i CD 1069 698 1864 A A i Oi 1 i 2 ! 61 6 J 7 j 2 I 8! ilifornia ional iity THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES REPORT RIGHT HONOURABLE THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS UPON Tilt' CARTE AND CAREW PAPERS BODLEIAN AND LAMBETH LIBRARIES, LONDON: LONGMAN, GREEN, LONGMAN, ROBERTS, AND GREEN. 1864. Price 2s. 6d. 8570. CONTENTS, Page. LETTER EROM THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS TO THE TREASURY - 3 REPORT- - - -5 Carte Papers in the Bodleian Library, Oxford - 5 Carew Papers in Lambeth Palace - - - - 1 1 APPENDIX. A. Notices of Carte's Manuscripts in Bodleian Library, Oxford - 1 4 B. Comparison of Carte's printed Volumes with Manuscripts in Volumes in Bodleian Library, Oxford - •• - - - 52 C. Notices of missing Volumes of the Carew Manuscripts - 77 LETTER OF THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS TO THE TREASURY. Sir, Rolls House, November 9, 1863. I BEG to acquaint you, for the information of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury, that, in consequence of your letter of the 22d July 1863, stating that their Lordships accepted the offer of Mr. Hardy and Mr. Brewer to make such an inquiry and report into the Carew Papers in Lambeth Palace, and the Irish Papers in the Bodleian Library, as that suggested in your letter, and requesting me to take the necessary steps for that purpose, I have acted in accordance with the desire expressed by you, and I have now the pleasure to forward the very able and valuable report of Mr. Hardy and Mr. Brewer ; but at the same time I think it desirable to state, for the consideration of their Lordships, my view of the course which it seems to me it would be most expedient to adopt. In the first place, it appears to me that it would be very desirable, not only that the Report, but the Appendices also should be printed, as their bulk renders them inconvenient for consultation in manuscript, and it is probable that they will be much sought for, especially in Ireland, inasmuch as the Appendices show the general nature of Carte's collection, which may not be fully known even to the Curators of the Bodleian, and still less to the public. They also identify a large mass of very curious letters, printed by Carte, which no one but himself knew Avhere to find. The printing and circulation of the Report will show that Her Majesty's Government have not been unmindful of the wishes expressed by the Irish nation to have the materials for Irish history collected, and that they have made an attempt to discover and disclose important documents connected with the historical literature of Ireland. In the second place, it would appear to me to be expedient, not to have a calendar made of the Carte Papers under the authority of Her Majesty's Government, but instead thereof, to have dupli- cate copies made of such Irish official documents as are in that collection ; that one copy should be sent to Dublin, and deposited in some proper place, which the Government may select for that purpose, and that the other copy should be placed in the Public a 2 Record Office in London, for the use of the public generally, and more especially for the information of Irish scholars in London. In the third place, I would beg to suggest the propriety of having the Carew Papers at Lambeth, including the six volumes among the Laud MSS. in the Bodleian, calendared chronologically on the same plan as that hitherto adopted in the calendars of State Papers under my direction ; the editor for that purpose to be selected and appointed by the Treasury. It is, however, my duty to state that I am unable to concur with the recommendation in the Report which I forward, to omit from the Calendar of the Carew MSS. the papers relating to the reign of Henry VIIL, which are calendared by Mr. Brewer, and will appear in his forth- coming volumes. Such an omission would in my opinion operate injuriously, inasmuch as it would deprive the Calendar of the Carew Papers of its character for entirety. On the contrary, I am of opinion that it is desirable that the Irish Papers calendared by Mr. Brewer should re-appear in the Irish Calendar. In the first place, as the number of such Papers will be very few, the circumstance of their appearing twice in different publications will not create any expense worth consideration. In the second place, it will obviate an evil which would be justly complained of, if every historical student who desired to obtain a knowledge of the Carew Papers should be compelled for that purpose to purchase not merely the Calendar of the Carew Papers, but also a Calendar of all the documents relating to the reign of Henry VIIL, to complete what ought to be included in the former calendar. The complete- ness of the work itself is the principle on which all the works pub- lished under the authority of the Government are edited, as far as it is possible to do so. "With this exception, the Report and its recommendations meet with my high approbation, and will, I think, be equally approved by their Lordships. I am, Sir, your obedient Servant, (Signed) John Romilly. Geo. Alex. Hamilton, Esq. &c. &c. REPORT UPON THE CARTE AND CAREW PAPERS ix tiii; BODLEIAN AND LAMBETH LIBRARIES. Public Record Office, Rolls House, Sir, November 3, 1863. In conformity with your instructions that Ave should ascer- tain " the nature and extent of the Papers in Carte's Collection in " the Bodleian Library at Oxford relating to Ireland," with a view of enabling the Lords of the Treasury to judge "whether it " would be desirable to make a Calendar of those Papers, or to " have any of them printed at the public expense," and, in con- junction with this investigation, to make similar inquiries in reference to the Carew MSS. at Lambeth Palace, we beg leave to submit to you the following Report : In regard to that portion of our inquiry which relates to the Carte Collection in the Bodleian Library, we have to state that a minute examination has been made of those papers. They are contained in 178 vols, in folio, and 37 vols, in quarto. Besides their importance in reference to the public affairs of England they are of great, value for the history of Ireland ; commencing with the administration of Lord-Deputy Chichester and closing with the reign of George I. The collection may be divided into four classes, viz. : I. Papers collected by Carte in connexion with his History of England. II. Letters to Carte and his father, from various persons, on friendly, family, and literary subjects. III. Letters and papers on public affairs concerning both England and Ireland. IV. Letters, papers, and public instruments having reference to Ireland alone. The classes I. and II., though interesting and valuable for specific purposes, are not of sufficient importance to be calendared at the public expense. Some notion of their general nature, however, may be obtained by reference to Appendix A. Classes III. and IV. are exceedingly valuable, and their con- tents ought undoubtedly to be made public. In Appendix A a general view of their nature and contents will be found. It was from these last two classes that Carte derived the materials for his Life and Letters of the Duke of Ormonde, published in 1735-6, in three volumes folio, and lately reprinted at the Oxford University Press ; his collection of papers in two volumes octavo, printed in 1739, relating to the Civil Wars; and the more interest- ing of the documents inserted in his General History of England. We can give no better proof of the value of these collections than is to be found in the fact that almost every historian who has treated upon the period of our history, extending from the outbreak of the Civil War to the end of the reign of George I., has made constant reference to them. The Earl of Hardwicke, editor of the Hard- wicke Papers, paid Mr. Jernegan (who had married* Carte's widow) 200?. for permission to peruse them. James Macpherson obtained the use of them for his History of Great Britain from the Restoration to the Accession of the House of Hanover, by a present of 300Z. Dalrymple also refers to them as vouchers for information not to be obtained elsewhere. In short, all who have had an opportunity of consulting them, however different their purposes or political principles, have been unanimous in assigning the highest import- ance to these papers for the history of the period through which they extend. But the value of Carte's collection, so far as Ireland is exclu- sively concerned, arises from the fact that great portions of the original records relating to that country have been totally destroyed or have disappeared, from one casualty or another. How far that loss can be supplied by these papers your Honour will be able more clearly to infer from a short account of the mode in which these papers were first obtained and have since been preserved. When Carte was first employed to write his account of the life and administration of the Duke of Ormonde in 1730, 153 bundles of correspondence were placed in his hands by the Earl of Arran. These bundles contained papers formerly in the possession of the first Duke of Ormonde, Earl Arran's grandfather, and were all in- dorsed by the Duke himself with the name of writer, the date of each letter, and the time of its receipt. Some attempt had been made by Captain Brydall in the year 1698 to arrange and catalogue those papers, but as he had fallen into many mistakes Carte re-arranged the papers to suit his own purposes, bound them up in 27 large volumes folio, disarranging the chronological sequence, and num- bered each page, distinguishing each volume by one or more letters of the alphabet. As these 27 volumes only contained papers to the end of the year 1651, Carte found it necessary to seek for further information to enable him to complete his work ; and as he had heard that a large mass of materials was preserved in Kilkenny Castle, he obtained the permission of the Earl of Arran to bring 1<» England such letters and papers as he might find fit for his purpose. Armed with this authority he proceeded to Ireland, and found in the evidence-room at Kilkenny " about fourteen Avicker " bins, each large enough to hold a hogshead of wine in bottles, * '['In' Carte Collection was bequeathed by Mrs. Jernegan to lier husband for his ad afterwards to the University of Oxford. Mr. Jernegan, however, disposed of his interest in it to the Dniver itj in 1 77s for a valuable consideration. As late as 177") be advertised the use of the papers for hire. " covered with unwieldy books of stewards' accounts," which upon inspection he found to contain a series of State Papers and other public documents connected with the Ormonde adminis- tration in Ireland, from the Restoration to the year 1686. Carte spent several months in digesting this accession to his literary materials, arranging them according to his own plan, convenient enough undoubtedly for his immediate object, but quite unsuitable for general purposes. He bound them up in folio volumes similar to those containing the papers which he had previously obtained from the Earl of Arran, and marked them successively with double, treble, and quadruple letters. The papers in quarto were also bound with their distinguishing marks, which arc awkward and inconvenient for citation. Not content with this acquisition, Carte excerpted from the Journals of both Houses of Parliament all passages relating to Ireland, and procured copies of all " news letters and intelligences " which he thought likely to throw light upon the exciting period then engaging his attention. These fresh materials he also bound up in several volumes, marking them " Ireland I.," " Ireland II.," &c. While he remained in Ireland several persons threw open their papers to his use, and permitted him to take copies of any he chose. Among them was the Journal of Owen O'Neile, and the curious collection formed by Tully O'Neil. The Earl of Hun- tingdon communicated to him all the papers which had belonged to his great-grandfather Sir John Davys, Attorney-General of Ireland. He also had access to the collections of the Bishop of Clogher, among which he found six volumes compiled by Matthew Barry, Clerk of the Council of Ireland, from the time of Lord Stratford's government down to the year 1682. Dr. Madding's manuscripts, a catalogue of which is in the " Catalogus Manuscrip- " torum Anglire et Hibernian," were also placed before him by the Bishop of Clogher. From these he extracted a variety of interesting papers written previously to the Rebellion, and several contemporary with it. Among them may be mentioned " An " Account of the Affairs of Ireland from 1641 to 1652," by X. S., who styles himself secretary to Owen Roe O'Neile. Another account communicated to him by Mr. Pluncket, whose uncle com- piled it, contains a collection of " Relations " of what happened in the Irish War by eye-witnesses. There is a further account in Latin, entitled " De Haeresis Anglican^ Intrusione et Progressu, " et de Bello Catholico ad annum 1641 ccepto, exin deque per " aliquot annos gesto, Commentarius;" and written by an Irish Catholic priest whom Thomas Baptista Rinuccini, Great Cham- berlain to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, employed to digest the papers of his brother the Archbishop of Fermo, and reduce them into the form of a narrative. To these may be added the " Memoircs " of the Marquis of Clanricarde — we do not allude to those published in the imperfect sketch of the Lorraine treaty — also lent to Carte. They contain a series of letters to and from the Marquis, with his reflections upon the orders he received from the Lords Justices of Ireland and others, together with his narrative of events which happened in Ireland from the 8 23rd of October lG-il to 30th August 1643, when he was going to Sigginston to assist at the treaty for a cessation of arms.