Falkland, Lord, [231]
Famine, the first symptoms of, [96;]
great distress, [397;]
Mr. Forster reports, [397;]
Relief Act passed, [399;]
the ruin which followed it, [400;]
after effects, [403]
Fedlim O'Connor, king of Connaught, [108]
Fenian prisoners, rescue of, at Manchester, [405]
Fenian rising, [401]
Fenni or Fenians, [11]
Fercal, tribes of, [161]
Ferns, town of, [83]
Finn, McCumal, [14]
Finn or Fingal, father of Ossian, [11]
Finvarragh, king of the fairies, [21]
Firbolgs, race of, [6]
Fitton, Sir Edward, [176]
Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, [354-359]
Fitzgerald, Maurice, [83]
Fitzgerald, Mr., member for Clare, [380]
Fitzgerald, Raymond (le Gros), [85]
Fitzgerald, Sir James, [191]
Fitzgerald, Sir John, [191]
FitzHenry, Robert and Meiler, sons of Nesta, [76]
Fitzmaurice, Lady, [188]
Fitzmaurice of Lexnaw, [111]
Fitzmaurice, Sir James, [178;]
breaks into rebellion, [178;]
relations between him and Sir James Perrot, [179;]
burns Kilmallock [179;]
marches into Ulster, [179;]
burns Athlone, [179;]
joins the Mac-an-Earlas, [180;]
lays Galway waste, [180;]
crosses the Shannon, [180;]
surrenders and takes the required oaths at Kilmallock, [180;]
sails to France, [180;]
returns, [184;]
his death, [187]
Fitzsimons, Walter, Archbishop of Dublin, [137]
FitzStephen, Robert, [83]
FitzUrse of Louth, [111]
Fitzwilliam, Lord, Lord-Lieutenant, [349-350]
Fitzwilliam, Sir William, Lord-deputy, [199]
Flood, Rt. Hon. Henry, [323]
Foltlebar and Feradach, Legends, [16]
Formorians, race of, [5]
Forster, Mr. W.E., [397]
Forty-shilling Freeholders, Bill of, [349]
"Four Masters," the annals of the, [9]
Foyle, Lough, [165]
Freeman's Journal, [322]
Fuidhar, or "broken man," [28]

G

Gall (Saint), [36]
Galway, bay and town of, [104]
Galway, Jury of, [247]
George, Duke of Clarence, [129]
Gerald de Barri, Gerald of Wales, or Giraldus Cambrensis, [78;]
grandson of Nesta, [78;]
priest and chronicler, [78;]
his character as a writer, [78]
Gerald, 8th Earl of Kildare, son of Geroit Mor, [130]
Gerald of Windsor, husband to Nesta, [76]
Geraldines, [101;]
Giraldus' opinion of them, [101;]
ancestors of Earls Kildare and Desmond, [102;]
important position, [102;]
their keep at Maynooth, [102;]
power in Ireland, [102;]
Geroit Mor, or Gerald the Great, 7th Earl of Kildare, [130]
Gilbert, Sir Humphry, [179]
Gilla Dacker and his horse, legend of, [14]
Ginkel, Dutch general of William III., [291]
Gladstone, Mr. W.E., [406;]
disestablished the Irish Church, [406;]
introduced Irish Land Act of 1870, [407;]
of 1881, [409;]
imprisoned members of Land League, [411;]
proposed measure of Home Rule of 1886, [414]
Glenmama near Dunlaven, [68]
Godred, King of Man, [87]
Gormanstown, Lord, [249]
Granard, Lord Justice, [280]
Grattan, Henry, [328;]
his loyalty and patriotism, [328;]
he enters Parliament, [330;]
his eloquence, [330;]
Declaration of Rights, [330;]
retires into private life, [332;]
protests against the Union, [332;]
member of English Parliament, [332;]
his death and burial, [333]
"Great Darcy of Platten," [132]
Gregory, Pope, [44]
Grey, de Wilton, Lord-deputy, [189]
Grey, Leonard, Lord, Deputy, [151], [152]
Griffiths, Sir Richard, Irish geologist, [312]

H

Habeas Corpus Act, [351]
Hadrian IV., Pope, [81]
Hamilton, Sir Richard, [282]
Harcourt, Lord, [325]
Hardi, French General, [365]
Harvey, Bagenal, United Irishman and general of the rebels, [363]
Hasculph, Danish Governor, [86-87]
Hatton, Sir Christopher, "an Undertaker," [194]
Heber and Heremon, sons of Milesius, [10]
Hoadly, Archbishop of Armagh, [320]
Hoche, General, [355]
Hoche, vessel called the, [365]
Home Rule, the question of, [44]
Howth, Earl of, [134], [136]
Humbert, French general, [364]
Hy-Nial, or royal house of O'Neil, [42], [52]

I

Iar Connaught, mountains of, [104]
Ireland, Primeval, [1;]
its early vicissitudes, [3;]
South European plants in, [5;]
early history of, [5-11;]
its legends, [13-21;]
Celtic Ireland, [23;]
early laws of, [26-29;]
St. Patrick's visit to, [32;]
the Northern scourge of, [50;]
invasion by Anglo-Normans, [76;]
King John in, [98-100;]
invasion of, by Edward Bruce, [107;]
Richard II. visits to, [119;]
attempt to force Protestantism upon, [158-160;]
Molyneux's, "The case of," &c., [313;]
Union of Great Britain and Ireland, [367-376]
Ireland, the future of, [413]
"Ireland, Young," party, [390-395]
Irish Catholic Association, [407]
Irish Celts, [25]
Irish Church, disestablishment of, [409]
Irish Education Act, [408]
Irish elk, [4]
Irish export of woollen goods forbidden, [309]
Irish famine, 396, [403]
Irish hare, [4]
Irish heroes, [418]
Irish Land Act, [407]
Irish volunteers, [336-340]
Inchiquin, Lord, [256]
Iona, [44]

J

James II. recalls Lord Ormond, [280;]
restores Catholics to office, [280;]
his treatment of Protestants, [281-282;]
his flight to France, [282;]
arrives in Ireland, [283;]
his reception, [284;]
besieges Londonderry, [285;]
goes to Dublin, [286;]
is defeated at the battle of the Boyne, [288;]
his flight, [289]
John, the Mad Berserker-warrior, [87]
Jones, Michael, Colonel, [259]
Jones, Paul, pirate, [326]
Joyce's, Mr., "Celtic Romances," [13]