158 
£ #%d. 
Of the rents of the freeholders, see and cottagers 
ofthe same,. . . Bie, ee OS as 
Of the demesnes of the same, . . .....- . 28 6 6 
Of the meadows there, - - - «© - ++ «+> 216. (0 
OE dic quill Theres ee a. ae ee sine ee 
Of the ‘boll Weeritiare + a 2 on ee a 0. 6. 0 
Of the advowsonsthere,. . . . 0.+2.+0 
Of the works and services of the beta ae cotta- 
fi hc tah ie a rs ec ema ae, er = 7. 8,9 
Of meat‘sgld, Ge, flere; 8 ss) sw is 3 0 0 
Summa,. .. .£165 8. 9 
The Total for the period, . . . . .£7728 5 104 
Per annum for the 5 years, . . . . £1545 13 2} 
‘«* The pound, of that day, was three times the value of our 
present pound, being twelve ounces of silver. Thesilver penny 
was the 240th part of the pound of silver; the silver three- 
pence, of our present money, is the same. This calculation : 
would make the revenue of the Archbishop at that time to be, 
per annum, £3336 15s. 6d. in silver by weight in pounds 
Troy. 
‘«¢ Tt appears that courts were then held in the manors of 
Swords, Balymore, Clondalkin, Finglas, and Shankil ; but 
not in those of Rathcool, Newtown, Tallaght, Cullen, in the 
archbishopric of Dublin; nor were courts held in the manors 
of Castlekevin, Glendel, or Glendelagh, Kilmasantan, or Bre- 
tach, which were the manors of the bishopric of Glendalagh. 
«‘ The manors of Balymore, Clondalkin, Shankhill, Rath- 
cool, Newtown, Cullen, and Kilmasantan formed, afterwards, 
the barony of Uppercross; those of Swords and its members, 
Lusk and Werne (or Warren), the barony of Nethercross. 
ra 
