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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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which they were wont to extort upon such Towns and Villages of the Churches as were near and next bordering upon them Fifthly That when Earick or Composition is made among the Lay-People for any Murther That no Person of the Clergy though he be kin to any of the Parties shall contribute any thing thereunto but as they be guiltless from the Murther so shall they be free from Payment of Mony for any such Earick or Release for the same Sixthly That all and every Good Christian being Sick and Weak shall before the Priest and his Neighbours make his last Will and Testament and his Debts and Servant's Wages being paid all his Moveables to be divided if he have any Children into three Parts whereof one Part to be to the Children another to his Wife and the third Part to be for the Performance of his Will And if so be he have no Children then the Goods to be divided into two Parts whereof the one Moyety to his Wife and the other to the Performance of his Will and Testament And if he have no Wife but only Children then the Goods to be likewise divided into two Parts whereof the one to himself and the other to his Children Seventhly That every Christian being Dead and dying in the Catholick Faith shall be reverendly brought to the Church and to be buried as appertaineth Finally That all the Divine Service in the Church of Ireland shall be Kept Used and Observed in the like Order and Manner as it is in the Church of England For it is Meet and Right That as by God's Providence and Appointment Ireland is now become Subject and under the King of England so the same should take from thence the Order Rule and Manner how to Reform themselves and to Live in better Order For whatsoever Good Thing is befallen to the Church and Realm of Ireland either concerning Religion or peaceable Government they owe the same to the King of England and are to be thankful unto him for the same For before his coming into the Land of Ireland many and all sorts of Wickedness in Times past flowed and and reigned among them all which now by his Authority and Goodness are abolish'd And so says Cambrensis they having owned the King Supreme in Church and State he confirmed their Canons by his Royal Authority And it seems to me That at the same Synod the King declared his Pleasure to govern Ireland by the Laws of England Whereto they consented and swore Obedience accordingly for thus my Author phrases it Leges Angliae sunt ab omnibus gratanter receptae juratoria cautione praestita confirmatae Temple 5. And though others say This was done at a Synod Matth. Paris held about this Time at Lismore Yet I rather believe That the Bishop of Lismore his presiding at Cashel as he did being the Pope's Legate gave rise to the Mistake of the Place than that there should be two such famous Synods celebrated in the same Province in one Year But however that be this is certain That the King soon after his return into England caused an antient Treatise 4 Inst. 12. called Modus tenendi Parliamentum to be transcribed in a Parchment-Roll and to be sent into Ireland for their better Instruction The King kept his Christmas at Dublin in as great State as that Place would admit of for there was not any House to be found there that was capable of his Retinue and therefore he was necessitated to build a long Cabin with smooth'd Wattles after the Fashion of the Country and almost in the Nature of a Tent which being well furnished with Plate Housholdstuff and good Chear made a better Appearance than ever had been seen in Ireland before that Time and accordingly it was admired and applauded by the Irish Potentates who flocked thither to pay their Duty to the King But it was Time for Henry to mind his Foreign Affairs and therefore in order to his return to England he went to Wexford and there he staid almost three Months during which Time the Weather was so tempestuous that Ships durst not adventure to Sea so that the King could neither get to England nor receive any Intelligence from thence At length after Mid-Lent a Vessel arrived with the bad News of the King's Sons being in Rebellion and of the coming of the Pope's Legates to Interdict the Kingdom for the Murder of Becket He was also distressed in Ireland by the Plague which raged in his Army and by the want of Victuals which now began to be very scarce and dear so that he was necessitated to hasten to England although he was much troubled to leave Ireland in that unsetled Condition and without some Castles and Fortresses which he design'd and thought necessary for its Conservation But the Kings Jealousie was not so much of the Irish as it was of Strongbow whose Reputation and Interest were very great And therefore to ballance him the King raised several Grandees and gave them large Portions of Land together with great Jurisdictions and Priviledges particularly he gave Vlster to the famous John de Courcy and Meath to Hugh de Lacy and left Lacy with twenty Gentlemen and Robert Fitz-Stephens and Maurice Fitz-Girald with twenty more Governours of Dublin Waterford was committed to the Care of Humphry de Bohun Robert Fitz-Barnard and Hugh de Gondeville who had twenty Gentlemen to attend them and William Fitz-Adelme Philip of Hastings and Philip de Bruce had the like number of Gentlemen to keep Wexford And so in the Morning on Easter-Monday the King went on Board and was by Noon the same Day landed at S. Davids in Wales He left Hugh de Lacy Chief Governour Some call him O R●●●k or Lord Justice of Ireland who kept his Residence at Dublin and thither came to him O Mlaghlin of Meath to complain of some Hardships and Inconveniences he pretended to suffer in that Country or rather to adjust Matters between them about their respective Interests and Estates in Meath for he desired a Parly at the Hill of Taragh To which Lacy very readily consented And so after reciprocal Oaths for each others Safety 1173. they met at the Time and Place appointed O Mlaghlin had treacherously prepared an Ambush and when he found his Opportunity he gave them the Signal and upon their Approach he with a Pale Grim Countenance and with a Spar in his Hand made up to Lacy and assaulted him But it happened That one Griffith the Night before the Parly had dreamt That a parcel of Hogs fell upon Lacy and had killed him if he had not slain the great Boar This Dream being told to Maurice Fitz-Girald he gave such regard to it as Superstitious Men commonly do to such Whimsies and believing that it did forbode some Danger to Lacy he caused Griffith and six more secretly to arm themselves and to ride near the Place of Parley as it were for Pleasure and to be ready
Confederates and that Goods recovered he restored to the right Owners and that all who assist or favour the Enemies or stand Neuter be Excommunicated and that all Invaders of any Irishman's Property be Excommunicated and that those Excommunicated shall be excluded from Confession and Sacrament and that Importers or Makers of Arms Powder c. shall pay no Taxes and that in the next Congregation Embassadors be appointed to be sent to the Pope the Emperor and the Kings of France and Spain and that a Clergyman or a Lawyer be of the Quorum in every Embassie and that part of the Church-Livings be given to the Clergy and the rest to support the War and that Two Confessors and One Preacher be appointed for every Regiment c. And afterwards viz. on the Twenty fourth of October there was a General Assembly of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and others the Representatives of the Confederates at Kilkenny and they likewise made many Ordinances mention'd at large Burlace Appendix 8. which are to this effect That the Popish Church in Ireland shall enjoy all Privileges according to Magna Charta and that the Common Law of England and all Statutes not inconsistent with the Freedom of Religion and the Liberty of the Subject be of force That Allegiance shall be continued to the King and His Prerogatives supported That the Law shall be executed as well as the Circumstance of War and the Absence from Dublin will permit That a Supreme Council of Twenty four be establish'd whereof Twelve constantly to reside and One of them to be President and Nine to be a Quorum of which Seven must concur to make any Vote obligatory and if a greater Number be present Two thirds must agree This Council shall have Authority over all Officers Civil and Military shall name Sheriffs Supreme Provost-Marshals c. and may do any thing for the Advantage of the Cause and determine Causes Capital and all other Matters except Title of Land and shall have a Guard of Five hundred Foot and Two hundred Horse That there be also Provincial and County Councils the former may receive an Appeal from the latter and may try Causes as Judges of Assize and Gaol-delivery use to do but must not meddle with Title of Land except Dowers and Jointures And the County Council shall have the Power of Sessions of Peace and an additional Authority to determine Personal Actions That the Sheriff in every County be Provost-Marshal and may execute any Man not worth Five pounds for any Capital Offence giving the Offender Twenty four Hours time to prepare his Soul And that no Temporal Government or Jurisdiction shall be assumed kept ☞ or exercised in this Kingdom or within any County or Province thereof during these Troubles other than is before expressed except such Jurisdiction or Government as is or shall be approved by the General Assembly or the Supreme Council And that every body quit the Possessions he hath wrongfully gotten and to avoid Debate that all Estates continue as they were possess'd for Three years last past unless the Title be determin'd or redeem'd and that to avoid all Distinction of Nation any British Papist that was so before this War and will come and reside in Ireland shall be privileg'd in a Third part of the Publick Taxes And that no Distinction or Comparison be made between Nations Provinces or Towns and that all New Converts be esteemed as Catholick Natives and that an Inn of Court be erected here and that Cess and Coyn and Livery be punish'd And no Soldiers shall be paid or relieved by the Country but such as are in the Marshal's List and none to be Billetted but by the Constable And that Free-Schools be erected in every Province And that the King's Revenue and the Enemies Rents be collected and dispos'd of by the Provincial or Supreme Council for His Majesty's Use and Service And that Popish Impropriators may retain their Tythes till that Matter be setled in Parliament And that there be Collectors of Publick Money in every County And that the Popish Wife of an Enemy shall have her Jointure and sue and be sued as if her Husband were naturally dead ☞ And that the Possessions of the Protestant Clergy in Right of the Church shall be deemed the Possessions of the Catholick Clergy And that no Man imprison'd by one Council shall be inlarg'd by another And that no Protection be given to the Enemy or their Servants with-without special Order That Merchants and their Ships be protected in their Importations and that Commissioners be appointed in every Port to view the Arms and Ammunition that shall be imported and to certifie the same to the Supreme Council That Fugitive Soldiers be sent to their respective Commanders That the Estates of Neuters and Enemies do first pay their Debts to any of the Confederates before any of it be put into the Publick Stock and that no Soldier meddle with an Enemies Lands or Goods without Order And lastly That the * * Append. 14. Oath of Association be taken solemnly after Confession and the Sacrament in the Parish-Church and the Names of all Persons of Rank and Quality that take the same to be enroll'd The Assembly did also 25 October order Proclamation to be made to invite all the Adherents of the English of what Nation soever to come from them over to the Confederates by the Last of November and 27 October they ordered a Seal to be made and 28 October they appointed a Committee to inquire how Money and Ammunition come from Foreign Parts hath been disposed of and that Mr. Baron bring in Writing the Propositions and Messages from Foreign Parts to him committed by the Pope's Nuncio and others and 29 October they appoint Auditors of the Account of Moneys received and what hath been made of Protestants Rents Goods or Chattels and that the Enemy be not called Protestants or English but the Puritanical or Malignant Party and 30 October they order That no Man be privileg'd from Contributing to the Maintenance of the Catholick Army On the First of November they appointed the Lords of Castlehaven and Gormanstown Doctor Fennell Colonel Dermond O Bryan Sir Lucas Dillon Sir Phelim O Neal Thomas Burk Richard Martin Feigh O Flin Richard Beling Adam Cusack James mac Donell Patrick Crelly Rory Macguire Patrick Darcy and all the Lawyers to prescribe a Form of Government And 2 November they order Philip Hore to Account for 120 l. received of the Gentry of the County of Dublin to buy Arms And 4 November That the Prelates enjoyn the Priests to administer the * * Append. 14. Oath of Association to every Parishioner and to take his Subscription thereunto And 11 November That the Supreme Council shall manage the Admiralty And 13 November That the next Assembly shall be on the Twentieth of May next unless the Supreme Council find cause to convoke it sooner and that Thirty thousand Pounds be levied on Leinster by
Disobediences and Affronts put upon the King's Authority and consequently suggested Matter to his Majesty of making his Declaration against the Peace Secondly We have perused the King's Declaration disavowing of the late Peace and are of Opinion for ought to us appearing That the King hath thereby withdrawn his Commission and Authority from the Lord-Lieutenant This is clearly proved out of a Branch of the said Declaration taking away and nulling all Commissions granted by him In that Declaration the King will have no Friends but the Friends of the Covenant Hence it is evidently inferred That his Majesty's Authority is taken away from the Lord-Lieutenant unless he be a Friend to the Covenant as we conceive he is not but if he be he is not our Friend nor to be trusted by us in having Authority over us In the same Declaration the Irish Nation as bloody Rebels are cast from the Protection of the King's Laws and Royal Favours It may not therefore be presumed That he would have his Authority kept over such a Nation to govern them We do joyn with you in that you represent to wit There is no Safety to be expected from Covenanters or Independents for the Catholick Religion or this Nation If that of the Peace be proved the only Safety we are for it However we conceive the benefit thereof is due to us having made no breach of our part Thirdly Something of our sense concerning what way may tend best to the Nation 's preservation we will say beneath and do offer our clear intentions before God to joyn with you and all Men in what will be found the best and fafest way to such preservation Fourthly We are of Opinion and did ever think all our Endeavours should be employed to keep the King's Authority over us But when his Majesty throweth away the Nation from his protection as Rebels withdrawing his own Authority we cannot understand this Mystery of preserving the same with us and over us or how it may be done Whereas you say That many of those considerable will instantly make their Conditions with the Enemy if the King's Authority be taken away by himself as by his Declaration it is and not driven away by the Subject In such case when the People may not hold it likely they will not agreewith the Parliament for not having it We are of Opinion the best remedy the King's Authority being taken away as was said of meeting this Inconvenience of the Peoples closing with the Parliament is returning to the Confederacy as it was intended by the Nation in case of breach of Peace on his Majesty's part This will keep a Union amonst us if Men will not