* We cordially join with Carte in his deep regret that the continuation of this valuable and important correspondence has been lost ; we say " lost/' because he was assured by several gentlemen (particularly by Mr. Nicholas Wogan of Rathcossy) that they had seen a com- plete collection of that correspondence down to the end of the public troubles. Several copies of the early portion of these si Memoires " were then extant in Ireland ; but the best and probably the original manuscript (written throughout in the hand of the Marquis of Clanricarde himself, and in that of his secretary — the one interspersed with the other) was in the possession of the then Archbishop of Cashel. The copy used by Carte be- longed to the Earl of Egmont, who likewise supplied him with several other curious papers, among Avhich was the account and defence of the cessation by Sir Philip Percival. We may here remark that these " Memoires " of the Marquis of Clanricarde are well worthy of publication. Besides this large collection of papers relating to the history of this country, and especially of Ireland, there is a vast body of evidence among the Carte Papers referring to the private life of the Duke of Ormonde, and which was sent to Carte by the then Bishop of Worcester, who lived several years in the Duke's family. Among these was a manuscript of about 100 pages, prepared by Sir Robert Southwell, and containing such domestic information touching the Duke of Ormonde's life, as he had received from his Grace's ow r n lips. In addition to the collection which Carte amassed in Ireland, he had free access to the papers belonging to the noble families of Montague and Wharton. To what extent he made use of them may be seen in Appendix A. However lofty the estimate which Carte was inclined to set upon these papers, your Honour will see from the remarks already made that that estimate was not overcharged. Carte unquestion- ably had obtained possession of letters and documents without which no one could hope to write or master the history either of Ireland or of England in those eventful times. He supposed that they would have supplied all the omissions to which we have already referred ; but, unfortunately, even before these papers had come into his hands, many portions were destroyed by firc.f He complains that many of the bound books of the collections had been lost by the Duke lending them too freely. Among others, he insinuates that some had been lent to Lord Chancellor Clarendon "in order to his drawing up that historical " view of the affairs of Ireland during the Rebellion," and had never been returned, notwithstanding repeated applications to Lord Clarendon's executors. It is possible that careful search among the Clarendon Papers for copies of the missing Irish Tl.i j volume is now No. 99 of the Carte Tapers in the Bodleian. t The ( 'ouncil Hooks of Ireland were lost in the fire Avhich happened at Dublin Castle in 1711. Council Books might clear up this charge, and some trace of others be discovered. Besides these, other injuries are noticed by Carte. lie states that the Duke "lent several bound volumes containing all the " papers which were interchanged in his treaties with the Irish " Confederates, and all passages in those treaties, and that he had " seen among his Grace's loose papers various references to those " books, but which he had not the good fortune to find." Two other books also seem to have been lost, one containing the letters of the Lords Justices nnd Council of Ireland to the King, the Lord Lieutenant, and the English House of Commons, from the breaking out of the Irish Rebellion down to January 1643-4, when Lord Ormonde entered upon the Government of Ireland ; the other containing all the papers presented or prepared by different parties to be offered to the King and Council of England in order to the settlement of Ireland after the Restoration. This loss, how- ever, is repaired by copies taken in 1 680 of these two books, which ■were at that time in the library of the Duke of Chandos and Carte transcribed. This indefatigable collector mentions that " when Dr. Xalson was making the collections which he afterwards " published, he was obliged to the Duke of Ormonde for the loan " of papers for that work." These papers were traced by him, and found in the possession of Dr. Williams, senior Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, who had them bound up in about 20 volumes. A catalogue of those relating to Ireland, and copies of such as Carte required, were transmitted to him by Dr. Zachary Gray. A notice of these may be seen at p. 34 of Appendix A. Since the Carte papers came into the possession of the authorities at Oxford they have been re-bound, but without any attempt at re-arrangement. Not only Carte himself, as we have before stated, but those who had the use of these valuable materials, appear to have been totally regardless of their primitive order, and to have disturbed their chronological arrangement as it suited their con- venience ; the consequence has been that papers of different years, and sometimes of different centuries, have been mixed and confused in volumes to which they do not belong. Thus great inconvenience is entailed on the historical inquirer, which can only be surmounted by a chronological calendar similar to those prepared under your Honour's sanction. It is due, however, to the Curators of the Bodleian to state that they adhered to the old aiTangement on the consideration that any re-arrangement would create great difficulty in finding such papers as might be required by applicants at the library.* Availing himself of the written permission of the Rev. Robert Payne Smith, sub-librarian of the Bodleian Library, acting in the absence of the Rev. H. O. Coxe, the librarian, Mr. Hardy pro- ceeded to Oxford on the 3rd August to commence operations by * Carte and others who have used these papers referred to them as A B C. &c, folio, or A B C, &c, quarto: as these old marks of reference have been preserved any paper can be found. We have given in Appendix A the new and old reference to each volume, in order that papers may be identified. 10 examining these papers ; but Mr. Coxe, on his return, informed your Honour that he did not consider himself authorized to concede the privilege of inspecting the Carte Papers with a view to this Report until he had obtained the sanction of the Curators, who could not be called together for some months ;* at the same time stating that it was the intention of the Curators to have a catalogue prepared of these papers, under their own superintendence, as soon as the catalogue of the Clarendon Papers now in preparation was finished; but Mr. Coxe, upon his own responsibility, and with the utmost courtesy, afforded every facility for the examination of the MSS. in question. The whole of the Carte collection has been carefully examined with a view of ascertaining what portion of it had been printed, and of determining the value and proportion of the rest. The task was one of difficulty, as many of these materials had been made use of and were dispersed in different publications. The difficulties were the greater from the confusion of the papers; enclosures had been separated from the letters which contained them and placed in different parts of the collection ; many of the writers wrote letters under assumed names, which Carte and others printed in their real names without any notice of the change. Thus, for instance, Sir Edward Nicholas, secretary to King Charles I., rarely used the same signature twice ; sometimes he signed himself " Charles Ledison," sometimes " Cha. Johnson," &c. Again, of many letters deciphered by Carte and his friend Mr. Davis, the deciphers were printed, of which no indication is attached to the originals. In this laborious investigation we have succeeded in identifying the printed papers, amounting to 872, with their originals now among the Carte collection, with the exception of about 55. Some of those which escaped our notice are valuable as literary curiosities, and for that reason may have been stolen, or perhaps presented by Carte to favoured collectors. Others may have been restored to their owners at Carte's death, as applica- tions were made to his widow to return papers borrowed by her husband. Some few may have been overlooked in consequence of the confused manner in which the papers are arranged, and some might have got into the collection of Admiral Montague, "whose papers were afterwards nearly all destroyed by fire. But as the results of these laborious inquiries now for the first time instituted, the facts of which may not be fully known even to the Curators of the Bodleian themselves, cannot fail of being useful to the literary inquirer, we have thought right to subjoin them in an Appendix to this Report (B). Profoundly interesting as are the papers in Carte's collection, of which scarcely a fourth part is known to the world, and important [ they are to the student of Irish history, it may be questionable whether, in the event of the Curators acting on Mr. Coxe's state- entj it would be desirable for the Government to make a calendar of the Iri>h papers in this collection. The calendars prepared * The sanction of the Curators WBB obtained, 4 Nov. 1SC3. 11 under your Honour's sanction differ from all others in two very important particulars, the advantages of which are obvious : — 1. All the papers are arranged chronologically, and so far con- stitute a history in themselves. 2. The description of each document is so detailed that the in- quirer can determine for himself the exact information likely to be found in it without necessarily having recourse to the original. Now when it is remembered that for every reign, from the time of Henry VIII., the documents count not by hundreds but by tens of thousands, in various handwritings and many languages, and that the labour of wading through, still more of reading, the contents of such voluminous collections, has hitherto deterred the historian from attempting anything more than a superficial and partial examination of the true materials of history, the importance of a calenelar giving sufficient information anel abridging useless labour will, we think, be readily admitted. Therefore, though we do not doubt that a Calendar of the Irish Papers in the Carte collection, arranged after the plan adopted in the State Paper Calendars issued under your sanction, would be a great boon to the Irish scholar, and though it is unlikely that the Curators of the Bodleian will, in any catalogue of the Carte Papers they undertake, depart from the rules they have hitherto adopted in their catalogues, yet it appears to us that it would not be desirable, under the circumstances, for the Government to frame a Calendar of the Irish Papers alone in this collection ; especially in our present uncertainty as to the course which the Curators of the Bodleian may think fit to adopt. But it appears to us desirable that copies of all official papers in Carte's collection should be made and placed in the several offices in Ireland from which the originals were thoughtlessly and improperly removed by Carte. We also recommend that a copy of the manuscripts should be taken for the use of the Irish scholars in England anel depositeel in the Public Record Office. We proceed to the Carew Papers. The Carew Papers preserved in the Archiepiscopal Library in Lambeth Palace contain most important materials for the history of Ireland, and extend from the reign of Henry the Second to the end of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. They were collected by Sir George Carew, President of Munster (afterwards Earl of Totness), when he held office in Ireland, apparently for the purpose of writing a history of that country, but especially of the wars which occurred in the province