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INDEX.

Drogheda, A.D. 1465, passes an Act for
the institution of a university there,
810; parlt. of Dublin, A.D. 1585, list
of the prelates present in, 1272; ac-
count of the first Irish parlt. of Jas. I.,
A.D. 1614, 873 seqq., 1320.

Parochial endowments in Ireland, their
origin, 1064.

Parochial English schools ordered for
Id. by Act of Henry VIII., 686.
Parsons, their corporate succession, 1068;
supported by the rent paid them as
part landlords of the soil, not by a tax
thereon, 1068-'70.

Paschal controversy. See Easter.
Paschal rule, Bede's mystical explana-
tion of, 960; Cummian's argument
about, and mode of concluding on, 986,
153 seqq.

Paschal week, of the Britons and Irish,
reckoned from the 14th to the 20th day
of the moon, 138, 182.

Paschasius Radbert, invents transubstan-
tiation, 401 seqq., 1425.

Passion of Christ, the, represented in a
drama, 738.

Passover, the Jewish, mode of determin-
ing the time of, 190, 191.

Pastoral office, Treatise of Gregory the
Great on, S. Columbanus expresses his
high opinion of, 292.

Pater-noster and Ave Marias, senseless
use of, by the ignorant poor in Id.,
A.D. 1593, 816.

Paternus, St., of Brittany, studies in Id.,

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Paternus, of Paderborn, his superstitious
suicide, 436.

Patrick, St., not the first preacher of
Christianity in Id., 1, 3; his " Confes-
sion" qd., 3, &c.; various Lives of
him written, 9, 10; their character,
11, his alleged miracles rejected by
respectable Romanists, 12; character
of his "Confession," 13; reality of his
existence, 14; his birthplace, 17; pa-

rentage, youth, and captivity, 18; con-
version, 19; prayerfulness, 20; deli-
verance from captivity, 21; missionary
zeal, 22; difficulties, 23, 24; scriptu-
ral knowledge, 25, 26; studies with
SS. Germanus and Martin, 28; his
mission to Id., 31; his first church
probably a barn, 33; he preaches at
Tarah, ib.; his labours elsewhere in
Id., 34, 35; he founds the see of Ar-
magh, 35; his death, ib.; barbarity
of his Latin, 36; notice of him by
Nernius, 37, 449 n.; his humility, 36,
39; his doctrines, ib., seqq.; his wri-
tings, 40; Irish hymn attributed to
him, ib.; his respect for the H. Scrip-
tures, 43; his views on the subject of
merit, 44; on clerical celibacy and in-
vocation of saints, ib., seqq.; his
Works by Villaneuva, refd. to, 49;
his sentiments relative to purgatory,
48; prayer for the dead, 50; and on
Roman supremacy, 52; the genuine-
ness of his writings, not to be denied,
53, 54; distinction between him and
Sen Patrick, 55; his prophetic vision,
56; and its explanation, 58; notice of
him in S. Cummian's paschal epistle,
159; exhibition of his relics at B.
Boru's funeral, 587; an altar erected
in his honour in Galway church, 591;
his successors' privileges curtailed by
Roman influence, 605; see Legates;
respect of the Irish for his practices,
€12; the modern Romish hierarchy in
Id. not connected by succession with
him and his fellow bishops, &c., 904;
his pretended "translation,"
the title of his "Successor" usurped
1050;
by the chiefs or dynasts of Armagh,
1061; see 465, '6; enumeration of his
successors in the see of Armagh, 1105
seqq.; notice of a consecration by him
in the triple form, 1014; the law of S.
Patrick, what, 1107; of the number of
bishops consecrated by him, 982 seqq.;

the story of his Roman mission adopt- |
ed in the Querimonia Magnatum,
1120.

Patrick's, St., Cathedral, Dublin, its
erection by J. Comyn, 612, 613; and
superstitious dedication, 585; taxation
of the churches belonging to, in A.D.
1294, 1149; Primate Mey grants in-
dulgences to all who should contribute
to repair, 1111; Henry VIII. pro-
claimed king of Id. in, 704; a Bible
presented to, 753; attempt to convert
the establishment into an Irish uni-
versity, 811; two of its dignitaries
foremost in promoting instruction by
means of the Irish tongue, 780; notice
of the State service in, preceding the
parlt. of A.D. 1614, 878.