be precipitantly guilty of breach of their Oath of Association which Oath by two solemn Orders of two several Assemblies is to continue binding if any breach of the Articles should happen of his Majesty's part The King's Authority and the Lord-Lieutenant's Commission being recalled by the Declaration abovesaid we are of Opinion the Lord-Lieutenant hath no such Authority to leave If we must expose Lives and Fortunes to the hazard of fighting for making good that Peace seeing the danger and prejudice is alike to defend that or get a better Peace Why should we bound ourselves within the limits of those Article to disavowed Upon consideration of the whole matter we may not consent with safety of Conscience to the Proviso's of revoking our Declaration and Excommunication demanded by his Excellency or granting any Assurance to him or the Commissioners of Trust for not attempting the like in the future and that for many Reasons especially for I. That the King's Authority is not in the Lord-Lieutenant nor Power in us to confer a new Authority on him being also destructive to the Nation to continue it in him and preservative if in another And that was our sence when we declared against the King's Authority in his person II. We much fear we should lose the few Churches remaining under his Government as we lost under him all the Churches of the City of Waterford and Kilkenny and the Towns of Wexford Ross Clonmell Cashell Fethard Kilmallock c. in this agreeing with the Maccabees Maxims Maximus vero primus pro sanctitate timor erat templi III. His Excellency having declared at Cork that he will maintain during his Life the Protestant Religion according to the Example of the best Reformed Churches which may be the same in substance with the Oath of Covenant for ought we know we may not expect from him Defence of the Catholick Religion IV. The Scandal over all the World to make choise of one of a different Religion especially in Rome where his Holiness in his Agreement or Articles with the Queen of England had a Catholick Governour granted tho' not performed And we do fear the Scourges of War and Plague that have fallen so heavy upon us and some Evidences of God's Anger against us for putting God's Cause and Churches under such a hand whereas that Trust might have been managed in a Catholick Hand under the King's Authority V. That we shall find no Succour or Countenance from any Catholick Prince of the Church or Laity he governing but Reproach and Disgrace VI. That the Souldiers by the ill Success of his Conduct have not the heart to Fight under him and so we shall be lost if we come to fighting VII We find the People generally in great fear to be lost under his Government and are of Opinion That the greater part of the People will agree with the Parliament if the Authority were continued in him despairing of Defence under him VIII That we declared against him having the King's Authority out of no Spleen or Malice against his person so save us God but for the fear we had upon good deliberation of the utter Ruine and Destruction of the Nation under his Government and that now finding no reasons or ways of Preservation by him we may not with reason be induced to alter our Opinion especially the King's Authority being not in him IX That those two considerable Corporations remaining are at great distance with his Excellence for giving Commissions to take away their Goods and other reasons and are thought to be resolved not to submit to him ☞ though they resolve to appear as in their intentions and actions they conceive they are Faithful to the Crown and to the King's Authority Obedient if placed in another person Ormond's Reply WE had reason to hope that if the Offer we made should not meet with the success we desired yet that so affectionate a Manifestation of our Love to the Nation transporting us to an Overture of Reconciliation with those that had so much injured us would not have given ground for repeating old and casting new Aspersions upon us But for Answer to this Paragraph we refer to our Letter and to our Answer to the eleventh Article of their Declaration Appendix 48. Here they readily declare their Opinion concerning
the common sort are not only capable but also very apt to learn any thing that is taught them so that I do impute the Ignorance and Barbarity of the Irish meerly to their evil Customs which are so exceeding bad Davis 150. that as Sir John Davys says Whoever use them must needs be Rebels to all good Government and destroy the Commonwealth wherein they live and bring Barbarism and Desolation upon the Richest and most fruitful Land in the World But the Irish Capacities are not to be questioned at this Day since they have managed their Affairs with that dexterity and Courage that they have gotten the whole Kingdom of Ireland into their Possession and by wheedling some and frightning others they have expelled the Body of the English out of that Island However let us not be dismaid for they are but the same People our Ancestors have so often triumphed over and although they are not to be so contemned but that we may expect they will make one good Effort for their Estates and Religion yet we may still depend upon it That their Nature is still the same and not to be so changed but that they will again vail their Bonnets to a victorious English Army AN EPITOME OF S R WILLIAM PETTY'S LARGE SURVEY OF IRELAND Divided into its 4 Provinces 32 Counties and the Counties into Their Several Barronies wherein are Distinguished y e Archbishopricks Bishopricks Citty 's Places that Return Parliament Men. also the Roads Bogs and Bridges By Phillip Lea At the Atlas and Hercules in Cheapside near Fryday Street LONDON The History of IRELAND From The Conquest Thereof By the ENGLISH to this Time By RICHARD COX Esq r Printed For JOSEPH WATTS at y e Angell in S t Pauls Church Yard THE REIGN OF Henry Plantagenet FITZ-EMPRESS Conqueror and Lord of IRELAND HENRY the Second of that Name King of England a Brave and Powerful Prince ambitious of Glory and the Enlargment of his Empire cast his Eye upon Ireland as a Country most easie to subdue and of great Advantage to him when conquered There were not wanting some Learned Men who affirmed The King had very fair Pretences if not good Title to that Island Speed 472. for besides the Conquests which the Kings Arthur and Edgar had formerly made there Spencer's view 33. they alledged That it was by Leave of the British King Gurgun●●s Campion 26 28. and under Stipulations of Tribute that the Irish were first permitted to settle themselves in that Kingdom Besides the first Inhabitants of Ireland were Britains and those People which the Irish Historians call Fir-bolg and Tuah de Danan i. e. Vir Belgus i. e. Populus Dannonius were no other than the Belga and Dannonit Ancient Inhabitants of England To which might be added That Bayon from whence the Irish pretend to come Lib. P. Lambeth 153. was part of the Kings Dominion So that either Way his Majesty was their natural Prince and Sovereign But however that were yet the King had 〈◊〉 cause of War against the Irish because of the Pyracies and Outrages they daily committed against his Subjects and the barbarous Cruelties they exercised on the English whensoever they fell into their Power buying and selling them as Slaves and using Turkish Tyranny over their Bodies Speed 473. so that the Irish themselves afterwards confessed That it was just their Land should be transfer'd to the Nation they had so cruelly handled Wherefore the King as well to revenge those Injuries as to recover that Kingdom put on a Resolution to invade it But first it was necessary to consult the Pope in that Matter because he pretended no less than three Titles to Ireland First the Universal Patent of Pasc● Oves which by their Interpretation was Synonimous to Rege Mundum Lib. P. Lambeth 48. Secondly the Donation of Constantine the Great whereby the Holy See was entituled to all the Islands of the Ocean Thirdly The Concession of the Irish Ibid. 154. on their Conversion to Christianity by which they granted the Temporal Dominion of their Country unto S. Peter's Chair And tho' the Answers to these Frivolous Pretences were easie and obvious viz. to the First That whatsoever Spiritual Jurisdiction was given by those Words yet our Saviour's Kingdom not being of this World it is certain no Temporal Dominion is granted thereby And to the Second That Constantine had never any Right or Possession in Ireland and therefore could not give to another what he had not himself And to the Third That the Allegation is false and the Popes had never any Temporal Dominion in Ireland but the same remain'd under their own Native Kings and Monarchs But this Forgery is yet more manifest Because the Irish were not converted by any Emissaries from Rome as appears by the Ancient Difference between the Churches of Ireland and Rome in some Baptismal Rites and the Time of celebrating the Feast of Easter Nevertheless the Pope's Licence in those Superstitious Times would create Reputation especially with the Clergy and his Benediction would as they fancied facilitate their Success and therefore it was thought fit That the King should send his Embassador John Salisbury to the Pope 1156. Sullevan 59. who was by Birth an Englishman and by Name Adrian IV. And how fond soever the Holy See doth now pretend to be of Ireland since the English Government and Industry have rendred it considerable 't is certain the Pope so little regarded it at that time when he received but small Obedience and less Profit from it that he was easily prevailed with to issue the following Bull. ADrian the Bishop Hanmer 107. the Servant of the Servants of God to his most dear Son in Christ the Noble King of England sendeth greeting and Apostolick Benediction Your Magnificence hath been very careful and studious how you might enlarge the Church of God here in Earth and encrease the Number of his Saints and Elect in Heaven in that as a good Catholick King you have and do by all means labour and travel to enlarge and increase God's Church by teaching the Ignorant People the True and Christian Religion and in abolishing and rooting up the Weeds of Sin and Wickedness And wherein you have and do crave for your better Furtherance the Help of the Apostolick See wherein more speedily and discreetly you proceed the better Success we hope God will send for all they which of a fervent Zeal and Love in Religion do begin and enterprize any such thing shall no doubt in the End have a Good and Prosperous Success And as for Ireland and all other Islands where Christ is known and the Christian Religion received it is out of all doubt and your Excellency well knoweth they do all appertain and belong to the Right of S. Peter and of the Church of Rome and we are so much the more ready desirous and willing to sow the acceptable Seed of God's Word because we know
the same in the latter Day will be most severely required at our Hands You have our well-beloved Son in Christ advertis'd and signified unto us That you will enter into the Land and Realm of Ireland to the end to bring them to Obedience unto Law and under your Subjection and to root out from among them their foul Sins and Wickedness as also to yield and pay yearly out of every House a yearly Pension of one Penny to S. Peter and besides also will defend and keep the Rites of those Churches whole and inviolate We therefore well allowing and favouring this your godly Disposition and commendable Affection do accept ratifie and Assent unto this your Petition and do grant That you for the dilating of God's Church the Punishment of Sin the Reforming of Manners planting of Virtue and the increasing of Christian Religion do enter to possess that Land and there to execute according to your Wisdom whatsoever shall be for the Honour of God and the Safety of the Realm And further also we do strictly charge and require That all the People of that Land do with all Humbleness Dutifulness and Honour receive and accept you as their Liege Lord and Sovereign reserving and excepting the Right of Holy Church to be inviolably preserved as also the yearly Pension of Peter-Pence out of every House which we require to be truly answered to S. Peter and to the Church of Rome If therefore you do mind to bring your Godly Purpose to effect endeavour to travail to reform the People to some better Order and Trade of Life and that also by your self and by such others as you shall think meet true and honest in their Life Manners and Conversation to the end the Church of God may be beautified the True Christian Religion sowed and planted and all other things done that by any means shall or may be to God's Honour and Salvation of Men's Souls whereby you may in the end receive of God's Hands the Reward of Everlasting Life and also in the mean time and in this Life carry a Glorious Fame and an Honourable Report among all Nations Together with this Bull the Pope sent King Henry a Gold-Ring as a Token of Investiture and somtime after a succeeding Pope Alexander III confirmed the former Grant by the following Breve ALexander the Bishop Hanmer 141. the Servant of the Servants of God to his dearly beloved Son the Noble King of England greeting Grace and Apostolick Benediction Forasmuch as things given and granted upon good Reason by our Predecessors are to be well allowed of ratified and confirmed we well considering and pondering the Grant and Priviledge for and concerning the Dominion of the Land of Ireland to Vs appertaining and lately given by Adrian our Predecessor We following his Steps do in like manner Confirm Ratifie and Allow the same reserving and saving to S. Peter and to the Church of Rome the yearly Pension of one Peny out of every House as well in England as in Ireland provided also that the Barbarous People of Ireland by your means be Reformed and Recovered from that filthy Life and abominable Conversation that as in Name so in Life and Manners they may be Christians and that as that Rude and Disordered Church being by you reformed the whole Nation may also with the Profession of the Name be in Acts and Deeds Followers of the same But saith Rossus of Warwick and he was no Protestant The King of England is not bound to rely on the Pope's Grant for Ireland Speed 472. nor yet to pay that Tax because he had a Precedent Claim to that Kingdom by hereditary Right Others object against these Bulls in another manner and particularly Philip O Sullevan who says They are void for many Reasons First Because they were obtained on false Suggestions and the Infallible Popes were deceived in their Grants Secondly That Regal or Sovereign Power is not granted by them but only that the Kings of England should be Lieutenants or Deputies to the Pope and Collectors of his Peter-Pence Thirdly That they were on a twofold Condition of paying Tribute and converting the People which not being performed the Bulls are void But because it is scarce credible that any Subject should be so Malicious against his Prince you shall have it in his own Words Rex hoc Decretum impetravit falsa Narrans ut ex ipso Decreto ego colligo pag. 59. Non Dominum Hiberniae sed Praefectum causa colligendi Tributi Ecclesiastici pag. 59. b. And again pag. 60. Non ut Rex aut Dominus Hiberniae sed ut a Pontifice Praefectus sic ego accepi ut Exactor Collector Pecun●ae quae ad Sedem Apostolicam pertinebat pag. 61. Ac mihi quidem rem totam sollicita Mentis acie contemplanti nihil Juris esse penes Anglos videtur For besides says he their Title was founded in Adultery meaning Dermond Mac Morough's they have exercised Fraud and Cruelty against the Catholicks that entertained them kindly and the very Temples have not escaped them Hinc igitur nemo ignorabit Hiberniam non Jure sed Injuria Narratione minime vera Sullevan 61. fuisse ab Anglis primo obtenta pag. 61. b. Nor can any Body believe says he that the Pope ever design'd so great an Injustice as to deprive the Irish Kings of their Birth-right Ibid. 62. and give it to Strangers And then he tells us That Laurence O Toole Archbishop of Dublin did obtain of the Pope a Bull to deprive the English King of his Government in Ireland but he dyed in his Return in France and is since canonized But says he supposing the Popes Grant at first were good yet 't is forfeited by Breach of Condition since the English did neither propogate Religion nor pay the Peter-Pence Postea omni Jure plane exciderunt Conditiones a Papa dictas constitutasque transgressi Nam Pensionem Divi Petri de medio sustulerunt nullam certam Religionem nullam firmam Fidem habent pro Deo Ventrem Voluntatem Libidinem colunt By this and the Approbation this Scandalous and Lying Treatise met with in Spain and the Repetition of the same things by divers others in their bitter Libels on the English People and Government and particularly by the Author of Analecta Hiberniae it is manifest that there are some Enemies of the Crown of England so malicious and unjust that they would make use of the most frivolous Pretences in the World to wrest the Kingdom of Ireland from the Dominion of the English Kings But as God Almighty has hitherto even many times to a Miracle protected the British Interest in Ireland so I doubt not unless we are wanting to our own Preservation but that he will continue that Noble Island under the Jurisdiction of the Crown of England for ever In the mean time though we lay no stress on the Popes Bulls yet because they are Argumenta ad Hominem and
