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A28828 The history of the execrable Irish rebellion trac'd from many preceding acts to the grand eruption the 23 of October, 1641, and thence pursued to the Act of Settlement, MDCLXII. Borlase, Edmund, d. 1682? 1680 (1680) Wing B3768; ESTC R32855 554,451 526

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the Castle in a Body but made little skirmishes from the Bogs as they passed along In their way they took in the strong Fort of Phillips-Town in Kings-County which was built upon a Pass in a Countrey almost inaccessible in the former Wars and kept always by the English against the Irish but the Rebels having by Treachery surprized this as they had done most of the other Places of Ireland it was now taken from them by this small Party under the Lord Lisle with their Pistols and Muskets the swiftness of their March and the illness of the Way not admitting any other Artillery such an Enemy not much needing it Being now upon their return to Dublin understanding that the Lord Gormanston and other Lords and Gentlemen of the Pale had gather'd a considerable Force together about Trym the Lord Lisle by the advice of Sir Charles Coote turn'd his March that way with that small company When they came near the Town they saw those Lords at no great distance from them but in such a posture as shewed they intended not to fight and so facing about they marched directly into the Town of Trym which was a Place of very inconsiderable strength but pleasantly situated upon the River of the Boyne in an open Champion Countrey and incompassed with a stone-Wall so old and ruinous as afforded in some places of it entrance to Horse over the heaps of rubbish that lay instead of the Wall The Lord Lisle approach'd with those Forces to the Town and Sir Charles Coote finding a place where he could get in some of his Horse brought them on and got them in without opposition the Lords of the Pale resolving of their dis-ability to keep that Town though they had treble the number of the Assailants quitted it and march'd out in some hast while the Lord Lisle's Horse enter'd in so as they became Masters of the Town without the loss of one Man and finding it a Place of great advantage situated in the most plentiful part of the Rebel's Quarters they resolv'd to make a Garrison of it And for this Reason Sir Charles Coote got the Lord Lisle to go to the Lords Justices at Dublin and acquaint them with the success they had had and the great benefit which might redound to the service of the State if they would think fit to send them down Moneys to fortifie that Place and a Regiment of Foot to keep it The Lord Lisle willing to improve all Arguments that might secure the present Affair took some of his Horse to guard him to Dublin and soon acquainted their Lordships with the Concern pressing the Business with all advantages imaginable whilst the Rebels having notice the day following of his repair to Dublin no Business being carried so private as they had not soon intelligence thereof gathered all their Forces together and having near 3000 Men they came in the dead of the Night to the very Walls of Trym before they were discerned thinking to surprize it But the Sentinels gave the Alarm and Sir Charles Coote who never us'd to go to Bed when he was abroad was the first that took it and having his Horse ready presently mounted but could not at the instant get above 17 Horse with him with these however he goes to the Gates knowing that expedition was not only the life of Action but must at that time be the only means of their preservation He issued out and fac'd the Enemy very numerous making their approaches towards them some few more Horse re-inforcing his strength He charged the first Troop of the Rebels that came towards him routing them immediately and following on upon their disorder charg'd their main Body which presently began to grow loose which he perceiving so vigorously charg'd in amongst them as they all betook themselves to flight and he having now more Men come out of the Town pursued them with great alacrity doing singular execution with his own hands And as he was encouraging his Men bravely to pursue their flying Enemy he was unfortunately shot in the Body as it was thought by one of his own Troopers whether by design or accident was never known it being for many months after his death generally reported and as generally believed that He was accidentally slain by one of the flying Rebels who in despair turn'd about and discharg'd his Musket at him And this end had this gallant Gentleman who began to be so terrible to the Enemy as his very Name was formidable to them His Body was brought to Dublin and there inter'd with great solemnity floods of English tears accompanying him to his Grave After whose death and Sir Harcourt's the Fate of the English Interest in Ireland seem'd eclips'd if not buried the great Artifice being then under several pretences to keep the Souldiers within their Garrisons to consume the Provisions and Stores they had or else to lead them forth without any considerable service till the Battle of Ross. About the beginning of June 1642. came over some Regiments under the Conduct of Sir Foulk Hunks and Lieutenant Colonel Kirk who brought over the Regiment design'd for the Lord Rannelagh whereupon two Regiments were immediately dispatch'd for Connaght and accompanied thither by the Lord Lieutenant who in that Expedition took by storm Knocklinch a strong Castle of Mr. Linches the besieged except Women not accepting of Quarter were put to the sword and Trimbleston a Castle of the Lord Trimbleston's quitted on the former's success as Kymkelf a fair Castle of the Lord Nettervile's and divers other Castles And upon his approach towards Athlone Sir James Dillon who had besieged it ever since Christmass ran away so that the Lord President with about 50 Horse and some 200 Foot met the Lieutenant General 5 miles from Athlone and after an hour or two's stay in the Field the Earl of Ormond took leave of the Lord President leaving at his departure a Regiment for the President himself and another under Sir Michael Earnly Sir Abraham Shipman and Sir Bernard Ashley and two Troops of Horse with which Forces the Lord President might have subdued all Connaght except Galloway But he instead of imploying such brave Men abroad while the Summer lasted kept them at home on short and rotten Commons whereby most of them were famish'd or contracted mortal Diseases and were presently so enfeebled that the tenth Man was hardly able to march In the mean time all almost that had fought against him of his Neighbours were receiv'd under Contribution which was never paid nor Victuals brought in for his Men though the Countrey yet abounded in Corn and Cattle so that the Garrison of Castle-Coot for meer pity baked Bread and sent them many Cart-fulls thereof bringing away in their empty Carts many of their sick Men that they might not perish And yet at last the General the Lord President was perswaded to draw out his Men to service besieging Ballagh Castle in the mid-way between Roscommon and
