O’Teige, and Creagh.
Arnold, Sir Nicholas, Lord Justice (1564-1565), [50], [51], [57], [65], [68]-[74], [77]-[82], [98]-[100], [197]
Arundel, name of, [314]
Askeaton, [137]
Athboy, [300]
Athenry, [114], [253], [318], [321]
Athlone, [110], [127], [183], [218]-[220], [254], [318], [322]
Athy, [298]
Audley, Lord, [257]
Augsburg, [357]
Austria, Don John of, [227], [346]
Bacon, Sir Nicholas, [156], [298]
Bagenal, Lady, wife of Sir Nicholas, [128]
— Nicholas, Marshal of the Army (1546-1553, and 1565-1590), [104], [128], [150], [198], [306], [310]
Baker, Captain, [303]
— a soldier, [160]
Bale, John, Bishop of Ossory, [363]
Balgriffin, [17]
Balla, [127]
Balliknockane, [159]
Ballinagarde, [222]
Ballinasloe, [318]
Ballycastle, or Market-town in Antrim, [90], [243]
Ballymoney, [243]
Ballyvolane, [135]
Baltimore, [188]
Baltinglass, Rowland Eustace, Viscount, [30], [47], [50], [158], [332]
Banbridge, [284]
Bangor, in Down, [127]
Bann River, [79], [126], [240], [243], [249]
Barkley, Captain or Mr., [243], [246]
Barnesmore, [109]
Barnewall, Sir Christopher, [152], [154]
Baron, Roland, Archbishop of Cashel (1553-1561), [368]
Barrett, family of, [314]
Barrow River, [228]
Barry, or Barrymore, James, Lord, [42], [89], [165], [186], [233], [237], [313], [336]
— Oge, [313]
Barry’s Court, [312]
Bartholomew, St., [236]
Basnet, an officer, [182]
— William, [362]
Belfast, [126], [127], [149], [239], [243], [246], [288], [305]
Belleek, in Fermanagh, [55], [110]
Bellingham, Sir Edward, [277]
Berkshire, [272]
Bermingham, Baron of Athenry, [318]
— William, [50], [57], [65], [70]-[74], [138]
Bewley, [86]
Bilson, a priest, [357]
Blackwater River, in Munster, [43], [84], [87]
— Ulster, [24], [60], [61], [109], [126], [127], [150], [293]-[295]
Bodkin, Christopher, Archbishop of Tuam (1537-1572), [218], [284], [286], [367], [368]
Boleyn, Anne, [203]
Bonner, Edmund, Bishop of London, [357]
Bordeaux, [192]
— Huon of, [103]
Bourchier, Captain George, [243], [264], [277], [280], [282]
Boyle, [110]
— Richard, first Earl of Cork, [256]
— Robert, [257]
Brady, Hugh, Bishop of Meath (1563-1585), [256], [319], [360], [361], [369]
Braintree, [61]
Breconshire, [335]
Brefny-O’Reilly (Cavan), proposed earldom of, [19]
Brest, [191]
Brett, Jerome, [237]
Brill, [216]
Briskett, Ludovic, [348]
Bristol, [108]
Broughshane, [90]
Browne, George, Archbishop of Dublin, [353], [363]
Brunker, Mr., [243]
Bunneygal, in Antrim (perhaps the same as Cushendun), [243]
Burgate, Thomas, [180]
Burghley, William Cecil, Lord, [178], [192], [198], [221], [230]-[232], [236]-[238], [241], [242], [256], [260], [264], [265], [273], [274], [276], [286], [290], [291], [308], [324], [326], [336], [346];
see Cecil.
Burgo, de, or Burke, Roland, Bishop of Clonfert (1534-1580), [367]
Burke, or de Burgh, Richard, second Earl of Clanricarde;
see Clanricarde.
— John, afterwards Baron of Leitrim, son of the second Earl of Clanricarde, [114], [159], [171], [217]-[220], [266], [318], [321], [323], [338], [339], [341], [343]
— Ulick, half-brother of John and afterwards third Earl of Clanricarde, [114], [217]-[220], [318], [321], [323], [339]
— of Mayo, [217]
— MacWilliam, Eighter, or Iochtar of Mayo, [317]
— Shane MacOliver, of Tyrawley in Mayo, claiming to be MacWilliam Iochtar, [182], [222]
— William, of Clanwilliam in Limerick, [165], [186]
Burkes of Clanricarde, [318]
Burnell, name of, [46]
— Henry, [255], [329]-[331], [333]
Burren, [171]
Burrows, Captain, [259]
Bush River, [244]
Butler, Thomas, tenth Earl of Ormonde;
see Ormonde.
— Sir Edmund, brother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde, [80], [85], [87], [146], [153], [154];
heads the rebels in the ‘Butlers’ war,’ [156]-[169], [171], [174]-[176], [190], [223], [224], [233], [263], [307], [311]
— John, brother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde, [66]
— Piers, brother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde, [112], [159], [160], [162], [163], [166], [168], [169], [171], [174]-[176], [307]
— Edward, brother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde, [112], [146], [147], [151], [159], [160], [163]-[166], [168], [169], [171], [174]-[176], [185], [188], [221], [223]-[224], [252], [307], [324]
— Piers, of Cahir, [85]
— Sir Theobald, of Cahir, brother of Piers, [164], [283] (where the name is wrongly given as Thomas)
Butlers, Barons of Dunboyne;
see Dunboyne.
— Eleanor, daughter of Lord Dunboyne and second wife of the sixteenth Earl of Desmond, [85], [131], [209], [235]-[238], [280], [284]
Buttevant, [165]
Cadiz, Bishop of, [226]
Caistor, [204]
Calatrava, [199]
Campbell, Lady Agnes, daughter of Argyle and widow of James MacDonnell, afterwards married to Tirlogh Luineach O’Neill, [92], [150], [169], [215], [304], [305]
Campbells, the, [128], [150], [295]
Campion, Edmund, Jesuit and historian, [118], [350]
Canice’s, St., the cathedral of Kilkenny, [341]
Carbery, in Cork;
see MacCarthy Reagh.
Carbery, in Kildare, [311]
Carew Castle, [180]
— an Irish Marquis about 1400, [142]
— Dygon, [145]
— Sir Peter, [139]-[145], [152], [153], [155], [157], [158], [160], [162], [177], [190], [242], [246], [250], [292], [298], [309]-[311]
— Sir Peter, nephew of the last-named, [309], [311], [342]
— George, brother of Sir Peter the younger and afterwards Earl of Totnes, [130], [342]
Carleton, George, [243]
Carlingford, [39], [59], [89], [270], [273]
Carlos, Don, [216]
Carlow, [59], [94], [122], [229], [311], [333], [344]
— County, [46], [59], [81], [348]
Carrickbradagh, [30]
Carrickfergus, [60], [79], [91], [95], [116], [118], [127], [129], [133], [148], [149], [213], [215], [232], [233], [240], [243], [244], [246], [271]-[273], [300], [301], [303]
Carrick-on-Suir, [186]
Carrigaline, [165]
Cartwright, Thomas, [356]
Casey, William, Protestant Bishop of Limerick (1551-1556 and 1571-1591), [366]
Cashel, [84], [112], [186], [221], [248]
— Archbishops of;
see Baron, MacCaghwell, Magrath, Fitzgibbon.
Castleblayney, [126]
Castlederg, [109]
Castlemaine, [188], [189], [207], [219], [222], [248], [253], [264]
Castle Martyr, [165], [248], [253], [264], [312]
Catherine of Arragon, [203]
Cé, Lough, annals of, [130]
Cecil, William, Lord Burghley, [1], [2], [9], [11], [12], [19], [25], [34], [35], [38], [58], [73], [74], [101], [105], [106], [108], [120], [123], [126], [127], [134], [139], [155], [156], [190], [197], [226];
see Burghley.
Celestine, Pope, [193]
Champernowne, Mr., [243]
Charles V., Emperor, [197]
Charles IX. of France (wrongly given in the text as Henry III.), [107], [173]
Chattertons, two brothers who tried to settle in Ulster, [231], [239], [304]
Cheapside, [39]
Cheevers, Sir Christopher, [57], [144]
— Thomas, Protestant Bishop of Elphin (1580-1584), [367]
Cheston, Captain, [132], [215]
Chinamen thought scarcely more strange than Irishmen, [34]
Christ Church, Dublin, [71], [353], [361]
Clancare, Daniel or Donald MacCarthy More, Earl of, [94], [114], [150], [151], [157], [161], [167], [168], [175], [180], [186], [196], [223], [233], [313];
see MacCarthy More.
Clandeboye, or Antrim, [36], [149], [213], [239], [240], [272], [274], [284], [286], [301], [305]
Clandonnells, [317]
Clanmaurice, in Kerry, [145]
Clan O’Neill, proposed earldom of, [305]
Clanricarde, Richard Burke or De Burgh, second Earl of, called ‘Sassanagh,’ [5], [6], [29], [41], [52], [61], [82], [114], [115], [119], [124], [170], [171], [182], [183], [196], [217]-[219], [227], [238], [254], [263], [266], [317], [318], [321], [322], [338], [339];
see John and Ulick Burke.
Clansheehy, [166];
see MacSheehy.
Clanwilliam, in Limerick, [165]
Clare;
see Thomond.
Clogh, [90]
see of, [360]
— Bishops of;
see Raymond, MacMahon, and Meiler Magrath.
Clonfert, church and see of, [218], [318], [367]
— Bishops of;
see De Burgo.
Clonmacnoise, see of, [361]
Clonmel, [10], [11], [85], [87], [112], [163], [186], [221], [248], [265], [266], [283], [345]
Cloyne, see and Bishops of, [313], [365];
and see Tirrey.
Coleraine, [79], [90], [116], [126], [127], [229], [243]
Colley;
see Cowley.
Collins, Arthur, compiler of the ‘Sidney Papers,’ [98]
Collyer or Collier, Captain, [162], [182], [211], [323]
Columba, St., [116]
Colwick, officer of the Tower, [358]
Comber, [247]
Conna, near Fermoy, [85]
Connaught, Presidency proposed, [96];
Presidency formed, [170], [219], [220], [227], [230], [318], [323];
see Fitton.
Connello in Limerick, [165], [167]
Connemara, [219]
Connigse, a place, [135]
Coonagh, in Limerick, [223]
Copeland Islands, [243]
Cork, [43], [44], [82], [159], [116];
the harbour, [188], [221], [224], [242], [249], [264], [282], [309], [313], [336]
— Beg, [191]
— County of, [113]
for Bishops, see Scaine and Tirrey.
