FOOTNOTES:
[435] Cotton’s Fasti; Brady’s Episcopal Succession.
[436] Considerations touching Munster, 1587, No. 70; Andrew Trollope to Walsingham, Oct. 26, 1587. Sir William Russell is said to have advised liberal grants of church lands to the nobility of both persuasions, ‘who would then hold their religion with their lands, in capite.’
[437] Spenser’s View of the State of Ireland, 1596. Some of the poet’s words might suggest Swift’s savage outburst about the worthy divines appointed to Irish sees who were uniformly robbed and murdered on Hounslow Heath ‘by the highwaymen frequenting that common, who seize upon their robes and patents, come over to Ireland, and are consecrated bishops in their stead.’
[438] Cornelius, bishop of Killaloe, to O’Rourke, Feb. 13, 1596; Sir John Dowdall to Cecil, March 9, 1596; Memorial among the Rawlinson MSS. July 28, 1592, printed in Irish Arch. Journal, i. 80; Dominic O’Colan’s confession, July 9, 1602.
[439] Pelham to Walsingham, Dec. 7, 1579; Bishop Middleton to Walsingham, June 29, July 21, and Aug. 19, 1580. ‘They call their city young Rochelle; I pray God it be not ironice dictum.’ And see John Shearman, schoolmaster of Waterford, to Primate Long, July 12, 1585.
[440] Bishop Lyon to Burghley, Sept. 23, 1595. The State Papers contain evidence that this was an energetic and liberal bishop: he built a church at Ross with 150l. of his own money, also a free school and a bridge.
[441] Rawlinson MS. July 28, 1592, printed in Irish Arch. Journal, i. 80. Pacata Hibernica, book i. chap. xviii. Letter from Lord Cahir to Creagh, MS. Hatfield; Brady’s Episcopal Succession.
[442] Rawlinson MS. ut sup.; Brady’s Episcopal Succession; Four Masters, 1601. In July 1588 O’Gallagher, as ‘Vice-Primas,’ delegates his authority to O’Devany for one year: ‘quoniam propter imminentia pericula ac discrimina interitus vitæ, personaliter terras illas visitare nequimus.’ See Fitzwilliam to Burghley, Oct. 26, 1588.
[443] Archbishop Lancaster to Walsingham, April 26, 1581; Sir N. White to Burghley, Feb. 3, 1589; Archbishop Garvey to Burghley, Feb. 20, 1592; Ware’s Bishops.
[444] Archbishop Long to Burghley, Jan. 20, 1585, and June 10; to Walsingham, July 8; Archbishop Henry Ussher to Burghley, April 10, 1596.
[445] Ware’s Bishops; Cotton’s Fasti; Archbishop Jones to Salisbury, Aug. 3, 1607; Note of abuses, &c. in Cashel, Emly, Waterford, and Lismore, in the Chancellor Archbishop of Dublin’s hand, and signed by him, Aug. 4, 1607. Writing to Cecil Feb. 20, 1604, Sir John Davies says Magrath held seventy-seven spiritual livings besides his four bishoprics.
[446] Sir John Davies to Cecil, Feb. 20, 1604, and May 4, 1606; certificates to Dublin and Meath dioceses, calendared under 1604, Nos. 267 and 268.
[447] The charter, as well as the deed of gift from the city of Dublin, are in Morrin’s Patent Rolls, ii. p. 345, and see p. 21; Taylor’s History of the University. There is a good account, from a Presbyterian point of view, in Killen’s Ecclesiastical History, vol. i. pp. 447-455.
[448] Neal’s History of the Puritans, vol. i., for Travers; Lowry’s Hamilton MSS., pp. 1-9, and Bruce’s Correspondence of James VI. and Cecil, for Fullerton and Hamilton. Hibernia Ignatiana, pp. 37 and 39. ‘Litteræ Annuæ’ of the Irish Jesuits, 1609, in Spicilegium Ossoriense.
[449] O’Sullivan, tom. iv. lib. i. cap. 17; Spicilegium Ossoriense, vol. i. p. 133.
[450] Gilbert’s History of Dublin, vol. i. pp. 29, 186, 383, 385; Ball’s Reformed Church of Ireland, chaps. iii. and iv.; Cotton’s Fasti; Bedell’s Life, printed by the Camden Society, and the articles on Bedell, Daniel, and Robert Boyle in the new Dictionary of National Biography. William Kearney, who printed the proclamation against Tyrone in 1595, may have been related to the Treasurer of St. Patrick’s; see above chap. xlv.
[451] William Lynch to Sir James Macintosh, printed in the Calendar of S. P. Ireland, 1606-8, p. civ; Francis Bacon to Cecil, 1602, printed by Spedding, pp. 48, 49. A commission to ‘execute the Acts concerning the Queen’s supremacy,’ was issued in 1594, Morrin’s Patent Rolls, ii. 290. Loftus and Jones were the only prelates commissioned, and very little was done.
[INDEX TO THE THIRD VOLUME.]
Agnes, Anyas, or Anes, Francis, ‘Burgomaster’ of Youghal, [35], [107]
Agnes, Black: see MacDonnell, Ineen Duive
Aguila or Aquila, Don Juan de, Spanish commander at Kinsale, chap. 51 passim, [424]
Aherlow, Glen of, Spenser’s Arlo, [27], [41], [45], [57], [95], [107], [136], [377], [379];
inseparably connected with Spenser, [444]
Aileach, [373]
Alford, Captain, [126], [127], [377]
— Doctor, Jesuit, [24], [29], [31], [234]
— John, [133]
Alva, Duke of, [76]
America, [15]
Anderson, Sir Edmund, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas in England, [198], [231]
Angelis, [48]
Anglesea Road, [404]
Anias, John, [426]
Antonio, Don, Portuguese pretender, [119]
Antrim County, [141], [146], [186]
— Randal MacDonnell, 1st Earl of, [436]: see MacDonnell
Antwerp, [145], [188], [280], [447], [472]
Anyas: see Agnes
Aranda, Don Martin de, [182]
Archer, James, Jesuit, ‘bewitches’ a lord, [309];
his ideas about heretics, [350];
his connection with Ormonde’s capture, [355]-[357];
‘raises the devil,’ [420], [421], [424];
he flies to Spain, [425], [472]
Ardcanny, [78]
Ardee, [340]
Ardfert, [69], [95], [102], [378]
Ardmayle, [404]
Ardnarea, [155]
Ards, in Down, called a county, [141]
Argyle, Colin Campbell, 6th Earl of, [138]
Ariosto, [345]
Arlo: see Aherlow
Armada, the Spanish Invincible, [149], [165], chap. 42 passim, [206], [209], [285], [290]
Armagh, [9], [254], [256], [265], [276], [277], [283], [286], [287];
an advanced military position, [296]-[299], [339], [372], [392], [393], [418]
— County, [227];
claimed as part of Tyrone, [242], [243], [260], [262]
— Archbishopric of, [465]: see Lancaster, Long, Garvey, Ussher, &c. and for titular primates under MacGauran and Lombard
Arney River, [244]
Aroasian Canons, [470]
Arran, James Stewart, Earl of, [128]
— Islands, [175]
Arrow, Lough, [244]
Arthegal, [74], [458]: see Arthur Lord Grey de Wilton
Ascoli, Prince of, [174]
Askeaton, [28], [30], [32], [35], [36], [41], [42];
taken from Desmond, [43], [44]-[46], [58];
gallantly defended by Barkley, [306], [327], [379]
Assaroe Abbey, [285]
Asturias, [46]
Athenry, [43], [44], [204], [279]
— Bermingham Baron of, [147]
Atherton, Captain, [329]
Athlone, [39], [43], [44], [65], [137], [159], [167], [172], [190], [194], [244], [256], [263], [271], [278], [301], [433], [452], [454]
Atkinson, Captain, [427]
Augher, [429]
Augustinians, [193]
Austria, [352]
Avancini, Giovanni, [178]
Avaux, Jean-Antoine Comte de, [414]
Avila, Don Christobal de, [182]
Avon River, at Bristol, [415]
Avonmore River, in Wicklow, [329]
Ayr, [451]
Azores, [76], [118], [251], [332]
Babington’s conspiracy, [231]
Bacchus, [69]
Bacon, Francis, [217];
his advice to Essex, [294]
his ideas about toleration, [474]-[476]
Bagenal, Sir Nicholas, [55];
his relations with Perrott, [159], [160], [223]
— Sir Henry, son of the foregoing, [9], [61], [138];
his quarrel with Tyrone, [223]-[225], [234]-[240], [242], [245], [252], [256], [257];
his defeat and death at the Yellow Ford, [297], [310], [313], [342], [410], [439]
— Mabel, sister of Sir Henry, Countess of Tyrone, her elopement, [223]-[225], [292]
— Sir Samuel, [296], [310], [370], [444]
— Dudley, [168]
Balla, [154]
Ballagh-a-line, or Ballyline, [175]
Ballard, John, the conspirator, [154]
Ballibrennan, [320]
Ballinacor, [135], [246], [247], [274], [277], [387]
Ballinacurra, [85]
Ballinakill, [355]
Ballingarry, [303]
Ballinhassig, [361]
Ballivodig, [85]
Ballybrittas, [357]
Ballycastle, in Antrim, [138], [139], [151]
Ballycroy, [178]
Ballyhack, [330]
Ballyhoura Hills, [328]
Ballymore Eustace, [61]
Ballymote, [191], [233], [263], [310], [365], [403]
Ballyragget, [309], [324], [355]
Ballysadare, [427]
Ballyshannon, its strategic importance, [137], [196], [227], [236], [253], [270], [276];
great struggle for it, [284]-[286], [363], [427];
‘that long desired place,’ [428];
the fishery there, [447]
held by the Spaniards, [406], [412]-[414], [419]
Baltinglas, James Eustace, Viscount, his rebellion, [51]-[55], [57], [59], [60], [70], [82], [83], [92], [99], [116], [144], [164], [193]
Bancroft, Richard, prebendary of St. Patrick’s, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, [134]
Bandon River, [353], [405], [406]
Bann River, [189], [266], [430], [447]
Bannada Abbey, [155]
Bantry Bay, [419]
— Barony of, [430]
Barbary, [10]
Barkley, Captain, M.P. for Antrim, [141]
— Captain Francis, his valiant defence of Askeaton, [306], [307]
Barnewall, Christopher, [116], [117]
— Sir Patrick, [470]
Barrow River, [135], [324], [447]
Barry or Barrymore, James FitzRichard Barry, Viscount (died 1581), [34], [45], [46], [50], [56], [85], [112], [124], [234]
— — — David Barry, Viscount, son and successor of the foregoing, [240], [241], [306];
his loyalty, [307], [312], [328];
persecuted by Tyrone, [353], [360], [365], [390], [401], [404], [430]
Barry, John, [307]
Bartoni, Alexander, [74]
Basques, Biskyes, Biscayans, [70]
Bath, [167]
Baxter, Nathaniel, [457]
Bayonne, [164]
Beaumont, Count Harley de, [314], [454]
Becher, or Beecher, Fane, [199]
— Sir William, [305]
Becket, Thomas, [52]
Bedell, William, Bishop of Kilmore from 1629, [473]
Bedford, Francis, Earl of, [94], [236]
Belfast, [289]
Bellaclinthe, [341]
Belleek, in Fermanagh, [154], [196], [234], [236], [284], [286]
— in Mayo, [26]
Belvelly, [87]
Bere, Berehaven, Bere Island, [48], [95], [412], [413], [421], [430], [447]
Bermingham: see Baron of Athenry
— or Birmingham Tower, in Dublin Castle, [28]
Berwick, [40]
Bingham, Sir Richard, [65], [69];
his smart seamanship, [71];
Chief Commissioner of Connaught, [124], [125], [129];
M.P. for Roscommon, [141];
makes a composition in Connaught, [147];
crushes the Scots at Ardnarea, [151]-[157], [159];
goes to Holland, [166]-[168], [170], [177];
his account of the Armada, [188], [191], [192];
his struggles in Connaught, [203]-[216], [229], [233], [253], [254];
his great strategic idea, [256], [260], [263], [269], [270];
in disgrace, [271];
his ideas adopted in his absence, [276], [278], [279], [294];
restored to favour before his death, [310], [314], [352], [427], [439]
— George, brother of the foregoing, [189], [191], [208], [216], [254]
— John, brother of the two foregoing, [260], [270]
— George Oge, cousin of the three foregoing, [253]
Biscayans or Biskyes: see Basques
Blackford, [324]
Blackfriars, Dublin, [132]
Blacksod Bay, [178]
Blackwater, river and fort in Ulster (this is Spenser’s Blackwater), [9], [92], [137];
land reserved by the Crown, [170], [254], [262];
new fort built, [284];
gallant defence, [286], [287], [289], [291];
great disaster in attempting relief, [294], [295], [296], [300], [329], [339], [369], [392], [393], [418], [455]
Blackwater River, in Munster, [39], [41], [47], [94], [95], [103], [112], [137], [199], [306], [328], [410]
Blake, James, [426]
Blaskets, islands and sound, [45], [173], [174], [188]
Blind Abbot: see William Burke
Blount, Sir Christopher, [294], [319], [323], [328], [331], [335], [339]
Bodley, Sir Thomas, [473]
— Captain Josiah, brother of the foregoing, [404], [435], [449], [455], [456]
Bologna, Bolognese, [74], [77]
Bolsena, [77]
Bonville family, [48]
Bordeaux, [472]
Borgias, the, [462]
Bostock, Captain John, [422]
Bothwell, [194]
Bourchier, Sir George, [35], [45], [56], [58], [68], [84]
Boylagh, in Donegal, [189]
Boyle, Richard, afterwards Earl of Cork, [199], [382];
his remarkable journey to London, [414];
his connection with Spenser, [457]
— Robert, son of the foregoing, [473]
— Elizabeth, cousin of the foregoing, married to Edmund Spenser, [457]
— in Roscommon, [244], [263], [301], [336], [337], [429], [431]
Boyne River, [392]
Bramhall, John, Bishop of Derry, translated to Armagh in 1661, [463]
Brefny O’Rourke, [79]: see Leitrim
Brest, [11]
Brewett, Miles, [164]
Bridgewater, [52]
Bristol, [12], [25], [26], [83], [249], [252], [381], [415]
Broadhaven, [376]
Brooke, Sir Calisthenes, his opinion of Irish service, [286], [344]