remainder of English but by a Peace We find his Majesty being deluded by the first and believing the last to be conducing to the preservation of his Majesties Protestant Subjects is concluding of a Peace which will again admit those Irish Rebels to be Members of Parliament so that that Court which should afford relief for our Grievances will by their over-swaying Votes be our greatest Grievance Moreover we are too truly informed by divers of their own Party whose names if we should publish would be as great an ingratitude as folly the first in betraying those that obliged us the last in depriving our selves of all future Intelligence by them that they have vowed never to submit to an English or Protestant Government except they have liberty to exercise their Religion in Churches That the Forces of the Kingdom may be Train'd-Bands of their Men and that likewise those of their own Religion may be admitted to Places of Trust in the Common-wealth which they call modest and moderate demands though we hope they cannot seem so to any but themselves and their Clergy who we find do not think them enough being they may not have all their Church-Livings For we have certain intelligence that they have made a strong Faction as well among my Lord of Castlehaven's Soldiers as in all other parts of the Kingdom so that they are five parts of six who will fly out into a new action when they see a convenient time to execute their design which as yet they determine to forbear until they see a Peace concluded supposing that then the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland will intermix Irish and English without distinction to oppose the Scots and that by that means there will be a sufficient number of their Party in our Garrisons to master them which when they find an opportunity for they will certainly seize into their own hands upon notice whereof the Faction abroad will with all expedition apprehend the English in all parts and having accomplished this part of their design they will manifest that they are weary of the King of England's Government and that they will trust none of his Protestant Subjects among them for we are certainly informed that they will invite a Forreign Prince to take them into his protection unto whom they will deliver possession of what he pleases and will become his Subjects And lest that Princes Treasure should be exhausted by Wars in other places the Clergy have with the Pope's assistance raised amongst those of their own Calling and divers of the Gentry in Italy one hundred thousand pounds in money and a quantity of Arms and Ammunition that are now ready to be sent hither and they have employed one Doctor Duyer to go forthwith thither for it as also to get his Holiness to settle a course for the raising of more Money to be employed for the advancement of that which they call the Catholick Cause Therefore out of a true sense of our injuries already suffered and un-redressed with a right apprehension of inevitable ruine not onely to our Lives and Estates but likewise to the English Nation and Protestant Religion we have re-assum'd our Arms according to our Duty to God our King and Countrey with inviolable resolution to die or frustrate this devillish design And since those that die acting for the Gospel are as perfect Martyrs as those that die suffering for it we cannot but with joy embrace any effect that proceeds from so glorious a Cause Neither can this act be esteemed a crime in us since his Majesty upon the Rebels first Insurrection his Treasure being exhausted gave his Royal assent for the passing of an Act of Parliament wherein he granted to all his Subjects that would adventure money towards reducing of the Rebels Lands proportionable to the sum adventured which would fall to the Crown when the Conquest should be finished And the better to secure the Adventurers his Majesty obliged himself to make no Peace with the Rebels but with the advice and approbation of the Parliament of England and by that Act communicated to the Parliament that Power which before was solely in himself So that they not condescending to this Peace our imploying of their Aids and re-assuming of those Arms put into our hands by King and Parliament joyntly cannot be esteemed contradictory to his Majesty in regard that their joynt Act is so absolutely binding that neither of them severally can annull it as is evident in the Laws of the Realm Therefore if this War were onely Offensive yet even slander it self must acknowledge us innocent having so just a Cause so pious an Intention and so lawful an Authority much more it being Defensive and the Law both of God and Nature allowing every one to defend himself from violence and wrong Moreover the King must never expect any obedience from the Irish but what proceeds either from their Interest or Fear Through the first of these neither his Majesty or we can hope for assurance for not granting them all their desires their Interest which is more powerful with them than their Loyalty will make them throw off their subjection and to become absolute not scruple to destroy us Then to expect any security by their fears were frivolous for though we have found their Hearts as ill as their Cause yet they cannot be apprehensive of 2 or 3000 ill armed and unprovided men having all things necessary and so numerous a People at their devotion And lest our Enemies should scandalize us with breach of Faith in violating the pretended Cessation or with Cruelty in expelling the Irish Papists from our Garrisons who hitherto seemed adhering to us Concerning the first we declare That although our necessities did induce us to submit supposing the Cessation would have produced other effects as is before mentioned yet we had no power without Authority from King and Parliament joyntly to treat or yield to it or if it had been in our powers yet by the Rebels daily breaches of it we are disengaged from it Concerning the second we declare That our Garrison cannot be secured whilst so powerful and perfidious Enemies are in our bosomes Powerful being four to one in number more than the English Perfidious in their constant designs to betray us some whereof we will instance to convince their own Consciences and satisfie the World of our just proceedings One Francis Matthews a Franciscan Frier being wonderfully discovered in an Enigmatical Letter and as justly executed before his death confessed that he had agreed to betray the City of Cork to the Lord of Muskery which must necessarily infer that the chiefest and greatest part of that City were engaged in this Conspiracy for otherwise he could not so much as hope the accomplishment And if this had taken effect it had consequently ruin'd all the Protestants in the Province of Munster that being our chief Magazine and greatest Garrison Besides upon this occasion other Friers being examin'd upon Oath confessed that in
