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A67920 A discouerie of the true causes why Ireland was neuer entirely subdued, nor brought vnder obedience of the crowne of England, vntill the beginning of his Maiesties happie raigne; Discoverie of the true causes why Ireland was never entirely subdued Davies, John, Sir, 1569-1626. 1612 (1612) STC 6348; ESTC S109372 93,412 291

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Ireland a Gouernor much feared of the Kings Enemies and exceedingly honored and beloued of the Kings subiects And the instructions giuen by the state of Ireland to Iohn Allen Maister of the Rols employed into England neere about the same time doe declare as much wherein among other things hee is required to aduertise the King that his Land of Ireland was so much decayed as that the Kings Lawes were not obeyed twenty miles in compas Whereupon grew that By-word vsed by the Irish viz That they dwelt By-west the Law which dwelt beyond the Riuer of the Barrow which is within 30. Miles of Dublin The same is testified by Baron Finglas in his Discourse of the decay of Ireland which hee wrote about the 20. yeare of King Henry 8. And thus we see the effect of the Reformation which was intended by Sir Edward Poynings THE next Attempt of Reformation was made in the 28. yeare of King Henry 8. by the Lorde Leonard Gray who was created Viscount of Garny in this Kingdome and helde a Parliament wherein many excellent Lawes were made But to prepare the mindes of the people to obey these Lawes he began first with a Martiall course For being sent ouer to suppresse the Rebellion of the Giraldines which he performed in few months he afterwards made a victorious Circuit round about the Kingdome beginning in Offaly against O Connor who had ayded the Giralàines in their Rebellion and from thence passing along through all the Irish Countries in Leinster and so into Mounster wher hee tooke pledges of the degenerate Earle of Desmond and thence into Conaght and thence into Vlster then concluded this warlicke Progresse with the Battell of Belahoo in the Borders of Meth as is before remembred The principall Septs of the Irishry beeing all terrified and most of them broken in this iourney manie of their chiefe Lords vppon this Deputies returne came to Dublin and made their submissions to the crown of England Namely the O Neales O Relies of Vlster Mac Murrogh O Birne and O Carrol of Leinster and the Bourks of Conaght This preparation being made he first propounded and passed in Parlament these Lawes which made the great alteration in the State Ecclesiastical Namely the Act which declared King Henry the eight to bee supreame Head of the Church of Ireland The Act probibiting Apeales to the church of Rome the Act for first fruites and twentith part to be paid to the King the Act for Faculties and Dispensations And lastly the Act that did vtterly abolish the vsurped Authoritie of the Pope Next for the encrease of the Kings Reuennew By one Act he suppressed sundry Abbeyes and Religious Houses and by another Acte resumed the Lands of the Absentees as is before remembred And for the Ciuill Gouernment a speciall Statute was made to abolish the Black-Rents and tributes exacted by the Irish vpon the English Colonies and another Law enacted that the English Apparrell Language manner of liuing should bee vsed by all such as would acknoledge themselues the Kings Subiects This Parliament being ended the Lord Leonard Gray was suddenly reuokt and put to death in England so as hee liued not to finish the woorke of Reformation which he had begun which notwithstanding was well pursued by his successors Sir Anthony Saint-Leger Vnto whom all the Lords and Chiefetanes of the Irishry and of the degenerate English throughout the Kingdome made their seueral submissions by Indenture which was the fourth general submission of the Irish made since the first attempt of the Conquest of Ireland whereof the first was made to King Henry 2. the second to k. Iohn the third to K. Richard 2. and his last to Sir Anthony Saint-Leger in 33. of Hen. 8. IN these Indentures of submission all the Irish Lords do acknowledge K. Henry the eight to be their Soueraign Lord and King and desire to bee accepted of him as subiects They confesse the Kings supremacy in all causes do vtterly renounce the Popes Jurisdiction which I conceiue to bee worth the noting because when the Irish had once resolued to obey the king they made no scruple to renounce the Pope And this was not only done by the meere Irish but the chiefe of the degenerate English Families did perfourme the same as Desmond Barry and Roche in Mounster and the Bourkes which bore the Title of Mac william in Conaght These submissions being thus taken the Lorde Deputy and Counsell for the present Gouernment of those Irish Countries made certaine Ordinances of state not agreeable altogither with the Rules of the Law of England the reason whereof is exprest in the preamble of those Ordinances Quia nondum sic sapiunt leges Iura vt secundū ea iam immediatè viuere regipossint The chiefe points or Articles of which Orders registred in the Counsel Booke are these That King Henrie the eight shold be accepted reputed and named King of Ireland by all the Inhabitants of the Kingdome that al Archbishops and Bishops should bee permitted to exercise their Iurisdiction in euery Diocesse throughout the Land that tithes should be duely set out and paide that Children should not be admitted to Benefices that for euery Manslaughter and theft aboue 14 d committed in the Irish Contries the offender shold pay a fine of 40. li. twenty pound to the King and 20. li. to the Captaine of the Country and for euery thefte vnder 14. d. a fine of fiue markes should be paid 46. s. viij d to the Captaine and 20. s. to the Tanister That Horsemen and Kearn shold not be imposed vppon the Common people to beefed and maintained by them That the Maister shold answer for his seruants and the Father for his Children That Cuttinges should not be made by the Lorde vppon his Tenants to maintaine war with his neighbors but only to beare his necessary expences c. These ordinances of state being made and published there were nominated and appointed in euery prouince certaine Orderers or Arbitraters who instead of these Irish Erehons should heare and determine all their Controuersies In Conaght the Arch-Bishop of Tuam the Bishop of Clonfert Captaine wakeley and Captaine Ouington In Munster the Bishop of VVaterford the Bishop of Corke and Rosse the Maior of Corke and Maior of Yough-hall In Vlster the Archbishop of Ardmagh the Lord of Lowth And if any difference did arise which they could not end either for the difficultie of the cause or for the obstinacy of the parties they were to certifie the Lord Deputy and Counsell who would decide the matter by their authority Heereuppon the Irish Captaines of lesser Territories which had euer bin oppressed by the greater mightier some with Risings out others with Bonaght and others with Cuttings and spendings at pleasure did appeale for Iustice to the Lorde Deputy who vpon hearing their Complaints did alwayes order that they should all imediatly depend vpon the King and
