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A28831 The reduction of Ireland to the crown of England with the governours since the conquest by King Henry II, Anno MCLXXII, with some passages in their government : a brief account of the Rebellion, Anno Dom. MDCXLI ... Borlase, Edmund, d. 1682? 1675 (1675) Wing B3771; ESTC R2056 87,451 336

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Vlster July 13. Lo●● Justice obiit on Palmsunday April 19. 1346. at Kilmainam The Nobility who were wont to suffer ●● controllment speak ill of him ●● of a rigorous and cruel man H● was a singular good Justicer an● one that if he had not died ●● soon was the likeliest person ●● that Age to have reduced the d●generate English Colonies to the natural obedience to the Crown of England 1346. Sir Roger Darcy whether ●● Nocton in Lincolnshire or of ●●ick in Essex was made Lord Justice ad tempus de assensu ordina●●e Regalium aliorum in Hiber●● and was sworn April 10. the ●●y following Vffords death 1346. Sir John Morris came Lord Justice May 25. He summoned a Parliament at Dublin to which the ●arl of Desmond refused to come ●●senting some priviledges newly ●●ken away formerly granted to ●●m and his Ancestors raising there●●on such a dissention between the English of Blood and the English of ●●rth as he and the Earl of Kildare ●ith the Citizens and Burgesses of ●●e principal Towns summoned a ●ouncil at Kilkenny in opposition ●o the Parliament but effected nothing more then some Articles against Maurice the Justice which vanished He was put out by the King and Sir Walter Birmingham was insttuted Lord Justice and came into Ireland in June and was sworn Lord Justice the 19. of the same Moneth who going for England 1348. Made John Archer Pri●● of Kilmainam his Deputy Justice 1348. Sir Walter Birmingham returns Justice as before to who● the King gave the Barony of Ken●● in Ossory which belonged to Eusta●● le Poer lately attainted and hanged Obiit Birmingham quondam Optim●● Justiciarius Hiberniae in Vigilia Margaritae Virginis 1350. in Angli●● Camden writes that he of the Nob●● and Martial Family of the Birminghams alias Bremichams took h●● Original from the Town so named i● Warwickshire 1349. Dominus de Carew Mil●● Baro Lord Justice probably of Anthony in Devonshire though others think of Clopton whence the ●●rews Barons of Clopton in Warwick shire 1349. Sir Thomas Rokeby Lord Justice of an ancient Family in ●ork shire sworn Decemb. 20. who quitting it 1351. He appointed for a time Maurice de Rupeforti alias Rochfort Bishop of Limerick his Lieutenant Justice who died June 9. some write April 15. 1353. Doctus fuit ●ir bonae Vitae Conversationis honestae Afterwards Rokesby returned Lord Justice and resigned July 20. 1355. To Maurice Fitz Thomas Earl of Desmond He died in Dublin Castle die Conversionis St. Pauli following 1356. Sir Thomas Rokesby was again Lord Justice He died the same year in the Castle of Kilka H● was an excellent Governour h● held a Parliament at Kilkenny acting therein many Laws for reducing the English Colonies to their Obedience It is recorded of him that he would eat in Wooden dishes but pay for his meat silver and gold 1357. Sir Almarick de Sancta Amando of which name and for ought I can yet read of whose Family the Barons de Sancto Amand● of Widehay in Berkshire are probably descended Lord Justice he returned into England anno 1358 or 1359. when 1359. James Butler Earl of Ormond son of Edmund Earl of Carrick was made Lord Justice He was created Earl of Ormond anno 2 Ed 3. and by some stiled Earl of Tiperary Quem Edw. 3. eo honoris evixit cujus majores olim honorarii erant Hiberniae Pincernae unde illis hoc nomen Butler impositum He married the daughter of Humphrey Bohun Earl of Hereford whom he had by a daughter of King Edw. 1. whereupon his son James was ever stiled The Noble Earl 1360. The Earl of Ormond going into England Maurice Fitz Thomas Earl of Kildare was made Lord Justice ut sequitur Omnibus ad quos hae Literae provenerint salutem Sciatis quod commissimus dilecto fideli nostro Mauritio Comiti Kildare Officium Justiciarii nostri terrae nostrae Hiberniae terram nostram Hiberniam cum Castris et omnibus pertinentiis suis custodiendam quamdiu nobis placuerit Recipiendo ad Scaccarium nostrum Dubliniae per annum quamdiu in Officio illo sic steterit quingentas libras pro quibus Officium illud et terram custodiet et erit vicessimus de hominibus ad arma cum to● equis coopertis continue durante commissione nostra supradicta in cujus rei testimonium c. Dat. per manus dilecti nostr● in Christo Fratris Thomae de Burgey Prioris Hospitalis Sti. Johannis Hierusalem in Hibernia Cancellari● nostri Hiberniae apud Dubliniam Martii 30. 35 Ed. 3● The Earl of Kildare upon the return of the Earl of Ormond Lord Justice surrenders to him And 1361. Lionel Duke of Clarence sirnamed Antwerp the place of his birth third son of Edw. 3. Earl of Vlster and Lord of Connaght in right of his Wife Elizabeth daughter and heir of William de Burgo came Lord Lieutenant into Ireland in octav Nativitatis Mariae with about 1500 men by the Pole accompanied with persons of great quality whose pay for himself and them Davies in his Discourse of Ireland particularly expresses too circumstantial for us to insist on His principal service was manifested in the well governing of his Army and in holding that famous Parliament at Kilkenny wherein the extortion of the Souldier and the degenerate manner of the English were by strict Laws reformed He died October 17. 1368. not at Venice but at Langavil in Italy soon after he had married Violenta the Duke of Millains daughter where they feasted him so as shortly after he died and was buried at Clare in Suffolk 1364. Lionel Duke of Clarence went into England April 22. and left James Earl of Ormond his Deputy Justice of Ireland and Decemb. 8. returned Lord Lieutenant 1365. The Duke of Clarence going into England Sir Thomas Dal● was left Governour and Justice o● Ireland 1367. Gerald Fitz Maurice Ear● of Desmond was made Lord Justice 1369. Sir William de Winsor came into Ireland July 12. Lord Lieutenant who taking Ship for England March 21. 1371. The 22 of March Maurice Fitz Thomas Earl of Kildare was sworn Custos Hiberniae 1372. Sir Robert de Ashton o● Ashton under Line in the County o● Lancaster was made Lord Justice a person of great account in this Kings reign as being Constable o● Dover Castle Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports Admiral of the Fleet from Thames mouth Westward Lord Treasurer of England Annis 50 51 Edw. 3. and as a Record testifies Constituitur Justiciarius Hi●erniae quamdiu c. Teste Reg. apud Westm ' April 28. part 1. pat anno 43 Edw. 3. M. 15. He is buried in the Church in Dover Castle with this Inscription Hic jacet Robertus Ashton Miles quondam Constabularius Castri Dovoriae Custos 5 Portuum Qui obiit nono die Jan. Anno Domini 1384. Cujus animae propitietur Deus Amen In the 44. of this Kings Reign saith
Curia Romana pro negotio ipsius patris nostri expediendis pro expensis quas idem Archiepiscopus fecit in servitio nostro in Hibern dum ultimo fuit Justiciar noster Hibern Assignavimus eidem Archiepiscopo Centum libras de firma Civitatis nostrae de Limerick recipiendas ad duos terminos viz. ad festum Sancti Michaelis quinquaginta libras ad Paschae quinquaginta libras Assignavimus etiam eidem Archiepiscopo in solutione ejusdem debiti quinquaginta Marcas per annum percipiendum de firma Civitatis nostrae Dublin Sicut plenius continetur in nostris patentibus quas inde fieri fecimus ideo vobis mandamus quod praedictas centum libras de firma praedictae Civitatis Limerick praedictas quinquaginta Marcas de firma Civitatis nostrae Dublin eidem Archiepiscopo recipere permittatis quousque praedictum debitum ei persolvatur Teste Rege apud Westm Maii 10. Anno Regni nostri 12. 1232. Maurice Fitz Gerald was made Lord Justice September 2. He continued so till 1245. at which time Mauritium Hiberniae Justiciarium eo quod ficte tarde auxilium ab Hibernia the King having use of his Forces against David ap Llewellin Prince of Wales domino regi duxerat periclitanti a Justiciaria deposuit Whilest he was Justice he excellently well behaved himself against Earl Marescal who 1234. had hostilely invaded Ireland animated by Geoffery de Marisco whom Mat. Paris calls homo ejus ligius senex infidelis and subduing him the first of April after that the Earl Marescal had with an unexpressable courage most of his Party betraying him manfully defended himself He died May 8. 1257. Miles strenuus facetus nulli secundus and was buried at Youghall amongst the Frier Minors which Covent he founded 1231. And upon his remove 1245. Sir John Fitz Geoffery was made Lord Justice Novemb. 4. Vir quidem praeclarus genere divitiis potentia To whom the King directs his Writ that Turvil Bishop of Ossory might dispose of his Goods by his last Will. Mandatum est Johanni filio Galfrido Justiciar Hiberniae quod permittat Priorem de Conale alios executores testamenti Galfridi de Turvil Episcopi Ossoriensis habere liberam administrationem omnium bonorum quae fuerunt ejusdem Episcopi Ita quod de primis bonis leventur debita Regis quae Regi debebat quae sunt Clara. Teste Rege apud Westm April 12. On his remove 1247. Theobald Butler Lord of Carrick and John Cogan were chosen Lords Justices Butler died in the Castle of Arkelo 1285. 1255. Alan de la Zouch succeed-Lord Justice descended from Alan Viscount of Roan in Little Brittain in times past Lord Ashbey de la Zouch in Leicester-shire He was in the 34 of H. 3. Chief Justice of the Kings Bench. He was slain by John 7. Earl Warren and of Surrey half Brother to King H. 3. in Westminster Hall 1259. Stephen de long Espee second Son of William the first Earl of Salisbury Justiciarius in Hibernia Dominus Capitalis erat o●dinatus He died 1260. in Ireland being slain by his own People his body was buried in England The 16 year of K. John He was made Earl of Vlster 1260. William Dean Lord Justice He died 1261. 1261. Sir Richard de Rupella or Rochel Glynn calls him la Rochel de Capel Lord Justice who being recalled into England 1267. Sir David de Barry was instituted in his place who did excellent Service in composing some differences between the Geraldines and Bourks which were too heady for the former Governour it is conceived that the Viscount Barries in Ireland descended from this man and all from Barry in Glanmorganshire 1268. Sir Robert de Vfford Ancestor not unlike of Robert de Vfford Earl of Suffolk Lord Justice upon whose remove into England 1269. Richardus de Exonia was made Lord Justice He died the same Year and 1270. Sir James Audley alias Aldelegh from whence as is supposed the noble Lord Audley was made Lord Justice He was killed with a fall from his Horse in Tocmond 1272. June 23. After whose death till the entrance of Edward the first Histories supply not who was instituted in his room This was he as probably may be conjectured to whom Hugh Lacy Earl of Vlster gave Lands with the Constableship of Vlster Sub EDWARDO I. 1272. Maurice Fitz Maurice Lord Justice to whom the King directs this Writ De conservatione Pacis in Hibernia Rex dilecto fideli suo Mauritio filio Mauritii Justic suo Hibern salutem Cum defuncto jam celebris memoriae Domino H. Rege patre nostro ad nos regni Angliae gubernaculum terrae Hibern Dominium successione haereditaria pertineant per quod nos qui in exhibitione pacis conservatione omnibus singulis de praedictis regno sumus ex nunc debitores jam pacem nostram in eodem regno nomine Regis fecimus proclamari vobis mandamus firmiter injungentes quod per totam terram nostram Hib. pacem nostram publice clamari firmiter teneri faciatis inhibendo omnibus et singulis de eadem terra sub periculo exhaeredationis vitae et membrorum ne quis pacem nostram infringere praesumat Nos enim omnibus et singulis de praedicta terra nostra Hiberniae in omnibus juribus et rebus ipsos contingentibus contra quoscunque tam majores quam minores parati sumus erimus plenam Auctore Domino Justitiam exhibere Dat per manum W. de Merton Cancellarii nostri apud Westminst Decemb. 7. 1173. Geoffery Lord Genevil of the House of Lorrain newly returned in Pilgrimage from the Holy Sepulchre Lord Justice succeeded in October to whom I find many Writs directed the following may be sufficient to testifie the truth Rex dilecto fideli suo Galfrido de Genevil Justiciario suo Hiberniae salutem Mandamus vobis quod omnimodas exactiones demandas districtiones quas fieri facitis venerabili Cassalen Archiepiscopo ponatis in respectum usque ad ventum nostrum in Angliam ut tunc inde provideatur quod rationabiliter fuerit inde faciendum nullam molestiam sibi vel Ecclesiae suae interim inferendo Dat c. Junii 13. Anno regno 2. He died the 12. before the Calends of November 1314. and was buried amongst the Preaching Friers in Trim the Foundation he himself had established 1276. Sir Robert de Vfford Lord Justice the second time who going into England 1279. Stephen de Fulborn Bishop of Waterford afterwards Archbishop of Tuam Treasurer of Ireland Lord Justice The year following he surrenders and Vfford resigning it he again accepts it 1282. He died at Dublin 1288. 5. Nonas Julii to whom the King for the better support of his Justiceship granted a Pension out of the Exchequer in Ireland of 500 l. per annum