Cormac, a Dominican, [226], [227]
Cornwall, Mr., [179]
Cosby, Francis, Governor of Maryborough and Seneschal of Queen’s Co. (1565-1577), [130], [131], [228], [253], [266], [338]-[340], [342], [344]
Cowley or Colley, Sir Henry, Governor of Philipstown (1562-1586), [47], [227], [228], [253]
Craik, Alexander, Bishop of Kildare and Dean of St. Patrick’s (1560-1564), [361]
Creagh, Richard, Papal Archbishop of Armagh (1564-1585), [356]-[360]
Croft or Crofts, Sir James, formerly Lord Deputy, [213], [307]
Cromaboo, [99]
Cromwell, Oliver, [349]
Cumnor, [12]
Curlew Mountains, [110]
Curry, Dr. John, the Roman Catholic historian, [130]
Curtis, Alderman, [197]
Curwen, or Curwin, Archbishop of Dublin (1555-1567), and Bishop of Oxford (1567-1568), [94], [354], [355], [361], [368]
Cusack, Sir Thomas, Lord Chancellor (1550-1555), [11], [62]-[67], [74]-[78], [82]-[84], [88], [89], [91], [102]
— Thomas, of Gerardstown, in Meath, [330]
Cushendun, in Antrim, [90], [117], [243]
Dalkey, [5]
Daly, Robert, Bishop of Kildare (1564-1582), [362], [363]
Daniel, or Danyel, Terence, Dean of Armagh for many years, from about 1550, [16], [52], [78], [356]
— a goldsmith, [39]
Darcy, Lord, [242]
Darton, Nicholas, [5]
David’s, St., [365]
Decies, the western part of Waterford, [84], [85], [93], [94]
— Lords of;
see Sir Maurice and Sir James Fitzgerald.
Delacroix, a French officer, [191]
De la Roche, a French officer, [201]
Delves, Captain George, [72]
Delvin, Christopher Nugent, ninth Baron of, [108], [261], [282], [332]
Dempsey, or O’Dempsey, family of, [131]
Denny, Sir William, proposed as President for Munster, [318]
Derrinlaur, near Clonmel, [283]
Derry, attempts at a settlement there, [109], [111], [115], [116], [215], [285]
— see of, [360];
for Bishops, see Eugene O’Dogherty.
Desmond, Thomas Fitzgerald, eighth Earl of, [150]
— Gerald Fitzgerald, sixteenth Earl of, attends Parliament, [6];
will not pay cess, [7];
suspected, [8];
on bad terms with Ormonde, [10];
suspected, [14];
on bad terms with Ormonde, [41];
insubordinate, [42];
goes to England, [43];
his behaviour in London, [48], [61];
his difficult position, [65]-[67];
his quarrel with and capture by Ormonde, [82]-[89], [92]-[94], [96]-[98];
a prisoner, [113], [121], [122];
sent to London, [125];
charges against him, [134]-[137], [145], [150], [151], [165]-[167], [208], [209];
returns to Ireland, [239], [247]-[249];
his escape from Dublin, [251]-[253], [260];
he dabbles in treason, [263]-[268], [273], [275], [276];
his treasonable attitude, [278]-[284], [297]-[299], [309], [313]-[316];
offers to submit, [336], [341], [345]
— Sir John Fitzgerald of, brother to the sixteenth Earl, [66], [97], [98], [122], [125], [136], [150], [208], [209], [236]-[238], [248], [283], [313], [337], [338]
— Sir James Fitzgerald of, brother of the sixteenth Earl, [281], [313]
— Joan, Countess of, mother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde, and first wife of the sixteenth Earl of Desmond;
see Joan Fitzgerald.
— Eleanor Butler, second wife of the sixteenth Earl of;
see Eleanor Butler.
Devereux, Alexander, Bishop of Ferns (1539-1566), [363], [364]
— John, Bishop of Ferns (1566-1578), [156]
— Penelope, daughter of Walter, Earl of Essex, and successively Lady Rich and Lady Mountjoy, [326]
Devon men in Ireland, [259]
— Earl of, [206]
Dillon, name of, [46]
— Sir Lucas, Solicitor-General (1565), Attorney (1566), Chief Baron (1570-1593), [153], [297], [317], [330]
Dixe, William, Government auditor, [65], [69], [72], [73]
Dominicans, [79], [127], [226], [227]
see Tyrconnel.
Dormer, Jane, Duchess of Feria, [203]
Dover, [357]
Dowdall, Sir James, Chief Justice of Munster, and afterwards of the Queen’s Bench, [180], [276]
Dowling, Thady, Chancellor of Leighlin (1595-1628), and author of Ireland, [130]
Down, County of, [6], [211]-[214]
— see of, [360];
for Bishops, see Eugene Magennis, Meiler Magrath, and John Merriman.
D’Oysel, Monsieur, [9]
Drake, Sir Francis, [301]
Draycott, Henry, Master of the Rolls (1565-1572), [95], [125]
Drishane, in Cork, [135]
Drogheda, [13], [17], [53], [62], [102], [108], [178], [293], [300], [310]
Dromore, see of, [360]
Drury, Sir William, Lord President of Munster (1576-1579), [282], [320], [322]-[324], [336]-[339], [343], [346], [347], [349]
Castle, [94], [176], [178], [219], [252], [300], [324], [335]
— see of, [361];
for Archbishops, see Curwen and Loftus.
— Mayors of, [17];
and see Sedgrave and Fagan.
Dudley, Edmund, [350]
— Lord Robert, created Earl of Leicester, [4], [12], [39]-[41], [47], [75];
see Leicester.
— Castle, [300]
Dufferin, in Down, [36], [304]
Duhallow, in Cork, [357]
Duleek, [142]
Dunboyne, Edmund Butler, first Baron of, [85], [89], [108], [112]
— James Butler, second Baron of, [151], [284], [313]
— Julia MacCarthy, wife of Edmund, first Baron of, [151]
Dundalk, [2], [4], [15], [18], [29], [35], [52], [53], [58], [59], [61], [62], [80], [91], [102], [107], [150], [270], [272], [284], [310]
Dundrum, [104]
Dungannon, [61]
— first Baron of, Matthew Ferdoragh O’Neill, or Kelly, [2], [15], [16];
see O’Neill and Kelly.
Dungannon, second Baron of, Brian O’Neill, [9], [15], [23], [39], [75];
see O’Neill.
— third Baron of, Hugh O’Neill, afterwards Earl of Tyrone, son of Matthew and brother of Brian, [39], [75];
see O’Neill.
Dungarvan, [86], [127], [185], [191], [215]
Dunmanus Bay, [313]
Dunsany, Christopher Plunket, sixth Baron of, [50]
— Patrick Plunket, seventh Baron of, [261], [331], [333]
Dursey Island, [142]
Edenduff Carrick, or Shane’s Castle, [90]
Edmond Boy, a Geraldine, [7], [298]
Edward IV., his coinage, [12];
his title to Tyrone, [38]
Elphin, see of, [367];
see Chester, Bishop of.
Ely O’Carroll, [147]
Ennis, [170]
Enniscorthy, [161]
Erne, Lough and River, [55], [110], [127]
Essex, Walter Devereux, created Earl of, his attempt to colonise Ulster, [239]-[247];
Governor of Ulster, [267]-[276];
his dealings with Desmond, [280]-[282];
with the O’Neills, [284]-[287];
seizes Sir Brian MacPhelim, [288];
his later proceedings, [289]-[294];
the colonisation scheme abandoned, [294]-[296];
arrests Kildare, [298];
his later proceedings in Ulster, [299]-[306];
goes to England, [324];
— Robert Devereux, second Earl of, [9], [327]
— Lettice Knollys, wife of Walter, Earl of Essex, and afterwards married to Leicester, [239], [269], [327]
Eustace, James, afterwards Lord Baltinglass, [229]
Eva MacMurrough, wife of Strongbow, [145]
Exeter Cathedral, [310]
Fagan, Christopher, Mayor of Dublin in 1573, [252]
Farnese, Alexander, [346]
Farney, or Ferney, [310], [325]
Farsetmore, [117]
Fathom, in Armagh, near Newry, [126]
Fénelon, De la Motte, [315]
Fenton, Geoffrey, and his daughter Catherine, [256]
Feria, Duchess of;
see Dormer.
Fermanagh, [55], [61], [285], [305]
Fermoy, [233]
Ferney;
see Farney.
Ferns, [156]
— see of, [365];
for Bishops, see Devereux.
Fethard, in Tipperary, [112], [186]
Fideli, Alessandro, [199]
Field, Bishop;
see O’Fihily.
Finglas, Richard, Prime Serjeant (1554-1574), [125]
Fitton, or Fytton, Sir Edward, first Lord President of Connaught (1569-1579);
Vice-treasurer (with a brief interval, 1575-1579), [170]-[173], [182], [183], [216]-[220], [238], [243], [245], [247], [254]-[257], [275], [321]
Fitzdavy, Edmund, [277]
Fitzgerald;
for the sixteenth Earl of Desmond and his brothers, see Desmond;
for the Earls of Kildare, see Kildare.
— at the Mullaghmast massacre, [131]
— Edward, brother of the eleventh Earl of Kildare, [264]-[267], [274], [276]
— Sir Maurice na Totane of Desmond, and his son Thomas, [42]
— Sir Thomas Roe of Desmond, [165], [172], [185], [186], [233], [313]
— Sir Maurice, afterwards Viscount of Decies, [84]-[87], [92], [112], [136], [137]
— Sir James, Lord of Decies, [312]
— John FitzEdmond;
see Imokilly.
— Sir John FitzEdmond of Cloyne, [284]
— Richard, [298]
— Lady Joan, married first to the ninth Earl of Ormonde, then to Sir Francis Brian, and then to the sixteenth Earl of Desmond, mother of the tenth Earl of Ormonde;
see Ormonde
Fitzgibbon;
see the White Knight.
