t m 1 
INDEX to the Article IRELAND. 
A GHTIIM, bitHe of, 32$. 
Agricola is invited to invade Ireland, 
284. 
Arklow, defeat of the rebels at that place, 
34-9- 
Arnioric de St. Lawrence, his gallantry and 
death, 294, 5. 
Afton, judge, hrs humane conduft, 330. 
Athlone befieged by general Douglas, 324; 
taken by Ginkel, 325. 
Babes of the Wood, a banditti fo called, 
35 2 - 
Ballymore, battle of, 325. 
Ballynahinch, defeat of the rebels at that 
place, 349. 
Bann, river, 358. 
Bantry Bay, arrival of a French fleet there, 
340. 
Bards, ancient Irilh, 284. 
Barrow, river, 358. 
Bedford, duke of, meafures of his admi* 
niftration as lord-lieutenant, 329. 
Belfaft, riots in that town, 341. 
Benburb, battle of, 313. 
Berkeley, lord, appointed chief governor, 
318 ; his regulations in favour of popery, 
3i?'- 
Berwick, duke of, his military operations, 
32*; is defeated by the Ennilkilleners, 
323. 
Birmingham, fir Robert, defeats the Scots 
■under Edward Bruce, 296. 
Blackwater, river, 358. 
Blood, his attempt on the life of the duke 
of Ormond, 319. 
Blunde, Margaret, charges brought by her 
-againfl: the bifhop of Calhel, 295. 
Blunt, Charles, lord Mountjoy, liis fuccelT- 
ful operations againfl: the rebels, 305. 
Bogs of Ireland, report of the commilfioners 
refpedting them, 359. 
Boileau, general, his defence of Limerie, 
3 2 4- 
Boyne, battle of the, 323; river, 358. 
Bruce, Edward, invades Ireland, where he 
is killed, 296. 
Buckingham, marquis, his meafures as lord- 
lieutenant, 338. 
Burgo, William de, murdered at Carrick- 
fergus, 297. 
Cabal, the, attempts to re-eftablilh popery, 
318. 
Cailkmotte falls at the battle of the Boyne, 
3 2 3- 
Camden, earl, appointed lord-lieutenant, 
335- 
Canals, navigable, 369. 
Carew, fir George, his fuccefsful operations 
againfl the rebel Irilh, 303. 
Carlingford burned, 322. 
Carlifle, earl of, appointed lord-lieutenant, 
335- 
Carlow, inefte&ual attempt of the rebels on 
that town, 347. 
Carrickfergus, mutiny of the garrifon there, 
318; taken by the duke of Sthombcrg, 
322; plundered by Thurot, 329. 
Calhel, ftormed by the earl of lnchiquin, 
314. 
—-, bifhop of, charges brought againfl 
him, 295. 
Caftlebar, battle of, 352. 
Caftlecomer plundered by the rebels, 351, 
Cathal, his inglorious vidtory, 294. 
Catholics, l'evere ftatutes againfl them, 326; 
repeal of l'ome of thefe, 339. 
Cattle, Irilh, their importation prohibited 
hy the Englilh parliament, 318. 
Vot. XI. No. 804. 
Caulfield, lord, furprifed and put to death 
by the rebel Irilh, 310,311. 
Cavan furprifed by the proteftant troops of 
Ennilkillen, 323. 
Charlemount, furprifed by the rebel Irilh, 
310; taken by the duke of Scbomberg, 
323 - 
Charles I. Hate of Ireland on his acceffion, 
308. 
Charles II. tranfadtions in Ireland during his 
reign, 317. 
Chefterfield, earl of, his excellent admini- 
ftration as lord-lieutenant, 328. 
Clanricard, lord, defeated by the earl of 
Kildare, 300. 
Clanric3rde, earl of, afiumes the govern¬ 
ment, and negociates with the duke of 
Lorraine, 316; capitulates with the re¬ 
publicans, 317. 
Clare, earl of, the firft Irilhman appointed 
lord-chancellor, 338. 
Clarendon, earl of, appointed lord lieute¬ 
nant, 319; his departure from Dublin, 
320. 
Clonmel, befieged and taken by Cromwell, 
316. 
Cogan, Milo de, his gallantry, 290; his 
death, 294. 
Cole, dean, his ludicrous difappointment, 
3°x. 
Commerce, 367, 8. 
Connaughc, its divifion, 357. 
Coote, fir Charles, is appointed by the par¬ 
liament to command in Connaught, 313 ; 
his fuccefles, 315, 316; joins the royal 
party, and is created a peer, 317. 
Copper-mines, 361. 
Cornwallis, marquis, appointed lord-lieute¬ 
nant, 352. 
Corrib, lake, 358. 
Courcey, John de, feizes the city of Down, 
293; is appointed governor of Ireland, 294. 