Browne, or Brown, Charles, [67], [77]
Browne, Archbishop, [132]
— John, [204]
— Sir Valentine, [114], [126], [127], [200]
— Sir Nicholas, son of the foregoing, [200], [293], [443]
— Sir Valentine, the younger, brother of Sir Nicholas, married to a Desmond, [384]
Bruges, [145]
Bruree, [46]
Bryskett, Ludovic, [85], [457]
Buckhurst, Lord Treasurer, [265], [395], [396]
Buckingham, George Villiers, first Duke of, [384]
Bunamargey Abbey, [138]
Bunboys, [180]
Bundrowes, [236]
Bungunder, [70]
Buoncompagno, Giacomo, son of Pope Gregory XIII, [119]
Burgh, or Borough, Thomas, Lord, Lord Deputy, [273], [277], [278], chap. 46 passim, [295], [439]
Burgh, Lady Frances, [287]
Burghley, Lord Treasurer, [36];
his exhortation to Ormonde, [38], [73], [89], [96], [97], [100], [101], [111], [112], [123], [132], [134], [135], [137], [149], [157], [158], [163], [166], [209], [224];
friendly to Sir John Perrott, [228], [229];
his consideration for Fitzwilliam, [239], [241];
he makes the clergy pay for the war, [250], [255];
his foresight, [260];
his opinion of Russell, [264], [265], [271];
his feeling for Norris, [280];
effect of his death on Essex, [313], [314], [395]
Burkes, or De Burghs of Co. Galway (Upper Burkes), [136], [152], [269], [406], [409];
for Earls of Clanricarde see under Clanricarde
Burke, or De Burgh, Ulick, Earl of Clanricarde, son of the foregoing: see Clanricarde
Burke, Sir John Shamrock, half-brother of the foregoing, created Baron of Leitrim, his rebellion, [79], [81], [84];
his violent end, [119];
his character and popularity, [120], [253], [302], [430]
— William, brother or half-brother of the two foregoing, in rebellion, [79], [84];
Burke, Redmond, son of Sir John Shamrock, [302], [309]
— William, brother of the foregoing, [430]
— Lady Mary, sister or half-sister of Ulick, John, and William, married to Brian O’Rourke [120], [121], [214]
— Lady Honora, sister of the foregoing, [79]
Burkes, or Bourkes of Co. Mayo (Lower Burkes), [153]-[157], [178], [204]-[216], [260], [263], [269], [270], [278], [406]
Burke, Redmond Na Scuab (of the besoms), [253]
— Sir Richard MacOliver, [92], [93], [147]
— Richard, called the ‘Devil’s Hook,’ [178], [204], [205]
— — called ‘Richard in iron,’ married to Grace O’Malley, [43], [44], [92], [93]
— Oge, called Fal fo Erinn (hedge or pale of Ireland) hanged by Bingham [151], [152], [211]
— Theobald, known as Tibbot ne Long (of the ships), [38], [366], [427]
— — calling himself MacWilliam Iochtar, [260], [365], [368]
— William, calling himself MacWilliam Iochtar and known as the ‘Blind Abbot,’ [205], [207], [211], [215]
— MacDavid, [431]
— MacWilliam, [44]
Burkes, or Bourkes, of Clanwilliam, in Limerick, [326]
Burke, Sir William, chief of the Limerick Burkes and created Baron of Castle Connell, [45]
— Theobald, son of the foregoing, [23]
Burnell, Henry, [143]
Bute, [138]
Butler family, [41], [86], [308], and see under Ormonde, Dunboyne, Cahir, and Mountgarret
— Piers, Ormonde’s brother, [65], [96]
— Lady Elizabeth, Ormonde’s daughter, afterwards married to Sir Richard Preston, [359], [384]
— Sir Theobald, afterwards Baron of Cahir of Cahir, [31]
Butler, James Galdie, of Cahir, brother of Thomas Lord Cahir, [325], [326]
— Eleanor, sister of Richard Lord Mountgarret, married to Thomas Lord Cahir, [309]
— Piers, Ormonde’s natural son, [117]
Butleraboo, [38]
Buttevant, [46]
Button, Captain, [401]
besieged by Essex, [325], [329], [332], [377]
— Thomas Butler, Baron of, [325], [333], [465]
Calderon, Coco, [173]
Callan, in Kilkenny, [141]
— River, in Armagh, [298]
Cambridge, [163]
Campbell, Lady Agnes, married to Tirlogh Luineach O’Neill, [130]
Campion, the Jesuit, [52], [455]
Campo, Alonso del, [408]
Canterbury: see Bancroft
Canutius, [78]
Caraçena, Marquis of, [425]
Carbery, in Cork, [201]
Carbury, in Sligo, [208]
Carew, Sir George, afterwards Earl of Totnes, Master of the Ordnance 1588, Lord President of Munster 1600, [36], [45];
at Glenmalure, [61]-[63], [160], [168], [172], [192], [217], [218];
consulted in England [239], [305];
Essex dislikes him, [314], [326], [328];
President of Munster, [353]-[356], [359]-[361], [363]-[365], [378]-[382], [384], [390], [392], [396];
his services before Kinsale, [399], [400], [402]-[404], [406], [407], [412]-[414], [416];
his reduction of Munster [419]-[424];
his spies, [423];
very tired of Ireland, [433], [434], [448];
— Sir Peter, the younger, brother of the foregoing, [61]-[63]
— Castle, in Pembrokeshire, [123]
— — near Bantry, [419]
Carey, Sir George, Vice-Treasurer, [345], [395], [436]
Carleile, Captain, [138], [139]
Carlingford, [141], [276], [320], [369], [372]
Carlos, Don, [258]
Carlow, [6], [8], [371], [443]
Carlow County, [20], [88], [166], [323]
Carnew, [330]
Carrickfergus, [8], [138], [139], [141], [261], [289], [290], [320], [322], [361], [394], [396], [418]
Carrigadrohid, [55]
Carrigafoyle, [30];
taken by Pelham [42]-[44], [378], [406], [420]
Carrigaline River, [194], [400], [401], [419], [466]
Carriganass, [420]
Carriganeady: see Castle Hyde
Carriglea, [312]
Carrigrohan, [304]
Cartwright, Thomas, [471]
Carusse, William, [67]
Cary, Peter, [146]
Case, Captain, [83]
Casey, Richard, M.P. for Mullingar, [141]
Cashel, in Tipperary, [30], [45], [46], [102], [141], [353], [354], [377], [381]
— Archbishop of: see Magrath
— in Queen’s County, [324], [371]
Castille, [164]
Castlebar, [153]
Castle Connell, [23], [45], [326]
Castledermot, [8]
occupied by Spaniards, [405], [408], [412], [413], [419], [424]
— Hyde, [306]
Castleisland, [39], [41], [46], [68], [111], [378]
Castle Keran, [339]
Castlemagner, [304]
Castlemaine, [11], [12], [42], [47]-[49], [70], [111]-[113], [382], [406]
Castle Martin, [137]
Castlemore-Costello, [155]
Castle Park, [401]
Castlereagh, [431]
Castletown Berehaven, [421]
— Delvin, [388]
— Roche, [312]
Castle Wellan, [456]
Cavan County, [140], [320], [340], [410] [442]
Cavan Town, [245]
Cé, or Key, Lough, [338]
Cecil, Sir Robert, [162], [255], [265], [275], [281], [282], [287];
effect of his French mission on Ireland, [293]-[295];
promotes Sir Arthur Chichester, [322];
his attitude towards Essex, [333], [346], [348], [349];
his policy about the succession, [366], [369];
well-informed about Spanish intentions, [376], [379];
sends Desmond to Ireland, [380]-[385];
will not have Raleigh for Lord Deputy, [381], [388];
Tyrone’s feelings to him, [394], [398];
anxious to obtain terms for Tyrone, [415];
his naval policy, [417];
his spies, [426], [433], [437];
encourages tobacco, [455];
Chancellor of Dublin University, [471];
Bacon’s advice to him about toleration, [474]
Chamberlain, Sir John, [373]
Charles II., King, [445], [448]
Charleville, [365]
Cheek, or Cheke, Henry, [3]
Cheke, John, [73]
Cheshire, [14], [106], [163], [249]
Chester, [27], [250], [322], [451]
Chichester, Sir Arthur, Lord Deputy after James’s accession, [131], [289];
attracts the notice of Essex, [321];
in command at Carrickfergus, [322], [394];
co-operates with Mountjoy, [417], [418], [434], [435]
— — John, brother of the foregoing, his defeat and death, [289], [290]
Christ Church, Dublin, [8], [132], [133]
Cistercians, [385]
Civita Vecchia, [6]
Clancare, Donnell MacCarthy More, created Earl of, [12], [40], [42], [46]-[50], [56], [111], [112];
wastes his substance in dissipation, [200], [201], [293]
— Countess of, Lady Honora Fitzgerald, [200], [293]
Clanmaurice, [47]
Clanricarde, Richard Burke, 2nd Earl of, [88], [92], [103]
— Ulick, Earl of, son of the foregoing, [13], [26], [64], [81], [92], [93], [103];
suspected of killing his half-brother, [120], [125];
Commissioner in Connaught, [147], [152], [154];
his gallantry, [214], [216], [256], [279], [284], [301], [347], [365], [366]
Clanricarde, Richard, 4th Earl of, son of the foregoing, [284], [338];
does good service at Kinsale, [408], [409], [414];
gains Elizabeth’s favour, [453];
marries Lady Essex, [454]: see Dunkellin
— district, [366]
— Frances, Countess of: see Essex
Clare, or Thomond, County of, [125], [127], [141], [147], [148], [175], [176], [188], [189], [266], [285], [301], [310], [311], [365], [366]: see Thomond
Clare Castle, [365]
— Galway, [44]
— Island, [190]
Clavijo, Don Bartholomeo Paez de, [402]
Clement VIII. (Aldobrandini), Pope, [400]
Clere, David, [463]
Clew Bay, [20], [38], [44], [175], [189], [193]
Clifford, Sir Conyers, Governor of Connaught, [276], [278], [279], [284]-[286], [294], [301], [310], [311], [335], [336];
his defeat and death, [337];
his character, [388], [429], [432], [439]
Clinton, Captain Thomas, [69], [71]
Clogher, [263]
Clonfert, [470]
Clonlish, [89]
Clonloan, [151]
Clonmel, [41], [52], [107], [169], [325], [381], [400], [421]
Clontubrid, [257]
Cloyne, [95], [98], [107], [381]: see Bishops Lyon and Creagh
Cobos, Alonso de, [268]
Coimbra, [3]
Coke, Sir Edward, [232]
Coleraine, [130], [137]-[139], [187]
Collins, Jesuit, [424]: see O’Colan
Colton, [269]
Columba, or Columbkille, St., [130], [183]
Comerford, Gerald, attorney-general of Connaught, afterwards Baron of the Exchequer, [206], [215]
Compostella, [472]
Condon, Patrick, [85], [94], [101], [108], [112], [116], [307]
Conn, Lough, [216]
Connaught: see under the several counties
— composition in, [147]
Connello, [35], [377]-[379], [409]
Connemara, [189]
Constable, Captain, [290], [331]
Contarini, Gaspar, [462]
Conway, Chancellor of St. Patrick’s, [133]
— Captain, [269]
Coolmine, [133]
Corcomroe Abbey and Barony, [311], [365]
Cordova, Don Luis de, [176], [177], [192]
Corgrage, [305]
Corkaguiny, [42]
Cork, [12], [26], [27], [33], [49], [55], [64], [72], [76], [77], [80], [84], [94], [102], [103], [107], [126], [149], [169];
its condition when the Armada came, [172], [201], [249], [292], [305]-[307], [312], [328], [361];
prefers agitators as mayors, [381], [391], [396], [398];
the Spaniards aim at it, [399]-[401], [407], [412], [415], [417], [419], [429];
called ‘the best city,’ [450], [457]
Cork County, [35], [46], [55], [96], [104], [106], [108], [112], [141], [198], [199], [304], [354], [406], [443]
— Cloyne, and Ross, bishops of, [107], [463], [465]: see Lyon, Creagh, Tanner, and MacEgan
Corrib, Lough, [205]
Corunna, [10], [39], [69], [77], [173], [183], [194], [399], [405], [424]
Cosby, Alexander, [272], [298], [302]
Coshbride, [35]
Courcey, Lord, [455]: see Lord Kinsale
— Sir William, [305]
Cox, Seth, [331]
Crawford, a Scot, [285]
Creagh, Dermot, papal Bishop of Cork and Cloyne 1580 till after 1603, [107], [309], [357], [465]
Croft, Sir James, [472]
Croghane, [301]
Cromwell, Oliver, [326], [407]
Crumlin, [246]
Cuellar, Captain Francisco de, [182]-[188], [216], [285], [450], [465]
Cuffe, Henry, Essex’s Secretary in Ireland, [369], [389]
Cumberland, [14]
Curlew mountains, [154], [263], [336], [427], [429], [432], [443]
Cusack, Robert, Baron of the Exchequer, [99]
— Edward, [99]
Dalkey, [123]
Daly, Daniel, [205]
Daniel, William, Archbishop of Tuam from 1609, [473]
Dantzig, [451]
Danvers, Sir Charles, [369]
— Sir Henry, [328], [368], [393], [414], [439]
Dartrey, [203]
Davies, Sir John, [131], [453];
on the Irish Church, [469], [470]
Davison, Secretary, [128]
Decies, [39], [45], [56], [73], [169], [331]
— Viscount, [169]: see Sir James Fitzgerald of Decies
Delahide, James, [144]
— Laurence, [144]
De la Roche, a French naval adventurer, [3], [4], [12]
Delvin, [370]
— Christopher Nugent, Baron of, [80]-[83], [91], [99], [116], [117], [159], [353], [370]
Den, James, [11]
Denny, Sir Edward, [305], [378]
— Lady, [174]
Derbyshire, recruiting there for Irish service, [248], [249]
Dering, Captain, [55]
Derninsh, [182]
Derrinlaur, [325]
Docwra’s settlement there, [362], [363], [375];
a hungry place, [434]
— County, [417]
— See of, [149], [459], [465]: see O’Gallagher
Derryvillane, [305]
Desmond, part of Kerry and Cork, [188], [420]
— Gerald Fitzgerald, 16th Earl of, [8], [12], [17], [19]-[22], chapters xxxvii., xxxviii., and xxxix. passim, [118], [119], [142];
attainted, [150], [169], [170], [198], [256], [297], [302], [303], [360], [400], [433], [443]
— Eleanor Butler, Countess of, wife of the foregoing, [17], [27], [42], [54], [57], [68], [91], [95], [96], [105], [108], [116]