— or MacGibbon, Maurice, Papal Archbishop of Cashel (1576-1578), [156], [192]-[196], [199]-[206], [225], [226], [258], [364]
Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, James, grandson of the fourteenth and nephew of the fifteenth Earl of Desmond, [131], [145], [146];
proclaimed traitor, [150];
his rebellion, [159]-[169], [171], [172];
attainted, [175], [177], [184], [185];
his struggle with Perrott, [187]-[189];
makes it a war of religion, [190]-[192], [201];
proposed duel with Perrott, [209];
continues in rebellion, [221]-[225];
submits to Perrott, [233], [238], [252], [264], [276], [277], [283], [312];
in France, [314]-[316], [333], [336], [338], [371]
— Thomas, sixteenth Baron of Lixnaw, and Lord of Kerry, [145], [165], [233], [237], [313]
— James, Bishop of Ardfert, [366]
Fitzpatrick, or MacGillapatrick, Barnaby, first Baron of Upper Ossory, [81]
— Sir Barnaby, second Baron of Upper Ossory, [81], [157], [158], [163], [254], [261], [307], [311], [344]
Fitzpatricks, the, [112], [221]
FitzStephen, Robert, [124]
Fitzwilliam, Sir William, Vice-Treasurer (1559-1575);
five times Lord Justice between 1559 and 1571;
Lord Deputy (1571-1575), [7];
he expects a general rising, [8];
Lord Justice again, [14];
temporises with Shane O’Neill, [18];
on bad terms with Kildare, [20];
thinks badly of Shane, [21];
sent to the Queen by Sussex, [26];
his instructions, [27];
returns with a pardon for Shane, [30];
Lord Justice, [33], [39], [42];
takes a gloomy view of Ireland, [43]-[44];
his opinion of officials, [45], [49], [51];
his valuation of Shane’s loyalty, [80];
thinks ill of Desmond, [89], [99];
on bad terms with Arnold, [100];
a partisan of Ormonde, [122];
cannot get his accounts as Vice-Treasurer balanced, [123];
Lord Justice, [124];
has a bad opinion of the Desmonds, [125];
and of Tirlogh Luineach O’Neill, [129];
goes to Ulster, [133];
his accounts not audited for nine years, [134], [162], [163], [181]-[183], [192];
his difficulties as Lord Deputy, [212]-[221], and [227]-[233];
disapproves the Essex expedition, [241], [249], [252]-[257];
bemoans his fate, [261], [263];
ordered to help Essex, [268], [269], [270];
his campaign in Munster, [282]-[284], [286];
last days of his government, [290]-[300], [340]
Fitzwilliam, John, Sir William’s son, [107]
— Brian, [71]
— Gerot, Shane O’Neill’s secretary, [91], [92]
— Robert, attorney of Drogheda, [53], [54]
Fortescue, Captain, [71]
Four Masters, Annalists, [130], [245], [251], [289], [300]
Foyle, Lough and River, [30], [108], [109], [127], [295]
France and Frenchmen, [7], [113], [149], [226], [249]
Francis II., [8]
Frobisher, Martin, [336], [337]
Furlong, Matthew, [228]
Gafney, Christopher, Protestant Bishop of Ossory (1565-1576), [363]
Galicia, [199]
Galway, [56], [114], [127], [170], [171], [219], [227], [317], [318], [322]
— County, [317]
Garland, Sir James, [30]
Garratt, a pirate, [249]
Garrett, Michael, a sea-captain, [315]
Garrystown, [167]
Gemblours, battle, [346]
George, St., [60]
— Mad, [345]
Gerard, or Gerrard, Sir Gilbert, Attorney-General for England, [11]
— Sir William, Lord Chancellor of Ireland (1576-1579), [178], [320], [328], [331], [334]-[336], [346], [348], [349]
Gerardiston or Gerardstown, in Meath, [330]
German travellers, [192]
Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, [158], [160], [167], [168], [171], [173], [192], [211], [277]
Giraldus Cambrensis, [142]
Glenconkein, [29]
Glendalough, [229]
Glenflesk, [188]
Glengariffe, [223]
Glenshesk, [90]
Glin in Limerick, [251], [315]
— Fitzgerald, knight of, [314]
Goldsmith, Oliver, [181]
Gomez, Ruy, [203]
Gormanston, Christopher Preston, fourth Viscount, [331]
Gort, [317]
Grace, Ormonde’s man, [161]
— Fulke, Ormonde’s constable at Roscrea, [343]
Graces, the, [254]
Grangegorman, [252]
Graves, Rev. James, [363]
Gravesend, [237]
Gray, Neal, [28]
Greame, Captain George, [225]
Greencastle, in Down, [150]
Greenwich, [179]
Gregory VIII., [233]
Grenville, Sir Richard and Lady, [157]
Gresham, Sir Thomas, [108], [123]
Grey, Arthur, Lord, designated as Viceroy, [207]
— William, Lord, [141]
Gueras, Antonio de, [257]
Guises, the, [39], [192], [201]
Gur, Lough, [252]
Haggardston, [107]
Hampton Court, [351]
Harlech, [50]
Harrington, Captain Henry, [255], [343], [344]
Hartpole or Harpole, Robert, [130], [131], [229], [342], [344]
Hatton, Sir Christopher, [349]
Hawkins, John, the sea-captain, [191]
Heath, Nicholas, Archbishop of York, [354]
Henry III. of France, [173];
see Charles IX. and Anjou.
Heron, Sir Nicholas, royal seneschal of Wexford (1563-1569), [74], [89], [150], [198]
Holing, S. J., John, [359]
Holyhead, [34]
Hooker, John, also called Vowell the chronicler, [140]-[144], [153], [154], [160], [161], [309], [310], [342], [364]
Hooker, Richard (the ‘judicious’), nephew to John, [141]
Horne, Robert, Bishop of Winchester, [362]
Horsey, Captain Jasper, [165]
Howth, [15]
— Christopher St. Lawrence, twentieth Baron of, [50], [332]
Huguenots, [171]
Hungary, [106]
Hungerford, Captain, [229]
Hupton, a keeper at the Tower, [358]
Hutchinson, William, [23], [60]
Idrone, [142], [145], [158], [309]
Imail, [229]
Imokilly, John FitzEdmond FitzGerald, seneschal of, [85], [157], [165], [264], [314]
Innishloughane, [243]
Innishowen, [127]
Ireland, Dukedom of, [225], [226]
Irish letters, [353]
Iveagh, in Down, [305]
James’s, St., Church, [39]
General Mercurian, [316], [353]
Jewell, John, Bishop of Salisbury, [142], [364]
Josefo, an Italian, [191], [192]
Kavanaghs, [143]-[145], [182], [311]
Keating Kerne, [44], [59], [138]
— Richard, [44]
Kells, in Meath, [361]
Kelly, John and Alison his wife, [2], [3], [17];
see O’Neill.
— Matthew Ferdoragh, [2], [3], [17];
see O’Neill.
Kelway, Mr., [243]
Kenbane, [243]
Kenry, in Limerick, [167], [284]
Kent, [237]
Kerry, [165], [168], [180], [184], [221] [248]
— Fitzgerald, Knight of, [85]
Kilcleif, [243]
Kildare County, [46], [330], [333], [348]
for Bishops, see Craik, Leverous, and Daly.
Kildare, Gerald Fitzgerald, ninth Earl of, [138]
— eleventh Earl of;
attends Parliament, [6];
intrigues with Desmond, [7];
and with the Irish, [8];
summoned to Court, [10], [14], [16], [17];
disagrees with Fitzwilliam, [20];
has a Royal Commission to conclude a treaty with Shane O’Neill, [31];
humiliates Sussex, [32];
presents Shane at Court, [33], [34], [40], [41];
his loyalty suspected, [42];
his hereditary swordsmen, [44], [52];
buys Brereton’s interest in Lecale, [61];
confers with Shane, [62]-[63], [79], [81];
his daughter, [88];
favoured by Arnold, [99]-[100];
his relations with Shane, [103]-[104];
accompanies Sidney to Ulster, [108], [119];
accused by Oliver Sutton, [138]-[139], [163], [221], [228], [238], [280];
vehemently suspected, [297]-[299], [308], [311], [331]-[333], [340], [341], [348];
procures arrest of Archbishop Creagh, [358]
Kilfeacle, [366]
Kilfenora, church and see of, [10], [66], [366]
Kilkea, [228]
besieged by rebels, [160]-[163], [337], [341], [343]
— County, [66], [111], [112], [311]-[313], [333], [348]
Killala, church and see of, [368]
Killaloe, see of, [366], [378];
for Bishops, see O’Corren, Terence O’Brien, Maurice MacBrien, O’Molony, and O’Mulrian.
Killarney, [313]
Kilmacduagh, [317];
see of, [367];
for Bishops, see Bodkin, Kirwan, and O’Dea.
Kilmacthomas, [280]
Kilmainham, [1], [6], [94], [95], [298]
Kilmallock, [6], [159], [165], [167], [171], [184]-[186], [208], [221], [223], [224], [247], [264], [277], [278]
Kilmore, see of, [360]
Kinelarty, [304]
King, Matthew, [65]
— Oliver, [204]
King’s County, [6], [81], [96], [227], [228], [348]
Kinsale, [43], [44], [208], [221], [309], [312], [313]
Kirwan, Stephen, Protestant Bishop of Kilmacduagh (1573-1582), [367]
Knockboy, [90]
Knockfergus;
see Carrickfergus.
Knocklofty, [85]
Knocklong, [90]
Knollys, Sir Francis, [105]-[107], [150], [269], [307]
— Lettice;
see Countess of Essex.
— H., [243]
Lacy, Hugh, Bishop of Limerick (1556-1571), [114], [366]
— a name in the Desmond district, [166]
Lagan, or Laggan River, [149], [246]
Lainez, James, second general of the Jesuits, [370]
Lambay Island, [44]
Lancashire, [273]
Lancaster, Thomas, Bishop of Kildare (1549-1554);
Archbishop of Armagh (1568-1584), [356], [364]
Lanfey, [324]
see Olderfleet.
Laud, Archbishop, [362]
Lecale, in Down, [60], [61], [104], [232], [246], [304]
Lee River, [10]
Leicester, Robert Dudley, Earl of, [74], [78], [92], [103]-[105], [121];
Ormonde’s mortal foe, [164], [197], [214], [241];
his relations with Lord and Lady Essex, [269], [299] and [326], [290], [307], [331]-[333], [343], [350], [351], [362];
see Dudley.
Leigh, a monk of Christ Church, [353], [354]
Leighlin Bridge, [47], [94], [143], [162], [215], [309];
defended by George Carew, [342]
for Bishops, see O’Fihily.
Leix, [1], [9], [14], [74], [91], [253], [340];
see Queen’s County.
Lepanto, battle of, [226]
Letterkenny, [117]
Leverous, Thomas, Bishop of Kildare (1554-1560, and Papal Bishop from that to 1577), [361], [368], [370]
Lichfield, [125]
Lifford, [76], [77], [109], [111], [114], [127], [285]
Limerick, [7], [172], [188], [221], [222], [227], [277], [324], [336], [338], [345]
— see of, [366];
for Bishops, see Casey and Lacy.
— see of, [365]
Littleton, Thomas, his ‘Tenures,’ [297]
Lixnaw, [145];
Baron of, see Fitzmaurice.
Loftus, Adam, Archbishop of Armagh (1562-1567);
of Dublin (1567-1605);
Lord Keeper (1573-1576, in 1577, and 1579, and 1581-1603);
Lord Chancellor (1603-1605);
Lord Justice (1582, 1597, and 1599), [71], [100], [134], [184];
his Puritan antecedents, [354], [355]-[356], [362], [364], [368]
Lombards, [314]
Longford County, [181], [311], [318]
— Castle, in Galway, [183]
Lorraine, Mary of, Queen Regent of Scotland, [9], [10]
— Cardinal of, [205]
Lough Rea, or Lough Reagh, [322], [323]
Louth County, [37], [46], [107], [108], [348]
— Patrick Plunket, third Baron of, [313], [348]
— Thomas Plunket, second Baron of, [132], [146]
Louvain, [40], [190], [257], [354], [357]
Luke, St., [133]
Lyon, William, Bishop of Ross from 1582, and of Cork and Cloyne in addition (1586-1617), [365]
MacAulliffe of Duhallow, in Cork, [135]
MacBrien Arra, in Tipperary, [146], [147], [182], [366];
see Bishop Maurice O’Brien.
— Coonagh, in Limerick, [222]
MacCaghwell, James, Protestant Archbishop of Cashel (1567-1570), [362]
MacCartane, or MacArtane, of Kinelarty, in Down, [36], [304]
MacCarthies, all in the counties of Cork and Kerry, [151], [222], [237]
MacCarthy More (Cork and Kerry), [6], [85], [89], [94], [103], [136], [159];
see Clancare.
— Reagh, of Carbery, [186], [233], [313], [386]
MacCarthy of Muskerry, Sir Cormac MacTeige, [186], [223], [233], [313]
— MacDonough, of Duhallow, [135], [168]
— Donough, [136]
— Julia;
see Lady Dunboyne.
