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A34852 Hibernia anglicana, or, The history of Ireland, from the conquest thereof by the English, to this present time with an introductory discourse touching the ancient state of that kingdom and a new and exact map of the same / by Richard Cox ... Cox, Richard, Sir, 1650-1733. 1689 (1689) Wing C6722; ESTC R5067 1,013,759 1,088

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Lord Deputy He was sworn on the Third of April and was an intimate Friend of the Lord Lieutenants and was suspected to have imployed Agents to raze out of the Journal-Book of the House of Commons some Instructions that were agreed upon by that House for a Committee to Impeach the Earl of Strafford but it is certain he did what he could to hinder that Committee from going to England And besides Persuasions Rushw 469. he proceeded to forbid them that voyage upon their Allegiance Nevertheless they all got away privately some from one Port and some from another and came safely to England This Committe were the Lords Gormanstowne Killmallock Costilo and Baltinglass for the Upper House Nicholas Plunket Sir Robert Digby Richard Fitz-Gerrald and Nicholas Barnwall for Leinster Sir Hardress Waller John Welsh Sir Donough mac Cartby for Munster Robert Linch Geoffry Browne and Thomas Burk for Connught and Sir William Cole and Sir James Mountgomery for Ulster and they carried with them a Remonstrance from the Irish Parliament against the Earl of Strafford whom they prosecuted effectually and were under-hand so to do by the Discontented part of the Parliament of England And because this Remonstrance contains a great part of the History of those Times I have thought necessary to add it in haec verba To the Right Honourable the Lord Deputy The Humble and Just Remonstrance of the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Parliament Assembled SHEWING THat in all Ages since the happy Subjection of this Kingdom to the Imperial Crown of England Rushw 11. it was and is a Principal Study and Princely Care of His Majesty and His Noble Progenitors Kings and Queens of England and Ireland to the vast Expence of Treasure and Blood that their Loyal and Dutiful People of this Land of Ireland being now for the most part derived from British Ancestors should be Governed according to the Municipal and Fundamental Laws of England that the Statute of Magna Charta or the Great Charter of the Liberties of England and other Laudable Laws and Statutes were in several Parliaments here Enacted and Declared that by the means thereof and of the most prudent and benign Government of His Majesty and His Royal Progenitors this Kingdom was until of late in its growth a flourishing Estate whereby the said People were heretofore enabled to answer their humble and natural Desires 〈◊〉 comply with His Majesty's Princely and Royal Occasions by their Free Gift of One hundred and fifty thousand pounds Sterling and likewise by another Free Gift of One hundred and twenty thousand pounds more during the Government of the Lord Viscount Faulkland and after by the Gift of Forty thousand pounds and their free and chearful Gift of Six intire Subsidies in the Tenth Year of His Majesty's Reign which to comply with His Majesty 's then Occasions signified to the them House of Commons they did allow should amount in the Collections unto Two hundred and Fifty thousand pounds although as they confidently believe if the Subsidies had been Levied in a moderate Parliamentary way they would not have amounted to much more than half the Sum aforesaid besides the Four intire Subsides granted in this present Parliament So it is may it please Your Lordship by the occasion of the ensuing and other Grievances and Innovations though to His Majesty no considerable Profit this Kingdom is reduced to that extream and universal Poverty that the same is les● able to pay Subsidies than it was heretofore to satisfie all the before-recited great Payments And His Majesty's most Faithful People of the Land do conceive great Fears that the said Grievances and Consequences thereof may be hereafter drawn into Precedents to be perpetuated upon their Posterity which in their great Hopes and strong Beliefs they are persuaded is contrary to His Royal and Princely Intention towards His said People Some of which said Grievances are as followeth I. The general apparent Decay of Trades occasioned by the new and illegal raising of the Book of Rates and Impositions upon Native and other Commodities exported and imported by reason whereof and of extreme Usage and Censures Merchants are beggar'd and both disenabled and discouraged to Trade and some of the Honourable Persons who gain thereby are often Judges and Parties and that in the conclusion His Majesty's Profit thereby is not considerably advanced II. The Arbitrary Decision of all Civil Causes and Controversies by Paper Petitions before the Lord Lieutenant and Lord Deputy and infinite other Judicatories upon Reference from them derived in the nature of all Actions determinable at the Common Law not limited into certain Time Cause Season or Thing whatsoever and the Consequences of such Proceedings by receiving immoderate and unlawful Fees by Secretaries Clerks Pursuivants Serjeants at Arms and otherwise by which kind of Proceedings His Majesty loseth a great part of His Revenue upon Original Writs and otherwise and the Subject loseth the Benefit of his Writ of Error Bill of Revers●l Vouchers and other legal and just Advantages and the ordinary Course and Courts of Justice declined III. The Proceedings in Civil Causes at Council-board contrary to the Law and Great Charter not limited to any certain Time or Season IV. That the Subject is in all the Material Parts thereof denied the Benefit of the Princely Graces and more especially of the Statute of Limitations of 24 Jac. granted by His Majesty in the Fourth Year of His Reign upon great Advice of the Councils of England and Ireland and for great Consideration and then published in all the Courts of Dublin and in all the Counties of this Kingdom in open Assizes whereby all Persons do take notice that contrary to His Majesty's Pious Intentions His Subjects of this Land have not enjoyed the Benefit of His Majesty ' Princely Promise thereby made V. The Extrajudicial Avoiding of Letters Patents of Estates of a very great part of His Majesty's Subjects under the Great Seal the Publick Faith 〈◊〉 the Kingdom by Private Opinions delivered at the Council-board without Legal Evictions of their Estates contrary to Law and without Precedent or Example of any former Age. VI. The Proclamation for the Sole Emption and Uttering of Tobacco which is bought at very low Rates and uttered at high and excessive Rates by means whereof thousands of Families within this Kingdom and of His Majesty's Subjects in several Islands and other Parts of the West-Indies as your Petitioners are informed are destroyed and the most part of the Coin of this Kingdom is engrossed into particular Hands insomuch that your Petitioners do conceive that the Profit arising and engrossed thereby doth surmount His Majesty's Revenue Certain or Casual within this Kingdom and yet His Majesty receiveth but very little Profit by the same VII The universal and unlawful Encreasing of Monopolies to the Advantage of a Few the Disprofit of His Majesty and Impoverishment of His People VIII And the extreme cruel Usage of certain late Commissioners and
the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret and the rest of the Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them and as to his Majesties Rents to grow due at Easter next and from thenceforth the same to be payable unto his Majesty notwithstanding any thing contained in the Article of the Act of Oblivion or in any other Article to the contrary but the same not to be written for or Lewed until a full settlement in Parliament as aforesaid 30. It is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased That the Commissioners of O●er and Terminer and Goal delivery to be named as aforesaid shall have power to hear and determine all Murthers Manslaughters Rapes Stealths Burning of Houses and Corn in Reek or Stacks Robberies Burglaries Forceable Entries Detainers of Possessions and other Offences committed or done and to be committed and ●one from the 15 th of September 1643 until the First day of the next Parliament These present Articles or any thing therein contained to the contrary notwithstanding Provided that the authority of the said Commissioners shall not extend to question any Person or Persons for doing or Committing any Act whatsoever before the conclusion of this Treaty by vertue or colour of any Warrant or Direction from those in p●ublick Authority among the Confederate Catholicks nor unto any Act which shall be done after the perfecting and concluding of these Articles by vertue or pretence of any authority which is now by these Articles agreed on Provided also the said Commission shall not continue longer than to the First day of the next Parliament In witness whereof his Excellency the Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of I●eland his Majesties Commissioner to that part of these Articles remaining with the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. and the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret c to that part of these Articles remaining with the said Lord Lieutenant have put their Hands and Seals at Dublin this 28 th day of March 1646 and in the Two and Twentieth Year of the Reign of our Sovereign King Charles King of Great Britain France and Ireland c. Appendix XXV The Petition of the Protestants of Munster against a Peace with the Irish to the Right Honourable the Lord Lieutenant General and Council of Ireland Humbly Sheweth THAT whereas after a long and happy enjoyment of the Peace and Prosperity under which by his Majesties Gracious Government this Land did lately flourish the Irish Papists of this Kingdom have on or about the Three and Twentieth day of October 1641 entred into a most Wicked and Treacherous Conspiracy to surprise the then Lords Justices and Council together with the City of Dublin and all other his Majesties Forts and Holds within this Kingdom intending thereby totally and at once to extirpate the Protestant Religion and English Nation from amongst them and consequently to alienate this Kingdom from the Crown and Government of England And for those ends although they were by the Divine Providence disappointed in the main point of that Bloody and Cruel design have pursued the same with indefatigable malice into Acts of open Rebellion and most inhumane Barbarism Robbing and Despoiling his Majesties good Subjects of their Lives and Fourtunes in all parts of the Kingdom insomuch as his Majesty for the Vindication of his Protestant Subjects from the cruel Rapines of the said Irish Papists was justly occasioned to denounce and undertake a War in this Kingdom the managing and support whereof he was graciously pleased to recommend to and entrust with his Parliament then sitting in England who having piously begun the great work of Suppressing the Cruelties of the aforesaid Irish were by the unhappy interposition of sundry fatal differences in England somented as may be greatly doubted by the Rebels of this Kingdom diverted from the careful and provident courses requisite in so important an affair By means whereof this Majesty who had undertaken the War for our defence was now constrained for our preservation to treat and conclude of a Cessation of Arms for Twelve Months space in which time he was made believe the aforesaid Irish Papists would submit to some 〈◊〉 and honourable conditions of Peace To when purpose Agents from the aforesaid Irish were admitted to have access to his Royal presence and his Majesty did not only in manifestation of his P●ous and Paternal care of his Prote●●ant Subjects command certain select persons welli●ensed and interested in the State and Affairs of this King●om to at●end his Royal Person and give information and assistance in the debate of so weighty a business but did also give admission to such Agents as his Protestant Subjects were able to imploy in representing their particular and general grievanced and s●fferings by the said Irish Papists who in the negotiation of that whole matter have endeavoured to make advantage of his Majesties 〈◊〉 and by sinister and corrupt means with a lavish expence of that treasure and those Estates which your Petitioners have been dispoled of by them to raise a Factious Party at the Court to seduce and misguide his Royal Majesty and to beguil his Judgment with a selfe opinion of their inclination to Peace and feigned forwardness to advan●● his Service and to discountance and suppress those whose attendance his Majesty had required and those Agents whom your Petitione●s imployed by which subtil and serpentine courses ●he said Irish Agents having quasht and deprest all opposers and accusers and removed all impediments to their 〈◊〉 ends of ex●irpa●ing the English and before any equal debate of the cause pro●●red a transmission of the whole affair unto your Lordships with Power and Commission further to treat and conclude of such conditions as by those deceitful courses they had gained too great hope to be confirmed unto them which for some reasons was not thought fit to be done in England they do now with the same art and subtilty study to trick your Petitioners here before your Lordships and to compound for all their mischiefs multiplied upon the Heads of your Petitioners at their own rates And therefore at a time when neither your Petitioners nor any from them are present when the Agents imployed to his Sacred Majesty are unreturned to this Kingdom and whilst most of your Petitioners evidences of their detestable Treasons and horrible Barbarisms are remaining in England they endeavour to strike up the business with your Lordships upon such terms as your Petitioners who were once a considerable part of this late flourishing and now unhappy Kingdom have not the honour to be made privy unto or to be called or admitted to any debate of the business of that main influence upon themselves and their Posterity Wherefore your Petitioners having seen how far some Persons of Honour have been misguided and by secret and subtil contrivances drawn to become abused properties and instruments to accomplish the wicked designs of the aforesaid
Great Britain France and Ireland c. for the Treating and Concluding of a Peace in the said Kingdom with His Majesties Humble and Loyal Subjects the Confederate and Roman Catholicks of the said Kingdom of Ireland of the one part and the Right Honourable Donnogh Lord Viscount Muskerry and others Commissioners Deputed and Authorized by the said Confederate Roman Catholick Subjects of the other part and thereupon many Difficulties did arise by occasion whereof sundry matters of great weight and consequence necessarily requisite to be condescended unto by His Majesties said Commissioners for the safety of the said Confederate Roman Catholicks were not hitherto agreed upon which retarded and doth as yet retard the Conclusion of a firm Peace and Settlement in the said Kingdom And whereas the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Glamorgan is intrusted and authorized by His most Excellent Majesty to grant and assure to the said Confederate Catholick Subjects further Grace and Favours which the said Lord Lieutenant did not as yet in that Latitude as they expected grant unto them and the said Earl having seriously considered of all matters and due Cirou●istances of the great Affairs now in agitation which is the peace and quiet of the said Kingdom and the importance thereof in order to His Majesties Service and in relation to a Peace and Settlement in His other Kingdoms and here upon the place having seen the Ardent desire of the said Catholicks to assist His Majesty against all that do or shall oppress His Royal Right or Monarchick Government and having discerned the Alacrity and Cheerfulness of the said Catholicks to embrace Honourable conditions of Peace which may preserve their Religion and other just Interests In pursuance therefore of His Majesties Authority under His Highness Signature Royal and Signes bearing Date at Oxon the Twelfth Day of March in the twentieth Year of His Reign Granted unto the said Earl of Glamorgan the Tenure whereof is as followeth Viz. Charles Rex Charles by the Grace of God King of England Scotland France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. To our trusty and right welbeloved Cosen Edward Earl of Glamorgan greeting We reposing great and especial Trust and Confidence in your approved wisdom and fidelity Do by these as firmly as under Our Great Seal to all intents and purposes Authorise and give you Power to treat and conclude with the Confederate Roman Catholicks in Our Kingdom of Ireland if upon necessity any thing be to be condescended unto wherein our Lieutenant cannot so well be seen in as not fit for Vs at the present publickly to own Therefore We charge you to proceed according to this our Warrant with all possible secrecy and for whatsoever you shall engage your self upon such valuable considerations as you in your judgment shall deem fit We promise on the word of a King and a Christian to ratifie and perform the same that shall be granted by you and under your Hand and Seal the said Confederate Catholicks having by their Supplies testified their Zeal to Our Service and this shall be in each particular to you a sufficient Warrant Given at Our Court at Oxford under Our Signet and Royal Signature the 12 th day of March in the 20 th year of Our Reign 1644. To our right trusty and right well-beloved Cosen Edward Earl of Glamorgan It is therefore granted accorded and agreed by and between the said Earl of Glamorgan for and on the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty His Heirs and Successors on the one part and the Right Honourable Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Lord President of the Supream Council of the said Confederate Catholicks the said Donogh Lord Viscount Muskerry Alexander mac Donnel and Nicholas Plunket Esquires Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Brien John Dillon Patrick Darcy and Geffery Brown Esquires Commissioners in that behalf appointed by the said Confederate Roman Catholick Subject of Ireland for and on the behalf of the said Confederate Roman Catholick Subjects of the other part in manner and form following that is to say 1. IT is granted accorded and agreed by the said Earl for and in the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty His Heirs and Successors That all and every the Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion in the Kingdom of Ireland of whatever estate degree or quality soever he or they be or shall be shall for ever more hereafter have and enjoy within the said Kingdom the free and publick use and exercise of the said Roman Catholick Religion and of their respectives function therein 2. It is granted accorded and agreed by the said Earl for and on the behalf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors That the said Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion shall hold and enjoy all and every the Churches by them enjoyed within this Kingdom or by them possessed at any time since the Twenty Third of October 1641 and all other Churches in the said Kingdom other than such as are now actually enjoyed by His Majesties Protestant Subjects 3. It is granted accorded and agreed by the said Earl for and in the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty His Heirs and Successors That all and every the Roman Catholick Subjects of Ireland of what estate condition degree or quality soever shall be free and exempted from the Jurisdiction of the Protestant Clergy and every of them and that the Roman Catholick Clergy of this Kingdom shall not be punished troubled or molested for the exercise of their Jurisdiction over their respective Catholick Flocks in matters Spiritual and Ecclesiastical 4. It is further granted accorded and agreed by the said Earl for and on the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty His Heirs and Successors that an Act shall be passed in the next Parliament to be holden in this Kingdom the tenour and purport whereof shall be as followeth Viz. An Act for the Relief of His Majesties Catholick Subjects of His Highnesses Kingdom of Ireland Whereas by an Act made in Parliament held in Dublin the Second Year of the Reign of the late Queen Elizabeth Intituled An Act restoring to the Crown the ancient Jurisdiction over the State Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolishing all Foreign Power repugnant to the same And by one other Statue made in the said last mentioned Parliament Intituled An Act for the Vniformity of Common-Prayer and Service in the Church and the Administration of the Sacrament Sundry Mulcts Penalties Restraints and Incapacities are and have been laid upon the Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion in this Kingdom in for and concerning the use profession and exercise of their Religion and their Function therein to the great prejudice trouble and disquiet of the Roman Catholicks in their Liberties and Estates and a general disturbance of the whole Kingdom For remedy whereof and for the better setling increase and continuance of the Peace Unity and Tranquility of this Kingdom of Ireland His Majesty at the humble suit and request of the Lords and Commons
in this present Parliament assembled is graciously pleased that it may be Enacted And be it Enacted by the King 's most Excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by Authority of the same That from and after the First day of this Session of Parliament it shall and may be lawful to and for all the Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion of what degree condition or quality to have use and enjoy the free and publick exercise and profession of the said Roman Catholick Religion and of their several and respective functions therein without incurring any Mulct or Penalty whatsoever or being subject to any restraint or incapacity concerning the same any Article or Clause Sentence or Provision in the said last mentioned Acts of Parliament or in any other Act or Acts of Parliament Ordinances Law or usage to the contrary or in any wise notwithstanding And be it also further Enacted That neither the said Statutes or any other Statute Acts or Ordinances hereafter made in Your Majesties Reign or in the Reign of any of Your Highnesses most Noble Progenitors or Ancestors and now of Force in this Kingdom nor all nor any Branch Article Clause and Sentence in them or any of them contained or specified shall be of force or validity in this Realm to extend to be construed or adjudged to extend in any wise to inquiet prejudice vex or molest the Professors of the said Roman Catholick Religion in their Persons Lands Hereditaments or Goods or any thing matter or cause whatsoever touching and concerning the free and publick use exercise and enjoyings of their said Religion function and profession And be it also further Enacted and Declared by the Authority aforesaid That Your Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects in the said Realm of Ireland from the first day of this Session of Parliament shall be and be taken deemed and adjudged capable of all Offices of Trust and Advancement Places Degrees and Dignities and perferment whatsoever within your said Realm of Ireland Any Acts Statutes Vsage or Law to the contrary notwithstanding And that other Acts shall be passed in the said Parliament according to the tenour of such Agreement or Concessions as herein are expressed and that in the mean time the said Roman Catholick Subjects and every of them shall enjoy the full benefit freedom and advantage of the said Agreement and Concessions and of every of them 5. It is Accorded Granted and Agreed by the said Earl for and in the b●●●lf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors That his Excellency the Lord Marques of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland or any other or others Authorized or to be Authorized by His Majesty shall not disturb the professors of the Roman Catholick Religion in their present possession and continuance of the profession of their said Churches Jurisdiction or any other the matters aforesaid in these Articles agreed and condescended unto by the said Earl until His Majesties pleasure be signified for confirming and publishing the Grants and Agreements hereby Articled for and Condescended unto by the said Earl 6. And the said Earl of Glamorgan doth hereby engage His Majesty's Royal Word and Publick Faith unto all and singular the professors of the said Roman Catholick Religion within the said Kingdom of Ireland for the due observance and performance of all and every the Articles Grants and Clauses therein contained and the Concessions herein mentioned to be performed to them 7. It is Accorded and Argeed That the said publick Faith of the Kingdom shall be ingaged unto the said Earl by the said Commissioners of the said Confederate Catholicks for sending Ten thousand men to serve His Majesty by order and publick Declaration of the General Assembly now sitting And that the Supream Council of the said Confederate Catholicks shall engage themselves to bring the said number of Men Armed the one half with Musquets and the other half with Pikes unto any Port within this Realm at the Election of the said Earl and at such time as he shall appoint to be by him Shipped and Transported to serve His Majesty in England Wales or Scotland under the Command of the said Earl of Glamorgan as the Lord General of the said Army which Army is to be kept together in one intire Body and all other the Officers and Commanders of the said Army are to be named by the Supream Council of the said Confederate Catholicks or by such others as the General Assembly of the said Confederate Catholicks of this Kingdom shall intrust therewith In witness whereof the Parties to these Presents have hereunto interchangeably put their Hands and Seals the 25 th day of August 1645. Glamorgan Signed Sealed and Delivered in the Presence of John Somerset Jeffery Barron Robert Barry Articles of Agreement made and concluded upon by and between the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Glamorgan and in pursuance and by vertue of His Majesty's Authority under His Signet and Royal Signature bearing Date at Oxford the Twelfth day of March in the Twentieth Year of His Reign for and on the behalf of His Most Excellent Majesty of the one part and the Right Honourable Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Lord President of the Supream Council of the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland Donnogh Lord Viscount Muskerry Alex. M. Donnell and Nicholas Plunket Esquires Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Brien John Dillon Patrick Darcy and Jeffery Browne Esquires for and on the behalf of His Majesty's Roman Catholick Subjects and the Catholick Clergy of Ireland of the other part 1. THE said Earl doth Grant Conclude and Agree on the behalf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors to and with the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Donnogh Lord Viscount Muskerry Alex. Mac Donnell and Nicholas Plunket Esquires Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Brien John Dillon Patrick Darcy and Jeffery Browne Esquires That the Roman Catholick Clergy of the said Kingdom shall and may from henceforth for ever hold and enjoy all such Lands Tenements Tyths and Here●itaments whatsoever by them respectively enjoyed within this Kingdom or by them possessed at any time since the Three and twentieth of October 1641. And all other such Lands Tenements Tyths and Hereditaments belonging to the Clergy within this Kingdom other than such as are actually enjoyed by His Majesty's Protestant Clergy 2. It is Granted Concluded and Agreed on by the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. on the behalf of the Confederate Roman Catholicks of Ireland that Two parts in Three parts to be divided of all the said Lands Tyths and Hereditaments whatsoever mentioned in the precedent Articles shall for Three Years next ensuing the Feast of Easter which shall be in the Year of our Lord God 1646. be disposed of and converted for and to the Use of His Majesty's Forces employed or to be employed in His Service and the other Third part to the Use of the said Clergy resepectively and so the like