Relie and Roger Mac-Guire this Examinant's Brother dispatched a Priest one Toole O Conley who lived in Leimster unto Owen O Neal into Flanders to acquaint him with the Business concerning the General Rebellion then in preparation which said Priest return'd about a month before the time appointed for execution thereof And the Answer which the said Priest brought from the said Owen O Neal was That he would within 15 days after the People were up be with them with his best Assistance and Arms And it being demanded Why he the said Owen would bring Arms considering the Castle of Dublin was to be taken and the Arms therein this Examinant answer'd That they so provided for Arms that they might not want any in case they could not take the said Castle whereof they doubted And this Examinant acknowledgeth That the Castle of Dublin was to have been surpriz'd by himself Capt. Bryan O Neal Capt. Con O Neal Capt. Mac-Mahon one Owen O Relie Roger Moore Hugh Mac-Mahon Col. Plunkett and Capt. Fox and likewise further acknowledgeth That Hugh Mac-Phelim Capt. Con O Neal and Bryan O Neal brought from Owen O Neal out of Flanders the very same Message which the Priest brought And this Examinant further saith That he was told by Roger Moor that a Great Man was in the Plot but he might not name him for the present And at another time and during the sitting of the Parliament the last Summer he this Examinant was inform'd by one John Barnewell a Franciscan Frier then resident in this City That those of the Pale were also privy to the Plot meaning the present Rebellion And lastly saith That of those Persons who came to attend him this Examinant for the surprize of the Castle of Dublin only Cohonough Mac-Guire was privy to the Business in hand and that the last Meeting when the day appointed for the execution thereof was resolv'd on was at Loghross where were present only Ever Mac-Mahon Vicar-General of the Diocess of Clogher Thomas Mac-Kearnan a Frier of Dundalk Sir Phelim O Neal Roger Moor and Bryan O Neal. Charles Lambert Robert Meredith Concordat cum originali Ex. per Paul Harris Which Examination he also acknowledged before Judge Bramston Lord Chief Justice of England and Justice Mallet the 22. of June 1642. in the presence of Jo. Conyers W. Ayloffe Nath. Finch And being Prisoner in the Tower of London he delivered to Sir John Conyers then Lieutenant thereof a Relation of the whole Scene to be presented to the Lords in Parliament which being stor'd with many remarkable Circumstances sufficiently evidencing the dis-satisfaction long contrivance and general combination of the Natives I shall commit to posterity in his own words that it may be seen what Fucus soever is now endeavour'd to be cast on the horrid Conspiracy it was not any ill miscarriage of the State at that time or any real suspicions that the Irish had of any violence to be obtruded on their Religion or Persons which drove the Natives into a general revolt but the deliberate complotted Counsels of many years that anvil'd out the Rebellion in detestation of the English that was the Sore however skin'd which they endeavour'd again to exulcerate to which end Neal's Regiment in Flanders consisting most of Irish Papists was purposely rais'd to train up the Irish in Arms against a fitting opportunity as by Mac-Art's Examination is most evident Thus was this inhumane and treacherous Rebellion unanimously complotted which brake forth the 23. of October 1641. St. Ignatius his day that less than such a Patron might not be entituled to so close and bloody a Conspiracy fourty years before fore-warn'd by the incomparable and pious Archbishop Usher preaching soon after the overthrow of the Spaniards at Kinsale 1601. on the Vision of Ezek. Chap. 4. Vers. 6. whence in reference to a connivance of Popery following he drew this Application From this year a day being for a year I will reckon the sin of Ireland that those whom you now embrace shall be your ruine and you shall bear this iniquity A little before which time this Reverend Primate went for England I cannot say his reflecting on this Prophesie was the cause of his repair thither no! many things were thought to be in dispute which his moderation might probably have compos'd However writes Armachanus Redivivus towards the end Monitu proculdubio divino tempestivus ab Hibernia recessit priusquam funestae calamitates erupissent illi lupi bipedes belluaeque deproedatrices dispersas oves horribili Laniena jugulassent The Castle of Dublin as you have read was the chief Place they aim'd at as in the Lord Grey's Government 1580. it was then the design of the Rebels to have kill'd him and his Family and to have surpris'd the Castle of Dublin wherein was all the Provision of War The like was intended by the Conspirators about the beginning of the Reign of King James Sir Arthur Chichester Lord Deputy The full determination of the Conspiracy we now speak of was as Dr. Jones in his clear and excellent account he gives thereof in his Depositions took the 3d. of March 1641. design'd at the Abbey of Multifernan notwithstanding that Tyroen's Son who had long consulted it in Flanders was suddenly strangled about that time in Bruxels and the Earl of Tirconnel drown'd near the time of the Earl of Strafford's death prime Instruments in anvilling the Design abroad and great hopes of countenancing it at home where there was a Covent of Franciscans conven'd it seems on a pious intent in the County of West-Meath after the last Sessions of Parliament where amongst many other things there debated the question was What course should be taken with the English and all others that were found in the whole Kingdom to be Protestants Some were onely for their Banishment as the King of Spain dismis'd the Mores out of Granado with some of their Goods Others were urgent that all the Protestants should be universally cut off the King of Spain's lenity being his and his Queen's act not the advice of his Council which say they afterwards cost Christendom dear the Mores surviving to return with Swords in their hands and infest them as Algiers and Sally doth at present Those Disputes held long at last some lean'd a middle way neither to dismiss or kill And we find by the event each of these thoughts had some execution in some places All being generally put to the Sword or a more deplorable end in other places Imprisonment accompanied with the utmost extremity of that condition was the lot of many and others who being dismiss'd with their Goods were afterwards stript of all expos'd to Cold and Famine worse than Sword or Halter Thus having determin'd what to do with the Protestants which in general too sadly succeeded to their wishes they according to the presumption of the event consulted in the next place what course they would peruse in reference to their Government of