Desmond, James, 17th and last Earl of, called the ‘Queen’s Earl,’ son of the two foregoing, [27], [96], [202], [364], [366];
his failure and death, [379]-[384], [390]
— Sir John Fitzgerald of, brother of the 16th Earl, [8];
murders Henry Davells, [21];
the Pope’s general, [25]-[28], [30], [34], [48], [54]-[56], [65], [70], [71], [83], [91];
slain, [94];
attainted, [150]
— Sir James Fitzgerald of, brother of the foregoing, [20], [22], [27], [28], [36], [48];
attainted, [150]
— Sir Thomas Roe Fitzgerald of, son of the 15th Earl by Catherine Roche, [45], [89], [112], [199], [303], [304]
— the Sugane Earl of, son of the foregoing: see James Fitzthomas
— Sir Richard Preston created Earl of, by James I., [384]
Deventer, [28];
conduct of Irish troops at, [161]-[163]
Devil’s Hook [204]: and see Richard Burke
Devereux: see Essex
— Lady Dorothy, [232]
— Lady Penelope: see Rich
Devon, Devonshire, [2], [20], [26], [28], [52], [106]
Dillon, Sir Lucas, [157]
— Sir Robert, Chief Justice of, [100], [121], [204], [206]-[208]
Dingle, or Dingle-y-coosh, [11]-[13], [37], [41], [42], [47], [48], [68], [72], [78], [83], [111], [113], [127], [137], [141], [420], [446]
Dinish, [421]
Disert, [65]
Dobbyn, Patrick, [31]
Docwra, Sir Henry, [320], [352], [355];
his settlement at Derry, [361]-[363], [365], [371], [373]-[377], [417], [427], [428], [434], [436]
Doddington, Captain, [423]
Dominicans, [193], [207], [208]
Donaghmoyne, [339]
Donegal town and monastery, [197], [227], [263], [285], [376], [403], [428]
— County, [178], [189], [190], [193], [197], [216], [244], [279], [373], [417], [427]: and see Tyrconnell
Donellan, Nehemiah, Archbishop of Tuam, 1595-1609, [473]
Donore, [388]
Doria, [1]
Douglas, Thomas, [436]
Dowdall, Captain, [45]
Down County, [141]
Downpatrick, [141], [392], [455], [456]
Down and Connor, Bishopric, [466], [468]: see Magrath and O’Devany
Dowrough, James ne, [193]
Drake, Sir Francis, [66], [75], [164], [172];
tradition of him at Cork, [194], [320]
Draperstown, [443]
Drogheda, [67], [117], [164], [192], [226], [322], [340], [342], [370], [391], [448], [466]
Dromahaire, [184]
Dromana, [39]
Dromoland, [192]
Dromore, Bishopric of, [459]
Drumane, [244]
Drumcondra in Meath, [341]
Drury, Sir William, Lord President of Munster, Lord Justice in 1579, [3], [8]-[10], [12], [17], [20], [22];
last services and death, [25]-[27], [43]
Dublin, social condition, [448]-[451];
early printers in, [472], [473]
— Archbishopric of: see Loftus, Jones, and Oviedo
— University, [131]-[135], [459], [471], [472]: see Trinity College
Duffry, [320]
Dunalong, [373]
Dunanynie, [138]
Dunboy, [406], [412], [413], [419];
Dunboyne, Lord, [31], [45], [143], [384], [400]
Duncannon, [330]
Dundalk, [137], [171], [227], [228], [237], [252]-[254], [255], [261], [265]-[267], [270], [291], [297], [344], [369], [371]-[373], [392], [393], [418]
Dundee, Grahame of Claverhouse, Viscount, [301]
Dungannon, [9], [171], [190], [197], [227], [235], [236], [243], [245], [254], [287], [359], [394], [418], [434], [438]
— Barony of, [64], [129], [140], [170]: see Earl of Tyrone
Dunkellin, Barony in Galway, [104];
Lord, afterwards Earl of Clanricarde, [284]: see Clanricarde, Richard, Earl of
Dunloe, [49]
Dunluce, [129], [130], [146], [150], [151], [180], [186], [189], [290]
— as a title, [291]: see James MacSorley MacDonnell
Dunmanus Bay, [361]
Dunmoylan, [305]
Dunnemark, [419]
Dunqueen, [308]
Dutton, Captain, [428]
Dymmok, John, [287];
his ‘Treatise of Ireland,’ [323], [337], [449]
Edenduffcarrick, or Shane’s Castle, [289]
Edward III., King, [165]
Edward VI., King, [395];
his Irish Prayer-book, [472], [473]
Egerton, Charles, [289], [290], [367]
Elizabeth, Queen, her parsimony, [8];
treated as a usurper by the Popes, [13]-[16];
her feminine supremacy a continuation of Eve’s heresy, [18], [25];
her supremacy scouted, [51];
has no wish to be an exterminator, [59], [74];
approves the Smerwick massacre, [75], [87], [91], [94]-[97];
gives Ormonde a free hand, [110]-[112];
makes no objection to O’Hurley’s torture, [118], [123], [124], [129], [135]-[137], [148], [151];
reported to be dying, [153];
cannot realise the Armada, [165], [167];
called a false siren, [193], [200];
her attitude to James VI., [216];
seems sorry for Perrott, [232];
her new way to pay old debts, [240], [243], [256];
unwilling to begin the Tyrone war, [259]-[263];
repudiates the dispensing power, [264], [273], [278], [280];
will not let knighthood be made cheap, [281], [286], [287];
her exhortation to Ormonde, [291];
reviles the Irish Council, [300];
Essex’s only friend, [313];
boxes his ears, [314];
dances with him, [318];
her ideas about knighthood, [321];
her letters to Lady Norris, [288], [328];
criticises Essex, [333], [335];
blames Essex severely, [342], [343], [345];
her reception of Essex on his return, [346];
consults Raleigh, [351], [352];
cautions Mountjoy, [353];
her dislike to name a successor, [366], [373];
her hesitation about making a new Desmond, [380]-[382];
provides for the Desmond ladies, [384];
her letter to Mountjoy, [386], [389];
is persuaded to debase the coinage, [395];
deposed by three Popes, [400];
Spanish admiration of her, [410], [414];
gives audience at daybreak, [415];
her unwillingness to spare Tyrone, [433];
her attitude to James VI., [436];
her last offers to Tyrone, [437];
her death, with reflections, [439];
her regret for Essex, [454];
founds Trinity College, [470];
provides a printing-press with Irish types, [473];
her practical toleration while refusing to exercise a dispensing power, [264], [474]
Ellogh, [362]
Elphin, [214]
Ely O’Carroll, [352]
Emden, [162]
Emly, Bishop of, [468]
Ennell, Lough, [388]
Enniskillen, [235], [244], [245];
its strategic importance, [286]
Ennistymon, [311]
Enriquez, Don Pedro, [411]
Erne, Lough and River, [153], [154], [227], [234], [235], [245], [256], [276], [284]-[286], [429], [447]
Erris Head, [180]
Esmond, Captain Laurence, [331]
Essex, Robert, Earl of, Lord Lieutenant in 1599, [202], [203], [232], [248], [251], [265], [275], [281]-[284], [288], [293]-[295], [310], [312]; chapter xlviii. passim, [351]-[353], [360], [368], [369], [378], [388]-[390], [394], [418], [439], [454]
— Frances Walsingham, Countess of, [454]
Eustace, James: see Viscount Baltinglas
— Edmund, brother of the foregoing, [91], [193]
— Walter, brother of the two foregoing, [91]
— a civilian, [81]
— Edward, [226]
Eustaces, in rebellion, [323]
Eve, a Devonshire man, [52]
Falmouth, [71]
Falstaff, [249]
Farnese, Alexander, [162], [174], [188]
Farney, [201]-[203], [339], [390]
Faroe Islands, [174]
Fartullagh, [335]
Faughard, [372]
Feale River, [41], [42], [109]
Fenit, [69]
Fenton, Sir Geoffrey, Chief Secretary from 1581, [32], [57], [83];
hostile to Ormonde, [85];
his opinion of Grey, [97], [103], [104], [117];
his ideas about making Irish rebels devour each other, [103], [121], [124], [132], [151], [157];
imprisoned by Perrott, [158], [181];
his account of the Armada, [188]-[190], [235];
in the North, [264]-[268], [275], [278], [295], [320], [380], [405];
his proposal about Scotch powder, [451];
his connection with Spenser, [457];
his version of Guicciardini, ib.
— Edward, brother of the foregoing, [46], [49]
— James, brother of the two foregoing, [95]
Fergus River, [365]
Feria, Duke of, [1]
Fermanagh, [202], [227], [237], [244], [321], [468]
Ferns, considered a county, [141]
Ferrara, [3]
Ferroll, [66]
Ffrehan, John, M.P. for Philipstown, [141]
Fingal, [319]
Finisterre, Cape, [399]
Finniterstown, [327]
Fitton, Sir Edward, Vice-Treasurer in 1579, [10], [32]
FitzEdmond, John, of Cloyne, a Fitzgerald, [95], [98], [381]
Fitzgerald, Earls of Desmond: see under Desmond
Fitzgerald, Earls of Kildare: see under Kildare
Fitzgerald, Sir John and Sir James, brothers of Gerald, Earl of Desmond: see under Desmond
Fitzgerald, Lady Margaret, daughter of Gerald, Earl of Desmond, married to Dermot O’Connor, [360], [364], [366], [384]
— Lady Joan, sister of the foregoing, married to O’Sullivan Bere, [384]
— Lady Catherine, sister of the two foregoing, married to Lord Roche, [384]
Fitzgerald, Lady Ellen, sister of the three foregoing, married to Lord Dunboyne, [384]
— Lady Ellice, sister of the four foregoing, married to Sir Valentine Brown, [384]
— Sir Thomas Roe, half-brother of Gerald, Earl of Desmond, but considered illegitimate: see under Desmond
— James and John Fitzthomas, sons of the foregoing: see under Fitzthomas
— James Fitzjohn, cousin of Gerald, Earl of Desmond, [94]
— FitzEdmond: see under John FitzEdmond and under Imokilly, Seneschal of
— the White Knight, [326], [377]
— the Knight of Kerry, [48]
— William, brother of the foregoing, [112]
— the Knight of Glin, [36], [378]
— Sir James of Decies, [56], [73];
created a Viscount, [169]: see Decies
— Sir Piers Fitzjames, [246], [302]
— Walter Reagh and his brother Gerald, chiefs of the bastard Kildare Geraldines, [168], [169], [246], [247], [272]
Fitzgibbon or MacGibbon, Maurice, papal Archbishop of Cashel (died 1578), [1], [5], [116]
Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald, James, at Rome, [3], [8];
in France and Spain, [10];
his rebellion, chapter xxxvi. passim, xxxvii. [28]-[31], [40], [45], [66], [78], [94], [117], [150], [164], [165], [193], [312], [324]
— Maurice, son of the foregoing, [3]
— Thomas, Lord of Lixnaw and Kerry, [40], [41], [45], [47], [49], [56], [68], [95], [101], [108], [112], [143], [406], [420], [443]
— Patrick, son and successor of the foregoing, [41], [47], [112], [222], [327]
— Lady Honora, [378]: and see O’Brien
Fitzpatrick, Barnaby, Baron of Upper Ossory, [50], [84], [85]
Fitzpatricks, [309]
Fitzsimon, Henry, a Jesuit, [350]
Fitzthomas Fitzgerald, James, son of Sir Thomas Roe Fitzgerald,
called the Sugane Earl of Desmond, suspected by Raleigh, [199];
is made Earl of Desmond by Tyrone and destroys the Munster settlement, [302]-[307], [312];
defies Essex, [327], [348], [352], [361];
has 1700 men under him, [363], [364], [366], [378];
his final defeat, [379], [383];
his capture and fate, [390]-[392];
Cecil’s opinion of him, [398], [465]
Fitzthomas Fitzgerald, John, brother of the foregoing, [303], [363], [391];
styled Earl of Desmond in Spain, [392]
Fitzwilliam, Sir William, Lord-Deputy 1588-1594, [1], [167], [168], [171];
his administration, chapters xlii.-xliv. passim;
reflections upon it, [241], [242], [244], [245], [294], [391], [459]
Flanders, [2], [13], [67], [145], [177]
Fleet prison, [231]
Flemings in Ireland, [10]
Fleming, one, [94]
Flemingstown, [305]
Florentines in Ireland, [74], [77]
Flores in the Azores, [199]
Flower, Captain, [361], [366], [378]
Four Courts, [132]
Fowle, Robert, [204]
Foyle, Lough and River, [128], [187], [259], [300], [335], [339], [352], [353], [361], [368], [373]-[375], [414], [447]: see Derry and Docwra
Foynes, [305]
France, the French, [3], [4], [10], [11], [13], [36], [77], [145], [200], [331], [414], [424], [435], [474]
Francesqui, Giacomo de, [162]: see Jacques.
Franciscans, [193], [217], [285]
Francke, John, [473]
Frenchmen in Ireland, [2], [10], [20], [183]
Fuller, Thomas, [1]
Fullerton, James, [471], [472]
Galbally, [401]
Galicia, [425]
Gallagher, Bishop, [464]: see O’Gallagher
Gallen, [137]
Galway, [11], [76], [77], [79], [93], [103], [151], [152], [156], [157], [161], [175], [177], [209], [215], [260], [269], [271], [279], [285], [396], [398], [427], [433], [452]
Galway County, [140], [152], [176], [205], [263], [403], [431]
Gara, Lough, [154]
Gardiner, Sir Robert, Chief Justice of the Queen’s Bench, from 1586, [160], [198], [237];
his partiality to Tyrone, [260], [261];
out of favour with the Queen, [263], [264];
Garvey, John, Bishop of Kilmore 1585;
translated to Armagh in 1589, [204], [206]-[208], [210], [466]
Gascony, [448]
Gaval-Rannall, [275]: see O’Byrne, Feagh MacHugh
Genoese in Ireland, [77], [174]
Gent, Thomas, Baron of the Exchequer in England, [198]
Geraldines, in Munster, [5], [7], [19], [40], [50], [86], [103], [193], [308], [331], [332]
— in Leinster, [348]
— bastard, in Leinster, [168], [246], [247], [265], [272], [323]: see Fitzgerald, Walter Reagh.