Courtney, Philip de, difplaced from the go¬ 
vernment of Ireland for extortion, 298. 
Croghan, gold-mine at that place, 360. 
Cromwell, Henry, his conciliatory condudl 
in Ireland, 317. 
Cromwell, Oliver, takes Drogheda and Wex¬ 
ford, and mafiacres the inhabitants, 315; 
his further fuccefles, and return to Eng¬ 
land, 316. 
Crolbie, fir Edward, his illegal execution, 
347. 
Curran, Mr, his charadler of Irilh hofpi- 
tality, 364. 
Danes, or Oilmen, their firft invafion of 
Ireland, 286. 
Defenders, a clafs of infurgents, their origin, 
339- 
Derg, lake, 358. 
Dermod, king of Leinfter, is driven from 
Ireland, 287 ; he folicits the afiiftance of 
Henry II. of England, 288 ; returns with 
a body of Englifh auxiliaries, and recovers 
his dominions, 288 ; gives hi* daughter 
in marriage to Richard Strongbow, 289; 
liis death, 290. 
Defmond, Gerald earl of, his haughty re¬ 
ply, 302. 
Devereux, Robert, earl of Eflex, appointed 
lord-lieutenant, 304. 
Devonfhire, duke of, his adminiftration as 
lord-lieutenant, 328. 
Dixon, Thomas, his diabolical barbarity at 
Wexford, 350. 
Douglas, general, befieges Athlone, 324. 
Down, ieizure of that city by the Englilh, 
293 - 
id S 
Drogheda, befieged by the rebels, 311 § 
ftormed by Cromwell, who puts the inha¬ 
bitants to the fwotd, 3155 furrenders to 
William III. 324. 
Dublin, taken by the Englilh, 289 ; de-- 
ftroyed by an accidental conflagration, 
295 ; unfuccefsful attempt to eflablilh an 
univerfity there, 296; its foundation, 
304; the city is threatened with a fiege 
by the infurgents, 314; invefted by the 
marquis of Ormond, 315 ; proceedings of 
a parliament held there by James II. 322 ; 
riots there, 329, 337; infurredtion con¬ 
duced by Emmett, 355. 
Dundalk, battle of, 296 ; dreadful morta¬ 
lity in the duke of Schosnberg’s camp 
near that town, 322. 
Dungan-hill, battle of, 314. 
Dungannon, meeting of the volunteers at 
that place, 335. 
Dwyer, a leader of banditti, 355. 
Edward I. ftate of Ireland during his reigrt, 
295, 6- 
Edward II. ftate of the country under him, 
296. 
Edward III. proceedings during his reign, 
2 97- 
Elizabeth, queen, tranfadlions in Ireland 
during her reign, 302-306. 
Elliot, capt. intercepts Thurot’s fquadro-n, 
329. 
Emmett, Robert, his plan for overturning 
the government of Ireland, 354; his fu¬ 
tile attempt to put it in execution, 355 ; 
he is apprehended, tried, and executed, 
356. 
Ennifcorthy taken by the rebels, 348. 
Ennilkillen, proteftant troops of, their fuc. 
cefsful operations, 322, 323. 
Epil'copacy reftored, 317. 
Erne, river and lake, 358. 
Ferns, bilhop of, his negociation with the 
duke of Lorraine, 316. 
Firbolgs, ancient inhabitants of Ireland, 283. 
Filheries, 368. 
Fitz-Andelm, William, appointed governor 
of Ireland, 293. 
Fitz-Euftace, Edward, his proceedings ag 
lord-deputy, 299. 
Fitz-Gerald, lord Edward, his apprehenfiois 
and death, 342. 
Fitz-Gerald, lord Thomas, his rebellion, 
300; dies in confinement in the Tower 
of London, 301. 
Fitz-Stephen, Robert, his military opera¬ 
tions, 288 ; is taken prifoner by the Irilh, 
290; his releafe, 291. 
Fitz-William, earl of, his adminiftration as 
lord-lieutenant, 340. 
Fleetwood, general, appointed lord-deputy, 
of Ireland, 317. 
Foflils found in Ireland, 360. 
Foyle, river, 358. 
Gadelians fubdue Ireland, 283, 4. 
Galway, taken by the republicans, 317; 
furrenders to general Ginkel, 325. 
Ginkel, general, his vidlorious operations 
againfl: the adherents of James II. 325 ; 
takes Athlone and Limerie, ibid.; figns 
the treaty of Limerie, and completes the 
redudtion of Ireland, 326. 
Glamorgan, earl of, his negociation with 
the rebel Irilh, 313. 
Glendalough, defeat of the Englilh there, 
303- 
Gold-mine of Wicklow, 361. 
Grafton, duke of, natural fon of Charles IL 
falls before Kinfale, 324. 