with them However Mountgarrets Forces infinitely increas'd so as the Lord President to secure Cork thought it most convenient to retreat thither whilst Mountgarret the 11th of February lodges his Forces in Moyallo brought thither by Serjeant Major Walsh the Inheritance of Captain William Jephson a Town containing one Street of near 200 English Houses thirty whereof were strongly built and Slated having at the South-end thereof a very fair and pleasant House called The great Castle committed to the charge of Arthur Betesworth with 200 Men Arms and Ammunition convenient and one Iron Piece of Ordnance with two Curriers whereof they made good use and advantage And at the North-end of the Town stood another strong Castle called The short Castle excellently well afterwards defended by Lieutenant Richard Williamson who after many Breaches in the Wall the best Assaults Serjeant Major Purcel could make and the loss of many Men was given over though at length yielded out of necessity on terms never perform'd though the remarkable stoutness of Lieutenant Williamson was such as he finding the Rebels to faulter in what they had promised resolutely getting up a Sword vowed to be the death of those who should hinder his and his Parties repair to the other Castle never yielded by Betesworth which being resolutely and on a sudden done struck such a fear in the Rebels as Williamson and his Party were all admitted to go to the Great Castle with what they had which was not irreparably rifled from them by the Rebels And shortly after the Rebels having some aiery rumors of the Lord Presidents Forces to fall upon them Mountgarret march'd thence with his Army the Lord Muskery notwithstanding all his fair pretences to the President being now come to the Rebels which was a great strengthning to that Party he having a considerable Estate and much Money left him by a miserable Father whilst it may be thought the Lord Roch Mac-Donnogh and others being brought to great straits could not worsen but might advance their Estates by the Rebellion Many were much concern'd that the Lord Mountgarret would go from Moyallo leaving the Countrey to be govern'd by themselves a great contest arising amongst them who should be Chief Serjeant Major Purcel Baron of Loghmo challenging the Generalship of that Province But the Heads of the Confederacy meeting at the Lord Muskery's House to avoid contention about Superiority there resolved that none of the Gentry of the County should bear any Office in the Army but that one Garret Barry who had long serv'd under the King of Spain and was reputed a good Soldier should be General and the Lord Muskery and some other prime and select Men should be call'd The Council of War so that that difference at the present was composed And this doughty General mustering up his Forces hover'd about Cork without any Attempt worth notice whilst other parts of the Irish Army visited Lismore the Cattle in and about that Place being driven away by Colonel Richard Butler The 23d of February Mr. Richard Bealing summon'd the Castle but the Lord Broghil whom neither Promises nor Threats could work any thing upon told them That he knew not what Quarter meant daring him to the Assault as soon as he would which He threatned within half an hour after But intelligence being brought that Sir Charls Vavasor was landed at Youghal with 1000 Men the Enemy fled to Dungarvan and the Lord President determining to look abroad advanced with that Regiment and the Lord Broghil's and Captain Courtney's Troop of Horse towards Talloe hoping to surprize Colonel Richard Butler but being disappointed Intelligence flying swifter than our March he set forward towards Dungarvan burning the Countrey as he went being in all 2000 Horse and Foot taking order that a Peece of Artillery should be brought him from Cork by Sea and having slain many of the Enemy in Talloe he burnt the Town and so went forward to Dungarvan and coming to it the 3d. of March 1641. sent a Summons but they refusing and setting out a Flag of Defiance he with his Men violently entred the Town and upon the 5th of March took the Castle giving the Enemy Quarter He put a Ward of 40 Musketeers into the Castle under the Command of Lieutenant Rosington from whom the Enemy not long after surpriz'd it The Lord Broghil the Lord Barrymore marching each of them afterwards on several Expeditions happily succeeded taking in divers Castles as Tourin the 8th of March which the Lord Broghil burnt and Bally-Mac-Patrick standing upon the Black-water which the Earl of Barrimore shortly after burnt meeting now and then with the Enemy on whom they did good execution As did Captain Jephson in the relief of Rathgogan and taking in of Balliha as also in the Encounter he and Lieutenant Downing had with the Enemy at his return where he slew 150 of them The like success he had in taking in Ballynageragh Sir Purcival's Castle Not long after Captain Sherlock Head of the Waterford Rebels amounting to 700 endeavouring to take Cappaquin guarded by Captain Hugh Crocker with a hundred men was in the streets killed and his Forces routed The 3d. of July 1642. the Lord Broghil with 60 Horse and 140 Foot went to fetch off Sir Richard Osborn from his Castle of Knockmone in the County of Waterford six miles from Lismore who in his advance thither burnt and destroy'd the Rebels Quarters though in his return towards Lismore he sent his Scouts to descrie the Enemy suspecting they should way-lay them as indeed they did setting themselves in Battalia in a Field near unto Cappaquin having a little half-Grove at their backs upon which the English perceiv'd that there was no way to secure themselves but by making their way with the Sword and therefore put their Men in the best posture they could the Enemy playing very hard upon them upon which the Lord Broghil resolutely encountred them with his Horse whilst Captain Stephen Brodrip led on his Foot in an orderly and well-compacted Body galling them on all sides so effectually with his Musketeers that the Enemies Horse and Foot were soon put to flight with the loss of one onely man of ours and at least 200 of theirs besides two of their best Captains who died the next day though their Horse carried them off then This was the first pitcht Battel since the Rebellion in Munster and had the Enemy succeeded Cappaquin Lismore and some other Places would have been an easie Prey Not long after the Earl of Barrymore took in upon Quarter the strong Castle of Cloghleagh in the County of Cork the Inheritance of Sir Richard Fleetwood who admitted Sir Arthur Hide to keep it but most treacherously he left it to be surprized by Condon whose Ancestors had been formerly the Proprietors of it an insolent Rebel as his Predecessors were before him Afterwards the Lod Dungarvan and the Lord Broghil summoning the Castle of