MacCoghlans, of Garrycastle, in King’s County, [20]
MacCongail, Papal Bishop of Raphoe (1562-1589);
present at the Council of Trent, [110]
MacCragh, Rory, [283]
MacDavid, Simon (probably an O’Byrne), [229]
MacDermot of Moylurg, in Roscommon, [130], [183], [318]
MacDonnell James, Lord of Antrim and Cantire, [11], [19], [60], [90], [92], [117], [118], [128], [132];
see Lady Agnes Campbell.
— Sorley Boy, brother of James, [9], [19], [54], [60], [90], [92], [117], [128], [215], [231], [232], [294], [301]-[304]
— Angus, brother of the two foregoing, [90]
— Alexander Oge, brother of the three foregoing, [90], [117]
— Donnell Gorm, brother of the four foregoing, [150]
— Alaster MacRandal Boy, [53], [60], [61]
MacDonnells, the, of Scotland and Antrim, [11], [55], [117], [295], [374]
MacGibbon;
see Fitzgibbon.
MacGillapatrick;
see Fitzpatrick.
MacHenry, James (apparently an O’Neill), [243]
MacIarlas, or Earl’s sons;
see John and Ulick Burke.
MacLeans, [54]
MacLeods, [90]
MacMahon, Raymond, Bishop of Clogher, died about 1560, [360]
— Patrick, Bishop of Ardagh (1541-1568), [361]
MacMahons, the, of Monaghan, [24], [30], [36], [52], [54], [62], [181], [287], [293], [305], [348]
— or O’Mahons, the, of Clonderalaw, and Moyarta in Clare, [173], [316]
MacMorragh, Teig (an O’Brien), [172]
MacMurrough;
see Kavanagh.
MacNamaras, of Clare, [316]
MacQuillins, the, of the Route in Londonderry and Antrim, [15], [137], [288]
Macroom, [233]
MacShane, [135]
— Gerot (an O’Connor), [136]
— Rory, [221]
MacSheehy’s, Desmond, gallowglasses, [166], [277]
MacSwiney gallowglasses, settled in Munster, [186], [187], [314], [323]
MacSwineys, the, of Donegal, [110]
MacWilliam, Iochtar, or Eighter (Lower), chief of the Mayo Burkes, [182], [183], [317];
see Burke.
Magee Island, in Antrim, [243], [271], [272]
Magennis, Eugene, Bishop of Down and Connor (1541-1560 or later), [360]
— Sir Hugh, chief of Iveagh, in Down, [36], [52], [54], [284], [287], [305], [348]
Magrath, Meiler, Bishop of Down by Papal provision (1565), Protestant Bishop of Clogher (1570 to, apparently, 1605), Archbishop of Cashel and Bishop of Emly (1571-1622), Bishop of Waterford and Lismore (1582-1589 and 1592-1608), Bishop of Killala and Achonry (1608-1622), [188], [360], [364]
Maguire, Shane, chief of Fermanagh, [11], [30], [31], [36];
oppressed by Shane O’Neill, [52]-[56],[61], [63];
— successor to the foregoing, [181], [285], [287]
— Art, [220]
Malicorne, a Frenchman, [200]
Mallow, [165]
Maltby, Captain (afterwards Sir Nicholas), employed in Ulster till 1575, [129], [132], [133], [183], [232], [233], [242], [243], [245], [293], [295], [304], [323], [324];
military governor of Connaught, [338]-[340], [344]
Man, Isle of, [149], [244], [257]
Manchester, [178]
March, Earl of, [240]
Marseilles, [249]
Marward, Janet, [261]
Maryborough, [121], [122], [215], [290]
Mary Stuart, [117], [191], [201], [239]
Massareene [127], [243], [246]
Massingberd, Sir Oswald, last Prior of Kilmainham, [1], [6]
Maston, in Meath, [144]
Meade, James, [255]
Meath, [30], [46], [96], [176], [310], [330], [333], [334], [348]
Medici, Catherine de’, [8], [173]
Medina Celi, Duke of, [192], [201]
Meelick, [219]
Mellifont, [163]
Melvin, Lough, [110]
Mendoza, Don Juan de, [191], [192], [198]
Mercurian, Everard, General of the Jesuits, [316]
Merles, Don Francesco de, [199], [204]
Merriman, John, Protestant Bishop of Down and Connor (1569-1572), [360]
Middlemore, a patentee, [179]
Middleton, Marmaduke, Bishop of Waterford (1579-1582), translated to St. David’s, [214], [365]
Mocollop, in Waterford, [186]
Montague, Sir Edward, proposed for the presidency of Connaught, [318]
Montgomeryshire, [335]
Moore, Lieutenant, [183]
— Thomas, a patentee, [178]
Morgan, Captain John, [188]
— William, [243]
Morlaix, [191]
Morris, Captain, [273]
Morton, James Douglas, Regent of Scotland from 1574, [181], [320]
Mullaghmast massacre, [130], [342]
Mullaly, William, Archbishop of Tuam (1573-1595), [318]
Munster, Presidency of, [91], [96], [104], [170], [191], [221]-[224], [318], [337]-[339];
for Presidents, see Pollard, Perrott, and Drury.
Neagh, Lough, [61], [126], [127], [240], [243]
Netherlands, [179], [201], [216], [346], [348]
Netterville, name of, [46]
Newman, Thady, Papal Vicar-General, [370]
Newry, [30], [39], [59], [91], [126], [150], [169], [231], [233], [270], [272], [284], [293], [306], [348]
Norfolk, Duke of, [141], [171]
Norris, or Norreys, Captain (afterwards Sir) John, [246], [289], [301], [302], [348]
— William, brother of John, [246]
Northumberland, Duke of, [350]
— Earl of, [239]
Northumbria, [221]
Nugent, Christopher, ninth Baron of Delvin, [261];
see Delvin.
— William, brother of the foregoing, [261]
— Nicholas, Solicitor-General in 1568, afterwards second Baron of the Exchequer, [125], [261]
O’Boyle, chief of Boylagh, in Donegal, [110]
O’Brien, Connor, third Earl of Thomond;
see Thomond.
— Sir Donnell or Donald, brother of the second Earl of Thomond, [7], [82], [317]
— Murrough, [338]
— Teig Mac Murrough, Sheriff of Clare, [170], [172], [317]
— (more properly MacBrien Arra), Maurice, Bishop of Killaloe (1570-1612), [366]
— Terence, Bishop of Killaloe (Papal) (1555-1569), [366]
— Cornelius, nominated for the Bishopric of Killaloe by Sidney, but not appointed by the Queen, [313]
O’Briens, the, of Clare, [9], [85], [173]
O’Byrne, Feagh MacHugh, [167], [228], [229], [298], [311], [340], [343], [344]
O’Byrnes, the, of Wicklow, [25], [266], [298]
O’Cahan, or O’Kane, of Londonderry County, [40], [116]
O’Callaghan of Duhallow, in Cork, [135], [145], [237]
O’Carroll, Sir William, chief of Ely, [148]
— Mulrony, [266]
— Thady, [147]
O’Carrolls, the, of Ely, in King’s County, [112]
O’Connor, Brian, chief of Offaly, [7]
O’Connor, Cahir, and Cormac, sons of Brian, [134]-[137], [254]
— Calvagh (of the Offaly family), [80], [81]
— Connor MacCormac, of Offaly, [136], [341], [343]
— Art, of Offaly, [136]
— Lysaght MacMurrough, of Offaly, [135], [136]
— Don, in Roscommon, [183], [216], [318]
— Roe, in Roscommon, [338]
— of Iraghticonnor, in Kerry, [136]
— of Sligo, [110], [127], [170], [321]
O’Connors, the, of Offaly, in King’s and Queen’s Counties, [52], [85], [99], [229], [266], [310]
O’Corren, James, Bishop of Killaloe (1526 to about 1539), [366]
O’Daly, Ferdinando, [20]
O’Dea, Cornelius, Papal Bishop of Kilmacduagh (1542-1576) (confounded in the text with Dermot O’Diera), [367]
O’Dempsey of Clanmalier, in Queen’s County, [131]
O’Diera, Dermot, called Papal Bishop of Kilmacduagh in text, really Papal Bishop of the minor see of Mayo, [367]
O’Dogherty of Innishowen, in Donegal, [109], [111], [285], [295]
— Eugene, Bishop of Derry (by Papal provision, 1554 to about 1569), [109], [360]
O’Donnell, Manus, chief of Tyrconnel, [54]
— Calvagh, son of Manus, chief of Tyrconnel, [7], [11], [19], [20];
seized by Shane O’Neill, [21];
his wife, [21], [23], [29], [40];
tortured by Shane, [53], [63];
his treatment by Shane, [76];
released and goes to England, [76]-[79], [91], [97], [99], [104], [107], [108];
restored, [110];
his death, [111]
— Hugh, brother and successor of Calvagh, [55], [56], [111];
totally defeats Shane O’Neill, [117], [120], [124], [127], [132], [213], [285], [305], [320], [321]
— Con, son of Calvagh, [30], [54], [55], [76], [77], [285]
— Edmund, a Jesuit, [233]
O’Donnells, the, [4], [7], [21], [52]
O’Donoghue in Kerry, [313]
Odorney Abbey in Kerry, [366]
O’Dunne, or O’Doyne of Iregan, or Tinnahinch, in Queen’s Co., [311]
O’Farells, or O’Ferrals, in Longford, [181], [311]
O’Farrell Bane, chief of his name, [181]
Offaly, [1], [9], [74], [91], [253]
O’Fihily, or Field, Thomas, Bishop of Leighlin (1555-1566), [363], [368]
O’Flaherties of Iar-Connaught, [219], [318]
O’Gallagher, a minor chief in Donegal, [110]
— Redmond, Bishop of Killala (1549-1569), translated by the Pope to Derry (1569), lived till 1601, [193]
O’Hanlon, chief of Orior in Armagh, [36], [53], [54], [111], [231]
O’Herlihy, Thomas, Papal Bishop of Ross (1561-1580), [156];
wrongly called Archbishop in the text, [192]
O’Keeffe of Duhallow, in Cork, [135]
O’Kellies (of the tribe of the Hy-Maine) in Roscommon and Galway, [220], [318]
Olderfleet or Larne, [243]
O’Loghlens, or O’Loughlins, the, of Burren in Clare, [173], [316]
O’Maddens, the, of Longford, in Galway, [20], [222], [318]
O’Mahon, or O’Mahony, of Carbery, in Cork, [313]
O’Mahon of Clare, [173];
see MacMahon.
O’Malley, of Burrishoole and Murrisk, in Mayo, [317]
O’Meagher, Teig Roe, [137]
O’Molloys, the, of Fercall (including Ballyboy and Ballycowan), in King’s Co., [310]
O’Molony, Malachi, Papal Bishop of Killaloe from 1571, [366]
O’More, Rory Oge, [221], [228], [252], [297], [311], [340]-[345], [347]
— Moris, [130]
— Neil Maclice, [14]
O’Mores, the, of Leix, [14], [52], [80]-[82], [229], [266], [311]
O’Mulrian, chief of Owney, in Tipperary;
see Ryan.
— or O’Ryan, Cornelius, Papal Bishop of Killaloe from 1576, [366]
O’Neill, Hugh Boy, chief of Clandeboye, his race, [213], [240], [289]
O’Neill, Con Bacagh, chief of Tyrone;
see Earl of Tyrone.
