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A13980 The historie of Iustine Containing a narration of kingdomes, from the beginning of the Assyrian monarchy, vnto the raigne of the Emperour Augustus. VVhereunto is newly added a briefe collection of the liues and manners of all the emperours succeeding, vnto the Emp. Rodulphus now raigning. First written in Latine by that famous historiographer Iustine, and now againe newly translated into English, by G.W.; Historiae Philippicae. English Justinus, Marcus Junianus.; Trogus, Pompeius. Historiae Philippicae.; G. W., fl. 1606.; Wilkins, George, fl. 1607, attributed name.; Victor, Sextus Aurelius. De Caesaribus. 1606 (1606) STC 24293; ESTC S117759 462,376 347

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forced pledges and Trowages of Oneale to keepe the Kings peace and diverse other exploytes did hee during his time of government which in particular rehearseth Flatsbury in his notes collected for Gerald Fitz Gerald Earle of Kildare Anno 1517. To him succeeded in office Sir Iohn Fitz Geffrey knight Geffrey Allan de la Zowche whom Earle Warren slevv to Zowch Stephen de longa spata who slevv Oneale in the streets of Down and there dyed Him followed William Den in whose time Mac Cartye played the devill in Desmond and to Den Richard Capell who envyed the Geraldines and was of them taken prisoner together with Theobald le Butler and Miles Cogan The king tooke up the variance and discharged Den preferring David Barrye to his roome who tamed the insolencie of Morrice Fitz Morrice cousin germane to Fitz G●rald upon Barrye came Vfford upon Vfford Iames Audeley who dyed of a fall from his horse in Thomond and then for the time Fitz Morrice governed till the king sent over Sir Ieffrey de Genevill newly returned in pilgrimage from the Holy Sepulture Him called home againe Edward the first in the fourth yeare of his raigne and sent in his stead Robert Vfford the second time who made his Vice-gerent Fryar Fulborne Bishop of Waterford and resumed his charge at his next arryvall into Ireland At this time the citty of Divelin was miserably wasted with fire and the Bell-house of Christs Church utterly defaced which the citizens before they repayred their private harmes jointly came to succor collections made to redresse the ruines of that ancient building first begun by the Danes as I finde in a monument of that foundation continued by Sitricus Prince of Divelin at the motion of Donate then Bishop dedicated to the Blessed Trinity finished by Richard Earle Strangbow Fitz Stephens and S. Laurence the Archbishop and his foure successors Iohn of Evesham Henry Scorchbill Lord Iustice Lucas and lastly by Iohn de S. Paul which worke at the decay by fire and since many devout citizens of Divelin have beautified The same Strongbowes Tombe spoyled by fall of the roofe Sir Henry Sidney Lord Deputy restoreth at this present who hath also given a sightly countenance to the Quire by doing cost upon the Earle of Kildares Chappell over against the which he hath left a monument of Captain Randolfe late Colonell of Vlster Valiantly dead in that service Iohn Samford Archbishop of Divelin Lord Iustice VVilliam Vescy Lord Iustice who pursued Omalaghli●n king of Meth that soone after was slaine The Souldan of Babylon determined to vexe the Christians cities of the East Tripolis Tyrus Berinthus Sidon Ptolemais now parts of Turky vvhom to redeeme vvith their helpes to get againe the Holy Land Edward the first had foure yeeres past obtained by licence of Mar●in the fourth and by confirmation o● Honorius his successor the vvhole tenth of all ecclesiastical revenues in Ireland for 7. yeares vvhereafter follovved a fifteene of the Temporalty And the same yeere Iohn Baliol Earle of Galvvay founded Baliol Colledge in Oxford made his homage to King Edward for his Kingdome of Scotland and to the Lord Iustice for his Earledome of Ireland Vescey vvas a sterne man and full of courage but rashe and impudent of his tongue he convented before him Iohn Earle of Kildare charged him vvith riots vagaryes unseasonable for that he ranged vvith his men abroad preyed upon privat enemies inordinatly for malice grudge not for advancement of the publique vveale vvhom the Earle as impatient as the other ansvvered thus By your honour and mine my Lord by king Edwards hand you vvould if you durst appeach me in plaine tearmes of ●elony for vvhereas I have the title and you the fleece of Kildare I wot well how great an eye sore I am in your sight who if I could bee hansomely trussed up for a fellon then might my young Master your sonne become a Gentleman Iustice Gentleman quoth he thou proud Earle the Vescyes were gentlemen before Kildare was an Earledome and before the Welch bankrupt thy Cousin feathered his Nest in Leinster But seeing thou darest me I will surely breake thy heart and with that word he called the Earle a notorious theefe murderer Then followed clattering of swords by Souldiours on both parties untill either side appeased his owne and the Lord Iustice leaving his Lieutenant VVilliam Hay sped over to the King whom immediately followed the Earle as fast as Vescey charged Kildare with fellony no lesse did Kildare appeach the Iustice of high treason and in tryall thereof he asked the Combate But when the listes royall were provided Vescey was slipt away into France and so disherited of all his lands in the county of Kildare which were bestowed upon the Earle of Kildare and his heires for ever The Earle waxed insolent upon this successe and squared with diverse Nobles English and Irish of the Land hee took prisoner Richard Earle of Vlster and him detained untill the Parliament then assembled at Kilkenny commanded his delivery and for that unrulinesse disseised the Geraldines of the Castle of Sligagh and of all his lands in Connaght VVilliam Dodding●ale Lord Iustice. This yere for the defence of Wales and commodity of Passengers to and from Ireland the King did coast upon the Isle of Anglisey called the mother of Wales and builded there the castle de bello marisco or Bewmarishe Thomas Fitz Morice Lord Iustice. Iohn VVogan Lord Iustice pacified the former strife betweene Vlster and Kildare and all the Geraldines with their associats together with Theobald Lord Butler gathered strength of men and met the kings army before Edinburgh wan the Citty slew 25. thousand Scots hampred Iohn Baliol king of the Scots in such sort that glad and faine was he to renew his homage CAP. V. Edward the second THomas Fitz Morice Lord Iustice. I will begin this Chapter with the modestie of a good Clerke Richard Havering who five yeares by dispensation had received the fruites and revenues of the Bishopricke of Divelin and long might have done had he beene so disposed But now feeling in sleep a waight upon his stomacke heavyer to his weening then any masse of mettall whereof to be released he vowed in his dreame all that ever he could make in this world Suddainely the next morne resigned the custodium of the Bishopricke and contented himselfe with other ecclesiasticall cures incident to his vocation The same yeare was the bane of the Templers in Ireland to whom succeeded the Knights of the Rhodes This profession began at Ierusalem by certaine Gentlemen that kept their abode next to the Temple there who till the Councell of Creetz increased not above the number of nine But thenceforth in little more then fiftie yeares being enriched by contribution of all Christian Realmes every where their houses were erected and endowed bountifully
speake of that time naturally given to idlenesse would not sulcate the seas neither give themselves to merchandise so that by one consent of the whole land it was thought good that some certaine nation by whose industrie the commodities of other regions wanting in Ireland might be hither transported should be suffered to dwell in some parts of the land Their Leaders and Captaines were three brethren Amelanus Sitaracus and Ivorus when they had first builded three Cities Dublin Waterford and Limericke the command of Dublin fell to Amelanus Waterford to Sitaracus Lymericke to Ivorus and from these by degrees in processe of time they gave themselves to build other Cities in Ireland This nation quae nunc Oas●mannica gens vocatur which now is called the Esterling nation or East men at their first comming demeaned themselves toward the Kings of the land in a most royall and peaceable mander but when the number multiplied of their owne kinne and they had fortified their Cities with wals and trenches they began to revive the old hatred that was hid in their hearts and obstinately to rebell They were called Oostmanni of their corrupt Saxon tongue as men of the East Of these and the former Norwegians the Irish tooke the use of the Sparthes now called Galloglas axes So farre Cambrensis verbatim and Polychron in substance Divers have diversly delivered their opinion and misreckoned themselves in their computation of yeeres when these Cities before spoken of were builded Stanihurst in his description of Ireland referreth it to the yeere 155. and that they were builded by Amelanus in another place he alledgeth it was after Gurmundus his dayes done in like sort by Amelanus It is such an errour as I cannot well impute it to the Printer Cambrensis and Polychronicon doe not lay down the yeere but the time about the yeere what beside is added is but fancie and conjecture for their testimony is the ground of all For where they write that these brethren came to Ireland after the death of Turgesius then it was after the yeere 862 wherein hee died but how soone or how long after there is no certaintie That they builded these Cities I doe not beleeve I had rather say with Stanihurst that they reedified them for those places were after a sort builded and inhabited many yeeres before their arrivall I take it that as Merchants they builded themselves dwelling houses walled the townes and made keyes to moore their shippes neither doe I hold it that every one severally builded a Citie but all three together with the aide of their country Merchants upon their arrivall in their safe Ports builded and planted their country people and rested not long for the Irish fell upon them and banished them out of the land for their riches pride