disposition to be renewed from Three Years to Three Years by the said Clergy during the Wars 3. It is Accorded and Agreed by the said Earl of Galmorgan for and in the behalf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors that his Excellency the Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland or any other or others Authorized or to be Authorized by His Majsty shall not disturb the Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion in their present Possession of their Churches Lands Tenements Tyths Hereditaments Jurisdiction or any other the matters aforesaid in these Articles agreed and condescended to by the said Earl until His Majesty's pleasure be signified for confirming and publishing the Grants herein Articled for and condescended unto by the said Earl 4. It is Accorded Granted and Agreed by the said Earl for and in the behalf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors that an Act shall be Passed in the next Parliament to be held in this Kingdom acccording to the Tenour of such Agreements or Concessions as herein are expressed and that in the mean time the said Clergy shall enjoy the full benefit freedom and advantage of the said Agreements and Concessions and every of them And the said Earl of Galmorgan doth hereby engage His Majesty's Royal Word and Publick Faith unto the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret and the rest of the said Commissioners for the due Observance and Performance of all and every the Articles Agreements and Concessions herein contained and mentioned to be performed to the said Roman Catholick Clergy and every of them In Witness whereof the Parties to these Presents have hereunto interchageably put their Hands and Seals the 25 th day of August Anno Dom. 1645. Glamorgan Signed Sealed and Dilivered in the presence of Glamorgan John Summerset Jeffery Barron Robert Barry Whereas in these Articles touching the Clergy Livings the Right Honourable the Earl of Glamorgan is obliged in His Majesty's behalf to secure the Concessions in these Articles by Act of Parliament We holding that manner of securing those Grants as to the Clergy Livings to prove more difficult and prejudicial to His Majesty than by doing thereof and securing those Concessions otherwise as to the said Livings the said Earl undertaking and promising in the behalf of His Majesty His Heirs and Successors as hereby he doth undertake to settle the said Concessions and secure them to the Clergy and their respective Successors in another secure way other than by Parliament at present till a fit opportunity be offered for securing the same do agree and condescend thereunto And this Instrument by his Lordship Signed was before the perfecting thereof intended to that purpose as to the said Livings to which purpose We have mutually Signed this Endorsement And it is further intended that the Catholick Clergy shall not be interrupted by Parliament or otherwise as to the said Livings Contrary to the meaning of these Articles Glamorgan I Edward Earl of Glamorgan do Protest and Swear Faithfully to acquaint the Kings most Excellent Majesty with the proceedings of this Kingdom in Order to His Service and to the indearment of this Nation and punctual performance of what I have as Authoriseed by His Majesty obliged my self to see performed and in default not to permit the Army intrusted into my Charge to adventure it self or any considerable part thereof until Conditions from His Majesty and by His Majesty be performed Glamorgan The Defezance to the Earl of Glamorgan KNOW all Men by these Presents That whereas We the Right Honourable Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Donnogh Lord viscount Muskerry Alexander Mac Donnel Nicholas Plunket Esquires Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Brien John Dillon Patrick Darcy and Jeffery Brown Esquires appointed by the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland to treat and conclude with the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Glamorgan for and in behalf of His most Excellent Majesty our dread Sovereign King Charles And having treated and concluded with the said Earl of Glamorgan as by the Articles of Agreement to which we have interchangealy set our Hands and Seals more at lage appeareth Yet it is to be understood that by the said Agreement the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Glamorgan doth no way intend to oblige His Excellent Majesty other than he himself shall please after he hath received these Ten thousand Men being a Pledge and Testimony of our Loyalty and Fidelity to His Majesty yet the said Earl of Glamorgan doth Faithfully promise upon his Word and Honour not to acquaint His most Excellent Majesty with this Defesance until his Lordship hath endeavour'd as far as in him lies to induce His Majesty to the granting of the particulars in the said Articles of Agreement but that done according to the Trust we repose in our very good Lord the Earl of Glamorgan We the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. and every of Us for and in the behalf of the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland who have intrusted Us do discharge the said Earl of Glamorgan both in Honour and Conscience of any further ingagement to Us herein though His Majesty be not pleased to grant the said Particulars in the Articles of Agreement mentioned and this we are induced to do by the particular Trust and Confidence the said Earl of Glamorgan hath reposed in Us for the draught of the Act of Parliament inserted within the Articles of our Agreement We assuring upon our Words and Honours that it is the most moderate of Three which we brought up for the Assent of the Right Honourable the Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland his Excellency and without which we cannot be satisfied and we are also induced hereunto in regard the said Earl of Glamorgan hath given us Assurance upon his Word and Honour and upon a voluntary Oath of his that he would never to any Person whatsoever discover the Defezance in the interim without our consents And in confidence thereof We have hereunto set our Hands and Seals the 26 th day of August Anno Dom. 1645. Glamorgan Signed Sealed and Delivered in the Presence of the Lord John Somerset who knew nothing of the Contents thereof F. Oliver Darcy Peter Bath Appen XXVIII His Majesties Letter about the Earl of Glamorgan's Peace Right Trusty c. We greet you well WE have seen and considered the dispatch directed from you and our Council there to our Trusty and Well-beloved Counsellor Sir Edward Nicholas one of our Privy Council of State concerning the Earl of Glamorgan's Accusation and your Proceedings thereupon and as we could not receive the one without extraordinary amazement that any mans folly and presumption could carry him to such a degree of abusing our trust how little soever so we could not but be very sensible of the great affection and zeal to our service which you have expressed in putting our honour so highly traduced into so speedy and effectual way of Vindication by the proceeding against the said Earl of Glamorgan and though we
bonds recognizances or any Record or acts office or offices inquisitions or any other thing depending upon or by reason of the said indictments attainders or outlawries shall in any sort prejudice the said Roman Catholicks or any of them but that they and every of them shall be forthwith upon perfection of these Articles restored to their respective possessions and hereditaments respectively provided that no man shall be questioned by reason hereof for measne rates or wastes saving wilful wastes committed after the first day of May last past 5. Item It is likewise concluded accorded and agreed and his Majesty is graciously pleased that as soon as possible may be all impediments which may hinder the said Roman Catholicks to sit or vote in the next intended Parliament or to choose or to be chosen Knights and Burgesses to sit or vote there shall be removed and that before the said Parliament 6. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed upon and his Majesty is further gratiously pleased that all debts shall remain as they were upon the 23. of October 1641. Notwithstanding any disposition made or to be made by vertue or colour of any attainder outlawry fugacy or other forfeiture and that no disposition or grant made or to be made of any such debts by vertue of any attainder outlawry fugacy or other forfeiture shall be of force and this to be passed as an act in the next Parliament 7. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon and his Majesty is graciously pleased that for the securing of the Estates or reputed Estates of the Lords Knights Gentlemen and Free-holders or reputed Free holders as well of Connaght and County of Clare or Country of Thomond as of the Counties of Limerick and Tipperary the same be secured by Act of Parliament according to the intent of the 25. Article of the graces granted in the fourth year of his Majesties Reign the tenor whereof for so much as concerneth the same doth ensue in these words viz. We are graciously pleased that for the Inhabitants of Connaght and Country of Thomond and County of Clare that their several Estates shall be confirmed unto them and their Heirs against us and our Heirs and Successors by Act to be passed in the next Parliament to be holden in Ireland to the end the same may never hereafter be brought into any further question by Us or Our Heirs and Successors In which Act of Parliament so to be passed you are to take care that all tenures in capite and all Rents and Services as are now düe or which ought to be answered unto us out of the said Lands and premises by any Letters Pattents past thereof since the first year of King Henry the Eight or found by any Office taken from the said first year of King Henry the Eight until the 21. of July 1645. whereby our late dear Father or any his Predecessors actually received any profit by wardship liveries primer-seisins measne rates ousterlemains or fines of alienations without License be again reserved unto Us Our Heirs and Successors and all the rest of the premises to be holden of our Castle of Athlone by Knights service according to Our said late Fathers Letters notwithstanding any tenures in capite found for Us by Office since the 21. of July 1615. and not appearing in any such Letters Patents or Offices within which Rule his Majesty is likewise graciously pleased that the said Lands in the Counties of Limerick and Tipperarie be included but to be held by such Rents and Tenures only as they were in the fourth year of his Majesties Reign provided always that the said Lords Knights Gentlemen and Freeholders of the said Province of Connaght County of Clare and Country of Tho●●●● and Counties of Tipperarie and Limerick shall have and enjoy the full benefit of such composition and agreement which shall be made with his most Excellent Majesty for the Court of Wards Tenures Respits and issues of Homage any clause in this Article to the contrary notwithstanding and as for the Lands within the Counties of Kilkennie and Wickloe unto which his Majesty was intituled by Offices taken or found in the time of the Earl of Straffords Government in this Kingdom his Majesty is further graciously pleased that the State thereof shall be considered in the next intended Parliament where his Majesty will assent unto that which shall be just and honourable and that the like act of Limitation of his Majesties Titles for the security of the Estates of his Subjects of this Kingdom be passed in the said Parliament as was enacted in the 21. year of his late Majesty King James his Reign in England 8. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that all incapacities imposed upon the Natives of this Kingdom or any of them as Natives by any Act of Parliament Provisoes in Patents or otherwise be taken away by Act to be passed in the said Parliament and that they may be enabled to erect one or more Innes of Court in or near the City of Dublin or elsewhere as shall be thought fit by his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being and in case the said Innes of Court shall be erected before the first day of the next Parliament then the same shall be in such place as his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other cheif Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon or any seven or more of them shall think fit and that such Students Natives of this Kingdom as shall be therein may take and receive the usual degrees accustomed in any Inns of Court they taking the insuing Oath viz. I. A. B. Do hereby acknowledge profess testifie and declare in my Conscience before God and the world that our Sovereign Lord King Charles is lawful and rightful King of this Realm and of other His Majesties Dominions and Countries and I will bear Faith and true Allegiance to His Majesty and His Heirs and Successors and Him and them will defend to the uttermost of my power against all conspiracies and attempts whatsoever which shall be made against his or their Crown and Dignity and do my best endeavour to disclose and make known to His Majesty His Heirs and Successors or to the Lord Deputy or other His Majesties Chief Governour or Governours for the time being all Treasons or Traiterous conspiracies which I shall know or hear to be intended against His Majesty or any of them and I do make this Recognition and acknowledgment heartily willingly and truly upon the true Faith of a Christian So help me God c. And his Majesty is further graciously pleased that his Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects may erect and keep free-Schools for Education of youths in this Kingdom any Law or Statute to the contrary notwithstanding and that all
Forfeitures which shall happen before you you shall cause to be entred without any concealment or imbezling and send to the Court of Exchequer or to such other place as his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom shall appoint until there may be access unto the said Court of Exchequer You shall not let for gift or other cause but well and truly you shall do your office of Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer Assizes and Goal delivery in that behalf and that you take nothing for your office of Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer Assizes and Goal delivery to be done but of the King and Fees accustomed and you shall not direct or cause to be directed any Warrant by you to be made to the parties but you shall direct them to the Sheriffs and Bayliffs of the said Counties respectively or other the Kings Officers or Ministers or other indifferent persons to do execution thereof so help me God c. And that as well in the said Commission as in all other Commissions and Authorities to be issued in pursuance of the present Articles this clause shall be incerted viz. That all Officers Civil and Martial shall be required to be aiding and assisting and obedient unto the said Commissioners and other persons to be authorised as abovesaid in the execution of their respective powers 29. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that his Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects do continue the possession of such of his Majesties Cities Garrisons Towns Forts and Castles which are within their now Quarters until settlement by Parliament and to be commanded ruled and governed in cheif upon occasion of necessity as to the Martial and Military affairs lindx by such as his Majesty or his cheif Governour or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being shall appoint and the said appointment to be by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them and his Majesties cheif Governor or Governors is to issue Commissions accordingly to such persons as shall be so named and appointed as aforesaid for the executing of such Command Rule or Government to continue until all the particulars in these present Articles agreed on to pass in Parliament shall be accordingly passed only in case of death or misbehaviour such other person or persons to be appointed for the said Command Rule and Government to be named and appointed in the place or places of him or them who shall so dye or misbehave themselves as the cheif Governor or Governors for the time being by the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall think fit and to be continued until a settlement in Parliament as aforesaid 30. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that all Customs and Tenths of Prizes belonging to his Majesty which from the perfection of these Articles shall fall due within this Kingdom shall he paid unto his Majesties Receipt or until recourse may be had thereunto in the ordinary legal way unto such person or persons and in such place or places and under such Controuls as the Lord Lieutenant shall appoint to be disposed of in order to the defence and safety of the Kingdom and the defraying of other the necessary publick charges thereof for the ease of the Subjects in other their Levies Charges and Applotments And that all and every person or persons who are at present intrusted and employed by the said Roman Catholicks in the Entries Receipts Collections or otherwise concerning the said Customs and Tenths of Prizes do continue their respective employments in the same until full settlement in Parliament accountable to his Majesties Receipts or until recourse may be had thereunto as the said Lord Lieutenant shall appoint as aforesaid other than to such and so many of them as to the chief Governor or Governors for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Tho. Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall be thought fit to be altered and then and in such case or in case of death fraud or mis-behaviour or other alteration of any such person or persons than such other person or persons to be employed therein as shall be thought fit by the chief Governor or Governors for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Tho. Lord Visc Dillon c. or any seven or more of them And when it shall appear that any person or persons who shall be found faithful to his Majesty hath right to any of the Offices or Places about the said Customs whereunto he or they may not be admitted until settlement in Parliament as aforesaid that a reasonable compensation shall be afforded to such person or persons for the same 31. Item As for and concerning his Majesties Rents payable at Easter next and from thenceforth to grow due until a settlement in Parliament it is concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that the said Rents be not written for or levied until a full settlement in Parliament and in due time upon application to be made to the said Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom by the said Tho. Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them for remittal of those Rents the said Lord Lieutenant or any other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being shall intimate their desires and the reason thereof to his Majesty who upon consideration of the present condition of this Kingdom will declare his gracious pleasure therein as shall be just and honourable and satisfactory to the reasonable desires of his Subjects 32. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that the Commissioners of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery to be named as aforesaid shall have power to hear and determine all Murders Man-slaughters Rapes Stealths Burning of Houses and Corn in Rick or Stack Robberies Burglaries Forcible Entries Detainers of Possessions and other Offences committed or done and to be committed and done since the first day of May last past until the first day of the next Parliament these present Articles or any thing therein contained to the contrary notwithstanding Provided that the Authority of the said Commissioners shall not extend to question any person or persons for doing or committing any Act whatsoever before the conclusion of this Treaty by vertue or colour of any warrant or direction from those in publick Authority among the confederate Roman Catholick nor unto any Act which shall be done after the
Ireland they proceeded to crown this Impostor at Christ-Church in Dublin with a Crown which they took from the Statue of the Virgin Mary in S. Mary-Abby and this Ceremony was rendred more solemn by a Sermon preached by the Bishop of Meath on the occasion and by the Attendance of the Lord Deputy the Chancellor Treasurer and other the great Officers of State And after he was crowned they carried him in Triumph upon the Shoulders of Great Darcy of Platten But the good Archbishop of Armagh refused to be present at this ridiculous Pageantry for which they gave him all the Trouble they could But it seems they were conscious of their Misdemeanour in this Matter and they knew how to purchase Absolution and therefore they called a Parliament or Assembly in the Name of their new King and the Clergy gave the Pope a Subsidy to absolve them So eager were these People to follow the Fortunes of this Mock-King that Thomas Fitz-Girald resigned the Chancellorship to the Lord of Portlester the better to be at liberty and so together they went for England and landed in Lancashire where Sir Thomas Broughton and his Party joyned them they marched through Yorkshire to Newark and being stopt there they turned aside to Notinghamshire and near the Village of Stoke 1487. on the the eleventh of June after a desperate Fight for three Hours they were totally defeated and all the Commanders and four thousand Soldiers slain and Lambert and his Master Symon were taken Prisoners and the latter was imprisoned and the former made one of the King's Falconers In December James Fitz-Thomas Decemb. 7. Earl of Desmond in the twenty eighth Year of his Age was murdered at Rakele by his Servant Shane Maunta and others who were all taken and executed for it by Maurice his Brother and Successor in that Earldom The Earl of Kildare and the other Ministers of State that were Faulty sent Messengers to the King to implore his Pardon which after some exprobration and reprimand was obtained and he was still continued in his Office of Lord Deputy Ware 14 And the same Year the Inconveniences of Sanctuaries were somewhat lessned by the Pope's Bull for the better Regulation of them It seems strange That hitherto the King did not send any Soldiers into Ireland to suppress the remainder of the Faction of York perhaps he knew That if he took any severe course with them it would utterly destroy the Pale and by weakning the small Colony of English would turn to the Advantage of the Irish and therefore he contented himself with the Submission of those that had been Faulty and sent over Sir Richard Edgcomb to take new Oaths of Allegiance of the Nobility and Gentry and to bind them in Recognizance to performance and thereupon to give them a Pardon He brought with him five hundred Men which was rather a Guard than an Army and he arrived at Kingsale with five Ships on the twenty seventh Day of June he did not intend to come on Shoar there and therefore the Lord Thomas Barry i.e. Barry oge came on Board and there did his Homage for his Barony and took his Oath of Allegiance but the next Day Sir Richard Edgcomb at the Importunity of James Lord Courcy and the Inhabitants of Kingsale did come into the Town and in their Parish Church dedicated to S. Multotius the Lord Courcy did Homage and he and the Townsmen swore Allegiance and entred into Recognizance for the Observation of it whereupon they were pardoned And so after Dinner Edgcomb sailed toward Waterford where he arrived the last Day of June and having applauded the Loyalty of that City and assured them That the King would liberally remunerate their Fidelity he set Sail for Dublin and there he arrived the fifth Day of July and was received by the Mayor and Citizens in most humble and submissive manner at the Gate of the Abby of the Friers Preachers where he was to lodge The Earl of Kildare was then upon some Exploit against the Irish so that he did not come to Dublin until the twelfth of July and then he sent the Bishop of Meath the Lord Slane and others unto Edgcomb to conduct him to S. Thomas-Court where the Lord Deputy lay Thither did Sir Richard come and with a stern Countenance delivered the King's Letters to the Lord Deputy after which they had a Private Conference but many of the Nobility being absent nothing more was done at that time and so they departed the Lord Deputy went to Minooth and Sir Richard Edgcomb returned to the Abby The next Day being Sunday Edgcomb caused to be read in Christ Church after Sermon the Absolution of the former Excommunication which the Pope had lately granted at the King's Request unto all those that should thenceforward continue loyal to his Majesty and after some time and many Expostulations between the Commissioners and the Nobility they did at last agree on the Form of an Oath to be found at large in Sir James Wares Annals p. 17. Wherein this is observable that they swore not to hinder or disturb the excommunication of all such as should oppose the King of what Quality soever they should be And in the Oath of the Clergy it was added that they should publish the Popes Excommunication against all the Kings Rebels or Enemies in Ireland as often as they should be thereunto required Salvo Ordine Episcopali c. And so on the 21st of July the Earl of Kildare being first absolved from the former Excommunication after the usual manner in time of Divine Service did Homage to the Kings Commissioner in the great Chamber in Thomas Court and swore Allegiance and entred into Recognizance for the due Observation of it and then Edgecomb gave him his Pardon and put a Gold-Chain about his Neck which the King had sent him for a Present to signifie his Majesties entire Reconcilation to him The like Oaths and Recognizances were made by Rowland Eustace Baron of Portlester Lord High Treasurer Robert Preston Viscount Gormanstown James Fleming Baron of Slane Nicholas St. Laurence Baron of Houth Christopher Barnewal Baron of Trimletstown John Plunket Baron of Dunsany Walter Archbishop of Dublin John Walton who had resigned that Archbishoprick reserving the Mannor of Swords to live upon during Life John Bishop of Meath Edmond Bishop of Kildare John Purcell Abbot of St. Thomas Abby Walter Champflour Abbot of St. Maryes and James Cogan Prior of Holm-Patrick and then Sir Richard Edgecomb entertain'd them all at a splendid Banquet at his Lodgings and the next day the Mayor and Citizens of Dublin took their Oaths at the Tolsel and remitted a Copy of the Oath under the City-Seal to the King to certifie His Majesty that they had taken it And so on the 23d day of July Edgecomb went to Drogheda and thence to Trim and both those Towns as also the Prior of St. Peters near Trim and the Abbots of Navan and Beclif did in like manner
grand Captain four shillings a petit Captain two shillings and an hundred Harquebusses I suppose on Horseback half at eight pence and the other half at nine pence a day makes three pound sixteen shillings and ten pence per diem and an hundred and seven pound eleven shillings and four pence per mensem and per annum 1402 04 02. Mr. Brereton's Retinue a grand Captain four shillings a Captain three shillings a petit Captain two shillings and an hundred and fifty Archers at six pence apiece is four pound four shillings per diem and one hundred and seventeen pound twelve shillings per mensem and per annum 1533 00 00. The Knight Marshal's Retinue a grand Captain four shillings and twenty nine Horsemen at nine pence a day is one Pound eight shilling per diem eleven Pound eighteen shillings per mensem and per annum 0511 00 00. Clerk of the Cheques Retinue ten Horsemen at nine pence and himself a shilling is eight shillings six pence per diem eleven Pounds eighteen shillings per mensem and per annum 0155 02 06 The Treasurers Retinue forty Horse at nine pence and himself at six shillings and eight pence per diem is per annum 0669 03 04 The Lord Deputy's Stipend is per annum 0666 13 04 Master of the Ordnance's Stipend per annum 0048 13 04 Charge of the Ordnance besides what comes out of England is per annum 0040 00 00 7982 06 08 It seems the reason why they had so little Foot was because the Lords and Gentlemen of the Country were bound by their Tenures to assist the King with a certain number of Men at every Hosting or rising out as they call it and as for the Artillery it was so contemptible that I find by one of the Letters from the Council at the Camp that the Army had but one broken Piece and therefore they desire another may be sent them But before we proceed farther in the Affairs of Ireland it will be fit to pay that respect to the Memory of the late Lord Deputy the Lord Grey as to give some Account of his Misfortunes and Destiny He had certainly performed considerable Atchievments in Ireland and great Commendations of him are contained in most of the Letters from the Council to the King and his Majesty did so well approve of his good Services that he Created him Viscount Grany and although the Earl of Ormond the Lord Chancellor Allen the Vice-Treasurer Brabazon and Sir John Travers went with him or immediately followed him into England to impeach him yet he was kindly received by the King and and carried the Sword before him on Whitsunday Nevertheless he was in a short time after imprisoned in the Tower and accused of very many Articles the principal of which are these First That O Connor feasted him and mended Toghercroghan for him and that in favour of O Molloy a Rebel he took a Castle from Dermond O Molloy whose Father-in-Law O Carol was a good Subject for which the Lord Grey had a Bribe and Stephen ap Harry had twenty Cows Secondly That he took the Castle of Bi r from a Loyal O Carol and gave it to a Rebel O Carol who married the Earl of Kildare's Daughter and also took Moderhern a Castle belonging to the Earl of Ormond and gave it to the Rebel O Carol and wasted the Earl of Ormond's Lands for which he had an hundred and forty Kine and Stephen ap Harry had forty and Girald Mac Gerrot had a black Hackny Thirdly That he took forty Kine from O Kenedy a Tenant of the Earl of Ormond's and his Son for Hostage Fourthly That he held secret and private familiar Correspondence with James of Desmond and went to visit him in his Tents in his Night-Gown and forced the Abbot of Owny to give him forty Pounds sterling to preserve that Abby from Ruine and O Brian to give him thirty Kine and Hostages Vlick Bourk a Bastard gave him 100 Marks to have Ballimacleere-Castle and to be made Mac William and that he carried the Artillery in a small Vessel to Galway and made the Town of Galway pay thirty four Pounds for that Carriage Fifthly That the Exploits at Bryans Bridge c. were in favour of O Bryan a Rebel Desmond's Son-in-Law and to the prejudice of Donough O Bryan a good Subject and that he took a Bribe of eighty Kine from Macnemarra Sixthly That trusting Desmond and O Bryan he hazarded the King's Army in a long and dangerous Journy wherein Desmond quarrelled and deserted him and O Bryan sent but one man with a Battle-Ax to guide him Seventhly That he rifled the Abby of Ballyclare and left neither Chalice Cross nor Bell in it Eighthly That he destroyed the Castles of Lecagh and Derriviclaghny in favour of Vlick Burk though the rightful Proprietor offered Submission and Rent to the King Ninthly That he had secret Conference with and received a Horse from O Connor Roe who was the chief Instrument in conveying away the young Fitz-Girald Tenthly That he took eighty Kine from O Maddin and forced O Mlaghlin's Son from Mr. Dillon whose lawful Prisoner he was for which he had seventy Kine And there was a Commission sent to Ireland to examine Witnesses and they say that these Articles were proved by the testimony of above seventy Persons whereof some were of Quality that is some of them swore to one Article and some to another so that the Lord Grey who was Son to the Marquess of Dorset and Viscount Grany in Ireland but no Peer in England being tried by a common Jury thought it his best way to confess the Indictment in hopes of the King's Grace and Pardon but in that he was mistaken and although his Services did infinitely over-balance his Faults yet he was publickly Executed on the twenty eighth day of July 1541. There are four other Articles mentioned by others Holingsh 102. to be laid to his Charge Ware 162. 1. His Partiality to his Nephew Fitz-Girald afterwards Earl of Kildare whom they say he might have taken 2. That his Servants pillaged the Gentlemen in Munster that entertained them 3. That he had inveigled Thomas Fitz Girald to submit by Promises which he had no Commission to perform and that he did it to destroy that Lord that his own Nephew might come to be Earl of Kildare as afterwards he did 4. His Sacrilege at Down But however that be it was not long after his Execution before a Commission was directed to Archbishop Brown and Cowly Master of the Rolls to make an Estimate or Survey of the Lord Grey's Estate in Ireland and to deliver it to the Lord Deputy Saintleger to be disposed of as the King shall direct Sir William Brereton 1540. Marshal of Ireland was sent by the Lord Deputy into Munster to take the Submission of James Fitz-John Earl of Desmond and to bring him to Dublin but the Marshal died at Kilkenny nevertheless the Earl on the