— Shane, chief of Tyrone, eldest son and successor by Celtic law of Con Bacagh, his claims, [2]-[4], [7], [9]-[11];
his struggle with the government and visit to England, [14]-[43], [49];
his affairs flourish, [51]-[59];
he baffles Sussex, who tries to poison him, [61]-[65];
his triumphant position, [74]-[80], [82];
supreme in the North, [89]-[92];
gets the best of Sir N. Arnold, [89]-[92], [97], [99], [100];
fills up the cup of iniquity, [102]-[111];
death and character, [116]-[120], [123]-[124], [127], [137], [147], [154], [197], [198], [355], [356], [358], [360]
— Tirlogh Luineach (so called from having been fostered with the O’Looneys), chief of Tyrone, cousin and successor by Celtic law of Shane, murders the Baron of Dungannon, [38], [39], [59], [61], [62], [116], [119], [127]-[129], [132], [133], [146], [149], [158]-[160], [169], [181], [215], [231], [244], [245], [266], [269], [271];
his struggle with Essex, [284]-[286], [288], [291];
relations with Essex, [293]-[295], [301], [305]
— Phelim Bacagh, chief of Clandeboye, [289]
— Sir Brian MacPhelim (of the race of Hugh Boy), chief of Clandeboye, son and successor of Phelim Bacagh, [119], [124], [128], [129], [133], [149];
opposes the Smiths, [212]-[214];
successful against the Smiths, [231]-[233];
baffles Essex, [244]-[247], [257], [258], [271]-[273];
his unjustifiable seizure by Essex, [288], [305]
— Matthew Ferdoragh, first Baron of Dungannon, reputed son of Con Bacagh, Earl of Tyrone, [2]-[4], [17];
see Kelly and Dungannon.
— Brian, second Baron of Dungannon, elder son of Matthew Ferdoragh, [33], [38], [39], [63]
— Hugh, third Baron of Dungannon and afterwards Earl of Tyrone, younger son of Matthew Ferdoragh, [40], [129], [247], [284], [304]
— Brian Carragh, [243]
— Phelim Roe, [18], [41], [284]
— Art MacBaron, [128]
— Brian Ertagh, of Clandeboye, [301]
— Neill MacBrian Ertagh, [305]
— Con Macneill Oge, [305]
— Tirlogh Brasselagh, [285]
— Lady Agnes Campbell, wife of Tirlogh Luineach and widow of James MacDonnell;
see Campbell.
O’Neills, the, of Tyrone, [9], [11], [108], [169]
O’Nialain, John, Bishop of Kilfenora by Papal provision (1541-1572), [366]
Oporto, [206]
Orange, Philibert, Prince of, [200]
— William the Silent, Prince of, [346]
O’Reilly, Malachias, chief of nearly all Cavan, [11], [19], [37], [40], [53]-[55], [63], [99]
— Hugh Connelagh, son and successor of Malachias, [99], [310]
— Cahir, brother to last named, [99]
O’Reillys, the, of Cavan, [97], [99], [111]
Ormonde, Thomas Butler, tenth Earl of (called Thomas Duff or Black Thomas), Lord Treasurer of Ireland, [5];
his relations, [6];
almost comes to blows with Desmond, [10]-[11];
keeps down the O’Mores, [14];
sent by Sussex to Shane O’Neill, [24];
intercedes for Jacques Wingfield, [25];
receives a messenger from Shane, [26], [27], [31];
accompanies Shane to England, [32], [40];
on bad terms with Desmond, [41];
his loyal demeanour, [42];
follows Desmond to England, [43], [44], [45];
has a conference with Shane, [62], [64];
complains of his wrongs, [66]-[67];
his brother Edmund, [80], [81], [82];
resolves to put down coyne and livery, [83]-[84];
fights a battle with Desmond, [85]-[87];
consequences of this, [87]-[89];
belongs to the Sussex faction at Court, [92], [93];
his submission, [94];
ordered to protect sheriffs, [96], [97];
favoured by the Queen, [98], [100];
opposed to Leicester and Sidney, [105];
his brother tried at Clonmel, [112];
Sidney makes an award in his favour, [113];
absent from his country, [114]-[115], [121], [122];
crushing award in his favour against Desmond, [125], [136], [146], [147], [151], [152];
his return and its consequences, [160]-[169];
his expedition to Thomond, [171];
in favour of clemency, [173];
bewitched, [175];
his ambition, [176];
his power in Munster, [177]-[179], [180], [182];
his good service in Munster, [184]-[188], [190], [196], [198];
at his wit’s end, [210];
cannot be spared, [215], [220], [221], [223];
goes to England, August 1572, [228]-[230], [235];
his relations with Desmond in England, [235]-[238], [247];
greatly missed, [253]-[254], [265];
back in Ireland, [281];
expostulates with Desmond, [281]-[283];
disapproves proceedings of Essex, [289], [298];
defies his detractors, [307]-[309];
entertains Sidney, [312], [323];
serves against Rory Oge, [340], [343];
hostile to the Leicester faction, [346], [348], [349]
Ormonde, Joan, Dowager Countess of, Countess of Desmond;
see Lady Joan Fitzgerald.
O’Rourke, chief of Brefny (Leitrim), [170], [226], [320]
Orrery, Roger Boyle, Earl of, [257]
O’Shaughnessy, chief of Kiltartan in Galway, [20], [115], [186], [358]
O’Sheehy, Manus Oge, [82];
see MacSheehy.
Ossory; see Upper Ossory and Fitzpatrick.
— see of, [363];
for Bishops, see Bale, Thonery, Gafney, and Strong.
Ostia, [203]
O’Sullivans, the, of West Cork and Kerry, [136], [222], [237]
O’Sullivan, Sir Owen, chief of Bear, in West Cork, [85], [89], [94]
— Philip, of Bear, the Catholic historian, [130]
O’Teige, Donat, Papal Archbishop of Armagh (1560-1562), [356]
O’Tooles, the, of Imail, in Wicklow, [298]
Oxfordshire, [272]
invaded by Shane O’Neill, [30], [36], [37], [41];
grievances, [46]-[48], [59]-[61];
a Royal Commission on it, [65], [70], [81], [99], [149], [153], [269], [296];
infected by pestilence, [300], [310];
agitates against the cess, [327]-[336], [341], [358]
Parker, Matthew, Archbishop of Canterbury, [354], [356], [362]
— John, Master of the Rolls (1552-1565), [11], [47], [57], [58], [65], [82]
— Lieutenant, [229]
Patrick, St., [34], [193], [321]
Patrick’s, St., Deanery and Cathedral, [65], [94], [96], [134], [191], [256], [355], [357], [361], [362], [369]
Pembroke, William Herbert, Earl of, [25], [197]
Perrot or Perrott, Sir John, Lord President of Munster (1570-1576); afterwards Lord Deputy, [156], [179]-[181];
his courage and vigour, [184]-[191];
proposes to end the war by a duel, [207]-[210];
his vigorous exertions, [219]-[225];
Fitzmaurice submits to him, [233]-[236];
hostile to Desmond, [238];
dislikes Essex, [242];
his Munster policy, [247]-[253];
leaves Ireland, his character by the Four Masters, [251], [263], [265]-[267], [277], [282]
Peryam, William, named for Chief Justice of Munster in 1568, [144], [155], [156]
Phalaris, [159]
Philip II., [8], [15], [40], [113], [141];
his intrigues with the Irish, [193]-[206], [226], [227], [257], [258]
Philipstown, [47], [253], [290]
Piers, William, constable of Carrickfergus (1556-1579), [60], [79], [80];
salts Shane O’Neill’s head, [118], [129], [133], [213], [242], [244], [245], [258], [260]
Piggott, name of, [131]
Piper, a pirate, [249]
Plunket family; see Dunsany and Louth.
— or Plunkett, John, Chief Justice of the Queen’s Bench (1559-1583), married to a niece of the eleventh Earl of Kildare, [88], [261]
Pollard, Sir John, first Lord President of Munster (1568), [155], [156], [170]
Portugal and the Portuguese, [216], [226], [249], [345]
Portumna, [222]
Power, John, third Lord Power of Curraghmore, [86], [87], [89], [108], [112], [132], [165], [284], [312], [313]
Poyning’s Law, [153]
Prendergasts, the, of Tipperary, [83]
Prideaux, Serjeant-at-Law, [196]
Prometheus, [98]
Purcells, the, of Tipperary or Limerick, [166]
Puritans, [362]
Quadra, de, [40]
Queen’s County, [6], [81], [96], [111], [159], [311], [317], [341], [347], [348]
Quin Priory in Clare, [317]
Radclyffe, Thomas; see Sussex.
— Sir Henry, brother of Sussex, [42], [72]-[75]
— Lady Frances, sister of Sussex, sought in marriage by Shane O’Neill, [49], [52], [63], [75]
Radnorshire, [335]
Raleigh, Sir Walter, [239]
Randolph, Colonel Edward, in charge of the first settlement at Derry, [19], [60], [106], [108], [109], [111], [115], [239]
Raphoe, [109]
— see of; see MacCongail.
Rathlin Island, [90], [150], [169], [240];
massacre there, [301]-[303], [324]
Red Bay, [60], [90], [117], [243]
Redshanks; see MacDonnell.
Richmond, Henry FitzRoy, Duke of, [9]
Rinuccini, Giovan Batista, Papal Nuncio (1645-1649), [201]
Roche, David, Viscount Roche and Fermoy, [42], [89], [115], [132], [151], [165], [186], [223], [313]
— Catherine, Desmond’s quasi-stepmother, mother of Thomas Roe, [165]
Rochelle, [315]
Roches, the, of Fermoy, in Cork, [222], [263]
Rochester, [357]
Rochforts, ancient colonists of Munster, [314]
Roden, one, [255]
Rokeby, Ralph, first Chief Justice of Connaught (1569-1603), [170]
Romero, Julian, [200], [201], [204]
Roscommon, [110], [127], [219]
Roslare, [162]
Ross or New Ross, in Wexford, [309]
— of Ross Carbery, in Cork, see of, [365];
see O’Herlihy and Cornelius O’Brien.
Route, the, the country between the Bush and the Bann, in Antrim and Londonderry, [36], [245]
Rutlandshire, [106]
Ryans, the, of Owney, in Tipperary, [276];
see O’Mulrian.
St. Leger, Sir Anthony, [16], [106], [152]
— Sir Warham, grandson of Sir Anthony, [108], [111], [112], [121], [155];
Desmond in his custody, [235]-[237];
hostile to Ormonde, [237]
— Lady, wife of Sir Warham, [157], [163]
Saintloo, Colonel Edward, [115]
San Lucar, near Seville, [226]
Savage, Edmond, [304]
— Henry, [232]
Savages, the, of Ards, in Down, [36], [212], [247]
Savoy, ambassador in London, [34]
Scilly Islands, [202]
Irish troubles originated there, [149], [206]
Scots of Antrim and the Isles, attacked by Shane O’Neill, [79], [300];
as good as six hundred Irish, [106], [108];
beset Carrickfergus, [215];
mercenaries in Connaught, [219], [230], [240];
mercenaries in Munster, [264];
attack Essex, [285], [293]-[295];
see MacDonnell and Campbell.
