A Short History of the Kingdom of Ireland from the Earliest Times to the Union with Great Britain: With Five Maps and AppendicesK. Paul, Trench, 1882 - 423 Seiten |
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Seite 47
... lived away in England . They eventually became forfeited to the Crown under the statute against absentees . The most powerful and most numerous of the Norman families was that of the Geraldines . They were all descended from Gerald ...
... lived away in England . They eventually became forfeited to the Crown under the statute against absentees . The most powerful and most numerous of the Norman families was that of the Geraldines . They were all descended from Gerald ...
Seite 52
... lived a life of rough self - reliance . He was a law unto himself , and dealt out rough justice to his tenants in the court baron , according to a curious mixture of the Brehon law and the common law of England . He was a border ...
... lived a life of rough self - reliance . He was a law unto himself , and dealt out rough justice to his tenants in the court baron , according to a curious mixture of the Brehon law and the common law of England . He was a border ...
Seite 53
... lived on English ground petitioned the Crown for an equal recognition with the English by the English law , and offered to pay eight thousand marks for the privilege . But though the king was favourable to the concession , the English ...
... lived on English ground petitioned the Crown for an equal recognition with the English by the English law , and offered to pay eight thousand marks for the privilege . But though the king was favourable to the concession , the English ...
Seite 54
... lived isolated in their strongholds ; they intermarried with the daughters of the native chiefs , and the native chiefs intermarried with their daughters ; they fell into the singular Irish practice of fosterage , under which the ...
... lived isolated in their strongholds ; they intermarried with the daughters of the native chiefs , and the native chiefs intermarried with their daughters ; they fell into the singular Irish practice of fosterage , under which the ...
Seite 88
... lived in conjugal felicity , but who was now middle - aged , and the mother of but one surviving child , and that a daughter . Wolsey had fallen a victim to the interests of the Boleyn faction , who believed him to be adverse to the ...
... lived in conjugal felicity , but who was now middle - aged , and the mother of but one surviving child , and that a daughter . Wolsey had fallen a victim to the interests of the Boleyn faction , who believed him to be adverse to the ...
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abbey acres amongst Anglo-Irish appointed Archbishop Armagh arms Athlone Baron battle became bill bishops brother Carew Carrickfergus Castle Charles chiefs chieftains Clanricarde clergy command confiscated Connaught Cork council court Crown death deputy Derry Desmond driven Dublin Dublin Castle Duke Dundalk Earl Earl of Desmond Elizabeth England English Government estates favour Fitzgerald Fitzmaurice force Foundation French Galway garrison Geraldines grants hands held Henry House insurgents Ireland Irish army island James John Perrot Kerry Kildare Kilkenny king king's Leinster Limerick lord-deputy lords justices McMurrough Meath ment monastery Munster native Irish O'Connor O'Donnel O'Moore O'Neil Offaly officers Ormonde Pale party passed plantation Protestant queen rebellion rebels received restored returned rising Roman Catholics royal secure seized sent settlers Shane Sir John Sir William soldiers Statutes summoned surrendered Tanistry tenants territory Thomond thousand Tipperary took towns tribes troops Tyrconnel Tyrone Ulster United Irishmen Waterford Wexford whole Wicklow