and Oliver Castells 1. That the Nobility wer over-taxed in the Subsidies 2. And were kept Close Prisoners tho' not Impeach'd of any Capital Crime 3. And could not get Licence to absent unless they leave their Proxy with one of the Chief Governors naming 4. That some have Titles of Honour that have no Lands in the Kingdom 5. That the Nobility were stop from going to Petition the King 6. That Trade is decayed by Illegal Taxes as Twelve pence apiece on Hides 7. That Causes are arbitrarily decided at Council-board and in other improper Judicatories 8. That Pa●ents are made void extrajudicially on private Opinions 9. The Monopolies of Tobacco Starch Sope Glass Tobacco-pipes c. 10. The Procedings of the High-Commission 11. The exorbitant Fees and pretended Customs exacted by the Clergy 12. The Proclamation against buying Gunpowder but out of the Store and restraining Hunting within Seven Miles of Dublin 13. That the Parliament in its Members and Actions hath not had its natural Freedom 14. That the Subject is denied the Benefit of the Act of Limitation 15. The taking excessive Fees 16. The Seizing of Linen Yarn and Cloth for not being exact according to Rule 17. The Oppressions of Officers And in this Parliament on the Fourth of March Captain Audley Mervin brought up an Impeachment of High-Treason from the Commons to the Lords against Sir Richard Bolton Lord Chancellor John Lord Bishop of Derry Sir Gerrard Lowther Lord Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas and Sir George Ratcliff and made an eloquent Speech on that Occasion The Charge consisting of Three Articles was General for subverting the Laws and introducing Arbittary Government by extrajudicial and unjust Decrees for inflicting infamous Punishments by Pillory c. on Persons of Reputation and subverting the Rights of Parliament But it seems there was a Dispute raised Whether the House of Lords in Ireland had Power of Judicature in Capital Cases Whereupon Captain Audley Mervin made a most excellent Speech in the Lords House in Parliament 24 May 1641. And afterwards he Impeached Sir George Ratcliff then in the Gate-house Westminster in the Parliament of England of the aforesaid Articles and adds That he joyned with the Earl of Strafford in taking out Eighty thousand Pounds out of the Exchequer to buy Tobacco and that he countenanced Papists to build Monasteries c. On the Sixteenth of March 1640. Secretary Vane sent the Lords Justices the following Letter by His Majesty's Command Right Honorable HIS Majesty hath commanded me to acquaint your Lordships with an Advice given him from abroad and confirm'd by His Ministers in Spain and elsewhere which in this distemper'd Time and Conjuncture of Affairs deserves to be seriously considered and an especial Care and Watchfulness to be had therein Which is That of late there have passed from Spain and the like may well have been from other Parts an unspeakable number of Irish Churchmen for England and Ireland and some good old Soldiers under pretext of asking leave to raise Men for the King of Spain whereas it is observed among the Irish Fryars * * In Spain there a Whisper runs as if they expected a Rebellion in Ireland and particularly in Connaught Wherefore His Majesty thought fit to give your Lordships this notice that in your Wisdoms you might manage the same with that dexterity and secrefie as to discover and prevent so pernicious a Design if any such there should be and to have a watchful Eye on the Proceedings and Actions of those who come thither from abroad on what pretext soever And so herewith I rest Your Lordships most humble Servant HENRY VANE In the mean time the Earl of Strafford came to his Tryal in England and it was the most Solemn that ever was in that Kingdom and at length he was Attainted by Act of Parliament and accordingly beheaded on the 12th day of May 1641. and the Earl of Leicester was the same day appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland in his stead His Tryal is excellently wrote at large by Mr. Rushworth to which I must refer the curious Reader but because every Man has not that Book by him I have Cursorily extracted so much of it only as I thought pertinent to his History wherein if I have not been very exact it was because the Inquisitive may easily inform themselves as well as I by having recourse to the Original which I had not leisure to examine more carefully than I have done The Third Article which is the First relating to Ireland is that he should say That Ireland was a conquer'd Nation and that the King might do with them what he pleased and that the Charters of the Corporations were worth nothing and did bind the King no farther than he pleased To which the Earl Answers That he never spoke those words and that the Scope and Intent of what he did say was to ingratiate his Majesties Government to the People and that his words were well accepted at that time however they come to be resented now That the Charters of Dublin were Anno 1634. brought before the Council and still are in the hands of the Clerk of the Council because besides other Abuses the Papists of that City engrossed all the Trade and denied Liberty to such as came out of England to set up there which he hath so far remedied as that there are Three Englishmen now in Dublin for One that was there when he came to the Government and the Charters are not Condemned but enjoyed to this day so that he aim'd at a Reformation in favour of the English but did not design the Destruction of the Charters The Fourth Article was That the Earl of Cork having begun a Suit at Law to recover a Possession he had lost by Colour of an Order from the Lord Deputy and Council the Lord Deputy threatned to imprison him unless he would surcease his Suit saying That he would have neither Law nor Lawyers dispute or question his Orders and that he said upon another the like Occasion That he would make the Earl of Cork and all Ireland know that so long as he had the Government there any Act of State there made or to be made should be as binding to the Subjects of that Kingdom as an Act of Parliament and that he question'd that Earl in the Castle-Chamber upon Pretence of a Breach of an Order of Council-Table To this the Earl of Strafford answered That the Council-Table was a Court of Record in Ireland wherein they proceeded formally by Bill Answer Examination of Witnesses c. and therefore the Orders of it are binding and ought to be obey'd he denies he compar'd it to a Parliament and denies that the Earl of Cork was prosecuted for disobedience of an Order of Council only The Fifth Article was That in time of Peace 12th of December 1635. he did give and procure to be given Sentence of Death against the Lord Mountnorris at a Council of War for saying of an Accidental
thousand five hundred Pounds yet for the better furthering of the Service we desire Ten thousand Pounds if it may stand with your Convenience 6. That their Pay which was condescended unto from the Eighth of December be presently advanced to the Eighth of February next against which time we are confident they shall be ready to march 7. That a Man of W●r or some M●rchants Ships be sent from Bristol Westchester or Dublin to 〈◊〉 for a Safe Convoy and Guard of the Passage because they 〈…〉 Boats may be subject to Inconveniences from the Enemy 〈…〉 we hear are towards that Coast 8. That the sending 〈…〉 th●se Men be without prejudice to the Proceeding of the Treaty which we desire may go on without any delay Westm 24. Jan. 1641. JA. PRYMROSE Which Proposals were approved of by Both Houses but the King disliked the Third Article as appears by His Answer viz. His Majesty having perused and considered these Eight Propositions presented by the Scots Commissioners doth willingly consent to them all except only the Third which His Majesty doth not approve and wisheth the Houses to take that Article again into Consideration as a Business of very great Importance which His Majesty doubts may be prejudicial to the Crown of England and the Service intended And if the Houses desire it His Majesty shall not be unwilling to speak with the Scots Commissioners to see what Satisfaction he can give them therein And the next day they waited upon him and told him That since it was only Matter of Trust that was in debate they hoped that he who was their Native King would not shew less Confidence in them than the English Nation had done Whereupon His Majesty consented rather than the necessary Supplies for Ireland should be delay'd And on the Fourteenth of February a Committee of Both Houses went with a Message to the Spanish Ambassador to this effect That the Parliament were informed Husbands 79. That some Vessels in Dunkirk laden with Arms and Ammunition were designed for Ireland and that if they or any such Ships were suffered to go thence it should be interpreted a Breach of the Peace between England and Spain To which the Ambassador answered That he would be careful to continue the League between both Crowns and did assure them that those Ships were not bound for Ireland And on the same Fourteenth day of February His Majesty sent a Message to Both Houses in which are these Words For Ireland in behalf of which His Majesty's Heart bleeds as His Majesty hath concurred with all Propositions made for that Service by His Parliament so He is resolved to leave nothing undone for their Relief which shall fall within His possible Power nor will refuse to venture His own Person in that War if His Parliament shall think it convenient for the Reduction of that miserable Kingdom And in the same Month the Parliament knowing that the Sale of the Rebels forfeited Estates was the best way to prevent future Rebellions by English Plantations in Ireland and to raise Money for suppressing of this did vote as followeth viz. THe Lords and Commons taking into their serious Considerations Husbands 84. as well the Necessity of a speedy Reducing of the Rebels of Ireland to their due Obedience as also the great Sums of Money that the Commons of this Realm have of late paid for the Publick and Necessary Affairs of the Kingdom whereof the Lords and Commons are very sensible and desirous to embrace all good and honorable Ways tending to His Majesty's Greatness and Profit the Setling of that Realm and the Ease of His Majesty's Subjects of England And whereas divers Worthy and Well-affected Persons perceiving that many Millions of Acres of the Rebels Lands of that Kingdom which go under the name of Profitable Lands will be confiscate and to be disposed of and that in case Two Millions and a half of those Acres equally taken out of the Four Provinces of that Kingdom may be allotted for the Satisfaction of such Persons as shall disburse any Sums Money for the Reducing of the Rebels there it would effectually accomplish the same have made these Propositions ensuing 1. That Two Millions and a half of those Acres may be assigned allotted and divided amongst them after this Proportion viz. For each Adventurer of 200 l. 1000 Acres in Ulster 300 l. 1000 Acres in Conaught 450 l. 1000 Acres in Munster 600 l. 1000 Acres in Leinster all according to English Measure and consisting of Meadow Arable and profitable Pasture the Bogs Woods and barren Mountains being cast in over and above These two Millions and a half of Acres to be holden in free and common Soccage of the King as of his Castle of Dublin 2. That out of those two Millions and a half of Acres a constant Rent shall be reserved to the Crown of England after this Proportion viz. Out of each Acre thereof in Ulster 1 d. Conaught 1 ob Munster 2 q. Leinster 3 3. That for the erecting of Mannors settling of Waste and Commons maintaining of Preaching Ministers creating of Corporations and regulating of the several Plantations one or more Commissions be hereafter granted by Authority of Parliament 4. That Monies for this great Occasion may be the more speedily advanced all the Undertakers in the City of London and within 20 Miles distance thereof shall under-write their several Sums before the Twentieth day of March 1641. and all within Sixty Miles of London before the First day of April 1642. and the rest of the Kingdom before the First day of May 1642. 5. That the several Sums to be under-written shall be paid in at four Payments viz. one fourth part within ten days after such under-writing and the other three parts at three Months three Months and three Months all to be paid into the Chamber of London 6. That for the better Securing of the said several Sums accordingly every one that doth so under-write shall at the time of his Subscription pay down the twentieth part of the Total Sum that shall be by him then under-written And in case that the residue of his first fourth part be not paid in to such person or persons as shall be appointed to receive the same within the ten days before limitted then such Party shall not only forfeit the twentieth part of the Sum total formerly deposited but so much more of his first fourth Payment to be added thereunto as shall make up the one Moyety of the said first Payment And if the same Person shall fail in any other of the three Payments he shall then Forfeit his entire first fourth and all the Benefit of his Subscription which Forfeiture shall accrue to the common Benefit of the rest of the Undertakers The Lords and Commons upon due and mature Deliberation of these Propositions have approved of them and given their consent unto the same and will become humble Petitioners to His Majesty for His Royal Approbation thereof and
said Forces and hereby further requiring and authorizing you as Commander of them in chief to arm array divide distribute dispose conduct lead and govern in chief the said Forces according to your best Discretion and with the said Forces to resist pursue follow apprehend and put to death slay and kill as well by Battel as other ways all and singular the said Conspirators Traitors and their Adherents according to your Discretion and according to your Conscience and Discretion to proceed against them or any of them by Martial Law by hanging them or any of them till they be dead according as it hath been accustomed in Time of open Rebellion and also to take waste and spoil their or any of their Castles Holds Forts Houses Goods and Territories or otherwise to preserve the Lives of them or any of them and to receive them into his Majesties Favour and Mercy and to forbear the Devastation of their or any of their Castles Forts Holds Goods and Territories aforementioned according to your discretion Further hereby requiring and authorizing you to do execute and perform all and singular such other thing for Examination of Persons suspected discovery of Traitors and their Adherents parlying with and granting Protections to them or any of them taking up of Carts Carriages and other Conveniences sending and retaining Espials victualling the said Forces and other things whatsoever conducing to the purpose aforementioned as you in your discretion shall think fit and the Necessity of the Service require further hereby requiring and authorizing you as Commander in chief to constitute and appoint such Officers and Ministers respectively for the better performance and execution of all and singular the Premises as you in your discretion shall think fit And we do hereby require and command all and singular His Majesties Sheriffs Officers and Ministers and loving Subjects of and within the County of Meath and the Borders thereof upon their Faith and Allegiance to His Majesty and to his Crown to be aiding helping and assisting to you in the doing and executing of all and singular the Premises This our Commission to continue during our pleasure only and for the so doing this shall be your sufficient Warrant Given at His Majesties Castle of Dublin November 2 d. 1641. To our very good Lord Nicholas Viscount Gormanstown R. Dillon Jo. Temple Ja. Ware Rob. Meredith Appendix IX The Deposition of Henry Jones Doctor in Divinity and Dean of Kilmore I Henry Jones Doctor in Divinity in obedience to His Majesties Commission requiring an Account of the Losses of his Loyal Subjects wherein they suffered by the present Rebellion in Ireland Requiring also a Declaration of what traiterous Words Projects or Actions were done said or plotted by the Actors or Abetters in that Rebellion do make and give in this following Report of the Premises to the best of my knowledge As for the present Rebellion howsoever the breaking out of this Fire into a Flame began first on the 23 d. of October yet was it smoking as may well be conjectured for many years before God having given us many and apparent Grounds for the Discovery of it had they been duly considered or fully prosecuted to a discovery of which kind we find these following four particulars 1. The first that about three or four years since amongst many Books brought into Limeriek from foreign yarts and seized upon by the Reverend Bishop of that See as probibited being thereunto authorized by the State One had a written Addition to the first part which was printed the Manuscript containing a Discourse of the Fryers of the Augustine Order sometimes seated in the Town of Armagh in Vlster but by reason of the Times at that present resident as that writing imported in the City of Limerick in Munster that while it flourished at Armagh it was protected and largely provided for by the then Earl of Tyrone Since whose expulsion out of Ireland that Convent was also decayed and driven to those distresses it did for the present undergo but that within three years this is as I remember the time limitied Ireland should find that he had a Son inheriting his Fathers Vertues who should restore that Kingdom to its former Liberty and that Convent to its first Lustre or words to that effect This was related unto me by that zealous and learned Prelate Doctor Webb now Bishop of Limerick who saw and read the said passage purposing as his Lordship told me to send that Book to the Lord President of Munster to be taken into further consideration 2. Hereunto was added a second passage about the same time at Limeriek aforesaid where a Popish Priest gave out that within three years there should not be a Protestant in Ireland or words to that purpose with some other material Circumstances which I do not now remember yet all so concurring with the former or the first to this for which preceeded I know not both being about one time that it was thought fitting to be considered of the said Priest being sent unto the Lords Justices at Dublin and he committed to the Castle 3. The third did agree with the two former and fell out about the same time in the Country of Westmeath in the Province of Linster where Walter Nugent of Rathaspeck in the said County Eldest Son the Walter Nugent Esquire a Man of great Fortunes upbraiding an Irish Protestant who was the Parish Clark of Rathaspeck aforesaid with his Religion and both speaking Latin the said Newgent uttered these words Infratres Annos veniet tempus potentia in Hibernia quando tu longe likely meaning diu pendebis in cruce propter Diabolicam vestram Religionem The party to which this was spoken feared the power of the man and durst not speak of it only in private yet being called upon and examined juridically upon Oath he deposed these words And being demanded whether the words were in Hiberniam or Hibernia the first importing an Invasion the other an Insurrection at home he deposed the latter having time given him to consider of it These Examination were sent to Sir George Ratcliff Newgent was sent for and committed to the Castle of Dublin and remained in long durance but after was dismissed 4. Hereunto was added the fourth about the same time near the Nass about Twelve Miles from Dublin where a Popish Preist newly arrived out of Flanders did make his Address to the then Lord-Deputy and informed his Lordship of an intercourse of Letters between the Earl of Tyrone with others in Flanders and the Popish Primate of Armagh Rely concerning an Invasion within a short time intended upon Ireland the said Priest offering so his Person might be secured to direct such as should be thereunto appointed to the place where the said Letters were in the Custody of the said Rely Rely was thereupon sent for together with the Popish Vicar General of Armagh as I remember it both were committed to the said Castle of Dublin but soon after
by any Ships or other Vessels of what Country or Nation soever under their Power or Command or Waged Imployed or Contracted with on their behalf or by any Forts Garrisons or Forces within this Kingdom under their Power in their coming to this Kingdom or returning from thence 4. It is concluded and accorded and the said Lord Viscount Muskery and the rest of the above named Parties do promise and undertake for and in the behalf of those for whom they are Authorised as aforesaid that all Ships Barks and Vessels which shall bring Provisions to any Harbour in this Kingdom in the hands of such as shall obey the Articles of this Cessation from any Potts in the Kingdom of England having his Majesties Pass or the Pass of any who is or shall be His Majesties Admiral or Vice-Admiral or the Pass of any Governor or Governors of any the Ports in England in his Majesties Hands or which shall hereafter during this Cessation be in his Majesties Hands or the Pass of the said Marquess shall not be interrupted by any of those for whom the said Lord Viscount Muskery and the rest of the above named Persons are Authorised as aforesaid neither in their coming to this Kingdom or in their return so as they use not any acts of Hostility to any of their said Party And this to be a Rule until his Majesties Pleasure be further declared therein upon application of the Agents of the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. to His Majesty 5. It is concluded and accorded and the said James Marquess of Ormond doth promise and undertake for and in the Name of His Majesty that no interruption shall be given by any Ship or Ships under his Majesties Power and Command or Waged Imployed or Contracted with by or in the behalf of his Majesty or by any of his Majesties Forts Garrisons or Forces within this Kingdom to any Ship or Ships that shall Trade with any of the said Roman-Catholicks who are now in Arms c. or any of their Party or which shall come in or go out of any the Cities Towns Harbours Creeks or Ports of this Kingdom in the hands of the said Roman-Catholicks now in Arms c. with Arms Ammunition Merchandise Commodity or any thing whatsoever during this Cessation As on the other side the said Donogh Viscount Muskery and the rest above named of that Party do promise and undertake for and in the behalf of those by whom they are Authorised that no interruption shall be given by any Ship or other Vessel whatsoever under the Power and Command of their Party or Waged Imployed or Contracted with by or in the behalf of their Party or by any Forts Garrisons or Forces within this Kingdom in their Power to any Ship or ships that shall Trade with any of his Majesties Subjects obeying this Cessation or which shall come in or go out of any of the Cities Towns Harbours or Ports of this Kingdom which shall obey this Cessation with Arms Ammunition Merchandise Commodity or any other thing whatsoever during this Cessation Provided that no Ship or Ships shall be admitted free Trade by colour of this Article but such as are warranted by the precedent Articles 6. It is Concluded and Accorded that the Quarters in the Province of Leinster be as followeth viz. That the County of Dublin the County of the City of Dublin the County of the Town of Droghedagh and the County of Lowth shall remain and be during the Cessation in the possession of his Majesties Protestant Subjects and of such as adhere unto them respectively saving and excepting unto the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party all such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed in the said Counties or any of them by any of the said Party And it is further Concluded and Accorded that as much of the County of Meath as is on the East and South-side of the River of Boyne from Droghedagh to Trym and thence to the Lordship of Moylagh and thence to Moyglare and thence to Dublin shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the possession of His Majesties Protestant Subjects and of such as adhere unto them respectively saving and excepting to the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms and their Party all such Castles Towns Lands and Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed by any of the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and of their Party within the said Limits and Boundaries and that the Residue of the said County of Meath shall remain in the Hands and Possession of the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except the Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed within the said last mentioned Quarters in the County of Meath by his Majesties Protestant Subjects and such as adhere unto them or by any of them respectively And that so much of the County of Kildare as is on this side of the Liffy where Naas is situate and on the other side of the Liffy from Dublin Westward into the County of Kildare so far as the Rye water at Kilcock and so far betwixt that and the Liffy as shall be at the same distance from Dublin as the said Rye Water is at Kilcock on that side of the Liffy shall during the said Cessation remain and be in the Hands and Possessions of his Majesties Protestant Subjects and their Adherents respectively except such Castles Towns Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed within the said Quarters by the said Roman-Catholick Subjects who are now in Arms c. and their Party and that the residue of the said County of Kildare shall remain in the hands of the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed by his Majesties Protestant Subjects and their Adherents respectively within the said last mentioned Quarters in the said County of Kildare And that the several Counties of Wicklow West Meath Kings County Queens County Catherlagh Kilkenny County of the City of Kilkenny Wexford and Longford shall during the said Cessation remain in the Hands of the said Roman-Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their Party except such Castles Towns Lands Territories and the Lands and Hereditaments thereunto belonging which upon the said Fifteenth day of September 1643 at the Hour aforesaid are possessed within the said County by
and if the Confederates be so desirous to try their innocency as they pretend they need not stay for another Parliament in Ireland but submit to that which is now in being which is an equal and just Parliament as in some of our Reasons touching that point is expressed ☞ and the offering to draw it to a new Parliament is in effect to desire that they may be their own Judges For as that Kingdom is now imbroiled and wasted the chief Delinquents or their Confederates will be so prevalent a Faction in the next Parliament that they will be able and doubtless will clear all the Popish Party how guilty soever and condemn all the Protestants how innocent soever These Answers to the high and unexpected demands of the Confederates we have framed in humble obedience to your Majesties directions but being very sensible as of the weight and great importance of the business so also of our own weakness and want of time and well knowing that some of your Majesties Privy-Counsellors Judges and Officers of that Kingdom are now in Town sent for over and here attending by your Majesties Command who by their long observations● and experience of the a●a●rs and state of Ireland are better abl● to give your Majesty mor● full and satisfactory answers touching the premises than we can and conceiving that the Collection in answer to the said Confederates Remonstrance which we humbly presented to your Majesty the Seventeenth of the last Month of April may in many things give your Majesty more light than these our answers do or can We humbly beseech your Majesty that the said Privy-Counsellors Judges and Officers as occasion shall require may be called upon and heard to give your Majesty the more satisfaction in these particulars and that to the same purpose the Book of the said Collections may be perused and considered of as your Majesty shall find most requisite Append. XXIV Articles of Peace made concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between his Excellency James Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant General and General Governour of his Majesties Kingdom of Ireland for and on the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty of the one part And Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Donogh Lord Viscount Muskery Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Bryen Patrick Darcy Geffery Brown and John Dillon Esquires Appointed and Authorised for and in the behalf of His Majesties said Roman-Catholick Subjects on the other part 1. IT is concluded accorded and agreed upon by his Majesties said Commissioner for and on the behalf of His most Excellent Majesty and the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret Donogh Lord Viscount Muskery Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Dermot O Bryen Patrick Darcy Geffery Brown and John Dillon Esquires on the behalf of the said Roman Catholick Subjects and his Majesty is graciously pleased that it shall be provided by Act of Parliament to be passed in the next Parliament to be held in this Kingdom That the Professors of the Roman Catholick Religion in the said Kingdom or any of them be not bound or obliged to take the Oath expressed in the Statute of Secundo Eliz. commonly called the Oath of Supremacy and that the said Oath shall not be tendred unto them and that the refusal of the said Oath shall not redound to the prejudice of them or any of them they taking the Oath of Allegiance in haec verba I A. B. do truly acknowledge confess testify and declare in my conscience before God and the World That our Sovereign Lord King CHARLES is Lawful and Rightful King of this Realm and of other His Majesties Dominions and Countries and I will bear Faith and true Allegiance to His Majesty and His Heirs and Successors and him and them will defend to the uttermost of my power against all Conspiracies and Attempts whatsoever which shall be made against His or their Crown or Dignity and do my best endeavour to disclose and make known unto His Majesty His Heirs and Successors or to the Lord Deputy or other Governour for the time being all Treasons or Trayterout Conspiracies which I shall know or hear to be intended against his Majesty or any of them and I do make this recognition and acknowledgement heartily willingly and truly upon the true faith of a Christian So help me God c. So as by the same Act it be further Provided and Enacted that if any Roman-Catholick happen to be promoted presented or advanced to any Ecclesiastical Promotion Dignity or Benifice according to the form now used in the Protestant Church of Ireland that the freedom and exemption aforesaid shall not extend to any such Roman-Catholick Or if any being a Protestant be advanced promoted or presented to any Ecclesiastical Benefice Dignity or Promotion shall afterwards happen to become a Roman-Catholick that the freedom and exemption aforesaid shall not so far extend to any such Roman-Catholick but that upon tender of the said Oath and refusal thereof he be for that cause left subject to privation of the said Benefice Dignity or Promotion according to the said Statue and it is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said Parties that for all matters concerning the first Proposition of the said Catholicks viz. That all Acts made against the Professors of the Roman-Catholick Faith whereby any restraint penalty mulct or incapacity may be laid upon any Roman-Catholick within the Kingdom of Ireland may be Repealed and the said Catholicks to be allowed the freedom of the Roman Catholick Religion That His Majesties said Roman-Catholick Subjects be referred to His Majesties gracious Favour and further Concessions and that no clause in these Articles shall or may hinder His Majesties said Roman-Catholick Subjects or any of them from the benefit of His Majesties further Graces and Concessions and that no use shall be made of the Papers past on this Treaty or any of them concerning the said first Proposition which may in any sort hinder the said Roman-Catholick Subjects or any of them from His Majesties further Concessions And that His Majesties said Commissioner and other chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being shall cause whatsoever shall be further directed by His Majesty to be passed in Parliament for and on the behalf of His said Roman Catholick Subjects to be accordingly drawn into Bills and transmitted according to the usual manner to be afterwards passed as Acts in the said Parliament 2. It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased to call a new Parliament to be held in this Kingdom on or before the last day of November next ensuing and that all matters agreed on by these Articles to be passed in Parliament shall be transmitted into England according to the usual form to be passed in the said Parliament and that the said Acts so to be agreed upon and so to be passed shall receive no alteration or diminution here or