you see how it came to pass that Murther is a greater offence and more severely punished in Ireland than in England and by these good Laws that horrid and execrable Crime and Monster of Blood and Murder was chain'd up or at least fetter'd and restrain'd in Ireland until its breaking loose upon us in this last and most barbarous and cruel Rebellion with that inhumane violence and unsatiable thirst of innocent Blood with the savage Butcheries of Men Women and Children without respect either of Age or Sex or Quality as no History or Age can parallel It appears by a Cloud of Witnesses the execrable Cruelties of the Murtherers were not satisfied with the variety of Tortures and cruel Deaths of the living by Striping Starving Burning Strangling Burying alive and by many Exquisite Torments put to death the living so that a present dispatch by death was a great Mercy So cruel are the Mercies of the wicked But their hellish rage and fury stayed not here but also extended it self even unto the Babes unborn ripping them out of their Mothers womb and destroying even those innocent Babes to satiate their savage cruelty Nor staid it here but extended also to the ransacking of the Graves of the Dead dragging the dead Bodies of the Protestants out of their Graves because they might not rest in their Hallowed Ground Nor did yet their execrable malice stay here but became boundless not onely to the devastation and the destruction of the Houses Castles and whole substance of the Protestants and whatsoever tending to Civility but also even to the utter extirpation of the English Nation and Protestant Religion out of this Land of Ireland all which the Murderers for of them I speak acted with that bruitish outrage as though Infidels or rather the wild Beasts of the Wilderness Wolves and Bears and Tigres nay Fiends and Furies had been brought into the Land If any think this Language too harsh let them consider how the holy Ghost ranks and couples the Murderers with Dogs Rev. 22. 15. For without the holy City the heavenly Jerusalem are Dogs and Sorcerers and Whoremongers and Murderers and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye No no Swans language to express either the woful miseries which the Protestants have suffered or the abominable cruelties the Murtherers have committed are here tolerable I have not words to declare how the Murderers in this horrid Rebellion have violated all Laws of God and Man all Faith all Bonds of Charity and Humane Society and how perfidiously they have broken all the Rules and Rights and Laws of War The Laws of War In republica maxime sunt observanda Jura belli By the Law and Rules and Rights of War Quarter warrantably given ought inviolably to be observed it is a Fundamental Law of War That Faith is to be kept with an Enemy Fides cum hoste servanda this hath been observed among the Heathens Infidels have kept this Faith the Turks observed it but by the Popes Dispensation the Christians once broke their Articles with the Turks whereupon the Lord gave a signal Victory to the Turks against the Christians the Story is well known The practice of the Murderers in this Rebellion hath been according to the old Popish Tenent Nulla fides cum Haereticis And so contrary to the Laws of War many Protestants were murdered after Quarter given of which Crime both are said to be guilty But that which exceeds all that can be spoken makes their sin exceeding sinful and their wickedness most abominable is That they began this butchery and cruelty even then when the Protestants were in perfect amity with them and joyned to them not onely in peaceable Neighbourhood but even in those Bonds that they pretend to hold most inviolable viz. Gossiprick Fosterage and such like Ties of Friendship and Alliance When they enjoyed so licentious a freedom of their Romish Superstition and free use of their Mass they had their Titular Arch-bishops for every Province their Titular Bishop with his Dean and Chapter for every Diocess and their Secular Priest for every Parish in the Land besides a monstrous multitude of their Votaries and Regular Clergy They had their Abbots Priors Monks Nuns Jesuits Frieries Monasteries Nunneries Religious Houses and Convents in the principal Towns and Cities of the Land even in this City of Dublin the residence of the State so that Father Harris a Secular Priest of their own published in Print That it was as hard to find what number of Friers were in Dublin as to count how many Frogs there were in the second Plague of Egypt They did not onely exercise all their Superstitious Rites and Ceremonies but also the Papal Jurisdiction as by Law they had Vicars General and kept their Provincial Courts and Consistories and Excommunicated the People delivering them to Satan When they enjoyed the benefit of the same Laws with us nay the end and force of the Law was in some cases abated as to them which was not dispensed withall as to the Protestants The Popish Lawyers were permitted to practice and the Papists admitted to Sue forth their Liberties and Ouster lemains and to bear and execute the Office of Sheriffs Justices of the Peace c. without taking the Oathes of Allegiance or Supremacy which was not permitted to the Protestants And these Popish Lawyers Priests Jesuits and Friers have been the principal Incendiaries and Firebrands of all those horrible Flames which have thus consumed the Land and were the chief Ring-leaders of this horrid Rebellion that the publick Burthens and Charges of the Common-wealth were born more by the Protestants than by them consideration being had to their numbers and quality of Possessors of Inheritance And that of the Subsidy granted in Decimo Car. whereof they raised so great a clamour both in England and Ireland the Protestants paid above one third part of the whole besides the Clergy though neither the Quantity or Quality of Lands of Inheritance then holden of them in the Land did amount to more than a fifth part and besides all this the Protestants had contributed to the charge of their Committees towards the obtaining of Grace in Bounties in sending Commissioners for them and even then when the British and Protestants had improved the Lands of the Irish Papists and enriched their Estates and brought into the Land Husbandry Trades Manufactury Traffick Merchandize c. by which means increase of Wealth grew in the Land to that abundance that the Irish grew not onely Rich but Honourable also they were made Earls Viscounts Lords Baronets Knights c. And when they enjoyed all this and much more if time did permit to declare it then even then without any provocation suddenly to rise up to this heighth of cruelty to murder some hundreds of thousands of these Protestants that lived peaceably and friendly with them and that before they could take Arms in their hands for their defence these things I say makes the sins of Murder Violence