and was inhabited by many English but now not a Man of English Extraction to be found there and even the O Bryans tho' very near Relations were inveterate Enemies each to the other and the Country was entirely wasted and innumerable complaints of Murther Rape Burning Robbery and Sacriledge were made to the Deputy He imprisoned the Earl of Thomond and Teig Mac Murrough till they gave Bonds and Hostages of their good Behaviour he kept the Earl's Brother in Irons and made Sir Donald O Bryan Sheriff and left a Provost-Marshal and a Garrison amongst them at their Request and Charge and upon shewing them that the uncertainty of their tenures was the cause of all their Disturbances they promised to surrender their Estates and take Patents according to Law and so having appointed Commissioners to hear such of their Complaints as he had not leisure to determine and having punished some notorious Offenders and ruined the Rebellious Mac an Aspigs Bastard Sons of the Bishop of Killaloo by name Brians he went to Galway To Galway came seven of the Family of the Clandonells and after them came Mac William Eighter who could speak Latin though he couldnot speak English he submitted by Oath and Indenture and agreed to pay two Hundred and Fifty Marks per Annum for his Country besides Contribution of Men on risings out and consented the Clandonells should hold their Lands of the Queen whereupon he was Knighted and had some small Presents from the Deputy and an English Sheriff sent into his Country as he desired O Mayle also submitted as did all the rest of the County of Mayo and desired Justice and English Government being weary of the devastations made by their civil Dissentions The Town of Galway was poor and disorderly and the Country destroyed by the Earl of Clanrickard's Sons against whom infinite Complaints were made Nevertheless they had the Confidence to come unexpectedly into the Church of Galway in the time of Divine Service and upon their Knees to make their Submission and at the same time they humbly begged Pardon for their Extravagances which by Advice of the Privy-Council was granted unto them although for the present they were confined and were afterwards carried to Dublin and so the Lord Deputy having stayed three Weeks at Galway set out towards Dublin and kept Sessions in every County he marched into 1576. and setled Garrisons in all places Convenient he finished his Progress on the thirteenth day of April 1576. But the state of Affairs and the miserable Condition of Ireland are best understood from the lively Representation of them in the Lord Deputies Letters which import that the County of Louth was impoverished by the frequent passage of the Army through it but would recover if it were protected from the ill Neighbourhood of the Ferny That Meath has been harassed by O Connor and O Molloy even since their Protections but that O Reyly behaved himself well That the Kings Writ did not run in the new Baronies of West meath but he hoped it should in a little time that the County of Kildare was wasted by the O Mores and the Counties of Wexford and Caterlough are but little better that the King's County and the Queens County are harassed by Rory oge and that the Undertakers are so poor and few that two Hundred Soldiers are in Garrison there to protect them so that those Counties do not yield the Crown the twentieth part of the Charge they put it to that Kilmallock was re-edified but that Athenry was the most miserable Spectacle in the World the whole Town was burnt by the Mac an Earla's and the Church it self was not exempted from the common Ruin although the Mother of one of these Vipers was buried therein but that was so far from mitigating their Fury that the Son being told his Mother was buried in that Church replied That if she were alive he would sooner burn her and the Church together than that any English Church should fortifie there that these Mac an Earla's hated each other and yet like Herod and Pilate joined together against any third Person whom they thought to be a common Enemy That the Deputy had laid a Tax of two Thousand Pound on the Country towards the re-edifying Athenry and took from the Earl of Clanrickard the Castles of Ballyclare and Ballynislow That O Connor Dun and O Flyn submitted to him at Roscomon and their Country being destroyed desired the English Laws and Government That the whole Province of Connaught was much annoyed by the Scots whom the Mac an Earla's had brought to their Assistance That the County of Longford submitted and paid part of their Arrears and promised the rest That the Brenny was pretty quiet that he left Thomas L'estrange and Thomas Dillon Commissioners to decide Controvers●es and Robert Damport Provost-Marshal of Connaught But if the Civil State of the Kingdom were in an ill Condition the Ecclesiastical was in a worse for there were scarce any Churches or Curates to be found Many People that never were Christned or knew any thing of God or Religion which being made known to the Queen Hooker 141. she sent a Commission to rectifie Ecclesiastical Matters and William Girald was sent over to be Lord Chancellor and Sir William Drury to be President of Munster both which arrived in June 1576. The Chancellor was immediately setled and the Deputy designed to go to Waterford to settle Drury in his Presidentship of Munster but he was diverted by the Letters received from the Bishop of Meath and Mayor of Galwey which advertised that the Sons of Clanrickard who had lately submitted with the connivance of their Father passed the Shenin changed their English for Irish Apparel sent for their Friends and the Scots and being met went to Athenry sacked the Town again and set the new Gates on Fire defaced the Queens Arms drove away some and slew others of the Masons that were building The industrious Deputy made such haste that in three days he was with them at the Report whereof the Rebels were amazed and fled to the Mountains but Clanrickard's Castles were taken and himself sent close Prisoner to Dublin though he made many Excuses but to no purpose which done the Deputy restored Castlebar to Mac William Eighter and went to Galway to comfort and secure the Townsmen and thence to Lymerick where he setled the President Drury and thence together they went to Cork where the President remained The Lord President Drury being valiant in War and diligent in times of Peace by executing Justice severely on the disobedient and by cherishing those that were Loyal brought Munster into good Order the County of Kerry only excepted which Desmond claimed to be his Palatinate Cambd. Eliz. 218. and exempt from the Presidents Jurisdiction whereby it came to be a nest of Rogues and a Sanctuary for Rebels wherefore the President resolved to break through the pretended Priviledge and to make Kerry amesnable to the Law Desmond
Rebellion than ever had been in Ireland to that time For the Lord Deputy having sent Proclamations of the King's Succession to all Cities and Burroughs not doubting but that they would be chearfully published in every place to his great amazement received this Account from Cork That Captain Morgan came thither with the Proclamation on the Eleventh of April and immediately Sir George Thornton one of the Commissioners of Munster went with it to Thomas Sarsfeild then Mayor who answered That by their Charter they might take time to consider it Sir George replied That since they knew the King's Right and that he was proclaimed in Dublin it would be taken ill if they delayed it The Mayor answered That Perkin Warbeck was also proclaimed in Dublin and that nevereheless much Damage hapned to the Country by their precipitation therein Whereupon Saxy Chief-Justice of Munster said That they ought to be committed if they refused But William Mead the Recorder told him That no body there had Authority to commit them Hereupon the Mayor and his Brethren c. went to the Court-house to consider of so important a Matter Sir George Thornton in the mean time staying in the Walk to expect their Resolution After an hours stay there he sent to know their Mind they put him off for an hour more and when that was expired they plainly told him They could not give their Answer till the next day Whereupon he said He would proclaim the King without them But they let him understand That he had no Authority within their Liberties to do so neither would they permit him to do it And so they put it off till the Thirteenth of April and then Sir George Thornton and the Lord Roch and about 800 Soldiers and others proclaimed the King in the North Suburbs near Shandon-Castle but the Mayor and Citizens deferr'd it till the Sixteenth and then wrote a sawcy Letter to the Lord Deputy importing That they had receiv'd the Proclamation on the Eleventh of April but had delayed publishing it till the Sixteenth for the greater Solemnity and they desired that Halbowling Fort not being in the Hands of a sufficient Commander to secure it might be put into the Hands of the Mayor and Citizens for whose Defence it was made But the Citizens not expecting an Answer to their minds from the Lord Deputy designed to set up their Religion by force and to that end they kept strong Guards on their Ports and Gates and stopt the King's Boats going with Victuals to Halbowling so that the Commissioners were forced to relieve that Fort with Ammunition and Victuals from Kinsale they also carried the Cross in Procession about the City and forced People to reverence it they also defaced Sentences of Scripture that were written on the Church-walls and painted the places with Pictures they re-consecrated the Churches and went daily in Procession they also took the Sacrament to spend their Lives in defence of the Roman Catholick Religion they disarm'd such Protestants as were in their Power and rejected the mixt Moneys and refus'd to suffer the King's Provisions to be taken out of the Store until they should be assured that the Soldiers should be sent out of the Liberties of the City they also endeavoured to get the South Fort into their Hands so that Sir George Thornton was forced to shelter himself in Shandon Castle Upon notice of these Proceedings Sir Charles Willmot who was besieging Mac-Morris in Ballingary Castle immediately repair'd to Cork and finding that no good was to be done by Treaty he sent 600 Men over the Ford by Gillabby into the South Fort and thô two of them were kill'd in their Passage by Shot from the Walls yet the rest got in safe and secur'd the Fort However the Citizens mounted some Guns and shot at the Bishop's Palace and Shandon Castle thô the Lord President Carew his Wife was in the one and the Commissioners of Munster in the other Nevertheless on the 28th of April the Lord Deputy wrote a kind Letter to the City of Cork and required them to suffer the King's Stores to be issued out to the Army but they excus'd themselves and answered That they did not know but those Stores if delivered out might be made use of against the Town Whereupon the Lord Deputy wrote a smart Letter to them on the First day of May but before it came to their Hands the Citizens under the Conduct of Christopher Murrough had removed the King's Stores into their own Cellars Morison 291. and being taught by a Seditious Priest That he could not be a Lawful King who was not approved by the Pope nor sworn to maintain the Catholick Religion they took a Resolution in Publick Council to excite the other Cities and Towns to Confederate with them for the Preservation of the Catholick Faith and resolved to defend themselves by Force It hapned that some few were slain on either Side and particularly a Minister was kill'd by a Shot from the Town and one of the Bishop's Servants was wounded and taken Prisoner and was told by them That the Traytor his Master should not escape Death if they could get him within their Power But their Insolence will best appear by their own Letter to the Lord Deputy the Substance of which is to be found here Appendix 1. In the mean time the Commissioners of Munster finding that they wanted Artillery sent for some to Halbowling but the Citizens having notice of that Design Mann'd out some Boats under William Terry to intercept them Nevertheless they arrived safely and thereupon the Citizens being frightned with the noise of the Great Guns agreed to a Cessation until the Lord Deputy should come But the City of Cork was not the only Place that was Rebellious at this Junctu●e Waterford was altogether as ill inclined tho' it had not an Opportunity of doing so much Mischief However they did their Share and first they pulled down Sir Nicholas Welsh their Recorder from the Cross where he was reading the Proclamation of the King's Succession They also broke the Doors of the Hospital and admitted Dr. White to preach a Seditious Sermon in St. Patrick's Church wherein amongst other inveterate things he said That Jezebel meaning Queen Elizabeth was dead They also took the Keys of the Cathedral from the Sexton and caused a Priest to celebrate Mass there Nor were the Towns of Clonmell and Wexford free from the like Insolencies but they being the weaker and the less populous Places were sooner sensible of their Faults than were other Towns where Tumult and Noise gave less opportunity of Thinking and Number and Fortification encourag'd to Obstinacy and therefore these Corporations restored the Churches and submitted to the Lord Deputy's Commands before the Army approached their Walls whilst on the contrary Limerick which has seldom been backward in an Irish Rebellion was one of the forwardest in this and gave their Priests the Possession of all their Churches where they erected Altars
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