le Butler Lord Justice created by Edw. 2. in the 9. year of his Reign Earl of Carrick He received his Commission on Friday after St. Matthews day whilest he was Governour ann scil 1316. Edward Bruce brother of Robert King of Scots so prevailed as that he was Crowned King of Ireland reigning a year England at that time saith Davies not being able to send either men or money to save the Kingdom only Sir Roger de Mortimer made Justice arrived at Youghal in Easter Week cum 38. milit and 1317. The said Robert Mortimer Lord Justice fencing with what prudence he could at last the Lord John Burmingham was sent over General who with Vernon Stapleton and the Commons of Meath c. encountring him near Dundalk overthrew his Army and flew him Et sic per manus communis Populi et dextram Dei liberatur Populus Dei a servitute machinata et praecogitata Mortimer going for England made 1318. William fitz John Archbishop of Cassel Custodem Hiberniae so that at one time he was Justice Chanceller and Archbishop He died Septemb. 15. 1326. potens dives ac venerabilis in Populo et in Clero The same year to wit Octob. 7. Alexander Bicknor Archbishop of Dublin Lord Justice 1319. Sir Roger Mortimer returns out of England Lord Justice who 1320. Going into England Thomas Fitz John Earl of Kildare is substituted in his room This Year Dublin is made an University Papae Johannis XXII authoritate Alexander Bicknor Archbishop of Dublin much furthering so excellent a Design the publick place for whose exercise was St. Patricks Church allowed of to this day in their more solemn Commencements caeterum deficientibus facultatibus quibus alumni alerentur Academia ipsa paulatim defecit as others at Armagh and Ross-Carbery or Ross-Alithry had done before as since at Tradagh Anno 5 Edw. 4. graced with the same Priviledges as Oxford so Sir James Ware Though in the reign of H. 7. there remained some Tracts of this excellent Work an Annual Salary to several Lecturers in Divinity being duly paid by virtue of what had been ordered in a Provincial Council held at Dublin in Trinity Church before Walter Fitz Simons Archbishop of Dublin Since the University of Dublin of which in its own place we shall speak more hath been favourably restored by Queen Elizabeth March 3. anno MDXCI from whence there hath shot forth many useful Lights in the Common Firmament besides Dr. James Vsher Archbishop of Ardmagh one of the greatest magnitude for general Learning and Piety the last Ages can truly boast of who was the first of the Scholars admitted into the Queens Foundation gradually proceeding according to his years Yet though Ireland for the succession of some Ages was esteemed the School of Literature and the Mart of excellent manners It is observable that very few if any of the Natives ever flourished in England either in the Ecclesiastick or Civil State though many English increased in much honour and wealth there which Fuller in his Worthies p. 67. attributes to this That we love to live there where we may command and they care not to live where they must obey Certainly the defect rests much in themselves having been at all times indulged on their Addresses and are men of parts and capacities deep as others 'T is true There were some Acts made in Henry the 6. reign against Irish men inhabiting here in England in the Universities or being Heads or Governours of any Hall or House or to live in England without some previous considerations As it was decreed at a Council held at Cleonard in Ireland 1163. Gelacius Archbishop of Ardmagh being President Vt nullus deinceps ad Theologiam publice praelegendum admitteretur nisi qui Academiae Armachanae fuerit alumnus Yet I believe this was not the cause of those Statutes but some more pressing occasion since which Time and a friendlier Education hath long worn out so as by an Act in Ireland the 13 of King James there is a Repeal of divers Statutes concerning the Natives for as much as they and the Inhabitants without difference and distinction were taken into his Majesties gracious protection and do now live under one Law as dutiful Subjects of our Sovereign Lord and Monarch that nothing now incapacitates them to be as growing and acceptable here as we are there but a deficiency in their application 1321. John Birmingham Earl of Louth so created for his excellent service against Bruce near Dundalk Lord of Authenry was made Lord Justice He was treacherously murthered by Macgohegan and other Irish men 1329. with several of his Family at Balybragan 1322. Ralph de Gorges Lord Justice an ancient Family in Glocestershire 1323. Sir John Darcy Lord Justice arrived at Dublin Febr. 2. Sub EDWARDO III. 1327. Thomas Fitz John Earl of Kildare Lord Justice Obiit 1328. on Tuesday in Easter week at Maynoth 1328. Roger Outlaw Prior of Kilmainam succeeded Lord Justice He was Prior of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem and Chancellour of Ireland 1329. Sir John Darcy second time Lord Justice who going for England deputes 1330. Prior Roger Outlaw hi● Lieutenant Justice 1331. Sir Anthony Lucy not unlikely of Charle-cot in Warwick shire a person of great Authority in England was sent over Lord Justice June 3. who endeavoured by a severe course the Times requiring it to reduce the degenerate Nation to a more ready obedience But staying not long which some impute as a principal cause of the unhappiness of that Kingdom effected little as too frequent change o● Governours often subjects forme● Councils and proceedings to a disadvantage 1332. Sir John Darcy the third time Lord Justice arrived at Dubli● February 13. He went into Scotland out of Ireland with an Army 1333. And left in his stead as Lord Justice Thomas de Burgh a Clergy man then Treasurer of Ireland 1337. Sir John Charleton Miles ●● Baro came Lord Justice in Festo ●alixti Papae but not behaving himself as it was expected he was complained of by his Brother Tho●as Charleton Chancellour of Ireland and Bishop of Hereford who 1338. Was made Justice Custos or Guardian of the Realm He had been for a time Treasurer of England anno sci 1329. He died Jan. 11. 1343. and hath a reasonable fair Tomb in the North wall of the North cross Isle over against the Clock in Hereford Cathedral 1340. Roger Outlaw Prior of Kilmainam succeeded Charleton in the Government He died February 13. at Any in Comitatu Leinster a●● then the King by his Letters Pate●● in the 14 Year of his Reign ma●● John Darcy Justice for life 1341. Sir John Morris Dav●●● calls him Sir William oth●●● Sir John came into Ireland in M●● Lord Justice 1344. Sir Ralph Vfford prob●bly of Vfford in Suffolk a Relation of Sir Robert mentioned before a man of courage and severit● came into Ireland with his Conso●● the Countess of
my Lord Coke in the 46. writes Rushw 1371 2. Sir Richard Pembridge alias Pembrugh a Baron was appointed Deputy of Ireland but he refused to go whereupon his Offices Fees and Lands which he held of the King for life being his Servant as Warden of the Cinque Ports c. were all seized on pro servitio impendendo yet he was no● upon that resolution committed t● Prison for that he being unwilling to go the Imployment was adjudged an Exile and no man by the Common Law is perdere patriam but by Authority of Parliament or in case of Abjuration fo● Felony 1374. Sir William de Windsor arrived at Waterford Lord Lieutenant April 18. and took his Oath for th● execution of his Place at Kilkenny May 4. following undertaking th● Custody of Ireland for 11213l 6s 8a but did no wonders He descende● of Sir James de Windsor Lord o● Stanwel in Middlesex as I understand from the present Lord Windsor 1376. James Butler Earl of Ormond succeeded in the Government Sub RICHARDO II. James Butler Earl of Ormond continued Lord Governour till that 1379. John de Bromwich was made Lord Justice to whom succeeded Edmund Mortimer Lord Lieutenant He died at Cork 1381. on St Stephens day in the Abbey of Dominicans and was buried at Wigmore 1381. John Colton Dean of S. Patricks by Dublin Lord Chancellor of Ireland afterwards Archbishop of Ardmagh was made Lord Justice He took his Oath at Cork in the Covent of the Preaching Friers Decemb. 27. He died the 5. of the Calends of May 1404. and was buried in Droghedagh in Saint Peters Church where sometime before his death he renounced his Prelacy 1383. Philip de Courtney Lord Lieutenant and then 1385. Robert Vere the ninth Earl of Oxford a great Favourite of the Kings was made Lord Lieutenant having been created Marquess of Dublin and Duke of Ireland the 10 of Richard 2. in which year the King furnished him with a great sum of Money that he might go into Ireland to get Dominium quod sibi Rex donaverat So Walsingham Sed novus iste insolitus umbratilis honor cito evanuit Brook in his Catalogue of Nobility saith more to whom I refer you He died in Lovania 1392. in great anguish of mind and penury leaving saith Camd. nothing but to his Tomb Titles and to the World matter of Talk He was buried at Colne in Essex in great Funeral State the King a Mourner After all his preparations and full Charter even to pass all things with his own Teste He as some others bore only the Title of Lieutenant never going into Ireland but deputed 1385. Sir John Stanley his Lieutenant 1387. Alexander de Balscot alias Petit Bishop of Meath who had been Treasurer and Chancellor of Ireland Lord Justice He died at Ardbracan a Village in Meath the 10 of November 1400. and was buried at Trim in St. Maries Monastery 1389. Sir John Stanley returning into Ireland took his Oath of Lord Justice Octob. 25. the Earl of Oxford nomine being Lord Lieutenant 1392. James Earl of Ormond Lord Justice during whose Government the Earl of Oxford under whom he was Justice died as we have said in Lovania yet he continued his Government his Patent being from the King not determining with the Earl of Oxfords death 1394. Thomas of Woodstock Duke of Glocester who afterwards was treacherously strangled going with an Army for Ireland cujus Insulae judum Rex creaverat eum Ducem was suddenly recalled and the same year King Richard 2. having been slighted by the Princes of Germany to whom by his Ambassadors he addressed himself to have been made Emperour arrived at Waterford October 2. with an Army of 4000 men at Arms and 30000 Archers the better to convince them of his Manhood But returned at Shrovetide being cheated by a feigned submission of the Irish And at his return he left Roger Mortimer Earl of March and Vlster Lord of Wigmore Trim Clare and Connaght Lord Lieutenant He was afterwards slain by O. Brien c. at Kenlis in Ossory July 20. 1398. on whose death 1398. Roger Gray was chosen Lord Justice in his stead The same year Thomas Holland Duke of Surrey Earl of Kent and Lord Wake half Brother to King R. 2. came to Dublin Lord Lieutenant October 7. He was in 1400. beheaded for conspiring to set up King Richard 2. after King Henry 4. had been established 1399. King Richard the second time came into Ireland to revenge Mortimers death and arrived at Waterford June 1. upon whose arrival all things succeeded prosperously for the Irish being divided into many Factions and they not being united the whole was sooner overcome But in the height of these proceedings Tidings came of Henry Duke of Lancasters preparations and proceedings in England Upon which the King quieted all things at a great uncertainty in Ireland and having there imprisoned in Trim Castle the sons of the Duke of Glocester and Lancaster he arrived in three nights at Milford-haven in Wales and thence marched forwards to his Ruine yielding himself up at Flint At his disserting of Ireland we find not who was left Governour But the time not being long betwixt Duke Henries being setled in the Throne and King Richard 2. coming out of Ireland we may probably conjecture who commanded the Army had also the Government of the Realm Sub HENRICO IV. 1399. Sir John Stanley was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Decemb. 10. Whilest he thus possessed the Government I find in Ware De Praes Hib. a Writ from H. 4. anno 1400. directed to Sir Thomas de Burgo Knight Justiciario suo in partibus Conaciae ordering him to restore the Temporalities to Thomas Bishop Alladensis And here that it might not be supposed that this Sir Thomas entituled Justice had thereby any other power then a Justiceship of Peace or at most as we now call it the Presidentship of Connaght I could not but take notice hereof not having met with the like president the usual Writs for the restoring of Temporalities being to the chief Governour only as Justiciario Regis of which in Prynns History of King John H. 3. Ed. 1. are many Presidents 1401. In May Sir John Stanley goes for England and leaves Sir William Stanley of Holton in Werral in Cheshire in his place 1401. August 23. Stephen Scroop of which Family there was the Lord Scroop of Bolton Castle in Richmondshire arrived in Ireland Deputy to Thomas of Lancaster the Kings Son He came into Ireland November 13. the same year who going for England about Novemb. 11. 1403. Left Stephen Scroop his Deputy and he going for England the first day of Lent the Noblemen of Ireland chose James Earl of Ormond Lord Justice who died at Gauran or Raligauran 1405. September 6. to whom succeeded 1405. Gerald Earl of Kildare 1406. After Michaelmass Stephen Scroop returned into Ireland Deputy to Thomas of Lancaster Lord Lieutenant He died at Tristle-Dermot