and rebellion In the yeere 850. lived Patricke the Abbot of Ireland Abbot and Confessor For there were two Patrickes the first a very learned and godly man the second a Abbot and given to superstition and founder of the fabulous Purgatorie which goeth in Ireland under the name of Saint Patrickes Purgatorie so write Ranulphus Monke of Chester and Bale Bishop of Ossory though Stanihurst allow not of it but attribute it to the first Patricke and that without warrant In his time there rose a great rebellion in Ireland so that hee fled into Britaine and lyeth buried in Glastenbury The Martyrologe of Sarum reporteth that in Ireland they keepe the feast of Patricke the Abbot the 24. of August Stanihurst to further his credite delivereth that he wrote a booke of Homilies and certaine Epistles directed to the Irish. The sounder opinion is the which Stanihurst at unawares remembred out of Claudianus that the place there was in like sort as it is now in the time of Paganisme and was long before Saint Patrickes dayes And it seemeth to be after the manner of concavities in the bowels of the earth where the ayre entring naturally to avoid Vacuum and the winde following whisteleth and crieth like dolefull ghosts the silly ignorant and simple people being deceived through perswasion of covetous Priests that some soules and spirits doe penance there for their sinnes call it a Purgatorie And further we see by reason and daily experience in Miners that if any be much under grownd the dampnesse of the earth takes away their lively colour and makes them looke ghastly and if they continue any long while there the vitall spirits being barred of their usuall course they are mightily tormented cast into trances and distracted and being once delivered from the place report things at randon of heaven and earth beleeve them who list Albertus Krantz reckoning up reports given forth out of severall countries touching visions apparitions voyces illusions inserteth among them Patrickes Purgatorie in Ireland and concludeth that they are to be accounted among old Wives fables Antoninus alledgeth Vincentius for his Author how that in those dayes the historie de fossae sancti Patricij of Saint Patrickes pit or ditch was not of many allowed the reason is alledged for that it is there avouched that the soules in that Purgatorie goe not straight to heaven but into some terrestriall Paradice whereas the received opinion is saith he that there is no middle place betweene Purgatorie and the celestiall Paradice In the time of Alphred alias Alured King of West Saxons anno 872. as Fabian and Cooper have noted there was a grievous maladie raigning among the people called the euill ficus which also tooke the King so that say mine Authors an Irish maid came out of Ireland called Modwen whose Monasterie in time of rebellion was destroyed and cured the King In recompence whereof she had land given her in the North whereon two Monasteries were founded and now she resteth at Aundersey by Burloa Polychronicon and Holinshead report the historie as if Alphred had gone into Ireland unto her I alledge this historie to put the reader in minde how that formerly I have written of one Modwen who lived immediately after Saint Patricke and was of Irish birth about 400. yeeres agoe Were it not for the time by many circumstances they both should be one but to remove all doubts and to uphold the credite of antiquaries I will say they were two of one country birth and now rest in one place There was great amitie betweene Alphred or Alured before mentioned and Gregory King of Scots in whose time Anno 877. Grafton Cooper and Buchanan are mine Authors great troubles and misery fell upon Ireland the circumstances in briefe were these The Citizens of Dublin found themselves grieved and mightily wronged by the Scots of Galloway that whereas certaine tall ships of theirs were wind-driven thither the Scots fell upon them rifled them and thereof made a prey In revenge whereof the people of Dublin gathered Irish forces arrived there and preyed the country Gregory the King having intelligence thereof hastened with his forces to
doubt not but it fared the better in many respects for that holy mans prayer yet had it this condition notified hundred of yeares ere he was borne CAP. IIII. Of the Irish tongue and the name Hibernia Ireland I Finde it solemnely avouched in some of their pamphlets that Gathelus and after him Simon Brecke divised their language out of all other tongues then extant in the world But considering the course of enterchanging and blending speeches together not by invention of Arte but by use of talke I am rather led to beleeve seeing Ireland was inhabited within one yeare after the devision of the tongues that Bastolenus a braunch of Iapheth who first seased upon Ireland brought hither the same kinde of Speech some one of the seventie two Languages that to his family befell at the dissolution of Babell unto whom succeeded the Scithians Grecians Aegyptians Spaniards Danes of all which this tongue must needes have borrowed part but specially retaining the steps of Spanish then spoken in Granado as from their mightiest auncestors Since then to Henry Fitz Empresse the Conquerour no such invasion happened them as whereby they might be driven to infect their native language untouched in manner for the space of 1700. yeares after the arrivall of Hiberius The tongue is sharpe and sententious offereth great occasion to quicke apothegmes and proper allusions wherefore their common Iesters Bards and Rymers are said to delight passingly those that conceive the grace and propriety of the tongue But the true Irish indeede differeth somuch from that they commonly speake that scarce one among five score can either write read or understand it Therefore it is prescribed among certaine their Poets and other Students of Antiquitie Touching the name Ibernia the learned are not yet agreed Some write it Hibernia and suppose that the strangers finding it in an odde end of the world wet and frosty tooke it at the first for a very cold country and accordingly named it as to say the winter land Another bringeth a guesse of Irlamal of whom because I read nothing I neither build upon that conjecture nor controll it Thirdly they fetch it from Hiberus the Spaniard Most credibly it is held that the Spaniards their founders for devotion toward Spaine called then Iberia and the rather for that themselves had dwelled besides the famous river Iberus named this land Iberia for so Iohn Leland and many forraine Chroniclers write it or Ibernia adding the letter n. for difference sake there being a rich Citty which Ptolome recounteth called then Ibernis from Ibernia proceedeth Iberland or Iuerland from Iuerland by contraction Ireland for so much as in corruption of common talke wee finde that v with his vowell are easily lost and suppressed So wee say ere for ever ore for over ene for even nere for never shoole for shovell dile for divell At the same time it was also named Scotia in reverence of Scota the wife of Gathelus auncient Capitaine of those Iberians that flitted from Spaine into Ireland And the said Scota was olde grandame to Hiberus and Hirimon after the Scottish Chronicles who in any wise will have their Countrymen derived from the Irish and not from the Brittaines CAP. V. Dispositions of the People THE People are thus inclined religious franke amorous irefull sufferable of paines infinite very glorious many sorcerers excellent horsemen delighted with Warres great almes-givers passing in hospitalitie the lewder sort both Clarkes and Lay-men are sensuall and loose to leachery above measure The same being vertuously bred up or reformed are such mirrours of holinesse and austeritie that other Nations retaine but a shewe or shadow of devotion in comparison of them As for abstinence and fasting which these dayes make so dangerous this is to them a familiar kinde of chastisement In which vertue and diverse other how farre the best excell so farre in gluttonie and other hatefull crimes the vitious they are worse then too badde They follow the dead corpes to the grave with howlings and barbarous out-cryes pittyfull in apparance whereof grew as I suppose the Proverbe to weepe Irish. The uplandish are lightly abused to believe and avouche idle miracles and revelations vaine and childish greedy of prayse they bee and fearefull of dishonour And to this end they esteeme their Poets who write Irish learnedly and penne their sonnetts heroicall for the which they are bountifully rewarded But if they send out libells in disprayse thereof the Gentlemen especially the meere Irish stand in great awe They love tenderly their foster children and bequeathe to them a childes portion whereby they nourish sure friendshippe so beneficiall every way that commonly five hundreth kyne and better are given in reward to winne a noble mans childe to foster They are sharpe-witted lovers of learning capable of any studie whereunto they bend themselves constant in travaile adventerous intractable kinde-hearted secret in displeasure Hitherto the Irish of both sortes meere and English are affected much indifferently saving that in these by good order and breaking the same vertues are farre more pregnant In those others by licentious and evill custome the same faults are more extreame and odious I say by licentious and evill custome for that there is daylie tryall of good natures among them How soone they bee reclaymed and to what rare gifts of grace and wisedome they doe and have aspired Againe the very English of birth conversant with the brutish sort of that people become degenerate in short space and are quite altered into the worst ranke of Irish Rogues such a force hath education to make or marre It is further to bee knowne that the simple Irish are utterly another people then our Englishe in Ireland whome they call despitefully boddai Sassoni's and boddai Ghalt that is English and Saxon churles because of their English auncestors planted heere with the Conquest and sithence with descent hath lasted now 400. yeares Of this people therefore severally by themselves I must intreate Yet none otherwise then as they stand unfiled and serve their accustomed humours with whom I joyne all such as either by living neere them or by liking their trade are transformed into them CAP. VI. Of the meere Irish. TOuching the meere Irish I am to advertise my Reader that hee impute not to them the faults of their Auncestors which heere I have noted for two causes First that when the same are reade in Cambrensis Solinus or others he confounds not the times but may be able distinctly to consider their manners then different from these dayes Secondly that it may appeare how much Ireland is beholding to God for suffering them to be conquered whereby many of these enormities were cured and more might be would themselves be plyable In some corners of the land they used a damnable superstition leaving the right armes of their Infants males unchristened as they tearmed it to the intent it might give a more ungracious