of Munster during the reign of Elizabeth. Lord Totness died before he had completed his work. It was finished and pub- lished under the title of " Pacata Hibernin," by his natural son, Sir Thomas Stafford, in the year 1633, to whom he had bequeathed his manuscripts by his will dated 30th November 1625, and proved 29th May 1629. It does not clearly appear how these manuscripts came to be deposited at Lranbeth. Todd, in his preface to the catalogue of the Lambeth manuscripts, says that they were pur- chased by Archbishop Tenison ; and it is affirmed in a pamphlet 12 by " Historicus Hibernicus " that this collection was purchased from the representatives of Sir George Carew by Archbishop Tenison, who, by his will dated 11th April 1715, bequeathed the MSS. in question to the Public Library of Lambeth " for the use of the " See of Canterbury for ever/' But in the Archbishop's will no mention is found of the Carew MSS. After a bequest of a picture and maps in the Long Gallery at Lambeth Library, where they were deposited, the will proceeds as follows — " respecting " divers books both printed and in manuscript in the Public " Librai'y of Lambeth, my will is that as many of them as are " either not at all in the ancient Library aforesaid, or not ; in " the same editions, or shall be judged worthy for that place/' by Dr. Gibson, Mr. Ibbot, and Mr. Clavering, " shall there continue " for the use of the See of Canterbury for ever." A tradition, however, is preserved that the Carew MSS. were deposited at Lambeth either by Archbishop Laud himself, or in his time ; and the fact of a certain number of volumes of the collection being among the Laud MSS. in the Bodleian Library seems confirma- tory of that report. There is also a memorandum in Archbishop Sancroft's handwriting in each of the three volumes of the cata- logue prepared for Lord Totness, which seems to prove that the Carew MSS. were in Lambeth Library in his time ; consequently they could not have been purchased by Archbishop Tenison. The collection originally consisted of 72 volumes, but only 42 now remain at Lambeth. "We have given in an Appendix (C) an account of the 30 missing volumes, in the hope that it may be the means of tracing them hereafter, especially as Todd in his pri 'ed catalogue makes no allusion to their loss or their contents.* While on the subject of Todd's catalogue it may not be irrelevant to mention that it is nothing more than a copy of that prepared by Dr. Wilkins in 1720, so far as it goes, and is by no means so full or so accurate as that compiled for Sir George Carew, in three volumes, and now in the Lambeth Library, Nos. 636, 637, and 638. That collection in its present state, and which Todd describes " as an inestimable mass of the most important evidence," con- sists of ancient chronicles and histories of Ireland, Journals of the proceedings of the Lord Lieutenants of Ireland, their instruc- tions, state papers, copies of proclamations, Acts of Parliament, orders of council, ordinances, commissions, memorials, petitions, decrees, interrogatories and examination of witnesses in political and criminal proceedings, certificates, declarations, estimates, perambulations, royal charters and letters patent, private grants, indentures and agreements, plans of castles and fortifications, matters connected with the army in Ireland, maps and surveys of towns, counties, and provinces, original warrants and letters (among them a valuable collection in the handwriting of Secretary Cecil) &c, many of which are copies of important documents not now known to exist. Very few of these papers have been made public, and many like the Carte collection, as we have already stated, supply deficiencies in the public collections in Ireland. * Six of the missing volumes are in the Bodleian Library (MSS. Laud. 610, Gil, 612, 013, 014, 01, ■>). 13 As a catalogue of the Carcw papers lias been printed, we have not deemed it necessary to annex to this Report such a minute account of their contents as we have given of the Carte collection; although we were compelled to prepare an analysis of them for the purpose of this Report, which can be forwarded to the Treasury if their Lordships desire to see it. "We think, however, that Todd's printed catalogue Avill be suffi- cient to give their Lordships some general notion of the nature of these papers. In conclusion, we deem it necessary to state that we have heard from the Rev. Wm. Stubbs, the present librarian of the Archbishop of Canterbury, that the Carcw papers are more frequently consulted than any other manuscripts at Lambeth, and the want of a good catalogue is very much complained of and deplored by all who attend the Library for the purpose of using the papers in question. From our own knowledge of these papers we consider them not only of the utmost importance for the history of Ireland, but that no faithful history of that country can be written until their voluminous contents are made public. Under these circumstances we have no hesitation in recom- mending that they should be calendared (in strict chronological order) on the same plan as that pursued under the direction of the Master of the Rolls, with the exception of those papers relating to the reign of Henry VIII., which are calendared by Mi*. Brewer, and will appear in his forthcoming volumes ; but at the same time we wish to remark that the collection, which is of a very miscellaneous nature, is not of the same value throughout. Many of the papers are copies of originals which exist at the Museum and elsewhere, whilst others are copies of originals which have since perished. It will, therefore, be necessary that the editor engaged to calendar these papers should be fully aware of these difficulties, and the length of his precis be determined accordingly. Further, owing to the difficulties attendant on Irish names of persons and places, we think that the editorship of such a calendar should be intrusted to a competent Irish scholar, not only familiar with Irish history generally, but with the names of individuals and localities referred to in the correspondence ; and we further suggest that the work would be more complete and valuable if the volumes in the Laudian collection in the Bodleian already referred to, and shown to be a portion of the Carew papers, were included in the same work. We have the honour to be, Sir, Your obedient servants, (Signed) T. Duffus Hardy. J. S. Bbewee. To the Right Hon. Sir John Romilly, Master of the Rolls, &c. &c. &c. APPENDIX. APPENDIX A. Xotices of Carte's MSS. in the Bodleian Library. Vol. 1, formerly marked "A," folio. Copies of Grants and other formal documents, temp. Hen. III., Edw. I., Edw. II., Edw. III., Ric. II., and Hen. V. James Earl of Ormonde's speech to the parliament of Drogheda, 1444, and other papers relative to his creation as Earl of Wilts and attainder. Letters from Thomas Earl of Ormonde to Thomas Archer, 1577 to 1612. Orders of the Councils of England and Ireland. Letters from Queen Elizabeth to the Council of Ireland, and one from Cecil to the Earl of Ormonde, general in Ireland (1 597). Letter from Sir Francis Bacon to George Duke of Buckingham when the latter became the favourite of James I., without date. Warrants. Letters, mostly original, and chiefly addressed to the Earl of Ormonde, from 1633 to 1641, from the King, Archbishop Laud, Lord Strafford, Lord-Deputy Wandesfordj the Lords Justices of Ireland, the Earls of Cork and Holland, Secretary Coke, Sir William Saintleger, Sir Charles Coote, Sir H. Bruce, Sir H. Vane, Sir J. Temple, and others. They chiefly relate to the affairs of Ireland. Some of these letters are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 27-38, and in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 1-5. A number of miscellaneous papers dated in the reigns of James I. and Charles I. Amongst them are : — A letter of news from an Alderman of Newcastle to a friend in London. A pajier concerning the Novations in Religion complained of by the Scots, signed " Ad. Blair." A Plan of the Way leading toDunbarton Castle. A Narrative of what passed at King John of Portugal's naming his Bishops at Rome. Demands of the Scots in order to a peace. Vol. 2, formerly marked " B," folio. Letters, mostly original, and generally addressed to the Earl of Ormonde, from October 1641 to March 1642, from the King, the Lords Justices of Ireland, the Officers in 1 lie North of Ireland, the Earls of Leicester and Cumberland, the Marquis of Clanricarde, Lords Mont- gomery, Muskery, Upper Ossory, Moore, Montgarret, Ranelagh, and Broghill ; Sir II. Tichborne, Sir II. Vane, Sir W. Saintleger, Sir .). Temple, Sir James Montgomery, Lieutenant-Colonel Byron, Sir Patrick Wemys, Sir Philip Percival, Sir Thomas Wharton, and others. They chiefly relate to tin.' Rebellion and other Irish affairs. Many of them are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 37-69, and p. 1 17. There are also a lew drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Miscellaneous papers relating to various subjects: — Proclamations. Depositions. Appointment of a Committee to confer with the Rebels (in print). An Accounl of the Insurrection in Tipperary. Petitions from the Lords of the Pale to King Charles 1. and Queen Henrietta Maria. Their Apology for taking Arms. Papers concerning a murder at the Silver Mines. Petition from the Officers of the Army to the King on the breaking out of the Rebellion (original, on parchment). The King's commission to hear the Rebels' propositions (Jan. 11, i The Declaration of the Lords and Gentry of Munster as to their intentions towards the Protestants j &c. IS Vol. 3, formerly marked "0," folio. Letters addressed to the Earl of Ormonde, mostly original, and dated from March to October, 1642, from many of the same persons as in Vol. 2, and from Lord Gonnanston and the Supreme Council of the Confederate Catholics, Secretary Nicholas, Speaker Lenthall, the Duke of Richmond, Lords Esmond and Claneboy, the Marquis of Argyle, Lords Wharton, Conway, Barry re. Grey of Wark, Valentia, Inchi- quin, and Grandison, Sir W. Parsons, Sir Robert Poyntz, Sir K. Gren- ville, Sir Hardress Waller, Mr. Tempest, Sir Arthur Loftus, Sir Robert Stewart. Sir W. Gilbert, Sir Fulk llouncks, Sir J. Gitfard, Sir Francis Willoughby, Sir Lucas Dillon, Sir Michael Ernie, Sir G. Radcliffe, and others. Also drafts and copies of Ormonde's letters to many of the above-mentioned persons. Some of these letters are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 70-106. Int irspersed among the above are a number of other papers, such as the following: — Depositions. Orders by the Lords Justices of Ireland. An Order of the House of Commons for a jewel to be sent to Ormonde, and vindicating him from false reports (printed in the "Life of Ormonde," iii. 71). A Proclamation sent to the Sheriff of Yorkshire, ordering him to for- bid the militia (in print). Proclamation for gentlemen to appear at York for the King's guard. Declaration by the Parliament of Ireland of the distressed condition of the Protestants, and Address to the Parliament of England. Petition of the Officers of the Irish Army to the King. Dates of Articles of the Treaty for reducing Ireland between the Scotch Com- missioners and those of the Parliament of England (29 Nov. 1643 and 20 Oct. 1646). An Ordinance of Parliament for issuing money for Ireland. Relation of Edgehill fight (printed in "Carte's Ormonde Papers/' vol. i. p. 9). Vol. 4, formerly marked " D," folio. Letters, mostly original, and chiefly from persons already mentioned addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, from October 1642 to March 1643. Also drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters, and the correspondence between the King's Commissioners and the Supreme Council of the Confederate Roman Catholics, touching a Cessation of Arms. Many of these letters are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 7o-14.3. Abo miscellaneous papers, such as Orders concerning Mr. Jerome and his lecture. Depositions. Bull of Pope Urban VIII. to the Irish (copy, on vellum). Discourse between an English and Irish Councillor of State about the causes of the insurrection. Petitions of persons who sub- mitted to Ormonde and were kept prisoners in Dublin Castle. Protest by the Bishops of England against the proceedings of the House of Lords during the tumults (in print). A Petition from Kent to the House of Commons. Letter from the Officers of the Irish Army to the English Parliament. "Pythias and Damon," a dialogue about the conduct of Irish affairs and the cruelties on both sides, with a project for peace. Declaration of the King to the County of Galway against the Rebels (printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 119). Letter from the Officers of the Army to the King (printed lb. p. 129). Resolutions of the Lords in England on the propositions for peace brought up by the Commons. The King's answer. Reasons against the Cessation of Arms offered to the Lords Justices of Ireland by the Houses of Parliament. "Remon- si ranee" of the Irish Roman Catholics (printed in the "Life of Ormonde." vol. iii. p. 136). Vol. o, formerly marked " E," folio. Letters, mostly original, and generally addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, between March and July 1643, from many of the same persons 16 as in the preceding volumes ; also from the Irish Commissioners for the Cessation of Arms, from Lord Antrim, Cromwell and Lambert, General Preston, Colonel Crawford, Sir G. Hamilton, Sir Frederick Hamilton, Sir Luke Fitzgerald, Arthur Trevor, Owen O'Neil, and others. They relate to Irish and English affairs, but chiefly to L'ish. Also drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Miscellaneous papers. — Depositions. Petitions. Representation to the King of the wants of the Irish Army. Proclamation for Papists to depart from Dublin. The King's Commission to Ormonde to treat with the Irish. Orders by the Lords Justices of Ireland; &c. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 130-16'i, and one in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. p. 19. Vol. 6, formerly marked " F," folio. Letters, dated from July to September 1643, mostly original, and generally addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, from Prince Rupert, the Irish Commissioners for the Cessation of Arms, and many of the same per- sons as in the preceding volumes. A few are in cipher, but deciphered. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's letters. Miscellaneous papers, such as — Letter from the Speakers of both Houses of Parliament to Ormonde and Lord Lisle. Covenant established in the General Assembly at Edinburgh, 17th August 1643 (copy). Proclamation by the King for standing by the Covenant and arming the kingdom of Scotland, 18th Aug. (in print). Letters from the Estates of Scotland to the Army in Ireland. Letter from General Monro and Officers to the Estates of Scotland about the Cessation of Arms. Propo- sitions of the Irish Commissioners about the "Quarters." Instrument of the Cessation of Arms signed by both sides (original). Proclamation by the Supreme Council for observing the Cessation of Arms (in print). Some of the above-mentioned letters and papers are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 166-174. Vol. 7, formerly marked " G," folio. Letters (mostly original) addressed to Ormonde, and dated in October and November 1643, from many of the persons already mentioned, and from Queen Henrietta Maria. .Lord Digby, Lord Thomond, Colonel Larry, Sir U. Barnewall, N. Plunkett, Sir R. Talbot, R. Bellings, Colonel Trafford, Sir Lucas Dillon, Edmund Butler, &c. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Correspondence of Ormonde with Lord Muskery and other Irish Commissioners. Proclamation by the King against the Solemn League and Covenant, 9th Oct. ''Grounds and motives" inducing the King to a Cessation of Arms. Instructions from the Committee of the Estates to the Committees of War in Scotland. Propositions agreed upon by the Scotch and English Commissioners at Edinburgh; &c. Some of the above letters and papers are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 17-3-213. (N.B. A letter from the Lords .Justices — printed in the "Life of Ormonde," iii. 183 — is not now in the volume.) Vol. 8, formerly marked "II," folio. Letters (nearly all original) addressed chiefly to the Marquis of Ormonde, and dated in December 1 6 13 and January 1644. They relate to Irish affairs for the most part, and are from the King, Queen Henrietta Maria, Prince Rupert, the Archbishop of York, the Bishop of Downe, Lords Moore, .Montgomery, Clanricarde, Digby, Inchiquin, Cork, 17 Esmond, Byron, and Strafford ; Sir Edward Nicholas the King's secre- tary ; Sir Robert Stewart, Arthur Trevor, Sir R. Barnewall, Sir Hardress Waller, Sir Henry Tichborne, Sir Luke Fitzgerald, R. Bellings, Sir John Giffarde, Sir Rob. Newcomen, Sir James Montgomery, Colonels Owen O'Neil and Rob. Byron, and other officera of the army in Ireland. A few in cipher. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's letters to the King and some of the persons above mentioned. Ormonde's correspondence with Lord Muskery and other commis- sioners for the Cessation of Arms. Copies of orders and letters from the Lords Justices and Council of Ireland. Remonstrance of tbe English Parliament against the Cessation of Arms. Letter from Irish Officers to the Committee of both Houses of Parliament in Scotland (copy). Pro- clamation by the Lords Justices against the " Solemn League and Covenant" (printed, two copies), with a copy of the "Covenant" and many papers respecting it. Petition from the Protestants in the North of Ireland to the Estates of Scotland. Declaration of the kingdoms of England and Scotland. Letter from the Committee of the House of Commons and Adventurers in England to the Officers in the North of Ireland. Declaration of the kingdom of Scotland concerning the expedition to Englaud. Petitions addressed to Ormonde. Letter from Lord Dillon, &c, accusing Sir W. Parsons and others of treason. Forms of oaths denouncing the Covenant and the Rebellion in England. Coat of arms (Ormonde's) ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 206-232, and in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 23-34. Vol. 9, formerly marked " I," folio. Letters (nearly all original) addressed mostly to Ormonde, from January to March 1644, relating principally to Irish affairs, from the King and Queen, Prince Rupert, the Bishops of Deny and Cloyne, Lords Derby, Thomond, Antrim, Pagett, Howth, and Roscommon, the Marquis of Newcastle, Lady Claneboy, John Bowen, Sir Lucas Dillon, Sir W. Stewart, Sir Francis Willoughby, Sir W. Parsons, Sir Rob. Newcomen, General Monroe, Colonel Arthur Chichester, Torlogh O'Neil. Sir William Cole, Sir Philip Percival, Rob. Thornton Mayor of Londonderry ; Sir Maurice Fitzgerald and other commissioners in Kildare ; Daniel O'Neil, Richard Spencer, and others before mentioned. Some are in cipher. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters to some of the above persons, and his correspondence with Lord Muskery and other Irish Commissioners. Letters and resolutions of Lord Montgarret and other members of the Supreme Council of the Confederate Catholics. Petitions to the King and Ormonde. Letter from the Chairman of the Committee (of the Commons) for Irish affairs to the Army in Ulster. Copy of a letter from the Speakers of both Houses of Parliament to the King. Instructions given by the Irish Protestants to their Agents sent to the King. Propositions of the Irish Roman Catholics. Other papers relative to Ireland, and the sending of Irish troops to Englaud in aid of the King. Some of the above arc printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 233-263: and one in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. p. 40. Vol. 10, formerly marked " K, " folio. Letters (nearly all original) dated from March to May 1644, and addressed chiefly to Ormonde. They relate for the most part to Irish affairs, and are from the Duchess of Buckingham, the Countess of B 18 Tyrconnel, Lords Taafte, Blaney, Montrose, and Bnlkley, Sir Til, Wharton, Sir G. Wentworth, Sir J. Sherlock, Sir G. Radcliffe, Major Beisley, Patrick Archer, and others previously mentioned, with some from the Supreme Council of the Confederate Catholics. A few are in cipher. Also many drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Petitions to the King and Ormonde. Latin oration to Ormonde. Propositions of the Supreme Council to the Earl of Antrim. Letter from the Chancellor of Scotland to the officers in the North of Ireland, (copy). Propositions of the Roman Catholics (two copies). Petition of the Agents for the Protestants of Ireland (copy). Letter from the Speakers of the Irish Parliament to the Army, concerning the " Solemn League and Covenant " (copy). Letter from the British Officers in Ulster to the English Parliament (copy). Protestation by Scotch Lords and others against the Rebellion in England and Scotland. De- claration of the Gentry of Leinster and Munster that they intend no harm to Protestants who will take the oath of obedience to the King. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 264-308. Vol. 11, formerly marked "L," folio. Letters (nearly all original) dated from May to July 1644, and addressed chiefly to Ormonde, from the Archbishop of Armagh, the Earl of Kildare, Lords Jermyn, Castlehaven, Dillon (president of Connaught), and Broghill, Majors Jones and Seafoule Gibson, Dr. Loftus, Colonel Hugh Byrne, Lieut. -Col. Edward Mathew, Col. Audley Mervyn, Sir Robert Poyntz, P. Wemys, and many other persons before mentioned. Some are in cipher. Drafts, duplicates, and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Petitions to the King and Ormonde. Orders, &c, of the Lord Lieutenant (Ormonde) and the Council of Ireland. Form of Oath of Allegiance to the King. Depositions. Letters from the Supreme Council of the Confederate Roman Catholics. A Petition to the Supreme Council. Copy of its printed Proclamation against the Scotch Army in Ulster. Letter from the Earls of Thomond and Clanricarde and others to the King, on the state of Ireland. Copy of letter from Lord Inchiquin and other Protestants of Munster to the King. Copies of several of Inchiquin's letters. Petition of Gentlemen of Kerry for their Governor Sir Piers Crosby to be continued in his office. Orders made at the General Assembly at Kilkenny as to the proceedings of the Judicature appointed by it. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 309-340 ; and in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 48-55. Vol. 12, formerly marked "M," folio. Letters (nearly all original) dated from August to November 1644, addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, from Lords Derby, Kilmallock, and Clanebov, Lady Moore ; Lord Mu skery, Lambert, Nicholas Plun- kett, and other Roman Catholic Commissioners ; the Mayor and Sheriffs of Cork, Sir Charles Coote, Sir John Mennes, Dr. Fennell, Endymion Porter, George Can-, Humphrey Galbraith,MortoghO'Hartegan, Edmund Seaman, and others before mentioned. They relate to Irish affairs occasionally alluding to passing events in England. Some are in cipher. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's Letters. Original Letters of the Lord Lieutenant and Council. Orders by Lord [nchiquin at Cork (copies). Enchiquin's Declaration as to the Covenant. Depositions. Abstract of a Declaration of the Protestants of Munster, with their Petition. Daniel O'Neil's Propositions respecting 19 Irish affairs. The King's Answer. Order of the House of Commons fbr a Meeting of the Adventurers (printed). Order by the Com- i doners of the General Assembly of Confederate Catholics. Narra- tive of the Defeat of the Rebels in Cornwall, by Edward Walker. Propositions of the Roman Catholics. Debate on them between the ...nil Chancellor of Ireland and the Irish Commissioners. Answers pf the Catholics to Ormonde's demands. Agreement between Ormonde and the Catholic Commissioners as to the "fourth sheaf" demanded from protected lands in the "quarters" of the Catholics. Proclamation by the King for proroguing the Parliament at Oxford (printed). Copy of the King's Proclamation "for settling speedy peace," dated at Exeter, 30th September 1644. Letter of Mr. Byrne, a Scotch minister in Ireland, complaining of a letter of the Mayor of Londonderry. The Mayor's justification of his letter. Letters from George Lane, Ormonde's secretary, to various persons. Proclamation for the continuance of the C Jessation of Arms (printed). Form of an Oath (taken in Munster) to aid the King against tin- Earl of Essex's army. Fox-mof an Oath (tendered in Connaught) not to surrender a fort without consent of the Parliament at Westminster ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iiL pp. 341-360 ; and in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 60-67. Vol. 13, formerly marked "N," folio. Letters (nearly all original) dated in December 1644, and January 164.1 ; addressed mostly to Ormonde, from the Supreme Council of the Con- federate Catholics, Lord Brabazon, William Vaughan, Charles Townley, Edward Billingsley, Worsley Batten, R. Swanley, Captain John Bart- lett, and others before mentioned. They relate chiefly to Irish affairs. A few are in cipher (deciphered). Drafts and copies of Ormonde's own papers. Petitions. Copies of Letters of Mr. George Lane. Correspondence concerning the continuance of the Cessation of Arms. Papers concerning Lord Inchiquin's proceedings at Cork. Information from the Governor of the Isle of Man of a design of the Parliament forces against Dublin. " Causes of a solemn Fast and Humiliation" to be kept in Scotland. Letter from Loudon, Chancellor of Scotland, to Lord Ardes and his regiment in Ireland. A Tract on Queries said to be propounded by the Protestants. "Disquisition touching that great question, whether an " Act of Parliament made in England shall bind the Kingdom and " People of Ireland," &c. Petition of the Protestant Forces and Subjects in Munster. Narrative of the King's affairs in the West of England since the defeat of the Earl of Essex in Cornwall. Papers respecting a Plot to betray Drogheda. Agreement between Ormonde and the Catholic Commissioners for adjourning the conclusion of the treaty (printed). Copy of the Order of the Scotch Convention for the return of their Army from Ireland. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 361-374, and one in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. p. 96. Vol. 14, formerly marked " O," folio. Letters (nearly all original) to the Marquis of Ormonde, from tin,' King, Prince Charles, Prince Maurice ; Lord Bulkeley, and other I i - tnissioners in Anglesea ; Lord Grandison, Lord Claneboy, Sir James Gallaway, General Monroe, Patrick Darcy, Captain John Ponsonby, Captain Humphrey Burrough, Robert King, Edward Hyde, and many other persons before mentioned. They are dated between February and May 1645. A few arc in cipher (generally deciphered). B 2 20 Drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Papers of News from England and Scotland. Depositions. Petitions. Correspondence of Ormonde with the Catholic Commissioners and the Supreme Council. " Reasons presented by Don Francisco Poissott, Agent for His Catholic " Majesty with the Confederate Catholics, in Ireland for seizing of the " ships and goods brought into Galway by Captain John Brooks." Printed Copy of a Bull in favour of the Friars Minors in Ireland. Orders of the Lord Lieutenant and Council. Letters from the British Army in Ulster to the two Houses of Parliament in England (copy). The Supreme Council's Commission to Lord Montgarret and others to treat for Peace or a further Cessation of Arms. Names of the Irish Gentlemen who have subscribed to the "Vow and Covenant." Demands of the King and the Protestant Party from the Confederate Catholics. Answers of the latter. Concessions of the King to the Catholics. Declaration of the British Army in Ulster that they will do nothing prejudicial to the Covenant. Order of the General Assembly of Confederate Catholics for the apprehension of marauders ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 376-412, and in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 73-90. Vol. 15, formerly marked "P," folio. Letters (nearly all original) from June to September 1645, addressed chiefly to the Marquis of Ormonde, from the Catholic Commissioners, the Earls of Peterborough, Westmeath, Glamorgan, Bath, and Brainford, Lords Ardglass, TaafFe, Lady Esmond, Henry Bishop of Elphin, Luke Taaffe, Sir Francis Hamilton, Sir George Hamilton, Sir Nicholas Byron, Sir Maurice Eustace, Sir Edmund Verney, Sir Mar. Langdale, Captain Francis King, Robert Clarke, and many of the persons already mentioned. They relate principally to Irish affairs, and some are in cipher (deciphered). There are also drafts and copies of Oi'monde's own letters. Orders of the Lord Lieutenant and Council. Petitions. Many Papers concerning the proposed Peace with the Confederates. Depositions. Letter from the King after the Battle of Naseby ordering Ormonde personally to convey as many troops as possible to England (copy). Letter written by the King's order to the Catholic Commis- sioners, censuring their immoderate demands in his extremity. Letter from the Irish Bishops answering two queries of the Catholics. Pro- positions for fitting out ships for the King's service, to bring 5,000 soldiers from Ireland to England. Articles of Agreement between the Earl of Glamorgan, the King's Commissioner, and the Catholic Commis- sioners (copy). Papers relating to the garrison of Jamestown. Order by the General Assembly of Confederates that the Oath of Association be binding till the Peace be ratified by an Irish Parliament (two copies). Relation of the surrender of Elphin Castle to Lord Dillon, President of Connaught. Propositions to Ormonde for the Relief of Carnarvon, &c. Some of the above are printed in the ''Life of Ormonde," vol. iii., pp. 413-427 and p. 47^, and in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. p. 90. Vol. 16, formerly marked "Q," folio. Letters (nearly all original) dated from October 1645 to March 1646, ami addressed mostly to Ormonde, from the Duke of Lorraine (at Brus- sels, the Bishop ofRaphoe, Lord Ranelagh, W. Cadogan, Du Moulin (ri idenl Ambassador of France in Ireland), Sir Fulk Houncks, Major Richard Perkins, Colonel George Monck, Captain Edward Trevor, Edward Crofton, ami others before mentioned ; some are in cipher. Dial!- and copies of Ormonde's own letters. Papers relating to the proposed Tr< aty with the Confederate Catholics (disputes about statutes 21 of Elizabeth, &c.) Petitions. Correspondence of Mr. George Lane, Ormonde's chief Secretary. Latin Oration before Ormonde by Angell Goulding. Ormonde's Instructions to some one he sends to the King, wishing to resign the Lieutenancy. Instructions to Rinuccini, Nuncio in Ireland (Italian). Letters of " M. M." at Paris for " S. G." Letters from the Supreme Council and the Catholic Commissioners. Copy of an Order by the Irish Council for the Kail of Glamorgan's im- prisonment. Interrogatories put to him, and other papers. Long Letter from the Council to Secretary Nicholas respecting him (copy). Orders by the General Assembly of Confederates concerning the Revenue for maintaining the Army, &c. Depositions. Order by the General Assembly as to the forces going to England, with Glamorgan's Declaration as to the state of affairs (printed). Copy of the Articles of Agreement between Glamorgan and the Catholic Commissioners. Supreme Council's Order requiring all military and civil officers to aid Glamorgan in raising troops for the King's service and the expulsion of the parliamentary forces -which have Landed in the Shannon. "His " Majesty's Message to both Houses of Parliament at Westminster, '• sent from Oxford, 23th Martii, 1645 ; to be read in all Churches and " Chapels, whereby the people may rest satisfied how great a desire His " Majesty hath to ease them of the burthen of the War" (copy). Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 428-450. Vol. 17, formerly marked " R," folio. Letters (mostly original) dated from March to June 1646, from the Roman Catholic Commissioners, Lord Castlestewart, Sir Charles Coote, Sir J. Borlase, Sir Piers Crosbie, Captain J. Crowther, Edmund Magrath, Patrick Nettervill, and Robert Moulton, and from many persons already mentioned. They relate for the most part to the affairs of Ireland, and are generally addressed to Ormonde. Some are in cipher. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's letters. Petitions. Printed copy of a letter from the King, declaring his intention to put himself into the hands of the Scotch army lying before Newark (Oxford, 3 April 1646). " His Majesty's Message to the kingdom of Scotland " (copy). Copy of his Letter to the Speaker of the House of Lords. Lane's correspondence.. Letter from the Commissioners of the Scotch Parliament to the Com- missioners of the English Parliament, announcing the King's sudden coming into their army (5 May). Correspondence of Ormonde and the Council with the English and Scotch Commissioners in the North of Ireland. Narrative of the manner in which the King was brought into Newcastle by General Leslie. Supreme Council's Instructions to Mr. Plunkett. The King's Message to the Parliament at Westminster and the Commissioners of Scotland. Letters from the Lieutenant and Council to the King, the Privy Council, and others. " A Perfect List " of the many Victories by God's Blessing upon the Parliament's " Forces under the command of His Excellency Sir Thomas Fairfax * (from June 1645 to April 1646), with a portrait of Fairfax (printed). Printed copy of a letter from Lieut. -Col. John Lilburne to the keeper of Newgate, protesting against his being tried before the House of Lords. " Some of the Reasons which necessitated the Stay of the " Ten Thousand Men agreed on the Treaty to be sent to England." Order by Ormonde respecting the King's grant to Mr. Edward Walsingham of " the benefit of making two baronets." u Arguments " proving that we ought not to part with the Militia to the Kinir. nor " indeed to any other but the Honourable House of Commons," dated at London, June 1646 (printed), &c. 22 Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 451-486 ; and in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 95 and 109. Vol. 1 8, formerly marked " S," folio. Letters (mostly original), from July to September 1646, addressed chiefly to Ormonde, from various persons, most of whom have already been mentioned. Some are in cipher, but generally deciphered. Also drafts and copies of the Marquis's letters. Printed Proclamation of the General Assembly as to protestations lately made against the Peace. Papers concerning the Peace with the Confederate Catholics. Orders of the Lord Lieutenant and Council (copies). Depositions. Petitions. The Bishop of Meath's paper approving the Peace, endorsed by the rest of the Bishops. Papers respecting the Condition of the Province of Leinster. "Remonstrance" of the Bishops and Clergy of Ireland to Ormonde, thanking him for his efforts for their welfare, signed by 1 1 Bishops and about 80 of the Clergy (original and copy). Sentence of Excommunication by the Nuncio and Irish Clergy against the favourers of the Peace (printed). Ormonde's Proposals to the Parliament Com- missioners for prosecuting the War against the L-ish Rebels (copy). Order of the Congregation at Kilkenny to the Confederate Forces QQt to plunder the Roman Catholics in the English Quarters (printed); &c. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 488-503. Vol. 19, formerly marked " T," folio. Original letters and copies of letters from October to December 1646, addressed chiefly to Ormonde, and relating to Irish affairs. They are from the King, the Queen (at St. Germain), the Prince of Wales, Lady Jephson, Sir Maurice Eustace, and many others whose names have been previously given. Drafts and copies of the Marquis's own letters. His correspondence with the Council of Ireland, and with the Parliament and Scotch Com- missioners. Numerous papers relative to his negotiations with the Parliament's Commissioners, who offer assistance against the Rebels, &c. Petitions. Letter from the King of France to the Confederate Catholics of Ireland (copy, in English). Votes of the English House of Commons. Powers given by the Committee at Derby House to their Commissioners. Correspondence of Ormonde with the Scotch Army. General Preston and his Officers' Declaration to conform to the Peace (copy). Reasons for delivering up Dublin to the Parliament. Papers respecting Lord Clan- ricarde's Negotiations with the Nuncio and Supreme Council. State of Ireland, l>y Sir W. Parsons, sent to the Committee of Derby House. Order by the Supreme Council and Congregation for those of the adverse party to be put to death, the Cessation of Arms having expired (two popies). Letter from the King to the Officers in the North of Ireland ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 503-535. Vol. 20, formerly marked " U," folio. Letters (nearly all original), from January to April 1647, addressed chiefly to the Marquis of Ormonde. They relate to Irish affairs, and are chiefly from persons already mentioned. Also drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters, one to the King of France. Petitions. Pro- position of the Irish Bishops to \\n- General Assembly at Kilkenny. M. <^i Moulin's Memoir to Ormonde. Overtures for an Accommodation 23 by the General Assembly. Du Moulin's Memoirs to the General Assembly. Letter from the Parliament Commissioners to the Committee at Derby House. Order by Ormonde and the Council of Ireland for applying to the English Parliament in order to quit the Government. Exconnnunieation by the Nuncio of Mr. Edmund Butler. Articles for a Cessation of Arms. Commission to Lord Digby to treat with Foreign Powers. Condition of the part of Ireland subject to the King, to be re- presented by Digby to the King and Queen (signed by Ormonde and the Council). Ormonde's correspondence with the Committee at Derby House. Letters from the Committee at Derby House to their Commissioners. Petition of the Distressed Clergy in Dublin to the Parliament. The King's Answer to the Petition of the Army in England, &c. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 536-550, and one in vol. ii., Appendix, p. 14. Vol. 21, formerly marked " V," folio. Letters (chiefly original), from May to December 1647, addressed generally to the Marquis of Ormonde, from the Marquis of Worcester, Lord Strafford, Lord Cavan, Dr. Dudley Loftus, Winter Grant, and many of the persons already mentioned, with drafts and copies of Ormonde's letter-. A lew are in cipher. Petitions. Correspondence of Ormonde with the Committee at Derby House and with their Commissioners. The King's Answer to the Propositions of the two Houses, sent to him at Newcastle. Paper for procuring a happy Peace in England. Agree- ment of the Commissioners to pay 13,000/. Petition of the Clergy against the proposed discontinuance of the Common Prayer. Instruc- tions for M. de Bellievre, Ambassador in England. Draft of an Engagement to the King of France. Proclamation by the Parliament Commissioners. Petitions of the Distressed Clergy in Dublin. Considerations for pre- serving Ireland during the distractions in England, presented to the Com- mittee by Mr. Slingsby. Declaration of the House of Commons upon the King's being carried from Holdenby. Summary Relation of the Affairs of Ireland from the Peace till the time Dublin was given up to the Parliament. Proceedings of the newly-moulded Army from its formation in 1645, till the King's going into the Isle of Wight, by Colonel Wogan. Letter from the King to Sir Kenelm Digby, authorizing the Queen to stipulate for him. Memoir for Cardinal Mazarin, in Ormonde's hand ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 552-574, and in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 126-159, and vol. ii. p. 349. Vol. 22, formerly marked " W," folio. The correspondence of the Marquis of Ormonde, chiefly with persons already mentioned, from January to November 1648 ; some of the letters being in cipher. Decrees of the General Assembly and Supreme Council of Catholics. Private Instructions to Winter Grant by the Queen and the Prince of Wales. Orders of the Committee of Derby Ilouse and their Commissioners. Propositions presented to the Queen and Prince in behalf of the Confederate Catholics. Speech of Captain Oliver French, agent of the Supreme Council, to the Slate- General of the United Provinces. Articles of Agreement between Lord Inchiquin and the Supreme Council. The Nuncio's Excommunication of the Adherents to the Cessation of Arms. His Letter to the Pope. Papers about Sir M. Eustace and other Prisoners in Dublin. Account of the Battle of Preston. Declaration of the General Assembly against the Nuncio. Resolutions of the States General as to the Irish Roman Catholics. The King of France's Pass for the Marquis of Ormonde. 24 Propositions by King Charles I. to the two Houses for an Accommo- dation. The King's Answers to the Propositions about the Church, when he was at Newport. Extract from a Letter of the King to the Queen. Articles of a new Address from the Parliament to the King. Papers relative to the negotiations between Ormonde and the Commissioners of the Confederate Catholics. Messages from the Scotch Parliament to Lord Inchiquin and to the King. Declaration by Ormonde. Memorials about the Prince of Wales's coming into Ireland. News letters. Agreement of the Marquis of Ormonde and Sir R. Blake to continue the Cessation of Arms ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 574-595, and in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 159-194, and vol. ii. pp. 351-358. Vol. 23, formerly marked « X," folio. The correspondence of the Marquis of Ormonde with many of the persons whose names have been already mentioned, from December 1648 to February 1649. Papers relative to the negotiations of Ormonde with the Commissioners of the General Assembly for Peace. Orders of the Assembly. Acts for prolonging the Cessation. Ordinance of Parliament for bringing the King to Trial. Lord Inchiquin's Queries to the Protestant Clergy. Their Answer. King Charles I.'s Speech before the High Court of Justice. News letters. Prince Rupert's Pro- posals to Ormonde with the latter's Answers. Proclamation declaring Ormonde Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Papers concerning Owen O'Neil. Declaration of King Charles II. confirming the Peace ; &c. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol, iii. pp. 596-608, and in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 197-213. Vol. 24, formerly marked " Y," folio. The letters contained in this volume are chiefly originals and original drafts. They form the correspondence of Ormonde with persons already mentioned and others, between February and May 1649. Some are in cipher. News letters from home and abroad. Letter from the Marquis of Ormonde to the Committee of Derby House. Letter from Ormonde to the Scotch Commissioners. Paper delivered by the Lords of the King's Council to the Deputies of the States General, 29 March 1649. Ormonde's Commission to Lord Ardes to be Commander-in-Chief of nil the British Forces in Ulster. The King's Instructions to Colonel W. Legg sent into Ireland. Depositions. The King's Instructions to Sir Robert Stewart ; &c. Some of the above are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 217-289, and in vol. ii. pp. 353-379. Vol. 25, formerly marked " Z," folio. Letters (nearly all original) addressed chiefly to the Marquis of Ormonde, dated from June t<> October 1649, from King Cliarles II., Queeu Henrietta Maria, Prince Rupert, the States General of Holland, Secretary Long, Sir Edward Nicholas, Lords Byron, Clanricarde, Moore, Jermyn, Clanbrazil, Aides, and Ardglass, John Wandesford, De Brune (the Dutch Agent), R. Fanshaw, the Mayor of Wexford, Daniel O'Neil, Lieut. -Col. Acheson, M. Trevor, Sir A. Aston, the Bishop of Cloyne, and others previously mentioned. They relate to public affairs, chiefly to those of Ireland ; some arc in cipher. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's own letters io some of the same persons. In- nee about Cromwell's design on Minister or Dublin. Letter from the Parliament of Scotland to the King. Ormonde's Proclamation that the Protestanl Clergy do not intrude into the Churches of the Roman 25 Catholics. Instructions for the Bishop of Raphoe and Colonel Mervyn in their negotiation with Owen O'Neil. The King's Instructions for Father Talbot sent to Ireland. Oliver Cromwell's Summonses to Drog- heda and Boss. Earl of Castlehaven's Orders to Sir Edmund Butler, Governor of Wexford, and to W. Bagnal, to raise their forces. Papers concerning Owen O'Neil. Letter from Cromwell to the Commander in Wexford. Major Birne's Relation of Cromwell's Army ; &c. Some of the above are printed in vol. i. of " Carte's Ormonde Papers," pp. 290-326, and in vol. ii. pp. 383-407. Vol. 26, formerly marked " AA," folio. The correspondence of Ormonde with many of the persons already mentioned, from October 1649 to February 1650. The letters are chiefly original and original drafts. Some are in cipher. Papers relative to the siege of Waterford. Letter from the King to his Ambassador in Spain about a Supply for Ireland. Narrative of Events after the Defeat at Rathmines. Treatise, entitled " No " Papist nor Presbyterian ; but Modest Desires and Proposals of " some Well Affected and Free Born People, offered to the General " Council of the Army," &c. Declaration of the King of France against the most horrid Proceedings of a Rebellious Party of Parliament Men and Soldiers in England against the King and Country. Letter from Cromwell to Major-General Hugh O'Neil, Governor of ClonmelL Depositions. Letters from Colonel Tickle to Cromwell. Cromwell's Declaration. Answer of the Gentry of Ulster to Lord Clanricarde's- Proposals. Letter of Salmasius about the Murder of King Charles I. Letter from Cromwell to the Parliament Commander at Dungarvan. Cromwell's Summons of Cahir ; &c. Some of the above are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 331-358, and in vol. ii. pp. 413-424. Vol. 27, formerly marked " BB," folio. Letters (nearly all original), dated from March to June 1650, and! mostly addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, from the Princess Royal, the Duke of Lorraine, the Commissioners of Trust, the Abps. of Cashel and Tuam, the Bps. of Clogher and Deny, Dean Boyle, Lords Muskery, Inchiquin, Dillon, Castleconnel, and Roche, the Mayor of Limerick, Sir G. Monro, Sir G. Grenville, Sir II. de Vic, Sir J. Preston, Sir Lewis Dyve, Sir R. Everand, Dr. Fennell, Colonel Synnot, J. Walsh, Hugh Rochfort, and others already mentioned. They relate chiefly to Irish affairs. Drafts of Letters from Ormonde, one to Oliver Cromwell. Colonel Hewson's Considerations offered to Cromwell. The King's Instructions to Ormonde. Letter from H. Ireton to Major F. Bolton. Propositions of Lord Clanricarde to the Bishops at Limerick. The Queen's Instruc- tions to Lord Byron. Remedies to remove the Discontents and Mis- trusts of the People, proposed by the Clergy and the Commissioners of Trust. Letter from the Citizens of Cork to Ireton. Letter from Lord Broghill to Cromwell. Letter from Cromwell to Ireton, President of Munster. Declaration of the Bishops at Limerick, presented to Ormonde. The King's Instructions to Sir H. de Vic and Mr. Rochfort. Letter from Robert Sterling to Dean Boyle, with Cromwell's Pass. Letters between the Bishop of Clogher and Sir G. Monro. Cromwell's Protection to Lady Mary Hamilton. Cromwell's Pass for Ormonde. Letter from Dean Boyle to Cromwell. Cromwell's Pass for Lady Inchiquin. A few Letters to George Lane, Ormonde's secretary. Instructions for Lord Taafe ; &c. 26 Some of the above are printed in ;i Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 359-378, and in vol. ii. pp. 365 and 426. Vol. 28, formerly marked " CC," folio. Correspondence of the Marquis of Ormonde with persons before mentioned, and others, from June to November 1650. The letters are mostly originals and original drafts. Instrument of the city of Limerick at give free passage to the King's forces. Instructions to Lord Taafe and others to treat with Colonel Synnot. Ormonde's Commission to them. Instructions to Hugh O'Neil and J. Walsh to treat with Lime- rick. Relation of the Unlawful Proceedings of the Young Men of Gal- way. Letter from Lord Clanricarde to the Bishop of Cashel and Prelates at Limerick. Papers concerning affairs in Gal way. Letter from the Duke of York to the Duke of Lorraine. Letter from Bankers at Rouen to a Banker at Middleburg. Declaration of the Prelates at Jamestown against Ormonde. Remonstrance of the Officers of the Army to the Estates of Scotland. Lord Antrim's Declaration. Cad- well's Relation of the Battle between the Scots and Cromwell. Decla- ration of Lords and Gentry with respect to the Clergy's Excommunica- tion. Proposition to the Spanish Ambassador by Daniel O'lSeil. Dean King's Relation to Ormonde of the King's condition in Scotland. Narrative of the King's Conferences with Dr. King. Address of the Jersey Soldiers to the King ; &c. Some of the above are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 380-399, and in vol. ii. pp. 427-445. Vol. 29, formerly marked " DD," folio. Correspondence of the Marquis of Ormonde with persons before mentioned, and others, from December 1650 to January 1652. The let- ters are chiefly originals and original drafts. Letters to the Marchioness of Ormonde and Lady Isabella Thymic, at Paris. Letters to and from George Lane. Draft of Ormonde's Commission to Lord Clanricarde. Lord Clanricarde's Propositions to the General Assembly before taking the Government. Letters from Clanricarde to Sir R. Blake, Chairman of the General Assembly. Powers given by the Duke of Lorraine to the A 1 d >('■ S. Catherine. Articles that His Majesty is desired to grant the Roman Catholics. Instructions for the Archbishop of Tnam and Sir L. Dillon, sent to Limerick. Intelligence of Breton's Designs. Letter from the King to Don Juan, for confining Sir Robert Walsh. Papers about the Treaty with the Duke of Lorraine. Letters from Perth. List of the Committee of Estates chosen at the Parliament at Perth. Letter from the Duke of Lorraine to the Pope. The King's Instructions to Dean King. " Articuli Transactionis inter Lotaringiae Ducem et '• Theobaldum V. Taafe, &c, Deputatos Regni et Populi Hibernise ; « &c." Some of the above are printed in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 397-472, and in vol. ii. pp. 1-45, and 446-464. Vol. 30, formerly marked " EE," folio. The contents of this volume are nearly all originals. A few deeds of early dale ; one being a conveyance from Roger, son of .Miles Pon er, to Sir Edmund Butler, dated 12Edw, II. An account of Tl ia-, son of Gerald, Earl of Kildare, with a letter to him, 1535. Papers relating to several Earlsof ( Ormonde, temp. Hen. VI., Hen. VIII., and Eliz. Letters from Queen Elizabeth, King James I., and the Councils of England and Ireland, principally addressed to the Earl of Ormonde. A number of letters