Germans in Ireland, [144], [145], [452]
Gerrard, or Gerard, Sir William, Lord Chancellor, [26], [32], [59], [60], [81]-[83], [100]
— Sir Thomas, [346]
Giacomo: see Buoncompagno
Giants’ Causeway, [172], [180]
Gifford, Captain, [301]
Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, [13], [33], [86], [88]
Glanageenty, [113]-[115], [379], [443]
Glandore, [361]
Glenconkein, [130], [131], [418], [432], [443]
Glengariffe, [420], [430]-[432], [443]
Glenmalure, great disaster there, [61], [64], [97], [106], [226], [227], [387], [443]
Glin, Knight of, [36], [41], [378], [443]: see Fitzgerald
Glynns, The, in Antrim, [151], [153]
Godolphin, Sir William, [411], [438]
Golde, James, Attorney-General, in Munster, afterwards Justice there, [13], [305], [320]
Golding family, [48]
Gormanston, Preston, Viscount, [60], [67], [68]
Gortnaclea, [357]
Gough, Edward, [309]
Gowrie, [128]
Grace, Piers, [45], [57], [70], [116]
Granvela, Cardinal, [165], [180]
Greame, Captain Richard, [379], [382]
Greeks in the Armada, [180], [181]
Gregory XIII., Pope 1572-1585, (Buoncompagno) employs Stukeley, [2];
patronises James Fitzmaurice, [4];
arms the Italian brigands against Elizabeth, [5]-[8];
sends Fitzmaurice to Ireland, [10]-[12];
his commission, [16], [38], [51], [116];
has no money for Irishmen, [117];
exercises the deposing power, [400], [468]: see Buoncompagno
Grenville, Sir Richard, [199]
Grey de Wilton, Arthur Lord, [54], [58];
his viceroyalty, [59]-[99] passim, [116], [353];
introduces coaches, [442]
— Thomas, Lord, succeeded his father (the foregoing) in 1593, [323], [346], [352]
Grosvenor, William, [248]
Hall, William, [67]
Hally family, [48]
Hamilton, James, created Lord Clandeboye, [471], [472]
Hampton, Christopher, Archbishop of Armagh from 1613, [466]
Harborn, William, [321]
Harlem, [76]
Harrington, or Harington, Sir Henry, Seneschal of Wicklow, [8], [144], [247]
his defeat near Wicklow, [328], [329], [332], [337]
— Sir John, author of Nugæ Antiquæ, &c. cousin of the foregoing, [323], [324], [326], [327], [330], [331], [335], [337];
his account of Tyrone at home, [344]
Harvey, Captain Roger, [414], [429]
Harwich, [71]
Hatton, Sir Christopher, [202], [232]
Hawkins, Sir Henry, [66]
Heath, Captain, [276]
Hebrides, Hebrideans, [43], [129], [138]
Helbry Island, [319]
Hely, Archbishop: see O’Hely
Heneage, Sir Thomas, [448]
Henry VIII., King, [18], [20], [110], [147], [166], [221], [232], [314], [398], [432]
— III., King of France, [4]
Henry IV., King of France, [250], [474]
Henry, Cardinal of Portugal, [8]
Henshaw, Captain, [276]
Herbert, Sir William, [305], [378]
— Sir Edward, [244]
Heywood, John, [453]
Hill, Moses, [290]
Hogan, Edmund, [7]
— Vicar Apostolic, [350]
Holland, Hollanders, [44], [52], [166], [167]
— Irish soldiers in, [161]-[163]
Hollingsworth, Captain, [44]
Holy Cross Abbey, [23], [312], [353]
Honora, [357]
Honorius, [232]
Hooker, or Hooker-Vowell, John, the chronicler, [20], [23], [29], [56], [61], [63], [72], [75]
— Richard, author of Ecclesiastical Polity, [471]
Hopton, Lieutenant of the Tower, [232]
Horgett family, [48]
Hovenden or Ovington, Henry, Tyrone’s secretary, [190]-[192], [267], [268], [341], [342]
Hovenden, Richard, brother of the foregoing, [190]-[192]
Howard, Lord, of Effingham: see Nottingham
Howth, [353]: see St. Lawrence
Hunsdon, Lord, [23]
Hurley, Thomas, [141]
Hyde, Arthur, [199], [305], [306]
Ibane, [360]
Idrone, [6]
Ijssel, [162]
Ikerrin, [403]
Ilfracombe, [26]
Imokilly, John FitzEdmond Fitzgerald, Seneschal of, [33], [34], [55], [56], [85], [94], [96], [102], [105], [107], [108], [112], [116];
his death, [222];
his successor appointed by the Sugane Earl of Desmond, [306]
Inchiquin, Barony, [311]
— Murrogh O’Brien, 4th Baron of, [285]
Indies, [2]
Ineen Duive, or Black Agnes: see MacDonnell
Inglefield, Sir Francis, [77]
Inistioge, [141]
Inniscarra, [354]
Innisfallen, [49]
Innishannon, [409]
Innishowen, [153], [189], [190]
Inquisition, the, [2], [6], [7], [117]
Iraghticonnor, [443]
Ireland, a Spanish duchy, [1], [3]
Isla, [128]
Island Magee, [290]
Italians in Ireland, [5], [7], [69]-[77], [162], [174], [191], [423]
Italy, Italians, [5], [7], [36], [100], [145], [177], [423]
Iveragh, [423]
Jacques, Captain or Lieutenant, Giacomo de Francesqui, so called, [159], [162]
James, a Protestant clergyman, [272]
James, King, 6th of Scotland and 1st of England, [129], [137], [146], [150], [151], [153];
gives O’Rourke up to England, [216];
knights James MacDonnell, [289];
his relations with Essex, [366]-[368];
creates a new Desmond, [384], [426];
his relations with Tyrone and with Elizabeth [435], [436];
proclaimed in Dublin, [439], [449];
his secret agents in Ireland, [471]
James II., King, the dispensing power, [264];
Jehangir, [44]
Jennings, Captain, [327]
Jephson, Captain, [456]
Jesuits in Ireland, [4];
keep a school at Youghal, [33], [69], [163], [193];
very numerous, [245];
boast of their success, [349], [355];
their energy, [462]
Jews, [16]
Jones, Thomas, Dean of St. Patrick’s 1581, Bishop of Meath 1584, Archbishop of Dublin 1605, [125], [132];
what Swift said about him, [133];
a special commissioner in Connaught, [203], [204], [206]-[208];
rebuked by Walsingham, [209], [211], [212];
marries Tyrone to Mabel Bagenal, [224], [225];
Perrott’s enemies seek him, [229], [292];
preaches before Essex, [322];
his notes on abuses in the Church, [469], [470], [474], [476]
Jones, Sir Henry, [123]
Kanturk, [49]
Kavanagh, clan, [135], [246], [297], [309], [443]
— Art, [223]
— Brian MacDonogh, [356]
— Donnell Spaniagh, [323], [331], [371]
Kearney, Patrick, M.P. for Cashel, [141]
— John, [473]
Keate, a settler in Munster, [198]
Kells, in Meath, [257], [279], [339], [340]
— in Antrim, [137]
Kenmare Bay, [36]
Kenry, [36], [126], [127]: see Pallaskenry
Kerry, Fitzmaurice’s descent in, [12], [20], [31], [41], [47], [57], [66], [68];
Spanish descent in, [69], [70], [78], [95], [96], [108]-[112];
considered as safe as Middlesex, [169];
the Armada on the coast, [172], [173], [188], [198];
flight of English settlers from, [305], [378], [379], [406];
its pacification by Carew, [420];
strongholds there, [443]
— cattle, [446]
Key, or Cè, Lough, [338]
Kilbritain, [455]
Kilcolman, granted to Spenser, [198], [199], [292];
sacked and burned, [304], [457]
Kilcommon, in Wicklow, [137]
Kilcornan, in Limerick, [272]
Kilcrea, [430]
Kilcullen, [323]
Kildare, [388]
— Gerald Fitzgerald, eleventh Earl of, [19], [26], [29], [53], [54];
in charge of the Pale, [80]-[82];
a prisoner, [83];
his intrigue with the Pope, [117], [134];
dies in London, [140]
Kildare, Henry, twelfth Earl of, son of the foregoing, [246];
dies in Ulster, [286]
— William, thirteenth Earl of, brother of the foregoing, drowned in the Channel, [319]
— Gerald, fourteenth Earl of, (descendant of the ninth Earl), [335], [348]
Kilkenny, [8], [29], [38], [72], [87], [113], [141], [309], [310], [305], [319], [399], [416]
Killala, Donough O’Gallagher, Papal bishop of, [18]
Killaloe, Cornelius O’Mulrian, Papal bishop of, [6], [10], [18], [69], [90], [462]
— rival bishops of, [459]
Killilagh, [175]
Killybegs, [178], [189], [376]
Kilmacduagh, [79]
Kilmakilloge, [421]
Kilmallock, [24], [26], [27], [39], [43], [46], [56], [58], [107], [108], [141], [169], [307], [365], [366], [377], [379];
strange scene there, [383]
Kilmore, Bishop of, [204]: see Garvey
Kiltinan, [400]
Kinel-Connell (tribe name of the O’Donnells), [408]
— Owen (tribe name of the O’Neills), 408
dialogue on its condition, [302], [323], [370], [403], [443]
Kinsale, [19], [32], [72], [112], [149], [361], [381];
reflections on it, [414], [417], [419], [465]
— De Courcey, Baron of, [112], [455]
Kinsella (tribe name of the Kavanaghs, &c.), [6]
Kirton, Lieutenant Francis, [423]
Knockacroghery, [175]
Knockfime, [175]
Knockgraffon, [96]
Knock Robin, [401]
Knollys, Sir William, [314], [315]
Knolt family, [48]
Lacy, Piers, [302], [306], [378], [393]
Lagan River, at Belfast, [289]
— — in Monaghan, [340]
Lambert, Sir Oliver, [427]
Lancashire, [14], [106], [466], [475]
Lane, one, [275]
Larne, [151]
Lasso, Rodrigo de, [192]
Latin, [456]
Laud, Archbishop, [390], [445]
Latwar, Rev. Dr., [392]
League, the, [424]
Leane, Lough, Killarney, [49]
Lecale, [418]
Lee River, [354]
Lee, Henry, [367]
— Captain Thomas, [168], [197], [238], [239], [244], [265], [275], [324]
Legge, Robert, [197]
Leicester, Robert Dudley, Earl of, [87], [121], [153], [161], [162], [167], [208], [317]
Leighlin, or Leighlin Bridge, [8], [39], [135]
— See of: see Meredith
Leinster, a Spanish duchy or marquisate, [1], [6]
Leitrim County, [34], [216], [279], [423], [443]
Leitrim Castle, [63], [79], [432]
— Barony of, in Co. Galway, [104], [119], [120]: see Burke, Sir John Shamrock
Lennox, Duke of, [436]
Leo X., Pope, [51]
Leonard, Margaret, [230]
Lepanto, [2]
Le Strange, Sir Thomas, [166], [204]
Levant, the, [2]
Leveson, Admiral Sir Richard, [402], [404], [405], [417]
Leyva, Alonso de Leyva, [177]-[180], [194], [204]
Liffey River, [61], [132], [226], [323], [369]
Limerick, [12], [22], [23], [26]-[28], [30], [41], [44], [45], [50], [54], [56], [72], [76], [77], [83], [107], [126], [127], [149], [165], [172], [199], [217], [287], [306], [311], [327], [377], [381], [398]
— County, [46], [68], [70], [72], [104], [106], [108], [111], [141], [198], [302], [305], [404], [443]
Lisbon, [6], [11], [183], [194], [399], [472]
Liscahan, [378]
Liscannor, [175]
Liscarroll, [430]
Lisdoonvarna, [175]
Lisfinnen, [35]
Lismore diocese: see Magrath
Listowel, [41]
Littleton, [381]
Liverpool, [451]
Lixnaw, Baron of: see Thomas, Lord Fitzmaurice
Loftus, Adam, Archbishop of Dublin, Lord Keeper in 1579 and from 1581 to 1603, Lord Chancellor after that, ... Lord Justice 1582, 1597, and 1599; ... [51], [53], [60], [82], [92], [97];
willing to pardon Desmond, [104], [116], [120]-[122];
on bad terms with Perrott, [124], [125];
his dispute with Perrott about St. Patrick’s, [133]-[135];
his influence on legislation, [142], [143], [146];
his enmity to Perrott, [157]-[159];
accused of corruption, [197];
his connection with Bishop Jones, [212], [217];
his contribution to Perrott’s ruin, [229], [237];
Lord Justice, [291], [300], [345], [466];
first provost of Trinity College, [470], [471], [474], [476]
— Captain Adam, son of the foregoing, [330], [332]
Lombard, Peter, titular Primate 1601-1625, [459]
London aldermen, as a standard to compare soldiers by, [40]
London Bridge, [114]
Londonderry, siege of, [414]
Long, John, Archbishop of Armagh, [125], [457], [466]-[468]
— Barony, in Galway, [104]
Loop Head, [175]
Lope de Vega, [193]
Loughrea, Castle and Barony of, [79], [104], [365]
— Mills of, [340]
Love, Captain, [399]
Loyola, [462]
Lucas, a pet name for Ormonde, [52]
Lugnaquilla mountain, [61]
Luzon, Don Alonso de, [187], [191], [192]
— Don Diego de, [192]
Lynch, William, [474]
Lyon, William, Bishop of Ross 1582, and of Cork, Cloyne, and Ross 1586-1617, describes military abuses, [102];
praised by Bramhall, [463], [464]
MacBaron, Sir Cormac O’Neill: see O’Neill
MacBrien (O’Goonagh), [23]
— Grace, [96]
MacCarthy, Florence, [85], [163];
his importance, [201];
the Queen’s gift to him, [240], [293];
his notions of loyalty, [360], [361], [363], [378], [402], [420], [426]
— Donnell, Clancare’s natural son, [201], [241]
— Donnell na Pipy, [56]
— Reagh, chief of Carbery, [56], [112], [201], [420], [455]
— Sir Cormac MacDermot, [112], [328], [406], [429], [430]
— Sir Cormac MacTeigue, [45], [46], [55]
— MacCarthies, [47], [292], [293], [327], [398]
— MacDonogh, chief of Duhallow, [101], [112]
— Dermot Moyle, [420]
— Dermot, called Don Dermutio by the Spaniards, [402]
— Lady Ellen, married to Florence MacCarthy, [200]: see Clancare.
MacClancy, MacGlannahie, Manglana, [184]-[186], [191], [216]
MacCowlie, MacCoolie: see MacMahon
MacCragh, Donogh, [112]
MacDermot, of Moyling, in Roscommon, [263], [337], [365], [403]
MacDevitt, a sept of O’Dogherties, Hugh Boy, Phelim Reagh, [377]
MacDonnell, Sorley boy, [10], [64], [130], [138]-[140], [150];
comes to terms with the Queen, [151], [180], [435]
— Alaster MacSorley, eldest son of the foregoing, [150], [151], [289]
— Donnell MacSorley, brother of the foregoing, [289]
— James MacSorley, brother of the two foregoing, [289], [290];
called ‘Dunluce,’ [291]
— Randal MacSorley, first Earl of Antrim, brother of the three foregoing, [289], [290], [394], [406], [436]
MacDonnell, Alaster and Angus, nephews to Sorley Boy, [138], [151], [153]
— Donnell Gorme, [130], [136], [153]
— Ineen Duive, or Black Agnes, mother of Hugh Roe O’Donnell, wife of Sir Hugh O’Donnell, [171], [190], [196], [221], [222]: see O’Donnell
MacDonnells, [18], [128], [138]-[140], [192]
MacDonogh, [49]
MacDonogh MacCarthy, [101], [112]
MacEgan, Owen, sometimes called Bishop of Ross, the Pope’s vicar in Munster, [422], [425], [429], [464], [465]
MacFynyn, a leader of Munster kerne, [49], [112]
MacGawran, Edmund, titular Primate of all Ireland, 1587-1593;
slain [233], [234], [243], [465]
MacGeohegan, Ross, [65]
— Brian, half-brother of the foregoing, [65]
MacGeohegan’s castle, [388]
MacGibbons, [47]: see Fitzgibbon.