By which occasion the Brittaines also put in a foot who discovering the state of the land to their Princes opened a gappe for Brennus the brother of Belinus to direct his course thither vvith the same Navy vvhich he had furnished to serve Signimius then King of Lyons amid the Galles in France But Brennus took small effect Before him also divers Kings of Brittaine had scope in Ireland Insomuch that Gurguntius the sonne of Beline reputed the same by lineall descent among his ovvne Dominions Notvvithstanding they never injoyed it longer then they could keepe possession perforce and often vvere they repelled and vvearyed vvith seeking after it as vvherein they found small fruite and blovves enough Lastly came the Spaniards from Biscaye conducted by foure Captaines of vvhose arryvall before I speake I must repeate their originall somevvhat farther and so give a light to the assoyling of a controversie that is vvhether the Irish came from Aegypt or from Spaine It shall appeare they came from both CAP. IX The arrivall of the Spaniards then called Iberians into Ireland IN the yeare of the World 2436. after the universall floud 780. while the children of Israell served in Aegypt Gathelus the sonne of Neale a great Lord in Greece was upon disfavour exiled the Country with a number of his faction adherents and friends The young Greeke being very wise valiant and well spoken got honourable entertainement with Pharao surnamed Amaenophis king of Aegypt and in short space reached to such a credit that he espoused the Kings base Daughter Scota whereof the Scotts are thought to be named This match bred to the King some tumult and to the young Gentle-man much envy wherefore assoone as the foresaid Amaenophis was drowned in the Red Sea the Princes of Aegypt so vexed Gathelus and his wife that they were faine to buske them withall their traine into Europe and came first to Lusitania where diverse of his people tyred with travaile would needs abide he builded there the city of Brigantia called afterwards Novium now Compostella The remnant passed with him into Ireland where the Barbarians highly honoured him for his cunning in all languages who also greatly perfected and beautified the Irish tongue taught them letters sought up their antiquities practised their youth in martiall feates after his Greeke and Aegyptian manner Finally so well he pleased them that to gratifie such a Benefactour they were content to name the Iland after him Gathelia and after his wife Scotia Truely that Scotia is the auncient appellation of Ireland all Chroniclers agree as it shal be more plaine when wee touch the Scottish pedigree A brute there is in Ireland but uncertainelie fathered that in remembrance of Pharao their good lord the Kerne pitching his Dart cryeth of courage faro faro but the learned thinke that to bee taken from the Spaniard who in his Ioco dicano exclaymeth fabo fabo The people left in the coast of Spaine founded the city of Bayon now part of Gascoigne and replenished all the shore towards Africk and the edges of Portugall Castile Galaecia towardes the sea Cantabricum well nigh 200. yeares after which time some of them began to minde another travaile because they were pestered with Inhabitants and whether they ever sped to Ireland it is unknowne at the leastwise in the raigne of Gurguntius the Brittaine then chiefe Lord of Bayon foure brethren Spaniards whereof two are noted Hiberus and Hirimon not the sonnes of Gathelus as writeth Boethius but his off-spring understanding that divers Western Ilands were empty desirous to live in ease and elbovv-room sayled Westvvard vvith a great retinue of men vvomen and babes hovering long about the Ilands Orchades in 60. great ships untill by good hap they met vvith Gurguntius then returning from the conquest of Denmarke vvho had refused to pay him the tribute vvhich Belinus his father vvan him they besought considering their vvant of victuals unable any longer to dvvell in their ships accumbred vvith carriage of vvomen children to direct further them to some place of habitation proffering to become his liege people to hold the same of him his heires for ever The King advising himselfe remembred vvith vvhat difficultie he kept the Irish in subjection conceived hope that these strangers vvould endeavor either to stub out that unruly generation or to nurture them so taking their oathes and hostages he mann'd their ships stored thē vvith victuall munition seated thē in Ireland Thus had the Brittaines an elder right to the Realme of Ireland then by the conquest of Henry the 2. vvhich title they never surceased to claime somtimes prevailed as in the dayes of King Arthur to vvhom the Irish Princes agnized their tribute and apparance made at his Parliament in urbe Legionū vvhich I take to be Westchester called of old Carleon as divers other citties vvere vvherein the Romanes placed the legions Again the Kings of Britain vvere thē Lords of the place vvhence this people came so as their vvinnings must have beene the Kings Dominion To all this when their owne free assent the dedition of other Princes lawfull conquest and prescription is adjoyned it forceth an invincible title But to prosecute our purpose Those Iberians being substantially ayded of Gurguntius enjoyed the Lands bestowed themselves foure brethren into foure parts thereof untill their pride and ambition armed two against other two Hiberus and his brother against Hirimon and his In this conflict Hirimon slew Hiberus and raigned quietly At this time the countrey was first named Ibernia as I have declared in the third Chapter The King to avoyde obloquie and slaunder purged himselfe to his subjects that neither maliciously nor contentiously but for his necessary defence and safeguard he had borne armes against his brother And to witnesse how farre he was from desire to rule alone he nominated speciall Captaines to be Kings under him of their severall Countryes reserving to himselfe but one fourth part and the portion of Meth allotted to the Monarchie for the better maintenance of his part These afterward clambered into five Kingdomes incompatible Leinster Connaght Vlster Mounster in two portions and sometimes to more by usurpations and compositions but ever one was elected the Monarch over all An hundred and thirtie chiefe Kings are reckoned of this Nation from Hirimon to Laigirus the sonne of Nealus magnus in whose time the blessed Bishop Patricius converted them to Christianity CAP. X. The comming of the Picts into Ireland NOW lived the Irish in tollerable order under their sundry Kings and applyed themselves to peace and gathering of wealth when suddainely Rodericke a Red-shank of Scythia fled thither with a small company of Galleyes and winde-driven in compassing round about the British coast were happely blowne ashore into Ireland These are the Picts a people from their cradle dissentious land-leapers mercilesse sowre and hardy being presented to the
assistance of Rodericke Oconor King of Connaght at that season the generall Monarch of all Ireland The subjects of Leinster detesting the quarrell and long ere this time hating their Prince left him desolate in his greatest neede so as with much difficulty he caught his boate and fled over for succour to Henry the 2. King of England then warring upon the Frenchmen within his Dukedome of Aquitaine Somewhat before this season sate in the See of Rome Adrianus 4. an English man borne who having in his youth taken a painefull pilgrimage into Norway and reduced the whole Iland unto Christianity learned distinctly the state of Ireland and how their countrymen which dayly repaired thither being themselves the most part infidels meeting with a people there wilde and furious were like very shortly but if God found remedy to deface religion for though Christ were beleeved and taught yet the multitude eft soone grew to a shamelesse kinde of liberty making no more of necessary points of Doctrine then served their loose humour Besides these occasions Henry the 2. builded upon the Popes favour his borne subject had sent Ambassadours to Rome in the first yeare of his raigne asking leaue to attempt the conquest of Ireland Adrian trusting and requiring a diligent reformation of the premisses graunted his Bull which Alexander his Successour confirmed and ratified upon the same conditions Now when Dermot was come in the very necke of these consultations and put up his complaint wherein he preferred the interest of his Crowne and craved a restitution of some peece of his lands the matter did seeme not all untowardly broached Henry having his hands full with the French because Mac Murrough urged all possible haste could not personaly intend that offer but sent him honourably garded into England with letters patents bearing this Tenour HENRY the second King of England Duke of Normandy and Aquitaine Earle of Angiow To all our true subjects English Normans Welchmen Scotts and to all nations within our Dominions whatsoever Greeting Witt yee that the Bearer hereof Dermot Mac Murrough King of Leinster we have received into the soveraigne protection of our Grace and bounty wherefore who so of you all our loving subjects will extend towards him your ayde for his restoring as to our trusty and welbeloved know yee that he is thereto authorized by these presents and shall deserve at our hands high favour in so doing With these letters and many gay additions of his owne he arrived at Bristow where he fell at conference with Richard Strongbow Earle of Pembroke with whom he