the Sea-coasts of Leinster and Mounster drew ouer the King in person the next year after cum quingentis Militihus as Giraldus Cnmbrensis reporteth who was present in Ireland at that time Which if they were but fiue hundered souldiers seemeth too smal a traine for so great a Prince But admit they wer fiue hundred knights yet because in those dayes euery Knight was not a Commaunder of a Regiment or Company but most of them serued as priuate men sometimes a hundered Knightes vnder a Speare as appeareth by the Lists of the ancient armies we cannot coniecture his army to haue beene so great as might suffice to conquer all Ireland being diuided into so many Principalities and hauing so manie Hydraes heads as it had at that time For albeit Tacitus in the life of Agricola doth report that Agricola hauing subdued the greatest part of Great Britaine did signifie to the Senat of Rome that he thought Ireland might also be conquered with one Legion and a few ayds I make no doubt but that if he had attempted the conquest thereof with a farre greater army he would haue found himselfe deceiued in his coniecture For a Barbarous Country is not so easily conquered as a Ciuill where of Caesar had experience in his warres against the Gaules Germaines and Britaines who were subdued to the Roman Empire with farre greater difficulty then the rich kingdoms of Asia And againe a Countrey possessed with many pettie Lordes and States is not so soone brought vnder entirely as an entire Kingdome Gouerned by one Prince or Monarch And therefore the late King of Spaine could sooner win the Kingdome of Portugall then reduce the States of the Low-Countries BVt let vs see the successe of King Henrie the second doubtlesse his expedition was such as he might haue said with Caesar veni vidi vici For vpon his first arriuall his very Presence without drawing his sword preuailed so much as al the Petty-Kings or Great Lords within Leinster Conaght and Mounster submitted themselues vnto him promised to pay him tribute acknowledged him their chiefe and Soueraigne Lord. Besides the better to assure this inconstant Sea-Nimph who was so easily wonne the Pope would needs giue her vnto him with a Ring Coniugio iungam stabili propriamque dicabo But as the Conquest was but slight and superficiall so the Popes Donation and the Irish Submissions were but weake and fickle assurances For as the Pope had no more interrest in this kingdome then He which offered to Christ all the kingdomes of the earth so the Irish pretend That by their Law a Tanist might do no Act that might bind his successor But this was the best assurance hee could get from so many strong Nations of people with so weake a power and yet he was so well pleased with this title of the Lordship of Ireland as he placed it in his Royall Stile before the Dutchies of Normandy Aquitaine And so being aduertised of somestirs raised by his vnnatural sonnes in England within fiue months after his first arriuall hee departed out of Ireland without striking one blow or building one Castle or planting one Garrison among the Irish neither left he behinde him one true subiect more then those he found there at his comming ouer which were onely the English Aduenturers spoken of before who had gained the Port Townes in Leinster and Mounster and possessed some scopes of land thereunto adioyning partly by Strongbowes alliaunce with the Lord of Leinster and partly by plaine inuasion and Conquest And this is that Conquest of King Henry the second so much spoken of by so many Writers which though it were in no other manner then is before expressed yet is the entire Conquest of all Ireland attributed vnto him But the troth is the conquest of Ireland was made peece and peece by slow steppes and degrees and by seuerall attempts in seuerall ages There were sundry reuolutions as well of the English fortunes as of the Irish some-whiles one preuailing somewhiles the other and it was neuer brought to a full period till his Maiesty that now is came to the Crowne As for King Henry the second hee was farre from obtaining that Monarchy Royall and true Soueraignetie which his Maiesty who nowe raigneth hath ouer the Irish. For the Irish Lords did onely promise to become Tributaries to King Henry the second And such as pay onely Tribute though they bee placed by Bodin in the first degree of Subiection are not properlie Subiects but Soueraignes For though they bee lesse and inferiour vnto the Prince to whom they pay Tribute yet they hold all other pointes of Soueraignty and hauing paide their Tribute which they promised to haue their peace they are quit of all other duties as the same Bodin writeth And therefore though King Henry the second had the title of Soueraigne Lorde ouer the Irish yet did he not put those thinges in execution which are the true markes and differences of Soueraignty For to giue Lawes vnto a people to institute Magistrats and Officers ouer them to punish and pardon Malefactors to haue the sole authority of making warre and peace and the like are the true markes of Soueraignetie which King Henry the second had not in the Irish Countreyes but the Irish Lords did still retaine all these prerogatiues to themselues For they gouerned their people by the Brehon Law they made their owne Magistrates and Officers they pardoned and punnished all Malefactours within their seuerall Countries they made warre and peace one with another without controulment and this they did not onely during the raigne of King Henry the second but afterwardes in all times euen vntill the Raigne of Queen Elizabeth And it appeareth what maner of subiects these Irish Lords were by the Concorde made betweene K. Henrie the second and Rodericke ô Connor the Irish King of Conaght in the yeare 1175. which is recorded by Houeden in this forme Hic est finis Concordia inter Dominū regem Angliae Henricū filiū Imperatricis Rodoricum Regem Conactae scilicet quod Rex c. Angliae concessit praedict Roderico Ligeo hominisuo vt sit Rex sub eo paratus ad seruitium suum vt homo suus c. And the Commission whereby King Henry the second made VVilliam Fitz-Adelme his Lieutenant of Ireland hath this direction Archiepiscopis Episcopis Regibus Comitibus Baronibus omnibus fidelibus suis in Hibernia Salutem Whereby it is manifest that hee gaue those Irish Lords the Title and stile of Kinges King Iohn likewise did grant diuers Charters to the King of Conaght which remaine in the Tower of London And afterwards in the time of King Henrie the third wee finde in the Tower a graunt made to the King of Thomond in these words Rex Regi Tosmond salutem Concessimus vobis terram Tosmond quam prius tenuistis per firmam centum triginta marcarum Tenendum de
yet remayning in Breminghams Tower made by william Fitz-warren Seneshall and Farmour of the Landes in Vlster seized into the Kings hands after the death of walter de Burgo Earle of Vlster from the fifth yeare of Edward the third vntill the eight yeare doe amount but to 900. and odde pounds at what time the Irishry had not made so great an inuasion vpon the earledome of Vlster as they had done in the time of King Richard the second As vaine a thing it is that I haue seen written in an ancient Manuscript touching the Customes of this realme in the time of King Edward the third that those dutics in those daies should yearely amount to 10000. Markes which by mine owne search and view of the Records heere I can iustly controll For vppon the late reducing of this ancient inheritance of the crown which had beene detained in most of the Port-Townes of this Realme for the space of a hundred yeares and vpwardes I tooke some paines according to the duty of my place to vis● all the Pipe-Rolles wherein the Accompts of Customes are contained and found those duties aunswered in euery Port for 250. yeares together but did not find that at any time they did exceed a thousand pound Per annum and