as near as I can suitable to what their necessities may require and the Condition and State of Affairs under my charge can admit as either by continuing them or so many of them in Town as shall be thought fit or for those of that condition that do go out by allotting for them some places near hand such as may by industry and care of any Friends in their behalfs be in most respects equal to what benefits they have in Town or at least contribute competently towards their livelihood and subsistence at present until either the state of our Affairs or frame of their Spirits be known to be altered as may admit their return or a further provision for them Given at Waterford March 1650. H. IRETON Fol. 316. l. 23. Consideration No mention yet of the King He was not to be named though there were but few that saw Him not at a distance improving each Gale to further his Return in as much as they continued till May 1660. then readily accepting of the Kings Declaration from Breda Fol. 319. l. 34. Eminent Sufferings for regulating of whose Interests a Court of Claims was afterwards instituted wherein if the exact Method and Institution ordered by his Majesties Commission grounded on the Act of Settlement were not regularly persued It 's agreed on by All that the Commissioners were no losers by their Imployment And that the house of Commons who knew best their own sense of so important an Act might have no excentrical proceedings thereupon they presented to his Grace an Instrument with Rules and Directions for the Commissioners proceedings That discovering a Cloud through the Interposition of some Malevolent Planet it might remain whether persued or no as a Record of their Endeavours That the hard Fate and Ruine of an English Interest in Ireland might not bear date under the best of Kings under so vigilant a Lord Lieutenant under the first and if not prevented like to be the last Protestant Parliament there Which Instrument hath since magnified that house justly sensible of intervening Evils TO THE READER Reader IN the Preceding History we cursorily mention'd the execrable Barbarisms the Irish committed in their Insurrection briefly reflected on in The Remonstrance of the Clergy to the House of Commons in England 1642. out of which other Examinations and Authentick Proofs in the Archives at Dublin we have collected the ensuing Murthers reducing them to Counties readier for every ones view Not mentioning the Rebels Mercy Plundering Stripping or Exposing the English to Cruelties worse than Death All being short of that Number which had we time would soon compleat a Volume especially could we have recover'd Archdeacon Bisse his Examinations taken in Munster with greater Artifice than Justice smother'd who as an Eminent and Worthy Person on the same Account the 12th of October 1678. was most inhumanly Murther'd by the Irish as He by the late Conspirators expressing that to be the Cause viz. The Examinations that were then taken Yet what we have here Collected with Dr. Robert Maxwell's Examination whose Integrity and Candor None ever yet dar'd Question I am confident exceeds the Martyrologie of former Ages and as a solid Divine ingeniously as well as truly observ'd on the Fast-day Wednesday the 13th of November 1678. is a Wonder even to Amazement That more Arts of Cruelty have been found out by the Romish Clergy propagating their Religion than the Heathen Persecutors ever reach'd to A Collection of Murthers in several Counties of Ireland committed since the 23d of October 1641. abstracted out of certain Examinations taken by Virtue of Commissions under the Great Seal of Ireland which said Particulars are singled amongst infinite others of that kind pointing to the Circumstances and the Names of the Persons or some of them murthering or murthered The fuller Evidence of which may be found according to the Quotations in the Archives of Dublin now in Possession of the Clerk of the Council The County of Antrim THE Rebels confessed to this Deponent that they killed in one Morning 954 in this County And that besides them they supposed they had killed 1100 or 1200 more in that County The County of Armagh Protestants in Multitudes forced over the Bridge of Portnedown whereby at several times there were drown'd in the River of Banne above 1000. Great Numbers of Protestants drown'd at Corbridge and Kynard in the County of Armagh Mr. Fullerton Clerk Mr. Aubrey Mr Gladwich murthered in the way towards Portnedown Many others Murther'd 5 murther'd soon after the beginning of the Rebellion 50 murther'd at Blackwater-Church 20 drown'd near the Water of Callon and several others murther'd Mr. William Blundell drawn by the Neck in a Rope up and down Blackwater at Charlemont to confess money and three weeks after He with his Wife and seven Children drown'd Four and fourty at several times murther'd A Wife compell'd to hang her own Husband with several other notorious murthers Mr. Robinson the Minister his Wife and three Children and seven more murther'd Two and twenty Protestants put into a thatch'd house in the Parish of Kilmore and there burned alive The Lord Caufield murther'd Dr. Hodges with 43 more murther'd within a quarter of a mile of Charlemont The Wife of Arnold Taylor great with Child had her belly ripp'd up then drown'd Thomas Mason buried alive Seventeen Men Women and Children cast into a Bogg-pit in the Parish of Dumcrees Many more murther'd Fifteen hundred murther'd in three Parishes 27 more murther'd Mr. Cambell drown'd Three hundred Protestants stripped naked and put into the Church of Loghgall whereof about 100 murther'd within the Church amongst whom John Gregg was quarter'd alive his Quarters thrown into the face of Richard Gregg his Father The said Richard was after there murther'd having received seventeen or eighteen wounds after cut into Quarters in this Deponents his Wife's Presence Such as were not murther'd were turn'd out a begging amongst the Irish naked and into the cold most of which were killed by Irish Cripples their Trulls and Children One hundred and eighty drown'd at twice at the Bridge of Callon One hundred some say two hundred more in a Lough near Ballimackilmorrogh Mr. Gabriel Constable and his Mother 80 years old murther'd Five hundred murther'd at Armagh besides 48 Families murther'd in the Parish of Killaman Three had their Brains knock'd out with a Hatchet within the Church of Benburb 8 Women drown'd in a River under the same Church Christopher Glover murther'd Lieutenant James Maxwell by order from Sir Phelim O Neil was dragg'd out of his Bed raving in the height of a burning Fever driven two miles and murther'd his Wife great with Child stripp'd stark naked and drown'd in the Blackwater the Child half born Mr. Starkey about 100 years old and his two daughters strip'd naked the Daughters forced to support and lead their Father he being not able to go