covenanted the delivery of his onely daughter and heire unto marriage and so the remainder of his Kingdome If the said Earle would recover him his home That day were planted in Wales two gentlemen Robert Fitz Stephens and Maurice Fitz Gerald brethren of a Mother allyed to Rice ap Griffin then Prince of Wales whose Grand-father was surnamed Rice the great Fitz Stephens had beene high Constable there under the King and for executing rigour upon the Princes servants was with him detained prisoner three yeares ne would in any wise pay ransome or accept the liberty promised him but if the conditions were loyall to the Crowne and to his person no dis-worship Lastly by the mediation of David Bishop of S. Davids the third brother and of Fitz Gerald and at the instance of Mac Murrough whom the Prince entertained in that distresse Fitz Stephens was conditionaly delivered that he and his brother Maurice should the next spring while Strongbow provided his army assist the Irish out-cast who in consideration thereof assured them an estate for ever in the towne of Weixford and two Cantreds adjoyning Thus much firmely concluded on all sides the King stale secretly home and wintered closely among the Cleargie of Fernes According to covenant came Fitz Stephens with 30. Knights of his blood 60. Squiers 300. footemen Archers to whom at his landing Dermot sent in aid his base sonne Duvelnaldus and five hundred speares The towne and suburbes of Weixford marched forth against him But when they saw Souldiours in array diversly dighted and weaponed furnished with artillery barbed horses and harnesse they retyred to their walles and strengthned them burning the villages thereabouts and all the provision they could not carry The assault lasted 3. dayes in the 4. certaine Bishops resciant there tooke up the variance pacified the Townesmen to their King and procured the rendring of the Towne Dermot having tryed the valiantnes of the Welchmen immeadiately kept his touch and gave possession of Weixford with the appurtenances aforesaid to Fitz Stephens and his brother After successe of these matters they leavyed to the number of 3000. Souldiours and devised to vexe the Lords of Vpper Ossory who had beene to the King of all other most cruell and injurious Them they compelled to deliver Trewage and sweare fealty Rodericke the monarch appalled at these newes reared up all the Kings in defence of the land verily supposing that all would to wrecke were it not prevented And first they directed courteous messages and gifts to Fitz Stephens moving him to depart the land quietly and not to molest them without cause To whom he answered that much he wondred at the folly of those Princes who to satisfie their choller had opened such a gappe to their owne prejudice as though the subjects whom they had schooled to breake allyance towards the King of Leinster would not be as ready by this example to learne to withstand the King of Connaght for his owne part though hee might with better reason invade strangers then they could expell their neighbours and their peere yet would they suffer the King to reenter his right they should not finde him stiffe nor untractable otherwise they should well feele that the Bryttons wanted neither abilitie nor truth to maintaine their word Rodericke perceived it was no boote to spurne and therefore bethought himselfe of composition upon agreement they resolved thus Inprimis that Mac Murrough swearing afresh his obedience to the Monarch should quietly repossesse the parts of Leinster which Rodericke with-held by suspensation Secondly that for ensurance thereof he should pledge his dearest base sonne Cnothurn to whom Rodericke promised his daughter if this peace were found effectuall Thirdly that being rested in his kingdome he should discharge the Welch army nor should henceforwards call them over in defence About this time Donatus the good King of Ergall founded the Abbey of Mellyfont which is the eldest that I finde recorded since the Danes arrivall except S. Mary Abbey besides Divelin erected in an 948. The meane while was landed at Weixford Maurice Fitz Gerald with his provision ten Knights thirty Squiers and an hundred Bowmen hereupon Dermot and the two Brethren set their force against Divelin which being the cheife Citty of his Realme refused to yeeld when Divelin and the country about it vvas recover'd there befell hostility between Rodericke and
right to Leinster VValter Fitz Richard who came from Normandy with VVilliam Conquerour died Lord Strongbow of Strigule alias Chepstow without issue to whom succeeded his sisters sonne Gilbert who was created the first Earle of Pembroke had issue Richard the inheritour of Leinster by a covenant marriage of Eva the sole daughter of Mac Murrough King of Leinster This Richard conveyed to Henry the second all his title and held of him the Lordship of Leinster in foure counties Weixford Catherlagh Ossory and Kildare Richard left issue a daughter Isabel married to VVilliam Earle marshall of England now Earle of Pembroke Lord Strongbow and Lord of Leinster VVilliam had issue five sonnes who died without issue when every of them except the youngest had successively possessed their fathers lands and five daughters Maude ●oane Isabel Sibil and Eve among whom the patrimony was parted in an 31. H. 3. Of these daughters bestowed in marriage are descended many noble houses as the Mortimers Bruises Clares c. borne subjects to the Crowne of England paying ever to the King his dutyes reserved Hugh de Lacy Conquerour of Meth had issue VValter de Lacy who held the same of King Iohn paying a fine of foure thousand marks sterling and hence beganne all the severall claimes there at this day with allegiance sworne and done by their auncestours At the very first arrivall of Henry the second the Princes of Mounster came universally and did homage voluntarily and acknowledged to him and his heires duties and payes for ever Iohn de Courcy Conquerour and Earle of Vlster dyed without issue King Iohn Lord of Ireland gave the Earledome to Hugh de Lacy who had issue VValter and Hugh dead without issue and one daughter married to Reymond Burke Conquerour and Lord of Connaght Connaght descended to diverse heires owing service to the Prince but Vlster is returned by devolution to the speciall inheritance and revenues of the Crowne of England in this manner The said De Burgo had issue Richard who had issue Iohn who had issue VVilliam who was slaine without issue and a Daughter Elizabeth intytled to thirty thousand marks yearely by the Earledome of Vlster whom Edward the 3. gave in marriage to Leonel his second sonne Duke of Clarence who had issue a daughter Philippe marryed to Edmund Mortymer who had issue Edmund Anne Elinor Edmund and Elinor died without issue Anne was married to Richard Earle of Cambridge sonne to Edmund of Laugley Duke of Yorke fift sonne to Edward the third which said Richard had issue Richard Plantagenet father to Edward the fourth father to Elizabeth wife to Henry the seventh and mother to Henry the eight father to Mary Edward the sixt and Elizabeth Severall claimes to the Land of Ireland 1. First that the Irish for of the rest there is no question were subjects to the the Crowne of Brittaine before they set foote in Ireland Thus it appeareth They dwelt on that side of Spaine whereof Bayon was then cheife imperiall Citie and the same then in possession and obedience to Gurguntius 376. yeares ere Christ was borne as it was to his successours many a day after namely to Henry the which as I finde noted in certaine precepts of governement dedicated by Iames Young to Iames Butler Earle of Ormond then Lieutenant of Ireland an 1416. From this coast and Citty now part of Gascoigne came the fleete of those Iberians who in 60. ships met Gurguntius on the sea returning from the conquest of Denmarke to whom they yeelded oath and service sued for dwelling were by him conducted and planted in Ireland and became his leige people 2. Mac Gil-murrow King of Ireland with all his petty Princes Lordes and Captaines summoned to King Arthurs court held in Carlion an 519. did accordingly their homage and attended all the while his great feast and assembly lasted 3. The Monarch of Ireland and all other both reges and reguli for them and for theirs for ever betooke themselves to Henry the second in an Dom. 1172. namely those of the south whiles he lay at Waterford Dermot King of Corke which is the nation of Mac Cartyes at Cashell Donald King of Limricke which is the nation of the Obrenes Donald King of Ossory Mac Shaghlen King of Ophaly at Divelin did the like Okeruell King of Vriell Ororicke king of Meth Rodericke King of all Ireland and of Connaght This did they with consents and shoutes of their people and king Henry returned without any Battle given Onely Vlster remained which Iohn de Courcy soone after conquered and Oneale Captaine of all the Irish there came to Dublin to Richard the 2. in an 1399. And freely bound himselfe by oath and great summes of money to be true to the crowne of England 4. The same time Obrene of Thomond Oconor of Connaght Arthur Mac Murrow of Leinster and all the Irish Lords which had beene somewhat disordered renewed their obedience 5. When Ireland first received Christendome they gave themselves into the jurisdiction both spirituall temporall of the See of Rome The temporall Lordship Pope Adrian conferred upon Henry the second and hee gave the same to Iohn his younger sonne afterwards King of England and so it returned home to the Crowne 6. Alexander the 3. confirmed the gift of Adrian as in both their Charters is expressed at large 7. Vivian the legate on the Popes behalfe doth accurse and excommunicate all those that flitte from the obeysance of the Kings of England 8. The cleargy twice assembled once at Cashell secondly at Ardmagh plainely determined the conquest to be lawfull and threatned all people under paine of Gods and holy Churches indignation to accept the English kings for their Lords from time to time 9. It would aske a volume to recite the names of such Irish Princes who since the conquest have continually upon occasions revolts or petitions sworne truth and faith to the kings of England from time to time received honours wages fees pardons and petitions And thus I thinke no reasonable man will doubt of a right so old so continued so ratified so many wayes confessed CAP. III. Richard the first and King Iohn BY occasion of Lacyes mishap Iohn Courcye and Hugh de Lacye the younger with all their assistants did streight execution upon the Rebells and preventing every mischiefe ere it fell stayed the Realme from uproares Thus they continued lovingly and lived in wealth and honour all the dayes of Richard the first untill the first yeare of King Iohns raigne Henry the second had issue male VVilliam Henry Richard Ieffrey and Iohn VVilliam Henry and Richard dyed without issue Ieffrey Earle of Brittaine dyed before his father and left issue two daughters and an after-borne son called Arthur whose title to the Crowne as being the undoubted lyne of the elder brother Philip King of France and certaine Lords of England and Ireland stoutly justified Him had King Iohn taken prisoner in Normandy and