not to be named did very much scandalize the Patrons of his Preferment Nevertheless his unparallel'd Repentance and the most Pious manner of his Death hath obtain'd for himself the Pity of all good Men and undoubtedly the Mercy of God And it is observable 1637. that the Earl of Cork and this Bishop Atherton did on the 27th of June 1637. joyn in a Petit on to the Lord Deputy and Council to appoint Arbitrators to decide their Controversies and accordingly the Bishop of Derry and the Master of the Court of Wards were Assigned to that purpose and in their Adward which I have seen they recite that the Bishopricks of Waterford and Lismore by the Alienations of former Bishops were left worth but Fifty pound per Annum Revenue in Land and that the Earl had not purchased any thing immediately from the Church but from other Persons for valuable Considerations near Forty years before yet out of Love to Religion and the Professors thereof he was contented to part with some of his Right and so they Adwarded Lismore c. to the Earl and Ardmore c. to the Bishop and this Adward was afterwards confirm'd by the Lord Lieutenant and Council and after that by the King Anno 1638. 1638. Doctor Bedell Bishop of Killmore held a Synod in his Diocess which was a thing very strange and unusual in Ireland Nevertheless it made excellent Cannons or Constitutions which are to be sound in Bishop Bedell's Life pag. 237. But Matters growing high in Scotland and England the Lord Deputy went over to the King and left ROBERT Lord DILLON of KILLKENNY WEST Sir CHRISTOPHER WANDESFORD Mr. of the Rolls Lords Justices who were Sworn on the 12th of September 1639. and soon after call'd a Parliament which met on the 16th day of March but did little or nothing until THOMAS Earl of STRAFFORD returned Lord Lieutenant on the 18th of March 1639. and on the 20th the Irish Parliament met again and Granted four entire Subsidies to the King and were on the 17th day of June prorogued to the First day of October following having first made the Twelve Acts to be found at large in the Printed Statutes 15 Car. 1. The first of these four Subsidies was Assessed at 46170 l. but the Second and Third of these Subsidies being in the absence of some Protestant Members with the Army at Caricfergus upon the Motion of Nicholas Plunket Assess'd in another manner did not together amount unto more then 23768 l. 15 s. 0 d. and the Fourth Subsidy was never Taxed at all by reason of the Rebellion that ensued And it is to be Noted that the Protestants paid more than one Third of the Commons part of the Subsidies besides 26480 l. 6 s. 0 d. Granted in Fourteen Subsidies by the Protestant Clergy only and above Three fourths of the Nobilities part of these Subsidies or more for the Nine Subsidies on the Nobility came too 52850 l. 18 s. 4 d. whereof the Confederate Lords paid but 10620 l. 18 s. 4 d. and it is very remarkable that foreknowing the Rebellion as undoubtedly they did they paid not one Penny of the Second or Third Subsidies and the Commons paid so little that of the Three Subsidies on them there was in Arrear when the Rebellion broke out 23855 l. 9 s. 7 d. And yet these Gentlemen or their Advocates have bragged in some of their Libels That they gave the King near a Million of Money But to proceed The Lord Lieutenant upon the Credit of these Subsidies and the annual Revenue which now was improv'd to above 80000 l. per Annum was enabled to raise Eight thousand Foot and One thousand Horse additional to the Veteran● 〈◊〉 they cost the Kingdom in raising clothing and paying them 204057 l. and were design'd to sudue the Rebells in Scotland and awe the Mutineers in England but being mostly Papists who were thereby Train'd to the use of Arms this Army was so offensive to all moderate and thinking Protestants that it brought great dis-repute and prejudice on the Kings Affairs and in the end cost the Lord his lieutenant his Head The Lord Lieutenant was exposed to the Hatred of the Presbyterians Husbands Collections 2 part 245. for imposing a new Oath on the People hereafter mentioned which was so much abhorr'd by many that they quitted the Kingdom rather then take it and he was open also to the Jealousies of the Protestants by bringing over with him Sir Toby Mathews a Jesuited Priest and by the Correspondence that was known to be between Paul Harris another plotting Priest and Sir George Ratcliff the Lord Lieutenant's intimate Friend and by suffering Publick Mass-houses at the Naas so near his own House and by permitting Fryars to dwell in a House of his own which he had built to other Uses But notwithstanding all this it is certain he was no Friend to Popery but only temporiz'd until he should meet with a more proper Season to go through with that Work as himself expresses it About this time Archibald Adair who had been Bishop of Killalla since the Year 1630 was deprived of his Bishoprick upon this Occasion One Corbet a Clergy-man that fled from Scotland for writing a Satyrical Book against the Covenanters called Lysimachus Nicanor was sent to this Bishop for Preferment but he being a moderate Man and perhaps too indulgent to his own Nation did not approve of Corbet that had handled the Scots so severely and therefore he gave no countenance to him but on the contrary told him That it was a bad Bird that foul'd his own Nest which was the sharper because Corby in Scotch signifies a Raven And when Corbet told him That he had hardly escaped with Life but had left his Wife to try the Humanity of the Scots the Bishop replied That he had left her to a very base Office And other things he said which the Government thought too favourable to the Govenanters and tho' they would not be much considered at another time yet now was thought a sufficient Cause of Deprivation and Doctor John Maxwell was made Bishop in his room but the next Year after the Execution of Atherton Bishop of Waterford Adair was made Bishop of that See Nor should it be omitted That this Bishop Maxwell a most excellent Preacher and a hearty Royalist was nevertheless wounded stript naked and left amongst the Dead by the Irish Rebels whose Skeins never distinguished between a Prelate and a Fanatick But the Bishop was accidentally preserved by the Earl of Twomond who travelled that way towards Dublin and afterwards went to the King to Oxford and was the first Man that convinced the King of the innate Hatred the Irish Rebels bore to all those of the Protestant Religion But let us return to the Lord Lieutenant who went again to England to give the King an Account of the good Posture of Affairs in Ireland leaving in his stead Sir CHRISTOPHER WANDESFORD Master of the Rolls
consent upon whatsoever Pretence to a Toleration of the Popish Profession there or the Abolition of the Laws now in force against Popish Recusants in that Kingdom His Majesty hath further thought fit to advertise His Parliament That towards this Work He intends to raise forthwith by His Commissions in the Counties near Westchester a Guard● for His own Person when he shall come into Ireland consisting of Two thousand Foot and Two hundred Horse which shall be Armed at Westchester from His Magazin at Hull at which time all the Officers and Soldiers shall take the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance The Charge of Raising and Paying whereof His Majesty desires His Parliament to add to their former Undertakings for that War which His Majesty will not only well accept but if their Pay be found too great a Burthen to His Subjects His Majesty will be willing by the Advice of His Parliament to sell or 〈◊〉 any of His Parks Lands or Houses towards the Supplies of the 〈◊〉 of Ireland with the Addition of these Levies to the former of English and Scots agreed upon in Parliament he hopes so to appear in this Action that by the Assistance of Almighty God in a short time that Kingdom may be wholly reduced and restored to Peace and some measure of Happiness whereby he may chearfully return to be Welcomed home with the Affections and Blessings of all His good English People Towards this good Work as His Majesty hath lately made Dispatches unto Scotland to quicken the Levies there for Ulster so he heartily wishes That His Parliament here would give all possible Expedition to th●se which they have resolved for Munster and Conaught and hopes the Encouragement which the Adventures of whose Interest His Majesty will be always very careful will hereby receive as likewise by the lately signing of a Commission for the Affairs of Ireland to such Persons as were recommended to Him by Both Houses of Parliament will raise full Sums of Money for the doing thereof His Majesty hath been likewise pleased out of His earnest desire to remove all Occasions which do unhappily multiply Misunderstandings between Him and His Parliament to prepare a Bill to be offered to them by His Attorney concerning the Militia whereby He hopes the Peace and Safety of this Kingdom may be fully secured to the general satisfaction of all Men without violation of His Majesty's just Rights or prejudice to the Liberty of the Subject If this shall be thankfully received He is glad of it if refused He calls God and all the World to judge on whose part the Default is One thing His Majesty requires if this Bill be approved of That if any Corporation shall make their Lawful Rights appear they may be reserved to them Before His Majesty shall part from England He will take all due Care to entrust such Persons with such Authority in His absence as He shall find to be requisite for the Peace and Safety of this Kingdom and the happy Progress of this Parliament To which the Parliament returned the following Answer May it please Your Majesty YOur Majesty's most Loyal and Faithful Subjects Husbands 141. the Lords and Commons in Parliament have duly considered the Message received from Your Majesty concerning Your Purpose of going into Ireland in Your own Person to prosecute the War there with the Bodies of Your English Subjects l●vied transported and maintained at their Charge which You are pleased to propound to us not as a Matter wherein Your Majesty desires the Advice of Your Parliament but as already firmly resolved on and forthwith to be put in Execution by granting out Commissions for the Levying of Two thousand Foot and Two hundred Horse for a Guard for Your Person when You shall come into that Kingdom Wherein we cannot chuse but with all Reverence and Humility to Your Majesty observe That You have declined Your Great Council the Parliament and varied from the usual Course of Your Royal Predecessors That a Business of so great Importance concerning the Peace and Safety of all Your Subjects and wherein they have a special Interest by Your Majesty's Promise and by those great Sums which they have disbursed and for which they stand ingaged should be concluded and undertaken without their Advice Whereupon we hold it our Duty to declare That if at this time Your Majesty shall go into Ireland You will very much endanger the Safety of Your Royal Person and Kingdoms and of all other States professing the Protestant Religion in Christendom and make way to the Execution of that cruel and bloody Design of the Papists every where to root out and destroy the Reformed Religion as the Irish Papists have in a great part already effected in that Kingdom and in all likelihood would quickly be attempted in other Places if the Consideration of the Strength and Union of the Two Nations of England and Scotland did not much hinder and discourage the Execution of any such Design And that we may manifest to Your Majesty the Danger and Misery which such a Journy and Enterprize would produce we present to Your Majesty the Reasons of this our humble Opinion and Advice 1. Your Royal Person will be subject not only to the Casualty of War but to Secret Practices and Conspiracies especially Your Majesty continuing Your Profession to maintain the Protestant Religion in that Kingdom which the Papists are generally bound by their Vow to extirpate 2. It will exceedingly encourage the Rebels who do generally profess and declare That Your Majesty doth favour and allow their Proceedings and that this Insurrection was undertaken by the Warrant of Your Commission and it will make good their Expectation of great Advantage by Your Majesty's Presence at this time of so much Distraction in this Kingdom whereby they may hope we shall be disabled to supply the War there especially there appearing less Necessity of Your Majesty's Journy at this time by reason of the manifold Successes which God hath given against them 3. It will much hinder and impair the Means whereby this War is to be supported and increase the Charge of it and in both these respects make it more insupportable to Your Subjects And this we can confidently affirm because many of the Adventurers who have already subscribed do upon the knowledge of Your Majesties Intention declare their Resolution not to pay in their Money and others very willing to have subscribed do now profess the contrary 4. Your Majesties Absence must necessarily very much interrupt the Proceedings of Parliament and deprive Your Subjects of the Benefit of those further Acts of Grace and Justice which we shall humbly expect from Your Majesty for the Establishing of a perfect Union and mutual Confidence between Your Majesty and Your People and procuring and confirming the Prosperity and Happiness of both 5. It will exceedingly increase the Jealousies and Fears of Your People and render their Doubts more probable of some force intended by some evil
also procured the Earl of Glamorgan to be sent into Ireland who made a Peace secretly with the Irish on the 25th day of August as we shall see anon and which also met with the same Fate and for the same Reason And this unfolds the Secret of some Mysteries which at that time were unintelligible for it was a Paradox to Ormond and those Cavaliers who were so zealous for the King that they passionately coveted a Peace with the Irish as that which they thought the only probable Means left to preserve His Majesty I say it amaz'd these Men to find the Irish delay and indeed reject the Peace which themselves at first had courted and which was their Interest to hasten even upon worse Terms than were offered them Nevertheless the Confederates continued to quibble upon Niceties and to reassume Debates that were determined before and particularly the Words in one of the Articles That Officers of Both Religions be equally preferr'd being upon an Objection of the Lord Digby explain'd by themselves to intend only Indifferency were now so strained that they would admit no other Interpretation of the Word Equally but that it must extend to Number whereat His Majesty was exceedingly disgusted But in May there was a General Assembly of the Irish which pursuant to a Decision of their Clergy Appendix 29 did on the Ninth of June Vote That as to the Demand of Restoring the Protestant Churches the Commissioners shall give a positive Denial And the Truth of it is that they thought themselves so sure of what Conditions they pleas'd from the Earl of Glamorgan that they little minded what Answer they gave to the Marquis of Ormond or his Commissioners And on the other side the King thought himself so sure of the Ten thousand Men from them that Sir Marmaduke Langdale was in July sent with Seven hundred Horse to Carnarvan to receive and conduct them as there should be occasion But when their Expectation in England began to tire and no News came either of a Peace or of Succors the Lord Digby Secretary of State wrote the following Letter to the Lord of Muskery and the rest that had been Agents for the Confederates at Oxford My Lords and Gentlemen HIS Majsty having long expected a Conclusion of a happy Peace within your Kingdom and His Affairs having highly suffered by the failing of His Expectations from thence cannot chuse but wonder what the Cause is of it calling to mind those fair Professions and Promises which you made unto Him when you were imployed here as Agents And knowing well what Power and Instructions He hath long since given to my Lord Lieutenant to comply with you for your Satisfaction as far forth as with Reason or Honor His Majesty could in Civil Things or with Prudence or Conscience in Matters of Religion and in the latter as to the utmost of what for any worldly Consideration He will ever be induced to So did He conceive nothing less than what you declared unto Him you were persuaded the Catholicks would be satisfied withal nay ought not in their own Interest to seek more in the present Condition His Majesty is in lest further Concessions might by confirming former Scandals cast upon His Majesty in Matters of Religion so alienate the Hearts of His faithful and loyal Adherents as to make them abandon Him Which as it would draw inevitable Ruin on Him so were you rightly apprehensive that when the Parliament should by that means have prevailed here that must soon after bring a certain Destruction upon your selves What the change of Princples or Resolutions are His Majesty knows not but He finds by the not concluding of a Peace there that your Party it seems is not satisfied