Praes Hib. fol. 170. the Temporalities of the Bishoprick of Cassels on the death of Richard O-Hedian was ad firmam given for 10 years that See being so long vacant 1442. William Wells Esq Deputy to the said Lion Lord Wells 1443 James Earl of Ormond was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland continuing till that 1446. John Earl of Shrewsbury came over Lord Lieutenant before whom a Parliament was held at Trim in 25 of H. 6. He was slain at Castilion upon Dordon near Burdeaux July 20. saith Vincent the Monument saith July 7. through the shot of a Harquebush in his thigh after that he had given testimonie of his valour 24. years Some would have him to be buried at Rhoan i● Normandy but certainly he was interred at Whitchurch in Shropshire with this Epitaph Orate pro anima Praenobilis Domini Domini JOHANNIS TALBOT quondam Comitis Salopiae Domini Furnival Domini Verdon Domini Strange de Black-Mere Mare scalli Franciae Qui obiit in Bello apud Burdews Julii 7● M. CCCC LIII At his return to England he accused the Earl of Ormond of High Treason before the Earl of Bedford Constable of England in his Marshals Court the King did abolish the Accusation 1447. Richard Talbot Archbishop of Dublin was appointed his Deputy under the title of Justice He writ many things but saith Sir J. Ware de Scriptoribus Hiberniae nothing is extant but what he writ De ●busu Regiminis Jacobi Comitis Ormo●iae dum Hiberniae esset Locum tenens Who by Thomas Fitz Thomas Prior of Kilmainam was appeached of Treason and appointed the Combat but took off as is before mentioned by the King He died Aug. 15. 1449. and lies buried in St. Patricks Church with this Epitaph Talbot Richardus latet hic sub marmore pressus Archi fuit Praesul hujus sedis Reverendae Parvos Canonicos qui fundavitque Choristas Anno Milleno C quater quater X quoque nono Quindeno Augusti mensis mundo va● ledixit Omnipotens Dominus cui propicietu● in aevum 1449. Richard Plantagenet Duke of York Chief of the Faction of the White Rose Son and heir of Richard of Conesbury Earl of Cambridge second Son of Edmund Langley Duke of York was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland He arrived at Houth July 5. the Rebels being very insolent against whom he so behaved himself that he not only suppressed them but ever after purchased the affection of the Irish Nation firm and entire to him and having established Statutes and Ordinances in a great Council held at Dublin in the 28 Year of this Kings Reign as also afterwards in a Parliament at Drohedagh in the said 28 Year o● Hen. 6. He going for England 1450. Made James Earl of Ormond his Deputy who 1453. Being besides Earl of Ormond Earl of Wiltshire and Lord Treasurer of England in the 33 of ● 6. and also again about the 37. ●nd so continued till the 38 year ●as made Lord Lieutenant He was ●● the first year of Edward the 4. be●eaded at Newcastle 1461. which at●indor was taken off in a Parliament at Westminster begun in Nov. in the first year of H. 7. and Sir Th. Butler was invested in his Honours and Estate At his leaving Ireland the same year John Mey Archbishop of Armagh ●as constituted his Deputy He died ●456 1454. Thomas Fitz Maurice Earl of Kildare Lord Deputy 1454. Sir Eustace●night ●night was made Deputy to Richard Duke of York Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Before whom a Parliament was held in the 32 of H. 6. 1456. Thomas Fitz Maurice Earl of Kildare Deputy to the Duke o● York Lord Lieutenant before whom the 33 of H. 6. there was holden a Parliament at Dublin by several Prorogations at Naas and Dublin c. 1459. Richard Duke of York Lord Lieutenant came into Ireland having the Earldom of Vlster and the Lordship of Connaght and Meath by descent from Lionel Duke of Clarence He held a Parliament at Drogedagh the 38 of H. 6. the Conditions on which he took the Government were 1. That he should be the King Lieutenant of Ireland for te● years 2. That to support the charge o● that Country he should receiv● all the Kings Revenues there both certain and casual without accompt 3. That he should be supplied also with Treasure out of England in this manner He should have 4000 Marks for the first year whereof he should be imprested 2000 l. before hand and for the other nine years he should receive 2000 per annum 4. That he might let or farm any of the Kings Lands and place or displace all Officers at his pleasure 5. That he might Levie or Wage what numbers of men he thought fit 6. That he might make a Deputy and return at his pleasure All which he managed with so much advantage as he greatly gained upon the Nation erecting only in Louth Meath and Kildare some Castles to stop the Incursions of the Irishry At his remove from thence in pursuit of a Crown the greatest part of the Nobility and Gentry o● Meath passed over with him into England and were slain with him at Wakefield 1460. He was first buried at Pontfract and afterwards removed to Fotheringhay Sub EDWARDO IV. 1460. Thomas Fitz Maurice Ear● of Kildare Lord Justice 1462. Sir Rowland Fitz Eustace Knight Lord of Port Leicester Treasurer of England Deputy to George Duke of Clarence third son of Richard Duke of York and Brother to King Edw. 4. born in the Castle o● Dublin Lord Lieutenant before whom was held a Parliament at Dublin the 2 of Edw. 4. He died December 19. 1496. and was buried in the Covent of Minor Friers at Kilcullen New-Abbey whereof he had been Founder but erected for himself and his Lady a specious Monument in St. Audoenus Church in St. Maries Chappel in Dublin He had given him the Mannor of Port Leicester and the Honour of a Parliament Baron by Edw. 4. as also the Title of Viscount Baltinglass by H. 8. 1463. George Duke of Clarence was made Lord Lieutenant for life but as others held the Lieutenancy by substitutes as 1463. Thomas Earl of Desmond Deputy to the said Duke of Clarence held a Parliament at Weys in the 3 year of Edw. 4. as also at other places by Prorogations He lost his head at Drogedagh for the exactions of Coin and Livery 1467. John Lord Tiptoft and Powes Earl of Worcester Treasurer of England in the 31 and 32 years of H. 6. also in the 2 and 3 of Edw. 4. in whose Reign he was made Constable of England for life Lord Deputy of Ireland to the Duke of Clarence One of the most learned and eloquent men in Christendom Of whom I may say what Pliny writes of Aristonis Vt mihi non unus homo sed literae ipsae omnesque bonae artes in uno homine summum periculum adire videantur So that in him more learning was
following he was made Deputy holding a Parliament by several Prorogations at Dublin in the 7 of H. 8 And 1513. in August at Athy he fe● sick from whence he was carried t● Kildare where Sept. 3. he died Q●licet magnis difficultatibus diu conflictatus fuerit posteriora tamen tempora magna animi tranquillitate reb●semper ferè ad vota fluentibus transegit He was buried in Trinity Church Dublin in a Chappel erected by himself This Gerald Earl of Kildare had been at several times 3● years Lord Deputy of Ireland which had he not been a person o● sigular Parts he could never have ●een entrusted with 1513. His Son Gerald Earl of ●ildare was Senatus Regis assensu ●eing then Treasurer made Lord ●ustice A custom mos per vicissi●dines ab antiquo mansit in Hibernia ●● deinceps jam mansurus est in poste●m Anno enim 33 H. 8. Cap. 2. Li●irici sancitur ut vel moriente Re●i Praefecto seu Deputato vel ex oc●sione succedente Regis illic Consi●●rii Anglum elegant in Justiciarium ●● Gubernatorem Regni Regio beneplacito duraturum that had been ●●ng used on the death of the Principle Officer as is evident by an Act ●ntituled An Act for the Electing ●●e Lord Justice the 23 of H. 8. therein it is enacted that none should be elected but who is an English man born within the Realm of England being no spiritual person Afterwards by a Patent from England he was made Lord Deputy Who in the 7 year of H. 8. hel● a Parliament at Dublin begun February 25. 1515. June 13. Willam Preston Viscount Gormanston was declare● Lord Justice but forthwith put ou● and the said Earl of Kildare wa● continued Lord Deputy who going for England 1519. Leaves Regia licentia pri● impetrata Sir Thomas Fitz Maurice ●● Lackagh a Knight of his own Family Lord Justice 1520. A little before Whitsontide Thomas Howard Earl of Surrey elder Son of Thomas Duke of Norfolk Admiral of England Wales and Ireland Knight of the Garter was made Lord Lieutenant of Ireland magis ex od● Kildarium whom Wolsey hated quam ex amore erga Surreium sait● Polid. Virg. mentioned by Sir James Ware as in the later Ages and for mer too others have been advanced thither on the like Principles ●e held a Parliament at Dublin June 4. 1521. in the 13 of H. 8. by several Prorogations About Christmass following he went into England where having discharged the weightiest employment of his King with much integrity and honour as he had done here and in France Scotland and elsewhere being a great Master of Wisdom through long experience he fell at last into this Kings displeasure his son ingenio florenti eruditione magna traeditus being accused and afterwards beheaded for quartering King Idward the Confessors Arms with his though ex sententia faecialium for which our Lieutenant now Duke of Norfolk was also committed Prisoner to the Tower though he had saith the Lord Cherbury eis much merit of ancient Service to plead for him as any Subject of his time could pretend to He laya long time Prisoner there at last was sent against Wiat with an inconsiderable handful made up for the greatest part of the Kings Guards but not succeeding having been ever before prosperous laid it much to heart and being tossed to and fro betwixt the reciprocal Ebbs and Fluxes of Fortune died in Sept. 1554. in the 1 and 2 year of Philip and Mary at Keninghal in Norfolk When he went for England he left 1521. His intimate Friend Pierce Butler Earl of Ormond after Earl of Ossory a near Allie of Thomas who died in London and was buried in Mercers Chappel 1515. Quo subditum ditiorem si vera sint quae de eo traduntur Anglia eo tempore non vidit about Christmass was left Lord Deputy 1524. Gerald Earl of Kildare was made Lord Deputy about Midsummer who caused Maurice Cava●agh Arch-deacon of Leghlyn to be hung on a Gibbet and his bowels burnt for most wickedly killing his Dioecesan Maurice Doran at Glen-Reynold a man much praised for his excellent manners and elegance in preaching Kildare being sent for into England was by Cardinal Wolseys subtle means ordered to be beheaded in the Tower and the Execution had certainly been done had not the Lieutenant of the Tower favouring Kildare acquainted the King therewith who not only respited his death but returned him with honour into Ireland checking the Cardinals presumption Upon his being sent for into England he 1526. Left in his stead Thomas Fitz Gerard of Leixlip Lord Deputy The same year he going off Richard Nugent Baron of Delvin was in his stead left Lord Deputy He was taken Prisoner by O-Connor 1538. treacherously during a Pa●ley between them He descended of Gilbert Nugent to whom behaving himself valiantly Hugh Lacy gave Lands in Meath 1528. Pierce Butler then Earl of Ossory the Title of the Earl of Ormond which to that time he had born being descended of the Earls race was conferred on Thomas ●ullin Viscount Rochford who à Senatu Regio was chosen Lord Deputy in Delvins stead 1530. Sir William Skeffington Lord Deputy to Henry Fitz Roy Duke of Richmond and Sommerset base son of H. 8. L. Lieut. of Ireland 1532. Gerald Earl of Kildare Lord Deputy to the said Duke of Richmond c. L. Lieutenant and being sent for into England left in his stead his eldest son as one for whose doing he would answer ut pro cujus fidelitate ipse vellet fide jubere 1534. Thomas then scarce 21 years old his Deputy A Youth of a hot and active Brain who having intelligence though false that his Father was beheaded in England indeed he was imprisoned in the Tower immediately flung up the Insignia Regalia to Cromer Chancellor of Ireland bidding defiance to the King and his Ministers slaying in his fury Dr. John Allin Archbishop of Dublin near Clantarfe Febr. 28. in the 58 year of his age committing besides many outrages the Father Gerald E. of Kildare dies in the Tower oppressed with the news of his Sons inconsiderateness upon which 1534. Sir W. Skeffington L. Deputy arrived at Dublin Octob. 21. and died at Kilmainam about the end of Decem. and was honourably buried according to his dignity in St. Patricks Church though afterwards a Monument was erected for him at Skeffington in Leicestershire from whence he descended since demolished by the Impiety of the last Age. 1535. Leonard Lord Gray son of Thomas Gray Marquess Dor●t created Viscount of Garny in Ireland Jan. 1. was made Lord Deputy to Henry Duke of Richmond and Sommerset The Duke died at St. James's House beyond Charing Cross in the 16 year of his Age July 22. Anno 1535. and was buried at Thetford in Norfolk Our Deputy held a Parliament in the 28 of H. 8. by several Prorogations Wherein amongst other Acts Thomas late Earl of Kildare was with