no maruell for the subsidie of Pondage was not then known and the greatest profite did arise by the Cocquet of Hides for Wooll and Wooll-fels were euer of little value in this Kingdome But now againe let vs see how the Martiall affayrs proceeded in Ireland Sir william winsor continued his gouerment till the latter end of the raign of King Edward the thirde keeping but not enlarging the English borders IN the beginning of the raigne of King Richard the second the State of England began to thinke of the recouery of Ireland For then was the first Statute made against Absentees commanding al such as had Land in Ireland to returne reside thereupon vppon paine to forfeite two third parts of the profit thereof Againe this King before himselfe intended to passe ouer committed the Gouernment of this Realme to such great Lordes successiuely as he did most loue and fauor first to the Earle of Oxford his Cheefe Minion whom he created Marquesse of Dublin and Duke of Ireland next to the Duke of Surrey his halfe Brother and lastly to the Lord Mortimer Earle of March and Vlster his Cosin and heyre apparant Among the Patent Rolles in the Tower the ninth yeare of Rich. the 2. we finde fiue hundred men at Armes at xij d. a peece Per diem and a 1000. A chers at vi pence a piece per diem appointed for the Duke of Ireland Super Conquestu illius terrae per duos annos for those are the wordes of that Record But for the other two Lieutenants I do not find the certain numbers wherof their armies did consist But certaine it is that they were scarse able to defend the English borders much lesse to reduce the whol Island For one of them namely the Earle of March was himselfe slain vpon the borders of Meth for reuenge of whose death the King himselfe made his second voyage into Ireland in the last yeare of his raigne For his first voyage in the eighteenth yeare of his raigne which was indeed a VoyageRoyall was made vpon another motiue and occasion which was this Vpon the vacancy of the Empire this King hauing married the King of Bohemiaes Daughter whereby hee had great alliance in Germany did by his Ambassadors solicit the Princes Electors to choose him Emperour but another being elected and his ambas sadors returned hee would needes know of them the cause of his repulse in that Competition they tolde him plainly that the Princes of Germanie did not thinke him fit to commaund the Empire who was neither able to hold that which his Ancestours had gained in France nor to rule his inso lent Subiects in England nor to Maister his rebellious people of Ireland This was enough to kindle in the heart of a young Prince a desire to performe some great enterprise And therefore finding it no fit time to attempt France he resolued to finish the Conquest of Ireland and to that end he leuied a mightie armie consisting of foure thousand men at Armes and 30000. Archers which was a sufficient power to haue reduced the whol Island if he had first broken the Irish with a warre and after established the English Lawes among them and not haue beene satisfied with their light submissions onely wherewith in all ages they haue mockt and abused the State of England But the Irish Lords knowing this to be a sure pollicie to dissolue the forces which they were not able to resist for their Ancestors had put the same trick and imposture vppon King Iohn and King Henry the second assoone as the King was arriued with his army which he brought ouer vnder S. Edwards Banner whose name was had in great veneration amongst the Irish they all made offer to submit themselues Whereupon the Lorde Thomas Mowbray Earle of Nottingham and Marshall of England was authorized by speciall Commission to receiue the homages Oaths of fidelity of all the Irishrie of Leinster And the King himselfe hauing receiued humble Letters from Oneale wherein hee styleth himselfe Prince of the Irishry in Vlster and yet acknoledgeth the King to be his Soueraign Lorde perpetuus Dominus Hiberniae remoued to Droghedab to accept the like submissions from the Irish of Vlster The men of Leinster namely Mac Murrogh O Byrne O Moore O Murrogh O Nolan and the cheefe of the Kinshelaghes in an humble and solemn manner did their homages made their Oaths of fidelity to the Earl Marshall laying aside their girdles their skeins and their Caps and falling downe at his feet vpon their knees Which whe they had performed the Earle gaue vnto each of them Osculum pacis Besides they were bound by feueral Indentures vpon great paines to bee paide to the Apostolique Chamber not onely to continue loyall subiects but that by a certaine day prefixed they and all their Sword men should clearely relinquish and giue vp vnto the King and his successors all their Landes and possessions which they held in Leinster and taking with them onely their mooueable goods shold serue him in his warres against his other Rebels In consideration whereof the King should giue them pay pensions during their liues and bestow the inheritance of all such lands vpon them as they shoulde recouer from the Rebels in any other part of the Realme And thereupon a pension of eighty Markes per annum was graunted to Art'Mac Murrogh chiefe of the Kauanaghes the enroulement whereof I found in the White Booke of the Exchequer heere And this was the effect of the seruice performed by the Earle Marshall by vertue of his Commission The King in like maner receiued the submissions of the Lords of Vlster namely O Neal O Hanlon Mac Donel
many years together yet the sundry rebellions ioyned with forraign inuasions vpon this Island whereby it was in danger to be vtterly lost to bee possessed by the enemies of the Crowne of England did quicken her Maiesties care for the preseruation thereof and to that end from time to time during her raigne she sent ouer such supplies of men and treasure as did suppresse the Rebels and repell the inuaders Howbeit before the transmitting of the last great army the forces sent ouer by Queene Elizabeth were not of sufficient power to break and subdue all the Irishry and to reduce and reforme the whole Kingdome but when the generall defection came which came not without a special prouidence for the final good of that kingdome though the second causes thereof were the faint prosecution of the Warre against Tyrone the practises of Priests and Iesuites the expectation of the ayds frō Spaine Then the extreame perill of loosing the Kingdome the dishonor danger that might thereby growe to the Crowne of England together with a iust disdaine conceiued by that great-minded Queene that so wicked and vngratefull a Rebell should preuayle against Her who had euer been victorious against all her enemies did moue and almost enforce her to send ouer that mighty army and did withall enflame the hearts of the Subiects of England chearefully to contribute to wardes the maintaining thereof a Million of sterling poundes at least which was done with a purpose only to Saue and not to Gaine a kingdom To keep and retaine that Soueraignetie which the Crowne of England had in Ireland such as it was and not to recouer a more absolute Dominion But as it falleth out many times that when a house is on fire the Owner to saue it from burning pulleth it downe to the ground but that pulling downe doeth giue occasion of building it vp againe in a better forme So these last warres which to saue the Kingdome did vtterly breake distroy this people produced a better effect then was at first expected For euery Rebellion when it is supprest dooth make the subiect weaker and the Prince stronger