take notice of and pursue the said Act of Oblivion without Pleading or Suit to be made for the same And that no Clerk or other Officers do make out or write out any manner of Writs Processes Summons or other Precepts for concerning or by reason of any Matter Cause or Thing whatsoever Released Forgiven Discharged or to be Forgiven by the said Act under pain of Twenty pound Sterling And that no Sheriff or other Officers do Execute any such Writ Process Summons or Precept and that no Record Writing or Memory do remain of any Offence or Offences Released or Forgiven or mentioned to be Forgiven by this Act And that all other causes usually inserted in Acts of General Pardon or Oblivion enlarging His Majesty's Grace and Mercy not herein particularized be inserted and comprized in the said Act when the Bill shall be drawn up with the Exceptions already expressed and none other Provided always that the said Act of oblivion shall not extend unto any Treason Felony or other Offence or Offences which shall be committed or done from or after the Date of these Articles until the First day of the before mentioned next Parliament to be held in this Kingdom Provided also that any Act or Acts which shall be done by vertue pretence or in persuance of these Articles or any of them after the Publication of the said Articles or any Act or Acts which shall be done by Vertue Colour or Pretence of the Power or Authority used or exercised by and amongst the confederate Roman Catholicks after the Date of these Articles and before the said Publication shall not be Accounted Taken Construed or be Treason Felony or other Offence to be excepted out of the said Act of Oblivion Provided likewise that the said Act of Oblivion shall not extend unto any Person or Persons that will not Obey and Submit unto the Peace Concluded and Argeed on by these Articles 16. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that an Act be Passed in the next Parliament prohibiting that neither the Lord Deputy or other Chief Governor Governors Lord Chancellor Lord High-Treasurer Vice-Treasurer Chancellor or any of the Barons of the Exchequer Privy Council or Judges of the four Courts be Farmours of His Majesty's Customs within this Kingdom 17. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that an Act of Parliament Pass in this Kingdom against Monopolies such as was Enacted in England 21. Jacobi Regis with a further clause of Repealing all Grants of Monopolies in this Kingdom and that Commissioners be Agreed upon by the said Lord Lieutenant and the Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them to set down the Rates for the Custom or Imposition to be laid on Aquavite Wine Oyl Yarn and Tobacco 18. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that such Persons asshall be Agreed on by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them shall be upon conclusion of these Articles Authorized by Commission under the great Seal to Regulate the Court of Castle-Chamber and such causes as shall be brough into and censured in the said Court 19. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that two Acts lately Passed in this Kingdom prohibiting the Plowing with Horses by the tail and the other prohibiting the burning of Oats in the Straw be Repealed 20. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that upon perfection of these Articles such course shall be taken against such who have disobeyed the Cessation and will not submit to the Peace if any shall Oppose it as shall be just and for the Peace of the Kingdom 21. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased forasmuch as upon application of Agents from this Kingdom unto His Majesty in the Fourth Year of his Reign and lately upon humble Suit made unto His Majesty by a Committee of both Houses of the Parliament of this Kingdom Order was given by His Majesty for redress of several Grievances and for so many of those as are not expressed in these Articles whereof both Houses in the next ensuing Parliament shall desire the benefit of His Majesty 's said former directions for Redresses therein that the same be afforded them yet so as for prevention of inconveniencies to His Majesties Service that the warning mentioned the 21 st Article of the Graces in the Fourth Year of His Majesties Reign be so understood that the Warning being left at the Persons dwelling Houses be held sufficient Warning and that as to the 22 d. Article of the said Graces the Process hitherto used in the Court of Wards do still continue as hitherto it hath done in that and hath been used in other English Courts but the Court of Wards being compounded for so much of the aforesaid Answer as concerns Warning and Process shall be omitted 22. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that Maritime causes may be determined in this Kingdom without driving of Merchants or others to Appeal and seek Justice elsewhere and if it shall fall out that there be cause of an Appeal the Party grieved is to Appeal to His Majesty in the Chancery of Ireland and the Sentence thereupon to be given by the Delegates to be Definitive and not to be questioned upon any further Appeal except it be in the Parliament of this Kingdom if the Parliament shall then be Sitting otherwise not This to be by Act of Parliament 23. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty out of His abundant Grace and Goodness to His Subjects of this Kingdom is graciously pleased to Assent that his said Subjects be eased of the increase of Rents lately raised on them upon the Commission of Defective Titles in the Earl of Straffords Government This to be by Act of Parliament 24. It is further Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that by Act to be Passed in the next Parliament all the arrears of Interest of Mony which did accrew or grow due by way Debt Mortgage or otherwise and yet not satisfied since the 23 d. of October 1641. until the perfection of these Articles shall be fully Forgiven and Released And that for and during the space of Three Years next ensuing no more shall be taken for Use or Interest or Mony than Five Pounds percent and in all Cases of Equity arising
through disability occasioned by the distempers of those Times the considerations of Equity to be alike unto both Parties 25. It is Concluded Accorded and Agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is graciously pleased that the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. shall be immediately upon conclusion of these Articles Authorized by Act of State to proceed in Hear Determine and Execute within the Cities corporate Towns Counties and parts of Counties now or late within the Quarters of the said confederate Catholicks the ensuing particulars and all matters thereupon depending and that the said Act of State and other the Authorities hereafter mentioned shall remain of Force without Revocation Alteration or Dimunition until Acts of Parliament be passed according to the Purport and Intent of these present Articles only in case of Death of any of the said Persons so to be Authorized the Lord Lieutenat or other Chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being shall by the Advice and Consent of the Persons so to be Authorized then Living or any Five or more of them name others in the place of such who shall be so Dead and the Persons so to be named to be Authorized as the former and that the Persons to be Authorized as aforesaid or any Five or more of them be permitted without interruption to Applot Raise and Levy Means with Indifferency and Equality upon all His Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects of this Kingdom for the Raising Clothing and bringing to Sea-Ports and Maintaining there until they be Shipped Ten thousand Men promised by the confederate Catholicks of this Kingdom to assist His Majesty and to Levy the Arrears of all Excises and other Publick Taxes already Imposed by them and yet unpaid and to call all Receivers and other Accomptants of all former Taxes and Publick Dues to a just and strict Accompt either by themselves or by such as they or any Five or more of them shall Name and Appoint And that the said Persons to be Authorized as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall have power to Applot Raise and Levy means with Indifferency and Equality by way of Excises otherwise in the several Cities Corporate Towns Conties and parts of Counties now within the Quarters of the said Confederate Catholicks towards the maintenance of such Army or Armies as shall be thought fit to continue and be in Pay for the defence of the Kingdom and towards the maintenace of all the Forts Castles and Garrisons within both or either of the now Quarters of either Party other than such of the said Garrisons Forts and Castles as from time to time until there be a settlement in Parliament shall be thought fit by His Majesty's chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being by and with the Advice and Consent of the said Persons so to be Authorized or any Five or more of them not to be maintained at the charge of the Publick Provided that His Majesties Lieutenant or other chief Governors for the time being be first made acquainted with such Taxes Levies and Excises as shall be made and the manner of Levying thereof and that he approve the same and that the Persons to be Authorized as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall be Authorized to appoint Receivers Collectors and all other Officers for such Monies as shall be so Assessed and for the Arrears of all former Applotments Taxes and other Publick Dues yet unpaid and that the Persons so to be Authorized or any Five or more of them in case of Refractoriness or Delinquency may Distrain and Imprison and cause such Delinquents to be Distrained or Imprisoned and that the profits of the Estates within the now Quarters of the confederate Catholicks of such as shall adhere to the Parliament and not submit to the Peace be accompted as Publick Dues and be converted to the maintenance of the Kings Army and that the said Persons to be Authorized as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall have Power to Applot Raise and Levy means with Indifferency and Equality for the buying of Arms and Ammunition and for entertaining of Frigats in such proportion and manner as shall be thought fit by His Majesties Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors for the time being by and with the Advice and Consent of the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them the said Arms and Ammunition to be laid up in such Magazines and under the charge of such Persons as shall be agreed by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them and to be issued and the said Frigats to be employed by the Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors for the time being for the safety of the Kingdom by the advice and consent of the said Richard Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them and that the said Persons so to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall have power to Applot Raise and Levy Means with indifferency and equality by way of Excises or otherwise in the several Cities Corporate Towns Counties and parts of Counties now within the Quarters and upon the Estates of the said Confederate Catholicks all such Sum and Sums as shall appear unto the said Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them to be really due for and in discharge of the publick ingagements of the said Confederate Catholicks incurred or grown due before the Conclusion of these Articles and that the said Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall have power to Applot Raise and Levy Means with indifferency and equality by way of Excise or otherwise in the several Cities Corporate Towns Counties and parts of Counties now within the Quarters of the said Confederate Catholicks as well for the Persons to be authorised as aforesaid and also for such other Person and Persons as shall be imployed in publick Affairs within the several Cities Corporate Towns Counties and parts of Counties within the now Quarters of the said Confederate Catholicks from time to time until a settlement by Parliament and that the said Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them make perfect Books of all such Monies as shall be Applotted Raised and Levied out of which Books they are to make several and respective Abstracts to be delivered unto their Hands or the Hands of any Five or more of them to the several and respective Collectors who shall be appointed to Levy and Receive the same and that a duplicate of the said Books under the Hands of the said Persons to be authorised as aforesaid be delivered unto his Majesties Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Govenors for the time being whereby a perfect accompt might be given 26. It is further concluded accorded and
agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that for the preservation of the Peace and Tranquility of the Kingdom That the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them shall for the present agree upon such persons who are to be authorised by Commission under the great Seal to be Commissioners of the Peace Oyer and Terminer and Goal delivery in the several Counties and parts of Counties within the now Quarters of the Confederate Catholicks with such power as Justices of the Peace Oyer and Teminer and Goal delivery in former times of Peace have usually had which is not to extend unto any Crime or Offence committed before the Fifteenth of September 1643. And to be qualified with Power to Hear and Determine all Civil Causes coming before them not exceeding Ten Pounds provided that they shall not intermeddle with Titles of Lands provided likewise the authority of such Commissioners shall not extend to question any Person or Persons for any Cattle or Goods heretofore taken by either Party from the other contrary to the Articles of Cessations but that the same shall be left to be determined in such way as by these Articles is already prescribed which Commissioners are to continue till settlement by Parliament Si tam diu se bene gesserint and if any who shall be so intrusted shall misbehave himself in the execution of such trust within that time that then such other person or persons shall be appointed in his or their place as shall be agreed on by His Majesties Chief Governour or Governors for the time being by the Advice and Consent of the said Persons so to be intrusted or any Five or more of them and the said Commissioners are to make their Estreats as accustomed in time of Peace and shall take the ensuing Oath Viz. You shall Swear that as Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer and Goal delivery in the Counties of A. B. C. in all Articles of the Kings Commission to you directed you shall do equal right to the Poor and to the Rich after your Cunning Wit and Power and after the Laws and Customs of the Realm and in pursuance of these Articles and you shall not be of Council of any Quarrel hanging before you and the Issues Fines and Amerciaments which shall happen to be made and all Forfeitures which shall happen before you you shall cause to be entred without any concealment or imbezeling and truly send to the Kings Exchequer You shall not let for gift or other cause but well and truly you shall do your Office of Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery in that behalf and that you take nothing for your Office of Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer and Gaol delivery to be done but of the King and Fees accustomed And you shall not direct or cause to be directed any Warrant by you to be made to the Parties but you shall direct them to the Sheriffs and Bayliffs of the said Counties respectively or other the King's Officers or Ministers or other indifferent Persons to do Execution thereof So help you God And that as well in the said Commission as in all other Commissions and Authorities to be issued in pursuance of 〈◊〉 Articles this Clause shall be inserted viz. That all 〈…〉 and Marshal shall be required to be ●iding and assisting 〈…〉 the said Commissioners and other persons to be Authori●●● 〈…〉 the execution of their respective Powers 27. It is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased That none of the now Roman Catholick Party shall from henceforth untill there be a Settlement by Parliament Sue Implead or Arrest or be sued Impleaded 〈…〉 in any Court Place Judicature or Tribunal or before 〈…〉 Justice or Commissioner whatsoever other than 〈…〉 Commissioners aforesaid or in the several Corporations or other Judicatures within the now Quarters of the said Confederate Catholicks as hath or have Power derived from his Majesty 28. It is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that his Majesties Confederate Catholick Subjects do continue the possession of such of His Majesties Cities Garrisons Towns Forts and Castles which are within their now Quarters until settlement by Parliament and to be Commanded Ruled and Governed in chief by such as his Majesty or his chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being shall Appoint and his Majesty his chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom as aforesaid is to issue Commissions and appoint such Person and Persons as shall be named by his Majesties chief Governour of Governours for the time being by and with the Advice and Consent of the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret c. or any Five or more of them for the execution of such Command Rule or Government to continue until all the particulars in these present Articles agreed on to pass in Parliament shall be accordingly passed only in case of Death or Misbehaviour such other Person or Persons to be appointed for the said Command Rule and Government to be named and appointed in the place or places of him or them who shall so die or misbehave themselves as the chief Governor or Governors for the time being by the advice and consent of the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret and the rest of the above mentioned Parties to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall think fit and to be continued until settlement in Parliament as aforesaid 29. It is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that all Customs belonging to his Majesty which from the perfection of these present Articles shall fall due within this Kingdom shall be payed into his Majesties Receit and to his use any Request Clause or Demand in the Act of Oblivion or in any other former Propositions to the contrary notwithstanding Provided thet alliance very Person and Persons who are at the present intrusted within the now Quarters of the Confederate Catholicks by them the said Confederate Catholicks in the Entries Receits Collections or otherwise concerning the said Customs do continue their respective Imployments in the same until full settlement in Parliament other than as to such and so many of them as to the chief Governor or Governors for the time being by the advice and consent of the said Lord Viscount Mountgarret and the other Persons to be authorised as aforesaid or any Five or more of them shall be thought fit to be altered And then in such case or in case of Death or Misbehaviour or other alteration of any such Person or Persons such other Person or Persons to be imployed as shall be thought fit by the chief Governor or Governors for the time being by and with the advice and consent of
Allegiance in haec verba viz. I A. B. do hereby acknowledge profess testifie and declare in my Conscience before God and the World that our Sovereign Lord King Charles is lawful and rightful King of this Realm and of other his Majesties Dominions and Countries and I will bear Faith and true Allegiance to His Majesty and His Heirs and Successors and Him and them will defend to the uttermost of my power against all Conspiracies and Attempts whatsoever which shall be made against His or Their Crown and Dignity and do my best endeavour to disclose and make known to His Majesty His Heirs and Successors or to the Lord Deputy or other His Majesties chief Governor or Governors for the time being all Treason or Traiterous Conspiracies which I shall know or hear to be intended against His Majesty or any of Them And I do make this Recognition and Acknowledgment heartily willingly and truly upon the true Faith of a Christian So help me God c. Nevertheless the said Lord Lieutenant doth not hereby intend that any thing in these Concessions contained shall extend or be construed to extend to the granting of Churches ☞ Church-Livings or the exercise of Jurisdiction the authority of the said Lord Lieutenant not extending so far yet the said Lord Lieutenant is authorized to give the said Roman Catholicks full assurance as hereby the said L. Lieut. doth give unto the said Rom. Catholicks full assurance that they or any of them shall not be molested in the possession which they have at present of Churches and Church-Livings or of the exercise of their respactive Jurisdictions as they now exercise the same until such time as His Majesty upon a full consideration of the desires of the said Roman Catholicks in a Free Parliament to be held in this Kingdom shall declare his further Pleasure 2. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that a Free Parliament shall be held in this Kingdom within six months after the Date of these Articles of Peace or as soon after as Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon of Costologh Lord President of Connaught Donnogh Lord Viscount Muskery Francis Lord Baron of Athunry Alexander Mac Donnel Esquire Sir Lucas Dillon Knight Sir Nicholas Plunket Knight Sir Richard Barnewal Baronet Jeffery Browne Donnogh O Callaghan Tyrlagh O Neile Miles Reily and Ger●ald Fennel Esquires or the major part of them will desire the same so that by possibility it may be held and that in the mean time and until the Articles of these Presents agreed to be passed in Parliament be accordingly passed the same shall be inviolably observed as to the matters therein contained as if they were enacted in Parliament And that in case a Parliament be not called and held in this Kingdom within two years next after the Date of these Articles of Peace then his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other his Majesties chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being will at the request of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or the major part of them call a General Assembly of the Lords and Commons of this Kingdom to attend upon the said Lord Lieutenant or other his Majesties chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being in some convenient place for the better setling of the affairs of the Kingdom And it is further concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said parties that all matters that by these Articles are agreed upon to be passed in Parliament shall be transmitted into England according to the usual form to be passed in the said Parliament and that the said Acts so agreed upon and so to be passed shall receive no disjunction or alteration here or in England Provided that nothing shall be concluded by both or either of the said Houses of Parliament which may bring prejudice to any of his Majesties Protestant Party or their Adherents or to his Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects or their Adherents other than such things as upon this Treaty are concluded to be done or such things as may be proper for the Committee of Priviledges of either or both Houses to take cognizance of as in such cases heretofore hath been accustomed and other than such matters as his Majesty will be graciously pleased to declare his further pleasure in to be passed in Parliament for the satisfaction of his Subjects and other than such things as shall be propounded to either or both Houses by his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being during the said Parliament for the advancement of his Majesties Service and the Peace of the Kingdom which clause is to admit no construction which may trench upon the Articles of Peace or any of them and that both Houses of Parliament may consider what they shall think convenient touching the Repeal or Suspension of the Statute commonly called Poyning's Act Entituled An Act That no Parliament be holden in that Land until the Acts be certified into England 3. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said Parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased That all Acts Ordinances and Orders made by both or either Houses of Parliament to the blemish dishonour or prejudice of his Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects of this Kingdom or any of them sithence the seventh of August 1641. shall be vacated and that the same and all Exemplifications and other Acts which continue the memory of them be made void by Act to be past in the next Parliament to be held in this Kingdom and that in the mean time the said Acts or Ordinances or any of them shall be no prejudice to the said Roman Catholicks or any of them 4. Item It is also concluded and agreed upon and his Majesty is likewise graciously pleased that all indictments attainders outlawries in this Kingdom and all the processes and other proceedings thereupon and all Letters Patents Grants Leases Customs Bonds Recognizances and all Records Act or Acts Office or Offices Inquisitions and all other things depending upon or taken by reason of the said Indictments Attainders or outlawries sithence the seventh day of August 1641. in prejudice of the said Catholicks their Heires Executors Administrators or Assignes or any of them or the Widows of them or any of them shall be vacated and made void in such sort as no memory shall remain thereof to the blemish dishonour or prejudice of the said Catholicks their Heirs Executors Administrators or Assignes or any of them or the Widows of them or any of them and that to be done when the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or the major part of them shall desire the same so that by possibility it may be done and in the mean time that no such indictments attainders outlawries processes or any other proceedings thereupon or any letters patents grants leases custodiums