to his choice of Governours whom neither the Nobility disdained nor the Inferiours were pressed to supply by violent courses 1551. Sir James Crofts of Cro●● Castle in Herefordshire whose he Herbert Crofts is the present Bishop of Hereford 1673. unus Nob●lium Secretioris Camerae Regis Apr● 29. was designed Deputy but coming to Dublin whilest St. Leger wa● in Munster he received not th● Sword till May 23. at Cork whe● St. Leger then was During his tim● even this year a King of Arms Herald named Vlster was first instituted for Ireland his Provinc● was all Ireland and the first tha● had it was Nicholas Narbon Th● Liturgy in English was also this yea● printed in Dublin and injoined b● Authority Many memorable Act● he did in Ireland He repaired th● Castle of Belfast and placed there ● Garrison Coming for England h● was certified by Sir Henry Knowls that Mary Dowager of Scotland had ●ent O-Connors son into Ireland to give encouragement to a new Insurrection which by his prudence deferring his Journey he prevented without noise and took Ship for England at Houth Decemb. 4. 1552. He was in the second year of Queen Mary accused of Wiats Conspiracy ●ut by the favour of the King and Queen set at liberty from the Tower and in Queen Eliz. Reign made a Privy Counsellor Governor of Berwick and Controller of the Queens Court and a Delegate at the Treaty of Bourbourg He died at Whitehall Camd. writes about the year 1590. His heir that now is says in the year 1595. or the year following and was buried in Westminster Abbey 1552. Sir Thomas Cusack of Cofington in Meath Lord Chancellor and Sir Gerald Ailmere Chief Justice of the Kings Bench Decemb. 4● were in Trinity Church Dublin ●● Proceribus Senatu Regio constituted Lords Justices Sub MARIA Regina 1553. The said Justices as the present Governours were writ to by the Council of England who July 29. certified the Lords Justices and Council of Ireland of the death o● King Edw. and the right of Q. Mary Whose Right in Dublin and other places they took care immediately to proclaim the Judges Places and the rest being speedily confirmed by new Patents 1553. Novemb. 11. Sir Anthony St. Leger landing at Dalkie came to Dublin where the 19 of the same Month he was the fifth time swor● in Trinity Church Dublin a Praede cessoribus suis Cusaco Ailmero Lord Deputy He died in Kent where he was born as I take it at Vlcomb the ancient Mansion of the Family de Sancto Leodegario corruptly Sent Leger Sellenger March 12. 1559. Vtriusque fortunae tam prosperae quam adversae particeps verissima rerum humanarum in hoc mundo Imago 1556. April 27. Thomas Radcliff Viscount Fitz Walter at Westm was nominated L. Deputy He arrived at Dublin on Whitsunday and two days after took the Oath of Deputy in Christ Church Dublin He held a Parliament annis 3 4 Phil. Mariae at which time Patre jam mortuo he was stiled Earl of Sussex passing many Acts to the benefit of the Nation and returned into England Decemb. 4. when 1557. Hugh Curwin of Westmoreland Doctor of the Civil Law Archbishop of Dublin Lord Chancellor and Sir Henry Sidney Treasurer Decemb. 5. à Stanleio Marescallo received the Sword as Justices On which occasion it may not be unseasonable to take notice of the eminent and honourable Office of Marshal as well as of this noble person to whom of all others this trust of delivering the Sword unto the Supream Officers was committed properly it is a Military office restraining as well the insolencies of Souldiers as of Rebels yet it hath power to try or determine all appeals made of things done out of the Realm as Piracy the justice of Generals to Souldiers c. also it hath conuzance of contracts of Deeds of Arms which cannot be determined by the Common Law but the Civil only secundum legem armorum of which after sentence there lies no forfeiture of Lands or corruption of Bloud By inheritance it was seated in the Barons of Morley anno 9. Reg. Joh. but how alienated I am not certain nor am I convinced that it is invested though it be great in Ireland as the Earls Marshals are honoured with in England a Title never given to that Officer till the 20 of R. 2. that Thomas Maubrey Duke of Norfolk had Earl affixed to his Title of Marshal Though we find the use of it of great consequence in Ireland never committed but to Persons of Honour under whom according to the occasions there is one or two Provost Marshals limited by instructions under the Great Seal of Ireland Archbishop Curwin was afterwards translated to Oxford where after one year he died at Swinbroch near Burford and there in the Parochial Church was buried Novemb. 1. 1568. 1557. Febr. 6. Sir Henry Sidney was sworn Lord Deputy in Christ Church Dublin and so continued till that 1558. Thomas Radcliff Earl of Sussex Viscount Fitz Walter April 27. returned out of England with 500 men and was sworn Lord Deputy on Sunday May 1. in Christ Church Dublin doing that Year excellent Service against the Scots in Vlster and Donald O-Brien in Thoomond in September He took Ship at Dalkie with the Forces he brought out of England and others raised at Dublin and went against Island Rachlin and the Islanders and left 1558. Sir Henry Sidney his Deputy who took the Oath of Lord Justice in Christ Church Dublin on Sunday September 18. the same year 1558. Thomas Radcliff Earl of Sussex returning from his Scottish Expedition was again sworn Lord Deputy in Trinity Church Dublin Novemb. 10. where he gave to the Chancellor Curwin a new Great Seal of Ireland as also particular new Seals to the principal Judges of other Courts Sub ELIZABETHA Regina 1558. The said Thomas Earl of Sussex who on the decease of Queen Mary was found Deputy was by a new Commission so continued who with a Garrison of 320 Horse and 1360 Foot had kept Ireland in a peaceable and quiet condition To whom succeeded 1559. Sir Henry Sidney Knight President of Wales Deputy During whose absence in Ireland Dr. John Whitgift Bishop of Worcester afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury was for two years and an half Quamdiu nimirum Sidnaeus Prorex Hiberniae praefuit Vice President of Wales Vir optimus eruditissimus writes Camden qui Justitia in Walliae propraefectura Doctrina in Ecclesiastica Angliae Politeia propugnanda singularem laudem consequutus quam fortitudine prudentia patientia indies adauxit Godw. de Praes Angliae Here by the way we may take notice of an Honour incident to the Clergy that besides this Reverend Prelate several others of his Function have been in this Office and the first President of Wales was William Smith Bishop of Lincoln who continued in the Government from the 17 of H. 7. to the 4 of H. 8. at which time he
William Fitz Williams that they suffered the Irish to be trained up in the knowledge of Arms few before their attaining that Science being much more able to subdue thousands of the Irish than afterwards thrice the number of so many English were able to encounter 1588. Sir Willam Fitz Williams June 30. Lord Deputy was sworn in Christ Church Dublin Many excellent things he did as raising a Composition in Munster and then in setling the Possessions both of the Lords and Tenants in Monahan Yet that Venus might not be without her Mole he is accused of too much rigour in enquiring after the Spoils and Wrecks at Sea which happened on some of the Invincible Navy being split in Ireland and the ensuing War is laid to his charge Nor do I find that the Histories of those Times much acquit him the Irish though they have not Cloaks will have Mantles for their coverings He carried it somewhat austerely not accepting of his Commission till a particular clause was inserted that Walter Devoreux Earl of Essex should be subject to his command which considering the illustrious quality of that person some thought might have been left indifferent In his time the Queen founded a Colledge at Dublin Anno 1591. a Concern which in Sir Henry Sidneys and Sir John Perrots time was given in Instructions but never perfected till now She dedicated it to the Holy and Individual TRINITY under this Title Collegium Sanctae ac individuae Trinitatis ex fundatione Reginae ELIZABETHAE juxta Dublin in the place where was before the Monastery of All-Saints enriching the same with all Priviledges of an University of which Sir Will. Cecil Knight Baron Burghley Lord High Treasurer of England Knight of the Garter and one of the Honourable Privy Council to Queen Elizabeth was the first Chancellor II. Robert Devoreux Earl of Essex Earl Marshal of England c. afterwards Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Chancellor of the Universities of Cambridge and Dublin Since Sub Carolo I. Dr. Willam Laud Archbishop of Canterbury Chancellor of the Universities of Oxford and Dublin Then his Excellency James Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland since Duke of Ormond and Chancellor of the University of Dublin as now of Oxford Which in the year 1320. was granted to the City by Pope John 22. at the request of Alexander Bicknor alias Bignor Archbishop of Dublin mentioned in the year 1320. failing for want of support till this B. Queen enlivened the ashes To which I must profess I owe a filial Reverence not as one of the Foundation but of the Society and in memory of her Prosperity reaching to this Age. I must crave liberty to annex the Provosts though amongst Princes and Great men By these they live Non incisa notis Marmora publicis Per quae Spiritus vita redit bonis Clarius indicant Laudes quàm Calabrae Pierides Not inscribed Marbles planted forth To publick view which gives new breath To Great and Good men after Death Bespeaks their praise So loud as the Pierian Laies The Colledge before these gave countenance to the Structure was empty and unarmed the Furniture was from the Men not the Materials Postquam lacertos movere et caput immortale extollere caepisset quum ingentia virtutis Nomina Danielos alias Odonnellos Bedleios Templos Capellos Par●os Eustacios Hoylios Martinios Dodwillios Lingardos Richardsonos Boswellos Golburnios Worthios Wareos Boylios Seelios Jonios Margetsonos Sternios ARMACHANVM ante omnes in Lucem Peperisset Touching whom the literate World hath spread many Elogies of his Excellencies and Merit though One for his Languages not the least in the Quire hath since this Prince of Learning's Decease left out part of what he first published in acknowledgment of his assistance whilest the unanimous Vote of the incomparable and famous University of Oxford sufficient to rival Eterniry hath left this on record Jacobus Usserius Archiepiscopus Armachanus totius Hiberniae Primas Antiquitatis Primaevae peritissimus Orthodoxae Religionis vindex 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 errorum Malleus in concionando frequens facundus praepotens vitae inculpatae exemplar● spectabile Some years before his death he was unwillingly put on an old Controversie touching the Precedency of his See of Armagh and Dublin A Controversie entailed as it seems on the Successors of that See of Dublin prosecuted in Archbishop Leches time Almoner to Edw. 2. 1310. with some animosity but now argued only as to Right not emulation which after the effusion of much Learning was desided on the Archbishop of Armagh's side And by an especial Letter from the King in the year 1634. he had afterwards also given him the Precedency of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland with all which he was nothing elated The Provosts Presidents of the COLLEDGE OF DUBLIN THe first Provost of which Colledge was Adam Lord Archbishop of Dublin formerly mentioned whose Dimensions ●e cannot better take than from ●ir James Ware and the Monuments ●e le●t of his Mind and Grandeur sufficiently expressed in the stately Edifice he built at Rafarnham leaving behind an ample Estate and a numerous Progenie well provided for of whom I shall say no more having occasion to speak of him amongst the Governours than tha● though he was a Prelate in height and spirit agreeable enough to the dignity of his place yet he esteemed i● no descention to be ushered by a Beadles Staff that had a Crosier a● his service II. The second Provost upon the Archbishops resigning up of the Provostship June 5. 1594. was by him and the Fellows in whom the Election was seated by the first Charter bearing date Mar. 11. 1591. placed on Mr. Walter Travers who too● not his Oath till Decemb. 6. 1595 He was bred up in Trinity Colledge i● Cambridge a person of great abilities betwixt whom and Mr. Hooke● Minister of the Temple and he their Lecturer there arose such animosities as ingaged the Court and others into strong Parties so as one writes Travers was struck dumb in the Temple not for Infidelity but Indiscretion both very learned Mr. Travers on what account is uncertain unless suspecting a Rebellion returned after some years stay unexpectedly into England where he lived many years obscurely though in himself a shining light He bequeathed ●at his death his Books of the Oriental Tongues in which he was singularly knowing and 50 l. worth of Plate to Sion Colledge in London After his departure III. Mr. Henry Alvey of St. Johns Colledge in Cambridge was chosen the third Provost Octob. 8. to whom succeeded IV. Mr. William Temple the fourth Provost afterwards Knighted and made one of the Masters of the Chancery in Ireland A person of great Piety and Learning bred up in Kings Colledge in Cambridge from whence he was made choice of by Sir Philip Sidney the Glory of the English Nobility to attend him in the Low-Countries during his Government there De quo quid quantum sibi augurabatur Britannia non facile