to preserve at the motion of the Lady Sidney then abiding in Droghedagh came Master Sarsfield then Major of Divelin with a chosen band of goodly young men Citizens and brake the rage of the enemies The Deputy returning made him Knight and finding it now high time utterly to weede and roote out the Traytor he furnished a substantiall army and with the readines thereof hartened the Irish whom Oneale had impoverished cut off his adherents and all accesse of succour chased him and his into corners spent him cast him into such despaire that he consulted with his Secretary Neale Mac Connor to present himselfe unknowne and disguised to the Deputy with an halter about his necke begging his pardon Ere you doe so quoth his Clarke let us prove an extreame shift and there he perswaded him to joyne with the Scots whom he had lately banished of whom should he be refused or finde inconvenience at any time submission to the Deputy might then be used when all faileth Shane knew himselfe odious to the Scots especially to them whom he thought to lincke with the brother and kindred of Iames Mac Conill yet in those hard oddes hee devised rather to assay their friendship then to grate upon mercy which so oft and so intollerably he had abused Mac Conill whom Shane overthrew left two brethren and a Sister whereof one Suarly Torwy remained with Oneale entertayned after his brothers death The other was Alexander Oge who with 600. Scots incamped now in Clanebov The woman was Agnes Ilye whose husband Shane slew in the said discomfiture Agnes had a sonne Mac Gillye Aspucke who betrayed Oneale to avenge his Fathers and Vncles quarrell At the first meeting for thither he came accompanied with Torwy and his Secretary and 50. horsemen the Captaines made him great cheere and fell to quaffing but Aspucke minding to enter into his purpose there openly challenged his Secretary as the Author of a dishonourable report that Mac Conils wife did offer to forsake her country and friends and to marry with Shane Oneale her husbands destruction Mary quoth the Secretary if thine Aunt were Queen of Scotland it might beseeme her full well to seeke such a marriage To this brawle Oneale gave eare upheld his man advaunced his owne degree The comparison bred a fray betweene their Souldiours Out sprang Aspucke and beat Oneales man and then suddainely brought his band upon them in the tent where the Souldiours with their slaughter-knives killed the Secretary and Shane Oneale mangled him cruelly lapped him in an old Irish shirte and tumbled him into a pit within an old Chappell hard by whose head foure dayes after Captaine Pierce cut off and met therewith the Deputy who sent it before him staked on a pole to the Castle of Divelin where it now standeth It is thought that Tirlagh who now usurpeth the name of Oneale practised this devise with Agnes Alexander and Torwy when he perceived Shane discouraged and not able to hold out Thus the wretched man ended who might have lived like a Prince had he not quenched the sparkes of grace that appeared in him with arrogancy and contempt against his Prince The next Tumult in Ireland proceeded of the folly especially of Sir Edmund Butler Pierce and Edward his Brethren who being unable in law to maintaine his title to certaine landes whereof he held possession whereunto Sir Peter Carew laide very direct and manifest claime for Carew is an ancient Barons house in Ireland confedered with Iames Fitz Morice of the south and others began commotion more dangerous to the Realme then the late stirre of Oneale such was their opportunity of place the rebels so friended their number so furnished that the Deputy passing forth against them in haste requisite with such shift as the suddaine mischiefe asked was thought to have put his person in great adventure but in conclusion he wanne by that journey great martiall honour started them from hole to hole and ransackt every veine of the land so as the Butlers craving protection shortly recoyled and stand now at the Queenes mercy To appease the country reforme the lewdnes of his Brethren Thomas Earle of Ormond came from the Court of England home and in quieting the said broyles shewed also for his part a right good peece of service worthy to be remembred After this ensued a Parliament the particulars whereof are expressed in the acts lately drawne to be published in Print somewhat before the last session a seditious libell intituled Tom Troth let fall in the streetes of Divelin nipped by name diverse honourable and worshipfull of the Realme certaine officers of the Deputyes houshold for greeving the land with impositions of Cesse whereupon followed a proclamation bearing date the twenty eight of Ianuary which if it may bee executed in all points would cut off many such murmures and leave a blessed memory of the Governour that devised it The day of prorogation when the Knights and Burgesses of the Cominalty resorted to the Lordes of the upper house much good matter was there uttered betweene the Deputy and the Speaker whereof comming home to my lodging I tooke notes and here I will deliver them as neere as I can call them to minde in the same words and sentences that I heard them First the Speaker Iames Stanihurst an Esquire of worship Recorder of Divelin and for the Citty Burgesse at that present began thus Rather of custome and dutyfull humility then for doubt of your honourable disposition so well knowne to us all and to every of us in private that it little needeth my praise we are to request your Lordship in the behalfe of our selves and our countryes whom we represent in this Parliament to accept our service and endeavour in driving these conclusions where by to the uttermost of our skill we have intended without injury the Crowne to enrich treasons to chastise to better the state traffique to further learning to cherish and in briefe to maintaine with our best advice those benefits which the Prince hath inferred upon this Realme by you and you with your sword and wisedome have performed An ordinary suite it is in the end of such assemblies to crave executions of law for it sufficeth not to keepe a statute tanquam inclusum in tabulis as a thing shut up in parchment rolles but law must speake and walke abroad to the comfort and behoofe of good subjects Otherwise vve shall resemble the folly of him that once in every houre saluted his gold never using it but onely bad it lye still and couch Of the necessity thereof I cannot say so much as your Lordship conceiveth and I desire not to discourse a matter generally felt and confessed In particular the zeale which I have to the reformation of this Realme and to breede in the rudest of our people resolute English hearts moveth me to pray your Lordships helping hand for the practise namely of one statute which is
downe for dead King Engus lamented greatly the death of seven Nobles of Mounster that were pledges with him at Cassill and miscarried in this mortalitie Not long after Declanus ended the way of all flesh and lyeth buried at Ardmore Albaeus as his owne Legend delivereth the second Patrone of Mounster after Patricke the generall Patrone of Ireland was borne in Elyach now called Ely O Caroll His fathers name was Ol●nais his mothers Sandith a maid servant in the house of King Cronanus the Lord of Eliach was then called a King Cronanus in his rage bid his servants hang the whoore and kill the childe the servants loath to dispatch an innocent tooke him out of his Pallace and laid him under the side of a rocke One Lochanus the sonne of Lugyr passing by pittied the childe tooke him to his horse and set him to nurse among certaine Britaines in the East part of Elyach Palladius saith the story passing from Rome toward Scotland and travelling through Ireland baptized him The Britaines sent him into France where hee was trayned up in Christian schooles and brought up under Bishop Hilarius who sent him to Rome where he was consecrated Bishop and remained one whole yeere and fiftie dayes preaching and expounding holy Scripture with great admiration And saith the Legend there came unto him out of Ireland fiftie grave and reverend men of which number there were 12 Colmans 12 Coenigeni and 12 Fintans the Bishop of Rome sent them backe into Ireland they came to Dolomoir where Sampson Bishop of that See gave them entertainement There he baptized saith the storie King Fintan After he had baptized and converted many unto the faith and builded many Churches and founded many Hospitals for lazers he came to Ymleach now called Emley a Bishopricke and in the Legend termed his owne Citie fell sicke and there left his bones He conversed with Biga whom learned Camden calleth Bega Bretach Nunnes and with Nessanus a great Antiquarie saith mine Author whose antiquities I never saw Kyaranus or Keran alias Piran another of the foure Bishops that lived in Ireland before Saint Patricke commeth next to be spoken of Of him Capgrave and the Martyrologe thus write that hee was a Bishop and Confessour and termed Sanctorum Hiberniae primogenitus And yet I finde in Molanus that one Saint Mansuetus Bishop of Tullum now called Tullense oppidū a towne in Flanders was of Irish birth fellow Disciple with Saint Clement under Saint Peter the blessed Apostle not trayned up in Ireland in the Christian faith but in forraigne countries where he was both baptized instructed and