So this general reuolt when it was ouercom did produce a generall Obedience Reformation of al the Irishrie which euer before had beene disobedient vnreformed thereupon ensued the finall and full conquest of Ireland And thus much may suffice to bee spoken touching the defectes in the martiall affayres and the weake faint prosecution of the warre and of the seuerall Impediments or imployments which did hinder or diuert euery King of England successiuely from reducing Ireland to their absolute subiection IT now remaineth that wee shew the defects of the Ciuil Pollicy Gouernment which gaueno lesse impediment to the perfection of this Conquest THe first of that kinde doeth consist in this That the Crown of England did not from the beginning giue Lawes to the Irishry whereas to giue Lawes to a conquered people is the principall marke and effect of a perfect Conquest For albeit King Henrie the second before his returne out of Ireland held a Counsell or Parliament at Lissemore Vbi Leges Angliae ab omnibus sunt gratanter receptae Iuratoria Cautione Prastita confirmatae as Marth Paris writeth And though King Iohn in the 12. yeare of his raigne did establish the English Lawes and Customes heere and placed Sheriffes and other Ministers to rule and gouerne the people according to the Law of England and to that end Ipse duxit secum viros discretos legis peritos quorum communi consilio statuit praecepit leges Anglicanas teneri in Hibernia c. as wee finde it recorded among the Patent Rolles in the Tower 11. Hen. 3. m. 3. Though likewise King Henrie the third did graunt transmit the like Charter of liberties to his subiects of Ireland as himselfe and his Father had graunted to the Subiects of England as appeareth by another Recorde in the Tower 1. Hen 3. Pat. m. 13. And afterwards by a speciall Writ did commaund the Lord Iustice of Ireland Quod conuocatis Archiepiscopis Episcopis Comitibus Baronibus c. Coram eis legi faceret Chartam Regis Iohannis quam ipse fecit iurari à Magnatibus Hiberniae de legibus Constitutionibus Angliae obseruandis quod leges illas tencant obseruent 12. Hen. 3. Claus. m. 8. And after that againe the same King by Letters Patents vnder the great seale of England did confrime the establishment of the English Lawes made by King Iohn in this forme Quia pro Communi vtilitate terrae Hiberniae ac vnitate terrarum de Communi Consilio prouisum sit quod omnes leges consuetudines quae in regno Angliae tenentur in Hiberniâ teneantur eadem terra eiusdem legibus subiaceat ac per easdem regatur sicut I●hanes Rex cumiliuc esset Statuit firmiter mandauit ideo volumus quod omnia breuia de Communi Iure quae currunt in Anglia similiter currant in Hibernia sub nouo sigillo nostro c. Teste meipso apud woodstocke c. Which confirmation is found among the PatentRolles in the Tower Anno 30. Hen. 3. Notwithstanding it is euident by all the Records of this Kingdome that onely the English Colonies and some few Septs of the Irishry which were enfranchised by special Charters wer admitted to the benefit and protection of the Lawes of England and that the Irish generally were held and reputed Aliens or rather enemies to the Crowne of England insomuch as they were not only disabled to bring anie actions but they were so farre out of the protection of the Lawe as it was often adiudged no fellony to kill a meere Irish-man in the time of peace That the meere Irish were reputed Aliens appeareth by sundrie Records wherein Iudgement is demanded if they shall be answered in Actions brought by them and likewise by the Charters of Denization which in all Ages were purchased by them In the common plea-Rolles of 28. Edward the third which are yet perserued in Breminghams Tower this case is adiudged Simon Neal brought an action of trespasse against william Newlagh for breaking his Close in Claudalkin in the County of Dublin the Defendant doth plead that the plaintiffe is Hibernicus non de Quinque sanguinibus and demandeth iudgement if he shall be answered The Plaintiffe replieth Quod ipse est de quinque sanguinibus viz De les Oneiles de Vlton qui per Concessionem progenitorū Domini Regis Libertatibus Anglicis gaudere debent vtuntur proliberis hominibus reputantur The Defendant reioyneth that the Plaintiffe is not of the Oneales of Vlster Nec de quinque sanguinibus And thereupon they are at yssue Which being found for the Plaintiffe he had Iudgement to recouer his dammages against the Defendant By this Record it apeareth that fiue principal blouds or Septs of the Irishry were
Irish nor the benefit and protection therof allowed vnto them though they earnestly desired and sought the same For as long as they were out of the protection of the Lawe so as euery English-man might oppresse spoyle and kill them without controulment howe was it possible they shoulde bee other then Out-Lawes Enemies to the Crown of England If the King woulde not admit them to the condition of Subiects how could they learn to acknoledge and obey him as their Soueraigne When they might not conuerse or Commerce with any Ciuill men nor enter into any Towne or Citty without perrill of their Liues whither should they flye but into the Woods and Mountaines and there liue in a wilde and barbarous maner If the English Magistrates would not rule them by the Law which doth punish Treason and Murder Thest with death but leaue them to be ruled by their owne Lords and Lawes why shoulde they not embrace their owne Brebon Lawe which punnisheth no offence but with a Fine or Ericke If the Irish bee not permitted to purchase estates of Free-holds or Inheritance which might discend to their Children according to the course of our Common Lawe must they not continue their custome of Tanistrie which makes all their possessions vncertaine and brings Confusion Barbarisme and Inciuility In a word if the English woulde neither in peace Gouerne them by the Law nor could in War root them out by the sword must they not needes bee prickes in their eyes and thornes in their sides till the worlds end and so the Conquest neuer bee brought to perfection BVton the other side If from the beginning the Lawes of England had beene established and the Brehon or Irish Law vtterly abolished aswell in the Irish Countries as the English Colonies If there had been no difference made betweene the Nations in point of Iustice and protection but al had beene gouerned by one Equall Iust and Honourable Lawe as Dido speaketh in Virgill Tros Tyriusuè mihi nullo discrimine habetur If vpon the first submission made by the Irish Lordes to King Henry the second Quem in Regem Dominum receperunt saith Matth. Paris or vpon the second submission made to King Iohn when Plusquam viginti Reguli maximo timore perterriti homagium ei fidelitatem fecerunt as the same Author writeth or vppon the third general submission made to King Richard the second when they did not only do homage fealty but bound themselues by Indentures and Oaths as is before expressed to becom and continue loyall subiects to the crown of England If any of these three Kings who came each of them twice in person into this kingdome had vppon these submissions of the Irishry receiued them all both Lords Tenants into their mediate protection deuided their seuerall Countries into Counties made Sheriffes Coroners and Wardens of the peace therein sent Iustices Itinerants halfe yearely into euerie part of the Kingdome aswell to punish Malefactors as to heare and determine causes betweene party and party according to the course of the Lawes of England taken surrenders of their