INDEX. 



457 



Armagh, Latinised A rdmacha Ciuitas, 157- 

 antiphonarium of the cathedral of, 



entry in, quoted, 391. 



tanist Abbot of, 406. 



mpo peap lecchin of, 28; Archima- 



gister, 29. 



Archbishop of, popular notion con- 



cerning, noticed by St. Bernard, 330. 



Basilica of, 153. 



Book of. See Tirechan, and Book of 



Armagh. 



the Books of Eochaidh O'Flannagan 



at, 106. 



Book of Maelbrighte written at, 305, 



entries in, quoted, ib. 



burned by lightning A. D. 995 ; 49, 



53, 146. 

 burned 55, 56, 340, 435, 442. 



carcar or prison at, 106. 



roof of the cloictheach of, 57. 



damliac or basilica of, 147, 150-152, 



156, 160, 443. 



erected by St. Patrick, 194. 



Kitchen of, 441. 



Refectory of, 425. 



Great house of the Abbots burned at, 



426. 

 ecclesiastical edifices of, burned by 



the Northmen, 144, 145, 147-152. 

 that the churches at, were stone build- 



ings in the ninth century, quite certain, 153 

 155. 

 buildings, constituting the religious 



establishment at, in St. Patrick's time, with 

 measurements of the same, noticed in detail, 

 38L 



Argyrotheca of, 381. 



erection of the ecclesiastical edifices 



at, in most instances, ascribed to St. Patrick 

 himself, 144. 



St. Evin's account of the laying of the 



foundation of the Cathedral of, by St. Pa- 

 VOL. XX. 3 



trick, 156; length of, as prescribed by St. 



Patrick, by direction of an angel, 156. 

 Armagh, that there is every reason to believe 



that the stone churches existing at, in the 



ninth century, were the very churches 



erected in St. Patrick's time, or shortly 



after, shewn, 155-158. 

 thepinginn in circulation at, in 1031 ; 



220, 221. 



plundered by Mac Cairill, A.D.996;54. 



by the inhabitants of Oriel, A. D. 



996; 55. 



by the Northmen, 145. 



by the Danes of Dublin, 145, 146. 



sacrilegious plundering or violation of, 



145. 

 Rath of, destroyed, 149, 150; burned, 



151, 442 See Rath. 



stone oratory at, 143. 



stone oratory in the neighbourhood 



of, coeval with St. Patrick, 347. 

 Treana i. e., Trians, Thirds, or ternal 



divisions of, 147-151, 442. 

 usurpation of archbishopric of, 307. 



Armenia, 69. 



Art, the son of Conn ; place of his burial, 99, 

 101. 



Art, skill of the ancient Irish ecclesiastics in 

 the art of manufacturing all the sacred uten- 

 sils belonging to the altar, shrines, &c. 200- 

 203. 



Art of sculpture, knowledge of, in Ireland, 269- 



Arthgal, son ofCathal, king of Connaught, 117. 



Artificers, ancient Irish, 201. 



Artificers of St. Patrick, skill of, 201. 



Arts, skill of the early ecclesiastics in Ireland 

 in, 191. 



Arts of civilized life, knowledge of, among the 

 Irish at the time of the first Danish irrup- 

 tions, 212. 



. decline of, in Ireland, after the Anglo- 

 Norman conquest, 317- 



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