167 



" Subsequent to the general meeting in November, 1684, 

 a list of the members of the Philosophical Society was for- 

 warded to Mr. Aston, to which 1 have added the names of 

 some seven or eight others, who, either prior or subsequent to 

 the publication of this list, were, I have positive assurance, 

 connected with this society, prior to 1688. 



President, Sir William Petty, Knt., M.D. 

 Director, Charles Willoughby, M.D. 

 Treasurer, William Pleydall, Esq. 

 Secretary, William Molyneaux, Esq. 



MEMBERS. 



Narcissus Marsh, Bishop of 

 Leighlin and Ferns. 



William Lord Viscount Mountjoy. 



Robert Huntingdon, D.D , Pro- 

 vost of Trinity College. 



John Worth, D.D., Dean of St. 

 Patrick's. 



John Baynard, A.M., Archdea- 

 con of Connor. 



Sir Robert Redding, Bart. 



Sir Cyril Wyche, Knt., P.R.S. 



Richard Bulkeley, F.T.C.D., af- 

 terwards Knt. and Bart. 



Patk. Dun,M.D., afterwards Knt. 



Henry Feneriy, Esq. 



J. Finglass, M.A. 



Samuel Foley, F.T.C.D., after- 

 wards Bishop of Down and 

 Connor. 



Daniel Houlaghan, M.D. 



John Keogh, M.A. 



Dudley Loftus, afterwards Judge 

 of the Prerogative Court. 



George Toilet, Professor of Ma- 

 thematics. 



Patterson, Surgeon. 



John Maden, M.D.* 



Allen Mullen, M.D. 



* The name of Madden (or Maden, as it is written in the Minutes of the 

 Philosophical Society) is intimately connected with the rise of science, litera- 

 ture, and medicine in this country. The John Maden, M. D., here alluded 

 to, was son of Thomas of Maddenton, and died in 1703. His family wore 

 connected with, and he himself was the intimate friend of the Molyneaux. 

 His son, the Key. Samuel Madden, commonly called "Premium Madden," 

 was the founder of the Royal Dublin Society in 1731. See " The Tribes and 

 Customs of Hy-Many," by John O'Donovan, printed for the Irish Archoeolo- 

 gical Society. 



VOL. HI. P 



