158 



f s. d. 

 Of the rents of the freeholders, betaghs, and cottagers 



of the same, 105 9 6 



Of the demesnes of the same, 28 6 6 



Of the meadows there, 2 16 



Of the mill there, . 18 



Of the boll beer there, 060 



Of the advowsons there, 020 



Of the works and services of the betaghs and cotta- 

 gers there, 789 



Of meat sold, &c, there, 300 



Summa, .... £165 8 9 



The Total for the period, £7728 5 10£ 



Per annum for the 5 years, . . . .£1545 13 2i 



" The pound, of that day, was three times the value of our 

 present pound, being twelve ounces of silver. The silver 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. 



" It 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. 