beats Clanrickard's Regiments fol. 213 his intention to besiege Tredagh hinder'd fol. 222 his Victory at Rathmines fol. 221 222 his death character fol. 230 Sir Theophilus Jones return'd with a Supply into Ireland fol. 210 made General of Dublin fol. 223 with Col. Reynold's Service in VVestmeath fol. 240 beats Phelim mac Hugh coming to relieve Finagh fol. 283 Seizes Dublin-Castle fol. 316 The bleeding Iphigenia answer'd in reference to a Calumny on the State fol. 55 his Doctrine of the lawfulness of assuming Arms to prevent an Evil confuted by Andrew Sall in his Book entituled fol. 16 Ireland never subdued till the Laws were as communicable to the Irish as English fol. 1 neglected fol. 93 Ireton left by Cromwell his Deputy fol. 241 takes VVaterford fol. 255 his service at Kilkenny fol. 282 sits down before Limerick fol. 283 takes Limerick fol. 290 dies there fol. 300 his Reasons after he had taken VVaterford why he put out the Irish App. 1 The Irish pretend a Commission under the broad Seal fol. 29 cruel before the Parliament medled with their Religion fol. 50 taunt the Lords of the Pale with old miscarriages fol. 69 hearken not to the Cessation whilst they storm'd Castle-Coot fol. 120 petition upon the Cessation to be admitted to their Houses fol. 140 Intentions suspected fol. 153 as false to Clanrick as Ormond fol. 284 285 upon their Heats with the Marquiss of Ormond threaten to return to their confederacy fol. 272 surrender on the Kilkenny Articles fol. 302 charg'd with the guilt of Royal Blood fol. 303 transplanted into Connaght fol. 315 Agents admitted to inspect the Act of Settlement fol. 320 carriage and dismission fol. 321 The Judges Reasons for the Continuance of the Parliament fol. 131 The Lords Justices equal Government fol. 7 cheerfulness to comply with the request of both Houses fol. 13 adjourn the Parliament to the 9th of Nov. ibid. summon the Lords of the Pale to consult what to be done fol. 40 Proclamation of the 28 of Decemb. fol. 45 Mercy to such as should return to their obedience in time fol. 51 Letter to the Speaker touching Ross Battle fol. 106 Letter to the King of the Affairs of Ireland fol. 122 K KIlrush Battle from 73 to 75 K. Charles I. censure of the Rebellion fol. 14 refers the care of Ireland to the Parliament of England fol. 36 sends Arms and Ammunition out of Scotland into Ireland fol. 38 his speech checking the Parliaments slow proceedings fol. 44 his second speech to that Intent ibid. his offer to raise 10000 Voluntiers for the Irish service fol. 45 his Proclamation against the Rebels fol. 53 his Reasons why it came forth no sooner fol. 54 his Letter of Grace to the Irish fol. 6 oflers to go into Ireland fol. 70 his Resentment of that Rebellion fol. 92 93 his Commission to hear the Rebels Remonstrance fol. 114 his first Letter about the Cessation fol. 118 his second Letter to that Intent fol. 121 his third Letter to the same purpose fol. 124 his fourth Letter for the same fol. 130 his fifth Letter for it and ordering how the Souldiers should be dispos'd of fol. 132 his motive to the Cessation fol. 130 K. Charles I. his answer to the Parliament touching Ireland fol. 200 his Letter to the Marquiss of Ormond ibid. his Reasons for the Peace 1648 fol. 202 his Judgment on Glamorgans Agency fol. 153 K. Charles II. upon the Defeat of Rathmaines is diverted from Ireland fol. 222 being inform'd of the disobedience of the Irish permits the L. Lieutenant to withdraw his Authority fol. 246 Declaration in Scotland against the Peace 1648. fol. 269 his Proclamation touching the Rebels fol. 318 Captain King's good Service at Balintober fight fol. 81 Lord Kynalmechy slain at the Battle of Liscarroll fol. 89 L THe Laity even those who would be thought the greatest Royalists where the Clergy were concern'd would not punish without the Bishops Cooperation fol. 267 Lambert thought on for Ireland but disappointed fol. 301 A Letter from Sir Henry Vane to the Lords Justices intimating a Conspiracy fol. 7 The Earl of Leicester design'd Lord Lieutenant not permitted to go fol. 5 However afterwards by the Act of Settlement his Arrears were allow'd 6. but that was not so satisfactory to him as his missing an opportunity to express his vertue and courage was really unhappy Limerick refractory 251. govern'd by the Clergy 244. delivered upon Articles fol. 296 governed by Sir Hardr. VValler for the Parliament fol. 299 The Lord Lisle lands at Dublin fol. 77 relieves the Lady Offalia fol. 78 beats the Rebels from Trim fol. 79 The Lord Lisle's expedition into Westmeath fol. 102 good service at Ross fol. 109 voted Lord Lieutenant by the Parliament fol. 168 his Arrival ibid. Service ibid. Return ibid. Lisnegarvey Fight fol. 38 The Lords of the Pale except against words in the first Proclamation fol. 22 Sir Thomas Lucas arrives at Dublin fol. 29 is in a Councel of War at Tredagh fol. 67 his Service in the Expedition towards Kilrush fol. 73 at the Battle of Kilrush fol. 74 75 Ross fol. 109 prisoner at Tredath fol. 195 admitted to have besides Officers 30 Souldiers in his Troop fol. 141 Ludlow succeeds Ireton fol. 301 Lowther one of the Commissioners from Ormond to Oxford fol. 142 the Parliament fol. 167 his excellent Speech at the trial of Sir Phelim O Neil fol. 305 M THe Lord Macguire's Examination fol. 23 Trial fol. 200 Execution fol. 200 Mac Mahon's Examination fol. 20 Trial fol. 99 Execution fol. 99 The Mayor of Dublin and his Brethren scarcely advance 50 l. fol. 27 Dr. Maxwell's large Examination touching the Plot App. 126 Means to reduce Ireland to Peace and Quietness fol. 46 Mellifont besieg'd by the Rebels fol. 37 Active Men of the House of Commons fol. 8 Protestant Members of Parliament inveigled by the Papists to seek ease and redress fol. 10 Money appointed for Ireland misapplied fol. 33 Lieut. Col. Monk arrives in Ireland fol. 52 his Advance at Kilrush Battle fol. 75 relieves Balanokill fol. 105 his Expedition against Preston fol. 128 seizes Carrickfergus Colrain Belfast fol. 195 his Cessation with O Neil disallowed of by the Parliament fol. 215 dismissed the Parliaments Service ibid. Monro's Letter in disgust of the Cessation fol. 136 The Lord Moore enters Tredagh fol. 60 his excellent Service there fol. 63 in Meath fol. 101 appears before Port-Leicester-Mill fol. 128 his death fol. 129 character ibid. A Motion to call in a Forraign Prince fol. 174 The Lord Moungarret head of the Munster Rebels fol. 84 The Lord Muskery joyns with the Rebels ibid. Munster Service fol. 93 Murther why a greater offence in Ireland then England fol. 311 A Collection of Murthers from f. 119 in the App. to 125. in which viz. f. 120 there is mention made of the Murther of Thomas Prestick the proof of which is referred to a Letter accidently left out but on occasion may be seen in my hands N LUke