Scott, Thomas, [125]
Scurlock, Barnaby, [329], [331]-[333]
Seaine, Matthew, Bishop of Cork (1572-1582), [371]
Sedgrave, Christopher, Mayor of Dublin in 1559, [5], [353]
Selby, Captain, [246]
Seville, [226]
Shannon River, [11], [80], [82], [173], [219], [321]
Shee, Richard, [158]
Shelburne, Lord, [70]
Sherlock, Patrick, [112], [265]
Shrule Castle, in Mayo, [182], [183]
Sidney, Sir Henry, three times Lord Justice (1557-1559); Lord Justice (1565-1567, 1568-1571, and 1575-1578), [2];
visits Shane O’Neill, [4];
sworn in with Roman Catholic rites, [5], [16];
advises the Queen, [41], [47];
proposes to suppress Shane, [91], [92];
his opinion of Ormonde and Desmond, [93];
to be Viceroy, [94];
bargains with the Queen, [95];
wind-bound in Wales, [101];
pronounces Shane hopeless, [102]-[103];
temporises, [104];
on bad terms with Sussex, [105];
demands proper means, [106];
makes a successful winter campaign in Ulster, [108]-[110];
will give Shane no rest, [111];
his tour in the South, [112]-[114];
receives Shane O’Neill’s head, [118], [119];
both thanked and reproved by the Queen, [120]-[121];
his dislike to Ormonde, [121];
inclined to favour Desmond, [122];
his attempts to govern without money, [123];
goes to England, [124];
his scheme of Irish reform, [126]-[127];
his absence much felt, [132], [134], [138];
returns to Ireland, [144], [146];
his active policy, [148]-[155];
sustains Carew and depresses the Butlers, [157]-[169];
reconciled to Ormonde, [171], [172], [173];
opposes monopolies, [179];
in England, [181]-[186], [191], [192], [198], [199];
refuses the Viceroyalty, [207], [209], [213]-[215], [254], [274], [277], [296];
again Viceroy, [299];
lands, [300];
his dislike to Ormonde, [307];
his tour in Leinster and Munster, [309]-[314];
in Thomond and Connaught, [317]-[319];
his account of the Church, [319];
his dealings with Clanricarde and others, [319]-[323], [325];
his dealings with the Pale about the cess, [327]-[333], [337];
later acts of his government, [339]-[341];
finishes with Rory Oge, [341]-[345];
last days in Ireland, [345]-[349];
his character, [349]-[352], [356], [358], [366]
Sidney, Sir Philip, [323], [326], [346]
— Lady Mary, wife of Sir Henry and sister of Leicester, [351]
Silva, De, [200]
Simier, Anjou’s agent, [351]
Skerries, [300]
Skryne, or Skreen, in Meath, [261]
Slane, Fleming, Baron of, [23], [30]
Slieve Gullion, [29]
Sligo, [110], [127] [227], [317], [321]
Smith, Sir Thomas, Secretary of State, proposes to colonize Ulster, [211], [212], [231], [232], [238], [239], [241], [304], [307]
— Thomas, natural son of Sir Thomas, his colonisation project, [211]-[214];
his proceedings in Ulster, [230]-[233];
his failure and death, [246], [258]
Smythe, John, [64]
— Thomas, [71]
Snagg, Thomas, Attorney-General (1577-1580), [348]
Southwark, [179]
Spain, [40], [113], [156], [160], [191], [249]
Stanihurst, James, Recorder of Dublin and Speaker of the House of Commons, [6], [152], [153], [174]
Stanley, Sir George, Marshal of the Army (1553-1565), [11], [24], [47], [48], [72], [74], [83], [88], [89], [99], [100]
Staples, Edward, Bishop of Meath (1530-1554), [2], [359]
Stephen’s Green, St., [5]
Strafford, Lord, [349]
Strangford, town and lough, [116], [232], [243]
Strong, Thomas, Papal Bishop of Ossory (1582-1602), [363]
Strongbow, [145]
Strozzi, Peter, [191]
Stukeley, Thomas, with Shane O’Neill, [103]-[105];
his proceedings in Spain and Italy, [199]-[206], [225]-[227], [239], [348]
Suck River, [219]
Suffolk, Duke of, [196]
Suppell, name of, [116]
Sussex, Thomas Radcliffe, Earl of, Lord Deputy, [4];
sworn in with the Protestant ritual, [5];
his Parliament, [6];
goes to England, [7];
returns as Lord-Lieutenant, [9];
his instructions, [10];
cannot reconcile Desmond and Ormonde, [11];
favours the Queen’s marriage with Leicester, [12];
goes to England, [14];
Shane O’Neill’s charges against him, [15]-[16];
has dealings with Scotland, [19], [20];
returns to Ireland, [23];
surprised by Shane, [24], [25];
desires Shane’s overthrow, [26], [27];
lays a plot to kill Shane, [28];
unsuccessfully invades Ulster, [29]-[30];
humiliated by Shane, [31]-[32];
follows him to England, [33];
defends himself against Shane’s accusations, [34]-[37], [41], [42];
his controversy with the Pale, [46]-[47];
follows Shane back to Ireland, [49];
his proposal as to administering Irish law, [49];
his controversy with the Pale, [49]-[50], [52];
almost in despair, [53];
will show no mercy to Shane, [55];
his correspondence with Shane Maguire, [55]-[56];
counsels patience, [56];
his disputes with Arnold and Parker, [57]-[58];
Dundalk refuses his garrison, [59];
foiled in the field by Shane, [60];
he attempts to poison Shane, [64], [65], [66];
Arnold’s hostility to him, [68];
he goes to England on sick leave, [69], [72];
his brother imprisoned, [73];
his sister claimed by Shane O’Neill, [75], [78];
disturbances after his departure, [80];
his rivalry with Leicester and disagreement with Sidney, [93], [95], [98], [102], [103];
hostile to Sidney, [105], [197], [213], [239];
favours Essex, [241], [246], [308];
admired by Essex, [326], [329], [351];
his dealings with the Irish Church, [353]-[356] and [365]
Sutton, David, [138]
Sweden, [34]
Sweetman, William, [158]
Swift, Jonathan, [179]
Swilly, river, [117]
Talbot, name of, [46]
— of Malahide, [50]
Termonfeckin, in Louth, [355]
Theatine order, [357]
Thomond, or Clare, [91], [136], [172], [317], [345]
— Connor O’Brien, third Earl of, [6], [29], [41], [52], [82], [114], [159], [170]-[172];
with Perrott, [186], [193], [196], [217], [313], [316], [338]
Thonery, John, Bishop of Ossory, appointed in 1553, [363]
Thornton, Captain George, [132], [315]
Thurles, [151]
Thwaites, William, [151]
Tinnakill, in Queen’s County, [347]
Ormonde’s regulations for, [83], [84], [85], [163], [180], [224], [237], [247], [312], [343], [348]
Tirrey, name of, [314]
— Dominick, Bishop of Cork and Cloyne (1536-1556), [365]
Tivoli, [203]
Tobin, James, [247]
Toledo, Bishop of, [360]
Toome, in Antrim, [126], [243]
Tracton Abbey, in Cork, [157]
Tremayne, Edmund, employed on special service, [156], [178], [184];
advises the Queen, [211], [214];
employed by Burghley, [241], [254];
praised by Sidney, [318]
Trent, Council of, [110]
Tressilian, Sir Robert, [330]
Trim, [334]
Trimleston, Barnewall, Lord, [332]
Trewbrigg, Perrott’s secretary, [225]
for Archbishops, see Bodkin and Mullally.
Turks, [227]
Turner, Rowland, [257]
Tyrconnel, or Donegal, [55], [76], [97], [107], [109], [116], [127], [305]
— Earldom of, [19]
Tyrone, [4], [36], [40], [41], [154], [284], [285], [293], [295], [305]
— Earldom of, [63]
— Con Bacagh O’Neill, first Earl of, [2]-[4], [35]
— Lady, wife of the first Earl, [8], [15]
Ulster, [104], [212]-[215], [222], [227], [239]-[240], [286], [289]-[295]
— Earldom of, [24], [38], [214]
Ulster, kingdom of, claimed by Shane O’Neill, [22], [104]
Upper Ossory, in Queen’s County, [311];
see Fitzpatrick.
Valentia Island, [236]
Veagh, Lough, [21]
Vielleville, Marshal, [173]
Virgil, [339]
Vivero, [198]
Wales, Lord President of, [95], [101], [221], [335], [350]
Wall, Peter, Bishop of Clonmacnoise (1556-1568), [360]
Walsh or Walshe, Nicholas, second Justice of Munster from 1570, and Chief Justice about 1572, [180], [264], [265], [276]
— Patrick, Bishop of Waterford (1551-1578), [365]
— William, Bishop of Meath (1554-1560), and, by Papal provision (1564-1578), [359], [368]
Walsingham, Sir Francis, [200], [201], [204]-[206], [227], [307], [324], [331], [336], [346], [364]
Waterford, [9], [43], [82], [87]-[89], [152], [159], [161], [162], [225]-[227], [283], [310], [312], [324]
Waterford County, [85], [88], [93], [112]
— see of, [365];
for Bishops, see Walsh, Middleton, Magrath.
Waterhouse, Edward, private secretary to Essex, [273], [295];
his ideas as to national honour and profit, [296], [299], [326], [332], [347], [348]
Wellesley, name of, [46]
Wells, Deanery of, [256]
Westmeath, [46], [47], [59], [219], [310], [330], [333]
Weston, Robert, Lord Chancellor (1567-1573), [124], [134], [152], [154], [155], [191], [256]
Wexford County, [11], [44], [46], [59], [81], [198], [228], [229], [333], [348]
White family, in Dufferin, [305]
— Nicholas, seneschal of Wexford (1569-1571), Master of the Rolls (1572-1578), [198], [228], [336]
— Peter, [365]
— Knight, the (Fitzgerald), [11], [85], [111], [145], [152], [157], [164], [186], [314]
Whitgift, John, Archbishop of Canterbury, [362]
Wicklow County (‘the Glinns’), [228], [229]
Wilsford, Captain Thomas, [259], [260]
Wilson, Thomas, Secretary of State, [346]
Winchester, William Paulet, Marquis of, and Lord Treasurer, [48], [78], [120], [122], [123], [156]
Winchester, Bishop of; see Horne.
Wingfield, Jaques, Master of the Ordnance (1558-1587), [24], [25], [29]
Winter, Admiral Sir William, [9]
Wolfe, David, a Jesuit, [192], [370], [371]
Wood, William, his halfpence, [179]
Worcester, Tiptoft, Earl of, [150]
Wrothe, Sir Thomas, [65], [68]-[71], [77], [78], [197]
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, [50], [141]
Wyse, George, [123]
Yarmouth, [204]
Youghal, [112], [113], [151], [157], [159], [185], [192], [208], [221], [249], [312]
END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.
PRINTED BY
SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
LONDON
September 1885.
A CATALOGUE OF
WORKS IN GENERAL LITERATURE & SCIENCE
PUBLISHED BY
MESSRS. LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON, E.C.
Classified Index.