been in any capacity to have subsisted till Forces arrived from England the first of which was on the last of December 1641. under the Conduct of Sir Simon Harcourt Collonel of a Regiment of Foot designed Governour of the City of Dublin that long experienced and excellent Officer worthy the memory of the best Prince and most grateful People who afterwards was by an especial Order admitted into the Privy Council But Providence whose eyes are in the Wheels so ordered the business that the whole force of the Irish united in Fury and Vilany were most miraculously there defeated and that meerly through Gods mercy by the Courage and Valour of the Besieged bearing out against the uttermost of Extremity and Treachery faithfully set down by Dean Bernard in his Treatise entituled The Siege of Drogheda the compleat freeing of which was upon the taking of Dundalk March 26. 1642. Sir Henry Tichbourn entred Drogheda Novemb. 4. 1641. so early had the Vigilance of the State through the experience of One who well knew the hazards of delay in War provided for its Defence sending thither with Sir Henry Tichbourn Governour Sir John Borlase jun. afterwards Collonel and Lieutenant of the Ordnance Lieutenant Collonel Robert Byron since Knight and late Master of the Ordnance and Lieutenant Collonel Philip Wainmond all formerly Field-Officers to join with the most excellent and truly Noble Henry Lord Viscount Moore afterwards Lieutenant General of the Horse deservedly registred amongst the first of the Nobility and Officers who was unfortunately slain at the beginning of the Treaty of the first Ceslation through the grazing of a Cannon bullet which he foresaw yet took not warning enough to evade These all served chearfully under his Command though the change of Fortune to whom none is indebted for her constancy hath sufficiently evidenced in Some how little is to be trusted to Ones Merits if Favour be not also put into the Ballance Sir Henry Tichbourn descended from an ancient Family in Hampshire from whom though he received much his Vertue added more he was early educated in the Wars some years before his death he was made Marshal of Ireland 1643. James Marquess of Ormond Jan. 21. in Christ Church Dublin was with great solemnity and general acceptance sworn L. Lieutenant a person likeliest by his Interests and Concerns to manage the troublesom Affairs then in agitation Not long after his access to the Government the Lord Inchequin instigated by the Parliament of England violated the Cessation in Munster as the Scots had done before in Vlster whilest the Irish under the Command of the Popes Nuncio and Owen Row a most inveterate Enemy to the English equally impatient of the Name as of the Government withdrew their Souldiers from their Fidelity and Colours though in the interim Preston and Taff endeavoured to make up a Peace with the King In opposition to which the Lord Inchequin and the Prime Officers in Munster had before interposed their sense That no Peace could be concluded with the Irish which would not bring unto his Majesty and the Kingdom in general a far greater prejudice than shew of a Peace there will bring them an advantage c. adding in the close that the true sense of the aspersion the Irish had cast upon his Majesty with all those other Reasons which they had set down in their Declaration made them resolve to die a thousand deaths rather than to condescend to any Peace with the perfidious Rebels vowing never to desert the Cause that was so visibly God Almighties Notwithstanding which and many more difficulties his Excellency bore up with an equal heat till that through the impetuousness of the Times the English Monarchy was discemented that the King being retired to New Castle writes from thence to the Marquess of Ormond June 11. 1646. That for many Reasons too long for a Letter we think it fit to require you to proceed no further in Treaty with the Rebels nor to engage Vs upon any Conditions with them after sight hereof c. Our Service and the good of our Protestant Subjects being herein much concerned After which the Rebels laying Siege to Dublin and the Lord Lieutenant not being able to sustain a longer Encounter the Scots too infesting at a distance surrendred Dublin June 18. 1647. and what the King held in Ireland to the Parliaments Commissioners Arthur Ansloe Esq Sir Robert King Sir Robert Meredith Collonel John More Collonel Michael Jones to whom Cheshire gives a Character that he never charged the Enemy till he came to the Head of their Troops rather then to suffer the Interest of the English and Protestants to fall into the Power of the Irish And so retires for England soon after But before that he left the Kingdom Philip Lord Lisle was by the Parliament of England 1646. Jan. 28. ordered to go into Ireland as their Lieutenant personally well furnished though otherwise with no considerable Force being made to believe that that part of the Army in England which had then nothing to do the King being brought to Holmby should be sent after him upon which Febr. 19. he set sail from Minhead and arrived at Cork the 22. yet the Army from whence he expected great matters then growing mutinous would not be commanded by the Parliament amongst which there were besides a Party in the House that did not further his Design with whom some in Ireland shewed at his landing to have an intimacy or correspondence so that though for the little time he was there it could not be said but that Affairs were prudently carried yet finding the Scene so contrary to his expectation he furnished the Marquess of of Ormond the 10 of March with 20 Barrels of Powder and the first of April 1647. he returned for England being out of hopes of more than those small Forces he carried with him 1648. The said James Marquess of Ormond furnished with new Instructions returns on the Votes of Non-Addresses anew into Ireland Lord Lieutenant but so writes Elenchus as to Act nothing in the execution of that Power as long as the Treaty with the King or any hopes of Peace lasted Which Injunction he very solemnly observed retiring himself to the Castle of Kilkenny his proper Inheritance but finding at length how the King was abused in that Treaty he then vigorously endeavoured to improve his Interests for his Majesties Service though with that Caution so vigilant an Eye such a wary Foot as if the concerns of Posterity more than his own was deposited in the weightiest Scale and thereupon being forced in the midst of great streights to conclude a Peace with the Confederate Irish he proclaimed it Jan. 17. 1648. which yet so little endeared him to them though such Terms could never have been gained but at such an extremity as August 12. 1650. the titulary Archbishops of Ireland and others of the Clergy convened at James Town left no stone unturned to have hit him if it had been
the prey they got VVith thunder and with lightning they proclaim Their Gospel as the Jews receiv'd their Laws VVith Mahomet's zeal they advance their Cause And to convert the Land they set it on a flame Your Father soon to stop their fury came Lest all the Land should be to ashes turn'd But whilst he quench'd the fire himself almost was burn'd VII Now the blest smiles of Peace and Love All frowns and animosities remove Nothing is left behind of VVar But here and there an ugly skar Great Ormond was the Augustus whose command To perfect Loyalty and Peace reduced the Land Ormond our great Apollo whose Renown Did best deserve the Muses Crown VVho rules in VVar and Peace with equal fame And all his faithful services justly claim A loyal Subject's and true Patriot's Name Brave Essex in his Power succeeds Fam'd for his own and his great Fathers deeds VVhose gallant Death and Actions do inspire His soul with such Heroick fire As flam'd in the young Graecian's breast when he Did a fam'd Generals Statue see So well this Hero fills his Princes Throne That he deserves to rule a Kingdom of his own VIII Here Sir you stop and now we may look back On all the various Scenes you track Here we the Historians Art may justly praise And there the History may our wonder raise VVith truth and eloquence you write Of Truth the strong Materials are made And the Foundation firmly laid On which a solid structure you erect VVhich is with Language aptly deckt You neither are with fear nor flattery led But in the paths of truth severely tread Truth which we often hate and will not find Because with Interest and Envy we are blind As the damn'd spirits of Eternal Night Dread the least Glimpse of Light And often Truth so hides her face That Errours we for Truth embrace And Truth in the dark seat of Errour place So when a glorious Comet here Doth after various turns of Heaven appear The Wise know 't is an harmless Star but all The long mistaken Vulgar call This Star a Meteor and its influence fear But when a flaming Meteor from a far Falls down the People then call it a Falling-star Z. Isham ERRATA PAge 2. Verse 2. sed for p. 7. l. 2. Beckly for Beckti● p. 17. in the close of that page add Mariscus being ●●nt for into England quits the Government p. 20. custo●iae for custodia p. 10. dele the Quotations of Camd. and ●anmer p. 32. in the margent read Pryn in his Hist p. ●8 l. 14. dele he p. 40. l. 6. Robert for Roger. p. 72. l. 4. Decemb. ● for 21. p. 84. l. 17. England for Ireland p. 97. l. 19. 23 ●or 33. p. 98. l. 20. read in Kild p. 102. l. 4. 1538 for 1528. p. 104. l. 9. Garny for Grany p. 109. after April 1. add St. Leger the 4 of August returns Vice Roy. p. 119. l. 4. add with that Power p. 145. l. 10. add Loftusios p. 149. l. 1. Minister for Master p. 159. l. 17. Laxtoviae for Laxtoniae p. 168. l. 4. coequal for coeval p. 172. l. 2. read a Dysent p. 174. l. 4. extitial for exitial p. 180. l. 13. dele being p. 183. l. 6. Carey for Carew p. 197. l. 12. Hiberniae for Hibernia p. 198. redeat for reddat p. 204. l. 10. Consilii for Concilii in the Plate read In utroque fidelis p. 213. l. 12. Majestatis for Maje●●ati so in p. 217. p. 251. l. 18. add who had it from p. 258. l. 13. dele in p. 274. l. 21. add and some Seculars p. 230. l. ●3 for some read both Other Omissions or Errata's if any are obvious to an easie Correction if the common favour may be indulged A DISCOURSE Introductive to the CATALOGUE of the Governours of IRELAND THe Rise and Growth of Kingdoms have been no less the Subject then the Industry of the ablest Pens yet their Original after the strictest Inquiries have in most things been found so obscure as if the dark side of the Cloud were still towards us no Nation being so meanly descended but that they something in their Temper which vaunts to be more ancient and noble then others thereby as Sir Walter Rawleigh observes thinking to glorifie their own Nations hence their innate affections to their Country leaves Truths too often dark and sullied to Posterity Of which Spirit the Irish Chronicles participate too much yielding few Tracts of their Original before the Conquest by Henry the second but what seems fabulous and vain most of the History of the Ancients as well as their Philosophy which indeed was their Theology being delivered to Posterity by no better then Bards Sic honor Nomen Divinis vatibus atque Carminibus venit Hor. de Art Poet. in as much as when I read their Chronicles so many absurdities appear as I am in doubt whether I should take them for a Legend or an History to avoid which I shall impose nothing but the plain Story on the Reader It seems strange scarce credible that after so many years possession of Ireland any should dare question the right of England to that part of its just Empire And yet such have been the insinuations of some whose spirits like the foaming Sea are unwilling to be confined that I have of late seen many Queries started to enfeeble if possible this Right And Walsh in his Vindication of the Loyal Formulary will tell you of one Mahony a Jesuite his Apologetical Disputation De jure regni Hiberniae pro Catholicis Hybernis adversos Haereticos Anglos maintains that no King of England nor Crown nor People nor State of that Kingdom had at any time any kind of right to the Kingdom of Ireland or any part thereof with many other damnable positions condemned to be burnt by order of the National Congregation at Kilkenny which if he had not mentioned might happily have been unknown to the Natives at this day who forsooth conceive themselves descended from a Progeny much injured by being imposed on by the Laws and Customs of England whereas nothing is more evident then that Ireland was at first inhabited by the Britains the Scythians Goths Spaniards Danes and other Easterlings falling in afterwards as the vicissitude of time administred opportunity though if there had not been this Title to the Dominion of Ireland yet Conquest had been a sufficient one especially since it was at first undertook against a Nation meerly Pyrates Barbarous and Inhumane against the Laws of Nature and Nations which the Lord Verulam in his Considerations touching a War with Spain as Grotius in his excellent Piece De jure Belli Pacis notably well argues But Jephtes Plea to the Ammonites●ustifies ●ustifies England at this day the Bishop of Romes own Proctors having not more to produce then Prescription for their Masters right to Rome it self of which I should saymore but though some cherish other thoughts ●ew as the Scene now lies have the