Patrick, second bp. of Dublin, his conse-

cration at Canterbury, 421; his pro-
mise of canonical obedience to Primate
Lanfranc, ib., 422; his high estimation
of King Turlogh, 423.

Patrick, bp. of Limerick, consecrated by
Theobald, abp. of Canterbury, 434.
See also 477.

Patriots, obliged to profess popular reli-
gion, 805.

Patron saints, or apostles, of different
continental nations, Irishmen, 334,
837, 340, 349.

Paul, St., most probably the apostle of
Britain, 110.

Paul's, St., Cross, London, abp. Fitz
Ralph a preacher at, 654.

Paul's, St., Cathedral, London, H. Cur-
wen consecrated in, for abp. of Dublin,
741.

Paul's, Father, History of the Council of
Trent qd., 1201.

Paulet, Sir George, governor of Derry,

his quarrel with O'Dogherty, 867 n.
Paulinus, Roman missionary, after the
conversion of the Northumbrians, is
driven back to Kent, 173.

Pavia, (Italy,) Dungal's school in, 395.

Peacock's eyes, used for the purposes of
witchcraft, 649.

Pelagianism, invades the British Church,
115, its nature, ib.; charged on the
Irish of the 7th cent., 148.
Pelagius said to have propagated monas-
ticism in Britain, 229.

Pelham, Sir W., Desmond's impudent
letter to, 796, "7.

Pembridge, the annalist, his curious no-
tion concerning the famine consequent
on E. Bruce's war, 1297.
Pembroke, (in Wales,) the starting place
of Henry II. for the invasion of Id.,
503, 1040; invasion of Pembroke itself
by Arnulf Montgomery, 1017; its
castle withstands the assaults of the
Welsh, 1027; is fortified against Hen-
ry I. on occasion of the Montgomery's
rebellion, 1029; and afterwards re-
built by Gerald de Windsor, subse-
quently to the settlement of the Fle-
mings in West Wales, 1031; transac-
tions of Henry II. there, 1040.
Pembroke, the earl of. See Mareschal,
Strongbow, &c.

Penal laws, against Romish supremacy,
not invented by Protestants, 859; ex-
torted from the English government
by papal presumption and intolerance,
843, 5, 1331-4; instances of their ex-
ecution, 1336, 7, 68, 75; P. Walsh's
account of their origin, 1399 segg.
Penances, daily, of the ancient monks,
their nature, 280.

Penciail, Jacob, pope's legate, his visit to
Id., 1052; and simony, 1053.
Pension-begging at foreign courts, a

trade of Irish titular bps., 909. See 1348.
Penthoiris, Geoffrey de, Anglo-Norman
murderer, 1128.

Pepin, King, patronises St. Virgilius,
344; and advances him to the bpk. of
Saltzburgh, 348.
Perceval, the Hon. and Rev., his papers
On the Amelioration of Id. referred to,

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INDEX.

387, '8; his treatise on the Apostolical
Succession qd., 1221, 2.
Percy, bp. of Dromore, his style of liv-
ing, &c., noticed, 1247 n.; his intimacy
with the recusant clergy, nn., ib., and
1048.

Perrot, Sir J., President of Munster, 778,
787; submission of Jas. Fitzmaurice
to, io., 1270; his effort, as Ld. Deputy
of Id., to convert St. Patrick's Cathe-
dral, Dublin, into a university, 811.
Peter, St., said to have preached in Bri-
tain. 109; his supremacy contended
for by Wilfrid at Whitby, 183; the re-
spect of St. Cummian, &c., for his
chair, or see, noticed, 168; views of
St. Columbanus connected with do.,
306 seqq., 948-50, 953, '4, 960; Ald-
helm's maintenance of his claims,
202.

Peter's, St., Chair, the festival of, 1234.
Peter's, St., Church, Drogheda, Primate
Mey provides for the saying of prayers
for the dead in, 590, 1; Primate Dow-
dall holds a provincial synod in, 1112,

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Peter and Paul, SS., Convent and Cathe-
dral Church of, at Newtown, Trim,
571, 616; the abbey of, in Bath,
branch establishments connected with
in Id., 575; Rome revereneed by the
Irish for its connection with their me-
mories, 168, 952, '3, 960.

Peter pence, promised by King Henry
II. as a rent to the popes for Id., 488,
528, 1046, 7, 8, 54; fraudulently
withheld, according to the Querimonia
Magnatum, 1123, 31; abolished in
England by Henry VIII., 678.
Petit, Ralph le, archdeacon of Meath,
his effort to obtain the primacy of Id.,
A.D. 1206, 619.