made Bishop and where he now resteth But to returne to Keran he was borne in Ossorie having to his father Domnell saith another Lugnaeus whereby I gather there were two of that name to his mother Wingella famous for life learning and sanctitie in the dayes of Saint Patricke He lived in the I le of Cleere some 30 yeeres from thence he went to Rome where hee met Saint Patricke who came to Ireland 30. yeeres after Pyranus was of note in Rome hee continued 15. yeeres expounding holy Scripture with great admiration as another saith 20. yeeres there the Bishop of Rome consecrated him Bishop He came to Ireland and was the first Bishop of Ossorie having his See at Keran in Elie O Carroll Hee refreshed saith mine Author Saint Patricke and tenne Irish Kings for the space of three dayes he confirmed Rhodanus in the faith visited the Virgin Cota with her Priest Geranus whose cell was a rocke of the ●eas not farre from the Citie of Cluan in Mounster He was a man of an austere life never ware woollen garment but the fell of Wolves and wilde beasts As he came to his lodging in time of Lent and having inquired what provision they had answere being made that they had but a pestle of Porke he commanded it to be laid on the table one scornefully refused the dyet he misliking with him threatned him an ill end which accordingly came to passe When by the course of nature he saw his end approach he called his friends unto him and said My welbeloved children and friends God hath disposed that I should trauaile out of Ireland into Cornewall and there expect the end of my dayes I cannot withstand the will of God I doe admonish you brethren to uphold the place with good workes and examples of life for there shall come children of perdition and death among you ye shall have mortalitie and warres the Churches shall become waste and desolate and the truth shall be turned into iniquitie faith shall not shine with good workes the Pastors will looke to themselves more then to their flocke feeding themselves more then their sheepe last of all I beseech you brethren pray for me that my iourney may be prosperous and that after my decease I finde not my King and my God angry but gentle and appeased when I shall appeare before him He tooke leave came to Cornewall and resteth some fifteene miles from Petrok-stow 25. miles from Mousehole where he is remembred for their Patron Cambr●nsis writeth that in Caerdise in Wales there is a Chappell called Saint Perans Chappell where King Henry the second in his returne from Ireland repaired to heare divine service as he hath remembred it in his Booke intituled Itinerarium Cambriae And thus much of Saint Keran or Saint Peran Of Ybarus the fourth Bishop before Saint Patricke I finde some discourse in the Legend of Abbanus the Abbot how hee baptized him and brought him up in learning and how they went together to Rome and after their returne conversed in Ireland with Saint Patricke as formerly in part hath beene delivered in the life of Declanus This Abbanus is renowned in Ireland for building of Celles and religious houses besides three Monasteries in Connaght he built in Mounster Ceall Achard Conchun alias Kill Achard where Saint Finan whom he baptized after his death was Abbot In the borders of Muskerry he builded the Nunnery of Husneach and left it to Saint Gobnaid and her Virgins another Monasterie also by Kilcullen In Nandesi as I take it now called the Decies by the towne of Briogoban he founded Kill-na-Marban and at the foot of the mountaine Crotte in Muskerie the famous Monasterie called Cluain-Airdmobecoc where Saint Becanus was Abbot the which afterward because of Becanus his lamentation in devout sort as it is written for his sinnes was called Ceall Nander Cella lachrymarum the cell of teares He founded also Cluain Findglaise Cluain Conbrum and went into Ely where he baptized and converted unto the faith thousands as the Legend reporteth in a place afterward called Rath-Becain in Latine Atrium Becani where Abbanus is recounted Patron He builded a Monasterie upon the river Berba called Ross-Mac-Treoin where the Abbot Saint Emenus resteth also in Meath Ceall-Ailbe and committed the charge thereof to the holy
of the sept of Fergusius the most potent Prince of Vlster whose of-spring were dispersed over Ireland his father matched with the royall bloud of Mounster he had to his Schoolemaster one Carthagus a Bishop It is alledged in his Legend penes authorem sit fides that it was prophecied he should become a great man and build two cities the first Raithe or Raichen in Feraceall the second Lismore This diversitie of names comming upon accidents is known unto them that have skill in the old Irish. It is remembred in his life that in his youth 30. Virgins were in love with him and that hee prayed unto God to turne their carnall into spirituall love which was granted yet saith mine Author to requite their former love he builded them all Cells and they dwelled in his parish and conversed with him all the dayes of their lives He had disciples that proved rare men Mochue Mocoemoge Gobbanus Sraphanus Lazreaanus Molva Aidanus Fiachus Findeling with others He was compelled to forsake Raithen and travailed west-ward untill he came to the river Nem now called Band more falling from the mountaine Chua and running into the sea whereupon Lismore is builded and given to Saint Mocodi For the Lord of that country Nandeisi Melochtrig the son of Cokthacg before witnesse granted him that seate to build both Church and Citie where he resteth and whom one Molcolmog succeeded Machutus otherwise called Maclovius though Bale and Capgrave call him a Britaine yet I finde that he was borne in Ireland and that he was the sonne of one Lovi and therefore called Maclovy Molanus writeth that he crossing the seas and having good successe led an Eremites life in Britaine and was the disciple of Saint Brendan of Ireland He accompanied with one Aaron and kept with him in an Island of his name saith Molanus called Aaron but now I finde it in the North-west parts of Ireland belonging to the Earle of Ormond called the Isles of Aran. Lastly he was made Bishop of Aletha and is honoured at Gemblacum in Flanders where the Church say they is patronized by Saint Machutus alias Maclovius hee lived saith Bale about the yeere 540. what time Arthur commanded Britaine Kentegernus then also lived and now is remembred in Ireland and in Wales the Martyrologe of Sarum reporteth that his Mother wist not how when nor by whom he was gotten yet was shee an holy woman saith mine Author and much loved our Lady She was cast downe headlong from a rocke saith mine Author into the sea and tooke no hurt then put into a Boate alone without Sayle or Oare came into Ireland and presently travailed with child He became an Abbot of 965. Monkes kept company with Saint David and in the end was a Bishop Ruadanus borne in Ireland of Noble Parentage his father hight Byrra of the of-spring of Dnach but inhabited the West part of Leinster of olde called Osraigie but now Ossorie whose sept is called Dnachs in those parts unto this day He left Ossorie and hearing of the fame of Saint Fynnan a wise and a learned man dwelling in his owne towne so saith mine Author commonly called Clonard of Cluayn jarhaird in Meath and confines of Leinster resorted to him who for the space of certaine yeeres brought him up in sacred letters gave him orders and sent him to Muscraytrie in Mounster where he was borne where also he builded a Monasterie which standeth to this day and is maintained by the Lords of the soile From thence he went to a place called Lothra where he builded another Monasterie and lyeth there wayting the generall resurrection Saint Brendan at the same time builded a Cell not farre from that place called Tulach Brenayd that is saith mine Author Collis Brendani left Ruadan the charge thereof tooke his blessing and begun his travaile as the Legends at large doe write Ruadanus is said to have written these bookes in the Latine tongue De miraculosa arbore lib. 1 De mirabili fontium in Hibernia natura lib. 1 Contra Diarmoyd regem lib. 1 Saint Faghua lived in the time of Finbarry and founded a Monasterie upon the sea in the south part of Ireland where he became Abbot the which seat grew to be a Citie wherein a Cathedrall Church was builded and patronized by Faghua This towne of olde called Rossai Lithry but now Roskarbry hath beene walled about by a Lady of that country but now according to the fruits of warre among the Carties O Driscales and other septs scarce can the old foundation be seene There hath beene there of old saith mine Author magnum studium scholarium a great Vniversitie whereto resorted all the South-west parts of Ireland for learnings sake Saint Brendan Bishop of Kery read publikely the liberall sciences in that schoole Farther of Faghua or Faghuanus mine Author recordeth that he being sapiens probus a wise and a good man by mishap fell blinde and with many prayers and salt teares desired of God restitution of his sight for the good of his Covent and the Students brought up under him a voyce he heard saith mine Author goe get some of the breast milke of Broanus the artificers wife wash thine eyes therewith and thou shalt see He went to a Prophetesse called Yta or Ytha to learne how to come by this woman and it fell out that this woman was her sister hee found her out washed his eyes and recovered his sight whether it be true or no I know not I report it as I finde it This Saint Yta was an Abbatesse whose originall was of Meth but she was borne in Mounster Vpon the storie of Faghua dependeth the Legend of Mocoeinoge interpreted in Latine meus pulcher iuvenis my beautifull young man who proved learned an Abbot and a Bishop being the childe of those breasts that washed Faghua his eyes many admirable things are reported of him wherewith I will not trouble the reader He conversed with Coemanus or Chemanus Cannicus Finianus Abbas Colman a Bishop Daganus Abbot of Inbyr-dayle in Leinster Mocobe his owne disciple Illepius the disciple of Mocobe Molna Mofecta Cunminus longus the sonne of Fiachua and Cronanne who lyeth buried at Rosscre Luctichernus and Lazerianus with Yta Patronesse of Huae Conaill her Abbot of Cluayn Mac Noys Abbot Engus Abbot Congallus of Vlster Mocoeinoge resteth in the county of Typperary by a long foord in the way from Kilkenny to the Holy Crosse as they cal it where sometime was a Citie a Monasterie called Liath but now a Village bearing his name Liath Mocoeinoge He had in his life time much adoe with Coemanus Bledin Ronanus Foelanus Diarmoda Sugbue Lords of Ely now called Ely O Carroll and with Falke Fland King of Mounster whose chiefe Pallace was in Cashell Saint Coeingenus shall next be spoken of in Latine as much to say as pulchrogenitus he was ordered by Bishop Lugidus led