Titles between party and party grown after these patents granted are to be left to the ordinary course of Law and that the Counsel-Table do not hereafter intermeddle with common business that is within the cognizance of the ordinary Courts nor with the altering of possessions of Lands nor make nor use private Orders hearings or references concerning any such matter nor grant any injunction or order for stay of any suits in any civil cause and that parties grieved for or by reason of any proceedings formerly had there may commence their suits and prosecute the same in any of his Majesties Courts of Justice or Equity for Remedy of their pretended rights without any restraint or interruption from his Majesty or otherwise by the chief Governour or Governours and Council of this Kingdom and that the proceedings in the respective Presidency Courts shall be pursuant and according to his Majesties printed Book of Instructious and that they shall contain themselves within the limits prescribed by that Book when the Kingdom shall be restored to such a degree of quietness as they be not necessarily enforced to exceed the same 14. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased That as for and concerning one Statute made in this Kingdom in the eleventh year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth intituled led an Act for staying of Wool Flocks Tallow and other necessaries within this Realm and another Statute made in the said Kingdom in the twelfth year of the Reign of the said Queen intituled an Act c. And one other Statute made in the said Kingdom in the 13 year of the Reign of the said late Queen intituled an Exemplanation of the Act made in a Session of this Parliament for the staying of Wool Flocks Tallow and other wares and commodities mentioned in the said Act and certain Articles added to the same Act all concerning staple or native Commodities of this Kingdom shall be repealed if it shall be so thought fit in the Parliament excepting for Wool and Woolfels and that such indifferent persons as shall be agreed on by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon Esq c. or any seven or more of them shall be authorized by Commission under the great Seal to moderate and ascertain the rates of merchandize to be exported or imported out of or into this Kingdom as they shall think fit 15. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that all and every person and persons within this Kingdom pretending to have suffered by Offices found of several Countries Territories Lands and Hereditaments in the Province of Ulster and other Provinces of this Kingdom in or since the first of King James his Reign or by Attainders or Forfeitures or by pretence and colour thereof since the said first year of King James or by other Acts depending on the said Offices attainders and forfeitures may petition his Majesty in Parliament for relief and redress and if after examination it shall appear to his Majesty the said persons or any of them have been injured then his Majesty will prescribe a course to repair the person or persons so suffering according to Justice and Honour 16. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between tht said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that as to the particular Cases of Maurice Lord Viscount de Rupe and Fermoy c. they may petition his Majesty in the next Parliament whereupon his Majesty will take such consideration of them as shall be just and fit 17. Item It is likewise concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased That the Citizens Free-men Burgesses and former Inhabitants of the City of Cork Towns of Youghal and Dungarven shall be forthwith upon perfection of these Articles restored to their respective possessions and estates in the said City and Towns respectively where the same extends not to the endangering of the said Garrisons in the said City and Towns In which case so many of the said Citizens and Inhabitants as shall not be admitted to the present possession of their houses within the said City and Towns shall be afforded a valuable annual Rent for the same until settlement in Parliament ☞ at which time they shall be restored to those their possessions And it is further agreed and his Majesty is graciously pleased That the said Citizens Free-men Burgesses and Inhabitants of the said City of Cork and Towns of Youghal and Dungarven respectively shall be enabled in convenient time before the next Parliament to be hold in this Kingdom to chuse and return Burgesses into the same Parliament 18. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that an Act of Oblivion be past in the next Parliament to extend to all his Majesties Subjects of this Kingdom and their Adherents of all Treasons and Offences capital criminal and personal and other Offences of what nature kind or quality soever in such manner as if those Treasons or Offences had never been committed perpertrated or done That the said Act do extend to the Heirs Children Kindred Executors Administrators Wives Widows Dowagers or Assigns of such of the said Subjects and their Adherents who died on before or since the 23d of Octob. 1641. That the said Act do relate to the first day of the next Parliament that the said Act do extend to all Bodies Politick and Corporate and their respective Successors and unto all Cities Boroughs Counties Baronies Hundreds Towns Villages Tithings and every of them within this Kingdom for and concerning all and every of the said Offences or any other Offence or Offences in them or any of them committed or done by his Majesties said Subjects or their Adherents or any of them before in or since the 23d of Octob. 1641. Provided this Act shall not extend to be construed to pardon any Offence or Offences for which any person or persons have been convicted or attainted of Record at any time before the 23d of Octob. in the year of our Lord 1641. That this Act shall extend to Piracies and all other Offences committed upon the Sea by his Majesties said Subjects or their Adherents or any of them That in this Act of Oblivion words of release acquittal and discharge be inserted that no person or persons Bodies politick or Corporate Counties Cities Burroughs Baronnies Hundreds Towns Villages Tithings or any of them within this Kingdom included within the said Act be troubled impeached sued inquieted or molested for or by reason of any offence matter or thing whatsoever comprised within the said Act and the said Act shall extend to all Rents Goods and Chattels taken detained or grown due to the Subjects of the one party from the other
since the 23d of Octob. 1641. to the date of these Articles of Peace and also to all Customs Rents Arrears of Rents Prizes Recognizances Bonds Fines Forfeitures Penalties and to all other Profits Perquisites and Dues which were due or did or should accrue to his Majesty on before or since the 23d of Octob. 1641. until the perfection of these Articles and likewise to all Measne Rates Fines of what nature soever Recognizances Judgments Executions thereupon and Penalties whatsoever and to all other Profits due to his Majesty since the said 23d of October and before until the perfection of these Articles for by reason or which lay within the survey or Cognizance of the Court of Wards and also to all Respits Issues of Homage and Fines for the same provided this shall not extend to discharge or remit any of the Kings Debts or Subsidies due before the said 23d of Octob. 1641. which were then or before levied or taken by the Sheriffs Commissioners Receivers or Collectors and not then or before accounted for or since disposed to the publick use of the said Rom. Catholick Subjects but that such persons may be brought to account for the same after full settlement in Parliament and not before unless by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them as the said L. Lieut. otherwise shall think fit Provided that such barbarous and inhumane Crimes as shall be particularized and agreed upon by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them as to the Actors and Procurers thereof be left to be tried and adjudged by such indifferent Commissioners as shall be agreed upon by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Tho. Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them and that the power of the said Commissioners shall continue only for two years next ensuing the date of their Commission which Commission is to issue within six Months after the Date of these Articles Provided also that the Commissioners to be agreed on for the Trial of the said particular Crlnies to be excepted shall hear order and determine all Cases of Trust where relief may or ought in equity to be afforded against all manner of persons according to the Equity and Circumstances of every such Cases and his Majesties chief Governor or Governors and other Magistates for the time being in all his Majesties Courts of Justice and other his Majesties Officers of what condition or quality soever be bound and required to take notice of and pursue the said Act of Oblivion without pleading or suit to be made for the same and that no Clerk or other Officers do make out or write out any manner of Writs Processes Summons or other Precept for concerning or by reason of any matter cause or thing whatsoever released forgiven discharged or to be forgiven by the said act under pain of 20 l. sterling And that no Sheriff or other Officer do execute any such Writ Process Summons or Precept and that no Record Writing or Memory do remain of any Offence or Offences released or forgiven or mentioned to be forgiven by this Act and that all other clauses usually inserted in Acts of general pardon or oblivion enlarging his Majesties grace and mercy not herein particularised be inserted and comprised in the said Act when the Bill shall be drawn up with the exceptions already expressed and none other Provided always that the said Act of oblivion shall not extend to any Treason Felony or other Offence or Offences which shall be committed or done from or after the date of these Articles until the first day of the before mentioned next Parliament to be held in this Kingdom Provided also that any Act or Acts which shall be done by vertue pretence or in pursuance of these Articles of peace agreed upon or any Act or Acts which shall be done by vertue colour or pretence of the power or authority used or exercised by and amongst the Confederate Roman Catholicks after the date of the said Articles and before the said publication shall not be accounted taken or construed or to be Treason Felony or other Offence to be excepted out of the said Act of oblivion Provided likewise that the said Act of oblivion shall not extend unto any person or persons that will not obey and submit unto the peace concluded and agreed on by these Articles Provided further that the said Act of oblivion or any thing in this Article contained shall not hinder or interrupt the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them to call to an account and proceed against the Council and Congregation and the respective Supream Councels Commissioners general appointed hitherto from time to time by the Confederate Catholicks to manage their affairs or any other person or persons accomptable to an accompt for their respective receipts and disbursements since the beginning of their respective imployments under the said Confederate Catholicks or to acquit or release any arrears of Excises Customs or publick Taxes to be accounted for since the 23. of Octob. 1641. and not disposed of hitherto to the publick use but that the parties therein concerned may be called to an account for the same as aforesaid by the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them the said act or any thing therein contained to the contrary notwithstanding 19. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that an act be passed in the next Parliament prohibiting that neither the Lord Deputy or other chief Governor or Governors Lord Chancellor Lord High-Treasurer Vice-Treasurer Chancellor or any of the Barons of the Exchequer Privy-Councel or Judges of the four Courts be Farmers of his Majesties Customs within this Kingdom 20. Item It is likewise concluded accorded and agreed and his Majesty is graciously pleased that an act of Parliament pass in this Kingdom against Monopolies such as was enacted in England 21. Jacobi Regis with a further clause of repealing of all grants of Monopolies in this Kingdom and that Commissioners be agreed upon by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them to set down the rates for the Custom and Imposition to be laid on Aquavitae Wine Oile Yarn and Tobacco 21. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed and his Majesty is graciously pleased that such persons as shall be agreed on by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall be as soon as may be authorised by Commission under the great Seal to regulate the Court of Castle-Chamber and such Causes as shall be brought into and censured in the said Court 22. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed upon
and his Majesty is graciously pleased that two Acts lately passed in this Kingdom one prohibiting the Plowing with Horses by the Tail and the other prohibiting the burning of Oats in the Straw be repealed 23. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased for as much as upon application of Agents from this Kingdom unto his Majesty in the fourth year of his Reign and lately upon humble suit made unto his Majesty by a Committee of both Houses of the Parliament of this Kingdom order was given by his Majesty for redress of several grievances and for so many of those as are not expressed in the Articles whereof both Houses in the next ensuing Parliament shall desire the benefit of his Majesties said former directions for redress therein that the same be afforded them yet so as for prevention of inconveniences to his Majesties Service that the warning mentioned in the 24. Article of the graces in the fourth year of his Majesties Reign be so understood that the warning being left at the persons dwelling Houses be held sufficient warning and as to the 22. Article of the said graces the Process hitherto used in the Court of Wards do still continue as hitherto it hath done in that and hath been used in other English Courts but the Court of Wards being compounded for so much of the aforesaid answer as concerns warning and process shall be omitted 24. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that Maritine causes may be determined in this Kingdom without driving of Merchants or others to appeal and seek Justice elsewhere and if it shall fall out that there be cause of an appeal the party grieved is to appeal to his Majesty in the Chancery of Ireland and the sentence thereupon to be given by the deligates to be definitive and not to be questioned upon any further appeal except it be in the Parliament of this Kingdom if the Parliament shall then be sitting otherwise not this to be by Act of Parliament and until the said Parliament the Admiralty a●d Maritine causes shall be ordered and settled by the said Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dilion c. or any seven or more of them 25. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that his Majesties Subjects of this Kingdom be eased of all Rents and increase of Rents lately raised on the Commission of defective Titles in the Earl of Straffords Government this to be by Act of Parliament and that in the mean time the said Rents or increase of Rents shall not be written for by any process or the payment thereof in any sort procured 26. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties and his Majesty is further graciously pleased that by Act to be passed in the next Parliament all the arrears of Interest mony which did accrue and grow due by way of debt mortagage or otherwise and yet not satisfied since the 23. of October 1641. until the perfection of these Articles shall be fully forgiven and be released and that for and during the space of three years next ensuing no more shall be taken for use or interest of mony then five pounds per centum And in cases of equity arising thro' disability occasioned by the Distempers of the times the considerations of equity to be a like unto both parties but as for mortgages contracted between his Majesties Roman Catholick Subjects and others of that party where entry hath been made by the mortgagers against Law and the condition of their mortgages and detained wrongfully by them without giving any satisfaction to the mortgages or where any such mortgagers have made profit of the lands mortgaged above country charges yet answer no rent or other consideration to the mortgagees the parties grieved respectively to be left for relief to a course of equity therein 27. Item It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that immediately upon perfection of these Articles the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. shall be authorized by the said Lord Lieutenant to proceed in hear determine and execute in and throughout this Kingdom the ensuing particulars and all the matters thereupon depending and that such authority and other the authorities hereafter mentioned shall remain of force without revocation alteration or diminution until Acts of Parliament be passed according to the purport and intent of these Articles and that in case of death miscarriage disability to serve by reason of sickness or otherwise of any the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. His Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other Chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being shall name and authorize another in the place of such as shall be so dead or shall miscarry himself or be so disabled and that the same shall be such person as shall be allowed of by the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them then living And that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall have power to applot raise and leavy means with indifferency and equality by way of Exercise or otherwise upon all his Majesties Subjects within the said Kingdom their persons Estates and Goods towards the maintenance of such Army or Armies as shall be thought fit to continue and be in pay for his Majesties service the defence of the Kingdom and other the necessary publick charges thereof and towards the maintenance of the Forts Castles Garrisons and Towns of both or either party other than such of the said Forts Garrisons and Castles as from time to time until there shall be a settlement in Parliament shall be thought fit by his Majesties chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them not to be maintained at the charge of the publick provided that his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being be first made acquainted with such Taxes Levies and Excises as shall be made and the manner of levying thereof and that he approve the same and to the end that such of the Protestant party as shall submit to the peace may in the several Counties where any of their Estates lieth have equality and indifferency in the Assessements and Levies that shall concern their Estates in the said several Counties It is concluded accorded and agreed upon and his Majesty is graciously pleased that in the
directions which shall issue to any such County for the applotting subdividing and levying of the said publick Assessements some of the said Protestant party shall be joyned with others of the Roman Catholick party to that purpose and for effecting that service and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall have power to levy the arrears of all excises and other publick taxes imposed by the Confederate Roman Catholicks and yet unpaid and to call Receivers and other Accomptants of all former taxes and all publick dues to a just and strict account either by themselves or by such as they or any seven or more of them shall name or appoint and that the said Lord Lieutenant or any other chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being shall from time to time issue Commissions to such person and persons as shall be named and appointed by the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them for letting setting and improving the Estates of all such person or persons as shall adhere to any party opposing his Majesties Authority and not submitting to the Peace and that the profits of such estates shall be converted by the said Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governour or Governours of this Kingdom for the time being to the maintenance of the Kings Army and other necessary charges until settlement by Parliament and that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall have power to applot raise and levy means with indifferency and equality for the buying of Arms and Ammunition and for the entertaining of Frigots in such proportion as shall be thought fit by his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governours of this Kingdom for the time being by and with the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them the said Arms and Ammunition to be laid up in such Magazines and under the charge of such persons as shall be agreed on by the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them and to be disposed of and the said Frigots to be imployed for his Majesties service and the publick use and benefit of this Kingdom of Ireland and that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall have power to applot raise and levy means with indifferency and equality by way of Excise or otherwise in the several Cities Corporate Towns Counties and part of the Counties now within the Quarters and only upon the Estates of the said Confederate Roman Catholicks all such sum and sums of mony as shall appear to the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them to be really due for and in the discharge of the publick ingagements of the said Confederate Catholicks incurred or grown due before the conconclusion of these Artieles and that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall be authorized to appoint Receivers Collectors and all other Officers for such monies as shall be assessed taxed or applotted in pursuance of the authorities mentioned in this Article and for the Arrears of all former applotments Taxes and other publick dues yet unpaid and that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them in case of refractoriness or delinquency may distrain and imprison and cause such Delinquents to be distrained and imprisoned And the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them make perfect books of all such monies as shall be applotted raised or levied out of which books they are to make several and respective abstracts to be delivered under their hands or the hands of any seven or more of them to the several and respective Collectors which shall be appointed to levy and receive the same And that a duplicate of the said books under the hands of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them be delivered unto his Majesties Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being whereby a perfect account may be given and that the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of ther●s shall have power to call the Councel and Congregation and the respective supream Councels and Commissioners General appointed hitherto from time to time by the said Confederate Roman Catholicks to manage their publick affairs and all other persons accountable to an account for all their Receipts and Disbursments since the beginning of their respective imployments under the Confederate Roman Catholicks 28. Item It is concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said parties and his Majesty is graciously pleased that for the preservation of the peace and tranquility of the Kingdom the said Lord Lieutenant and the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall for the present agree upon such persons who are to be authorized by Commission under the great Seal to be Commissioners of the Peace Oyer and Terminer Assises and Goal Delivery in and throughout the Kingdom to continue during pleasure with such power as Justices of the Peace Oyer and Terminer Assizes and Goal delivery in former time of Peace have usually had which is not to extend unto any crime or offence committed before the first of May last past and to be qualified with power to hear and determine all civil causes coming before them not exceeding ten pounds Provided that they shall not intermeddle with Titles of Lands provided likewise the authority of such Commissioners shall not extend to question any person or persons for any Shipping Cattle or Goods heretofore taken by either party from the other or other injuries done contrary to the Articles of Cessation concluded by and with the said Roman Catholick party in or since May last but that the same shall be determined by such indifferent persons as the Lord Lieutenant by the advice and consent of the said Thomas Lord Viscount Dillon c. or any seven or more of them shall think fit to the end that speedy and equal Justice may be done to all parties grieved And the said Commissioners are to make their Estreats as accustomed of peace and shall take the ensuing Oath viz. You shall swear that as Justice of the Peace Oyer and Terminer Assizes and Goal delivery in the Counties of A. B. in all Articles of the Commission to you directed You shall do equal right to the Poor and to the Rich after your Cunning and Wit and Power and after the Laws and Customs of the Realm and in pursuance of these Articles and you shall not be of Councel of any quarrel hanging before you and the Issues Fines and Amercements which shall happen to be made and all
superciliously or malitiously of those Actions whereunto they are willing Strangers And this being a Disadvantage whereunto all Commanders have been and ever will be subject we have no Reason to expect an Exemption from it and might therefore pass by this Grievance reserving Our self for an Account of Our Actions till it were required from Us by him to whom only in this Case We are obliged to render one But such is our desire to satisfy those that are faithful to the Cause We have laboured in and may have been stumbled at that Chance of War that We shall give them the Reason and Grounds of Our Undertaking and of the supposed Omission recited in what remains of these Grievances And first it is necessary it should be understood that a little before the time of that Defeat the Condition of Affairs in this Kingdom stood thus The Provinces of Leinster Munster and Connaught were entirely reduced to his Majesty's Obedience except the City of Dublin and Balishannon which were block'd up with a small Number of our Men. But in Vlster the Rebels by the Assistance of Owen O-Neil and the Interruption given to the Lord Viscount Mountgomery by the Scotish Clergy had raised the Seige of London-Derry and were become Masters of the Field About the same time also We had certain Intelligence that Cromwel with a very strong Army a vast Sum of Money and great plenty of all Provisions was ready ship'd for this Kingdom And it was from good Hands intimated unto Us that he purposed his Descent in Munster and that he had Intelligence with some Governour of the Sea-ports there Hereupon it was taken into Consideration at a Council of War whether the blocking up of Dublin should be continued or whether We should not retire from thence to Drogheda Trym and the Garisons adjacent and prepare our selves for securing Munster and making a defensive or offensive War as occasion should afterwards be offered And of this Opinion We were the rather because it was there also concluded that the Lord President of Munster with a good Party of our best Horse should go into Munster to secure it and that the very Day we rose from Finglass and marched to Rathmines Reynolds landed with 600 Horse and 1500 Foot Hereunto it was strongly objected That if We sent away Our heavy Cannon which we proposed should be done the more to facilitate an orderly Retreat the People would despair of the taking of Dublin that they would accompt all that was done as good as nothing unless that City were reduced That they would not consider that the City was to be reduced by distressing it by blocking up which might have securely been done the way We proposed but taking the Matter to be given over and consequently despairing of the Ease they expected by the total Reduction of the Kingdom would grow more and more backward in their Contribution and perhaps be seduced to a Conjunction with Owen O-Neil and a Rejection of the Peace and his Majesty's Authority thereby established over them which even then We found was though under-hand privately and under other Pretences aimed at by some that since have taken the Advantage of the time to declare themselves without Disguise It was also objected that unless Dublin were reduced before Cromwel's Landing with the Force and Treasure we were sure he had in Readiness at the Water-side that it was to be feared he would be able to corrupt many of the English which considering the Treasure he brought with him and the want We were in might as reasonably be apprehended as that Owen O-Neil and his Party should have become Mercenary to Sir Charles Coot Perswaded by these Arguments delivered by the whole Council of War We were resolved to continue before Dublin and to endeavour to approach near unto it to the end to take from them within the Conveniency of grazing betwixt Our Camp and their Works which if it had been effected their Horses being 1200 must in three days have starved and then the Benefit of the Sea would have been with much ease taken from them which would so much have discouraged all their Souldiers that it was probable they would in a few Days more have forced their Officers to a Treaty and Surrender of the City It was then conceived that Baggatrath was the fittest Place to be fortified But before We gave Order for it We sent the Earl of Castle-haven General Preston Sir Arthur Ashton and Major General Purcel to view it who returned unto Us approving the Place as in all Respects fit for our Purpose We then gave the Major General Order to command thither in the beginning of the Night 1500 Foot with Materials to fortify which was the Number advised to be sent by those Persons that had seen it In the Morning at Day-break we went thither and finding the Work not advanced to Our Expectation found fault therewith The Major General told Us That he was so misguided from the Camp thither which was not an English Mile that he came not to the Place till an Hour before Day Yet such was the natural Strength of the Place that being helped with a few Hours Work We conceived it might very well be made good against any Attempt of the Enemy But the better to secure it We put the whole Army in Arms and appointed it to be drawn down near Baggatrath shewing every General Officer where his Charge was and appointing the drawing down some Cannon to an Eminency of Ground commanding the same and some of the Fields leading from Dublin thither And then having been up all Night partly in writing of Dispatches and to be in the better Readiness in case the Enemy upon discovering Our Men marching should sally We retired to take a little Rest which was about nine of the Clock About ten We wakened with the Noise of Shot and before we could get on Horseback Our 1500 Men were beaten out of Baggatrath and soon after was Sir William Vaughan kill'd and the Horse with him routed Whereupon all those in the left Wing except Our Brothers and Colonel Miles Reyly's Regiments ran away without once facing the Enemy and as was alledged which we have not heard disproved against their Officers uttermost Endeavour In short The Rebels gained Field after Field till they came up to the Ordnance and thence into the Rear of Us standing in a Field with a Party of Foot commanded by Colonel Gifford who gave very good Fire upon them for a while but upon Discovery of another Party of the Rebels marching up to their Front some called for Quarter others threw down their Arms and some continued Shooting Then We quitted the Field and endeavoured but in vain several times to rally the Horse These are the Grounds for continuing the blocking up Dublin and this is briefly as much of the manner of the Defeat as We were Witness of and can readily call to mind That his Majesty's Army on that side the River attempted by