magnis meis negotiis Hiberniae nunc autem ad vos mitto Willielmum filium Audelm Dapiferum meum cui commisi negotia mea tractanda agenda mei loco vice Quare vobis mando firmiter praecipio quod ei sicut mihime intendatis de agendis meis faciatis quicquid Ipse vobis dixerit e● parte mea sicut amorem meum desideratis per fidem quae mihi debetur Ego quoque ratum habeo firmum quicquid ipse fecerit tanquam egomet fecissem quicquid vos feceritis erga eum stabile habeo Test Galfrido Archidiacano Cantuariensi Richard● Archidiacono Pictaviae Richardo Constabulario apud Valon Audelm the next Year builds Vice mandato Regis St. Thomas Court near Dublin in expiation as it was thought of the murther of Thomas Becket Afterwards our Governour growing somewhat unquiet with his Equals his temper was disliked having done neither honour to his King or good to his Country And he was recalled into England when 1179. Hugh Lacy was again made Governour sub titulo Generalis Hiberniae Procuratoris Robert le Poer the Kings Marshal then Governour of Waterford and Weshford from whom immediately proceeded the Barons of Curraghmore who flourished near Dungavon a long time after the Conquest being joined as an Assistant to him 1181. John Constable of Cheshire Baron of Halton Castle and Richard de Peche Bishop of Chester or rather Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield Chester not being made a Bishops See till 1539. in the 30 Year of H. 8. who converted the Monastery of Monks there into a Cathedral about the Calends of May were sent over Governours of Ireland in Lacies room he having raised jealousies in the King by marrying the Daughter of Roderick King of Connaght without his Licence John Constable of Cheshire died 1190. at Tyre in Jerusalem in the Voyage to the Holy Land Richard Peche was son of Robert Peche Bishop of Coventry who succeeded his Father in the Bishoprick 1162. He was buried in St. Thomas Church near Stafford of which he was Founder Anno 1183. 1181. Hugh Lacy having given security to the King for his Allegiance was with Robert of Shrewsbury of Salisbury saith Hanmer a Clergy-man made Governour Lacy was a singular good Governour and established many Laws for the good of the Weal-publick He was murthered at an unawares with a Pickax Anno 1189. whose death the King was not sorry for being always jealous of his greatness His body was buried in the Monastery of Beckly and his head in S. Thomas Abbey at Dublin 1184. Philip of Worcester called by Hoved. Philip de Breos alias Brause Vir dapsilis militaris about the Calends of September Procurator in Hiberniam fuit missus with Horse and Foot the better to prepare the way for the Kings Son 1185. The King gave Ireland to his younger Son John afterwards King of England by the name of King John and made him King of Ireland writes Hoved. which as it is well observed by Sr. Peter Leceister in his Description of Ireland I take to be no more then constituit ●um Dominum Hiberniae which is King in effect the Supream Power being thereby imployed and from thence we see he assumed the Title of Dominus Hiberniae afterwards which was declared to be as much as in the future was comprehended in the Title of King 33 H. 8. Whence my Lord Coke in the third part of his Institutes writes That albeit the Kings of Ireland until the Statute before cited were stiled by the name of Lords of Ireland yet were they supream and absolute Domini and had a Royal dominion and authority else their Consorts could not have had Aurum Reginae And albeit there was such a grant to the Kings Son yet by the Law the King by his Letters Patents could not grant so Royal a Member of his Imperial stile which happily the King being sensible of takes with him into Normandy Octavianus a Subdeacon Cardinal of the Roman Church and Hugo de Nunant to whom Pope Vrban commisit Legatiam in Hiberniam ad Coronandum ibi Johannem filium Regis by which the King disappointed the Coronation and it is observable that the Seals fixed to many Charters at Dublin have only this Inscription Sigillum Johannis filii Regis Angliae Domini Hiberniae This Year Earl John went into Ireland but soon returned having built Tibrach Lismore and Archsinan alias Ardsivin Castles Constituting in his place 1185. John de Curcy whom we find every where spoken of with so much respect principle Governour and for ought I could yet discover in which circumstance I have been vigilant he did so continue till that Sir Hugh de Lacy the younger the Year is omitted in the History was sent over Lord Justice into Ireland with absolute command of the Realm and he continued his Government to the second Year of Richard the First if not so long afterwards as Hanmer would have him Curcy after having endeavoured fifteen times to go for Ireland was still beaten back as a judgment say the Historians for his impiety to Ardmagh Church and then went into France and there died He claimed a priviledge after his first obeisance to be forthwith covered in the Kings presence The like I find in Fullers Church History granted by H. 8. and confirmed by Act of Parliament to Francis Brown of Tollethorp in Rutlandshire Esq Ancestor of Robert Brown Head of the Brownists giving him leave to put on his Cap in the presence of the King or his Heirs And the present state of England p. 281. mentions the same priviledge to Henry Earl of Turrey Sub RICHARDO I. 1189. Sir Hugh de Lacy the younger Lord Justice 1191. William Petit Justicer William Marshall Lord Justice a Relation of the Earl Marshals of England Seneschal of Leinster supposed by some to decease at London and buried by his Father in the New Temple others think at Kilkenny 1231. in the Monastery there Militiae flos temporum Modernorum though I have some doubt whether this Elogie be intended for this person or others of his name 1197. Hamo de Valois aut de Valoniis vel Valoineis of an ancient Family in Suffolk Lord Justice acknowledged by Prynn in his History of King John as also by Ware De praesul Hib. Sub JOHANNE 1199. In the beginning of whose Reign I find that Hugo de Lacy was Governour but the certainty of his continuance is not specified and all agree that in this Year Miler Fitz Henry son of the base son of H. 1. was Lord Justice He died Anno 1220. on whom Glynn hath this Epitaph in the Abbey of Conal in the County of Kildare which Abbey he founded 1202. Conduntur tumulo Meyleri nobilis ossa Indomitus Domitor totius gentis Hibernae 1210. King John comes into Ireland
Jan. 16. 1408. 1407. Scroop going this Year into England James Butler Earl of Ormond son of the former Earl was elected by the Country Lord Justice 1408. Thomas of Lancaster the Kings Son lands at Carlingford in Ireland August 2. Lord Lieutenant The third of the Ides of March following he returned for England Afterwards viz. March 22. 1421. he was slain at the Battle of Bangy by the Duke of Alanson On his remove he left Thomas Butler Prior of Kilmainam his Deputy During his Government viz. in the tenth year of the King Hen. 4. gave the Sword to the City of Dublin formerly governed by a Provost as appears by their ancient Seal called Signum Praepositurae which in the 14 of Hen. 3. was governed by a Major with two Bailiffs which Bailiffs were changed into Sheriffs by Charter of Ed. 6. 1547. Since in the 17 year of King Charles 1. by a Patent dated July 29. at Westminster the Government was changed into a Lord Major though they took not up the Title till Michaelmass 1665. that Sir Daniel Bellingham Knight Goldsmith for the Year beginning at Michaelmass was made Lord Major 1665. John Desmynieres Merchant 1666. Mark Quinne Apothecary 1667. John Forrest Merchant and sometimes Chandler 1668. Lewis Desmynieres Merchant 1669. Enoch Reader Merchant 1670. John Tottie Merchant and sometimes Glover 1671. Robert Dery Shoemaker 1672. Joshua Allen Merchant 1673. Sub HENRICO V. 1413. The said Prior of Kilmainam continued Lord Justice till that 1413. October 7. Sir John Stanley landed at Clantarfe near Dublin Lord Lieutenant He died Jan. 6. following at Ardee He was the Son of John the Ancestor of the illustrious Family of the Stanleys first created Earl of Derby Anno 1 H. 7. The transactions of whose Affairs in Ireland were preserved with other evidences in the Eagle Tower at Lathum in Lancashire till the Ruines of that magnificent Seat fell a Sacrifice to the Insolencies of the late Times which the last Lord CHARLES a person of exemplary worth and humanity who died Decemb. 1. 1672. hath since raised up with advantage from its Loyal Rubbish 1671. Upon Sir John Stanleys death the 11. of February following Thomas Cranley Archbishop of Dublin twice Chancellour of Ireland was elected Lord Justice Of whom Ware writes that Vir fuit qui non modo ingenio verum etiam Calamo utpote bonis instructus Artibus plurimum valuit with which Elogie I may very well take up but being that he was buried in New Colledge Chappel in Oxford of which he had been the first Warden I may injure their Antiquities not to insert his Epitaph which so long they have admitted in their Sanctuary though truly it neither bespeaks his worth or the least ingenuity of those Times He was sometimes Chancellor of Oxford He died May 25. 1417. at Faringdon and on a fair Stone in New Colledge Chappel inlaid with Brass there is a Portraicture of a Bishop clothed in his sacred Vestments over whom there is placed the Arms of the See of Dublin and his own and under all this Inscription Incedens siste locus Aspice quod tenet iste Annis bis denis pater almus alumnus Egenis Pontificis gratum Develyn Corpus tumulatum Sedet Sacratus fungens vice pontificatus Transfuga quem Cernis dum vita vices variavit Spiritus eripitur non arte valens revocari Mors Carnis vivit sub Humo lectum sibi stravit Quaeso piis praecibus sibi viribus auxiliari This Inscription incompasses the sides of the Stone Flori Pontificum Thomae Cranley Deus istum Annuit optatum funer is esse locum Talem nutrivit locus is quem postea rexit Quo sibi quaesivit requiem cum lumina flexit M C junge quater I duples V numerater Invenies annum quo ruit iste Pater Aldelmi festo cursu migravit honesto Qui circumstatis praecibus sibi subveniatis 1414. Sir John Talbot Lord Furnival and Verdon lands at Dalkie in Ireland September 10. Lord Lieutenant Whilest he was Lieutenant of Ireland Anno sci 1418. the Earl of Kilmain with 1600 men armed after their fashion which you may read in the year 1578. Pelham being Justice came from Harflue where they landed and did excellent service as they were commanded to attend in the Forrest of Lions these were the first most considerable Forces drawn out of Ireland When he left Ireland he substituted his Brother 1419. Richard Talbot Archbishop of Dublin Lord Justice July 22. 1420. James Butler Earl of Ormond landed at Waterford April 4. Lord Lieutenant Sub HENRICO VI. 1422. The said Earl of Ormond continued Lord Lieutenant till that 1423. Edmund Mortimer Earl of March and Vlster was sent over Lord Lieutenant He died of the Plague in the Castle of Trim in Ireland 1424. the third year of King H. 6. and was buried at Stoke near Clare 1425. John Lord Talbot was made Lord Justice 1426. James Butler Earl of Ormond Lord Justice He died as it is conjectured at Ormond-Place near Garlick-Hithe London a noble seat of that Families and was certainly buried at St. Thomas of Acres called Mercers Chappel and Dame Joan his Countess 1428. 1427. Sir John de Gray Lord Lieutenant arrived at Houth the last of July and August 1. took his Oath Who afterwards going for England left 1428. Edward Dantsey Bishop of Meath for a time Treasurer of Ireland his Deputy He died Jan. 4. 1428. 1428. The Right Noble and Right Gracious Lord Sir John Sutton whether of Stourton Castle in Staffordshire or of the Family of Notingham is uncertain was made Lord Lieutenant before whom a Parliament was held at Dublin the Friday after the Feast of All-Saints in the 7 of this Kings Reign 1429. Sir Thomas Strange was made Deputy to Sir John Sutton probably this Strange came from Hunstanton in Norfolk 1432. Sir Thomas Stanley was made Lord Lieutenant He going for England constitutes 1432. Sir Christopher Plunket his Deputy a valiant and wise man who in right of his Wife heir of the Family of the Cusacks was afterwards made Baron of Killin and his second Son Baron of Dunsany 1435. Sir Thomas Stanley returns again Lord Lieutenant 1436. Richard Talbot Brother of John Earl of Shrewsbury Archbishop of Dublin was made Deputy to Sir Thomas Stanley Lord Lieutenant 1438. Lion Lord Wells Lord Lieutenant of Alford in Lincolnshire an ancient and Worthy Family 1440. Richard Talbot Archbishop of Dublin Lord Justice before whom a Parliament was held at Dublin in the 18 year of the Kings Reign The same Year James Earl of Ormond Lord Lieutenant and before the end of the year Lion Lord Wells again Lord Lieutenant This I conceive was that worthy person who not prevailing with his Son Sir Robert Wells to quit H. 6. Interests was beheaded by Edw. 4. 1470. 1441. James Earl of Ormond Deputy to the said Lion Lord Wells to whom as it seems by Sir James Ware de