and papers relating to Irish matters dining the reigns of James I. and Charles I. Letters from Lord Falkland. Sir W. Parsons, and others, to the Duke of Buckingham, 1623-1625. Papers respecting the Ormonde estates. Letters from Prince Rupert, Prince Charles, the Duke of York, the Duke of Neuburg, Sir II. de Vic, Lord Chancellor Hyde, Lord Mordant, Lord Jerinyn, Father Talbot, Abraham Cowley, Mary Knatchbull, Abhess of Gand, Diana de Moll, and many others, to James Marquis of Ormonde, wilh a few to the King, during the time of the Civil War and the Commonwealth. Some of the letters are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers,'' 8vo, vol. ii. pp. 52-347. Vol. 31, formerly marked " FF," folio. Original and holograph letters, dated from July 16G0 to September 1662. generally addressed to the Duke of Ormonde, or to his Secretary Sir George Lane, from the King, the Duke of Albemarle, Lord Chancellor Eustace, Lords Montrath, Ardes, Clanricarde, Aungier, and Kildare, Sir Paul Davys, Sir Audley Mervyn, Sir Edward Nicholas, Sir G. Hamilton, and others. They relate principally to public affairs, and interspersed among them are papers relative to various subjects. A i\-\v letters from Ormonde, one of which, addressed to Sir J. Temple, Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, is printed in the Appendix to the second volume of the Life of Ormonde, page 20. Vol. 32, formerly marked " GG," folio. Original and holograph letters from September 1662 to August 1663, addressed principally to the Duke of Ormonde and Sir George Lane, from the King, the Duke of Albemarle, Lord Chancellor Clarendon, the Lords Justices of Ireland, the Bishops of Corke and Kildare, Lords Berkeley and Conway, Sir Francis Dodington, Sir G. Hamilton, Sir James Shaen, Sir Arthur Forbes, Daniel O'Neil, Don Pat. Muledy, Colonel Gorges, and many others. They relate to public affairs — the Act of Uniformity, conspiracy against the King's life, plots in Ireland, and Colonel Blood (with a letter from Blood to Mr. G. Chamberlain), &c. &c. Mixed with the above are many papers relating to the events of the time. Vol. 33, formerly marked " HH," folio. The contents of this volume are chiefly original and holograph letters, addressed to the Duke of Ormonde and Sir George Lane, from December 1661 to Decemher 1664. They are from many of the persons mentioned in the description of vol. 32, and also from the Lord Deputy ami Council of Ireland, the Lord Chancellor Eustace, Archbishop Boyle, Lord Dungannon, Lord Massarene, Sir Thomas Clarges, Sir Rob. Forth, Sir Paul Davys, Sir Henry Tichborne, Sir Allan Broderick, J. Thomp- son, Sir W. Temple, and J. Walsh. They relate mostly to Irish affairs. Among the miscellaneous papers are Orders from the Council in England. Vol. 34, formerly marked " II," folio. This volume consists chiefly of original and holograph letters relating t< Irish affairs, from January 1665 to June 1666, addressed to the Duke of Ormonde and Sir George Lane, from many of the persons iv mentioned, and from the Duke of York, the Duke of Buckingham, Prince de Ligne, the Earls of" St. Albans and Carlingford, Sir Robert i hwell. Sir Theophilus .Jones, Sir Robert Byron, Sir Oliver St. ge, Sir (i. Carteret, &c. Interspersed among them are Petitions to Ormonde, Depositions, Orders of the Council in England, and other i ers, one containing " Reasons why the Patent of the Canara '• Company of England should not extend to Ireland." 28 Vol. 35, formerly marked "KK," folio. Original and holograph letters, dated between July 1666 and No- vember 1667, and relating principally to Irish affairs, with occasional notices of events in England, the Great Fire, &c. They are mostly from persons already mentioned, and are addressed to the Duke of Ormonde and Sir George Lane. Amongst them is a letter from the States General of Holland to Ormonde, in French. There are a few copies of letters. Petitions to the Duke of Ormonde. A few letters from the Duke to several persons, generally drafts or copies. Copy of a letter from the King of France to King Charles II. Depositions. The King's Speech to the English Parliament, January 1667. Letter from the King of France to M. d'Estrades. Orders of the Lord Lieutenant and Council. Declaration of the French King as to the rights of the Queen of France, published in the Low Countries (French). Procla- mation for dispersing the unlawful assemblies near Chichester House, August 1667 (copy). Heads of the charge against Lord Clarendon. Narrative of the proceedings in Portugal for discharging the Conde de Castelmether (Aug. — Nov. 1667). Vol, 36, formerly marked " LL," folio. Original and holograph letters, from persons already mentioned, and others, to the Duke of Ormonde and Sir George Lane, from December 1667 to December 1668, relating for the most part to Irish affairs and to Ormonde's impeachment. Copy of a Memorial presented by Sir Robert Southwell to the King of Portugal, 12 Dec. 1667. Lord Bristol's Articles of High Treason against Lord Clarendon, with other papers concerning the latter's impeachment. Letters and Orders from the Lord Lieutenant and Council of Ireland, 1662-1668. Petition of the Farmers of Hearth Money. In addition to the above there are many papers relative to various matters, dated from 1661 to 1668. Some relate to the Irish revenue. Vol. 37, formerly marked " MM," folio. A number of original and holograph letters, from 1661 to 1674, addressed chiefly to the Duke of Ormonde and the Earl of Ossory, from the Duke of* Florence, the Lords Justices of Ireland, Lords Strafford and Ranelagh, the Earls of Winchelsea and Donegal, Sir W. Domvile, Sir J. Temple, G. Mathews, and others already mentioned. Papers relating to the dispute between the Earls of Meath andArran, and to Meath's accusations against the Duke of Ormonde. Papers relative to the dispute about the rpiartering of soldiers. Copies of orders and letters of the Councils of England and Ireland. Drafts and copies of Ormonde's letters and papers, with many other papers, dated from 1660-1676, some referring to the negotiations with the Dutch (1672). Vol. 38, formerly marked " NN," folio. The contents of this volume arc chiefly original and holograph letters, from 1673-1679, addressed chiefly to the Duke of Ormonde and re- lating to the public affairs of the period, from the Queen of Bohemia, Chancellor Boyle, the Earls of Essex and Carlingford, Sir T. Wharton, Sir ( >. Lane, Sir W. Temple, Sir J. Temple, Sir J. Cuffe, Sir It. South- well, J. Walsh, ami others. Letters from the King to the Earl of Essex, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. Orders of Council. Letter from the King to iIk' University of Cambridge, for the election of the Duke of Mi n- moutli to be its Chancellor. Duke of Monmouth's Petition to the King, 29 September 167o. Depositions. Papers relative to the proceedings and accounts of the Farmers. Terms of Pence offered by the King of France (1678). Vol. 39, formerly marked " 00," folio. The contents of this volume are letters and papers, nearly all original, dated from 1679 to 1682. Ormonde's Correspondence with Sir R. Southwell. Letters with the King's sign manual. Letters to the Earl of Arran, Lieutenant-General of Ireland ; many from the Commissioners of the Treasury. Correspondence between the Bishop of Meath and Colonel Maunsell. Letters addressed to the Duke of Ormonde, one from Mr. T. Sheridan. Depositions. Notes and Memoranda by the Duke of Ormonde. Papers relative to the Farmers. Petitions to Ormonde ; one from the French Protestants for a settlement. Orders of Council. Answer of Ormonde to the Bishop of Ferns, Avritten when he was in France (draft). Ormonde's Petition to the King against the Earl of Anglesea, with other papers respecting their dispute. Vol. 40, formerly marked " PP," folio. Letters and papers, some original and some copies, from 1662 to 1688. Letters to the Earl of Arran, many from the Commissioners of the Treasury. Petitions, Projects, Depositions, &c, &c. Letters to H. Gascoigne. Orders of the Lord Deputy and Council. Letters to Ormonde, one from W. Penn, dated at Philadelphia, 11 Jan. 168f, very characteristic and giving an account of the country (11 pages) ; another from the Prince of Orange, dated at Abingdon, 12 Dec. 1688. The Duke of Ormonde's report concerning the Earl of St. Alban's, 11 Nov. 1682. Paper prepared by the King, signed by the Duke of Monmouth, and read in Council, 12 Dec. 1683. Letters from the Commissioners of the Kevenue in Ireland to the Commissioners of the Treasury. Two Letters to the Earl of Ossory from the King of Spain and the Prince of Portugal, 1678 and 1679. Papers respecting a dispute between the Treasury and the Duke of Ormonde about an annuity to the latter of 5,000/., &c. Vol. 41, formerly marked "QQ 1," folio. A collection of King Charles II.'s letters under his sign manual, appointing persons to bishoprics and offices in the government and army of Ireland, granting lands, &c. They are dated from June 1660 to March 1661. Vol. 42, formerly marked " QQ2," folio. A collection of the King's letters between March 1661 and September 1662, nearly all originals under the sign manual, relative to Irish matters, granting offices, privileges, pensions, restitution of estates, &c, &c. They are mostly addressed to the Duke of Ormonde and the Chancellor of Ireland, and are enrolled on the Patent Polls of Ireland in the years to which they severally belong. Vol. 43, formerly marked " QQ 3." A collection of King Charles II.'s letters under sign manual, dated from 1660 to 1669, and nearly all addressed to the Duke of Ormonde. They grant offices, pensions, lands, restitution of estates, &c, and are generally enrolled in the Chancery of Ireland. Vol. 44, formerly marked « RR," folio. Papers and letters, some originals, others drafts, relative to the settle- ment of Ireland, dated between 1660 and 1673. Petitions, Orders of 30 Council, &e. &c. Amongst the few letters arc two from the Queen Mother, Henrietta Maria, to the Duke of Ormonde. There are also a few papers of earlier date, and three letters from Lord Strafford to Sir Harry Vane in June 1639. Two of the papers in this volume, contain- ing speeches by Ormonde to the Irish House of Commons, are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. App. pp. 31 and 32. Vol. 4o, formerly marked " SS," folio. Correspondence of the Duke of Ormonde with several Irish Bishops and the Archbishop of Canterbury, and many other letters and papers respecting the Church and Sectaries in Ireland. The letters are very curious and valuable, nearly all being holographs or drafts. The period embraced is from 1660 to 1687. Vol. 46, formerly marked " TT," folio. A collection of very curious and valuable letters from Lord Arlington and Sir H. Bennet to the Duke of Ormonde, from 1660 to 1671, relating to the public affairs of that, period, conspiracies in Ireland and England, declaration of war by France, the war with Holland, the fire of London, the treaty of Breda, the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, &c. There are also a few letters from King Charles II., and one from the King of France. Vol. 47, formerly marked " UU," folio. A large number of original and holograph letters, dated from 1652 to 1683, and addressed for the most part to the Duke of Ormonde, chiefly from the Duke of York, Lord Chancellor Clarendon, Lords Cornbury, Anglesea, and Ossory, Sir W. Temple, Sir E. Nicholas, Sir W. Coventry, and Mr. H. Coventry ; with a few letters from the Duke of Ormonde. The letters of Lord Clarendon are all holographs, and some of them are in cipher, which has been deciphered. There are also some depositions and other papers. Vol. 48, formerly marked " WW 3," folio. The contents are chiefly copies of letters from the Duke of Ormonde to Lords Ossory, Clarendon, and Orrery, from 1660 to 1669, with a few to other persons. There are also a few miscellaneous papers among them. Some of the above are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. Appendix. Vol. 49, formerly marked " WW," folio. Copies of the Duke of Ormonde's letters, from June 1660 to Decem- ber 1668, to the following persons : — Louis de Haro, M. de Witt (Pen- gionnaire of Holland), the Earl of Montrath (President of Connaught), the King 0'f Denmark, the Lord Deputy of Ireland, Prince de Ligne, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, Archbishop of Armagh, Lord Orrery, the Lords Justices of Ireland, the Princess Royal of Orleans, the Prince de Conde, the Duke; of Hamilton, (lie Bishop of Clogher, the Bishop of Winchester, the Bishop of London, Lord Conway, the Portuguese Ambassador, Lord Ossory, Lord Chancellor Hyde, the Duke of Buck- ingham, Secretary Morrice, Sir W. Coventry, Lord St. Alban's. Duke of Albemarle, the Earl of Carlingford, Sir A. Broderick, Colonel Cooke, Colonel Legg, the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Kingston, Captain <;. Mathews, Sir G-. Carteret, and others. There are also some letters from the King, George Lane, the Countess of Devon, and others. Some of the above are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. Appendix, pp. 34-61. 