Lands and territories graunted estates vnto them to holde by English Tenures graunted them Markets Fayres and other Franchises and erected Corporate Townes among them all which hath bin performed since his Maiesty came to the Crowne assuredly the Irish Countries had long since beene reformed and reduced to Peace Plenty and Ciuility which are the effects of Lawes and good Gouernment they hadde builded Houses planted Orchards Gardens erected Towne-shippes and made prouision for their posterities there had beene a perfect Vnion betwixt the Nations and consequently a perfect Conquest of Ireland For the Conquest is neuer perfect till the war be at an end and the war is not at an end till there be peace and vnity and there can neuer be vnity Concord in any one Kingdom but where there is but one King one Allegiance and one Law TRue it is that King Iohn made xii shires in Leinster Mounster namely Dublin Kildare Meth Vriel Catherlogh Kilkenny VVexford waterford Corke Limeric Kerrie and Tipperary Yet these Counties did stretch no farther then the Landes of the English Colonies did extend In them only were the English Lawes published and put in Execution and in them only did the Itinerant Iudges make their circuits and yisitations of Iustice and not in the countries possessed by the Irishry which contained two third partes of the Kingdome at least And th●…●…re King Edward the first before the court of Parliament was established in Ireland did transmit the Statures of England in this forme Dominus Rex mandauit Breue suum in haec verba Edwardus Dei gratia Rex Angliae Dominus Hiberniae c. Cancellario suo Hiberniae Salutem Quaedam statutaper nos de assensil Praelatorum Comitū Baronū Communitat regni nostri nuper apud Lincolne quaedam alia statuta postmodum apud Eborum facta quae in dicta terrae nostra Hiberniae ad Communem vtilitatē populi nostri eiusdem terrae obseruari volumus vobis mittimus sub sigillo nostro mandantes quod statuta illa in dict a Cancellaria nostra Custodiri ac in rotulis eiusdem Cancellariae irrotulari adsingulas place as nostras in terra nostra Hiberniae sing ulos Commitatus eiusdem terrae mittifaciatis ministris nostris placearum illa rum et Vicecomitibus dictorum Comitatuū mandantes quod statuta illa coram ipsis publicari ea in omnibus et singulis Articulis suis obseruari firmiter faciatis Teste meipso apud Nottingham c By which Writt and by all the Pipe-Rolles of that time it is manifest that the Lawes of England were published and put in execution onely in the Counties which were then made and limited not in the Irish Countries which were neglected and left wilde and haue but of late yeares bin deuided in one and twenty Counties more Againe true it is that by the Statute of Kilkenny enacted in this kingdome in the fortith yeare of King Edward the thirde the Brehon Law was condemned and abolished and the vse and practise thereof made High-Treason But this Lawe extended to the English onely and not to the Irish For the Lawe is penned in this forme Item Forasmuch as the diuersitie of Gouernment by diuers Lawes in one Land doth make diuersity of ligeance and dehates between the people It is accorded and established that heereafter no Englishman haue debate with another Englishman but according to the course of the Common Law And that no Englishman be ruled in the definition of their debates by the March-Law or the Brehon Law which by reason ought not to bee named a Law but an euill Custome but that they be ruled as right is by the common Lawe of the land as the Lieges of our Soueraigne LORD the King And if any do to the contrary thereof be attainted that he be taken and
according to the examples before recited they had reduced as well the Irish Countries as the English Colonies vnder one forme of ciuil gouernment as now they are the Meres Bounds of the Marches and Borders had beene long since worne out and forgotten for it is not fit as Cambrensis writeth that a King of an Islande should haue any Marches or Borders but the foure Seas both Nations had beene in corporated and vnited Ireland had beene entirely Conquered Planted and Improoued and returned a rich Reuennew to the Crowne of England THE next error in the Ciuill pollicy which hindered the perfection of the Conquest of Ireland did consist in the Distribution of the Landes and possessions which were woonne and conquered from the Irish. For the Scopes of Land which were graunted to the first Aduenturers were too Large and the Liberties and Royalties which they obtained therein were too great for Subiects though it stood with reason that they should be rewarded liberally out of the fruites of their owne Labours since they did Militare proprijs stipendijs and receiued no pay from the Crowne of England Notwithstanding there ensued diuers inconuiences that gaue great impediment to the Conquest FIrst the Earle Strongbow was entituled to the whole Kingdom of Leinster partly by Inuasion and partly by Marriage albeit hee surrendred the same entirely to King Henrie the second his Soueraigne for that with his license hee came ouer and with the Ayde of his Subiects hee had gayned that great inheritance yet did the K. re-grant backe againe to him and his heyres all that Prouince reseruing onely the Citty of Dublin the Cantreds next adioyning with the Maritime Townes and principall Forts Castles Next the same King granted to Robert Fitz-Stephen and Miles Cogan the whole Kingdome of Corke from Lismore to the Sea To Phillip le Bruce he gaue the whole Kingdome of Limericke with the Donation and Byshopprickes and Abbeyes except the Citie and one Cantred of Land adioyning To Sir Hugh de Lacy all Meth. To Sir Iohn De Courcy all Vlster to william Burke Fitz-Adelm the greatest part of Conaght In like manner Sir Thomas de Clare obtained a graunt of all Thomond and Otho de Grandison of all Tipperary and Robert le Poer of the territory of VVaterford the Citty it selfe and the Cantred of the Oastmen only excepted And thus was all Ireland Cantonized among tenne persons of the English Nation And thogh they had not gained the possession of one third part of the whole Kingdom yet in Title they were Owners and Lords of all so as nothing was left to bee graunted to the Natiues And therefore we do not find in any Record or storie for the space of three hundred yeares after these Aduenturers first ariued in Ireland that any Irish Lorde obtained a grant of his Country from the Crowne but onely the King of Thomond who had a grant but during King Henry the third his Minority and Rotherick O Connor King of Conaght to whom King Henrie the second before this distribution made did graunt as is before declared Vt sit Rex sub eo moreouer Vt teneat terram suam Conactiae it a bene inpace sicut tenuit antequam Dominus Rex intravet Hiberniam And whose successour in the 24. of Henrie the third when the Bourkes had made a strong plantation there had welny expelled him out of his territory he came ouer into England as Matth. Paris writeth and made complaint to King Henrie the third of this inuasion made by the Bourkes vppon his Land insisting vppon the g●auntes of King Henrie the second and King Iohn and affirming that he had duely paide an yearely tribute of fiue thousand marks for his Kingdome Whereupon the King called vnto him the Lord Maurice Fitz-Girald who was then Lorde Iustice of Ireland and President in the Court and commanded him that he should roote out that vniust plantation which Hubert Earle of Kent had in the time of his greatnesse planted in those parts and wrote withall to