with the utmost that His Majesty can grant in Matters of Religion that is the taking away of the Penal Laws against Roman Catholicks within that Kingdom And His Majesty here hears that you insist upon the Demands of Churches for the Publick Exercise of Religion which is the Occasion that His Majesty hath commanded me to write thus frankly unto you and to tell you That He cannot believe it possible that Rational and Prudent Men had there been no Propositions made to the contrary can insist upon that which must needs be so destructive to His Majesty at present and to your selves in the Consequences of His Ruin that is inevitably to be made a Prey to the Rebels of these Kingdoms or to a Foreign Nation Wherefore my Lords and Gentlemen to disabuse you I am commanded by His Majesty to declare unto you That were the Condition of His Affairs much more desperate than they are He would never redeem them by any Concession of so much wrong both to His Honor and Conscience It is for the Defence of His Religion principally that he hath undergone the Extremities of War here and He would never redeem his Crown by destroying It there So that to deal clearly with you as you may be happy your selves and be happy Instruments of His Majesty's Restoring if you would be contented with Reason and give Him that speedy Assistance which you well may so if nothing will content you but what must wound His Honor and Conscience you must expect howsoever His Condition is and how detestable soever the Rebels of this Kingdom are to Him He will in that Point joyn with them the Scots or with any of the Protestant Religion rather than do the least Act that may hazard that Religion in which and for which He will live and die Having said thus much by His Majesty's Command I have no more to add but that I shall think my self very happy if this take any such effect as may tend to the Peace of that Kingdom and make me Your Affectionate humble Servant GEO. DIGBIE Cardiff 1 August 1645. But the Confederates little regarded this Importunity they had other Designs of their own to mind and were busie managing the Two Treaties with Ormond and Glamorgan and whilst they proceeded diligently with the Earl they dealt sophistically with the Marquis still raising new Scruples and Difficulties varying and inhancing upon the King as His Condition grew worse so that on the Second of August they demanded to be exempt from the Excommunication of a Protestant Bishop because they could not in Conscience seek Absolution from those of another Relig●n And thus Matters continued until the 25th of August at which time the secret Peace with Glamorgan was concluded and then to let him know that they design'd no more effectual Compliance with him than they had perform'd with others they did on the 28th of August make the following Order ☞ viz. The General Assembly Order and Declare 〈…〉 Union and Oath of Association shall remain firm and invi●lable and in full strength in all Points and to all Purposes until the Articles of the intended Peace shall be ratifi●d in Parliament Notwithstanding any Proclamation of the Peace c. And on the First of September
Religion And they afterwards strictly prohibited all their people from obeying the Peace or paying Contributions to the King or to any that obeyed it on pain of Excommunication ipso facto which on the Fifth of October was formally issued with Notes as it is recited Appendix 31. But now it is time to look after our Heralds who as hath been already mentioned left Dublin on the Sixth of August in order to proclaim the Peace in the other Cities and Corporations They came to Waterford the Eighth where they were so unwelcome to all the people that no body would shew them the Mayor's House until at length a little Boy did it for Sixpence but the Mayor would not be seen for above four hours and when he was told their Errand he asked why they did not first proclaim the Peace at Kilkenny and they answered That they pursued their Orders and supposed the Reason might be because Waterford was next to Dublin one of the most ancient and considerable Cities in the Kingdom However after three day stay they could get no other Answer but that the Peace should be first proclaimed at Kilkenny and the Rabble threatned to send them packing with Withes about their Necks unless they made haste away From Waterford they went to Kilkenny where they were received with Respect and the Peace was there proclaimed even with excess of Joy and Pageantry It was also proclaimed at Calan Fethard and Cashell but Clonmell would not receive it until it should first be published at Limerick It was in the Evening of the Twentieth of August when they came to Limerick where they found the Gates shut so that they had no admittance till the next day Noon and then were civilly treated by the Mayor who was for the Peace however that day they could not agree but on the Twenty second it was carried by the major Vote of the Aldermen and Council That the Peace should be proclaimed and all things were prepared accordingly Whereupon Fryer Wolf with an armed Rabble of above 500 came to the High-Cross and denounced Excommunication against the Adherers to the Peace Nevertheless the Mayor who lived near the Cross was coming out in his formalities to make the Proclamation but the Rabble with hideous Outcries drove them back again and followed them into the House and pursued them even from Chamber to Chamber they wounded the Mayor and the King at Arms and drag'd them to Prison and they mortally wounded the Pursivant Henry King and most of the rest were likewise wounded and all were Imprisoned for about 10 days and the Mayor's House was broken and pillaged and during all this Tumult the Fryers cryed out Kill kill kill and I 'le Absolve you And what is yet more strange is That the Mayor was afterwards turned out and Dominick Fanning a principal Incendiary in this Commotion was made Mayor in his room and was by Letters from the Nuncio thanked for what he had done and encouraged to go on and the Apostolical Benediction was imparted to him for committing such an Outrage upon the Privileged Person of an Herald as all other Nations in the World would abhor But to proceed The Congregation at Waterford did also under the pain of Excommunication prohibit the Lords Mountgarret and Muskry from going to Dublin to consult the execution of the Peace nevertheless they went and in the Name of the Supreme Council invited Ormond to Kilkenny as well to countenance the Peace as to stop Insiquin's progress in Munster who triumphed over all Opposers and put the Country under Contribution as far as the Black Water Hereupon Ormond having first sent Daniel O Neal with great Offers to Owen Roe whom nothing could satisfie but the British Estates in Ulster prepared for his Journy and in the latter end of August he went to Kilkenny with about 200 Horse and 1200 Foot which small Party was a Guard more for State than Security for what need an Army amongst Friends His Excellency was received at Kilkenny with all imaginable Triumph and Respect and intended in conjunction with the Irish to march into Munster to force Insiquin likewise to submit to the Peace but when he understood what the Clergy had done and were doing at Waterford he sent some of Quality thither to perswade them not to interrupt the Peace which was likely to be so advantageous to the King and the People he offered his Lady and Children for Hostages that they should not be disturbed in the Possession of the Churches they then had which was the Secret Article not mentioned in the Publick and purposely so contrived by the Popish Bishop of Clogher ☜ that on occasion they might the easier incense the Rabble by shewing that there was no provision for Religion in the printed Articles But all that he or the Supreme Council could do was to no purpose for the Nuncio and Clergy were resolved to * * Colonel Fit●-Williams's Letter to the Lord Lieutenant have their wills or perish And that this may plainly appear it will be fit to give a short Account of the Negotiation between the Supreme Council and the Popish Clergy which was thus On the 24th day of August 1646 the Congregation at Waterford published a Declaration to be transmitted with the following Propositions at large and in Print to the Supreme Council I. That the Earl of Glamorgan's Articles grounded upon the King's Authority be printed and be made as firm and obliging as the present Peace that the Confederates do oblige themselves by Union Oath and otherwise to insist upon the same Articles and them to maintain till confirmed with the present Peace next Parliament And whereas it appears by His Majesty's Letters taken at Naseby that Ormond had Power to Repeal Penal Laws and Suspend Poyning's Act the Confederates expect the benefit thereof to be added to the Articles of the Peace and that those Letters be made Publick II. That the Generals of Ulster and Leinster be made General of the Horse and Major General of the Field and all other Catholick Officers continued if not advanced III. That no Garison be added nor Tax be imposed upon them till Parliament without Confent of some or one of the Commissioners of the Interval to see Equality IV. That the 7th Article of the Peace be changed as touching Universities and that the Institution and Discipline of them be Catholick V. That in all places to be recovered from the Parliament Roman Catholicks be restored to Estates Privileges c. and that the Free Exercise of their Religion be secured to them and all other Catholicks that shall please to dwell there And if the Supreme Council do not approve of these Propositions ☞ then let them do one of these things viz. Retain their Civil and Military Power within their own Quarters independent as heretofore until His Holiness's and His Majesty's Pleasure can be known and in the mean time both Parties persue the Common Enemy Or else let them refer
or Clergy but to Men of Estates that are dispossessed as appears by the Limitation of its Continuance viz. until they can possess so much of their own Estates That the Covenant hath been already pressed and imposed in all parts of Ireland that are under the power of the Parliament and therefore they must be secure against that and if there be no Ordinance of Parliament to impose it the Commissioners may the better undertake it shall not be imposed That tho' his Lordship if he were to continue the Government would submit to Ordinances of Parliament that relate to Government of the Army or the like yet he would not to Ordinances of Religion against his Conscience and doth not scruple now that the people shall be obliged to Ordinances of the former sort and the Commissioners Declaration That they intend no other will give Satisfaction in this point That there was time enough to get the King's Orders That the Delivery of Oxford was forced by Extremity and yet was not done without the King's Direction That Inferences must not be made against any thing that is expressed And besides the first Article To procure His Majesties Direction the Seventh Article Mentions That if in the mean time till they can get the King's Orders they supply the Garisons it shall be well husbanded c. So that this Matter is fully and doubly expressed in those Proposals And lastly There is no Satisfaction given about the Dissolution of the present Parliament in Ireland which would be the Ruin of the Protestants of that Kingdom But because the Kingdom might not be deprived of the Supplies the Commissioners brought and that neither side may be prejudiced until the King's Pleasure may be known and their Instructions from the Parliament enlarg'd the Lord-Lieutenant propos'd 1. That the Officers and Soldiers may be landed and put in one or more Garisons and to receive Orders from his Excellency and the Governor of the place and submit to the Martial Law 2. That 3000 l. be lent his Excellency to support the Army ⅔ Money and 1 ● Victuals 3. That the Commissioners engage their Soldiers shall remove at the end of six Weeks unless an Agreement be made in the mean time and till then do no Prejudice to the Government 4. That his Lordship will engage they shall have free Egress c. at six Weeks end But the Commissioners thinking that the Exigencies of the City and Army and the danger to lose both would force the Lord-Lieutenant to comply refused these Proposals and repeated That his Lordship had offered to the Parliament to put all his Forces and Garisons under their sole Command the King unconsulted with therein which his Lordship did by his Letter of the Two and Twentieth of November positively deny And so this Treaty broke off and the Commissioners carried their Men and Supplies to Ulster But though the Lord Lieutenant had a fair excuse for refusing the Parliament Commissioners since they did not bring His Majesty's Orders according to the express mention thereof twice made in his Propositions yet he was very uneasy in regard of the Protestants under his Command and accordingly in answer to one of the Lord Digby's importunate Letters he thus exp●esseth himself Nov. 18. 1646. It is an hard Task I have to break with the Parliaments Commissioners and keep my Reputation with my own Party to whom these Commissioners offered Security in their Fortunes Supplies in their Wants and Assistance against the Irish that have destroyed them in all the Interests that are dear to Men besides I must perswade my Party to return to intolerable and inevitable Wants and to rely once more upon the recently broken Faith of the Irish And in the same Letter he excepts against letting the Irish into Garisons and against promising to obey the Orders of Queen or Prince and against the words Free Exercise of Religion To all which the Lord Digby gave plausible Answers on the 20th and writes That Preston languished for his Commission and that he need do no more than write a kind Letter to that General and so at length he was overcome and did on the 25th day of November write to Preston and the next day gave a Commission to Clanrickard to be Lieutenant General of the Army and he was received as such by General Preston's Forces drawn up in Battalia The Terms of this new Reconciliation appear in the Marq. of Clanrickard ' s Engagement Appen 33 which one would think is as full as could be desired however the Nuncio and his Minion Owen Roe were not satisfied with them the Nuncio on the 20th of November urged the Marquis of Clanrickard That the Churches of Dublin might be included in his Engagement but Clanrickard replyed That it is more plausible to refuse Obedience to the King till he become Catholick than until being a Protestant he refuse to part with his own Churches Your Grace said he ought to content your Self with the Glory of Setling all the Garisons and in a manner all the Power in the Kingdom in Catholick Hands and to have secured the Catholick Religion with at least as great Extent and as great Freedom and Lustre under a King of a different Faith as that of his own Profession However it is not doubted but the Nuncio did secretly * * Nuntius Prestonio mandat ut f●●dus cum prorege renovet Beling 38. promote this Pacification not with a design it should stand but in expectation of these three Advantages 1. That being by Sickness and want of For●●ge necessitated to raise the Siege this Agreement would make their Retreat safe which else might be dangerous Ormond's Horse being much better than theirs 2. The Disappointment of the Parliaments Commissioners would make an everlasting Fewd between them and Ormond And 3. Preston's Forces being in the English Garisons might find an opportunity to master some of them Nevertheless it was necessary that Owen Roe should decline the Agreement for else all the Kingdom would have complyed with it as believing that the Nuncio wanted either Power or Will to oppose it and therefore on the 17th of November he decamped and marched into the Queens County where he ravaged over the Country and destroyed all that he could not keep But Preston stayed in the Camp and on the 27th of November received the Marquis of Clanrickard as Lieutenat General of the Army and was himself made Major General and he and his Officers signed the Engagement mentioned Appendix 34 to obey the Peace and by Letters under his own Hand invited the Lord Lieutenant to march with him to Kilkenny and Waterford to reduce those Cities to conformity which he said would be effected by his Excellency's Appearance only before those places whereupon Ormond co●●●nted but was by Sickness detained for some few days from the intended March. But contrary to his expectation General Preston decamped and on the second of December from Naas writes to his Excellency That the