AGRICULTURE, HORSES, DOGS, and CATTLE.
| Dog (The), by Stonehenge, | 21 |
| Dunster’s How to Make the Land Pay, | 9 |
| Fitzwygram’s Horses and Stables, | 10 |
| Greyhound (The), by Stonehenge, | 21 |
| Horses and Roads, by Free-Lance, | 12 |
| Loudon’s Encyclopædia of Agriculture, | 14 |
| Lloyd’s The Science of Agriculture, | 14 |
| Miles’ (W. H.) Works on Horses and Stables, | 17 |
| Nevile’s Farms and Farming, | 18 |
| — Horses and Riding, | 18 |
| Scott’s Farm-Valuer, | 20 |
| Steel’s Diseases of the Ox, | 21 |
| Taylor’s An Agricultural Note-Book, | 22 |
| Ville’s Artificial Manures, | 23 |
| Youatt on the Dog, | 24 |
| — Horse, | 24 |
ANATOMY and PHYSIOLOGY.
| Ashby’s Notes on Physiology, | 5 |
| Buckton’s Health in the House, | 7 |
| Cooke’s Tablets of Anatomy and Physiology, | 8 |
| Gray’s Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical, | 11 |
| Macalister’s Vertebrate Animals, | 15 |
| Owen’s Comparative Anatomy and Physiology, | 19 |
| Quain’s Elements of Anatomy, | 20 |
| Smith’s Operative Surgery on the Dead Body, | 21 |
ASTRONOMY.
| Ball’s Elements of Astronomy, | 22 |
| Herschel’s Outlines of Astronomy, | 12 |
| ‘Knowledge’ Library (The), | 20 |
| Proctor’s (R. A.) Works, | 19 |
| Neison’s The Moon, | 18 |
| Schellen’s Spectrum Analysis, | 20 |
| Webb’s Celestial Objects for Common Telescopes, | 23 |
BIOGRAPHY, REMINISCENCES, LETTERS, &c.
| Bacon’s Life and Works, | 5 |
| Bagehot’s Biographical Studies, | 5 |
| Bray’s Phases of Opinion, | 7 |
| Carlyle’s (T.) Life, by James A. Froude, | 7 |
| — (Mrs.) Letters and Memorials, | 7 |
| Cates’ Dictionary of General Biography, | 7 |
| Cox’s Lives of Greek Statesmen, | 8 |
| D’Eon de Beaumont’s Life, by Telfer, | 8 |
| Fox (C. F.), Early History of, by G. O. Trevelyan, | 10 |
| Grimston’s (Hon. R.) Life, by Gale, | 11 |
| Hamilton’s (Sir W. R.) Life, by R. P. Graves, | 11 |
| Havelock’s Memoirs, by J. C. Marshman, | 12 |
| Macaulay’s Life and Letters, by G. O. Trevelyan, | 15 |
| Malmesbury’s Memoirs, | 16 |
| Maunder’s Biographical Treasury, | 16 |
| Mendelssohn’s Letters, | 17 |
| Mill (James), a Biography, by A. Bain, | 6 |
| Mill (John Stuart), a Criticism, by A. Bain, | 6 |
| Mill’s (J. S.) Autobiography, | 17 |
| Mozley’s Reminiscences of Oriel College, &c., | 18 |
| — Towns, Villages, &c., | 18 |
| Müller’s (Max) Biographical Essays, | 18 |
| Pasolini’s Memoir, | 19 |
| Pasteur’s Life and Labours, | 19 |
| Shakespeare’s Life, by J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps, | 21 |
| Stephen’s Ecclesiastical Biography, | 21 |
| Taylor’s (Sir Henry) Autobiography, | 22 |
| Wellington’s Life, by G. R. Gleig, | 23 |
BOTANY and GARDENING.
| Allen’s Flowers and their Pedigrees, | 4 |
| De Caisne & Le Maout’s Botany, | 8 |
| Lindley’s Treasury of Botany, | 14 |
| Loudon’s Encyclopædia of Gardening, | 14 |
| — Encyclopædia of Plants, | 14 |
| Rivers’ Orchard-House, | 20 |
| — Rose Amateur’s Guide, | 20 |
| Thomé’s Botany, | 22 |
CHEMISTRY.
| Armstrong’s Organic Chemistry, | 22 |
| Kolbe’s Inorganic Chemistry, | 13 |
| Miller’s Elements of Chemistry, | 17 |
| — Inorganic Chemistry, | 17 |
| Thorpe & Muir’s Qualitative Analysis, | 22 |
| —’s Quantitative Analysis, | 22 |
| Tilden’s Chemical Philosophy, | 22 |
| Watts’ Dictionary of Chemistry, | 23 |
CLASSICAL LANGUAGES, LITERATURE, and ANTIQUITIES.
| Æschylus Eumenides, Edited and Translated by Davies, | 4 |
| Aristophanes’ The Acharnians, translated, | 5 |
| Aristotle’s Works, | 5 |
| Becker’s Charicles, | 6 |
| — Gallus, | 6 |
| Cicero’s Correspondence, by Tyrrell, | 7 |
| Homer’s Iliad, translated by Cayley, | 12 |
| — Green, | 12 |
| Hort’s The New Pantheon, | 12 |
| Mahaffy’s Classical Greek Literature, | 16 |
| Perry’s Greek and Roman Sculpture, | 19 |
| Rich’s Dictionary of Antiquities, | 20 |
| Simcox’s History of Latin Literature, | 21 |
| Sophocles’ Works, | 21 |
| Virgil’s Ænid, translated by Conington, | 7 |
| — Poems, | 7 |
| — Works, with Notes by Kennedy, | 23 |
| Witt’s Myths of Hellas, | 24 |
| — The Trojan War, | 24 |
| — The Wanderings of Ulysses, | 24 |
COOKERY, DOMESTIC ECONOMY, &c.
| Acton’s Modern Cookery, | 4 |
| Buckton’s Food and Home Cookery, | 7 |
| Reeve’s Cookery and Housekeeping, | 20 |
ENCYCLOPÆDIAS, DICTIONARIES, and BOOKS of REFERENCE.
| Ayre’s Bible Treasury, | 5 |
| Blackley’s German Dictionary, | 6 |
| Brande’s Dict. of Science, Literature, and Art, | 6 |
| Cabinet Lawyer (The), | 7 |
| Cates’ Dictionary of Biography, | 7 |
| Contanseau’s French Dictionaries, | 8 |
| Gwilt’s Encyclopædia of Architecture, | 11 |
| Johnston’s General Dictionary of Geography, | 13 |
| Latham’s English Dictionaries, | 14 |
| Liddell & Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon, | 14 |
| Lindley & Moore’s Treasury of Botany, | 14 |
| Longman’s German Dictionary, | 14 |
| Loudon’s Encyclopædia of Agriculture, | 14 |
| — Gardening, | 14 |
| — Plants, | 14 |
| M’Culloch’s Dictionary of Commerce, | 16 |
| Maunder’s Treasuries, | 16 |
| Quain’s Dictionary of Medicine, | 20 |
| Rich’s Dictionary of Antiquities, | 20 |
| Roget’s English Thesaurus, | 20 |
| Ure’s Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, &c., | 23 |
| White’s Latin Dictionaries, | 23 |
| Willich’s Popular Tables, | 24 |
| Yonge’s English-Greek Dictionary, | 24 |
ENGINEERING, MECHANICS, MANUFACTURES, &c.
| Anderson’s Strength of Materials, | 22 |
| Barry’s Railway Appliances, | 22 |
| Bourne’s Works on the Steam Engine, | 6 |
| Culley’s Handbook of Practical Telegraphy, | 8 |
| Edwards’ Our Seamarks, | 9 |
| Fairbairn’s Mills and Millwork, | 10 |
| — Useful Information for Engineers, | 10 |
| Goodeve’s Elements of Mechanism, | 11 |
| — Principles of Mechanics, | 11 |
| Gore’s Electro-Metallurgy, | 22 |
| Gwilt’s Encyclopædia of Architecture, | 11 |
| Jackson’s Aid to Engineering Solution, | 13 |
| Mitchell’s Practical Assaying, | 17 |
| Northcott’s Lathes and Turning, | 18 |
| Piesse’s Art of Perfumery, | 19 |
| Preece & Sivewright’s Telegraphy, | 22 |
| Sennett’s Marine Steam Engine, | 21 |
| Shelley’s Workshop Appliances, | 22 |
| Swinton’s Electric Lighting, | 22 |
| Unwin’s Machine Design, | 22 |
| Ure’s Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, & Mines, | 23 |
ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE.
| Arnold’s English Poetry and Prose, | 5 |
| — Manual of English Literature, | 5 |
| Latham’s English Dictionaries, | 14 |
| — Handbook of English Language, | 14 |
| Roget’s English Thesaurus, | 20 |
| Whately’s English Synonyms, | 23 |
HISTORY, POLITICS, HISTORICAL MEMOIRS, and CRITICISM.
| Amos’ Fifty Years of the English Constitution, | 4 |
| — Primer of the English Constitution, | 4 |
| Arnold’s Lectures on Modern History, | 5 |
| Beaconsfield’s Selected Speeches, | 6 |
| Boultbee’s History of the Church of England, | 6 |
| Bramston & Leroy’s Historic Winchester, | 6 |
| Buckle’s History of Civilisation, | 7 |
| Chesney’s Waterloo Lectures, | 7 |
| Cox’s General History of Greece, | 8 |
| — Lives of Greek Statesmen, | 8 |
| Creighton’s History of the Papacy, | 8 |
| De Tocqueville’s Democracy in America, | 8 |
| Doyle’s The English in America, | 9 |
| Epochs of Ancient History, | 9 |
| — Modern History, | 9 |
| Freeman’s Historical Geography of Europe, | 10 |
| Froude’s History of England, | 10 |
| — Short Studies, | 10 |
| — The English in Ireland, | 10 |
| Gardiner’s History of England, 1603-42, | 10 |
| — Outline of English History, | 10 |
| Grant’s University of Edinburgh, | 11 |
| Greville’s Journal, | 11 |
| Hickson’s Ireland in the 17th Century, | 12 |
| Lecky’s History of England, | 14 |
| — European Morals, | 14 |
| — Rationalism in Europe, | 14 |
| — Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland, | 14 |
| Lewes’ History of Philosophy, | 14 |
| Longman’s (W.) Lectures on History of England, | 14 |
| — Life and Times of Edward III., | 14 |
| — (F. W.) Frederick the Great, | 14 |
| Macaulay’s Complete Works, | 15 |
| — Critical and Historical Essays, | 15 |
| — History of England, | 15 |
| — Speeches, | 15 |
| Maunder’s Historical Treasury, | 16 |
| Maxwell’s Don John of Austria, | 16 |
| May’s Constitutional Hist. of Eng. 1760-1870, | 16 |
| — Democracy in Europe, | 16 |
| Merivale’s Fall of the Roman Republic, | 17 |
| — General History of Rome, | 17 |
| — Romans under the Empire, | 17 |
| — The Roman Triumvirates, | 17 |
| Noble’s The Russian Revolt, | 18 |
| Rawlinson’s Seventh Great Oriental Monarchy, | 20 |
| Seebohm’s English Village Community, | 20 |
| — The Oxford Reformers, | 20 |
| — The Protestant Revolution, | 20 |
| Short’s History of the Church of England, | 21 |
| Smith’s Carthage and the Carthaginians, | 21 |
| Taylor’s History of India, | 22 |
| Walpole’s History of England, 1815-41, | 23 |
| Wylie’s England under Henry IV., | 24 |
ILLUSTRATED BOOKS and BOOKS on ART.