the greatmen of Ireland to remooue the Bourkes and to establish the King of Conaght in the quiet possession of his Kingdome Howbeit I doe not read that the King of Englands commandement or direction in this behalfe was euer put in execution For the troth is Richard de Burgo had obtained a graunt of all Conaght after the death of the King of Conaght then liuing For which he gaue a thousand pounde as the Record in the Tower reciteth the third of Henry 3. claus 2. And besides our great English Lords coulde not endure that any Kings should raigne in Ireland but themselues nay they could hardly endure that the Crown of England it selfe should haue any Iurisdiction or power ouer them For many of these Lordes to whome our Kings had granted these petty kingdomes did by Vertue and colour of these Grants claime and exercise Iura Regalia within their Territories insomuch as there were no lesse thē eight Counties Palatines in Ireland at one time For VVilliam Marshall Earle of Pembroke who married the daughter and heyre of Strongbow being Lord of all Leynster had Royall Iurisdiction thoroughout al that Prouince This great Lord had fiue sonnes and fiue daughters euery of his sonnes enioyed that Seigniory successiuely and yet al died without Issue Then this great Lordship was broken and diuided pertition made betweene the fiue daughters who were married into the Noblest Houses of England The Countie of Catherlogh was allotted to the eldest VVexford to the second Kilkenny to the third Kildare to the fourth the greatest part of Leix nowe called the Queenes County to the fift In euery of these portions the Coparceners seuerally exercised the same Iurisdiction Royall which the Earle Marshall and his Sonnes had vsed in the whole Prouince Whereby it came to passe that there were fiue County Palatines erected in Leinster Then had the Lord of Meth the same Royall libertie in all that Territory the Earle of Vlster in all that Prouince and the Lorde of Desmond and Kerry within that County All these appeare vppon Record and were all as ancient as the time of King Iohn onely the liberty of Tipperarie which is the onely Liberty that remaineth at this day was granted to Iames Butler the first Earle of Ormond in the third yeare of King Edward the third These absolute Palatines made Barons Knights did exercise high Iustice in all points within their Territories erected Courts for Criminall and ciuill Causes and for their owne Reuennews in the same forme as the Kings Courts wer established at Dub lin made their own Iudges Seneshals Sheriffes Corroners and Escheators so as the Kinges Writt did not run in those Counties which took vp more then two partes of the English Colonies but onely in the Church Lands lying within the same which were
liues deliuered to Shepheards to be nourished and bred vp when they haue bin restored to their great fortunes haue still retained their loue and affection to their Fosterers whom for manie yeares they tooke to be their Parents yet this was a rare case and few examples are to be found thereof But such a generall Custome in a Kingdome in giuing and taking children to Foster making such a firme Alliance as it doth in Ireland was neuer seene or heard of in any other Countrey of the world besides THE like may be said of Gossipred or or Compaternitie which though by the Canon Law it be a spirituall affinity and a Iuror that was Gossip to either of the parties might in former times haue bin challenged as not indifferent by our Law yet there was no nation vnder the Sun that euer made so Religious accompt thereof as the Irish. Now these two Customs which of themselues are indifferent in other Kingdomes became exceeding euill and full of mischiefe in this Realm by reason of the inconueniences which followed thereupon For they made as I saide before strong parties and factions wherby the great men were enabled to oppresse their Inferiours and to oppose their Equals and their followers were borne out and countenanced in all their lewde and wicked actions For Fosterers Gossips by the common Custome of Ireland were to maintaine one another in all causes lawful and vnlawfull which as it is a Combination and Confederacy punishable in all well-gouerned Common-weales so was it not one of the least causes of the common misery of this Kingdome I omit their common repudiation of their Wiues their promiscuous generation of Children their neglect of lawfull Matrimony their vncleannesse in Apparrell Diet Lodging and their contempt and scorne of all thinges necessary for the Ciuill life of man These were the Irish Customes which the English Colonies did embrace and vse after they had reiected the Ciuill and Honorable Lawes and Customes of England whereby they became degenerate and metamorphosed like Nabuchadnezzar who although he had the face of a man had the heart of a Beast or like those who had drunke of Circes Cuppe and were turned into very Beasts and yet tooke such pleasure in their beastly manner of life as they would not returne to their shape of men againe Insomuch as within lesse time then the Age of a man they had no markes or differences left amongst them of that Noble nation from which they were discended For as they did not only forget the English Language scorne the vse thereof but grew to bee ashamed of their very English Names though they were Noble and of great Antiquity and tooke Irish Surnames and Nicke-names Namely the two most potent families of the Bourks in Conaght after the house of the Red Earle failed of Heyres-males called their Cheefes Mac william Eighter and Mac william Oughter In the same Prouince Bremingham Baron of Athenrie called himselfe Mac Yoris Dexecester or De'exon was cald Mac Iordan Mangle or de Angulo took the name of Mac Costelo Of the Inferior families of the Bourkes one was called Mac Hubbard another Mac Dauid In Munster of the great Families of the Geraldines planted there One was called Mac Morice chiefe of the house of Lixnaw and another Mac Gibbon who was also called the white Knight The chiefe of the Baron of Dunhoynes house who is a branch of the house of Ormond tooke the Surnames of Mac Pheris Condon of the Countie of waterford was called Mac Maioge and the Arch-Deacon of the County of Kilkenny Mac Odo And this they did in contempt and hatred of the English Name and Nation of these degenerate families became more mortal enemies then the meere Irish. And whereas the state and Gouernment beeing growne weake by their defection did to reduce them to Obedience grant them many protections and Pardons The cheapenesse whereof in all ages hath brought great dishonor and damage to this Commonweal they grew so vngratefull and vnnatural as in the end they scorned that grace fauour because the acceptance thereof did argue them to be subiects and they desired rather to bee accounted Enemies then Rebels to the Crowne of England Heereupon was that olde Verse made which I finde Written in the White Booke of the Exchequer in a hand as auncient as the time of King Edward the third By graunting Charters of peas To false English withouten les This Land shall be mich vndoo But Gossipred and alterage And leesing of our Language Haue mickely holp theretoo And therefore in a close Roll in the Tower bearing this Title Articuli in Hibernia obseruandi we finde these two Articles among others 1. Iusticiarius Hiberniae non concedat perdonationes de morte hominis nec de Roberijs seu incendijs quod de caetero certificet dominum regem de nominibus petentium 2. Item Quod nec Iusticiarius nec aliquis Magnas