spending of their Blood in their Sovereigns Quarrel aspired to this Type of Honour in which at this Day God and my King be thanked I stand So your Lordship taking the nigher Way to the Wood by charging me with Treason would gladly trip so roundly on my Top that by shedding of my Blood and by catching my Lands into your Clutches that butt so near upon your Mannors of Kildare and Rathimghan as I dare say they are an Eye-sore unto you you might make my Master your Son a proper Gentleman A Gentleman quoth the Lord Justice thou bald Baron I tell thee the Vescies were Gentlemen before the Giraldins were Barons of Ophaly yea and before that Welsh Bankrupt thine Ancestor he meant Sir Maurice Fitz-Girald feathered his Nest in Leinster And whereas thou takest the Matter so far in Snuff I will teach thee thy Lyripups after another Fashion than to be thus malapartly cocking and billing with me that am thy Governour Wherefore albeit thy Taunts are such as might force the patientest Philosopher that is to be choakt with Choler Yet I would have thee ponder my Speech as though I delivered it in my most sober and quiet mood I say to the Face of thee and I will avow what I say unto thee That thou art a Supporter of Thieves a bolsterer of the King's Enemies an Upholder of Traytors a Murderer of Subjects a Firebrand of Dissention a rank Thief an arrant Traytor and before I eat these Words I will make thee eat a piece of my Blade The Baron bridling with might and main his Choler bare himself as cold in Countenance as the Lord Justice was hot in Words and replied in this wise My Lord I Am very glad that at length you unwrapt your self out of that Net wherein all this while you masked As for mine Ancestor whom you term a Bankrupt how Rich or how Poor he was upon his repair to Ireland I purpose not at this time to debate yet thus much I may boldly say That he came hither as a Buyer not as a Beggar he bought the Enemies Land by spending his Blood But you lurking like a Spider in his Cobweb to intrap Flies endeavour to beg Subject's Livings wrongfully by despoiling them of their Innocent Lives And whereas you charge me with malapertness in that I presume to chop Logick with you being Governour by answering your snappish Quid with a knappish Quo. I would wish you to understand now that you put me in mind of the Distinction that I as a Subject honour your Royal Authority but as a Nobleman despise your Dunghil Gentility Lastly Whereas you charge me with the odious Terms of Traitor Murtherer and the like and therewithal you wish me to resolve my self that you rest upon Reason not upon Rage if these Words proceed from your Lordship as from a Magistrate I am a Subject to be tried by order of Law and am sorry that the Governor who ought by vertue of his publick Authority to be my Judge is by reason of private Malice become mine Accuser But if you utter these Speeches as a private Person then I John Fitz-Girald Baron of Ophalie do tell thee William Vescie a singe-Sole Gentleman that I am no Traytor no Felon and that thou art the only Buttress by which the Kings Enemies are supported the mean and Instrument by which his Majesties Subjects are daily spoiled Therefore I as a Loyal Subject say Traytor to thy Teeth and that shalt thou well understand when we both shall be brought to the Rehearsal of these Matters before our Betters Howbeit during the time you bear Office I am resolv'd to give you the Mastery in Words and to suffer you like a brawling Cur to bark but when I see my time I will be sure to bite These biting Speeches passing to and fro great Factions on both sides were raised with high and mighty words and deep Oaths till in time either part appeas'd his own The Baron of Ophaly not sleeping nor slacking his Matter scudded with all haste into England where he was no sooner inshoared than Vescie after he had substituted William Hay in his room was imbarked making as hot foot after the Baron as he could The King and his Council understanding the occasion of their sudden Arrivals to the end the Truth should be brought to light appointed a set Day for the deciding of their Controversie and that each of them should speak for himself what he could Whereuon Vescie being commanded to begin spake to this effect My Dread Sovereign AS I must acknowledge my self somewhat aggrieved to be entangled in so intricate a Matter so I am glad as heart can think that so weighty a controversie is brought to the deciding of so upright an Umpire And whereas it stood with your Majesties Pleasure with the Advice of this your Honourable Council That I as unworthy should have the Government of your Realm of Ireland and during my Time your Majesties Subjects have been I may not deny it diversly annoyed for my Discharge as I said in Ireland So I avow here in England that he kneeleth here before your Highness pointing to the Baron of Ophaelie that is the Root and Crop of all these Enormities for it is well known that he beareth that stroke with the Irish as if he once but frown at them they dare not be so hardy as once to peak out of their Cabbins And whereas his Force doth greatly amaze them think you but his Countenance doth wonderfully encourage them To the furtherance of which it is apparently known and it shall be proved that he hath not only in hucker mucker by sundry Messages imboldned your Majesties Enemies to spoil your Subjects but also by his personal Presence in secret Meetings he gave them such Courage as neither the Royalty of your Highness nor the Authority of your Deputy neither the force of your Laws nor the strength of your puissant Army was able to quench the Flame of these Hurly-burlies that through his traiterous drifts were enkindled These and the like Enormities through his privy packing with Rebels being daily committed to bring me your Majesties Governour in the hatred of the People his Adherents both secretly muttered and openly exclaimed against me and my Government as though the Redress of all these Harms had wholly lain in mine hands Whereupon being in conference with such as were the Chieftains of your Realm of Ireland albeit I took it to be expedient to point with my Finger to the very Sink or Head-spring of all the Treasons that by secret Conspiracies were pretended and practised against your Majesty and your Subjects yet notwithstanding having more regard to Modesty than to the Deserts of the Baron of Ophalie I did but glance at his packing in such secret sort as none or very few of the Company could guess whom with my misty Speeches I did touch And as commonly the galled Horse doth soonest kick so this Gentleman being prickt as it should seem
with the sting of his guilty Conscience brake out on a sudden and forgetting his Allegiance to your Highness and his Duty to me your Deputy he took me up so roughly as though I had been rather his Underling than his Governor The Sum of which despightful Speeches I refer to the Testimony of the honourable Audience where they were delivered As for his manifold Treasons I am ashamed to rehearse such things as he did not stick to commit And if it shall stand with your Majesties Pleasure to adjourn the Trial for a few days I will charge him with such apparent Items as were his Face made of Brass he shall not be able to deny any one Article that shall be booked against him When Vescie had ended the Baron of Ophalie prest himself somewhat forward and in this wise spake Most puissant Prince and my dread Sovereign WEre Mr. Vescie's Mouth so just a Measure as what he spake should be holden for Gospel this had been no fit Place for so arrant a Traitor as he with his feigned glossing would gladly prove me to be But sith it pleased your Majesty with so indifferent Ballance to ponder both our Tales I am throughly perswaded that my loyal Innocency shall be able to overpoize his forged Treachery Your Majesty hath heard many Words to small purpose and as his Complaint hitherto hath been generally hudled up so my Answer thereto may not particularly be framed Whereas therefore he termeth me a Supporter of Thieves a Packer with Rebels and a Conspirator with Traitors If I should but with a bare word deny the Premises all his gay Gloss of glittering Speeches would suddenly fade away Yea but he craveth respite for the Booking his Articles Truly so he hath need for loitering and lingring is the only way he may devise to cloak his Feigning and Forging wherein he sheweth himself as crafty as the Philosopher was accounted wise that promised a Tyrant upon menacing words to School his Ass in Philosophy so he had seven years respite because that in that space he was perswaded that either the Tyrant the Ass or he would die In like wise Mr. Vescie upon respite granted him would hang in hope that either the Life of your Majesty which God forbid should be shortned or that I in tract of time would be disfavoured or that he by one subtile Prank or other should be of this heavy Load disburthened But if I have been as many years a Malefactor as he advoucheth how happeneth it that his Tongue was tied before this late Dissention begun Why did he not from time to time advertize the Council of my Treasons Whereas now it may be probably conjectured that he was edg'd to this Service rather for the hatred he beareth me than for any love he oweth your Royal Majesty Touching the Words I spake in Ireland I purpose not for ought I heard as yet to eat them in England And when I shall be call'd to testifie such Speeches as I delivered there I will not be found so raw in my Matter as to lose my Errand in the Carriage as Mr. Vescie hath done or to crave further respite for the registring of his manifold Treasons As for my secret Meetings with Irish Rebels were I perswaded Mr. Vescie that you were able to prove them I would be found willing to acknowledge them for if my Conscience were so deeply stung as you pretend I would take it for better policy by acknowledging my Trespass to appeal to my King's Mercy than by denying my Faults to stand to the rigour of his Justice And as for Meetings I never had so many in Woods with Rebels as you Mr. Vescie have had in your Chamber with Cows For it hath been manifestly apparent that when the Baron of Ophaly and the best of the Nobility of Ireland have been imbarr'd from entring your Chamber an Irish Cow should have at all times access unto you No Mr. Vescie a Cow an Horse an Hawk and a Silver Cup have been the occasion of your Slackness when the Subjects were preided you would be content to wink at their Misery so that your mouth were stopt with Bribery And when you had gathered your Crumbs sufficiently together you held it for a pretty Policy and yet it was but a bare shift to charge the Nobility with such packing as you daily did practise But you must not think that we are Babes or that with any such stale Device or gross jugling Trick you may so easily dusk or dazle our Eyes Can any man that is but slenderly witted so far be carried as to believe that Mr. Vescie being the King's Deputy in Ireland having his Majesties Treasure having the Nobility at his Beck the Kings Army at his Commandment but that if he were disposed to bestir himself he were able to ferret out such bare-breech Brats as swarm in the English Pale If he said he could not we must smile at his simplicity if he could and would not how may he colour his Disloyalty Yea but I bear such a stroak with the Irish as that upon any private Quarrel I am able to annoy them What then Because the Baron of Ophalie can revenge his private Injuries without the assistance of the Deputy therefore the Deputy may not vanquish weak and naked Rebels without the furtherance of the Baron of Ophalie whereas the contrary ought to be inferr'd that if a private person can tame the Irish what may then the publick Magistrate do that hath the Princes Pay But indeed it is hard to take Hares with Foxes You must not think Mr. Vescie that you were sent Governor into Ireland to dandle your Trulls to pen your self up within a Town or City to give Rebels the Gaze to peel the Subjects to animate Traytors to fill your Coffers to make your self by marring true men to gather the Birds whilst others beat the Bushes and after to impeach the Nobility of such Treasons as you only have committed But for so much as our mutual Complaints stand upon the one his Yea and the other his Nay and that you would be taken for a Champion and I am known to be no Coward let us in God's Name leave Lying for Varlets Berding for Ruffians Facing for Crackers Chatting for Twatlers Scolding for Callets Booking for Scriveners Pleading for Lawyers and let us try with the Dint of Sword as becomes Martial Men to do our mutual Quarrels Wherefore to justifie that I am a true Subject and that thou Vescie art an Arch-Traytor to God and to my King here in Presence of his Highness and in the hearing of this Honourable Assembly I challenge the Combat Whereat all the Auditory shouted Now in good Faith quoth Vescie with a right good Will Whereupon both the Parties being dismist until the King's Pleasure were further known It was agreed at length by the Council That the fittest Trial should have been by Battle Wherefore the Parties being as well thereof advertized as the Day by
Villages 1577. and yet by help of his Intelligence which was very good he made a shift to escape the diligent Pursuit that was made after him by 〈◊〉 Captains Harrington and Co●by One day a Parly being appointed between them on 〈◊〉 Oaths the perfidious Rebel seiz'd upon Harrington and Cosby hand●asted them together and made them 〈◊〉 after him 〈◊〉 a couple of 〈◊〉 through Woods and Bogg● in continual fear of Death at length an Agreement was almost concluded when Robert Harpool Constable of Car●●● accompanied by Lieu● Parker and fifty Men having good intelligence went to the Place where Rory Oge 〈◊〉 Rory surprized with the Noise and suspecting the worst went to his Prisoners Harrington and Cosby and gave them many Wounds and cut off Cosby's little ●inger but being in the dark and in haste it so hapned that none of the Wounds were mortal 〈…〉 English having entred the House I released Harrington and Cosby and killed all the rest● 〈◊〉 Rory Oge and one more escaped in the dark and could not be found Soon after Rory Oge assembled all his strength together and came to 〈◊〉 early in the Morning burnt some Houses and 〈…〉 him and killed seventeen of his best Men and Rory himself hardly escaped In the mean time the Lord Deputy 〈◊〉 to the 〈◊〉 and thither came to him 〈…〉 and renewed his former Sub●ission he brought with him to the Town four hundred Pound in Money and thought it much to his Glory that he and his Followers spent 〈…〉 three days time and so having received some small Presents from the Deputy he returned joyfully 〈◊〉 In December the Deputy 〈◊〉 into the King● County and took Pledge● 〈…〉 held Sessions at Kilkenny where several 〈…〉 the City and Country were discovered to be 〈…〉 Popish ●uries would not find the Indictments although the Parties confessed the 〈◊〉 some of them were bound by Recognizance to appear at the Castle Chamber in Dublin to answer that 〈◊〉 To Kilkenny came the 〈◊〉 President 〈◊〉 to complain 〈◊〉 Desmond kept 〈…〉 which oppressed the Country and 〈…〉 President The Deputy 〈◊〉 for Desmond and 〈◊〉 immediately came and excused his not coming to the President because he was his 〈◊〉 Enemy but the Lord Deputy so manag'd it that they were reconciled and the 〈◊〉 promised due Obedience And so cunningly did that 〈◊〉 dissemble that he sent the Lord President word of the Arrival of a 〈…〉 with many French and Irish Men 〈…〉 and Munster in 〈…〉 In the Month of December 〈…〉 Son whereupon great and cruel 〈…〉 ensue between 〈…〉 at length their Controversies were referr'd to the Deputy About the same time some of the 〈◊〉 Followers were suspected to be 〈…〉 sent for to be 〈…〉 to surrender them 〈…〉 to be tried but also joyned with the rest of the Lords and Free-holders of Connaugh● to settle a certain annual Rent amounting to about eighteen hundred Pounds 〈◊〉 by way of Composition Morison 3. and in lieu of all other Services But we must return again to that indefatigable Rebel Rory Oge who sent a Spy to in●●● Fitz-Patrick Lord of Upper Ossory 1578. the Messenger personating a Friend told that Lord That Rory Oge had taken a Prey from the County of Kilkenny which might easily be recovered and Rory himself taken Fitz-Patrick prepares for the Enterprize but wisely suspecting the worst made his Party as strong as he could and being come to the Place he sent thirty Men into the Wood to search for the Tories and himself and the rest of his Party kept on the Plain Rory Oge with about thirty appeared leaving the rest in Ambush and being proud and conceited thought with his Presence to fright●n Fitz-Patrick's Keins but he found them more valiant for they fought stoutly and amongst the rest slew Rory-Oge himself on the last day of June 1578. And though the Deputy offered the valiant Baron the thousand Marks due by Proclamation for Rory's Head yet he would take but one hundred Pounds thereof to be divided amongst his Men. In the mean time Philip King of Spain being vexed at the Aid which Queen Elizabeth under-hand gave to the Hollanders Cambd. Eliz. 230. resolved to requite her with the like secret Assistance to the Irish and the holy Father Gregory the Thirteenth partly to propagate Religion and partly to obtain that Kingdom of Ireland for his Son James Buon Campagno whom he had made Marquess of Vin●ola was willing to contribute to the Charge of the Irish Rebellion Wherefore they confederated and agreed to joyn Forces and Councils and to send Aid to Ireland under the Command of Stukely an English Fugitive who by his extravagant Boasting had raised the Pope's expectation to the greatest height wherefore to qualifie him for so high a Command Stukely was made Marquess of Leinster Earl of Wexford and Catherlogh Viscount Murrough and Baron of Ross and furnished with eight hundred Soldiers with which he set Sail from Civita Vecchia and arrived in Portugal Sebastian King of Portugal was at that time intent on his Wars in Africk and promised Stukely that if he would attend him into Mauritania that then he would immediately after the Africk War accompany Stukely to Ireland The Irish General agrees and to Africk they go where they were killed in the famous Battel wherein three Kings are said to be slain The Viscount Baltinglass whose real trouble was Religion and the Cess pretends great Oppression from Marshal Malby and his Soldiers one Night they lay at Baltinglass when they went against Rory Oge the Viscount made a formal Complaint to the Deputy and did the like to the Queen by Letters sent to the Earl of Ormond and communicated to her Whereupon her Majesty gave strict Order to examine the Matter and it was sound that Malby at coming to Baltinglass had made Proclamation against Oppression and at parting thence made Proclamation for those to come in for reparation that had any cause 〈◊〉 Complaint and so this Matter ended to the Disgrace of the Viscount In Vister Mac Mahon had committed a barbarous Murder on the Son and Heir of Ma●genis and therefore at Ma●genis his Complaint and Request the Deputy marched into Mac Mahon's Country and burnt and destroyed it And so this good Lord Deputy having been eleven years and seven several times Chief Governor of Ireland leaves that unfortunate Country in greater Quiet than ever it had been in before having first caused the Irish Statutes to be Printed and the Records to be put in good Method and Order he beautified the Castle of Dublin anno 1571 repaired A●henry built the Bridge of Athlona which opened a Passage into Connaught he began to wall Oarrig f●rgus he built a Gaol at Molingar and in his time the Revenue was increased eleven thousand Pounds but finding all these Services under valued he laboured to be 〈◊〉 and had Orders of the twentieth of March to return but they were super●eded by Letters of the nineteenth of
for Sir William Saintleger to be Lord President of Munster And on the Fifteenth of March he ordered the Vice-Treasurer to pay what the Lord Deputy and Eight Privy-Counsellors should think fit for the Charges of the Lord Deputy's Progress On the Ninth of May 1627. upon Complaint of the Lord Courcy That Sir Dominick Sarsfeild had obtained the Title of Viscount Kinsale it was referred to the Lord president of the Council the Steward of the Houshold Earl of Totness Viscount Grandison and Chancellor of the Dutchy who report That the Lord Courcy and his Ancestors were Lords Courcy and Barons of Kinsale and Ringrone And thereupon the Defendant endeavor'd to carry the Barony to another Line and also alledged an Attainder but made out neither and then he propos'd That both Titles were consistent one to be Baron and the other to be Viscount of Kinsale But that being not thought convenient his Majesty orders That Sir Dominick quit the Title of Kinsale but retain the Name and Precedency of Viscount Sarsfeild and chuse some other Place to denominate his Honour and afterwards he did so and was created Viscount Killmallock And on the 24th of July the King orders That Nathaniel Catlin his second Serjeant at Law should have Precedence of the Attorney-General and Sollicitor-General and in February following his Majesty likewise gave Orders to make a new Examinator for the Court of Chancery there being but one Examinator in that Court before that time But in order to make the Papists the more willing to bear the great Charge of the Army and to consent to a constant Tax for its Support certain Propositions were set on foot in their favour viz. to suspend all Proceedings against them for Marriages and Christnings by Priests and to give them liberty of Suing out Liveries and Ouster le mains without taking the Oath of Supremacy with design to introduce a more Publick Toleration of Religion for which a good Sum of Money should be paid to his Majesty to maintain the Army to which end a Great Assembly of the Nation was Convok'd by the Lord Deputy But the Protestant Archbishops and Bishops abhorring this gross and scandalous Proposal did on the 26th day of November 1626. at the Lord Primate's House unanimously vote and subscribe the following Protestation viz. The Judgment of divers of the Archbishops and Bishops of Ireland Life of Archb. concerning Toleration of Religion Vsher 28. THe Religion of the Papists is Superstitious and Idolatrous their Faith and Doctrine Erroneous and Heretical their Church in respect of both Apostatical To give them therefore a Toleration or to consent that they may freely exercise their Religion and profess their Faith and Doctrine is a grievous Sin and that in two Respects For First It is to make our selves accessory not only to their Superstitions Idolatries and Heresies and in a word to all the Abominations of Popery but also which is a Consequent of the former to the Perdition of the seduced People which perish in the Deluge of the Catholick Apostacy Secondly To grant them a Toleration in respect of any Money to be given or Contribution to be made by them is to set Religion to sale and with it the Souls of the People whom Christ our Saviour hath redeemed with his most precious Blood And as it is a great Sin so it is also a Matter of most dangerous consequence the Consideration whereof we commit to the Wise and Judicious beseeching the God of Truth to make them who are in Authority zealous of God's Glory and of the Advancement of True Religion zealous resolute and couragious against all Popery Superstition and Idolatry Amen Ja. Armachanus Mal. Casellen Anth. Medensis Tho. Ferns Leghlin Ro. Dunensis Georg. Derensis Richard Cork c. Andr. Alachadens Tho. Kilmore Ardagh Theo. Dromore Mic. Waterford Lismore Fra. Limerick This zealous Protestation of the Bishops against Popery which Downham Bishop of Derry read to the State in the midst of his Sermon at Christchurch on the 23th day of April 1627. drew on a Remonstrance from the House of Commons in England to his Majesty to this effect That the Popish Religion was publickly profest in every Part of Ireland and that Monasteries and Nunneries were thsre newly erected and replenished with Votaries of both Sexes which would be of evil Consequence unless seasonably repress'd These two extraordinary Actions put a stop to any farther Endeavors for the publick Exercise of Popery at that time Nevertheless because the Irish Agents in England did consent to the payment of 120000 l. in three Year it was thought reasonable that the King should signifie his Gracious Acceptance thereof by conferring some extraordinary Favours on the Agents and Contributors And therefore the King did on the 24th day of May not only grant them the following Graces which were transmitted to Ireland by way of Instructions to the Lord Deputy and Council but also sent with it a Letter recommending the Lord of Killeen and the Lord Poer and the rest of the Irish Agents to the Lord Deputy's Favour desiring that he would order such Moneys to be paid them by the Country as they were promis'd for their Agency and that he should issue necessary Warrants and Directions for levying the same Instructions to be observed by Our Right Trusty and Well-beloved Cousin and Counsellor Henry Lord Viscount Falkland Our Deputy-General of Our-Realm of Ireland and by Our Council there and by the Deputy or other Chief Governor or Governors and Council there which hereafter for the time shall be and by all other Our Officers and Ministers whom it may severally or respectively concern I. AT the humble Requests presented unto Us on the behalf of Our Subjects of Ireland upon mature Consideration had thereof and by the Advice of Our Privy-Council We are graciously pleased in the first place to order and direct for the better Preservation and Ease of our said Subjects that Our Soldiers there be called in and limited to the most Serviceable Garrisons and that they be not called from thence upon any Pretence but against the Enemy or Rebel that makes Head II. For the Collection of Our Rents in case of Default That first a Summons Process shall issue Secondly That a Pur●uivant be sent and Lastly If this be not sufficient in case the Sum be of value that then Our Vice-Treasurer by Warrant from Our Deputy and Council shall appoint a competent Number of Soldiers of the next adjoyning Garison to collect Our said Rents at the Charge of the Parties complained of having care that any Man be not burdened with a greater number of Soldiers than the Service shall necessarily require III. And when Necessity requires the Marching of Our said Soldiers against the Enemy or Rebel That the Officers imploy'd shall give Ready Money or Ticket to be defalked out of their Entertainment and duly paid into the Country upon demand without taking Money Pawns or Distresses but such Meat and
the Eighteenth of May there was an Order of Reference to him in the Controversie between the City of Dublin and the Merchants-Strangers from whom that City demanded Three pence per Pound Custom And on the Eighteenth of July he got an Order to the Lord Will●ot 〈…〉 General of the Army in Ireland to surrender that Office to him He had also the King's Letter of the Sixteenth of October to the Lords Justices That the Port-●orn and Tithes belonging to the Chief Governor should be given to his Servants And he also obtain'd his Majesty's Commission of the Seventeenth of October to levy what Forces he should think fit or find necessary and an Order of the same Date to be paid the Charge of such Journeys and Progresses as he should think fit to make And Matters being thus fitted to his mind THOMAS Viscount WENTWORTH was on the Twenty fifth day of July sworn Lord Deputy 1633. to whom the Bishop of Kilmore and two other Bishops and the Inhabitants of the County of Cavan sent a Petition Bishop Bedel's Life containing some Complaints against the Army and some Proposals for the Regulation of it which was very ill resented at that time and interpreted to be a Mutinous and Insolent Attempt and brought the Bishop of Kilmore who was supposed the Author and Promoter of it under his Excellency's Displeasure until that Prelate afterwards explain'd himself averring That he did not intend by lessening or discountenancing the Army to expose with the Publick Peace his own Neck to the Skeins of the Romish Cut-throats But the Contribution or Tax of 20000 l. per Annum to which the Country had consented for two Years was now almost expired so that it was necessary to call a Parliament wich met the Fourteenth day of July 1634. 1634. at Dublin and granted Six entire Subsidies but not without the opposition of some Papists one of which moved That the Matter concerning the Subsidies might be put off to another time and then be again considered of This Parliament also passed an Act for the Confirmation of Patents afterwards to be past on the * Dated 29 June 1634. Commission of Defective Titles and then was Prorogued to the Fourth day of November following At the same time there was also a Convocation of the Clergy and preparatory to it the Precedency of the Archbishop of Armagh before the Archbishop of Dublin was determin'd and setled by his Majesty's definitive Sentence And this Convocation to manifest their Agreement with the Church of England did receive the Thirty Nine ●●●●cles of that Church into the Confession of Faith of the Church 〈◊〉 Ireland nevertheless without a●rogating any of the Canons of the Convocation held Anno 1615. And a New Book of Canons for the most part agreeing with that of England was then compiled for the better Government of the Church of Ireland By vertue of these Six Subsidies which amounted to above 240000 l. and were payable Half-yearly the Lord Deputy was enabled to pay a Debt of 80000 l. due from the Crown and to support the Charge of the Kingdom without any Supply of Money from England This Lord Deputy had formerly obtain'd his Majesty's Order of the Sixteenth of January 1633. for the free transportation of so many Horses and Mares out of England as he the Lord Deputy should give Licence for by which means he changed Five hundred Foot of the Army for Six hundred Horse which were extraordinary good ones his own Stables exceeding that of any former Governors And indeed generally the whole Army was neither so well paid nor so well disciplin'd in any other time as it was in his On the Twenty fourth of September 1634. the King reciting That King James had by his Commission of the Tenth of August 1603. renewed or revived the Court of Castle-chamber as himself likewise had done by his Commission of 5 October 1625. and that now some Disputes are arisen whether that Court can sit out of Term or more than twice a Week His Majesty Orders That it it may sit when and as often as the Commissioners please and that a new Commission issue to that Purpose And about this time Emerus Mac Mahon afterwards Titular Bishop of Clogher discovered to Sir George Ratcliff a Plot for a general Insurrection in Ireland and Confess'd that himself had been imploy'd for some years in foreign Courts to solicite Aid to carry on a Rebellion which it seems they thought fit to adjourn to a more proper Season But on the 14th of November the Parliament met according to the Prorogation and sate till the 14th of December and were then Prorogu'd to the 26th of January from which time they sate till the 21st day of March and then it was again Prorogu'd to the 24th day of the same Month and sate from thence to its Dissolution which was on the 18th day of April 1635. I need not mention the Acts made in these several Sessions of Parliament because they are many and are to be found at large in the Printed Book of Statutes it is enough to say That they cull'd out all the choice Statutes that were made in England since the 20th of Henry the 8th that were proper for the Kingdom of Ireland and added to them some good new Laws that were peculiar to that Countrey The Parliament being thus ended and closed with an Act of Indemnity the Lord Deputy and Council made a Progress into Conaught to inquire into his Majesties Title to several Lands in that Province and on the 11th of July at Abby-boyle to still the Jealousies and Alarms the People were under at this great Inquisition they published an Act of Council 1635. That it was not his Majesties intention to take any thing from his People that was justly theirs and therefore that those who had effectual Letters Patents should have the full benefit of them as if they were found Verbatim in the great Office then to be taken provided the Patents or the Enrolment thereof were shewn to the Council-board before Easter Term next and by it approved to be good and effectual in Law and the like was done in other Counties of Conaught and so this great Inquisition which was one of the Spring-heads and Fountains of the succeeding Rebellion was with great Diligence and Success carried on and effected and the Kings Title was found to most part of that Province and a noble English Plantation was design'd Whereupon the Patentees and particularly the Lord Dillon of Costilo produced their Patents to the Council-board and it appearing those Patents were Granted by Virtue of a Commission 4 Jac. 1. wherein there was no direction about the Tenure it grew to be a Question whether the Patents to hold by Knights Service as of the Castle of Dublin were warranted by that Commission or valid in Law and after much debate it was solemnly adjudg'd That those Patents were void And this Case is well known to the Lawyers by the