necessities of his Army forced him to withdraw thither where he stayed to expect his Lordships farther Commands And the same day Ormond replyed That he would certainly meet him at Castledermond that day sevenight with 600 Horse and 600 Musquetiers and that he will cause Commissions to be prepared with blanks for the Names of Preston's Officers to whom he will give proof of his full confidence in them and value of their Merit and loyal Affections and for Preston himself that he should have all the Power with the Lord Lieutenant that he could desire And thus Matters stood in a fair Correspondence between his Excellency and General Preston when on the 9th of December the Marquis of Ormond accompanied with the Marquis of Clanrickard marched out of Dublin with his small Party in the nature of Guards towards the place of Rendezvous and I doubt not but the Reader is full of Expectation to find General Preston there also but alas the Scene was changed and the Case was altered for the Council and Congregation at Kilkenny had on the 24th of November declared against this new Reconciliation as Appendix 35 and the Nuncio did so influence General Preston and his Officers by alledging That the former Treaty and Engagement were not binding being concluded without the Consent of a General Assembly which only had the Cognisance of Matters of so great Importance that he prevailed with them to Apostatize from their Solemn Engagement so lately entered into and to write this bald Excuse to the Marquis of Clanrickard That his Officers were not Excommunication-Proof And on the 15th of December the Council and Congregation of the Confederates not taking any notice of any Peace or Agreement that had intervened 1646. published the following Declaration By the Council and Congregation WHEREAS the Cessation of Arms between us and the adverse Party is long since determined and for that the Enemy in Dublin is now advanced into the Field committing daily acts of * * * Though really they committed none but paid for whatever they had Hostility We therefore Declare Order and Appoint That all Generals Captains and other Officers and Soldiers whatsoever of all and every the Armies of the Confederate Catholicks of Ireland and all and every Party and Parties of them either now together in Body or in their Winter Quarters shall and may KILL and Endamage the most they or any of them may of the Enemy aforesaid and against them or any of them use and exercise all manner of acts of Hostility But General Preston by his Letter of the 19th of December from Waterford endeavoured to excuse this Apostacy and laid the fault upon his Officers and yet on the 22th of the same Month he published a Declaration in Print against the lately renewed Peace ☞ to this effect That since the Engagement made by the Marquis of Clanrickard doth not yield sufficient Security for the Free Exercise of Religion c. as by the Congregations * * Appendix 35. Annotations thereon doth appear and since a Resolution was taken not to receive any of his Forces into the Garison of Dublin according to Agreement unless these Objections may be satisfied by the Enlargement of farther Grants that may satisfy the Council and Congregation he thinks himself obliged by the Oath of Association to obey the Council Congregation and General Assembly Whereupon the Lord Lieutenant by his Letter of the 5th of January acquaints him That however things have not sorted to his Expectation or to what he understood to be Preston's Obligation yet he was far from believing that Preston had any design so unbecoming a Man of Honour as to make use of the Credit given by Ormond to his Invitation to the Lord Lieutenants Prejudice or for the Improvement of Preston's Conditions with another Party which makes him confident that a Printed Paper Entituled Preston's Declaration c. and dated but three days after the former Letter of the 19th of December being so contrary to the Expressions therein must be a Forgery at also the Reports that some of Preston's Forces are gathering together at Castledermond to interrupt his Return or destroy the remainder of his Quarters yet he desires Satisfaction from Preston's own hand in those Particulars And accordingly General Preston did by his Letter of the 15th of January own his Declaration for which he writes he had good Reasons to be imparted at a more convenient time but disowned that he had any hand in disturbing his Excellency's Quarters or interrupting his Return But that the Reader may perceive that this Perfidiousness was not unexpected I must insert a short Passage in a Letter of the Lord Lieutenants to Colonel John Humilton dated at Lucan before he knew of Preston ' s Relapse and it was thus That I may leave no means unattempted to prevent the Ruin of His Majesty's Affairs whilst I have a hand in them I have undertaken an Expedition whereunto I was invited by a considerable Party of the Irish but I confess I go rather to leave them for ever unexcusable if they should fail me than that I have any assured Confidence of Performance such are the Impressions their former Failures have left in me But because it may be thought hard that the Confederates should be judged by the Sentiments of Protestants it is therefore necessary to shew what Opinion such of the Roman Catholicks as were loyal had of their Proceedings and the Reader may find it at large in the Marquis of Clanrickard's Letter Appendix 37. But Ormond either because he considered the Poverty of the City of Dublin or that being thus a second time deceived by the Confederates he was ashamed to return hither did march his small Army into Westmeath being the Enemies Quarters and there he kept a melancholy Christmas and though he used no Hostility but paid for every thing so that the Country seemed pleased with them yet the Captain and Lieutenant of his Excellency's Guards sta●ing behind the rest were murdered upon the Highway by some of the Irish and on Christmas Day the Lord Lieutenant wrote to the Lord Digby then intended for France as followeth I Shall beseech you to be careful of one thing which is to take Order that the Commands that shall be directed to me touching this People if any be thwart not the Grounds I have laid to my self in point of Religion for in that and in that only I shall resort to the liberty left to a Subject to Obey by Suffering and particularly that there be no Concession to the Papists to perpetuate Churches or Church-livings to them or to take Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction from us And as for other Freedoms from Penalties for th● Quiet Exercise of their Religion I am clear of Opinion it not only may but ought to be given them if his Majesty shall find cause to own them for any thing but Rebels However whilst Ormond continued at Trim the Lord Muskry and some others that
agreed against the Common Enemy and in their Abhorrence and Mistrust of the Irish so that the Privy Council represented to his Excellency That they had deserved as well of the King as Subjects possibly could either by Doing or Suffering and therefore they hoped he would not expose them to the Mercy of their cruel and hereditary Enemies ☞ who by their late Perfidiousness had made themselves incapable of Trust and therefore they desired him again to Treat with the Parliaments Commissioners who would at least perform the Conditions they promise which could not be relied on from the Irish And it is said That his Excellency did rather incline to this Advice because he knew that the Design of many in this Irish Rebellion was intirely to alienate the Kingdom of Ireland from the Crown of England P. W. Remonstrance 583. and to extirpate not only the Protestants but also all the English tho' Catholicks That the Nuncio-Party design'd to separate it from England and to put Ireland under the Protection of some Foreign Prince unless they could advance one of the Old Irish Families to the Throne And accordingly Mr. Anthony Martin in the last General Assembly did propose to call in some Foreign Prince for Protection And so the Lord Lieutenant and Council being reduced to so great straits that they had but Seventeen Barrels of Powder le●t and no Magazins either of Stores or Victuals nor any Money either to buy more or to pay the Army did agree to resign the Kingdom to the Parliament for these Reasons 1. It was observed ☜ That no Exercise of the Protestant Religion was so much as tolerated where the Confederates had the Command and that if all the Churches in His Majesty's Quarters should be given or suffered to be taken to the Use of the Romish Religion it would too much countenance the Reproaches of His Majesty's Inclinations to Popery and might be dangerously applied by those who had His Majesty's Life in their Power 2. That it could not be for His Majesty's Honor to have those Subjects and Servants who had stuck to His Cause after all besides was lost in His Three Kingdoms to be at last subjected to the Tyranny of those who then ruled among the Irish whose Persidy was so manifest and their Malice so great as to give Rest to the Parliament Forces and to unite all their Power against those only who had carried Peace to their very Doors Lastly It was known how many Agents the Irish had employed abroad and what Publick Ministers had Reception with them as from the Pope the Kings of France and Spain That if the Garisons now held were put into the Hands of the Two Houses of Parliament they would revert by Treaty or otherwise whenever His Majesty should in England recover His Rights but if either given or left to these Confederates there was little hopes of Restitution while any Foreign Prince should think his Affairs secured or advanced by consuming the Blood and Treasure of England in this Dispute And so on the Fifth of February they made an Act of Council which recites their sad Condition and impowers the Lord Lieutenant to renew the Treaty with the Parliament for the Surrender of Dublin and quitting the Government And accordingly his Excellency did the next day write to Wharton and Salway two of the Parliament Commissioners That he was now satisfied in the Point he scrupled at viz. the King's Orders and therefore was willing to surrender the Government on the Terms formerly propos'd and desir'd that Succors might be sent immediately Hereupon the Parliament did order 3 March That if Ormond would give one of his Sons Hostage for Performance together with the Earl of Roscomon Colonel Chichester and Sir James Ware that then Coot's Regiment of Horse and Monroe's and Fenwick's Regiments of Foot at that time in Ulster should march to his Assistance and that the Lords of Insiquin and Ardes should give the Enemy Diversion And accordingly the Lord Richard Butler afterwards Earl of Arran was sent Hostage to Chester and the aforesaid Three Regiments were received in Ormond's Garisons and the Lord Insiquin sent his Excellency Twenty Barrels of Powder and half a Tun of Match and on the Seventeenth of March the Earl of Roscomon Colonel Arthur Chichester and Sir James Ware were sent to the Committee at Derby-house to be Hostages for Performance of the Agreement with the Parliament and to solicit That Papists always adhering to the King and Papists that got out of the Rebels Quarters as soon as they could and Papists remaining in the Rebels Quarters that have shewed constant good Affections c. may be indemnified That Ormond may have leave to wait on the King and that the other Lords and Gentlemen may have Posses to go through England That Ormond may have leave to transport as many Papists to foreign Service as will go with him for which Liberty he will remit Ten thousand Pound That no Oaths other than those of Fidelity may be imposed on any Protestant and that the Common Prayer and their respective Imployments may be continued to them But they were told by the English Committee That they were Hostages and not Commissioners And on the same 17th day of March the Parliament of Ireland which had before made an Address to the Parliament of England for Protection quod vide Burlace 178 did remonstrate their Gratitude to the Marquiss of Ormond in the following Address signed by the Speakers of both Houses The Remonstrance of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons in Parliament assembled declaring the Acknowledgment of their hearty Thankfulness to the most Honourable James Marquiss of Ormond Lord Lieutenant General of Ireland His Excellency VVE the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament in Our whole Body do present Our selves before your Lordship acknowledging with great Sense and feeling your Lordships singular Goodness to Us the PROTESTANT PARTY and those who have faithfully and constantly adhered unto them who have been preserved to this day under God by your Excellencies Providence and Pious Care which has not been without a vast Expence out of your own Estate as also to the hazarding of your Person in great and dangerous Difficulties And when your Lordship found your Self with the Strength remaining with you to be too weak to resist an insolent and upon all Advantages perfidious and bloody Enemy rather than we should Perish You have in your Care transferred Us into their hands that are both able and willing to preserve Us and that not by a bare casting Us off but by complying so far with Us that you have not denied our Desires of Hostages and amongst them of one of your most dear Sons All which being such a free Earnest of your Excellencies Love to our Religion Nation and both Houses do incite Us here to come unto you with Hearts filled with your Love and Tongues declaring how much We are obliged to your Excellency