Hiberniae concedat protectiones alicui contra pacem Regis existent c. But now it is fit to looke backe and consider when the old English Colonies became so degenerate and in what Age they fell away into that Irish barbarisme reiecting the English lawes and Customes Assuredly by comparing the ancient Annalles of lrelaud with the Records remaining heere in the Tower of London I do find that this generall defection fell out in the latter end of the raign of king Edward the second and in the beginning of the raigne of King Edward the thirde And all this great innovation grewe within the space of thirty years within the compasse of which time there fell out diuers mischieuous accidents whereby the whole kingdome was in a maner lost For first Edward de Bruce inuaded Ireland with the Scottish Army and preuailed so farre as that he possessed the Maritime parts of vlster marched vp to the walles of Dublin spoiled the English Pale passed thorough Leinster and Munster as farre as Limericke and was Maister of the field in euery part of the kingdom This hapned in the tenth yeare of King Edward the second at what time the Crowne of England was weaker suffred more dishonor in both kingdomes then it did at any time since the Norman Conquest Then did the State of England send ouer Iohn de Hotham to be Treasurer heere with commission to call the great Lords of Ireland to gether and to take of them an Oath of Assoacition that they should loyally ioyne together in life death to preserue the right of the King of England and to expell the commonenemy But this Treasurer brought neither men nor money to performe this seruice At that time though Richard Bourk Earle of Vlster commonly called the Redde-Earle were of greater power then any other subiect in Ireland yet was he so farre stricken in yeares as that hee was vnable to mannage the martiall affaires as he had done during all the raigne of King Edward the
opportunity and passing ouer the Banne did first expell the English out of the Barony of Tuscard which is nowe called the Rout and likewise out of the Glynnes and other Lands vp as farre as Knockfergus which Countrey or extent of Lande is at this day called the lower Clan Hugh-Boy And shortly after that they came vp into the great Ardes which the Latine writers call Altitudines Vltoniae and was then the inheritaunce of the Sauages by whom they were valiantly resisted for diuers yeares but at last for want of Castles and fortifications for the saying of Henrie Sauage mentioned in euery Story is very memorable That a Castle of Bones was better then a Castle of Stones the English were ouer-run by the multitude of the Irishry So as about the thirtith of K. Edw. 3. some few yeares before the arriuall of the Duke of Clarence the Sauages were vtterly driuen out of the Great Ardes into a little nooke of land neer the Riuer of Strangford where they now possesse a little Territory called the little Ards and their greater patrimony tooke the name of the vpper Clan Hugh-Boy from the Sept of Hugh-Boy O Neale who became Inuaders thereof FOr Conaght some yonger branches of the Family of the Bourkes being planted there by the Red-Earle his Ancestors seeing their Chiefe to bee cut off and dead without Heire-male and no man left to gouern or protect that Prouince intruded presently into all the Earles Lands which ought to haue bin seized into the kings handes by reason of the minoritie of the heire And within a short space two of the most potent among them diuided that great Seigniory betwixt thē the one taking the name of Mac william Oughter and the other of Mac william Fighter as if the Lord william Bourk the last Earle of Vlster had lefte two sonnes of one name behinde him to inherit that Lordship in course of Gauelkinde But they well knewe that they were but Intruders vppon the Kings possession during the minority of the heire they knew those lands were the rightfull inheritance of that young Lady and consequently that the Law of England woulde speedily euict them out of their possession therefore they held it the best policy to cast off the yoake of English Law and to become meere Irish and according to their example drew al the rest of the English in that Prouince to do the like so as from thenceforth they suffered their possessions to run in course of Tanistry and Gauel-kinde They changed their names language and apparrell and all their ciuil manners and Customes of liuing Lastly about the 25. yeare of King Edward the third Sir Richard de Clarè was slaine in Thomond and al the English Colonies there vtterly supplanted Thus in that space of time which was betweene the tenth yeare of king Edward the second and the 30. yeare of King Edward the third I speak within compasse by the concurrence of the mischieses before recited all the old English Colonies in Munster Conaght and Vlster more then a third part of Leinster became degenerat fell away from the Crowne of England so as onely the foure Shyres of the English Pale remained vnder the Obedience of the Lawe and yet the Borders and Marches thereof were growne vnruly and out of order too being subiect to Blacke-Rents and Tribute of the Irish which was a greater defection then when tenne of twelue Tribes departed and fell away from the Kings of Iuda But was not the State of England sensible of this losse and dishonour Did they not endeuor to recouer the Land that was lost and to reduce the subiects to their Obedience Truely King Edward the second by the incursions of the Scottish Nation and by the insurrection of his Barons who raised his wife and his Sonne against him and in the end deposed him was diuerted and vtterly disabled to reforme the disorders of Ireland But assoone as the crown of England was transferred to K. Edw. 3. though hee were yet in his minority the State there beganne to looke into the desperate estate of thinges heere And finding such a general defection Letters were sent from the King to the great men and Prelates requiring them particularly to swear fealty to the Crowne of England Shortly after Sir Anthony Lucie a person of great authority in England in those daies was sent ouer to work a reformation in this Kingdome by a seuere course and to that ende the King wrote expresly to the Earle of Vlster and others of the Nobilitie to assist him as is before remembered presently vpon his arriual he arrested Maurice Fitz-Thomas Earle of Desmond and Sir william Bremingham and committed them prisoners to the Castle of Dublin where Sir william Bremingham was executed for treason though the Earle of Desmond were left to Mainprize vpon condition hee should appeare before the King by a certain day and in the meane time to continue loyall AFter this the King being aduertised that the ouer-large Graunts of Lands and Liberties made to the Lords of English Bloude in Ireland made them so insolent as they scorned to obey the Law and the Magistrate did absolutely resume all such Crants as is before declared But the Earle of Desmond aboue al men found himselfe grieued with this resumption or Repeale of Liberties and declared his dislike discontentment insomuch as he did not only refuse to come to a Parliament at Dublin summoned by Sir william Morris Deputie to the L. Iohn Darcy the kings Lieutenant But as we haue said before he raised such dissention betweene the English of bloud and the English of birth as the like was neuer seen from the time of the first planting of our Nation in Ireland And in this factious and seditious humour hee drewe the Earle of Kildare and the rest of the nobility with the Cittizens and Burgesses of the principall Townes to hold a seuerall Parliament by themselues at Kilkenny where they framed certaine Articles against the Deputy transmitted the same into England to the King Heereupon Sir Raphe Vfford who had lately before married the Countesse of Vlster a man of courage and seuerity was made Lord Iustice who forth with calling a Parliament sent a speciall commandement to the Earle of Desmond to appeare in that great Councel but the Earle wilfully refused to come Whereupon the Lord Iustice raised the Kings Standard and marching with an Army into Munster seized into the Kings handes all the possessions of the Earle took and executed his principall followers Sir Eustace le Poer Sir william Graunt Sir Iohn Cotterell enforced the Earle himselfe to flye and lurke till 26. Noblemen and Knights became Mainpernors for his appearance at a certaine day prefixed But he making default the second time the vttermost aduantage was taken against his sureties Besides at the same time this Lord Iustice caused the Earle