| Dresser’s Japan; its Architecture, &c., | 9 |
| Eastlake’s Five Great Painters, | 9 |
| — Hints on Household Taste, | 9 |
| — Notes on Foreign Picture Galleries, | 9 |
| Jameson’s (Mrs.) Works, | 13 |
| Lang’s (A.) Princess Nobody, illus. by R. Doyle, | 14 |
| Macaulay’s (Lord) Lays, illustrated by Scharf,15 | |
| — illustrated by Weguelin, | 15 |
| Moore’s Irish Melodies, illustrated by Maclise, | 18 |
| — Lalla Rookh, illustrated by Tenniel, | 18 |
| New Testament (The), illustrated, | 18 |
| Perry’s Greek and Roman Sculpture, | 19 |
MEDICINE and SURGERY.
| Bull’s Hints to Mothers, | 7 |
| — Maternal Management of Children, | 7 |
| Coats’ Manual of Pathology, | 7 |
| Dickinson On Renal and Urinary Affections, | 9 |
| Erichsen’s Concussion of the Spine, | 10 |
| — Science and Art of Surgery, | 10 |
| Garrod’s Materia Medica, | 11 |
| — Treatise on Gout, | 11 |
| Hassall’s Inhalation Treatment of Disease, | 12 |
| Haward’s Orthopædic Surgery, | 12 |
| Hewitt’s Diseases of Women, | 12 |
| — Mechanic. System of Uterine Pathology, | 12 |
| Holmes’ System of Surgery, | 12 |
| Husband’s Questions in Anatomy, | 13 |
| Jones’ The Health of the Senses, | 13 |
| Little’s In-Knee Distortion, | 14 |
| Liveing’s Works on Skin Diseases, | 14 |
| Longmore’s Gunshot Injuries, | 14 |
| Mackenzie’s Use of the Laryngoscope, | 15 |
| Macnamara’s Diseases of Himalayan Districts, | 16 |
| Morehead’s Disease in India, | 18 |
| Murchison’s Continued Fevers of Great Britain, | 18 |
| — Diseases of the Liver, | 18 |
| Paget’s Clinical Lectures and Essays, | 19 |
| — Lectures on Surgical Pathology, | 19 |
| Pereira’s Materia Medica, | 19 |
| Quain’s Dictionary of Medicine, | 20 |
| Salter’s Dental Pathology and Surgery, | 20 |
| Smith’s Handbook for Midwives, | 21 |
| Thomson’s Conspectus, by Birkett, | 22 |
| Watson’s Principles and Practice of Physic, | 23 |
| West’s Diseases of Infancy and Childhood, | 23 |
MENTAL and POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY, FINANCE, &c.
MISCELLANEOUS WORKS.
| A. K. H. B., Essays and Contributions of, | 4 |
| Arnold’s (Dr.) Miscellaneous Works, | 5 |
| Bagehot’s Literary Studies, | 5 |
| Beaconsfield Birthday Book (The), | 6 |
| Beaconsfield’s Wit and Wisdom, | 6 |
| Evans’ Bronze Implements of Great Britain, | 10 |
| Farrar’s Language and Languages, | 10 |
| French’s Drink in England, | 10 |
| Johnson’s Patentee’s Manual, | 13 |
| Longman’s Magazine, | 14 |
| Macaulay’s (Lord) Works, Selections from, | 15 |
| Müller’s (Max) Works, | 18 |
| Peel’s A Highland Gathering, | 19 |
| Smith’s (Sydney) Wit and Wisdom, | 21 |
| Verney’s (Lady) Peasant Properties, | 23 |
NATURAL HISTORY (POPULAR).
| Dixon’s Rural Bird Life, | 9 |
| Hartwig’s (Dr. G.) Works, | 11 |
| Maunder’s Treasury of Natural History, | 16 |
| Stanley’s Familiar History of Birds, | 21 |
| Wood’s (Rev. J. G.) Works, | 24 |
POETICAL WORKS.
| Bailey’s Festus, | 5 |
| Dante’s Divine Comedy, translated by Minchin, | 8 |
| Goethe’s Faust, translated, | 11 |
| Homer’s Iliad, translated by Cayley, | 12 |
| — translated by Green, | 12 |
| Ingelow’s Poetical Works, | 13 |
| Macaulay’s (Lord) Lays of Ancient Rome, | 15 |
| Macdonald’s A Book of Strife, | 15 |
| Pennell’s ‘From Grave to Gay’, | 19 |
| Reader’s Voices from Flower-Land, | 20 |
| Shakespeare, Bowdler’s Family Edition, | 21 |
| — Hamlet, by George Macdonald, | 15 |
| Southey’s Poetical Works, | 21 |
| Stevenson’s Child’s Garden of Poems, | 21 |
| Virgil’s Æneid, translated by Conington, | 23 |
| — Poems, translated by Conington, | 23 |
SPORTS and PASTIMES.
| Dead Shot (The), by Marksman, | 8 |
| Francis’ Book on Angling, | 10 |
| Jefferies’ Red Deer, | 13 |
| Longman’s Chess Openings, | 14 |
| Pole’s The Modern Game of Whist, | 19 |
| Ronalds’ Fly-Fisher’s Entomology, | 20 |
| Verney’s Chess Eccentricities, | 23 |
| Walker’s The Correct Card, | 23 |
| Wilcocks’ The Sea-Fisherman, | 24 |
SCIENTIFIC WORKS (General).
| Arnott’s Elements of Physics, | 5 |
| Bauerman’s Descriptive Mineralogy, | 22 |
| — Systematic Mineralogy, | 22 |
| Brande’s Dictionary of Science &c., | 6 |
| Buckton’s Our Dwellings &c., | 7 |
| Ganot’s Natural Philosophy, | 10 |
| — Physics, | 10 |
| Grove’s Correlation of Physical Forces, | 11 |
| Haughton’s Lectures on Physical Geography, | 12 |
| Helmholtz Scientific Lectures, | 12 |
| — On the Sensation of Tone, | 12 |
| Hullah’s History of Modern Music, | 12 |
| — Transition Period of Musical History, | 12 |
| Kerl’s Treatise on Metallurgy, | 13 |
| ‘Knowledge’ Library (The), | 20 |
| Lloyd’s Treatise on Magnetism, | 14 |
| Macfarren’s Lectures on Harmony, | 15 |
| Maunder’s Scientific Treasury, | 16 |
| Proctor’s (R. A.) Works, | 19 |
| Rutley’s The Study of Rocks, | 22 |
| Schäfer’s Essentials of Histology, | 20 |
| Schellen’s Spectrum Analysis, | 20 |
| Smith’s Air and Rain, | 21 |
| Text-books of Science, | 22 |
| Tyndall’s (Prof.) Works, 22, | 23 |
| Wilson’s Manual of Health Science, | 24 |
THEOLOGY and RELIGION.
| Arnold’s (Dr.) Sermons, | 5 |
| Ayre’s Treasury of Bible Knowledge, | 5 |
| Boultbee’s Commentary on the 39 Articles, | 6 |
| Browne’s Exposition of the 39 Articles, | 7 |
| Calvert’s Wife’s Manual, | 7 |
| Colenso’s Pentateuch and Book of Joshua, | 7 |
| Conder’s Handbook to the Bible, | 7 |
| Conybeare and Howson’s St. Paul, | 8 |
| Davidson’s Introduction to the New Testament, | 8 |
| Dewes’ Life and Letters of St. Paul, | 8 |
| Edersheim’s Jesus the Messiah, | 9 |
| — Warburton Lectures, | 9 |
| Ellicott’s Commentary on St. Paul’s Epistles, | 9 |
| — Lectures on the Life of Our Lord, | 9 |
| Ewald’s Antiquities of Israel, | 10 |
| — History of Israel, | 10 |
| Hobart’s Medical Language of St. Luke, | 12 |
| Hopkins’ Christ the Consoler, | 12 |
| Jukes’ (Rev. A.) Works, | 13 |
| Kalisch’s Works, | 13 |
| Lyra Germanica, | 15 |
| Macdonald’s Unspoken Sermons (second series), | 15 |
| Manning’s Temporal Mission of the Holy Ghost, | 16 |
| Martineau’s Endeavours after the Christian Life, | 16 |
| — Hours of Thought, | 16 |
| Monsell’s Spiritual Songs, | 17 |
| Müller’s (Max) Origin and Growth of Religion, | 18 |
| — Science of Religion, | 18 |
| Newman’s (Cardinal) Works, | 18 |
| Rogers’ The Eclipse of Faith, and Defence, | 20 |
| Sewell’s (Miss) Devotional Works, | 21 |
| Smith’s Shipwreck of St. Paul, | 21 |
| Supernatural Religion, | 22 |
| Taylor’s (Jeremy) Entire Works, | 22 |
TRAVELS, ADVENTURES, GUIDE BOOKS, &c.
| Aldridge’s Ranch Notes, | 4 |
| Alpine Club (The) Map of Switzerland, | 4 |
| Baker’s Eight Years in Ceylon, | 5 |
| — Rifle and Hound in Ceylon, | 5 |
| Ball’s Alpine Guide, | 4 |
| Bent’s The Cyclades, | 6 |
| Brassey’s (Lady) Works, 6, | 7 |
| Crawford’s Across the Pampas and the Andes, | 8 |
| Dent’s Above the Snow Line, | 8 |
| Hassall’s San Remo, | 12 |
| Howitt’s Visits to Remarkable Places, | 12 |
| Johnston’s Dictionary of Geography, | 13 |
| Maritime Alps (The), | 16 |
| Maunder’s Treasury of Geography, | 16 |
| Three in Norway, | 22 |
WORKS of FICTION.
| Anstey’s The Black Poodle, &c., | 5 |
| Antinous, by George Taylor, | 5 |
| Atelier du Lys (The), | 17 |
| Atherstone Priory, | 17 |
| Beaconsfield’s (Lord) Novels and Tales, | 6 |
| Burgomaster’s Family (The), | 17 |
| Elsa and her Vulture, | 17 |
| Harte’s (Bret) By Shore and Sedge, | 12 |
| — In the Carquinez Woods, | 17 |
| — On the Frontier, | 12 |
| In the Olden Time, | 13 |
| Mademoiselle Mori, | 17 |
| Modern Novelist’s Library (The), | 17 |
| Oliphant’s (Mrs.) In Trust, | 17 |
| — Madam, | 18 |
| Payn’s Thicker than Water, | 17 |
| Reader’s Fairy Prince Follow-my-Lead, | 20 |
| Sewell’s (Miss) Stories and Tales, | 21 |
| Six Sisters of the Valleys (The), | 17 |
| Stevenson’s The Dynamiter, | 21 |
| Sturgis’ My Friends and I, | 21 |
| Trollope’s (Anthony) Barchester Towers, | 17 |
| — The Warden, | 17 |
| Unawares, | 17 |
| Whyte-Melville’s (Major) Novels, | 16 |
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