Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicus, Volym 1; Volym 11Charles Vallancey L. White, 1786 |
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Sida 120
... ancestors have fat . In this cafe you shall have some of them tell their landlord , that they and their forefathers have been there as long and perhaps longer than he , and they will not out for him ; whither shall they go ? and the ...
... ancestors have fat . In this cafe you shall have some of them tell their landlord , that they and their forefathers have been there as long and perhaps longer than he , and they will not out for him ; whither shall they go ? and the ...
Sida 138
... ancestors had been chief Lords of the country , and who being received to grace , had performed good service in these parts , had a patent of the whole country granted unto him by the late lord lieutenant , and held it accordingly ...
... ancestors had been chief Lords of the country , and who being received to grace , had performed good service in these parts , had a patent of the whole country granted unto him by the late lord lieutenant , and held it accordingly ...
Sida 198
... ancestors had formerly Mey , H. f . enjoyed the fame . " Univerfis fanctæ matrisec- " clefiæ filiis , ad quos præfentes literæ pervene- " rint , Johannes , permiffione divinâ archiepif- 66 copus Armachanus , Hiberniæ primas , falutem ...
... ancestors had formerly Mey , H. f . enjoyed the fame . " Univerfis fanctæ matrisec- " clefiæ filiis , ad quos præfentes literæ pervene- " rint , Johannes , permiffione divinâ archiepif- 66 copus Armachanus , Hiberniæ primas , falutem ...
Sida 209
... ancestors were once without the use of fire . Mela , Pliny and Plutarch , speak of nations who at the time they wrote had but just learned it , and several modern travellers atteft facts of the fame kind in our days . The ufe of copper ...
... ancestors were once without the use of fire . Mela , Pliny and Plutarch , speak of nations who at the time they wrote had but just learned it , and several modern travellers atteft facts of the fame kind in our days . The ufe of copper ...
Sida 219
... ancestors . Whoever reads Procopius's Hiftory of the Van- dalic war , and the foundation of the empire efta- blished by Geferic , or Gizeric , conqueror of Andalufia and Africa foon after the fifth century , will there find a true ...
... ancestors . Whoever reads Procopius's Hiftory of the Van- dalic war , and the foundation of the empire efta- blished by Geferic , or Gizeric , conqueror of Andalufia and Africa foon after the fifth century , will there find a true ...
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Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicus, Volym 3; Volym 11 Charles Vallancey Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1786 |
Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicus, Volym 2; Volym 11 Charles Vallancey Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1786 |
Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicus, Volym 4; Volym 11 Charles Vallancey Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1786 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
according againſt alfo alſo anceſtors annals of Innisfallen antient barony battle becauſe bishop Brehon laws Brien brother Cafhel called chief Chronicon Scotorum church Clovis command confequently conftitution Connaught Connor Cormac Cormac Cas crown cuftom defcended Dermod divifion Donal Donogh eftate eldeſt Engliſh Erenach eſtabliſhed Eugenian faid fame fecond feems feniority fervice feven feveral fhall fhould fide fignifies fince firft firſt flain fome foon fovereign fovereignty ftate fubject fucceeded fucceffor fuch fword Gaul Gregory of Tours hath heir hiftory himſelf Ireland Iriſh king of Leinster king of Thomond kingdom laft lands lord lordship Mahon maxim moft Mortogh moſt Munfter muſt nation O'Brien obferved occafion perfon poffeffed poffeffion prefent prince province reafon refpective regal fucceffion reign Salic Salic law ſhall ſhare ſtate Suevi Teige thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tribe Turlogh ufurpation unto uſe Vandalic weft whereof whofe word
Populära avsnitt
Sida 282 - SintTruiden, at the end of the eleventh century and the beginning of the twelfth...
Sida 162 - ... of the Church, took beginning in this manner : When any lord or gentleman had a direction to build a church, he did...
Sida 177 - Thence will arise villages and towns, which will draw tradesmen and artificers. So as we conceive a hope that these countries in a short time will not only be quiet neighbours to the Pale, but be made as rich and as civil as the Pale itself.
Sida 122 - ... and thus the portion is quickly paid ; nevertheless, caution is taken from the Bridegroom, on the day of delivery, for restitution of the cattle, in case the Bride die childless within a certain day limited by agreement, and in this case every man's own beast is restored.
Sida 162 - ... faint or other, whom he chofe to be his patron ; then he founded the church, and called it by the name of that faint, and then gave the land to...
Sida 170 - The building of a gaol and feflions-houfe was likewife refpited until my lord deputy had refolved of a fit place for a market, and a corporate town. For...
Sida 169 - And yet the number of freeholders named in this county was above two hundred ; and in this order and method we digefted the bufmefs touching the pofleffions and...
Sida 153 - When we had delivered the gaol, we impannelled another jury to enquire of the ftate of the church in that county, giving them thefe fpecial articles in charge, viz.
Sida 114 - ... no man whatever can escape a nickname who lives among them, or converseth with them ; and sometimes so libidinous are they in this kind of raillery, they will give nicknames per antiphrasim, or contrariety of speech. Thus a man of excellent parts, and beloved of all men, shall be called grana, that is, naughty or fit to be complained of; if a man have a beautiful countenance, or lovely eyes, they will call him Cuiegh, that is, squint-eyed ; if a great house-keeper, he shall be called Ackerisagh,...
Sida 116 - Thisarifeth thro' that great care and concern every man hath left he mould be over-reached by his neighbour ; and they will take upon them to be judges to an extreme nicety of the quality and quantity of each rood of ground ; and, to make fure work, will bring their ropes to meafure, as formally as a furveyor his chains. Their manner of divifion is thus, To each plough they reckon a certain number of acres, which by a general name is called a...