diem with an encrease of the number of his Archers viz 360 Archers on horsebacke out of Lancashire at vjd a peece per diem and 23. Archers out of Wales at ij d. a peece per diem The earle of Staffords entertainment was for himselfe vi s. viij d. per diem for a Banneret iiij s. per diem for xvij Knights ij s. a peece per diem for 78. esquires xij d. a peece per diem for 100 Archers on horsebacke vj d. a peece per diem Besides he had the command of 24. Archers out of Staffordshire 40. Archers out of worcestershire six Archers out of Shropshire at iiij d. a peece per diem The entertainment of Iames earle of Ormond was for himselfe iiij s. per diem for two Knights ij s. a peece per diem for 27 esquires xij d. a piece per diem for 20 Hoblers armed the Irish Horsemen were so called because they serued on Hobbies vj d. a peece per diem and for 20. Hoblers not armed iiij d. a peece per diem The entertainment of Sir Iohn Carew Banneret was for himselfe iiij s. perdiem for one Knight ij s. per diem for eight squires xij d. a peece per diem for ten Archers on horsebacke vj d. a peece per diem The entertainement of Sir william winsore was for himselfe ij s. per diem for two Knights ij s. a peece per diem for 49. Squiers xij d. a peece per diem for six Archers on horseback vj d. a piece per diem The like entertainment rateably were allowed to diuers Knightes and Gentlemen vpon that List for themselues and their seuerall retinewes whereof some were greater and some lesse as they themselues coulde raise them among their tenants and Followers FOr in ancient times the King himselfe did not leuy his armies by his owne immediate authority or Commission but the Lords and Captaines did by Indenture Couenant with the King to serue him in his Wars with certaine numbers of men for certain wages entertainments which they raised in greater or lesse numbers as they had fauour or power with the people This course hath been changed in later times vpon good reason of State For the Barons and Chiefe Gentlemen of the realme hauing power to vse the Kings prerogatiue in that point became too popular whereby they were enabled to raise forces euen against the Crown it self which since the Statutes made for leuying and mustering of souldiers by the Kings speciall Commission they cannot so easily performe if they should forget their duties THis Lord Lieutenant with this small Army perfourmed no great seruice yet vpon his comming ouer all men who had Land in Ireland were by Proclamation re maunded backe out of England thither and both the Cleargy and Laity of this land gaue two yeares profits of all their Landes and Tithes towards the maintenance of the war heere only he suppressed some Rebels in Low Leinster and recouered the Maritime parts of his erldome of Vlster But his best seruice did consist in the well-gouerning of his army and in holding that famous Parliament at Kilkenny wherein the extortion of the souldier and the degenerat maners of the English briefly spoken of before were discouered and Lawes made to reforme the same which shall bee declared more at large heereafter THe next Lieutenant transmitted with any forces out of England was Sir VVilliam winsore who in the 47 yeare of King Edward the third vndertooke the Custodie not the Conquest of this Land for now the English made rather a Defensiue then an inuasiue war and withal to defray the whol charge of the kingdome for eleauen thousand two hundred thirteene pounds six shillings and eight pence as appeareth by the Indenture betweene him and the King remaining of Record in the Tower of London But it appeareth by that which Froissard reporteth that Sir william winsore was so farre from subduing the Irish as that himselfe reported That he could neuer haue accesse to vnderstande and know their Countries albeit he had spent more time in the seruice of Ireland then any Englishman then liuing ANd heere I may well take occasion to shewe the vanity of that which is reported in the Story of walsingham touching the reuennue of the Crown in Ireland in the time of king Edward the third For he setting forth the State of things there in the time of King Richard the 2. Writeth thus Cum Rex Angliae illustris Edwardus tertius illic posuisset Bancum suum at● Iudices cum Scaccario percepit inde ad Regalem Fiscum annuatim triginta millia librarum modò propter absentiam ligeorum hostium potentiam nihil inde venit sed Rex per annos singulos de suo Marsupio terrae defensoribus soluit Triginta millia marcarum ad regni sui dedecus et fisci grauissimum detrimentū If this Writer had knowne that the Kings Courts had beene established in Ireland more then a hundred yeares before King Edw. 3. was borne or had seene eyther the Parliament Rols in England or the Records of the Receits and yssues in Ireland he had not left this vaine report to posterity For both the Benches and the Exchequer were erected in the twelfth year of King Iohn And it is recorded in the Parliament Rols of 21 of Edward the third remaining in the Tower that the Commons of England made petition that it might be enquired why the King receiued no benefit of his land of Ireland considering he possessed more there then any of his Ancestors had before him Now if the King at that time when there were no Standing forces maintained there had receiued 30000. pound yearely at his Exchequer in Ireland he must needes haue made profit by that land considering that the whole charge of the kingdome in the 47. yeare of Edward the third when the King did pay an army there did amount to no more then eleuen thousand and two hundred pounds per annum as appeareth by the contract of Sir VVilliam winsore Besides it is manifest by the Pipe-Rolles of that time wherof many are yet preserued in Breminghams Tower and are of better credite then any Monkes story that during the raigne of King Edward the third the reuenew of the Crowne of Ireland both certaine and casuall did not rise vnto 10000. li. per annum though the Medium be taken of the best seauen years that are to bee found in that Kinges time The like Fable hath Hollingshead touching the reuennue of the Earledome of Vlster which saith hee in the time of king Richard the second was thirty thousand Markes by the yeare whereas in truth though the Lordships of Conaght and Meth which were then parcell of the inheritaunce of the Earle of Vlster be added to the accompt the reuennew of that earledome came not to the thirde part of that he writeth For the Accompt of the profits of Vlster