340 Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. 



10. 1644. Proclamation "By The Supreme Councell of the Confederat 

 Catholicks of Ireland " (Galling upon those inhabitants of Ulster who had 

 gone into other parts to avoid " the charge of the "War " to return thereunto, 

 &c, &c.) Given at Kilkenny, the 25 of May 1644. 



Thomas Bourke, Printer to the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland. 

 Eoyal Arms. S.sh. Fol. 

 [R.I.A. /In glass case.] 



11. 1644. List of Peers and other Members of the General Assembly of 

 the Irish Confederates in 1644. Thomas BourJce. 



[Fide Gilbert's " History of the Confederates " : vol. iii, p. 214.] 



12. 1644. Querees, Propounded by The Protestant Partie, Concerning 

 The Peace In Generall, Now treated of in Ireland, and the ansivers thereimto 

 made in behalf e and name of the Irish Nation . . . 



Imprint : " Printed at Paris, by Iohn Belier, in the yeare, 1644." 4to. 

 24 pp., including t. p. 



[University Library, Cambridge. /Hib. 7. 644. 31 (No. 6886) ; E. R. McC. Dix.] 



Query : — Waterford-printed ? 



N.B. — Appears to be identical with Bourke's printing. 



13. 1644. The Inquisition of a Sermon Preached in the Cathedrall Church 

 of the City of Watcrford in February, 1617, etc., By Robert Daborne, Chancellor 

 of the said Cathedrall, etc. Written by the Pi. F. P. C. of the Order of 

 S. Augustin, & Doctor in Divinity. 



Thomas Bourke. 4to. 254 pp. + 4 leaves (Table). Sigs. A-LL. 2. 

 [Marsh's Library, Dublin. The Franciscan Library, Dublin.] 



14. 1644. A Briefe Eelation of the most remarkable Feates and Passages 

 of what his most Gracious Majesties Commanders hath done in England against 

 the Eebells and of His severall glorious Victories over them, sithence 

 January 1641, till December 1643. And from the first of May 1644, till the 

 fifth of this present July. 



Thomas Bourke. Woodcut. 4to. 8 leaves. Verso of title-page and last 

 pages blank. Cropped. 

 [Brit. Mus. /102. a. 23.] 



15. 1644. A Declaration of the Lords, Gentry and others of Leinster and 

 Munster, of their intentions towards English and Scottish Protestant 

 inhabitants within this Kingdom, (n.d.) (AND) 