MacGrath and Creagh, or MacCraghe, Bishop Dermot, [465]: see Creagh
Machary, James, [194]
MacHugh, Feagh: see O’Byrne
MacKenna, [203], [227], [228]: see Trough
Mackworth, Captain, [75], [76], [194], [354]
MacMahon, Sir Ross, chief of Monaghan, [202]
— Hugh Roe, brother of the foregoing, [202]
— Brian MacHugh Oge, [202], [203], [239], [407]
— Ever MacCoolie, [203], [341], [390]
— Teig, of Co. Clare, [311]
MacMahons, of Co. Monaghan, [234], [247], [261], [262], [352], [406]
MacMorris, [48]
MacMurrough, Dermot, [470]
MacQuillins, [130]
MacShanes, sons of Shane O’Neill, [9]: and see O’Neill
MacShane, Morris, not an O’Neill, [199]
MacSheehys, Sheehys, Clan Sheehy. Desmond gallowglasses, [29], [112], [271], [278], [292]
MacSheehy, Rory, a leader of the foregoing, [55]
MacSwiney Banagh, [179]
— Sir John, [337]
— Maelmory, [374]
MacSwineys, [112], [179], [190], [216]
MacThomas, Gerald, called Toneboyreagh, [108]
MacWalter, Callogh: see O’More
MacWilliam Iochtar, Irish title given to the chief of the Lower or Mayo Burkes, [44], [79], [92], [93], [152], [157], [205], [207], [208], [215], [260], [263], [279], [300], [365]: see Richard and William Burke
Madrid, [10]
Magennis, Sir Hugh, chief of Iveagh in Down, [64], [130];
his eldest son married to Tyrone’s daughter, [239], and [456], [341], [392]
— Lady Sara: see O’Neill
Magnylson, Tirlogh, [428]
Magrath, Miler, Archbishop of Cashel and Bishop of Emly, (1571-1622);
Bishop of Waterford and Lismore (1582-1589; and 1592-1608) &c. [217];
Tyrone’s attitude to him, [311], [312], [364];
accompanies Desmond to Ireland, [381], [383];
his many misdeeds, [462], [463], [468], [469]: and see Index to Vol. II.
— Bishop Dermot: see Creagh
— Eugene, [359]
Maguire, Cuconnaught, chief of Fermanagh, [146], [154], [202]
— Hugh, son and successor of the foregoing, married to Tyrone’s daughter, [202], [219], [220], [227];
in rebellion, [233], [237], [239], [249];
takes Enniskillen, [252], [261], [262], [266], [276], [285], [298];
— successor of the foregoing, [454]
— or Gwire, Thomas, M.P. for Trim, [141];
Mahomet, [184]
Maigue River, [28], [36], [45]-[47], [327], [410]
Mainwaring, Mr., [305]
Mal Bay, [175]
Malin Head, [179]
Mallow, [49], [50], [288], [305], [307], [328], [382], [383], [409], [443]
Maltby, Sir Nicholas, Governor of Connaught, [20], [22], [23], [26], [28];
on bad terms with Ormonde, [29], [31], [33], [36], [41];
his severity in Connaught, [43], [44], [63]-[65], [79], [81], [87], [92];
hangs Clanricarde’s son, [93], [103], [104], [204]
Mangerton, [420]
Manners, John, of Haddon, [248], [249], [251]
Manrique, Don Francisco, [180]
Markethill, [257]
Markham, Sir Griffin, [337]
Marshalsea, [231]
Marward, Janet, married to William Nugent, [100], [101]
Mary, Queen of England, [395], [466]
Maryborough, [39], [65], [141], [310], [334], [370], [443]
Mask, Lough, [159]
Maugherie, [234]
Maunsell, Captain Rice, [289], [290]
Mayo, [93], [137], [140], [152]-[154], [177], [204]-[216], [260], [305], [311]
Meade, or Miagh, John, [141];
Mayor of Cork, [381], [382], [384]
Meath, [226], [319], [323], [370], [408]
— Bishop of: see Jones
Medici, Catherine de, [3], [11]
— the, [462]
Medina Sidonia, Duke of, [173], [174], [176], [178], [182], [188], [192]
— — Duchess of, [178]
Meelick, [137]
Melville, Andrew, [471]
Mendoza, Don Pedro de, [176]
Mercœur, Duke de, [424]
Mercurian, Everard, General of the Jesuits, [4]
Meredith, Richard, Bishop of Leighlin, [229]-[231]
Merriman, Captain Nicholas, [180], [248]
Miagh: see Meade
Milborne, a serjeant, [275]
Middlesex, [169]
Middleton, Marmaduke, Bishop of Waterford, [462], [463]
Midleton, [85]
Mitchelstown, [391]
Mizen Head, [42]
Moile, Henry, [85]
Monaghan, [202], [228], [234], [237], [252], [254], [262], [418]
Monaghan County, [201], [202], [340], [390]
Monasterevan, [370], [387], [388], [443]
Monasternenagh, [28]
Moncada, Hugo de, [178]
Money, [247]
Montague, Captain Charles, [299], [300], [329], [330]
Montrose, James Grahame, Marquis of, [307]
Moore, Colonel George, [61], [63]
— — Garret, [438]
— — Thomas, [302]
— Neale, [371]
Mordaunt, Captain Nicholas, [214]
Morgan, Sir William, [84]
Morocco, [7]
Moryson, Sir Richard, [371], [373], [456]
— Fynes, the historian, brother of the foregoing, Mountjoy’s secretary, [369], [372], [373], [386], [412], [438], [439], [450], [452], [453]
Mostyn, Captain, [269]
Mountgarret, Edmund Butler, second Viscount, [31], [124]
— Richard Butler, third Viscount, son of the foregoing, [308], [323], [324], [333], [465]
Mountjoy, Charles Blount, Lord, Lord Deputy, 1600, [315], [318], chaps. 49-52 passim, [450], [452]
— Fort, [439]
Moydrum, [403]
Moyry Pass, [250], [363], [369], [372], [392]
Mucross, [420]
Mulkear River, [410]
Mullaghcarne mountains, [170]
Mullet, the, [181]
Mullingar, [141], [156], [244], [388]
Munster Presidency, [58], [87]
Murrows, [87]
Nantes, [474]
Naples, [191]
Narrow Water, [64], [320], [372]
Naunton, Sir Robert, [232]
Neagh, Lough, [64], [131], [220], [266], [289], [418], [434]
Neale, the, [204]
Nelson, [66]
Nephin, [215]
Netherlands, [2], [3], [25], [27], [58], [143], [145];
Irish troops in, [161]-[163], [194]
Netterville, Richard, [143]
Newcastle, in Limerick, [35], [305]
— in Wicklow, [60]
New Forest, [131]
Newfoundland, [69]
Newman, Darby, [236]
Newrath, [340]
New Ross: see Ross
Newry, [128], [129], [137], [236], [238], [252]-[256], [261], [262], [277], [283], [287], [297], [300], [323], [362], [363], [369], [371], [372], [418], [456]
Norris, Lord, of Rycot, [124], [328]
— Lady, wife of the foregoing, called ‘my own crow’ by Queen Elizabeth, [288], [328]
— Sir John, son of the two foregoing, Lord President of Munster, [124], [126]-[128];
in Ulster, [130], [131], [135], [138]-[140];
M.P. for co. Cork, [141];
his eloquence, [145];
in Flanders, [146];
slighted by Leicester, [162];
recommends Irish soldiers for a descent on Spain, [194], [247];
Lord General in Ireland, [251], [252], [254];
disagrees with Russell, [255], [256];
wounded in Armagh, [257], [259], [260], [263]-[271], [275];
his quarrel with Russell, [276], [277]-[279];
his relations with Lord Burgh, [282];
retires to Munster, [287];
his death, [288], [294], [314], [320], [330], [344], [372], [439]
— — Thomas, brother of the foregoing and his Vice-president, Lord President after his death, [127], [141], [145], [174], [200], [217], [257], [288], [291], [293], [302], [304], [305], [307], [308], [310], [312];
his death, [326], [328], [333], [363], [439];
hears Spenser read his great poem, [457]
— — Henry, brother of the two foregoing, [257], [259], [327];
— Lady, of Mallow, widow of Sir Thomas, [382]
Northumberland, County of, [1]
Norway, [174]
Nottingham, Lord Howard of Effingham, afterwards Earl of, Lord Admiral, [180], [315], [388]
Nugent, William, [91], [92], [99], [100], [119], [209]
Nugent, Sir Nicholas, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, executed [99], [100]
— John, [363]
— Janet: see Marward
O’Boyle, Niel, Bishop of Raphoe by papal provision, 1591-1611, [285]
O’Brien: see Thomond and Inchiquin
— Sir Tirlogh, of Ennistymon, [141], [147], [311]
— Teig, Thomond’s brother, calling himself ‘the O’Brien,’ [301], [310], [311]
— Donnell, brother of the foregoing, [310], [311]
— Tirlogh, [93]
— Lady Honora, Thomond’s sister, married to Lord Fitzmaurice, q. v.
O’Byrne, Feagh MacHugh O’Byrne, chief of the sept called Gavel-Rannall, [8], [53], [59], [60], [91], [135], [136], [164], [168], [223], [226], [239];
hunted by Russell, [246];
in league with Tyrone, [247], [261];
retakes Ballinacor, [274];
is killed, [275];
his head in England, ib., [280], [284], [323], [387], [443]
— Cahir MacHugh, brother of the foregoing, [303], [307]
— Phelim MacFeagh, Feagh MacHugh’s son, [331], [387]
O’Byrnes, the, [51], [57], [88], [323], [329]
O’Cahan, O’Cahans, in the present county of Londonderry, [129], [146], [186], [187], [219], [362], [363], [373], [374], [428], [434]
— Rory, [374]
O’Callaghan, seated in Duhallow, co. Cork, [47], [49], [112]
O’Carroll, O’Carrolls, [309], [323], [352]
O’Colan, Dominick, [423], [424], [462]
O’Connor, Brian MacGilpatrick, Teig MacGilpatrick, Connor MacCormac, Morrogh ne Cogge, all of Offaly, [121], [122]
— Roe, in Roscommon, [363], [365]
— Sligo, Sir Donnell, [43], [60], [147], [208]
— Cahil Oge, brother of the foregoing, [208]
— Sligo, Donough, son of Cahil, [208], [209], [279], [284], [336], [338], [365], [384], [427], [429], [432]
O’Connor, Kerry, [378], [406], [431], [443]
— Eugene, Bishop of Killala (not Killaloe), [459]
— Dermot, leader of free companions, [360], [364], [366], [383], [384]
O’Connors of Offaly, [8], [65], [76], [82], [92], [121], [122], [136], [194], [301], [323], [370]
— in Connaught, [191], [269], [406]
O’Crean, John, [214]
O’Cullen, Piers, [259]
O’Daly, Geraldine historian, [7]
— bard in Munster, [419]
O’Dempsey, Sir Terence, [357], [358]
O’Devany, Cornelius, Papal Bishop of Down and Connor, 1582-1612, [466]
O’Dogherty, Sir John, chief of Innishowen, [153], [191], [196], [197], [261], [268], [301], [321], [362], [365]
— Cahir, son of the foregoing, [377]
O’Dogherties, [363], [373], [434]
O’Donnell, Sir Hugh, chief of Tyrconnell, [10], [19], [60], [63], [64], [171], [190], [219], [221];
resigns in his son’s favour, [227]
— Hugh Roe, son and successor of the foregoing, [171], [196], [197];
kidnapped by Perrott, [221];
his first escape, [222];
his second and final escape, [226];
installed as O’Donnell, [227], [233], [235]-[237];
married to Tyrone’s daughter, [239];
promises help to O’Byrne, [247], [253];
very strong in Connaught, [260]-[262];
receives Spanish aid, [268], [269], [271], [275], [276], [278], [279], [284], [285];
at the Yellow Ford, [298], [299], [301];
overthrows Clifford, [336]-[338], [348], [363];
harries Clare, [365], [371], [374];
his last effort at Lough Foyle, [375];
has help from Spain, [376], [384], [400];
flies to Spain, [409], [411], [412];
his death and character, [424]-[426], [427], [432]
— Rory, brother and successor of Hugh Roe, afterwards Earl of Tyrconnell, [409], [425]-[427], [429], [432], [447]
— Nuala, sister of Hugh Roe and married to Nial Garv, [375]
— Donnell, elder half-brother of Hugh Roe, and married to a daughter of Tirlogh Luineach O’Neill, [197], [221], [222]
— Calvagh, former chief of Tyrconnell, [221], [375]
O’Donnell, Con, son of Calvagh, [22], (d. 1583)
— Hugh, son of Calvagh, [171]
— Nial Garv, grandson of Calvagh, [221], [365], [375]-[377], [427]
— Hugh, grandson of Calvagh, and brother of the foregoing, [376]
— Donnell, brother of the foregoing, [376]
— Con, brother of the three foregoing, [376]
— Hugh Duff, descendants of, [221]
— Ineen Duive MacDonnell, wife of Sir Hugh and mother of Hugh Roe: see MacDonnell
Tyrone’s second wife, [223], [285], [374]
— of Glenflesk, [49]
O’Donovans, [464]
O’Dooleys, [335]
O’Dowds, [191]
O’Doyne, [8]
O’Driscoll, Sir Fineen, [406]
— Dermot, [431]
O’Driscolls, [413], [419], [431], [447]
O’Feighy, Thomas, [391]
O’Ferrall, Shane, [119]
Offaly, [76], [334], [348], [357], [370]
O’Flaherty, Sir Murrough ne Doe, claiming to be chief of Iar Connaught, [147], [152], [205]-[208], [211], [215]
— Roger, of Moycullen, [152], [211]
— Roderic, author of Ogygia, grandson of the foregoing, [211]
O’Flaherties, [19], [20], [30], [152], [176], [269], [427]
O’Gallagher, Sir John MacToole, [196], [197]
— Redmond, papal Bishop of Derry 1569-1601, usually acting as Primate from 1575, [149], [187], [188], [285]
— Donogh, a Franciscan, [18]
— [427]
— Tirlogh, [226]
— Terence, [299]
O’Hara, [155]
O’Hart or O’Harte, Eugene, papal Bishop of Achonry 1562-1603, [459], [467]
O’Harts, [191]
O’Hea, Friar James, [35], [56]
O’Hely, James, papal Archbishop of Tuam 1591-1609 (?), [246]
O’Hurley, Dermot, papal Archbishop of Cashel 1581-1584;
O’Kelly, Daniel, [113]
O’Kellies, [92]
O’Kennedys, [309]
Olivares, [1]
O’Madden, O’Maddens, [40], [263]
O’Malley, Dowdary Roe, [176]
— Daniel, [431]
— Grace or Grana, married to Richard-in-Iron Burke, [43], [44], [447]
O’Malleys, of Burrishole in Mayo, [175], [427], [447]
O’Meagher, [403]
O’Molloy, [263]
O’More, Rory Oge, [337], [443]
— Owen or Owny, MacRory, calling himself ‘the O’More,’ son of the foregoing, [272], [302], [303], [306], [307], [309], [323], [325], [331];
captures Ormonde, [355]-[359];
— Callogh MacWalter, [371]
O’Moriarty, Maurice and Owen, [113]
O’Mulrian: see O’Ryan.
O’Neill, Con Bacagh, chief and Earl of Tyrone, father of Shane and reputed grandfather of Tyrone, [170]
— Shane, chief of Tyrone, son of the foregoing, [9], [64], [130], [146], [170], [200], [215], [219], [222], [224], [238], [289], [466]: see MacShane
— Arthur MacShane, brother of the foregoing, [221], [222], [226]
— Brian MacShane, brother of the foregoing, [220], [227]
— Con MacShane, brother of the two foregoing, [219], [220], [227]
— Edmund MacShane, brother of the three foregoing, [221]
— Henry MacShane, brother of the four foregoing, [9], [221], [222], [226], [227]
— Hugh Gavelagh MacShane, brother of the five foregoing, [219], [220]
— Tirlogh MacShane, brother of the six foregoing, [221]
O’Neill, the MacShanes or sons of Shane O’Neill, [9], [149], [219] sqq.
