A History of Ireland, from the Earliest Accounts to the Accomplishment of the Union with Great Britain in 1801, 2. köideJ. Jones, 1805 |
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... respect to the prefs - Adminiftration of Henry CromwelHis refignation - Proceedings of the royalifts Council of officersLudlow - Seizure of the Castle and its reduction . Page 1 CHAP . CHA P. XXVIII . English affairs and reflexions on ...
... respect to the prefs - Adminiftration of Henry CromwelHis refignation - Proceedings of the royalifts Council of officersLudlow - Seizure of the Castle and its reduction . Page 1 CHAP . CHA P. XXVIII . English affairs and reflexions on ...
Page 23
... respect to the right of refiftance against undue or tyrannical stretches of power by established authority . Specula- tive reafoners ought in public difquifitions to obferve the fame caution , or to inculcate only the doctrine of ...
... respect to the right of refiftance against undue or tyrannical stretches of power by established authority . Specula- tive reafoners ought in public difquifitions to obferve the fame caution , or to inculcate only the doctrine of ...
Page 77
... respect to the army , than that all the king's fubjects indifcri- minately , without regard to religious profeffion , fhould be admitted to ferve ; yet this lord gave ftrict orders , that none but catholics fhould be admitted ...
... respect to the army , than that all the king's fubjects indifcri- minately , without regard to religious profeffion , fhould be admitted to ferve ; yet this lord gave ftrict orders , that none but catholics fhould be admitted ...
Page 137
... respect of numbers the armies of James and Battle of William were not widely unequal , the former con- fifting of thirty - three thoufand , the latterof thirty - fix thousand men ; nor in point of difcipline was the difference great ...
... respect of numbers the armies of James and Battle of William were not widely unequal , the former con- fifting of thirty - three thoufand , the latterof thirty - fix thousand men ; nor in point of difcipline was the difference great ...
Page 172
... respect to fubmiffion were adopted by Fitton , Nagle , and Plowden , the three lords justices , who exercised the civil admini . stration in the name of James . But the faction who favoured the French intereft were enabled for the ...
... respect to fubmiffion were adopted by Fitton , Nagle , and Plowden , the three lords justices , who exercised the civil admini . stration in the name of James . But the faction who favoured the French intereft were enabled for the ...
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Common terms and phrases
addrefs adminiſtration affembly affociations againſt alfo arms army avoirdupois bill Britain British cafe Carrickfergus catholics caufe cauſe CHAP commanded commiffioners confequence confiderable confifting declared defenſe defign Derry Dublin duke Dungannon earl enemy England English Enniskillen eſtabliſhed excife faid fame favour fecond fecurity feemed feffion fent fervice feven fhall fhould fide filk fince firſt foldiers fome foon force fpirit French ftate fubjects fuch fupply fupport furrendry fyftem garrifon Ginckle Great-Britain himſelf houfe of commons houſe hundred infurgents infurrection intereft Ireland Iriſh Irish parliament Jacobites James juftices king Limerick lord lieutenant Majefty meaſure ment moſt neceffary notwithſtanding occafion officers oppofition Ormond paffed parliament of Ireland party perfons poft poſt pound weight pound weight avoirdupois Poyning's law prevent prifoners proteftants publiſhed purpoſe raiſed rebels refolution reſpect royal ſhall ſtate ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe thouſand thousand pounds tion town troops united kingdom Wexford whofe William XXXVIII
Popular passages
Page 521 - Mayo, or any of them ; and all the commissioned officers in their majesties' quarters, that belong to the Irish regiments now in being, that are treated with, and who are not prisoners of war, or have taken protection, and who shall return and submit to their majesties...
Page 266 - the king, lords and commons of Ireland, had a right to make
Page 553 - Sessions, and twenty-eight Lords Temporal of Ireland, elected for life by the Peers of Ireland, shall be the number to sit and vote on the part of Ireland in the House of Lords of the Parliament of the United Kingdom; and...
Page 533 - Ireland," and that the doctrine, worship, discipline, and government of the said united church shall be, and shall remain in full force for ever, as the same are now by law established for the church of England; and that the continuance and preservation of the said united church, as the established church of England and Ireland...
Page 552 - ... may appear to the Parliament of the United Kingdom to require ; provided, that all writs of error and appeals, depending at the time of the Union, or hereafter to be brought, and which might now be finally decided by the House of Lords of either kingdom, shall from and after the Union be finally decided by the House of Lords of the United Kingdom...
Page 556 - ... himself or by his proxy (the name of such proxy having been previously entered in the books of the House of Lords of Ireland according to the present forms and usages thereof), to the clerk of the Crown or his deputy (who shall then and there attend for that purpose) a list of twenty-eight of the temporal peers of Ireland ; and the clerk of the Crown or his deputy shall then and there publickly read the said lists, and...
Page 529 - Ireland shall become entitled, by descent or creation, to an hereditary seat in the House of Lords of the united kingdom ; it being the true intent and meaning of this article, that at all times after the Union it...
Page 533 - That it be the fifth article of Union, that the churches of England and Ireland, as now by law established, be united into one Protestant Episcopal church, to be called, The United Church of England and Ireland...
Page 532 - House ; and that every one of the Lords of Parliament of the United Kingdom, •and every Member of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, in the First and all succeeding Parliaments, shall, until the Parliament of the United...
Page 305 - ... systematic endeavour to undermine the Constitution in violation of the laws of the land. We pledge ourselves to convict them, we dare them to go into an inquiry; we do not affect to treat them as other than public malefactors ; we speak to them in a style of the most mortifying and humiliating defiance. We pronounce them to be public criminals ; will they dare to deny the charge? I call upon, and dare the ostensible member to rise in his place, and say, on his honour, that he does not believe...