for Fintan the Abbot and received at his hands the blessed Sacrament and so departed the fift of the Ides of October In remembrance of this Cannicus there is now a famous towne in Leinster called Kilkenny parted into the English and Irish towne with a small fresh or brooke that falleth into the Nure the chiefe Lord under the King is the Earle of Ormond and Ossorie the English towne is governed by a Soveraigne Bayliffes and Burgesses the Irish towne is governed by the Bishop of Ossorie and his officers and the Bishopricke of Ossorie whose principall see was first in Ely and called Sire Keran as formerly I have written in the life of Keranus afterward translated to Achadbo is now setled in Kilkenny The first founder of Saint Kennies Church there was Hugh Mapilton the fift Bishop of that See after the conquest about the yeer 1240. There was also about the same time a Church builded over against the towne upon the East side of the Nure in the honour of Saint Maula the mother of Saint Kenny whose memory is continued in that towne by her plague that fell among them and thus it was There was a great plague in that towne and such as died thereof being bound with Wythes upon the Beere were buried in Saint Maulas Churchyard after that the infection ceased women and maides went thither to dance and in stead of handkerchiefes and napkins to keepe them together in their round it is said they tooke those Wythes to serve their purpose It is generally received take it gentle reader as cheape as you finde it that Maula was angry for prophaning her Church-yard and with the Wythes infected the dancers so that shortly after in Kilkenny there died of the sicknesse man woman and childe Aedanus divers times before spoken of was of honourable parentage borne in Connaght his father hight Sothna his mother Ethne of the sept of Amluygh his companions were Molassus alias Lazerianus and Airedus also he conversed much with Saint David Bishop of Menevia now called Saint Davids and is there called Moedock this David was his master The martyrologe of Sarum calleth him Maeldock my Author yeeldeth the reason writing how that his mother conceiving with childe of him his father dreamed that he saw a starre fall from heaven upon his wife the mother of this Aedanus and therefore when he was borne he was called in Latine filius stellae in Irish Moedog that is the sonne of the starre Master Fox writeth that hee builded the Monasterie of Maibrose by the floud of Twide David the holy man advised him to repaire to his native soile for the good of his country after that hee had for a good space followed the Christian Britaines against the faithlesse Saxons He came to Ireland to Anmyre King of Connaght from thence to Leinster and builded Monasteries in Kinselach and Cluayn More what time Edus or Edanus the sonne of Anmyre King of Connaght levied warre against Brandub King of Leinster in which battaile Edus and all his Nobilitie of Connaght were slaine and Brandub became Monarch of Ireland After this he went to the North of England and was made Bishop of Lyndsey Lyndesfernensis Capgrave maketh two of one Aedanus the one an Abbot the other a Bishop and to reconcile the dissonance he was first an Abbot afterwards a Bishop so writeth Bale Beda delivereth singular commendations of him the which to avoid prolixitie I omit After all this hee returned to Leinster to Brandub the Monarch who upon speciall liking of his vertues gave him a parcell of land where he builded a Monasterie the place is called Ferna now Fernes where both Church and Monasterie are patronized as they write by Saint Moedog where afterwards both Brandub and Moedog were buried whereof the words in the life of Aedanus alias Moedog are these Magnas dedit rex oblationes Sancto Moedog agrum in quo vir Dei construxit monasterium quod dicitur Ferna in quo Sanctus Moedog sepultus est rex Brandub genus ejus post eum ibi semper sepelitur Et magna civitas in honore sancti Moedog ibi crevit quae eodem nomine vocatur Ferna Deinde facta Synodo magnatum in terra Laginensium decrevit Rex Brandub tam Laici quam Clerici ut Archiepiscopatus omnium Laginensium semper esset in sede cathedra sancti Moedog tunc sanctus Moedog a multis catholicis consecratus est Archiepiscopus The King gave many gifts to Saint Moedog and a parcell of ground where the man of God builded a Monasterie called Ferna where Saint Moedog is buried and King Brandub and his posteritie after him is there continually buried And a great Citie in the honour of Saint Moedog is there risen the which by the same name is called Ferna Afterwards a Synode or Parliament of the Nobilitie of Leinster being called together King Brandub decreed together with the Laitie and Clergie that the Archbishopricke of all Leinster should alwaies be in the seate and chayre of Saint Moedog and then Saint Moedog by many Catholikes was consecrated Archbishop According to which indeed in the Legend of Saint Molva he is called Archiepiscopus Laginensium David of Menevia being of great yeeres desired to see him before his death Moedog visited him and returned into Ireland in a troublesome time namely when all Leinster was in Armes to revenge upon Saran a Nobleman of Leinster the death of King Brandub whom he had traiterously murthered This Brandub the sonne of Eatach of the progenie or sept of Enna of whom Censelach hath originall had a most honourable funerall and was greatly lamented and intombed in the Church-yard of Saint Moedog in his Citie Ferna where his progenie the royall bloud of the Kings of Leinster is interred after his death Earle Saran so mine Author calleth him being tormented in conscience came to the Kings tombe lamented the horrible treason he had committed and could finde no rest to his dying day In the time of this Moedog the three Kings of Tuomond Connaght and Vlster with an Armie of foure and twenty thousand men came to Leinster to revenge the death of Edus before spoken of The King of Leinster called Moedog and the Clergie and commanded them all to pray while he fought and saith the storie God gave the Leinster men the victory and their enemies were overthrowne It is remembred of this Aedanus how that one comming unto him and desiring him to assigne him a Confessor his answer was Thou needst no Confessor but God who knoweth the secrets of thy heart but if thou wilt have a witnesse of thy doings goe to one Molva a learned man who shall direct thee in thy course And yet gentle reader I may not overslip one thing the which Capgrave reporteth in the life of Aedanus or Aidanus or Moedog namely how that for all the sanctitie of the Prelates in those
for the guard and safety of the City early in the morning when the enemy was unarmed out of order little thinking that so few within durst attempt to give the onset to so many without they fell upon them killed without mercy and the rere was so forward that they came with the Vanguard by wheeling about to the slaughter of the enemie Roderic all this while trusting to his troupes and multitude of people feared nothing he took his ease and pleasure and was bathing himself but when the larum was up that he saw his men on every side fall to the ground never tarried called for man nor Page to array him but tooke his mantle and ranne away all naked and hardly escaped with life The Britaines pursued after and had the killing of them all that day in the evening they returned into the Citie not onely with the honour of the field but rich booties and praies of victuals armour and other pillage as much as man and beast could cary Immediatly also the rumor hereof the other Campes were dispersed namely Laurence the Archbishop whom it had beseemed better to have beene at home with his porthouse then in Campe with rebels Mathelan Machalem Gillemehelmocus Otuetol Ororic Prince of Meath Ocarol alias Ocarvell Prince of Vriell Machfalin Ochadese with many other great Commanders where every man shifted for himselfe of Gotred alias Godfray King of Man that came by Sea I find nothing for upon this disaster he tooke him to the seas the next day without any further deliberation Miles Cogan is left to governe Dublin and the Earle with his Army marched towards Wexford to raise the siege at the Carreke to relieve Robert Fitz Stephens as he passed by Odrone the forces of Leinster by the conduct of Donole Obrene Prince of Limerik and Donald Prince Osery set upon him and fought a cruell fight but he went on with the losse of one man As he came to the borders of Wexford certaine messengers met and informed him of the mischance that happened to Robert Fitz Stephens and the firing of the Towne of Wexford adding moreover that the Wexfordians were fully determined if the Earle came any further towards them they would cut off all the heads of Fitz Stephens and all his company and send them unto him whereupon with heavy cheere and sorrowfull heart he changed his mind turned to Waterford But afore I proceede any further I am to deliver the manner of the treachery and villany shewed unto Robert Fitz Stephens Donold of Limric sonne in Law to Dermot Mac Morogh while his father lived he was one that favoured the Brittains and not without cause but now forgetting humanity returneth to his vomit bends his course towards Wexford and while other states of Ireland by East and by North with might maine practised the rooting out of the Brittains he flies to the South and raiseth Wexford Kensile to lay siege to the Carreke the fort of Robert Fitz Stephens First they begin with force and seeing that failed them they fall to guiles and subtilities under color of peace pretending nothing but pure love tender affection and safeguard of his person and all that were with him they bring with them two Bishops the one of Kildare the other of Fernes