— Hugh, Baron of Dungannon and Earl of Tyrone: see Tyrone
— Tyrone’s eldest son, [243]
— Lady Margaret, Tyrone’s eldest daughter, married to Richard Viscount Mountgarret, [308]
— Lady Sara, sister of the foregoing, married to Magennis, [239], [456]
— Lady Alice, sister of the two foregoing, married to Sir Randal MacDonnell, [290]
— Con, natural son of Tyrone, [311], [312]
— Cormac MacBaron, brother of Tyrone, [141], [243], [245], [261], [262], [268], [341]
— Sir Brian MacPhelim, his daughter married to Tyrone, [223]
— Shane MacBrien, [141], [289]
O’Neills of Clandeboye, [130]
O’Neill, Art Oge, progenitor of Tirlogh Luineach’s sept, [220]
— Tirlogh, Luineach, chief of Tyrone, [9], [10], [36], [60], [64];
to be sovereign in Ulster, [69], [92], [129], [130];
his appearance in English dress, [141];
divides Tyrone with the Earl, [146];
weeps at Perrott’s departure, [168];
his disputes with Tyrone, [170], [171], [190], [218]-[222], [227], [228];
resigns in Tyrone’s favour, [233];
dies, [258], [363], [373], [376], [453]
— Lady Agnes, wife of Tirlogh Luineach: see Campbell
— Sir Arthur, son of Tirlogh Luineach, [220], [321], [363], [373]-[376], [427]
— Tirlogh, Sir Arthur’s son, [376]
— Tirlogh Brasselagh, [220]
— (?) or Neill, Robert, M.P. for Carlingford, [141]
O’Neills, [27], [131], [353], [468]
Orange, William the Silent, Prince of, [67]
Oranmore, [365]
O’Reilly, Sir John, [261], [299]
— Maelmore, Sir John’s son, [299]
— Philip and Edmond, Members of Parliament for Cavan, [140]
Orkneys, [194]
Ormonde, Thomas, Butler, tenth Earl of, called Black Thomas, general in Munster, [29]-[35], [37]-[39], [40]-[43], [45]-[51], [56]-[58], [65], [69], [70], [71], [80], [81], [84]-[86];
his house at Carrick plundered, [96];
governor of Munster, [102];
in England, [105];
returns with fresh powers, [106];
finishes the Desmond war, [108]-[114], [116], [117], [123], [124], [126], [127];
in Ulster, [130]-[132], [142], [150];
during the Armada days, [176], [198];
his correspondence with Tyrone, [237], [239], [240], [246];
proposes to put a price on Tyrone’s head, [255], [259], [272];
Lord Lieutenant-General, [291], [292], [293];
what Bacon thought of him, [294], [296], [297];
thinks Bagenal’s army bewitched, [300];
in Munster, [305]-[307], [309];
relieves Maryborough, [310];
with Essex, [323]-[326], [328], [331], [333], [334], [344];
suspected by Mountjoy, [351], [353]-[356];
a prisoner with the Irish, [357]-[359], [371], [384], [399], [403], [423], [431]
Ormonde, Countess of, Elizabeth Sheffield, [358], [359]
— James, first Duke of, [384]
— district in Tipperary, [312]
O’Roughan, or Roughan, Dennis, [230], [231]
O’Rourke, Sir Brian, chief of Leitrim, [19], [43], [60], [63], [64];
defeated by Maltby, [79];
helps the Spaniards, [191], [196], [197], [202], [210], [212];
defies and reviles the Queen, [213];
defeated by Bingham, [214];
hanged at Tyburn, [216], [230]
— Brian Oge, natural son of the foregoing, [214];
escapes from Oxford, [230], [233], [234], [239], [247];
called O’Rourke, [262], [266];
with O’Donnell, [285];
in Clare, [365];
in Munster, [403], [427], [431], [432], [462]
— Teig, legitimate half-brother of the foregoing, [214]
O’Ryan, Ryan, or O’Mulrian, Cornelius, papal Bishop of Killaloe, 1576-1616, [6], [10], [18], [69], [90], [119], [462]
O’Ryans, Ryans, or O’Mulrians, in Tipperary, [309]
O’Shea, Ellice, M.P. for Kilkenny, [141]
Ossory, Piers Roe, Earl of Ormonde and, [444]
— Bishop of: see Walsh
O’Sullivan Bere, Sir Owen, will not join Fitzmaurice, [112];
with Ormonde, [49], [56], [111], [112]
O’Sullivan, Donough, [406], [408], [409], [413], [430]-[432]
— Bere, Philip, the historian, Dermot’s son, [90], [234], [235], [288], [327], [407], [408], [431], [472]
— Bere, [447]
— Rice, [247];
wife of Feagh MacHugh O’Byrne, q. v.
— Theobald, [152]
O’Tooles, [323]
Oviedo, Matthew de, a Spanish Franciscan, papal Archbishop of Dublin, [69], [400], [459]
Ovington, Henry and Richard: see Hovenden
Owen, Richard, [341]
Owny Abbey, [302]
Oxford, [230], [369], [430], [466]
Oyster Haven, [401]
Pale, the, [26], [64], [80], [81], [92], [102], [110], [143], [144], [146], [147], [165], [166], [193], [242], [243], [257], [260], [273], [274], [276], [296], [301], [340], [369], [405], [434], [470]
Paleologo, Manuel, [177]
Pallaskenry, [272]
Pallice, [49]
Paredes, Count of, [180]
Parker, Matthew, Archbishop of Canterbury, [18]
Parker, Lieutenant, [61]
Parliament of England, [136], [137], [467]
Parliament of Ireland, [165], [258]
Parma, Duke of: see Farnese
Parsons, the Jesuit, [52]
Pelham, Sir William, Lord Justice, [27];
begs to be recalled, [33], [36], [37];
in Munster, [40]-[50], [55], [57], [58];
leaves Ireland, [59], [60], [63], [65], [68], [161], [463]
Penmaen Mawr, [319]
Percy, Sir Charles, [326]
Perrott, Sir John, Lord Deputy, [11], [25], [26];
his viceroyalty, chaps. xl. & xli. passim, [172], [196], [197], [203], [208], [214], [221], [222];
his trial and death, [228]-[232], [244], [324], [444], [467], [470]
Perrott, Sir Thomas, son of the foregoing, [172], [232]
Peter, Saint, [16]
Petty, Sir William, [448]
Philip II., King of Spain, [1], [4], [5], [7], [8], [18], [36];
to be King of Ireland, [42];
always too late, [118], [162];
his animosity to England, [164], [173], [174], [180], [189];
his Irish subjects, [191];
called the Christian Ulysses, [193], [195], [229];
slow in his affairs, [234];
Tyrone calls him King of Ireland, [259], [261];
encourages Tyrone, [267];
his death, [313];
his gift to O’Donnell, [377], [391];
how he lost Holland, [437];
rents the Irish fisheries, [447]
Philip III., King of Spain, a Rehoboam, [313], [314], [349];
sends an expedition to Ireland, [398], [400], [404], [411];
addressed as King of Ireland, [413], [414];
his undertaking humour, [417];
favours O’Donnell, [424], [425];
hopes to conquer England through Ireland, [462]
Philipstown, [8], [39], [141], [301], [334], [370]
Piers, Captain, [64]
Pisa, Hercules of, or Pisano, [6]
Pius V., Pope, [2], [13], [400]
Plantagenets, [441]
Plunkett, Oliver, [67], [68], [74]
Pope, the, Papa aboo, [33], [76], [77];
exalted above the Queen, [79];
suzerain of Ireland, [80];
called sovereign of Ireland, [356];
may depose kings, [400];
sends Tyrone a vassal crown, [438];
to separate Ireland from England, [462], [472]: see Pius V., Gregory XIII., and Clement VIII.
Popham, Sir John, [231]
Portarlington, [357]
Portland Race, [71]
Portland, in Tipperary, [430]
Portugal, [3], [7], [8], [119], [163]
Portumna, [104]
Powell, Humphrey, [472], [473]
— Sir Henry, [354], [359], [360], [409]
— Captain, [423]
— David, [171]
Powers, foster-brethren of Lady Margaret Fitzgerald, [364]
Powerscourt, [223]
Preston, Sir Richard, created Earl of Desmond, [384]
— Lady Elizabeth, first Duchess of Ormonde, [384]
Price, Captain, [150], [381], [382]
Puckering, Sir John, [231]
Puritans, [471]
Queen’s County, [57], [141], [166], [323], [355], [371], [443]
Radclyffe, Sir Alexander, [337]
— Egremont, [2]
— Lady Frances, [224]
Raleigh, Sir Walter, [72];
at Smerwick, [75];
his gallantry, [85];
his policy, [86];
disliked by Grey, [101], [102];
his Munster settlement, [199];
with Lord Burgh, [281];
unwilling to be Deputy, [294];
his property destroyed, [304], [314], [320];
advises the Queen, [351], [381];
his advice to the Queen, [430], [455], [457], [469]
Randolph, Colonel Edward, [361], [362]
Raphoe, see of, [459]
Rathcoole, [81]
Rathlin, [138]
Reagh, Walter and Gerald: seeFitzgerald
— Dermot MacPhelim, [247]
Reay, Lord, [122]
Recalde, Spanish Admiral, [74], [173], [174], [177]
Ree, Lough, [154]
Ribera, Francis de, a Spanish Franciscan, papal Bishop of Leighlin, 1587-1604, [459]
Rice, Piers, [78]
— family, [48]
Rich, Lord, [390]
— Lady, Lady Penelope Devereux, [351], [367], [368], [389], [390]
Rincurren, [401]
Ringabella, [119]
Robins, a surveyor, [169]
Roche, David, Lord, [45], [47], [85], [112], [198], [199]
— Maurice, Lord, son of the foregoing, [45], [85], [305], [306], [312], [400]
— Lady, [312]
— David, [307]
— William, [11]
— Theobald, [96]
— Captain, [331]
— Catherine, [303]
— Monsieur de la, [3], [4], [11], [12]
Rochelle, [69]
Romans, [71]
Rome, [1], [2], [3], [6], [10], [14], [18], [77], [116], [117], [163], [349], [426], [466]
Romney, Captain, [299]
Rosclogher, [185]
Roscommon, [154], [155], [244], [269], [301]
— County, [43], [140], [233], [403], [427], [429], [431]
Roscrea, [403]
Ross or New Ross, in Wexford, [6], [83], [230], [330]
— or Rosscarbery, in Cork, [4], [419], [422], [463], [464]
— Castle, in Kerry, [384]
Rothe, David, titular Bishop of Ossory 1618-1650, [472]
Roughan: see O’Roughan
Russell, Sir William, Lord Deputy 1594-1597, [194], [197], [236], [242];
his viceroyalty chap. xlv. passim, [280], [282], [284], [460]
— the Desmond historian, [22]-[24]
Ryan: see O’Ryan
Rycot, [124]
Ryde, [71]
St. Albans, [281]
St. Andrews, [471]
St. David’s, [463]
St. Laurence, Sir Christopher, [324], [326], [404], [433]
St. Leger, Sir Warham, [33], [54], [55] [56], [84], [85], [89], [97], [105];
his intrigues against Ormonde, [109]-[112], [141], [199], [201], [304], [328], [341];
slain, [354], [359], [360], [472]
— Sir Anthony, Master of the Rolls from 1593, [237]
Santa Cruz, Marquis of, [76], [119], [164], [165], [177]
Santander, [77]
Savage, Sir Arthur, [371]
Saxey, Chief Justice of Munster, [308]
Saxons, [308]
Scattery Island, Scharnhorst, [451]
Scilly, [25]
Scotland, [4], [13], [20], [22], [100], [112], [128], [129], [140], [178], [179], [186], [187], [189], [191], [192], [194], [195], [367], [394], [435], [451]
Scots in Ireland, [10], [22], [43], [60], [64], [79], [92], [93], [126], [128];
invade Ulster, [137]-[140], [146], [147];
slaughtered by Bingham, [152]-[156], [164], [197], [242]-[244], [257], [263], [270], [292];
an element in Dublin University, [471]: and see MacDonnell
Scurlock family, [48]
Seagrave, Stephen, [159]
Sebastian, King of Portugal, [7], [8]
Shakespeare, [249], [318], [320]
Shamrock, Sir John: see Burke
Shandon, [414]
Shannon River, [11], [42], [65], [66], [69], [79], [112], [175], [263], [306], [427], [430]
— Harbour, [403]
Shee: see O’Shea
Sheehys: see MacSheehys
Sherlock, George, [309]
Shrewsbury, Gilbert, Earl of, [248]
Shrule, [92]
Sicily, [177]
Sidee, Captain James, [66], [67]
Sidney, Sir Henry, [1], [8], [30], [51], [97], [100], [131], [140], [165], [216], [319], [453], [473]
— Lady, Sir Henry’s wife, Leicester’s sister, [130]
— Sir Philip, son of the two foregoing, [236], [254]
— Sir Robert, Sir Philip’s brother, [294]