struck off at one blow than was left in the heads of the surviving Nobility He was born at Everton in Cambridg shire brought up in Baliol Colledge in Oxford He held a Parliament at Dublin in the 7. of this King He was attainted by Parliament in England for taking part with Edw. 4. against King H. 6. who had then again resumed his Title with a grateful admittance into London and was beheaded on Tower-hill 1470. and his body was buried in the Preaching Friers London 1467. Thomas Fitz Maurice Earl of Kildare made Lord Justice and 1471. Lord Deputy to George Duke of Clarence before whom a Parliament was held at Naas the 12 of Edw. 4. 1475. William Sherwood Bishop of Meath Deputy to the Duke of Clarence Lord Lieutenant In July he held a Parliament at Dublin the 15 of Edw. 4. He died at Dublin December 3. 1482. and lies buried in the Church of St. Peter and Paul near Trim. 1478. Henry Gray Lord Gray of Ruthin a descendant of the Earls of Kent Deputy to the said Duke of Clarence and the same year Sir Robert Preston Knight descended from the line of the Prestons in Lancashire was Deputy to the said Henry Lord Gray and before the end of the year Gerald Earl of Kildare was made Lord Justice Vir licet spectatae fortitudinis rigidus tamen Praeferox He held a Parliament at Dublin the 18 of the King and 1479. The said Gerald Earl of Kildare was made Deputy to Richard of Shrewsbury Duke of York second Son of Edw. 4. nominated Lord Lieutenant of Ireland He held a Parliament at Dublin the 20 of Edw. 4. Sub EDWARDO V. 1483. The said Earl of Kildare was continued Deputy Sub RICHARDO III. 1483. The said Earl of Kildare was first made Deputy to Edward the Kings Son before whom sub exitum anni writes Sir James Ware in Parliamento Dublinii incepto lata est lex de nummis adveteratis fi angendis Edward the Kings son died 1484. the 2 of Richard 3. And after the death of Edward the Kings Son the said Earl of Kildare was made Lord Deputy to John de la Pole Earl of Lincoln Lord Lieutenant who was slain at Stokefield taking part with Martin Swarth June 20. the 2 of H. 7. 1487. Sub HENRICO VII 1485. Gerald Earl of Kildare was continued Deputy to the said Earl of Lincoln Lord Lieutenant Whilest the Government was thus committed to Kildare Lambert Simnel a Youth that carried a kind of fascination in his Countenance was sent thither out of the Burgundian Forge with a considerable Force under Martin Swarth a German accompanied with the Earl of Lincoln the Lord Lovel and other persons of Quality who so smoothly carried their Design as the Deputy the Chancellour Treasurer of Ireland and some of the Bishops all friends to the White Rose conceived this Pretender to be the true Earl of Warwick son of George Duke of Clarence rightful Heir to the Crown of England and thereupon had him solemnly Crowned in Christ Church Dublin with a Crown taken off the head of the Statue of the blessed Virgin Mary who on such occasions it seems takes it not ill to be divested of her Attire Afterwards that Idol with its complices were defeated at Stokefield and which some account a notable subtilty in H. 7. our Deputy the Earl of Kildare with all the Council were not only pardoned but continued in the same Government with Instructions suitable to the Time And then 1491. He was made Deputy to Jasper Earl of Pembroke and Duke of Bedford Uncle to H. 7. Lord Lieutenant After whom 1492. Walter Fitz Simons Archbishop of Dublin was made Deputy to the said Duke of Bedford and Earl of Pembroke Lord Lieutenant who held a Parliament at Dublin the 8 of H. 7. and was afterwards Chancellour who in Synodo ab e● Dublinii celebrata Theologiae praelectori salarium assignavit à se Suffragiis suis annuatim pendendum an Argument the University formerly established by Archbishop Bicknor 1320. was not wholy neglected He died at Finglass May 14. 1511. and was most honourably buried in St. Patricks Church Dublin 1493. Robert Preston Viscount Gormanston succeeded Deputy to the Duke of Bedford He was the first Viscount Gormanston He died the 5. of the Ides of April 1541. He held a Parliament at Drogedagh which was repealed the 10 of H. 7. because he had no power by his Commission to keep a Parliament other causes are alledged also The Duke of Bedford died Decemb. 21. 1495. the 11 of H. 7. Gormanston quitted his Government The same year to his Son as his Vicar or Deputy who surrendred it 1494. To Sir Edward Poynings Knight of the Garter and one of the Privy Council in England designed Deputy Decemb. 13. and was sworn at Dublin not long after He held a Parliament at Drogedagh in the 10 of the King wherein besides many Acts of notable importance he passed an Act That no Parliament should be holden in Ireland until the Acts were first certified into England and thence returned with the Royal Assent under the Great Seal which hath been the grand security of what the English hath since enjoyed Then also it was enacted That all the Statutes made in England to that time should also be in force in Ireland So making saith my Lord Bacon some compensation for the meagreness of his Service in the War Also there past an Act that the Lords of Ireland should appear in the like Parliament Robes in the Parliament of Ireland as the English Lords are wont to wear in the Parliament of England Which some of them put on not with less regret than ours would their Trowses as Tirlagh Lynnagh who was suffered to bea● the Title of O-Neal after it was dam'd by an Act of Parliament He died an old man Anno 1522. He going for England in Jan. 1495. Leaves Henry Dean then Bishop of Bangor writes Ware but not till the Year following saith Godwin only Prior of Lanthony Abbey and Chancellor of Ireland Lord Justice A person of great prudence soon detecting the Imposture of Perkin Warbeck Dean died Archbishop of Canterbury at Lambeth Febr. 15. 1502. and lies buried in the Martyrdom at Canterbury under a fair Marble stone inlaid with Brass 1496. August 6. Gerald Earl of Kildare was made Lord Lieutenant before whom August 26. at Tristledermort was held a Parliament in the ●4 H. 7. 1503. In April Walter Fitz Simons Vir gravis eruditus Archbishop of Dublin succeeded Deputy to the said Earl of Kildare and in August the same Year quitted the Sword to Gerald Earl of Kildare magno tum honore novis instructionibus returning out of England Lord Deputy maugre all the malice of his adversaries Sub HENRICO VIII 1509. The said Gerald Earl o● Kildare continued his Government with a new Patent under the Title of Justice though the year
died 1559. Thomas Earl of Sussex Kt. of the Garter arrived at Bullock August 27. Lord Lieutenant and was sworn in Christ Church Dublin August 30. having in charge strictly to look to the Irish who being a superstitious Nation may easily be seduced to Rebellion through the practices of the French then at difference with England under praetext of Religion before whom a Parliament was held at Dublin Jan. 12. 2. Eliz. wherein Acts of great consequences were past as the restoring to the Crown the ancient Jurisdiction of the State Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing all foreign Power repugnant to the same also for the Uniformity of the Common Prayer for Consecrating of Bishops and the Queens Title to the Imperial Crown of Ireland with many others After which he went for England and 1559. Sir William Fitz Williams Febr. 15. was sworn in Christ Church Dublin Lord Justice during whose Government viz. anno 1560. Q. Elizabeth amongst the most commendable Actions of her Government reduced Coin to its full value much debased through her Fathers excessive expence and stamped for Ireland Coin called Sterling of which the shilling in Ireland passed for 12 d. and in England 9 d. Yet though affairs were carried thus honourably to her advantage in the Year 1601. the Lord Buckhurst very skilful in Money matters got her to mingle Brass with the Money that she sent into Ireland by reason that the War in Ireland stood her Majesty yearly in 160000l sterl which the Souldiers suffered without mutiny having a true Reverence for that Lady though not without loss and in effect not much to her service the Reputation of a Prince being in nothing preserved more entire than in the just value of their Coin Hence it was that when the Earl of Leicester Anno 1585. was sent into Holland one of this excellent Princesses charges to him was to know by what Art they enhanced or put down the value of their Money in which Art they excelled all others lest the Souldier should receive that at a higher rate than they could put it off for And to this effect Sir George Carew in his Letter to the Council of England mentioned in Pacata Hibernia writes that it was impossible to prevent a confusion in the State if the People might not be put in some certain hope that upon the end of the War the now Standard should be abolished or eased 1561. Thomas Earl of Sussex Lord Lieutenant arrived at Dublin and was sworn in Christ Church Dublin June 25. 1561. Sir William Fitz Williams Lord Justice was sworn in Christ Church Jan. 22. 1562. Thomas Earl of Sussex July 24. Lord Lieutenant who amongst other things did excellent Service in reducing the Irish Countries into Shires and placing therein Sheriffs and other Ministers of the Law as Annaly in Leinster he made a Shire calling it the County of Longford and the Province of Connaght he divided into 6 Counties viz. Clare which contains all Thoomond Gallaway Sligo Mayo Roscommon and Leitrim He died at his house at Bermondsey in Southwark June 9. 1583 and was honourably buried at New-Hall in Essex July 9. following At his departure from Ireland having setled things in excellent order 1565. Sir Nicholas Arnold of the County of Gloucester Knight May 25. was made Lord Justice to whom was assigned only a Garrison of 1596 Souldiers with which he kept peace but gained nothing Being recalled into England surrenders his Government 1565. To Sir Henry Sidney who in the time of Queen Mary had been Judge and Treasurer of Ireland now President of Wales Jan. 20. Lord Deputy before whom a Parliament was held at Dublin Jan. 17. in the 11 of Eliz. many things being acted therein greatly to the advantage of the State and a Subsidy granted considering the infinite masses of Treasure able to purchase a Kingdom that her most noble Progenitors the famous Princes of England had exhausted for the Governments Defence and Preservation of them and her Majesties Realm of Ireland largely expressed in the Act. In which Parliament also which had several Prorogations Shane O-Neal was attainted and the name extinguished In which Act also the Kings ancient Titles to Ireland are recited Thus having setled Affairs he took Ship towards England at Houth Octob. 9. having with good success discomfited Shane O-Neal who after his return from England where the Queen 1563. had graciously received him into favour he most treacherously went into Rebellion and affected the Title of King of Vlster In the year of this Governours admittance he institutes Wareham St. Leger first President of Mounster with an Assessor two Lawyers and a Clerk the same Government he also constituted in Connaght 1567. Dr. Weston Lord Chancellor and Sir Will. Fitz-Williams Treasurer at War Octob. 14. Lord Justices Weston was thought a prudent and upright man for whom I find this Epitaph in St. Patricks Church Dublin on a Monument very stately erected principally in memory of the Relations of Richard Earl of Cork upon the uppermost seat of which ●s Dr. Westons Effigies with this Inscription Here lieth interred the Body of that Reverend and Honourable Gentleman Robert Weston Esq Doctor of the Civil and Canon Laws Grandfather to the Lady Katherine Countess of Cork ●●ing sometimes one ●f the Lord Justices ●● Ireland and for ●●x years Lord Chancellour of the Realm A small Coat of ARMS betwixt Who was so Learned Judicious and Vpright in the Court of Judicature all the time of that imployment He never made Order or Decree that was questioned or reversed He changed this mortal life for an eternal life May 20. 1573. whos 's honourable memory no time shall extinguish 1568. Sir Henry Sidney Octob. 20 Lord Deputy He took Ship for England from the Key at Dublin March 25. 1571. When Sir William Fitz Williams the April ensuing was swor● Lord Justice in St. Patricks Church Dublin and Jan. 13. eodem anno the said Sir William Fitz Williams was made Lord Deputy 1575. Sir Henry Sidney Septemb 18. returned into Ireland Lord Deputy where having pacified several Rebellions and that not with so much Rigor as excellent Conduct having at several times been 1● years Justice and Deputy of Ireland so as that Kingdom is much indebted to him for his Wisdom and Valour He Septemb. 12. 1578. took Boat a● the Wood Key in Dublin for England he died at Worcester May 5. 1586. and was buried amongst his Ancestors at Penshurst of whom Dr. Powel in his Epistle to the Reader in his History of Wales writes that his Disposition was rather to seek after the Antiquities and the Weal publick of those Countries He governed then to obtain Lands and Revenues within the same for I know not one foot of Land that he had either in Wales or Ireland cujus potentiam nemo sentit nisi aut Levatione periculi aut accessione Dignitatis justly applicable to him Vel. Pater f. 109. He caused the Irish Statutes to his