Petranus of Brittany, his visit to Id.,
126.

Petrie, Mr. Geo., his Essay on Tarah

Hill fedr. to, 5 n., 6, 42 n., 70; his

Petroc, St., the Briton, 71; spends 20
observations on St. Patrick and Sen
Patrick, 55.
ycars in Id. improving himself in the
Petronilla burned at Kilkenny for witch-
knowledge of the H. Scriptures, &c.,
craft, 649.

Phelan, Mr., his Declan letters qd., 30,
1059; his History of the Policy of the
Church of Rome in Id., 554 ., &c.,
607 m., 766 n.; an error of his con-
nected with R. Waucop's titr. primacy
corrected, 716 n.; his inaccuracy in
other instances noticed, 828 n., 837 n.,
1289, 1306, 1317; correction of his
version of D. Rothe's account of Shane
O'Neill's tumults and end, 1232; his
account of the views of Bp. Berring-
ton, &c., on the pretended deposing
power of the popes of Rome, 1324-
1333; extracts from his Letter to the
Marquess Wellesley, on the Church
property of Id., &c., 1059 seqq.
Phelim Mac Criffan, king of Munster,
his attack on Kildare, 383; his death,
Philip II., king of Spain, applied to by
385; his patronage of the "Rule of
St. Patrick" in his realm, 1107.
Jas. Fitzmaurice for aid towards his
rebellion, 788; the earl of Desmond
expresses his confident reliance on his
power, 797; his encouraging letters to
the Irish rebel chiefs, 824; and em-
ployment of titr. primate Magauran
as his agent for such business, 1236.
Philip III., king of Spain, obtains the
See 1252.
appointment of M. de Oviedo to be
titr. abp. of Dublin, and sends him
into Id. with aid for the rebels there,
827, 1252, '3; his foundation of an
Philip of Slane, bp. of Cork, his intri
Irish College in Louvain University,
ib., 1373.

guing relative to the arranging of cer-

tain ecclesiastical affairs in Id., Enagh-
dun diocese, &c., 1178-'81.
Philip of Worcester founds a Benedic-
tine priory at Kilcumin, Co. Tippe-
rary, 575.

Phoenix plume, a, sent by the pope of
Rome to H. O'Neill, 827.
Picts, their conversion by S. Columb-
kille, 79; their wars with the people
of Britain, 116, 117; their observance
of the Irish Easter, in opposition to
Rome's decrees, 183; they conform to
the latter, 185.

Piers, an English officer, assassinates S.
O'Neill, 771.

Piracy of the ancient Irish, some notes
on, 1440.

Piran, St., of Cornwall, supposed identi-
cal with Kieran of Saigir, 69.
Pius. See Pope.

Plantation of Ulster, 867; some of its re-

sults noticed, 868 seqq.
Platina, his silence relative to S. Pa-
trick's mission by P. Celestine, 29.
Plowden's Ireland qd., 844.

Plunket, A., mentioned as a titr. abp. of
Dublin, 1255.

Plunket, Oliver, seventh titular primate

of Id., his life, 1242; specification of
the charges of treason brought against
him, 1243; his trial, condemnation,
dying address, &c., 1244; his Jus Pri-
matiale, ib,

Poland, why few bpks. in, 984.
Pole, Cardinal, his acknowledgment of
P. Adrian's motive in bestowing Id. on
Henry II., 489.

Pollock, M., Esq., 964.

Political agitation employed against the
Refn. in Id., 875, 1344; the new race
of priests, A.D. 1614, cautioned against
meddling with, privately, 895; such
cares devolving more satisfactorily on
their superiors, 896, 1349.

Polycarp, St., quoted by the Irish as an
authority for their Easter, 182; his

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Popes, the, of Rome, their coalition with

England against the Irish, on various
occasions before the Refn., 487 seqq.,
555, 602, 4, 624, 633, 647, '8 n., 661,
1426, &c.; their power not unchecked
in old times by Romish authorities,
674, 861, &c.; their assertion of a
claim to a deposing power, 708, 830, '1;
see Deposing Power, Oaths, &c.; P.
Walsh's account of their claims, to be
monarchs of the entire world, &c.,
1402; their extensive control over
episcopal appointments in Id., cir.
A.D. 1367, 1139-45. (See also 1108
-'12, and 1321, '2.