in their formall moods with other Religious persons O damned Prelats and they had with them the Masse Booke the host with certaine Reliques upon these they take corporall oathes and sweare with great solemnity and protestations as followeth For the good will and affection wee beare unto you whom we have alwaies found a curteous and bountifull Prince we are to signifie unto you this much how that Dublin is taken the Earle Strangbow Maurice Fitz Girald Reimond le Grosse Miles Cogan with all the English are put to the sword and now Roderic the Monarch with all the power of Conoght and Leinster posteth hither to rase even with the ground all the Forts Holds and Castles which the Englishmen have and especially to apprehend you Robert Fitz Stephens and Willam Not that were the forerunners into this Land of all this mischiefe wherefore take this for truth and be well advised what to doe if they take you there is no mercy if you will put your selfe with your company and goods into our hands in the faith of Christianity we sweare we will safely transport you and yours unto Wales so shall you not lose so much as a haire of your head wherefore the great Army being at hand yeeld come forth and shippe your selfe for Wals. Robert Fitz Stephens who would not in this case give credit yeelded himselfe into their hands immediatly more like Iewes then Christians they strippe them out of all that ever they have they hang one they throw another over a rocke they breake anothers necke one hath his eyes puld out another hath his tongue cut some they scourge with thongs other some they take and with sledges breake their Armes and thighes the greatest kindnesse they shew is iron and imprisonment the which Robert Fitz Stephens endured now leaving these bloody Massacers and themselves I will turne to Waterford after Earle Strangbow When Earle Strangbow came to Waterford he found there Hervie de Monte Marisco newly arrived out of England with letters from the King requiring him forthwith to repaire unto his Majesty Strangbow together with Hervy tooke the first wind and went for England and found the King at Newham not farre from Glocester where he was in readinesse with a great Army to saile out into Ireland whereafter sundry altercations passed betweene them at length as they say by meanes of Hervy the Kings displeasure was appeased and it was agreed that the Earle should sweare alleageance to the King and yeeld and surender unto him the City of Dublin with the Cantreds thereunto adjoining as also such Townes and Forts as were bordering upon the Sea side and as for the residue he should have and reteine to him and his heires holding the same of the King and his heires Strangbow was no sooner knowne to be in England and Reimond at Waterford but Ororic Monoculus the one eyed Prince of Meath mustred a great number of Souldiers and laid siege to the City of Dublin Miles Cogan the Governour withall his company while the enemy was carelesse upon a sudden issued out and fell upon them unawares and made a great slaughter of them among whom both Ororic and his sonne were slaine In the British Chronicles copied by Owen Cretten out of the Abbies of Conwey in North-wales and Stratflur in South-wales I find recorded that when King Henry the 2. made preparation for the conquest of Ireland Richard Strangbow Earle of Strigale Marshall of England being reconciled to the King had all his Lands in England and Normandy restored unto him againe and thereupon the King made him Seneschall Steward saith he of Ireland Then came Rees prince of South-wales and offred the King to further his
over Ireland And all the West of the world and there followed immediatly a continuall untemperature of the ayre with a filthy skurfe the Winter stormy cold and wet which continued untill the 11. of Iuly and put the Gardeners Fruterers and Husbandmen void of all hope in so much they complained that Winter was turned to Summer and Summer to Winter and that they were like to lose all and bee undone Anno 1252. saith Dowling and Grace and the English Anonimus but Clyn and Florilegus write that it was 1254. King Henry gave to Prince Edward his sonne Gascoigne Ireland Wales Bristow Stanford and Grantham and sent him to Alphonsus King of Spaine to take Ellionor his sister to wife where hee was by the said King Knighted and returned together with his wife into England with great riches Anno 1255. Alanus de la Zouch was made Lord Iustice so I finde in the Booke of Houth after his departure out of Ireland hee being a Lord Baron and chiefe Iustice in England Florilegus Humfrey Loid and Stow doe write the Story how hee came to his end great strife rose in England betweene certaine of the Nobility about territories lands and titles whereto each side made claime the matters in controversie by direction from the King were decided in Westminster Hall the first Controversie was betweene Iohn Earle of Surrey and Warren and Hugh de Lacy Earle of Lincolne which went upon Lacy his side The second was betweene this Earle Warren and Allan de la Zouch this Zouch being Chiefe Iustice asked Earle Warren how he held his land Earle Warran drew foorth his sword and said by this mine Ancestors held the same and by this I presently hold it and with that ranne the Chiefe Iustice through in Westminster Hall and in his flight wounded also his sonne thence hee fled to his Castle at Risgate whome Prince Edward the Kings eldest sonne pursued with an Army to whom the Earle submitted himselfe and afterwards with friends and what with money pacified all Anno 1256. in the warres of Lewelin Prince of Wales so I find in the records of Conway Stratflur Copied by Gettine Owen Edward Earle of Chester fell to outrage one while against the King another while against the Welshmen his Army was 1500. foot and 500. horse Henry the third together with Richard Earle of Cornewall and King of Almane wrote unto him gently wishing him to returne to his Country and keepe the peace and not to provoke the Welshmen to Armes the which he refused to doe but sent to the Irishmen for succour and supplies Prince Edward the Kings eldest sonne understanding thereof rigged a Navy met with the Irish fleet killed their men and sunck their ships few onely remaining to returne and to make report of this hard successe in Ireland In a while after the King raised warres against Lewellin Prince of Wales and the Welshmen saith Paris Causa autem eorum etiam hostibus eorum justa videbatur and was brought to a narrow straight so that he sent to Ireland and to Gascoigne for succour the Irishmen not forgetting their late overthrow were loath to come being of all sides driven to serve in the end came and joyned with their Kings forces where no memorable act was performed for God saith Paris defended the poore people that put their whole confidence in him About this time to wit Anno 1256. Florished Iohannes De Sacro Bosco Bale out of Leland will have him to be a Yorkeshire man and terme him Iohn Holyfaxe Stanihurst writeth he was borne in Ireland at Holy Wood in Fingall some 12. miles from Dublin and therefore called Iohannes De Sacro Bosco which carried great likly-hood with it untill they are reconciled which side prevaileth I waigh not greatly I thought good to insert him for so much as his great learning graced him unto the posterity In his springing yeeres hee suckt the sweet milk of good learning in the famous Vniversity of Oxford afterwards he went to Paris where he professed the learned Sciences with singular commendations and there slumbreth in the dust of the earth whose exequies and funerals were there with great lamentations solemnized first hee followed Aristotle afterwards gave himselfe to the Mathematikes and addicted himselfe so much thereto that none of the posterity as is thought could follow him hee wrote De Spaera Mundi lib. 1. Tractatum de spaera quatuor De Algorismo lib. 1. Omnia quae a primeva rerum orig De Anni Ratione lib. 1. Cmoputus scientiam considerans Breviarium Iuris lib. 1. Verborum superficie penitus Vpon his Tombe together with the Mathematicall Astrolabe was insculped as followeth M. Christi bis C. quarto deno quater anno De Sacro Bosco discrevit tempora ramus Gratia cui nomen dederat divina Iohannes Anno 1258. Stepham Espee alias De longa spatha that is Stepham with the long skeine or two handed sword Earle of Salibury as I suppose was made Lord Iustice of Ireland this Stepham gave battell unto Oneile and the rebels of Vlster and Conaght and slue of them together with Oneile saith Clinne in one day three hundred fifty and two and departed this life saith Florilegus 1260. Anno 1260. William Denne was made Lord Iustice in whose time Greene Castle Arx Viridis was destroyed and the Carties plaied the Divells in Desmond where they burned spoiled preyed and slue many an innocent they became so strong and prevailed so mightily that for the space so it is reported of twelue yeeres the Desmonds durst not put plow in ground in his owne Country at length through the operation of Satan a bane of discord was throwen betweene the Carties and the Odriscoles Odonovaies Mac Donoch Mac Mahonna Mac Swines and the inhabittants of Muscrie in so much that by their cruell dissention they weakened themselves of all sides that the Desmond in the end overcame and overtopped them all but in the beginning of these garboils I find that the Carties slue of the Desmonds Iohn Fitz Thomas founder of the Monastery and Covent of Trally together with Maurice his sonne eight Barons 15. Knights beside infinite others at a place called Callan where they were buried Mine Authors are Iohn Clinne onely and the Booke of Houth In the end of these tumults dyed Sir William Denny Lord Iustice Anno 1261. Richardus de Capella otherwise called Rochell Clinne calleth him La Rochell de Capella became Lord Iustice of Ireland Anno 1262. There rose in Dublin a great stirre betweene the Prior and Covent of the blessed Trinity now called Christ-Church and the Communalty of the City about the tithe fish of the Liffy Anno 1264. Walter Bourke commonly called Walterus de Burgo spoken of before was made Earle of Vlster hee had married the daughter and heire of Sir Hugh Delacy the younger and in her right enjoyed the Earledome The Booke of Houth layeth downe the descent that this Walter