The second is part of a Letter to the Marquis of Clanrickard Dated at Paris the Tenth of February 1646. And the third is an Account of Mr. Jeofry Baron his Embassy to France THat Glamorgan was The Letter to the Queen for this only Reason imprisoned That being a Catholick he was carrying to the King such Catholick Succours as might deserve His Majesty's Favour to himself and the Catholicks of Ireland That the Kingdom being clear'd of the common Enemy by the Catholicks of Ireland which we suppose may be easily done this Summer we may all unanimously go to assist our King That we dislike the late Peace because all things are referred to the Pleasure of the King which we would readily submit to if he were not environ'd on all sides with the Enemies of our Religion and so far off from Your Majesty And in the mean time the Armies Garisons and Jurisdiction of the Confederates even the Supream Council it self are subjected to the sole Authority and Dominion of the Marquis of Ormond a Protestant Viceroy But we have no small hopes and Confidence in Your Majesty's gracious and effectual Intercession with the Pope That Bounds being set to the Protestants within which their Armies and Government may be confin'd they may not disturb the Catholick Religion the Churches nor Ecclesiastical Persons or Things QUod Glamorganus eo solo capite detrudi in Carcerem quod Catholicus ad Regem ferit Catholicorum Subsidia quibus sibi Catholicis Hibernis Regios Favores promeretur Ut purgata ab Hoste Communi per Catholicos Hiberniae quod satis facile ni fallimur poterat hoc Autumno fieri unanimos ire ad nostri Regis Subsidium Pax ideo nobis displicet quia omnia referuntur ad Arbitrium Suae Majestatis i.e. Regis quod subiremus libentissime si ab Hostibus nostrae Religionis undequaque cincta à MAJESTATE Vestra tam procul non esset Interim subjici Exercitus Arma Castra omnem Confederatorum Jurisdictionem ipsum Concilium Supremum soli Authoritati Dominio Marchionis Ormoniae Proregis Protestantis Non modica nobis restat Spes Fiducia in Majestatis Vestrae benigna efficacissima Intercessione apud Summum Pontificem ut praescripto Protestantibus limite intra quem eorum Arma Imperium contineantur ne Religionem Catholicam Ecclesias Ecclesiasticasque personas acres turbare liceat THE new Agent of the Supream Council The Letter to the Marquiss of Clanrickard Colonel Fitz-Williams is very violent in his Office It is believed that Hartegan hath inchanted or infected the Employment insomuch that all his Successors prove like to him He the Colonel is very liberal in the disposing of Places and Offices in the Kingdom He told the Countess of Arundel That he could make the Earl her Husband if he pleased Lord-Lieutenant and 't is imagined he says the same of the Marquis of Worcester to his Friends that is That he shall be Lord-Lieutenant and this was just Hartegan's way of Proceeding Shall we never have a discreet Person come from those parts who may impartially do our Affairs here Such a Party would Advantage and Honour your Country Colonel Fitz-Williams hath said in great heat That Dublin should be taken as soon as Mr. Baron returned and that the Confederates are so puissant that he wisheth with all his Heart that there were in Ireland 40000 English and Scots that they might have the Honour to beat them And another said The Confederates had taken Dublin if it were not for their Respect to the Queen Her Majesty declares That tho' she hath sent Mr. Winter Grant yet it is only with reference to the Marquisses of Ormond and Clanrickard to be consulted with and without their Advice and Consent he is not to engage her Majesty's Authority in any one thing Colonel Fitz-Williams endeavoureth now by his Friends to get a good Opinion in this Court from our Queen and he clasheth with Dr. Tirrel and pretendeth at Court That he suffers for adhering to my Lord of Ormond and our King's Party however at his Arrival here Hartegan was not more violent than he was against my Lord of Ormond and that Party MR. Jeofry Baron landed at Waterford on Friday the Eleventh of March 1646. and came the next day to Kilkenny The Account of Mr. Barons Ambassy and being indisposed two or three days he came not into the Assembly till the Sixteenth at which time being asked for an account ●f his Negotiation he answered That for the most part it consisted in the Letters he had brought with him and made some scruple to communicate them to any other than a sworn Council because the matter required Secrecy At length a Committee was appointed to peruse the Letters and Sir Lucas Dillon the Chairman reported from that Committee That it was requisite the Letters should be read in the Assembly which was done accordingly The first was a Letter of 30 January from Dr. Tirrell one of the Irish Agents importing That the Repture of the late Peace did at first seem to both the Courts in France to trench far upon the publick Faith of the Kingdom but when some slight Objections were solidly refuted and full Information given then the Rejection of the Peace was confirmed by the King and Queen of France and by Cardinal Mazarine but when they heard of the Return of the Irish Forces from Dublin they suspected their Weakness and Division wherefore he advises them to unite their Forces and attack that City again and make themselves Masters of the Kingdom and thereby they will regain the good Will of the King and Queen of France And that the Queen and Prince of Wales are coming to Ireland and advises not to agree upon slight Terms for when they come the Irish will have their Wills The second was a Letter from the King of France of 26 September to this effect That being well informed of the Inclinations the Kingdom hath to him he will take a particular Care of their Interests c. The third and fourth were from Cardinal Mazarine containing general Promises and that the Settlement of His Majesty of England would much rejoyce the King of France The Fifth was from Colonel Fitz-Williams Assuring them That if they would provid a good Reception from the Queen and Prince in Ireland most of their Demands would be granted That the Queen denies to have any Power to treat with the Irish but that she will send for it That the French will s●●d Ships for Two Thousand Irish That if they aid Antrim in Scotland the Scots must look to their own Country and without them the Parliamentarians can do the Irish no hurt That the Presbyterians and Independents will certainly fall out That the Irish should not decline any of their Proposals for Peace for he is sure they shall have all Only he Supplicates them to leave one Church open in Dublin for the King's Religion lest the
France in their favour and therefore were loth to foreclose themselves of Assistance abroad or Complices at home by taking an Oath of Allegiance at that time And accordingly on the 19th of June 1666. the Lord-Lieutenant wrote thus to the Secretary of State There is hardly an hour in a day wherein I have not hot alarums of Conspiracies ready to he executed by the Irish and such concurrent Intelligence from several places and persons concerning it that I now really believe they are put into a disposition of rebelling by some employed out of France I will according to Instructions keep the Irish Clergy to the letter of the Remonstrance or to a sense equivalent Most part of this Summer was spent in ordering the Militia and on the 7th of August the Parliament was dissolved having enacted as in the Irish Statute-Book and the Lord-Lieutenant made a progress into Munster and after his return viz. on the 27th of September Edmond Riley Titular Archbishop of Armagh was by the Lord-Lieutenant and Council sent Prisoner into England And at the same time the second Court of Claims sate in Dublin and were busie disposing of Lands and Houses by lot to the 49 Officers and in ordering Reprisals c. And on the 1st of October the Lord-Lieutenant and Council considered of a way to send 15000 Bullocks for the relief of the City of London then lately burnt And in March the notable Tory Collonel Costilo was killed and a Proclamation issued to appoint Granaries for Wheat and Oatmeal in several parts of the Kingdom The year 1667. was troublesom enough in Ireland that Kingdom being frequently alarum'd with Reports of a French Invasion so that the Militia was raised in all parts of the Kingdom and those of Leinster the City of Dublin excepted did rendesvouz on the Curragh of Kildare and thither the Lord-Lieutenant came to view them on the 13th of July And in the same month a considerable Squadron of Ships appearing upon the South-Coast very much frightned the Inhabitants thereabouts but it proved ●o be an English Fleet under Sir Jeremy Smith which came into the Harbour of Kingsale on the 11th of July And in the beginning of the year 1668. the Lord-Lieutenant embarqued for England and left his Son the Earl of Ossory Lord Deputy and he continued so until the 18th day of September 1669. at which time he surrendred the Sword to John Lord Roberts of Truro who staid but a very little time before the Popish Interest then prevailing at Court got him removed and placed in his stead John Lord Berkly Baron of Stratton who was sworn Lord-Lieutenant on the 21st day of May 1670. and whose Instructions were to the effect following viz. 1. The Introduction and first Instruction is in usual form That he is appointed Lord-Lieutenant and to receive the Sword of State and take the accustomed Oath 2 dly And forasmuch as all good success doth rest upon the Service of God above all things you are to settle good Orders in the Church that God may be better served in the true established Religion and the People by that means by reduced from their Errors in Religion wherein they have been too long most unhappily and perniciously seduced and never more than since the late fatal Rebellion which hath produc'd too plentiful a Seed-time of Atheism Superstition and Schism But in your care of Religion be sure to moderate the precipitation and preposterous Zeal of any on what specious pretences soever who under the name of Christ's Kingdom the Church and Religion disturb both Church and State and may endanger the peace thereof whereas by Wisdom and Moderation the Established Religion will not only be more firmly setled again but by a wise and diligent hand the Tares and Cocle which many years War and Confusion have sowed will be most safely pick'd out In order to this proceed as in the beginning of the Lord Chichester's time to the Building and Repair of Churches And because good Preachers will be difficultly obtained without competent Means inspect the Ecclesiastical Livings with assistance of some of the Church and others of skill and raise them as you can and supply those in Our Gift with pious apt and able persons Men of good respect and credit and Residents and persuade all Patrons to do the like and to eschew Corruption observe the Directions about the Church of Ireland Anno 1623. and see that the Clergy lose nothing designed for them in the several Plantations And that fit and diligent Schoolmasters may have the benefit of our Donations and the Act of Parliament And that you encourage the People to send their Youth to the College of Dublin 3dly Send us an account of the state of the Kingdom what is wanting and how it may be supplied 4thly Enquire diligently how Our Judges Officers and Ministers behave themselves in discharge of their respective Trusts and that faulty persons may be succeeded by better 5thly Take exact Musters and administer the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy to all Officers and Soldiers and Cashier such as refuse 6thly To prevent false Musters and the mustering of Servants and Tenants c. change Quarters often even to remote Provinces renewing in this particular the printed Instructions and Rules to the Commissaries in the Duke of Ormond's time with such Alterations and Additions as shall be found requisite 7thly Quarter the Soldiers most conveniently for our Service and the least burthensom to the Subjects and give strict directions that they live orderly and according to Discipline and that the Officer may not detain the Soldiers Pay nor absent himself without license which must not exceed three months 8thly Inspect the Revenue c. exactly as it was 20 January 1669. and is now 9thly And improve it by increase of the Income and abatement of the Charge 10thly If any Orders under Great or Privy-Seal Privy-Signet or Sign-Manual or from Privy-Council shall come unto you contrary to these Instructions or in your opinion unfit to be obeyed you may suspend your Obedience until you signifie your Reasons sor so doing and receive Our Answer 11thly Make no Grant or Lease of any thing of Ours till Office be found or Record entred and an indifferent Survey or Valuation thereof made and that then the same be put in charge in the proper Offices and the Grantee give good Security for Rents and Covenants 12thly That new Surveys be made of all forfeited escheated and concealed Lands c. 13thly Improve Trade as far as you can without breach of the Acts of Navigation and Transportation of Irish Cattel particularly incourage Fishery Linnen Manufactury the resort of Protestant Strangers and if they amount to any Number we will order them such Priviledges for their Religion as will best consist with the Peace of that Kingdom Have a strict eye to the Transportation of Wooll take Bonds Diligently and Prosecute them Severely and the better to discover Frauds Transmit your Bonds hither to be
Irish Rebels and finding how they are in all likelihood in danger to be overborn by the power and potency of their said Adversaries do in all humility beseech your Lordships first to call to mind that his Majesty hath by his Royal assent unto an Act of Parliament obliged himself not to grant any Pardon or terms of Peace to the aforesaid Rebels without the consent of his Parliament of England and accordingly that your Lordships would not suffer any part of his Majesties Honour to be betrayed to calumny in assenting to such packed terms of Peace as they have already contrived to draw your Lordships unto without the consent of the said Parliament of England and without admitting your Petitioners to a free and full debate of the cause whereby they may vindicate his Majesty and themselves from that unnatural aspersion which the Irish would maliciously fasten on them by making the one the fauter and the other the occasion of their Rebellion And that the matter may not be carryed with such indulgency towards them as that to extenuate their real enormities your Petitioners must be made guilty of imaginary crimes and undergo a heavier censure for demanding Justice than they for perpetrating all their Treasons and that their Lives Fortunes and Posterities and which is dearest their Religion may not be sold or sacrificed to the malice of the Irish Papists or if this lawful favour shall be denied them that they may have leave to protest against any such fatal and destructive conclusions as are in hand to be made with the aforesaid Irish Rebels without consent of the King and Parliament or your Petitioners privity and that their fictious pretences of assisting his Majesty wherewith they have too long already abused himself and his Ministers on purpose to protract the War in England may not be a sufficient wile to delude your Lordships any longer but that your Petitioners and not Persons disaffected to their Religion and Nation now to be preserved or ruined may be heard to plead in this cause before any Judgment be given therein and that the Examples of their former and frequent breaches of the Cessation yet unrepaired may be accounted a reasonable caution to your Lordships to expect little better observation of any Peace that shall abridge them of their devilish designs And your Petioners shall ever Pray for your Lordships increase of Honour and Happiness Signed by the Lord Broghill the Magistrates of Cork Kinsale Youghall and Bandonbridge and above Three Hundred other Persons Append. XXVI The Articles between Sir Knelme Digby and the Pope Articles to be sent to the Lord Rimucini to be put in Execution in Ireland with Power to add to and take from them according to the present State of Affairs and as need shall be which will be better understood there upon the place 1. THAT the King of Great Britain do effectually grant in the Kingdom of Ireland the free and publick Use of the Roman Catholick Religion allowing the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy to be restored to the Catholicks with all the Churches and Revenues according to the Custom of the said Religion And as to the Monasteries pretended to have been released to the Possessors by Cardinal Pool Legate in the Time of Queen Mary that it be debated in a free Parliament in Ireland what may or can be done in that Point as likewise touching the three Bishopricks that of Dublin and the other two which are in the Hands of the Heretick Protestants under the Obedience of the King 2. That he annul and repeal all the Penal Laws and others whatsoever made aginst the said Catholicks on the Account of their Religion from the beginning of the Defection of Henry the Eighth to this Day 3. That for the better establishing the free and publick Exercise of the Catholick Religion and to add more Force and Security to the Repeal of the said Laws the King do call a Parliament in Ireland independent on that of England 4. That the Government of the Kingdom of Ireland and the principal Offices there be put into the Hands of the Catholicks and that Catholicks be made capable and promoted to Offices Honours and Degrees in that Kingdom in like manner as the Protestants have been till this Time 5. That the King do put into the Hands of the Irish Catholicks or at least such English Catholicks as the Supream Council of Ireland shall approve of the Town of Dublin and the other two which are held in his Name in Ireland 6. That he join his Forces with those of the Irish to drive the Scots and Parliamentarians out of Ireland 7. This being performed by the King and what else may in Ireland be added or altered in these Articles by the Lord Rimucini His Holiness is willing to pay to the Queen of Great Britain a Hundred Thousand Crowns of Roman Money 8. That the said King do repeal all the Laws made against the Catholicks of England and particularly the two Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance so as they may enjoy their Revenues Honours Liberties and Priviledges as other the Gentlemen of that Kingdom do so that their being Catholicks shall be no manner of prejudice to them and that in the first Parliament or other Settlement of the Affairs of England His Majesty do approve and confirm the aforesaid Repeal and in the mean Time that they do actually enjoy all manner of Equality with the Protestants 9. That an Agreement be made between the King and the Supream Council of Ireland to transport into England a Body of an Army of Twelve Thousand Foot under Irish Commanders and Officers to whom shall be joyned Three Thousand or at least Two Thousand Five Hundred English Horse under Catholick Commanders upon such Conditions to be adjusted between them concerning the Government of the Army the Ports of their Landing and Places of Security as shall be adjudged just and convenient 10. When the said Forces shall be entred into England and joyned together in any Place His Holiness will pay the first Year a Hundred Thousand Crowns of Roman Money by a Monthly Proportion the same to be continued the second and third Year as ●●is Forces shall stand and according to the Advantage that shall ●e made by the said Army 11. And lastly because the first six Articles may speedily be put in Execution His Holiness will expect the performance of them in six Months from the Date of these Presents and as to the Eighth and Ninth that require perhaps longer Time he will stay four Months more besides the Six beyond which he will not be tyed to this present Promise At Rome the 30 th Day of November 1645. Append. XXVII The Articles made by the Earl of Glamorgan WHereas much time hath been spent in meetings and debates betwixt His Excellency James Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant and General Governour of His Majesties Kingdom of Ireland Commissioner to His most Excellent Majesty Charles by the Grace of God King of