other Stewards of the British Farmers and Inhabitants of the City and County of London-Derry ☞ by means whereof the worthy Plantation of that Country is almost destroyed and the Inhabitants are reduced to great Poverty and many of them forced to forsake the Country the same being the first and most useful Plantation in the large Province of Ulster to the great weakning of the Kingdom in this Time of Danger the said Plantation being the principal Strength of those Parts IX The late Erection of the Court of High-Commission for Causes Ecclesiastical in these necessitous Times the Proceedings of the said Court ' in many Causes without Legal Warrant and yet so supported as Prohibitions have not been obtained though legally sought for And the excessive Fees exacted by the Ministers thereof and the Encroaching of the some upon the Jurisdiction of other Ecclesiastical Courts of this Kingdom X. The exorbitant Fees and pretended Customs exacted by the Clergy against the Law some of which have been formerly represented to your Lordship XI The Petitioners do most heartily bemoan that His Majesty's Service and Profit are much more impaired than advanced by the Grievances aforesaid and the Subsidies granted in the last Parliament having much increased His Majesty's Revenue by the buying of Grants and otherwise And that all His Majesty's Debts then due in this Kingdom were satisfied out of the said Subsidies and yet His Majesty is of late as the Petitoners have been informed in the House of Commons become indebted in this Kingdom in great Sums And they do therefore humbly beseech That an exact Account may be sent to His Majesty how and in what manner his Treasure is issued XII The Petitioners do humbly conceive just and great Fears at a Proclamation published in this Kingdom in Anno Domini 1635. prohibiting Men of Quality or Estates to depart this Kingdom into England without the Lord Deputy's Licence whereby the Subjects of this Kingdom are hindred and interrupted from free Access to Address to His Sacred Majesty and Privy-Council of England so declare their just Grievances or to obtain Remedies for them in such sort as their Ancestors have done in all Ages since the Reign of King Henry the Second and great Fees exacted for every of the said Licences XIII That of late His Majesty's Attorney-General hath exhibited Informations against many ancient Burroughs of this Kingdom into His Majesty's Court of Exchequer ☜ to shew cause by what Warrant the said Burroughs who heretofore sent Burgesses to Parliament should send Burgesses to the Parliament And thereupon for want of an Answer the said Privileges of sending Burgesses were seised by the said Court Which Proceedings were altogether coram non Judice and contrary to the Laws and Privileges of the House of Parliament and if way should be given thereunto would tend to the Subversion of Parliaments and by consequence to the Ruin and Destruction of the Commonwealth And that the House of Commons hath hitherto in this present Parliament been deprived of the Advice and Counsel of many profitable and good Members by means thereof XIV By the Powerfulness of some Ministers of State in this Kingdom the Parliament in its Members and Actions hath not its natural Freedom XV. And lastly That the Gentry and Merchants and other His Majesty's Subjects of this Kingdom are of late by the Grievances and Pressures before said and other the like brought very near to Ruin and Destruction And the Farmers of Customs Customers Waiters Searchers Clerks of Unwarrantable Proceedings Pursuivants and Gaolers and sundry others very much enriched whereby and by the slow Redress of the Petitioners Grievances His Majesty's most faithful and dutiful People of this Kingdom do conceive great Fears that their Readiness approved upon all Occasions hath not been of late rightly represented to His Sacred Majesty For remedy whereof the said Petitioners do humbly and of right beseach your Lordship That the said Grievances and Pressures may be speedily redressed and if your Lordship shall not think fit to afford present Relief that your Lordship might admit a select Committee of this House of Persons uninteressed in the Benefit arising of the aforesaid Grievances to be licensed by your Lordship to repair to his Sacred Majesty in England for to pursue the same and to obtain fitting Remedy for their aforesaid and other just Grievances and Oppressions And upon all just and honourable Occasions they will without respect of particular Interest or Profit to be raised thereby most humbly and readily in Parliament extend their utmost Endeavors to serve His Majesty and comply with His Royal and Princely Occasions And shall pray c. As soon as the Lord Deputy had notice of this Remonstrance and perceived the Fury of the Irish Parliament he took occasion to Prorogue it on the Twelfth day of November but whatever he could do was ineffectual to stem the Tide which now ran too violent against him And therefore being heart-broken with his own and the Earl of Strafford's Misfortunes he died suddenly on the Third day of December 1640. Whereupon ROBERT Lord DILLON of Killkenny-West afterwards Earl of Roscomon Sir WILLIAM PARSONS Knight and Baronet Master of the Court of Wards were on the Thirtieth of December sworn Lords Justices 1640. But the Lord Dillon beings for his Intimacy and Alliance with the Earl of Strafford obnoxious to the aforesaid Irish Committee he was at their Instance removed and Sir WILLIAM PARSONS Master of the Court of Wards Sir JOHN BORLACE Master of the Ordnance were sworn Lords Justices on the Tenth of February to whom the King by his Letters of the Fourth of January before sent Orders at the Request of the Irish Committee That the Irish Subsidies which heretofore were Forty thousand Pounds should be reduced to a less Sum than formerly and that all Letter 's sent to the Chief Governor or other Publick Officers touching Publick Affairs or the Subjects Private Interests should be entred in the Signer-Office in England to the end the Subjects upon occasion might take Copies thereof and that all Dispatches from Ireland should be safely kept apart for the easier and readier recourse thereto and that His Majesty approves of the Repair of His Subjects to appeal to Him notwithstanding any Prohibition in Ireland to the contrary and orders That no body be prosecuted or molested on that score and that the Irish Committee shall have Copies of all Records Certificates Orders of Council Publick Letters or other Entries that are necessary to manifest or prove their Grievances And this Letter was on the Tenth of February 1640. by the Irish Parliament then sitting ordered to be entred amongst the Records and Ordinances of that House And soon after Rushw 15. the Irish Parliament did vote the following Grievances to be transmitted to their Committee in England which it seems were couched in Two Petitions one to the King and the other to the Parliament and both carried over by John Bellew
him And having setled the Civil and Military Affairs at Dublin and mustered and rested his Army he committed that City to the Government of Sir Theophilus Jones and on Friday the 30th of August marched out with 10000 Men and on Munday the 2d of September he came before Tredagh This Town being very considerable and esteemed pretty strong was the chief care of the Lord-Lieutenant who omitted nothing that was possible to fit it for a Siege the Garrison he put in it was part of his own Regiment under Sir Edm. Venry 400 Coll. Birn's Regiment 400 Coll. Warren 900 Coll. Wall 800 Lord of Westmeath 200 Sir James Dillon 200 and Horse 200 amounting in all to 2900 Foot and 200 Horse besides 500 Foot that he sent in under Lieutenant-Collonel Griffin Cavenagh together with 500 l. in Money whilst Cromwell lay before the Town And over these he placed a Governour beyond exception Sir Arthur Aston formerly Governour of Reading and afterwards of Oxford a Souldier of great Reputation and Experience It is needless to make a long story of a short Siege and therefore it will be enough to say That altho' the Governor had assured the Lord-Lieutenant That he would find the Enemy play and that the Garrison being select Men was so strong that the Town could not be taken by Assault and therefore advis'd Ormond then at Trim to hazard nothing by precipitating to his Relief Yet Cromwell who besieged the Town but on one side and without the formality of regular Approaches began his Battery on the 9th of September and the very next day at five in the evening stormed it and altho' his Men were twice beaten off and Collonel Cassels slain yet he led them on himself the third time and carried the Town and put most of the Garrison to the Sword and the rest being not above thirty he sent to Barbadoe's This terrible Execution so frightned the rest of the Garrisons that Dundalk immediately submitted and so did some other Castles near Trim and then Cromwell returned to Dublin But one thing is very remarkable and ought not to be omitted and that is That tho' there were several Protestants in the Town yet were the Popish Souldiers so insolent and so unjust to their Protestant Companions even in the midst of their Adversity that on Sunday the 8th of September they thrust the Protestants out of St. Peter's Church in Drogheda and publiquely celebrated Mass there tho' they had Monasteries and other convenient places besides for that purpose And suitable to this is that which the Bishop of Derry in his Letter of the 9th of October affirmed to the Lord-Lieutenant viz. That the Earl of Roscomon being then dead at Limerick they were fain to be very private in their Devotions and doubted whether they should be permitted to use Funeral-Rites even privately in the Chamber But why do I instance such Trifles after the Earl of Orrery has assured us that an Irish General told the Lord-Lieutenant at Kilkenny That if the King came there in person he should not be allowed a Church to celebrate his Devotion in To which his Excellency replied That he hoped to see all of that mind without a Church to say Mass in Ireland In the mean time the King who from the Hague had written the 2d April 1649 that he designed speedily for Ireland and had accordingly been preparing for that Voyage did now by his Letters of the 29th of August assure the Lord-Lieutenant That he is not discouraged by the Defeat at Rathmines but still designs for that Kingdom if his Lordship thinks fit And his Majesty did also by his Letters of the 17th of July from St. Germans order 800 l. per an out of the forfeited Estates to be setled on General Preston and to create him Viscount Taragh and accordingly that General did pass Patent for the Estate of Francis Viscount Mountnorris Father of the late Earl of Anglesey and on the 2d day of July 1650 he pass'd Patent for his Honour But Cromwell having Cashiered the seven old Regiments form'd by the Parliament Commissioners Anno 1647 and setled Affairs in Dublin to his mind left Collonel Hewson Governor of that City and marched South-ward through the County of Wicklow and having taken Arklow Fernes Insscorfy and some other lesser places and a good quantity of Provisions in a Monastery deserted by the Fryers he came before Wexford on the first day of October and immediately Summon'd the Town The Governour Collonel David Synot did thereupon send out a Messenger with Proposals of Surrender but indeed so high and extravagant as manifested his design was but to gain time by the Parly as he did until the Earl of Castlehaven found means to put a Regiment of Foot into the place and within three days after the Marquess of Ormond sent in Sir Edmund Butler and 1000 Men more all Papists for the Town 's Men would admit no other Nevertheless it so happened that within two hours after these last Recruts were come in and whilst more were wafting over the Ferry Captain James Stafford a Papist surrendered the Castle of Wexford to Cromwell upon Articles whereupon the Guns thereof were immediately turn'd upon the Town at which both Souldiers and Inhabitants were so frightned that they quitted the Walls and endeavoured to escape over the River But the Cromvelests perceiving their Cowardize presently clapt Scaling-ladders to the Walls and took the Town by Storm and put all they found in Arms to the Sword to the number of 2000 Men and Sir Edmond Butler himself was shot in the head as he was swiming over the River But we must attend the Lord-Lieutenant and enquire what he did towards the Defence of the Kingdom and we shall find that he did all that was possible for one in his circumstances his main dependance was upon the Conjunction of Owen Roe's Forces and the bravery of the Lord of Insiquin's Horse and in expectation of some good effects from these he staid at Trim during the Siege of Tredagh designing as soon as Owen Roe should come up to endeavour to raise that Siege but that General did not come in time the Agreement with him not being finished until the 12th day of October upon the Tearms mentioned by P. W.'s Remonstrance 597 and Insiquin's Cavalry being most of them English-men did not care to fight against their Friends and Country-men and therefore daily revolted to Cromwell even by Scores and Squadrons which drew that Lord back again to secure his Garrisons in Munster which about this time began to Mutiny However after Tredagh was taken Ormond put a good Garrison into Trim and endeavoured to Rendezvouz his Forces at Kilkenny he press'd Wexford to accept of a Garrison but they would have none except a few Companies of their own chusing under Lieutenant-Collonel Synot who was a Creture of their Bishop of Fernes Nevertheless the Lord-Lieutenant omitted nothing within his power for their Defence but as he heard of Cromwell's
the more Civility or Civil Education these Irish Rebels obtained by the care and pious inspection of the late English Governors which they did to recover and reclaim them the more dangerous Enemies they now found them and the more the English did Enrich Countenance and Favour those Rebels the more Scornful Ungrateful and Mortal Enemies they have shewn themselves unto those their Benefactors They consider farther and now find by dear experience that the Towns and Corporations all consisting of Papists though for the most part old English except Three of Four Towns lately Planted which are Protestants are apt upon every Inferrection against the English to run with the Country and hereby they will be able on the sudden to overwhelm them in lesser Numbers either in Town or Country so as the English can expect no refuge They consider farther that the Irish being Masters of the Body of that Kingdom Arm'd in great numbers for War and full of Malice and now far too Hauglity and Insolent to submit to such terms of Peace as may be safe for England or honourable for so Just and Pious a King as your Majesty and that if the Blood of Peace so unmeasurably shed by the Rebels who have now Enrich'd themselves by the Spoils of the British should be wiped out in a fained Submission it would embolden them and their Postevity hereafter upon all occasions to attempt the like again for their Advantage making the English but Slaves to gather Substance to satiate their cruel Malice and Lust whensoever they find themselves in case to Surprize them as they have done in several Ages They remember that in the best of former times the Irish did so exceed in number as that the Governors never could or durst fully execute the Laws for true Reformation for fear of Disturbance having some hope always by civil and fai● intreaty to win them into a Civil and Peaceable Life as if Peace should now be granted them before the Sword of Fam●●●●ave so abated them in number as that in reasonable time English Colonies might overtop them and and so perhaps frame the reside Into English Manners and Civil course of Life by Trades or other good Industry to take comfort in a quiet Life the English do plainly foresee it can never be safe for them to cohabit with them secure for England to enjoy them or likely that themselves separate from the English can ever digest into a People good to themselves or profitable to their King and Country We hope it will not be conceived out of what we have here written that we are Enemies to Peace nay we do from our hearts desire Peace and do pray the Eternal God of Peace to grant it to your Majesty in all your Dominions as the greatest Blessing on Earth that can be bestowed on the Sons of Men and we shall in due time with all our Power Skill and Industry under the Prudent Conduct and Direction of your Majesty endeavour to fix it here but we humbly crave leave to affirm that the settlement of it in this Kingdom will be of a different consideration from the rest of your Dominions if we observe the present State of these Rebels the temperature and natural inclination of the Irish their Ancestors former deportment to the English in all Ages their antient and unchang'd Resolution to expulse them by Force or Fraud and their obdurate wilfulness to set up and maintain Popery here without permitting the Protestant Religion and although by a present Peace if the Rebels would consent to it we for our parts might hope to gain a breathing time and perhaps for some years a little profit out of our poor Estates here yet we are not so vile as to value any thing that shall concern our own particular when it may not consist with the due care which we ought and ever shall have of your Majesties Honour and Safety and the future safety and happiness of your Posterity and this your Kingdom And howsoever it be true that all the peril and damage we undergo and all the Arms we desire to have used and borne here is but by Gods Blessing to bring on a safe and lasting Peace yet we can no way apprehend that it can be so done till the Sword have abated these Rebels in Number and Power yet not to the utter extirpation of the Nation which is far from our thoughts though some to render us the more odious report so of us but to the Levelling of the Rebels so as they may fully know it is not their strength and Obstinacy but your own gracious Mercy and Indulgence that can make you shew your Princely love to Peace and which shall also put these Irish Rebels into such a Case as not so easily as now to relapse into their ever affected Commotions and Prosecution of their continued purpose to extirpate the English and shall also give your Majesty more liberty of Judgment who are fit objects of your Mercy or Justice to be applied as in your high wisdom you shall find cause We confess we are at this time in a very terrible want of means to support a War as we often and lately to the full declared thither whence only we must expect reinforcement and we foresee that unless Supplies of Mony Munition Arms Cloaths and other Habiliments of War be speedily sent us we have little hope to escape utter destruction and loss of the Kingdom yet seeing the cause of God and the perpetual safety of your Majesty your Prosperity and your Dominions under Gods Providence is the matter and ground of our so deep engagement and having had hitherto such experience of God's mighty Sustentation we cannot despair of his goodness in granting us even some expected aid And being now at a very low ebb through these wants yet having a wonderful comfort in the alacrity and constant courage of our Men of War amidst their exrteam Sufferings we dare say in the confidence of Faithful Subjects and Servants to your Majesty that if those Supplies can in any time come unto us we shall be able by Gods guidance to overcome and avenge the wickedness of these Unjust and Disloyal attempts against your Sacred Majesty and your good People and so find a way to that Peace which may befit the greatness and Wisdom of your Majesty to grant and which we heartily long for being at this time pressed with as much calamity as Men can bear yet not able in our Judgments to perceive that a present Peace can free us and the Protestants here from a certain though perhaps a Lingering Ruine and the dangerous consequences thereof And we in like manner affirm that nothing under God could have brought us to this hard Condition or subjected your Majesties affairs here to the hazard they now stand in but the unexpected failing of Privisions timely ministred unto us without which we always signified thither that this Kingdom could not be sustained out of any subsistance
the Sacred Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ do grant a full and plenary Indulgence and absolute Remission for all their Sins and such as in the holy time of Jubile is usual to be granted to those that devoutly visit a certain number of Priviledged Churches within and without the Walls of our City of Rome By the tenor of which present Letters for once only and no more we freely bestow the favour of this Absolution upon all and every one of them and withal desiring heartily all the Faithful in Christ now in Arms as aforesaid to be partakers of this most precious Treasure To all and every one of these foresaid Faithful Christians we grant Licence and give power to choose into themselves for this effect any fit Confessor whether a Secular Priest or a Regular of some order as likewise any other Selected Person approved of by the Ordinary of the Place who after a diligent hearing of their Confessions shall have power to liberate and absolve them from Excommunication Suspension and all other Ecclesiastical Sentences and Censures by whomsoever or for what cause soever pronounced or inflicted upon them As also from all Sins Trespasses Transgressions Crimes and Delinquences how hainous and atrocious soever they be not omitting those very enormities in the most peculiar Cases which by any whatsoever former Constitutions of Ours or of our Predecessors Popes than which we will have these to be no less valued in every point were designed to be reserved to the Ordinary or to the Apostolick See from all which the Confessor shall hereby have Power granted him to Absolve the aforesaid Catholicks at the Bar of Conscience and in that sence only And furthermore we give them Power to exchange what Vow or Vows soeever they were formerly astricted to those of Religion and Chastity excepted into any other pious and good work or works imposed or to be imposed on them and every one of them to perform in all the foresaid Cases by a wholsome Penance according to the mind and will of the Confessor Therefore by the Tenour of these present Letters and by the vertue of that holy strict obedience wherein all Christians are bound unto us we charge and command all and every one of the Reverend Brethren Archbishops Bishops and other Ecclesiastical Prelates and whatsoever Ordinaries of Places now residing in Ireland together with all Vicars Substitutes and Officials under them or these failing We command all such to whom in those places the care of Souls in incumbent that as soon as they shall have received the Copies of these our Letters they shall forthwith without any stop or delay Publish them and cause them to be Published throughout all their Churches Diocesses Provinces Countries Cities Towns Lands Villages and Places whatsoever Nevertheless We do not intend by these present Letters where any publick or secret Irregularity is made known or any Defection Apostasy Incapacity or Inability in any manner of way contracted to dispense therewith or grant to any other any power or faculty of Dispensation Rehabilitation or Restoring the Delinquent to his former condition though but at the Bar of Conscience neither can or should these our present Letters avail or be stedable to those who by us and the Apostick See or by any Prelate or Ecclesiastical Judge have been Excommunicated Suspended Interdicted or declared and publickly denounced to have justly incurred the Sentences and Censures of the Church till ●irst they have satisfied and agreed with the Parties therein concerned notwithstanding all other Constitutions and Apostolical Ordinations whereby nevertheless the faculty of Absolution in these as well as other expressed cases is so reserved to his Holiness the Pope for the time being that no kind of Jubile nor power of granting such Indulgences can in any sort avail unless express mention be made of the fault or faults in particular and the whole tenor of them fully deducted by an individual Relation from word to word and not by general Clauses importing the same thing This or some other exquisite from of the like nature being carefully Observed We in that case especially expressly and namely by the effect of these Presents do totally abolish and remit them all and every one of them their offences notwithstanding any thing to the contrary Now that these principal Letters of ours which cannot be conveniently brought to every place may the sooner come to the notice of all Our Will and Pleasure is that any whatsoever Copies or Transcripts whether Writen or Printed that are Subscribed with the Hand of a Publick Notary and which have the Seal of some Eminent Person in Ecclesiastical dignity affixed thereunto be of the same Force Power and Authority and have the like credit in every respect given unto them as would be to these our Principal Letters if they were shewn and Exhibited Dated at Rome in the Vatican or St. Peter's Palace the 25th of May 1643 and in the Twentieth Year of our Pontificat M. A. Maraldus Appendix XVI Articles of Cessation of Arms agreed upon by and between James Marquess of Ormond Lieutenant General of his Majesties Army in the Kingdom of Ireland of the one part and Donogh Viscount Muskery Sir Lucas Dillon Knight Nicholas Plunket Esquire Sir Robert Talbot Baronet Sir Richard Barnwel Baronet Torlogh O Neale Geffry Brown Ever Mac Gennis and John Walsh Esquires Authorised by his Majesties Roman-Catholick Subjects of the other part FIrst It is concluded and accorded that there be a Cessation of Arms and of all Acts of Hostility between His Majesties said Roman-Catholick Subjects who are now in Arms c. in this Kingdom and their Party and all others His Majesties good Subjects for one whole Year to begin in the Fifteenth day of September Anno. Dom. 1643 at the Hour of 12 of the said day 2. It is concluded and accorded that free Passage Entercourse Commerce and Traffick during the said Cessation shall be between His Majesties said Roman-Catholick Subjects who are now in Arms c. and their Party and all others His Majesties good Subjects and all others in League with his Majesty by Sea and Land 3. It is concluded and accorded and the said Viscount Muskery and the rest of the above named Persons do promise and undertake for and in the behalf of those for whom they are Authorized to Treat and Conclude as aforesaid That all Ships Barques and Vessels which shall bring Provisions to any Harbour in this Kingdom in the Hands or Possession of such as shall obey the Articles of this Cessation from Minehead and Whitehaven and from all the Ports between on that side where Wales is situate so as they be Ships belonging to any of the said Ports and do not use any Acts of Hostility to any of the said Roman-Catholicks who are now in Arms or to any of their Party or to any who shall be Waged or Imployed unto or by them shall not be interrupted by any of their Party nor