Popes, individual, prooceedings of, con-
nected with Ireland, &c:-
Adrian IV., origin of his claim to Id.,
427; his advancement to the papacy,
486; his Bull to Henry II. for the in-
vasion of Id., 488; the motive for
granting it, 489, 490; his intimacy
with John of Salisbury, and death, ib.,
491; sanction of his Bull in Id., 526,
527; whether it remained a secret for
20 years, 542; Dr. Lanigan's censure
of the concoctor of it, and his accom-
plices, 544 n., 595 n.; Adrian's at-
tempt on Id. older than D. Mac Mo-
rogh's treason, 552; the Irish com-
plain of his mischievous interference,
in their appeal to P. John XXII., 634,
'5, €42, 1121, '3; copy of his bull to

Henry, 1045-7; which seems to have
been elicited partly by the private
spitefulness of a covetous cardinal,
1048.

Agatho, sends John, precentor of St.
Peter's, Rome, into England, 209;
Agatho, Sergius, and Benedict, resisted
by the Anglo-Saxons, 222.
Alexander III. receives from Henry II.
intelligence of the submission of the
Irish, 508, 510 n.; the kingdom over
whose island he confirms to him, 525,
"7; his Brief omitted by Giraldus, but
preserved by J. Ross of Warwick, 530
n.; his curious letters on the state of
Ireland, 532 seqq.; his suggestion to
Henry II. to be careful to introduce
papal jurisdiction into Id., 538, '9; for
the further advancement of which he
commissions Cardinal Vivian to be his
legate there, 601; who takes pains to
explain to the Irish that it was by his
authority Henry acted, 602; licenses
and confirms the appointment of John,
earl of Morton, as king of Id., 604;
his letter confirming the bull of Adri.
an, 1053, '4; his extraordinary epistle
to the bps. of Id., 1085-'7; do. to
King Henry II, 1087-'90; do. to the
Irish chieftains, 1090-'91; do. to
Rodk. O'Conor, king of Id, 1091, '2.
Anicetus, his conference with S. Poly-
carp, 198, 258.

Boniface IV., St. Columbanus's letter

to, on the Three Chapters, 271, 300,
304 seqq.; the letter itself in full, 940.
Boniface VIII. makes a vain attempt to
secure possession of the ecclesiastical
Tenths of England, 1149.

Celestine, his mission of Palladius to Id.,
2; whether he sent St. Patrick also,
29.

Clement III. authorizes the canoniza-
tion of St. Malachy, 481; makes an
English bp. his legate for Id., 1050,
'51.

Clement V. orders all monks to enter
holy orders, 231; grants to Abp. Lech
a bull for the foundation of a univer-
sity in Dublin, 629; makes over to the
king of Engd. the papal Tenths of
that island for seven years, 1151.
Clement VIII. sends H. O'Neill "a
phoenix plume," &c., in support of his
rebellion, 827; letter to him from
O'Neill, the Sugan Desmond, &c.,
836, 1282-5; his encouraging bull to
them, 837, 1286-'8; his second do.,
encouraging them to "fight manfully
for the inheritance of their fathers,"
839, 1289; titular primate Lombard's
connection with him, 908, 909 m., 1238.
See also 1296, 1317, 1373.
Clement IX. appoints Oliver Plunket
titr. primate of Id., 1242.
Damasus, letter of St. Jerome to, qd. by
S. Cummian, 158, 168.
Eleutherius, his intercourse with King
Lucius, 112.

Eugenius III.. his elevation to the pa-
pacy, A.D. 1145, and visit to France,
A.D. 1148, noticed, 478; Primate Mala-
chy's mission to apply to him for palls
for Id., ib., 479; he sends over the
palls by Card. Paparo, 482, 993, &c.
See also 616.

Gregory I. sends the monk Augustine
as a missionary to the Saxons, 128;
makes York an episcopal see, 132, 177;
his writings qd. by S. Cummian, 159;
letter of S. Columbanus to, on the
Paschal controversy, 257, 288; his
censure of the profligacy and simony
of the French clergy, 276; his work
on the Pastoral Office, praised by S.
Columbanus, 292; his correspondence
with certain bishops on the subject
of the Three Chapters, 932-937 ;
his intercourse with S. Kentegern,

1009.

Gregory VII, or Hildebrand, his ambi-

tious letter, containing the first claim

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