ibid. A Proclamation calling in Protections fol. 99 for the Peace 1646. fol. 156 Propositions from the Rebels by Sir Thomas Cary and Dr. Cale fol. 45 by Fitz-Williams about the Peace with the Queens consent fol. 154 Protections granted by Commissioners revoked fol. 102 The Protestants Petition for Agents to go to Oxford fol. 140 to the King App. 62 allow'd by his Masty fol. 140 Agents to go to Oxford fol. 142 receive a gracious promise from his Majesty fol. 143 Agency question'd by the Councel-board fol. 144 of Ireland acknowledg'd by the King to bear a great part in his Restauration fol. 316 How Protestant Hereticks are to be buried fol. 171 Q QUarter not to be given to any in arms especially Priests fol. 264 The Queen Regent of France thought a convenient Person to procure the Peace fol. 152 of England her Answer to to the Irish Agents fol. 199 Querie whether the Protestant Agents at Oxford acted by the Protestant Committee of the Parliament of Ireland at Dublin fol. 144 Queries expounded by several Members in a Committee of the House of Commons against the sense of the Judges fol. 12 R RAconnel Battle fol. 105 The Lord Rannelagh pent up in Athlone till reliev'd by the Lieutenant General fol. 44 Rathmines Disaster fol. 221 Reasons why O Neil consulted not with the Councel at Kilkenny fol. 254 The Irish Rebellion discovered fol. 19 its success in Ulster fol. 27 60 progress in Lemster fol. 38 breaks out in Munster fol. 49 Connaght ibid. Remonstrance presented at Trim fol. 114 The Rebels tear the Order of Parliament fol. 35 55 Mercy was cruelty fol. 50 51 slanders cast on the English profligated fol. 57 endeavour to make themselves Masters of Lemster fol. 59 of Longford Letter by Costilough App. 25 Unskilful in Sieges fol. 71 Cruelties ibid. send Agents to forreign Princes fol. 98 receive Ministers from them ibid. are declared Subdued fol. 303 Several Rebellions fol. 14 c. Five Regiments arrive at Dublin fol. 52 Not the Defence of Religion Prerogative or Liberty but the Extirpation of the English Interest principally aim'd at by the Rebels fol. 10 c. The Officers Remonstrance threatning much danger fol. 111 Col. Reynold's takes Carrick fol. 227 Ross Battle fol. 109 Sir Benjamin Rydiard's Speech in defence of Religion fol. 35 touching Collections for Ireland fol. 27 S SIr William Saintleger President of Munster fol. 49 83 his good Service there ibid. at Talloe fol. 85 his Letter to the Lord Lieutenant App. 35 takes Dungarran fol. 85 his vigilance and faithfulness fol. 88 death ibid. Upon the recalling the King's Ships principal Commanders land in Ireland fol. 83 The Scots thought the King's Offer to go for Ireland a great Demonstration of his Care fol. 70 Yet the Scotch Councel as well as the two Houses interceded earnestly against this design pretending the hazard his Sacred Person would be in Burnet fol. 163 The meer Scots did little in Ireland the English Scots did good Service fol. 101 152 The Scots beaten at Benburgh fol. 162 in Ulster join with Hamilton to invade England fol. 195 Declaration against the standing Army in Ireland fol. 210 Souldiers sent into England fol. 138 receive an Oath ibid. disobey what Preston engaged for fol. 171 The Spaniard prevails with the Irish to send no men into England fol. 160 Stafford betrays Wexford-Castle to Cromwell fol. 225 The States first dispatch to the King at Edenburgh fol. 27 second dispatch to the King fol. 30 his Warrant to the Earl of Ormond and Ossory to fight the Rebels fol. 42 Letter to the Lord Lieutenant expressing the sad Condition they were in fol. 43 Captain Stutfield's good Service in the relief of Tredagh fol. 63 64 Colonel Synnot's Propositions for the delivery of Wexford fol. 226 T THe Lord Taaff goes for England fol. 34 returns to Ireland fol. 123 beaten by Inchequin fol. 187 is at Rathmines Battle fol. 190 helps to expel the Nuncio fol. 221 goes to the D. of Lorrain fol. 285 Tecroghan delivered to the Parliamentarians fol. 255 Sir Hen. Titchbourn sent Governour of Tredagh fol. 29 certifies the Lord Lieutenant that Mellifont was besieged fol. 37 his excellent Service at Tredagh fol. 61 62 c. Lord Justice fol. 121 at Dungan Hill fol. 186 Sir Arthur Tirringham gives the State notice of the Rebellion fol. 27 his Conduct at Lisnegarvy fol. 38 Tool of Wickloe accused by Relie fol. 315 Tredagh forewarn'd to be besieg'd by the Reverend and Vigilant Dr. Jones fol. 28 besieged by the Rebels fol. 59 relieved with Provisions fol. 63 64 Col. Trevor beaten by Captain VVilliam Meredith fol. 224 New Troubles meditated in Ireland fol. 226 V SIr Charles Vavasor lands at Youghall fol. 85 his excellent Service at the Comroe fol. 116 takes Cloghleigh fol. 117 is taken Prisonner fol. 118 Captain William Vaughan's resolution in relieving Carrickmacros fol. 102 Knighted fol. 105 his Service at Ross Battle fol. 110 slain at Rathmines fol. 220 The pious and learned Primate Usher's Prophecy of the Rebellion fol. 24 agreement with Bishop Bramhall fol. 3 goes for England fol. 25 Col. Venables lands at Dublin fol. 218 appearing at Rathmines Defeat a few days after with exemplary Vertue he goes with Cromwell to the siege of Tredagh where the Assailants having been twice beaten off he the third time forced his entrance into the Town over the bodies of the slain Cromwell following At the Bridge in the midst of the Town he found some considerable opposition which would have been more could they within have drawn up the Draw-bridge which his Capt. Lieut. Thomas Chetam and Ensign Done hinder'd with a set of Pikes so the Town being taken he was sent to oppose George Monro in the North fol. 224 he is set upon in his March by Col. Trevor ibid. has Belfast surrendred to him fol. 225 takes in Charlemont and other Garisons fol. 255 VV LIeut Col. Waineman goes to Tredagh fol. 29 his Service at Marlington fol. 66 Dundalk fol. 67 An Abbreviate of the War in Munster 1642. from 83 to 89 1643. from 115 to 119 Connaght 1642. from 80 to 83 1643. from 119 to 120 Waterford content at last to receive a Supply of Souldiers so they might be old Irish of Ulster under Lieutenant General Farrall fol. 229 230 VVendesford Lord Deputy fol. 6 his Affection to the Earl of Strafford dies ibid. Viscount VVentworth Lord Deputy fol. 2 his Government fol. 2 3 made Earl of Strafford fol. 4 Lord Lieutenant of Ireland fol. 3 his Trial fol. 5 Death ibid. Sir Francis VVilloughby Governour of Dublin Castle fol. 27 is sent from the Marq. of Ormond Commissioner to the Parliament fol. 167 his eldest Son Capt. VVilloughby Governour of Wallway-Fort fol. 82 his Son Col. Francis Willoughby's Regiment reduced fol. 180 disbanded fol. 225 is sent Prisoner to Chester by Jones fol. 195 Colonel VVogan Governour of the Fort of Duncannon fol. 230 Major VVoodhouse returns unsatisfied from England fol. 105