Majesty tending by the blessing of God in an high degree to the honour and service of his Majesty and to the happiness of this his Kingdom and People Given at the Council Chamber in Dublin Novemb. 20. 1661. Jam. Dublin H. Midensis W. Caulfield Jo. Bysse Jo. Temple Paul Davies Robert Forth Robert Meredith The Earl of Montrath dying the 18 of December 1661. of the Smal Pox in Dublin was privately buried in Christ Church the next night but his Obsequies were there solemnly performed the 6 of February following in great State After whose death 1661. Sir Maurice Eustace Lord Chancellor and Roger Earl of Orrerey c. January 14. were sworn Lords Justices at the Council Board Sir Maurice Eustace died in Dublin the 22 of June in the 71 year of his Age of a Palsie 1665. and was buried at Castle Martin early the next morning his Funeral was solemnized in St. Patricks Church in Dublin that day three Weeks after he died The most noble Prince James Duke Marquess and Earl of Ormond Earl of Ossory and Brecknock Viscount ●hurles Lord Baron of Arclo and Lanthony Lord of the Regalities and Liberties of the County of Tiperary Chancellor of the University of Dublin Lord Lieutenant General and General Governour of his Majesties Kingdom of Ireland one of the Lords of his Majesties most honourable Privy Council of his Majesties Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland Lord Steward of his Majesties Houshold Lord Lieutenant of the County of Somerset Gentleman of his Majesties Bedchamber and Knight of the most noble Order of the Garter MDCLXII 1662. James Duke of Ormond c. who had as the Act for the Settlement of the Kingdom of Ireland saith fol. 99. upon the most abstracted considerations of Honour and Conscience faithfully adhered to his Majesty and to the Crown of England without any regard to his own Estate or Fortune was the 28 of July sworn in Cork-House Lord Lieutenant and the 27 of September following he gave the Royal Assent to several Acts of Parliament At that time delivering himself in so significant a Speech as besides those Elegances which beautified the Oration he discovered with singular humanity how far men further than their first intention may proceed to Villanies Policy and Power in conclusion could not restrain All delivered with that Vigour that nothing could have made equal Impression or indeed have been spoken but from one that had lain in his Masters breast known his thoughts uttered his sense which being registred amongst the Records of Parliament is there to be sought for with Reverence Then as I have said he past many Acts of Parliament amongst the rest one for the Settlement of the Kingdom of Ireland was the chief which afterwards through the proceedings of the Commissioners authorized by Virtue of that Act to judge betwixt Party and Party came again to be considered In as much as Sir Audley Mervin Speaker of the House of Commons in his excellent Speech to his Grace the Duke of Ormond February 13. 1662. stiles it the Magna Charta Hiberniae and in maintenance of the true sense thereof presents an Instrument to his Grace with Rules and Directions for the Commissioners proceedings thereupon that discerning a Cloud through the Interposition of some malevolent Planet it might remain whether pursued or no as a Record of their endeavours that the hard fate and ruine of an English Interest in Ireland might not bear date under the best of Kings under so vigilant a Lord Lieutenant under the first if not prevented like to be the last Protestant Parliament there which with fuller circumstances were so lively presented by him that with one Voice it was Ordered to be Printed and so it was by William Bladen at Dublin and re-printed at London by J. Streater soon after which for its length I omit though as to the English Interest the Adventurers security and the Souldiers Arrears nothing deserves more solemnly to be commended to Posterity All afterwards duly considered of by his Grace the Duke of Ormond who in the timely composure of this business struggled under no mean or short Incumbrances and so having laid the Storm the better to reduce all Interests into a Settlement he repaired into England the 31 of May 1663. And his Son 1663. Thomas Earl of Ossory the same day was sworn Lord Deputy in the Council Chamber the Sword till then deposited in the Dukes Closet being with usual Ceremonies committed to his Trust And well it might for never any unless his Father received it with more general applause or bore it with a more equal and obliging temper Since he hath in several capacities at Sea gallantly acted beyond the Fiction of a Romance 1665. In the beginning of September his Grace the Duke of Ormond landed at Waterford and came to Kilkenney having the Sword delivered to him again upon his landing the Earl of Ossory's Commission then being determined And now his Excellency being returned on whose Indulgence Father Walsh with his Party much relied the Glossing Design of some Papists to demonstrate their Allegiance to the King against all pretences of the Roman Court daily gathered fire in as much as the Irish Clergy Archbishops Bishops c. with two Divines of each Regular Order to the number of 70 obtained the freedom to meet at Dublin in the Residence of the Parish Priest of St. Owens Church the 11 of June 1666. in a National Synod to sign the Remonstrance and Protestation subscribed and presented to his Majesty in January and February 1661. by divers of the Nobility Gentry and Romish Clergy the like whereof nay nor any way near it had ever been permitted saith my Author others thought so too since Queen Maries Reign that rational men expected from so gracious a connivance some notable and grateful Act would have proceeded but in stead of such first they clash amongst themselves then the Primate coming in bids the Bishop of Kilfinuragh their Speaker to quit the Chair who refusing the Primate with most of the Assembly depart the House upon which the Remnant cry hard for a Dissolution But Father Walshes Arguments after some heats on all sides prevailed to continue the Assembly and the Primate returns thither of himself the House declaring that the Chair was no Seat of Dignity but of Ministry and Office And so the Assembly proceeded but with such animosities in their Debates as the Result was wholy insignificant granting little more if any thing then when their Confederates in the late Rebellion coined Monies slew his Majesties innocent naked Subjects surprized his Castles vilified his Governour yet verbally professed Allegiance to the King so as the 25 of June the 15 day of their meeting the National Synod was dissolved his Grace signifying to them that he found no satisfaction in any of their Addresses In all which Father Walsh is very particular in his History and Vindication of the Loyal Formulary A Piece bating his exuberances worthy perusal
Romanorum cap. 26. p. 70. Vide Pomp. Laetum De Magist Rom. p. 92. Ware de Antiq. Hib. p. 168. Hanmer p. 157. Cambd. of Irel. Giral Hib. Exp. lib. 2. cap. 18. Hoved. p. 685. Godw. of Bish P. 159. Hoved. Hollinshead Hoved. lib. ● cap. 24. Fol. 77. Stat. Irel. fol. 183. Fol. 357. Hoved. Annals Anno 1187. Hanmer Chron. p. 168. Hanmer out of the Book of Hoth p. 169. Fuller in his Worthies p. 25. P. 167. Camp fol. 73. Hanmer fol. 169 Hollinshead Hanm. fol. ●● Mat. Par. f●● 403. Fol. ●● Fol. ●●● Hanm. fol. 183. Ware de Antiq. Hib. p. 173. Matt. Paris Ware De Antiq Hib. p. 213. Mat. Paris fol. ●30 Godw. of Bishops p. 421. Pry●● Hist H. 3. fol. 38. Ware De praes Hib. fol. 107. Prynn Hist K. John fol. 10. Mat. Paris fol. 366. Anno 1230. Mat. Par. ibid. Spelm. Gloss fol. 340. Prynn Hist H. 3. fol. 80. Mat. Par. fol. 397. Hanm. fol. 198. out of Florileg and Hollinsh Matt. Par. fol. 398. Ware de Antiq. Hib. p. ●33 Mat. Par. fol. 975. Prynn H. 3. fol. 107. Hollinsh fol. 37. Cambd. Brit. fol. 519. Dugd. Chronica Camd. Brit. f. 309. Vincent on Brook fol. 522. Vincent on Brook fol. 447. Holmes his Note thereon Hanm. fol. 201. Camd. Brit. fol. 583. Prynn fol. 118. Prynn Hist Edw. 1. fol. 136. Ware de Praes Hib. fol. 247. Prynn fol. 353. Ware de Praes Hibern f. 110. in his Hist of the King f. 574 Camd. Brit. fol. 723. Prynn fol. 573. Ware de Hib. p. 346. Camp fol. 79. Ware de Praes Hib. f. 34. Prynn Hist fol. 457. Prynn 23 of Edw. 1. fol. 639 From fol. 774. to fol. 888. Davies of Ireland fol. 85. Fol. 97. Fol. 366. Camd. Irel. fol. 82. P. 85 Spencer of Irel. fol. 13. Davies p. 86. Ware de Praes Hib. f. 167. De Antiq. Hib. p. 82. Ware de Antiq. Hiber lib. 15. Marleb fol. 211 Camd. Brit. fol. 364. Godw. de Praes P 541. Anno 1268. Davies p. 205. Ware de Prae● Hib. f. 185. Camd. Brit. fol. 283. Camd. Irel. fol. 82. Camd. Title Leinster P. 32. Dan. Hist fol. 25● Vinc. on Brook fol. 125. Weavers Fun. Monum fol. 268. Fol. 523. Coke Instit Part 2. fol. 47. York Title March fol. 197. Coke of Ireland fol. 357. Ware de Praes Hib. fol. 36. Walsing Hypod. Neust Davies p. 42. and forwards Vincent on Brook fol. 528 Fol. 271. S●●w Camp Hist fol. 96. De Praes Hib. 12. fol. 115. Truss fol. 111. Vincent on Brook fol. 329. Stow Survey of London in 4 to p 487. Ware de Praes fol. 36. Stat. Irel. fol. 3. Camd. Brit. fol. 48● Camd. Irel. fol. 95. Speed fol. 876. Vincent on Brook from Camd. fol. 598. Coke Jurisd of Courts fol. 124. Stows Survey of London in 4 to p. 720. Trussel fol. 151. Stat. Irel. fol. 13. Vincent on Brook fol. 593. Ware H. 7. An. 1 Ware de Praes Hib. f. 23. Stat. Irel. f. 19. Stat. Irel. f. 21. Stat. Irel. f. 29. Vincent on Brook fol. 621. Stat. Irel. f. 31. Ware de Antiq. Hib. p. 174. Camd. Irel. f. 88. Stat. Irel. f. 32. Davies p. 61. Pliny Epist p. 65. Fullers Worth Stat. Irel. f. 40. Vincent on● Brook f. 612. also Trussel fol. 194. Stat. Irel f. 44. Stat. Irel. f. 4● Ware de Praes Hib. fol. 37. Ware de Praes Hib. f. 171. De Antiq. Hib. p. 164. Bakers Hist R. 3. p. 43. Ware H. 7. Ann. 1487. Ware de Praes Hib. f. 117. Stat. Irel. fol. 67. Vincent on Brook fol. 50. Ware H. 7. f. 38. Davies p. 254. Ware H. 8. f. 113 De Praes Angl. Godw. de Praes Ang. p. 191. Ware H. 8. Camd. Irel. fol. 100. Spelm. Gloss fol. 334. Fol. 99. Vincent on Brook fol. 357 Stows Survey of London in 4 to p. 487. Ware De Praes Hib. fol. 157. Cherb H. 8. fol. 208. Stat. Irel. f 7. Davies p. 238. Vincent on Brook fol. 173. Herb. of H. 8. f. 389. Ware de Pras Hib. fol. 118. Stat. Irel. f. 1●1 Herb. fol. 469. Brents Counc of Trent f. 392 ware fol. 173. ware fol. 178. So Camp and the Writers of the last Ages Sir John Hayw. in the life of Edw. 6. p. 280. Camd. Brit. fol. 331. Ware of this Q. Stat. Irel. f. 246 Camd. Ann●● Eliz. 1. Pag. 223. Godw. de Praes Angl. p. 360. Camd. Eliz. p. 43. Stat. Irel. fol. 259. Fol. 297. Fol. 309. Fol. 315. Ware de Script Hib. p. 136. 1580. Camd. Eliz. in this year 1586 Lib. 8. p. 404. In 1583. Camd. Anno citato Stat. Irel. fol. 373. Davies p. 256. Caesar Williamson Panaeg in Hen. Cromwel p. 22. Vir doctrinâ multifariâ modestiâ omnibúsque virtutibus conspicuus Ware de Praes Hib. f. 111. De Praes Hib. Camd. Brit. fol. 690. Vir certè praecellens in quo morum probitas cum natalium claritate certavit quae tamen Invidiae obsistere non poterant Camd. Annal. Eliz. fol. 264. P. 122. 1597. ROBERT DEVOREUX Earl of Essex Earl Marshal of England and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland Viscount Hereford Baron Ferrars of Chartley Lord Bourchier and Lovain Master of the Horse and Ordnance to Queen Elizabeth Knight of the Garter one of her Majesties Privy Council and Chancellor of the Universities of Cambridge and Dublin XV. April MDXCVIII Camd. Eliz. Part 2. p. 210. Camd. Append to Eliz. Fowlis in his Hist of Romish Treason Vincent on Brook So Dan. in his Fun. Po●m on this noble E. p. 22. Davies of Irel. p. 264. Davies p. 265. Brit. p. 76. * R●●usant In his Ch●●● fol. 439. W●r● de Praes Hib. fol. 121. Rushw Hist Collect. Fol. 55. Scrinia Sacra p. 236. In his Reign of K. Charles I. fol. 116. Ephemeris Parliamentar fol. 210. * A Title rather of honour than Profit having but 30 l. Fee from the Exchequer the Vice Treasurer or Treasurer at War having the chief emoluments of the Place though the Lord Treasurer carries the Staff and bears the dignity Printed at Dublin 1637. Anno 16 Car. Reg. Diurnal Occurrences p. 355. The Anniversary Act of Thanksgiving fol. 5. P 115. The Lord Inchequin and the Officers Letter from Cork July 17. P. 223. P. 347. Anno 1650. The Act of Settlement fol. 124. * Praeter quotidiana munia sua praestita perquam laudabiliter hisce Comitiis habuit in eorundem auspiciis orationem gravibus verbis cultam sapientissimis sententiis politam alias verò effudit Orationes Succulentas c. ut nemo fide prestantior nemo certè in officio constantior atque perseverantior c. Ejusdemque Consilio decretum est unanimi consensu suffragante omnia sua Membra coenae salutaris Dominicae fieri participantia sacra manu hujus Praesulis administrante Which I the rather observe it being for what I ever heard the first Order of that Nature the Composition of the Lords House consisting most of Papists P. 3. P. 1. Walsh Loyal Remonstrance fol. 674. The State of which business was Printed at Dublin with his Graces Speech and the House of Commons Considerations on the Bill of Settlement by John Crooke 1665. See the State of the Adventurers Case fol. 7. * At which Solemnity there was also present his Grace of canterbury the Bishops of London Worcester Oxford and Rochester the Earls of Bedford Aylsbury Dumferlin and Carlingford with innumerable other persons of Quality whom after the Convocation was ended he there entertained at a most sumptuous Banquet with a Mind more obliging * Quot haec aetas nec retrò omnia secula uno tempore loco vix unquam viderunt consecratos quae quidem Consecratio ita secundùm sacri officii●a ex parte formam ritus Ecclesiae ex Canonibus requisitos erat celebrata ut Nihil pro Rei tam Sacrae Solemnitate venustate de●●deraretur Dud. Loft Orat. Fun. in Episc Armac p. 26.