Cork in Ire 
land. 
KinfaJe. 
Amfterdam. 
[ 420 ] 
tended with a very uncommon hollow found. A 
perfect calm for feveral hours before and after (1). 
By a fubfequent account from the fame place, the 
water is faid to have rifen near 30 inches, between 
the hours of twelve and one P. M. and continued 
for near half an hour. That day, and feveral before 
it, remarkably fine. It is added, an infiance fimiiar 
to this happened here, at the time of the Lilbon 
earthquake (2), viz. of 1 755. 
On the coaft of Ireland, from Cork, there was 
advice, that, on the fame 31ft of March, a quarter 
after noon, a (hock of an earthquake was felt in that 
city, and, between the gates only, allowed to be more 
violent than that of November 1, 1755. It did not 
continue above one minute, undulating from eaft to 
weft, and vice verfa (3). 
At Kiniale, about fix o’clock P. M. near dead 
low-water, >the tide rofe fuddenly on the ftrand, 
about two feet higher than it was, and went out 
again, in the fpace of four minutes, with great force, 
which repeated feveral times j but the firft was the 
greateft (4). 
At Amfterdam, the branches in the fynagogue 
'.were obferved to vibrate, between one and two 
o’clock. In the great church at Maefiand-Slys, the 
branches moved about a foot from the perpendicular, 
and the vefiels in the harbour were agitated (5). 
(1) London Chronicle, April II, p. 35 0, 
(2) Ibid. p. 366. 
(3) Ibid. p. 350. 
(a) Ibid. p. 358. 
(5) Ibid. p. 383. 
Thefe 