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
are so well assured of yours and our Councils entire confidence in the Justice and Piety of our Resolutions in what concerns the maintenance of the true Protestant Religion and particularly of the Church and the Revenues thereunto belonging and our constant care of our good Subjects of the same in that our Kingdom as we do not think it needful to say any more to you upon that Subject than what hath been sufficiently declared by the practice and profession of our whole life yet to the end that your zeal may be the better interested in that particular whereby to certify such of our Subjects as might be apt to be misled by the subtilty and malice of our Enemies we thought fit to let you know the whole truth of what hath passed from us to the said Earl whereby he might in any wise pretend to the least kind of Trust or Authority from us in what concerns the Treaties of that Kingdom The truth is that the pressing condition of our affairs obliging us to procure a Peace in that Kingdom if it might be had upon any Terms safe to our Honour and Conscience and to our Protestant Subjects there and finding also that the said Peace could not be gained but by some such Indulgence to the Roman Catholicks in the point of freeing them from the penalties imposed upon the exercise of their Religion which although justly and duly we might grant yet happily in a publick transaction could not be without some scandal to such of our good Subjects as might be apt to be wrought on by their Arts who have continually watched all advantages to blast the integrity of our actions we thought fit over and above our publick powers and directions to our Lieutenant to give our private instructions and powers to assure the Roman-Catholicks in a less publick way of the said exemption from the penalties of the Law and of some such other Graces as might without blemish to our honour and conscience or prejudice to our Protestant Subjects be afforded them With the matter of these Instructions to you we thought fit to acquaint the Earl of Glamorgan at his going to Ireland and being confident of his hearty affections to our Service and withal knowing his interest with the Roman-Catholick Party to be very considerable we thought it not unlikely that you might make good use of him by imploying that interest in perswading them to a Moderation and to rest satisfyed upon his engagement also with those above mentioned Concessions of which in the nice condition of our affairs you could give them no other than a private assurance To this end and with the strictest Limitations that we could enjoyn him meerly to those particulars concerning which we had given you private instructions as also even in that to do nothing but by your special directions ☞ it is possible we might have thought fit to have given to the said Earl of Glamorgan such Credential as might give him credit with the Roman-Catholicks in case you should find occasion to make use of him either as a farther assurance to them of what you should privately promise or in case you should judge it necessary to manage those matters for their greater confidence apart by him of whom in regard of his Religion and Interest they might be the less Jealous This is all and the very bottom of what we might possibly intrust to the said Earl of Glamorgan in this affair which as things then stood might have been very useful to our Service in accelerating the Peace and whereof there was so much need as well for the preservation of our Protestant Subjects there as for hastning those necessary aids which we were to expect from thence had we had the luck to imploy a Wiser man but the truth is being very confident of his affection and obedience we had not much regard to his abilities since he was bound up by our positive Commands from doing any thing but what you should particularly and precisely direct him to ☞ both in the matter and manner of his Negotiation wherefore our pleasure is that the charge begun by the Lord George Digby our Secretary according to his duty be throughly and diligently prosecuted against the said Earl and so no way doubting of your and our Councils farther care there to correspond to your beginning in a matter so highly concerning us We bid you heartily farewel Given the One and Thirtieth of January 1645. Append. XXIX The Determination of the Popish Clergy about restoring the Churches c. to the Protestants In the Name of God Amen WHere a question of most high concernment and meerly touching the publick profession subsistence and safety of the Roman Catholick Religion throughout this Kingdom of Ireland was proposed to us the undernamed Prelates Dignitaries and others of the secular and regular Clergy of the Convocation House in Killkenny viz. whether supposing the known approved and applauded Justice and Lawfulness of this our present Catholick War in this and Foreign Kingdoms upon a Treaty of Peace now to be concluded between us and the other Party adhering to His Majesty by his Majesties special Commission for the safety of Lives Liberties and Estates of our Confederate Catholicks the said Confederate Catholicks be bound in conscience by vertue of their Oath of Association or other tye to make an express Article with the Protestant Party for keeping in our Hands such Churches Abbies Monasteries and Chappels now in our Possession and recovered by us for the true Worship of God where it is to be observed that it is suggested that if any such Article be made his Majesty will break off and consent to no Peace between us and the above specified Party to the great danger of the Estates Lives and Liberties of all our Party And as it is further urged and suggested that in not demanding such an express Article as above his Majesty will grant us Toleration of our Religion We therefore after invocating the assistance of the Holy Ghost and after mature deliberation of the said question and all circumstances thereof do answer declare and resolve with an unanimous assent and consent of us sitting together in the said House of Convocation that conformable to the tenour and true meaning of the said Oath of Association the principles of Laws and Divinity the said Confederate Catholicks are bound in conscience absolutely expresly and clearly to set down in the said Treaty of Peace a special Article to the effect meaned in the case and in case the said Article be not consented unto and that the said Confederate Catholicks proceed to agreement for other temporal points without such Article as above we do declare them to be Violaters of the Oath of Association and Transgressors of the Divine Law Witness our Hands the First of June 1645. Appendix XXX By the Assembly Ecclesiastical of the Superior and Inferior Irish Clergy met in the Holy Ghost at Waterford before the most Illustrious Lord
Favours he shall be graciously pleased to confer upon his faithful Catholick Subjects in this Kingdom according to their Obedience and Merit in his Service And we do further protest that we shall never esteem our selves disobliged from this Engagement by any Authority or Power whatsoever provided on both parties that this Engagement and Undertaking be not understood or extend to debar or hinder His Majesties Catholick Subjects of this Kingdom from the benefit of any further Graces and Favours which His Majesty may be graciously pleased to concede to them upon the Queens Majesties Mediation or any other Treaties abroad Appen XXXV The Declaration against the renewed Peace Anno 1646. By the Council and Congregation Kilkenny the 24th of November 1646. WE taking into consideration an Instrument intituled the Marquess of Clanrickard his Engagement of the Nineteenth of November 1646. Do first observe that his Lordship is qualified with no known Authority that might enable him to make good the undertaking therein expressed if they did contain advantagious Concessions as they do not and then let any Man judge that looks with an indifferent Eye whether the Peace of a Kingdom to follow thereupon be grounded on sufficient Foundation The next to be considered is the first Article where it is exprest that there shall be a Revocation of all the Laws in force in this Kingdom in as much as shall concern any Penalty Inhibition or Restraint upon Catholicks for the free Exercise of their Religion These words seem plausible but he that will look into the Statute of the Second of Elizabeth in the First Second Third and Fourth Chapters and other the Statutes of Force within this Kingdom will find that no Bishop can be made or consecrated or do the Office of a Bishop in conferring orders of Priesthood or granting Dispensations or Faculties or any Priest exercise his Function after the Rights of the Roman-Catholick Church by Authority of the See of Rome but that by express words of the said Statute of the Second of Elizabeth in one of the said Chapters the First offence of that nature is under pain of praemunire which extends to imprisonment during life and the Forfeiture of Goods and Lands the Second offence is Felony and the Third offence against that Law is High Treason in the Principals Abetters Relievers and Maintainers c. And the words of the said First Article do extend only to the revocation of the Penalties against the Exercise of Religion which will not take away the Branches of those Laws that are against the Exercise of Spiritual Jurisdictions or Functions so as all our Prelates and Priests are left subject to the former dangers which doubtless the Confederate Catholicks did intend to free them from upon the taking of their Oath of Association By one of the Chapters of that Statute of the Second of Elizabeth Catholick Service or Mass is excluded out of the Churches and the Common-Prayer Book which the Protestants used introduced and clearly for any thing mentioned in the said First Article no Mass can be said in any Church without incurring the Penalty ordained by that Law and those that are ver●ed in the late Treaty with the Lord Lieutenant do well know and all others that saw an Instrument sent by the Lord Lieutenant in a Letter of the Seventh of August 1644 importing a Brief of Collections whereby the Singing Saying and Hearing of Mass was granted may observe that notwithstanding that Concession the Lord Lieutenant did add a Proviso that no Mass should be Said or Sung in Churches Cathedral or Parochial or Chappel thereunto belonging by means whereof and of an express denial to grant the Catholicks liberty to have a Catholick Bishop by any authority from the See of Rome and for want of other Concessions in matters of Religion without Provisoes or Clogs that would spoil them matters of Religion were referred by the late Articles to further or other Concessions And as we are taught by the Tenents of Catholick Doctrin that there can be no Catholick Religion nor essential parts thereof without Bishops who in matters of Religion depend and ought to depend of the See Apostolick and without Priests made by such Bishops or the Pope himself nor the Sacraments administred without such Prelates and Pastors therefore the Exercise of Religion as to those and several other particulars essential ought to made certain or else that the said Statutes of the Second of Elizabeth and the Statutes of Faculties in the Twenty Eighth of Henry the Eighth be totally Repealed as to his Majesties Roman-Catholick Subjects and a provision made by Act of Parliament for Roman-Catholick Bishops and Pastors to be and remain in this Kingdom with impunity Upon consideration of the Second Article where it is expressed that they shall not be disturbed in the enjoyment of their Churches or any other Ecclesiastical Possessions which were in their Hands at the publication of the late Peace until that matter with others referred already receive a settlement upon a Declaration of his Majesties gracious intentions in a free Parliament held in this Kingdom his Majesty being in a free condition himself It is apparent by this Second Article besides what is said before that the First Article concerning the Revocation of the Penal Laws is not intended by the undertaking of that engagement to extend to the taking away of the Penal Laws that prohibit Mass to be said in Churches and seemeth as to the Churches to put us by our own assent to this Proposition in worse condition than we were by the late rejected Peace for then and still we have the resolution of the General Assembly expressed in an order to hold our Churches always and not to part with them And now if this Second Article were agreed on we express only a promissive enjoying of them until Parliament and so are left as to that in a worse condition than before and even until Parliament it self there is no security at all for Churches or Church Livings within our Quarters other than the undertaking of the said Lord Marquess of Clanrickard who is subject to Mortality and Changes as other Mortal Men and who was never yet of our Vnion and admit this were an assurance till Parliament the same will fall on the Kings Declaration to the contrary if in a free condition which Declaration to be contrary may probably be expected so long as his Majesty is of a different Religion and before that Parliament be all Persons engaged or to be engaged are subject to Mortality Upon all which we see no security at all for Churches or Church-Livings As to the Third it containeth no concession and is but an engagement of the said Lord Marquess his Word which is uncertain and unsafe to rely on without mentioning what Garrisons and what Catholicks in them and what number and by whom they are to be commanded in regard the Commander in chief may by his Order remove or alter them as he sees cause
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