— Dorcas, [272]
Sienna, [3]
Sillees River, [245]
Simancas, [425]
Simier, Monsieur, [25]
Skeffington, Lord Deputy, [287], [334]
Skibbereen, [419]
Slane, Lord, (Fleming), [67], [117], [143]
Slaney River, [330]
Slea Head, [173], [188], [308]
Sleyny family, [48]
— Gallion, [434]
— Gamp, [154]
— Margy, [443]
— Mish, [68]
— Phelim, [404]
Sligo, [137], [154], [180], [181], [189], [191], [208], [209], [214], [215], [253], [256], [260], [263], [270], [336], [427]
— County, [140], [141], [196], [285], [427]
Smerwick, [13], [20], [30]-[32], [65], [69]-[71], [78], [83], [89], [93], [95], [97], [193]
Smith, Rev. Sidney, [22]
— Captain, [102]
Smythe, Jesse, Chief Justice of Munster, [198]
Sorley Boy (Carolus Flavus): see MacDonnell
Soto, Don Pedro de, [414]
Southampton, Henry Wriothesley, Earl of, [281], [323], [331]-[333], [341], [351], [352], [362], [363], [367]-[370], [389]
Spain, English and Irish in, [1], [2], [5], [6], [10], [11], [66]-[68], [149], [163]-[165];
Irish Regiment, [234], [412]-[414], [424]-[426], [435], [465]
Spaniards in Ireland, [12] sqq., [20], [32], [36]-[43];
chap. xxxviii. passim, [95], [119], [128], [153];
chap. xlii. passim, [203], [206], [216], [249], [254], [267], [268], [285], [376], [390], [391], [393], [394];
chap. li. passim, [417], [421]-[423], [430], [459]
Spanish wine, [448]
— Point, [175]
Spenser, Edmund, the poet, Clerk of the Council in Munster, Lord Grey’s secretary in Ireland, [75], [85], [97], [104];
settles in Munster, [198], [199], [292];
rests his hopes on Essex, [295];
an unpublished treatise by him (?), [302];
burnt out by the rebels, [304];
as a courtier, [318], [439], [444], [447], [453], [454];
his friends and work, [456]-[458];
his account of the Church, [460], [461]: and see Boyle, Elizabeth
Spittle Hill, Kinsale, [401]
Springfield, [27]
Stack, Maurice, [378]
Stanley, Sir William, Master of the Ordnance, [28], [29], [36], [39], [42]
at Glenmalure, [60]-[62], [135], [139], [140], [146];
his treason, [161]-[163], [172], [194]
Stanley, Sir Rowland, Sir William’s father, [163]
— Lieutenant, [113]
Stephenson, Oliver, [305]
Stony Stratford, [281]
Strabane, castle and barony, [197], 22[220], [227], [233], [236]
Stradbally, in Queen’s Co., [272], [302], [324], [371]
Strade, [93]
Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, [444], [447]
Strancally, [39]
Strange, Lady, [454]
Streedagh, [182]
Stuart: see Mary
Stukeley, Thomas, [1], [2], [5]-[7], [117]
Suir River, [96], [198], [303], [308], [325], [326], [447]
Surrey, [169]
— Thomas Howard, Earl of, [334]
Sussex, Thomas Radclyffe, Earl of, [29], [75], [87], [140], [224], [318]
Swift, Jonathan, [133], [134], [145], [232], [395]
Swilly, Lough, [22]
Tallow, [304]
Tanner, Edmund, papal Bishop of Cork and Cloyne 1574-1579, [4], [50]
Tarbet, [305]
Tassagard, [133]
Tavistock, [25]
Teelin, [376]
Templemore, [403]
Terceira, [76]
Termonfeckin, [466]
Theatins, [193]
Thomond: see Clare
— Connor O’Brien, 3rd Earl of, [45]
— Donogh O’Brien, 4th Earl of, called the ‘great Earl,’ [127], [147], [215], [257], [284];
in England, [294], [295], [301];
with Ormonde, [310];
asserts his power in Clare, [311], [347], [354];
with Carew, [355];
wounded, [356], [363], [365], [378];
brings troops from England to Kinsale, [402], [414];
hangs men in pairs, [423]
Thompson, Treasurer of St. Patrick’s, [133]
Thornton, Sir George, [108], [291], [305], [382], [391]
Timahoe, [371]
Tipperary, [326]
— County, [23], [27], [35], [57], [96], [106], [107], [111], [126], [141], [166], [194], [301], [309], [390], [403], [431], [454]
— Cross, [141]
Tireragh, [154]
Tone, Theobald Wolfe, [5]
Toneboyreagh: see MacThomas
Tory Island, [253]
Toulouse, [472]
Tournai, [472]
Tracton, [304]
Tralee, [13], [21], [32], [41], [42], [68], [70], [113], [174], [190], [194], [305], [378]
Trant family, [48]
Travers, Dr., second provost of Trinity College, [471]
Trenchard, Sir William, [305]
Trent, Council of, [187], [459], [465], [467], [468]
Trevor, Captain, [435]
— Charles, [230]
Trim, [141], [370], [388], [437]
Trinity College, Dublin, [466], [472], [473]
Trollope, Andrew, [450], [459], [460]
Trough, Mackenna’s country in Monaghan, [203], [227]
Tullaghogue, [429]
Tunis, [2]
Turner, Captain Richard, [283]
Turvey, [224]
Tyburn, [217]
Tyrawley or Tirawley, [92], [189], [190], [215]
Tyrconnell, or Donegal, [10], [128], [150], [171], [197], [221], [228], [237], [284], [321], [374], [375]
— Rory, first Earl of: see O’Donnell
Tyrone, [130], [146], [218]-[221], [242], [243], [266], [321], [376]
— Hugh O’Neill, Baron of Dungannon and Earl of, seeks to be chief, [9], [124];
with Perrott, [129];
sits in Parliament as an Earl, [140];
receives half Tyrone by deed, [146], [170];
his ambition, [171];
his attitude to the Armada, [190]-[192], [196], [197], [202], [222];
his marriage with Mabel Bagenal, [223]-[225], [226]-[228];
becomes ‘the O’Neill,’ [233];
begins to give trouble, [234]-[240];
in Dublin, [242];
allowed to go free, [243];
generally suspected, [244]-[246];
a covert rebel, [247];
in arms, [252];
proclaimed traitor, [254];
Ormonde casts him off, [255];
a price to be set on his head, [256], [257];
invested as O’Neill, [258];
fighting, negotiating and intriguing with Spain, [258]-[260];
demands liberty of conscience, [261], [262]-[266];
a promise to him broken, [267], [268];
regarded as leader of a crusade, [272], [273]-[278];
fights with Lord Burgh, [286]-[288], [290]-[292];
totally defeats Bagenal, [296]-[300];
general rising under him, [301]-[312], [321], [322], [324], [332];
his boasts to foreigners, [336];
his relations with Essex, [338]-[350];
his struggle with Mountjoy, chapters xlix.-lii. passim, [442], [446], [451], [452], [462]
Tyrone, Lady, (O’Donnell), [171]
— Lady, [394]
Tyrone’s sister, [239]
— daughters, [239]
— daughter married to Hugh O’Donnell, [222]
Tyrrell, Captain Richard, a leader of mercenaries, [335], [354], [370], [382], [388], [406], [408], [409], [420], [421]-[423], [430], [433], [444]
Ughtred, Sir Henry, [302], [305]
Upper Ossory: see Fitzpatrick
Ussher, Henry, Archbishop of Armagh, [133], [134], [466], [468], [471]
— James, Archbishop of Armagh, [471], [472]
— Lord, [56]
Valladolid, [425]
Vaughan, Sir Francis, [283], [284]
Vere, Sir Francis, [287]
Vernon, Elizabeth, [333]
Vidonia, [10]
Villafranca, Count of, [181]
Virgil, [131]
Walker, Captain, [45]
— Rev. George, [392]
Wall, Ulick, [305]
Wallop, Sir Henry, Vice-Treasurer from 1582, [35], [41], [79]-[85];
Lord Justice, [97], [104], [106], [111], [116], [117], [120]-[122];
commissioner for Munster escheats, [126], [127], [146], [147], [149], [153], [157], [160], [167], [237], [243];
in the North, [260], [323], [395]
Walsh, Nicholas, Bishop of Ossory, [473]
Walshe, Sir Nicholas, Chief Justice of Munster and Speaker of the House of Commons, [142], [150], [332], [363], [473]
Walsingham, Sir Francis, Secretary of State, [1], [25], [29], [38], [50], [52], [82], [83], [87], [88], [111], [117], [118], [130], [137], [157], [158], [168], [169], [203]-[205], [209], [210], [219], [444], [454]
— Frances, Countess of Essex and Clanricarde, daughter of the foregoing, [454]
Walter Reagh: see Fitzgerald
Wardman, Captain, [329]
Warren, Sir William, [224], [259], [265], [340], [344], [347], [355]
Waterford, [1], [6], [8], [10], [11], [12], [32], [36], [40], [51];
Mayor of, [52], [96], [142], [149], [164], [165], [174], [260], [287], [305], [328], [330], [398], [416], [448], [450], [452], [462], [463]
— County, [46], [96], [104], [106], [107], [198], [199], [328], [360], [377], [381]
— and Lismore Diocese, [469]
Waterhouse, Sir Edward, [13], [26], [31], [32], [82], [85], [117], [135]
Wayman, Mr, [305]
Welsh blood in Connaught, [152]
Wenman, Thomas, [368]
Westmeath, [323], [335], [352], [354], [388], [403]
Westmoreland, Lord, [77]
Wexford County, [20], [88], [141], [323]
— Spanish Earldom of, [6], [45]-[47], [49], [50]
White, Sir Nicholas, Master of the Rolls, [45]-[47], [49], [50], [78], [121], [157], [204], [229], [446]
White Knight, the, [101], [112], [326], [377], [390], [391]
Wicklow, [329], [330], [344], [387]
— County, [57], [81], [88], [141], [323], [328], [329], [443]
Wilbraham, Roger, Solicitor-General 1585, [169], [294]
William III., King, [395], [414]
Williams, Captain Thomas, [284], [292], [295], [296], [300], [392]
— Captain William, [334]
— Philip, [229]
Willoughby, Lord, [166]
Wilmot, Sir Charles, [379], [420], [430]
Wilson, Dr., Secretary of State, [7]
— Thomas, [302]
Wingfield, Jacques, Master of the Ordnance to 1587, [61], [72], [139], [172]
— Sir Richard or Sir Edward, [257], [399], [408]
Winter, Admiral Sir William, [47], [48], [57], [58], [65]-[68], [71], [73]
Wolfe, David, [7]
Woodhouse, Captain, [155]
Wood’s halfpence, [395]
Wotton, Sir Henry, private secretary to Essex in Ireland, [313], [316], [322], [332], [341], [342], [426]
Yellow Ford, Battle of the, [310], [342]
Yorke, Rowland, [162]
Youghal, [31]-[35], [83], [107], [304], [305], [379], [381], [382], [424], [457]
Zamora, [424]
Zouch, Captain John, [39], [40], [43], [73], [83], [87], [88], [93]-[96]
THE END.
Spottiswoode & Co. Printers, New-street Square, London.
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[A Classified Catalogue]
OF WORKS IN
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PUBLISHED BY
LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO.
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91 AND 93 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, AND 32 HORNBY ROAD, BOMBAY.
[CONTENTS.]
| PAGE | |
| BADMINTON LIBRARY (THE) | [10] |
| BIOGRAPHY, PERSONAL MEMOIRS, &c. | [7] |
| CHILDREN’S BOOKS | [25] |
| CLASSICAL LITERATURE, TRANSLATIONS, ETC. | [18] |
| COOKERY, DOMESTIC MANAGEMENT, &c. | [28] |
| EVOLUTION, ANTHROPOLOGY, &c. | [17] |
| FICTION, HUMOUR, &c. | [20] |
| FUR, FEATHER AND FIN SERIES | [12] |
| FINE ARTS (THE) AND MUSIC | [29] |
| HISTORY, POLITICS, POLITY, POLITICAL MEMOIRS, &c. | [3] |
| LANGUAGE, HISTORY AND SCIENCE OF | [16] |
| MENTAL, MORAL, AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY | [14] |
| MISCELLANEOUS AND CRITICAL WORKS | [29] |
| MISCELLANEOUS THEOLOGICAL WORKS | [32] |
| POETRY AND THE DRAMA | [19] |
| POLITICAL ECONOMY AND ECONOMICS | [17] |
| POPULAR SCIENCE | [24] |
| SILVER LIBRARY (THE) | [26] |
| SPORT AND PASTIME | [10] |
| STONYHURST PHILOSOPHICAL SERIES | [16] |
| TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE, THE COLONIES, &c. | [9] |
| WORKS OF REFERENCE | [25] |
[INDEX OF AUTHORS AND EDITORS.]