as followeth viz. That the County of Galway the County of the Town of Galway the Counties of Mayo Roscomon Sligo and Letrym in the Province of Connaght and all such Castles Lands Tenements and Hereditaments in the said Province which the said fifteenth day of September 1643 at the hour aforesaid are possessed by the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their party shall during the said Cessation remain entirely in the possession of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms and their party excepting all such Territories Castles Lands Tenements and Hereditaments within the said several Counties which upon the said fifteenth of September 1643 at the hour aforesaid are possessed by any of His Majesties Forces or by their party or by any of them and that those who after taking protection of any of His Majesties Forces or any of that party or from any Governors deriving Authority from His Majesty there have joined themselves to the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their party shall pay no Contribution unto such who protected them But in regard there may be a rule different touching Persons that may be said to do this and consequently touching the Contributions payable by them It is concluded and accorded that such Disputes and Questions if any shall arise be determined by Commissioners indifferently chosen on each side and it is concluded and accorded that the like rule for sowers and manurers of Corn within the Quarters of each other shall be observed in the Province of Connaght as is set down for Leinster 11. It is concluded and accorded and the said Marquess of Ormond for and in the Name of His Majesty doth promise and undertake that no interruption shall be given unto any of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. or their party in any of the said Counties Quarters or Places by the said precedent Articles unto them or any of them limited as aforesaid during this Cessation like as the said Donnogh Viscount Muskery and the rest of the above named Persons who are authorized as aforesaid do promise and undertake that no Interruption shall be given unto any of His Majesties Forces Protestant Subjects or such as adhere unto them within any of the said Counties Quarters or Places by the precedent Articles limited unto them as aforesaid during the said Cessation 12. It is concluded and accorded that no Officer of the Army or Souldier of either side shall be admitted without licence from the Commander in chief of the Army on both sides or of the Commander of the next chief Garrisons respectively to pass or repair into any Garrison on either side save that it be lawful for either party to furnish any Garrison in their power during the Cessation with Victuals Cloth Ammunition or other Necessaries by licence as aforesaid which is not to be denied upon demand 13. It is concluded and accorded that if any Army or Forces in this Kingdom raised by His Majesties Authority or any part thereof or any other His Majesties Subjects shall not yeild obedience to the Articles of this Cessation but shall publickly stand in opposition thereunto that the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their party may prosecute such And the said James Marquess of Ormond doth promise and undertake that such who shall so stand in opposition shall not be assisted protected or defended against the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. or their party by His Majesty or any of his Forces And yet nevertheless the same shall not be understood to be any breach of Cessation as to other parts of the Kingdom which shall conform and yeild thereunto And whereas the assistance of His Majesties Forces is desired by the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. against such as shall oppose the Articles of this Cessation and will not yeild obedience thereunto or interrupt the Trade and Traffick albeit that it is not to be supposed that there will be any such the said James Marquess of Ormond doth further promise and undertake that their said request shall be made known to His Majesty and upon signification of his pleasure the same shall be obeyed 14. It is concluded and accorded that if in other cases it be pretended on either side that the Cessation is violated that yet no Act of Hostility is immediately to follow but first the party complaining is to acquaint the Lord General Lieutenant-General or other chief Commander of either side in that Province in which the said Cessation is pretended to be violated therewith and to allow fourteen days after notice given for reparation or satisfaction and in case reparation or satisfaction be not given or tendred then fourteen days notice to be given before Hostility begin 15. It is concluded and accorded that all Prisoners and Hostages of both sides in all parts of the Kingdom excepting such of them as are indicted of any Capital offence shall be mutually released and set at liberty within seven days after publication of the said Cessation And the said Marquess of Ormond doth further promise and undertake that such Prisoners who are indicted of any Capital Offence shall be set at liberty upon Bail until His Majesties further Pleasure be known therein Provided nevertheless that if any party of His Majesties Army in any other Province of the Kingdom shall not within ten days after Publication of these Articles yeild obedience thereunto that the same shall be no breach of Cessation but that His Majesty be first made acquainted with such Disobedience and his direction expected therein And that all other Persons that do reside with either party and all Women and Children shall be permitted within seven days after publishing of this Cessation or when they please with their Goods and Chattles to depart to what place they please with a safe conduct or convoy if they desire it 16. It is concluded and accorded that the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their party may at any Time during the Cessation send such Agents to His Majesty as they shall think fit And that the said Agents shall have safe Conduct in writing from the chief Governor or Governors of this Kingdom for the time being upon demand 17. It is concluded and accorded and the said Marquess of Ormond doth promise and undertake for and in the Name of His Mujesty that all and every of the precedent Articles which have been agreed unto and undertaken by the said Marquess for and in the behalf of His Majesty shall be faithfully truly and inviolably observed fulfilled and kept And the said Viscount Muskery c. For and in the behalf of the said Roman Catholick Subjects now in Arms c. and their party do promise and undertake that all and every of the precedent Articles which have been agreed unto and undertaken by them for and in the behalf of their party shall be faithfully
Protestant Subjects And that all the Laws and Statutes established in that Kingdom against Popery and Popish Recusants may continue of Force and be put in due Execution 3. That Restitution be made of all our Churches and Church Rights and Revenues and all our Churches and Chappels re-edified and put in as good Estate as they were at the breaking out of the Rebellion and as they ought to be at the charge of the Confederate Roman-Catholicks as they call themselves who have been the occasion of rhe Deftruction of the said Churches and possessed themselves of the Profits and Revenues thereof 4. That the Parliament now sitting in Ireland may be continued there for the better settlement of the Kingdom and that all Persons duly Indicted in the said Kingdom of Treason Felony or other Heinous Crimes may be duly and legally Proceeded against Outlawed Tryed and Adjudged according to Law and that all Persons lawfully Convicted and Attainted or to be Convicted and Attainted for the same may receive due Punishment accordingly 5. That no man may take upon him or execute the Office of a Mayor or Magistrate in any Corporation or the Office of a Sheriff or Justice of Peace in any City or County in the said Kingdom until he have first taken the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance 6. That all Popish Lawyers who refuse to take the Oath of Supremacy and Allegiance may be Suppressed and Restrained from Practice in that Kingdom the rather because the Lawyers in England do not here practise until they take the Oath of Supremacy and it hath been found by Woful Experience that the Advice of Popish Lawyers to the People of Ireland hath been a great cause of their continued disobedience 7. That there may be a present absolute Suppression and Dissolution of all the Assumed Arbitrary and Tyrannical Power which the said Consederates exercise over your Majesties Subjects both in Causes Ecclesiastical and Temporal 8. That all the Arms and Ammunition of the said Confederates be speedily brought into your Majesties Stores 9. That your Majesties Protestant Subjects Ruined and Destroyed by the said Confederates may be Repaired for their great Losses out of the Estates of the said Confederates not formerly by any Acts of this present Parliament in England otherwise disposed of whereby they may the better be enabled to re-inhabit and defend the said Kingdom of Ireland 10. That the said Confederates may Rebuild the several Plantation-Houses and Castles Destroyed by them in Ireland in as good state as they were at the breaking out of the Rebellion which your Majesties Protestant Subjects have been bound by their several Patents to Build and Maintain for your Majesties Service 11. That the great Arrears of Rent due to your Majesty out of the Estates of your Majesties Protestant Subjects at and since Michaelmas 1641 may be paid unto your Majesty by such of the Consederates who have either received the said Rents to the uses of the said Confederates or destroyed the same by disabling your Majesties Protestant Subjects to pay the same and have also destroy'd all or the most part of all other Rents or means of support belonging to your said Protestant Subjects And that your said Protestant Subjects may be discharged of all such Arrears of Rents to your Majesty 12. That the said Confederates may give satisfaction to the Army for the great Arrears due unto them since the Rebellion and that such Commanders as have raised Forces at their own charges and laid forth great Sums of Money out of their own Purses and engaged themselves for Money and Provisions to keep themselves their Holds and Soldiers under their Commands in the due necessary defence of your Majesties Rights and Laws may be in due sort satisfied to the encouragement of others in like times and cases which may happen 13 That touching such parts of the Confederate Estates as being forfeited for their Treasons are come or shall duly come into your Majesties Hands and Possession by that Title your Majesty after the due satisfaction first made to such as claim by former Acts of Parliament would be pleased to take the same into your own Hands and Possession And for the necessary encrease of your Majesties Revenue and better security of the said Kingdom of Ireland and the Protestant Subjects living under your Gracious Government there to plant the same with British and Protestants upon reasonable and honourable Terms 14. That one good Walled Town may be Built and kept Repaired in every County of the said Kingdom of Ireland and Endowed and Furnished with necessary and sufficient means of Legal and Just Government and Defence for the better security of your Majesties Laws and Rights more especially the true Protestant Religion in time of danger in any of which Towns no Papist may be permitted to Dwell or Inhabit 15. That for the better satisfaction of Justice and your Majesties Honour and for the future Security of the said Kingdom and your Majesties Protestant Subjects there exemplary Punishment according to Law may be inflicted upon such as have there Traiterously Levied War and taken up Arms against your Majesties Protestant Subjects and Laws and therein against your Majesty especially upon such as have had their hands in the shedding of Innocent Blood or had to do with the First Plot or Conspiracy or since that time have done any notorious Murder or Overt Act of Treason 16. That all your Majesties Towns Forts and places of Strength destroyed by the said Confederates since the said Rebellion may be by them and at their Charges Re-edified and delivered up into your Majesties hands to be duly put into the Government under your Majesty and your Laws of your good Protestants and that all Strengths and Fortifications made and set up by the said Confederates since the said Rebellion may be slighted and thrown down or else delivered up and disposed of for Protestant Government and Security as aforesaid 17. That according to the Presidents of former times in cases of general Rebellions in Ireland the Attainders which have been duly had by Outlawry for Treason done in this Rebellion may be established and confirmed by Act of Parliament to be in due form of Law transmitted and passed in Ireland and that such Traitors as for want of Protestant and indifferent Jurors to Indict them in the proper County are not yet Indictd not Convicted or Attainted by Outlary or otherwise may upon due proof of their Offences be by like Acts of Parliament Convicted and Attainted and all such Offenders forfeit their Estates as to Law appertaineth and your Majesty to be adjudged and put in possession without any Office or Inquisition to be had 18. That your Majesties Protestant Subjects may be restored to the quiet Possession of all their Castles Houses Mannors Lands Tenements Hereditaments and Leases and to the quiet possession of the Rents thereof as they had the same before and at the time of the breaking forth of this Rebellion and from whence
in England provided that nothing shall be concluded by both or either of the said Houses of Parliament which may bring prejudice to any of His Majesties Protestant Party or their Adherents or to any of his Majesties Roman-Catholick Subjects Party or their Adherents other than such things as upon this Treaty shall be concluded to be done or such things as may be proper for the Committee of Priviledges of either or both Houses to take cognizance of as in such cases heretofore hath been accustomed and such other things as shall be propounded to either or both Houses by the Lord Lieutenant or other chief Governour or Governours for the time being during the said Parliament for the advancement of His Majesties Service and the Peace of the Kingdom which Clause is to admit no construction which may trench upon these Articles or any of them 3. It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that all Acts Ordinances and Orders made by both or either Houses of Parliament to the blemish dishonour or prejudice of His Majesties Roman-Catholick Subjects of this Kingdom or any of them since the Seventh of August 1641 shall be vacated and that the same and all exemplifications and other Acts which may continue the memory of them be made void by Act of Parliament 4. It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that all Indictments Attainders Outlawries in this Kingdom and all the Processes and other proceedings thereupon and all Letters Patents Grants Leases Custodiams Bonds Recognizances and all Records Act or Acts Office or Offices Inquisitions and all other things depending upon or taken by reason of the said Indictments Attainders or Outlawries since the Seventh of August 1641 in prejudice of the said Catholicks their Heirs Executors Administrators and Assigns or any of them or the Widows of them or any of them shall be vacated and made void in such sort as no memory shall remain thereof to the blemish dishonour or prejudice of the said Catholicks their Heirs Executors Administrators or Assigns or any of them or the Widows of them or any of them and that to be done immediately after concluding of these Articles and at furthest before the First day of October next or in case the said new Parliament be called sooner than the said last day of November then Forty days before the said Parliament And that all impediments which may hinder the said Roman-Catholicks to Sit or Vote in the next intended Parliament or to choose or to be chosen Knights and Burgesses to Sit or Vote there shall be removed before the said Parliament provided that no man shall be questioned by reason of this Article for mesne rates or wastes saving wilful wastes committed after the First of November 1645. 5. It is further concluded accorded and agreed upon by and between the said parties And His Majesty is further graciously pleased that all debts do stand in state as they were in the beginning of those troubles and that no grant or disposition made or to be made thereof by vertue or colour of any Attainder Outlawry Fugacy or other Forfeiture whatsoever or otherwise shall be of force and this to be passed as an Act in the said next Parliament 6. It is concluded accorded and agreed by and between the said parties and His Majesty is graciously pleased that for the securing of the Estates or reputed Estates of the Lords Knights Gentlemen and Freeholders or reputed Freeholders as well of Connaught and County of Clare or Country of Thomond as of the County of Limerick and Tipperary the same to be secured by Act of Parliament according to the intent of the Five and Twentieth Article of the Graces granted in the Fourth year of his Majesties Reign the Tenor whereof for so much as concerneth the said Proposition doth ensue in these words viz. We are Graciously pleased that for the securing of the Inhabitants of Connaught and Country of Thomond and County of Clare that their several Estates shall be confirmed unto them and their Heirs against Vs and our Heirs and Successors by Act to be passed in the next Parliament to be holden in Ireland to the end the same may never hereafter be brought into any further question by Vs Our Heirs and Successors in which Act of Parliament so to be passed you are to take care that all Tenures in Capite and all Rents and Services as are now due or which ought to be answered unto Vs out of the said Lands and Premises by any Letters Patents past thereof since the first year of King Henry the Eighht or found by any Office taken from the said first year of King Henry the Eighth until the One and Twentieth of July 1615 whereby our late dear Father or any His Predecessors actually received any profit by Wardship Liveries primer Seisins mesne rates O●ster le mains or fines of alienations without licence be again reserved unto Vs Our Heirs and Successors And all the rest of the premises to be holden of Our Castle of Athloane by Knights Service according to our said late Fathers Letters notwithstanding any Tenures in Capite found for Vs by Office since the One and Twentieth of July 1615 and not appearing in any such Letters Patents or Offices within which rule it is His Majesties pleasure and it is so concluded and agreed that the said Lands in the Counties of Limerick and Tipperary be included but to be held by such Rents and Tenures only as they were in the Fourth Year of His Majesties Reign Provided always and it is the intention of the said parties to these presents that the said Lords Knights Gentlemen and Freeholders or reputed Freeholders of the said Province of Connaught County of Clare and Country of Thomond and Counties of Tipperary and Limerick shall have and enjoy the full benefit of such Composition and Agreement which shall be made with His most Excellent Majesty for the Court of Wards Tenures Respites and Issues of Homage any clause in this Article contained to the contrary notwithstanding And as for the Lands within the Counties of Kilkenny and Wickloe unto which His Majesty was Intituled by Offices taken or found in the time of the Earl of Strafford's Government in this Kingdom His Majesty is graciously pleased that the state thereof shall be considered in the next intended Parliament w●●rein His Majesty will assent unto that which shall be Just and Honourable And it is further concluded and agreed by and between the said Parties and His Majesty is further graciously pleased that the like Act of Limitation of His Majesties Titles for the security of the Estates of His Subjects of this Kingdom be passed in the said Parliament as was Enacted in the One and Twentieth Year of His late Majesty King James His Reign in England 7. It is further concluded accorded and
without looking after the Lord Marquess of Clanrickard for Advice or Consent and in effect if the number to be put into Garrisons be not so ascertained ☜ that it may master the rest there from the Protestant Party it is but to offer our Men to the Slaughter and expose our selves to what conditions they please our Army abroad being thereby diminished and the Party put into Garrison subject to be removed at the pleasure of him that shall command in chief As to the Fourth whether the Catholick Lord General be of the Catholick Union or faithful to the same and what Commands to be conferred on our Generals or Commanders or upon which of them or for what time to continue or to what chief Garrisons they shall be drawn or in what number or how long they shall continue there are wholly uncertain and all the particulars are alterable and subject to the Will and Pleasure of the Chief Governor for the time being The Fifth only is matter of Security and mends not the conditions granted if the same were obtained as is propounded and if our Union were dissolved by any agreement before performance what means is left us to expect or obtain performance And certainly where the Lord Marquess of Clanrickard grounds all he doth in this on his own undertaking without Warrant from his Majesty we cannot prudently suppose having no other Grounds for it but his Majesty will disavow it when he did disavow the undertaking of the Earl of Glamorgan to the Confederate Cathotholicks made more solemnly to the Persons wherewith the Government was entrusted and who had thus far an advantage beyond the Marquess of Clanrickard that his Lordships the Earl of Glamorgans Concessions were grounded on his Majesties known authority under his Seal Manual and attested with his Royal Signature whereas the Marquess of Clanrickard goeth only on his own undertaking As to the Sixth it containeth no certain command or order which may in future be had from his Majesty and being a certain contingency needeth no Answer As to the Seventh concerning his Lordships undertaking to sollicite for redress to be had in the next Parliament therein we find no manner of assurance for all those who unjustly lost their Estates in Ireland other than that the Lord Marquess of Clanrickard will Petition sollicite perswade and use his best endeavours whereof no man is Judge but himself and the event and engagement uncertain and the Act of Oblivion being only by that instrument of engagement to extend to those that shall joyn therein and which engagement is now suddenly expected to be concluded there all others of the Nation that are absent who cannot joyn therein so suddenly and are not privy are left open to the danger of the extremities of the Law both for their Lives and Estate And lastly we conclude that the General Assemby now at hand is the only means left to conclude a certain stable Peace in this Kingdom and no private or particular undertaking of any Subject unqualified with any appearing authority besides the former inducements to satisfy you you ought seriously to consider that the Earl of Glamorgans Concessions grounded on his Majesties authority and read in the General Assembly held in Lent last and on which they wholly relyed will by these propositions if accepted be absolutely waved contrary to the intention of the whole Kingdom which we desire may be seriously reflected on amongst the rest those Concessions by many degrees being more valuable and grounded on clearer authority than the offerings or undertakings now made John Baptista Archiepiscopus Firmanus Nuncius Apostolicus Jo. Clonfert Emer Clogherensis Louthe Fr. Pa. Plunket Alexander Mac Dnonel N. Plunket Robert Lynch Piers Butler Appen XXXVI A Declaration of the General Assembly against the Peace of 1646. THis Assembly having met to consider of the great affairs of the Kingdom and for the settlement thereof have seen and perused a Decree Dated the 12 of August 1646 made and published by the Congregation of the Clergy then convened at Waterford by which the Peace contained in Thirty Articles past betwixt the Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland on his Majesties behalf and certain Commissioners intrusted by the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland was declared unsafe and under penalty of Censure not to be accepted or adhered unto by the said Confederate Catholicks and protested against as not containing security for the free exercise of the Catholick Religion and having likewise at large heard what the said Commissioners the late Supream Council and Committe of Instructions produced from the grounds they proceeded on do find as to that part which concerneth Religion the said Commissioners Council and Committee did not rely only on the said Thirty Articles but also on certain other Articles per●ected and agreed on between the said Commissioners of the one part and the Right Honourable the Earl of Glamorgan on the other part by Authority from his Majesty to the said Earl which Authority ensueth in haec verba and so recites it verbatim Which Articles contain so advantagious Concessions for matters of Religion together with such other strong motives and encouragements upon which the said Commissioners Council and Committee resolved to insist and upon breach thereof to call an Assembly and resume their former Power as by an Order of this House and other Orders of the Council did appear unto this Assembly as did induce the said Commissioners and Committee to conclude the said Peace though by reason of many Accidents happened since the said Agreement which were offered in the debate of this Cause in the House the said Agreement with the Earl of Glamorgan was and is held unsecured to be relied on for the free exercise of the Catholick Religion by the said Confederate Catholicks This Assembly therefore most humbly acknowledging his Majesties gracious and favourable intentions expressed in many particulars of the said Articles and Agreements yet forasmuch as the said Confederate Catholicks are not satisfied or secured by the said Peace in their Religion Lives Estates or Liberties therefore and for many other Important Reasons and Weighty Considerations the said General Assembly may not accept of nor submit unto the said Peace and do hereby protest against it and do declare the same Invalid and of no Force to all intents and purposes And do farther declare that this Nation will not accept of any Peace not containing sufficient and satisfactory security for their Religion Estates Lives and Liberties of the said Confederate Catholicks And this Assembly do likewise declare that the said Council Committee of Instructions and Commissioners of the Treaty have faithfully and sincerely carried and demeaned themselves in their said Negotiation pursuant and according to the trust reposed in them and gave thereof a due acceptable account to this Assembly Given at Kilkenny the Second of February 1646. Ex. per Phillip Carny Cl. Gen. Concil Hiberniae Appen XXXVII The Marquess of Clanrickard's Letter to Sir Luke
of the Affairs of the Confederate Catholicks and to direct their Assistance in what they may to further settling of the happy Peace of this Kingdom with Advantageous and Honourable Conditions Commissioners being now sent to conclude the same if they may You are to let his Most Christian Majesty the Queen Regent and Cardinal Mazarine know That there is a considerable Enemy in the Heart of the several Provinces of this Kingdom that yet we have many sufficient Cities and Parts of the greatest Consequence in our Hands and have sufficient Stock of Men to defend the Nation and expel the Enemy but do want Aids of Money and Shipping without which we shall be in danger the next Summer-Service and therefore to solicite for considerable Aids in Moneys to be sent timely the Preservation of the Catholick Religion in this Kingdom depending thereon If you find upon the Place that a Settlement of Peace cannot be had according to the several Instructions that go with the Commissioners to his Holiness and Christian Majesty and Prince of Wales nor such considerable Aids that may probably prove for the Preservation of the Nation then you are to inform your self by Correspondence with our Commissioners imployed to Rome whether his Holiness will accept of this offer of being Protector to this Nation And if you find he will not accept thereof nor otherwise send such powerful and timely Aids as may serve to Preservation then you are by advice of other the Commissioners imployed to his Majesty and Prince of Wales and by Correspondence had with the Commissioners imployed to Rome and by Correspondence likewise with our Commissioners imployed since if it may be timely had to inform your self where the most considerable aids for preserving this Nation may be had by this offer of the Protectorship of the Nation in manner as by other instructions into France grounded on the same order of the assembly is contained and so to manage the disposal of the Protectorship as you and the rest of our said Commissioners shall find most for the advantage of the Nation The like Instructions for Spain bearing the same date Appendix XLI A Letter from Fryer Paul King to the Titular Bishop of Clogher Reverendissime Domine BReviter Dico Antrimus totus est ad Obsequium Eugenii O Neal Exercitus Ultoniensis procurabitque omnes suos ponere statim ex parte illius Rogat vehementissime ut veniat Eugenius O Neal Exercitus Ultoniensis siine mora versus Kilkenniam ne dubitent quin tota Lagenia imo Hibernia erit in dispositione ipsorum Oportet prevenire Ormonium qui venturus est statim post Muskry Browne Vester Decanus Firmanus est hic quasi Captious Ipse Archiepiscopus Dubliniensis anhelant vestrum adventum omnia ad Nutum fient cum acceleratione sed sine illa omnia nutabunt per alium bajulum mitto tibi litteras Nicolai Plunketti Prestonius vix habet nomen exercitus qui est omnino dispersus Concilium Supremum Factionistae cadent modo extemplo venerit exercitus Ultoniensis cum Eugenio O Neal. Vester fidelis Servus Fr. Paulus King Appendix XLII The Marquess of Ormonds Declaration upon his Arrival in Ireland 1648. By the Lord Lieutenant General of Ireland ORMOND TO prevent the too frequent prejudices incident through jealousies distrusts and misconstructions to all undertakings we account it not the least worthy our Labour upon the instant of our Arrival to prepare this People whose wellfare we contend for with a right understanding of those intentions in us which in order to his Majesties Service we desire may terminate in their good To enumerate the several reasons by which we were induc'd for preservation of the Protestant Religion and the English interest to leave the City of Dublin and other his Majesties Garrisons then under our power in this Kingdom in the hands of those intrusted by his two Houses of Parliament were to set forth a Narrative in place of a Manifest It may suffice to be known that those Transactions had for one main ground this confidence that by being under the power of the Houses they would upon a happy expected composure of affairs in England revert unto and be revested in his Majesty as his proper right But having found how contrary to the inclinations of the well-affected to his Majesties Restauration in England the power of that Kingdom hath unhappily devolv'd to hands imployed only in the art and labour of pulling down and subverting the Fundamentals of Monarchy with whom a pernicious party in this Kingdom do equally sympathize and cooperate And being filled with deep sense of the Duty and Obligations that are upon us strictly to embrace all opportunities of employing our endeavours towards the recovery of his Majesties just Rights in any part of his Dominions Having observed the Protestant Army in the Province of Munster by special Providence discovering the Arts and Practises used to intangle the Members thereof in engagements as directly contrary to their Duties towards God and Man as to their intentions and resolutions to have found means to manifest the Candor and Integrity thereof in a disclaimer of any obedience to or concurrence with those Powers or Persons which have so grosely vari'd even their own professed principles of preserving his Majesties Person and Rights by confining him under a most strict imprisonment his Majesty also vouchsafing graciously to accept the Declaratien of the said Army as an eminent and seasonable expression of their Fidelity toward him and in Testimony thereof having laid his Commands upon us to make our repair unto this province 〈◊〉 discharge the duties of our place We have as well in obedience thereunto as in pursuance of our own duty and desire to advance his Majesties service resolved to evidence our approbation and esteem of the proceeding of the said Army by publishing unto the world our like determination in the same ensuing particulars And accordingly we profess and declare First to improve our utmost endeavours for the settlement of the Protestant Religion according to the Example of the best Reformed Churches Secondly To defend the King in his prerogatives Thirdly To maintain the priviledges and freedom of Parliament and the Liberty of the Subjects that in order hereunto we shall oppose to the hazard of our Lives those Rebells of this Kingdom who shall refuse their obedience to his Majesty upon such terms as he hath thought fit by us to require it And we shall endeavour to the utmost the suppressing of that independant party who have thus fiercely laboured the extirpation of the true Protestant Religion the ruin of our Prince the dishonour of Parliament and the Vassalage of our Fellow Subjects against all those who shall depend upon them or adhere unto them and that this our undertaking might not appear obnoxious to the Trade of England but that we desire a firm Union and Agreement be preserved betwixt us we do likewise declare that we will