| Page | |
| Abbott (Evelyn) | [3], [18] |
| ---- (T. K.) | [14], [15] |
| ---- (E. A.) | [14] |
| Acland (A. H. D.) | [3] |
| Acton (Eliza) | [28] |
| Adeane (J. H.) | [8] |
| Æschylus | [18] |
| Ainger (A. C.) | [12] |
| Albemarle (Earl of) | [10] |
| Allen (Grant) | [24] |
| Amos (S.) | [3] |
| Angwin (M. C.) | [28] |
| Anstey (F.) | [20] |
| Aristophanes | [18] |
| Aristotle | [14] |
| Arnold (Sir Edwin) | [9], [19] |
| ---- (Dr. T.) | [3] |
| Ashbourne (Lord) | [3] |
| Ashby (H.) | [28] |
| Ashley (W. J.) | [3], [17] |
| Avebury (Lord) | [17] |
| Ayre (Rev. J.) | [25] |
| Bacon | [7], [14] |
| Baden-Powell (B. H.) | [3] |
| Bagehot (W.) | [7], [17], [27], [30] |
| Bagwell (R.) | [3] |
| Bailey (H. C.) | [20] |
| Bain (Alexander) | [14] |
| Baker (J. H.) | [27], [30] |
| ---- (Sir S. W.) | [9], [10] |
| Balfour (A. J.) | [11], [32] |
| ---- (Lady Betty) | [5] |
| Ball (John) | [9] |
| Banks (M. M.) | [20] |
| Baring-Gould (Rev. S.) | [27], [30] |
| Barnett (S. A. and H.) | [17] |
| Baynes (T. S.) | [30] |
| Beaconsfield (Earl of) | [20] |
| Beaufort (Duke of) | [10], [11] |
| Becker (W. A.) | [18] |
| Beesly (A. H.) | [7] |
| Bell (Mrs. Hugh) | [19] |
| Bent (J. Theodore) | [9] |
| Besant (Sir Walter) | [3] |
| Bickerdyke (J.) | [11], [12], [13] |
| Bird (G.) | [19] |
| Blackburne (J. H.) | [13] |
| Bland (Mrs. Hubert) | [20] |
| Boase (Rev. C. W.) | [5] |
| Boedder (Rev. B.) | [15] |
| Boyd (Rev. A. K. H.) | [30], [32] |
| Brassey (Lady) | [9] |
| ---- (Lord) | [12] |
| Bray (C.) | [14] |
| Bright (Rev. J. F.) | [3] |
| Broadfoot (Major W.) | [10] |
| Brown (A. F.) | [25] |
| Bruce (R. I.) | [3] |
| Buck (H. A.) | [12] |
| Buckland (Jas.) | [25] |
| Buckle (H. T.) | [3] |
| Bull (T.) | [28] |
| Burke (U. R.) | [3] |
| Burns (C. L) | [29] |
| Burrows (Montagu) | [5] |
| Butler (E. A.) | [24] |
| ---- (Samuel) | [18], [20], [30] |
| Cameron of Lochiel | [12] |
| Campbell (Rev. Lewis) | [18], [32] |
| Camperdown (Earl of) | [7] |
| Cawthorne (Geo. Jas.) | [13] |
| Chesney (Sir G.) | [3] |
| Childe-Pemberton (W. S.) | [7] |
| ‘Chola’ | [20] |
| Cholmondeley-Pennell (H.) | [11] |
| Churchill (W. Spencer) | [3], [20] |
| Cicero | [18] |
| Clarke (Rev. R. F.) | [16] |
| Clodd (Edward) | [17], [24] |
| Clutterbuck (W. J.) | [9] |
| Colenso (R. J.) | [29] |
| Coleridge (S. T.) | [19], [20] |
| Comparetti (D.) | [19] |
| Conington (John) | [18] |
| Conway (Sir W. M) | [11] |
| Conybeare (Rev. W. J.) & Howson (Dean) | [27] |
| Coolidge (W. A. B.) | [9] |
| Corbin (M.) | [25] |
| Corbett (Julian S.) | [4] |
| Coutts (W.) | [18] |
| Coventry (A.) | [11] |
| Cox (Harding) | [10] |
| Crake (Rev. A. D.) | [25] |
| Crawford (J. H.) | [20] |
| ---- (R.) | [9] |
| Creed (S.) | [20] |
| Creighton (Bishop) | [4], [5] |
| Crozier (J. B.) | [7], [14] |
| Curzon of Kedleston (Lord) | [4] |
| Custance (Col. H.) | [12] |
| Cutts (Rev. E. L.) | [5] |
| Dallinger (F. W.) | [5] |
| Davidson (W. L.) | [15], [16], [32] |
| Davies (J. F.) | [18] |
| Dent (C. T.) | [11] |
| De Salis (Mrs.) | [29] |
| De Tocqueville (A.) | [4] |
| Devas (C. S.) | [17] |
| Dickinson (G. L.) | [4] |
| ---- (W. H.) | [30] |
| Dougall (L.) | [20] |
| Dowden (E.) | [31] |
| Doyle (A. Conan) | [21] |
| Du Bois (W. E. B.) | [5] |
| Dufferin (Marquis of) | [12] |
| Dunbar (Mary F.) | [20] |
| Ebrington (Viscount) | [12] |
| Ellis (J. H.) | [13] |
| Evans (Sir John) | [30] |
| Farrar (Dean) | [16], [21] |
| Fitzmaurice (Lord E.) | [4] |
| Folkard (H. C.) | [13] |
| Ford (H.) | [13] |
| ---- (W. J.) | [13] |
| Fowler (Edith H.) | [21] |
| Francis (Francis) | [13] |
| Francis (M. E.) | [21] |
| Freeman (Edward A.) | [5] |
| Freshfield (D. W.) | [11] |
| Froude (James A.) | [4], [7], [9], [21] |
| Fuller (F. W.) | [4] |
| Furneaux (W.) | [24] |
| Gardiner (Samuel R.) | [4] |
| Gathorne-Hardy (Hon. A. E.) | [12], [13] |
| Gibbons (J. S.) | [12] |
| Gibson (C. H.) | [14] |
| Gleig (Rev. G. R.) | [8] |
| Goethe | [19] |
| Going (C. B.) | [25] |
| Gore-Booth (Sir H. W.) | [11] |
| Graham (P. A.) | [13] |
| ---- (G. F.) | [16] |
| Granby (Marquis of) | [12] |
| Grant (Sir A.) | [14] |
| Graves (R. P.) | [8] |
| Green (T. Hill) | [15] |
| Greene (E. B.) | [5] |
| Greville (C. C. F.) | [4] |
| Grose (T. H.) | [15] |
| Gross (C.) | [4], [5] |
| Grove (F. C.) | [11] |
| ---- (Mrs. Lilly) | [11] |
| Gurdon (Lady Camilla) | [21] |
| Gurnhill (J.) | [15] |
| Gwilt (J.) | [25] |
| Haggard (H. Rider) | [21], [31] |
| Hake (O.) | [12] |
| Halliwell-Phillipps (J.) | [8] |
| Hamilton (Col. H. B.) | [4] |
| Hamlin (A. D. F.) | [29] |
| Harding (S. B.) | [5] |
| Harte (Bret) | [21] |
| Harting (J. E.) | [12] |
| Hartwig (G.) | [24] |
| Hassall (A.) | [7] |
| Haweis (H. R.) | [8], [30] |
| Head (Mrs.) | [29] |
| Heath (D. D.) | [14] |
| Heathcote (J. M.) | [12] |
| ---- (C. G.) | [12] |
| ---- (N.) | [9] |
| Helmholtz (Hermann von) | [24] |
| Henderson (Lieut Col. G. F.) | [7] |
| Henry (W.) | [12] |
| Henty (G. A.) | [26] |
| Herbert (Col. Kenney) | [12] |
| Herod (Richard S.) | [13] |
| Hiley (R. W.) | [8] |
| Hillier (G. Lacy) | [10] |
| Hime (H. W. L.) | [18] |
| Hodgson (Shadworth) | [15], [31] |
| Hoenig (F.) | [31] |
| Hogan (J. F.) | [7] |
| Holmes (R. R.) | [8] |
| Holroyd (M. J.) | [8] |
| Homer | [18] |
| Hope (Anthony) | [21] |
| Horace | [18] |
| Houston (D. F.) | [5] |
| Howard (Lady Mabel) | [21] |
| Howitt (W.) | [9] |
| Hudson (W. H.) | [24] |
| Huish (M. B.) | [29] |
| Hullah (J.) | [29] |
| Hume (David) | [15] |
| Hunt (Rev. W.) | [5] |
| Hunter (Sir W.) | [5] |
| Hutchinson (Horace G.) | [11], [13] |
| Ingelow (Jean) | [19] |
| Ingram (T. D.) | [5] |
| James (W.) | [15] |
| Jameson (Mrs. Anna) | [29] |
| Jefferies (Richard) | [31] |
| Jekyll (Gertrude) | [31] |
| Jerome (Jerome K.) | [22] |
| Johnson (J. & J. H.) | [31] |
| Jones (H. Bence) | [25] |
| Jordan (W. L.) | [17] |
| Joyce (P. W.) | [5], [22], [31] |
| Justinian | [15] |
| Kant (I.) | [15] |
| Kaye (Sir J. W.) | [5] |
| Kelly (E.) | [15] |
| Kent (C. B. R.) | [5] |
| Kerr (Rev. J.) | [12] |
| Killick (Rev. A. H.) | [15] |
| Kingsley (Rose G.) | [29] |
| Kitchin (Dr. G. W.) | [5] |
| Knight (E. F.) | [9], [12] |
| Köstlin (J.) | [8] |
| Ladd (G. T.) | [15] |
| Lang (Andrew) | [5], [10], [11], [13], [17], [18], [19], [20], [21], [22], [26], [31], [32] |
| Lapsley (G. T.) | [5] |
| Lascelles (Hon. G.) | [10], [12] |
| Lawrence (F. W.) | [17] |
| Laurie (S. S.) | [5] |
| Lawley (Hon. F.) | [11] |
| Lear (H. L. Sidney) | [29] |
| Lecky (W. E. H.) | [5], [15], [19] |
| Lees (J. A.) | [9] |
| Leslie (T. E. Cliffe) | [17] |
| Levett-Yeats (S.) | [22] |
| Lillie (A.) | [13] |
| Lindley (J.) | [25] |
| Loch (C. S.) | [30] |
| Lodge (H. C.) | [5] |
| Loftie (Rev. W. J.) | [5] |
| Longman (C. J.) | [10], [13], [30] |
| ---- (F. W.) | [13] |
| ---- (G. H.) | [11], [12] |
| ---- (Mrs. C. J.) | [29] |
| Lowell (A. L.) | [5] |
| Lubbock (Sir John) | [17] |
| Lucan | [18] |
| Lutoslawski (W.) | [15] |
| Lyall (Edna) | [22] |
| Lynch (H. F. B.) | [9] |
| Lyttelton (Hon. R. H.) | [10] |
| ---- (Hon. A.) | [12] |
| Lytton (Earl of) | [5], [19] |
| Macaulay (Lord) | [5], [6], [19] |
| Macdonald (G.) | [9] |
| ---- (Dr. G.) | [19], [32] |
| Macfarren (Sir G. A.) | [29] |
| Mackail (J. W.) | [8], [18] |
| Mackinnon (J.) | [6] |
| Macleod (H. D.) | [17] |
| Macpherson (Rev. H. A.) | [12] |
| Madden (D. H.) | [13] |
| Magnusson (E.) | [22] |
| Maher (Rev. M.) | [16] |
| Malleson (Col. G. B.) | [5] |
| Mann (E. E.) | [29] |
| Marbot (Baron de) | [8] |
| Marchmont (A. W.) | [22] |
| Marshman (J. C.) | [8] |
| Martineau (Dr. James) | [32] |
| Maryon (M.) | [31] |
| Mason (A. E. W.) | [22] |
| Maskelyne (J. N.) | [13] |
| Matthews (B.) | [31] |
| Maunder (S.) | [25] |
| Max Müller (F.) | [8], [15], [16], [17], [22], [31], [32] |
| May (Sir T. Erskine) | [6] |
| Meade (L. T.) | [26] |
| Melville (G. J. Whyte) | [22] |
| Merivale (Dean) | [6] |
| Merriman (H. S.) | [22] |
| Mill (John Stuart) | [15], [17] |
| Millais (J. G.) | [13] |
| Milner (G.) | [31] |
| Moffat (D.) | [13], [19] |
| Monck (W. H. S.) | [15] |
| Montague (F. C.) | [6] |
| Moon (G. W.) | [19] |
| Moore (T.) | [25] |
| ---- (Rev. Edward) | [14] |
| Morgan (C. Lloyd) | [17] |
| Morris (Mowbray) | [11] |
| ---- (W.) | [18], [19], [20], [22], [30], [31] |
| Mulhall (M. G.) | [17] |
| Nansen (F.) | [9] |
| Nash (V.) | [6] |
| Nesbit (E.) | [20] |
| Nettleship (R. L.) | [15] |
| Newman (Cardinal) | [22] |
| Oldfield (Hon. Mrs.) | [7] |
| Onslow (Earl of) | [11], [12] |
| Osbourne (L.) | [23] |
| Park (W.) | [14] |
| Payne-Gallwey (Sir R.) | [11], [14] |
| Pearson (C. H.) | [8] |
| Peek (Hedley) | [11] |
| Pemberton (W. S. Childe-) | [7] |
| Pembroke (Earl of) | [12] |
| Pennant (C. D.) | [12] |
| Phillipps-Wolley (C.) | [10], [22] |
| Pitman (C. M.) | [11] |
| Pleydell-Bouverie (E. O.) | [12] |
| Pole (W.) | [14] |
| Pollock (W. H.) | [11], [31] |
| Poole (W. H. and Mrs.) | [29] |
| Pooler (C. K.) | [20] |
| Poore (G. V.) | [31] |
| Pope (W. H.) | [12] |
| Powell (E.) | [6] |
| Praeger (S. Rosamond) | [26] |
| Prevost (C.) | [11] |
| Pritchett (R. T.) | [12] |
| Proctor (R. A.) | [14], [24], [28] |
| Raine (Rev. James) | [5] |
| Randolph (C. F.) | [6] |
| Rankin (R.) | [20] |
| Ransome (Cyril) | [3], [6] |
| Raymond (W.) | [22] |
| Reader (Emily E.) | [23] |
| Rhoades (J.) | [18] |
| Rice (S. P.) | [10] |
| Rich (A.) | [18] |
| Richardson (C.) | [10], [12] |
| Rickaby (Rev. John) | [16] |
| ---- (Rev. Joseph) | [16] |
| Ridley (Sir E.) | [18] |
| ---- (Alice) | [23] |
| Riley (J. W.) | [20] |
| Roget (Peter M.) | [16], [25] |
| Romanes (G. J.) | [8], [15], [17], [20], [32] |
| ---- (Mrs. G. J.) | [8] |
| Ronalds (A.) | [14] |
| Roosevelt (T.) | [5] |
| Ross (Martin) | [23] |
| Rossetti (Maria Francesca) | [31] |
| Rotheram (M. A.) | [29] |
| Rowe (R. P. P.) | [11] |
| Russell (Lady) | [8] |
| Saintsbury (G.) | [12] |
| Sandars (T. C.) | [15] |
| Savage-Armstrong (G. F.) | [20] |
| Seebohm (F.) | [6], [8] |
| Selous (F. C.) | [10], [14] |
| Senior (W.) | [11], [12] |
| Sewell (Elizabeth M.) | [23] |
| Shakespeare | [20] |
| Shand (A. I.) | [12] |
| Shaw (W. A.) | [6] |
| Shearman (M.) | [10], [11] |
| Sinclair (A.) | [12] |
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| ---- (W. P. Haskett) | [10] |
| Somerville (E.) | [23] |
| Sophocles | [18] |
| Soulsby (Lucy H.) | [31] |
| Southey (R.) | [31] |
| Spahr (C. B.) | [17] |
| Spedding (J.) | [7], [14] |
| Stanley (Bishop) | [24] |
| Stebbing (W.) | [8], [23] |
| Steel (A. G.) | [10] |
| Stephen (Leslie) | [10] |
| Stephens (H. Morse) | [6] |
| Sternberg (Count Adalbert) | [7] |
| Stevens (R. W.) | [32] |
| Stevenson (R. L.) | [20], [23], [26] |
| Stock (St. George) | [15] |
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| Stuart-Wortley (A. J.) | [11], [12] |
| Stubbs (J. W.) | [7] |
| Suffolk & Berkshire (Earl of) | [11] |
| Sullivan (Sir E.) | [12] |
| Sully (James) | [16] |
| Sutherland (A. and G.) | [7] |
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| Tebbutt (C. G.) | [12] |
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| Thornhill (W. J.) | [18] |
| Thornton (T. H.) | [8] |
| Todd (A.) | [7] |
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| Trevelyan (Sir G. O.) | [6], [7], [8] |
| ---- (G. M.) | [6], [7] |
| Trollope (Anthony) | [23] |
| Turner (H. G.) | [32] |
| Tyndall (J.) | [7], [10] |
| Tyrrell (R. Y.) | [18] |
| Upton (F. K. and Bertha) | [26] |
| Van Dyke (J. C.) | [30] |
| Virgil | [18] |
| Wagner (R.) | [20] |
| Wakeman (H. O.) | [7] |
| Walford (L. B.) | [23] |
| Wallas (Graham) | [8] |
| Walpole (Sir Spencer) | [7] |
| Walrond (Col. H.) | [10] |
| Walsingham (Lord) | [11] |
| Ward (Mrs. W.) | [23] |
| Warwick (Countess of) | [32] |
| Watson (A. E. T.) | [10], [11], [12] |
| Weathers (J.) | [32] |
| Webb (Mr. and Mrs. Sidney) | [17] |
| ---- (T. E.) | [16], [19] |
| Weber (A.) | [16] |
| Weir (Capt. R.) | [11] |
| Wellington (Duchess of) | [30] |
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| Weyman (Stanley) | [23] |
| Whately (Archbishop) | [14], [16] |
| White (W. H.) | [20] |
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| Wilcocks (J. C.) | [14] |
| Wilkins (G.) | [18] |
| Willard (A. R.) | [30] |
| Willich (C. M.) | [25] |
| Witham (T. M.) | [12] |
| Wood (Rev. J. G.) | [25] |
| Wood Martin (W. G.) | [7] |
| Wordsworth (W.) | [20] |
| Wyatt (A. J.) | [19] |
| Wylie (J. H.) | [7] |
| Zeller (E.) | [16] |
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Ball (John).
The Alpine Guide. Reconstructed and Revised on behalf of the Alpine Club, by W. A. B. Coolidge.
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Hints and Notes, Practical and Scientific, for Travellers in the Alps: being a Revision of the General Introduction to the ‘Alpine Guide’. Crown 8vo., 3s. net.
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In the Trades, the Tropics, And The ‘Roaring Forties’.
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The Cruise of the ‘Alerte’: the Narrative of a Search for Treasure on the Desert Island of Trinidad. With 2 Maps and 23 Illustrations. Crown 8vo., 3s. 6d.
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