31 Vol. 50, formerly marked " WW 2," folio. Copies and original drafts of the Duke of Ormonde's letters, from !(>(>"!> to 1687, to the following persons: — Captain G. Mathews, Lord Clanri- carde, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, the Constable of Castile (Governor of the Low Countries), Sir J. Temple (Solicitor General), Lord Ossory, Lord Kingston, Lord Arran, Lord Auugier, Lord Derby, Lord Strafford, the Prince of Orange, Sir G. Lane, Sir W. Temple, the King, Lord Arling- ton, Lord and Lady Burlington, Colonel Fitzpatrick, Sir Robert Southwell, Sir W. Coventry, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lord Primate of Ire- land, Lord Sunderland, Lord Coventry, the Earl of Rochester, the Earl of Longford, and others. There are also some miscellaneous papers) among which are the following : — Instrument of the University of ( ) x lbr< I, making Lord Clarendon High Steward. The Duke of Ormonde's Speech in the Cause between Hyde and Emerton. Letter to the King after Major Warren was sent over in 1642, with a memorandum about transporting the Forces to England (Feb. 1643). A prayer of Ormonde's. Patent of Precedence of Lord Ossory's children. Settlement proposed on the Marriage of James Earl of Ossory and Lady Hyde. Account of Ormonde's Debts, &c. At the end of the volume is a collection of ciphers of the following persons : — Sir II. de Vic, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, the Lord Chancellor of England, Lord Arlington, Sir E. Nicholas, the Earl of Orrery, SirW. Coventry, Lords Anglesea, Ossory, Carlingford, Kingston, Conway, Longford, and Arran, Sir T. Clarges, Sir G. Carteret, Captain Barrington, Colonel W. Legg, Sir Robert Southwell, Sir G. Lane, J. Walsh, Dr. Gorges, Sir Robert Booth, and P. Alden. Thcy are dated from 1662 to 1682. Vol. 51, formerly marked " WW 4," folio. Copies of letters from the Duke of Ormonde to Loi'ds Anglesea, Arlington, and Coventry, from 1665 to 1667, with other papers, the whole embracing the period between 1662 and 1675. Vol. 52, formerly marked "XX 1." Letters and papers relative to the Revenue of Ireland from 1641 to 1693. The letters are chiefly from the King, the Council in England, the Lord Deputy and Council of Ireland, and the Commissioners of the Treasury, addressed for the most part to the Duke of Ormonde ; and there are a few from Ormonde to Mr. Secretary Williamson. Among the papers are orders of the Councils of England and Ireland, and petitions to the King, the Duke of Ormonde, and the Irish Council. Vol. 53, formerly marked " XX 2." The letters and papers contained in this volume almost entirely relate to the fiscal matters of Ireland, and are dated from 1678 to 1683. The most important are the following : — The Duke of Ormonde's correspondence with the King, the Council of Ireland, the Commissioners of the Treasury, the Commissioners of Accounts, Archbishop Boyle, and others. Orders by the Duke of Ormonde. Orders of Council. Petitions to the King and Ormonde. Papers showing the state of the Farmer's Accounts from 1678 to 1682. Mr. Sheridan's paper about the Revenue ; with a letter from the Duke of Ormonde to him. Vol. 54, formerly marked " XX 3." Papers relating to the Revenue and Army of Ireland from 1660 to 1687. Letters from the Commissioners of the Revenue to the Lords of the Treasury, the Earl of Arran, and the Duke of Ormonde. A few letters to Ormonde. Correspondence of Lord Arran with the Commis- sioners of the Treasury and of the Revenue ; &c. At the end there is a " Discours sur la Fortification de M. le Comte de Pagan, par M. de " Visaucour." Vol. 55, formerly marked " Y 1, Ireland, temp. Eliz." The correspondence and papers of Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam, between the years 1567 and 1595, relating to the affairs of Ireland. The letters are original — a large number of them holographs — and are from Lord Fitzwilliam, Lord Burleigh, Thomas Earl of Ormonde, the Council in England, Sir Francis Walsingham, the Earl of Sussex, Lord Delvyn, Sir John Perrot, Lord Howthe, and others ; they form a very valuable collection. Vol. 56, formerly marked " Y 2, Ireland, temp. Eliz." Original letters and papers connected with Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam's government in Ireland, between 1564 and 1576. Among them are many holographs of Lord Fitzwilliam, Lord Burleigh, Lady Burleigh, the Earl of Leicester, Sir H. Sidney, Sir F. Knollys, Thomas Earl of Ormonde, the Earl of Sussex, Sir F. Walsingham, and others, and about forty -five with the sign manual of Queen Elizabeth. Vol. 57, formerly marked " Y 3, Ireland, temp. Eliz." Original letters and papers connected with Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam's government of Ireland, from 1569 to 1574. Many holographs are among them ; also some letters with the sign manual of Queen Elizabeth. Vol. 58, formerly marked " Y 4, Ireland, temp. Eliz." Original letters and papers respecting Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam's government of Ireland, from 1560 to 1575. Among them are several papers with the sign manual of Queen Elizabeth, and holograph letters from Secretary Cecil and others. Vol. 59, formerly marked "DO, Ireland, 1," folio. Papers between the years 1641 and 1684, nearly all copies of docu- ments relating to the public and private affairs of the Duke of Ormonde. Among them are a few original deeds on parchment, and some copies of deeds of an early date ; a few original writings, such as the Duke of Ormonde's will, dated 1 Sept. 1642 ; a number of warrants dated from 1576 to 1662 ; printed proclamations and a printed poem on the death of the Lord Ossory in 1681 (pp. 1 to 16). Vol. 60, formerly marked " Ireland, 2," folio. Warrants from the King and from the Duke of Ormonde, some few original, but the greater number copies. Original petitions to the Duke of Ormonde with h\s fiat. Memorials to Ormonde. Cases for adjudica- tion. Opinions of cases. Original letters, and copies of letters from the King and other persons, nearly all relating to public matters, but a few to the private transactions of the Duke of Ormonde. Miscellaneous papers. The above are of various dates between 1628 and 1690 ; very many arc undated. Vol. 61, formerly marked " Ireland, V." Original papers and copies of papers relative to the public affairs of Ireland from L585 to 1615, consisting for the most part of warrants issued by the Lord Deputy Chichester. These warrants are for the in-"! poration of towns, and for grants to corporations of fairs, markets, 33 and other privileges, and to private persons of pardons, offices, licence! to alienate lands, &c. Vol. 62, formerly marked " Ireland, VI." Original warrants and copies of warrants from Lord Deputy Chichester, incorporating towns, and granting fairs, markets, and other privileges to corporations, and offices, lands, pardons, &c. to private persons. Among others there is one to the Provost, Fellows, &c. of the College near Dublin and their successors, to elect and send two Burgesses to Parlia- ment for ever (12 May 1613). Also licences given by the Lord Deputy ; petitions to him ; King James I.'s grant to Sir William Uvedale of all fines levied on persons who plough their ground with horses drawing by their tails ; original letters from Lord Chancellor Ellesmere and Sir Francis Bacon to Sir John Davis, Attorney General of Ireland, &c. &c. The period comprised in this volume is from the year 1604 to tho year 1618. Vol. 63, formerly marked " Ireland VIII." Most of the letters in this volume are copies, but nevertheless very curious and important for the history of the period to which they relate (1613-1671). They are from Charles I., Lord Deputy Wandesford, the Marquis of Clanricarde, Cardinal Mazarine, Lords Digby, Jermyn, Inchiquin, and Taaffe, the Earl of Glamorgan, Sir Edward Nicholas, Sir William Saintleger, Sir Robert King, Secretary Long, and others, firincipally addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde. One of them, a etter from Lord Digby, is printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 548. There are also some letters from Ormonde to many of the above persons, and some deciphers of ciphers, which are valuable. Among the miscellaneous papers is a Speech made by Ormonde to the General Assembly of the Confederated Catholics, which is printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. App. p. 15. Vol. 64, formerly marked " Ireland I." Copies of papers between the years 1613 and 1666, relating to Irish affairs. There are copies of printed tracts — extracts from the journals of the Houses of Peers and Commons in Ireland — copies of proceedings in the Irish House of Convocation — copy of the register book of letters of the Supreme Council of the Confederate Roman Catholics at Kilkenny, &c. Vol. 65, formerly marked " Ireland II." Most of the papers in this volume are original, and many of the letters arc in cipher. They refer to public affairs between the years 1636 and 1652 — the Irish Rebellion — the negotiation for a Cessa- tion of Arms— the Solemn League and Covenant in Scotland — tho Civil War in England, &c. The letters arc generally addressed to the Marquis of Ormonde, and are chiefly from the following persons : — The King and Queen, Prince Charles, Cardinal Mazarine, the Lords Justices of Ireland, Lords Digby and Clanricarde, Sir Edward Nicholas (the King's Secretary), Sir II. Vane, Speaker Lcnthall, and Secretary Long. There is also a considerable number of Ormonde's own letters to the above- mentioned persons and the Assembly of the Confederate Roman Catho- lics. There arc also a few letters from O'Hartegan to the Supreme Council of the Confederates, a Relation of the Battle of Edgehill, a printed copy of the Solemu League and Covenant, with other printed papers, &c. &c. Vol. 66, formerly marked " Ireland IV." Original papers and letters, with some copies, relative to the affairs of Ireland between the years 1634 and 1684. Some of the papers are printed. There are eleven letters from Lord Strafford to the King C 34. dated from 1635 to 1638, which are, with one exception, printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 14-26 ; and there are two letters of Vice-Treasurer Loftus, one printed in. the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 27. Vol. 67, formerly marked " Ireland X." Copies of letters and papers from 1613 to 1679, of which the greater portion is taken from Dr. Williams's Collection of Papers relating to Ireland. Vol. 68, formerly marked "Ireland VII." Original letters to and from Lord Ormonde, the Earl of Ossory, the Earl of Essex, Lord Ranelagh, Primate Boyle, the Earl of Longford, the Earl of Leicester, the Earl of Northumberland, Lord Chancellor Clarendon, and others. Also a considerable number of letters from the Lords Justices and Council of Ireland to various persons, and many important papers (some printed) respecting the disputes between the Roman Catholics and Protestants in Ireland. The period comprised is from 1641 to 1683. A letter from Lord Digby to the Marquis of Ormonde, contained in this volume, is printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 475. Vol. 69, formerly marked " Ireland III." The period embraced by the papers in this volume extends from 1646 to 1697. Some of the letters contained in it are original, others copies. There are also extracts from printed books ; memoranda concerning the life of the Duke of Ormonde (curious) ; copies of pedigrees and family papers of the Duke ; an original letter from the celebrated Colonel Blood to the Duke of Ormonde, without date ; &c. Vol. 70, formerly marked " Ireland IX." Nearly all the letters and other papers in this volume are copies, but are important for the history of the period to which they relate (1604- 1688). Many of the papers refer to the pedigrees and private affairs of the Ormonde family. There are some original letters from John Ant is, the Herald, to Thomas Carte. Vol. 71, formerly marked " Ireland XI." Copies of commissions, grants, and Acts of Parliament of no great value. A very large collection of proclamations, orders, and ordinances, all in print, seemingly very rare, and perhaps unique ; many during the Commonwealth. Vol. 72, formerly marked " ZZ," folio. This volume consists of news letters, both from home and abroad, proceedings and speeches in Parliament, originals and copies of papers relating to Ireland, France, and Germany. The period embraced is from 1642 to 1685. Vol. 73, formerly marked " AAA," folio. Original letters and copies of letters to and from General Montague (afterwards Ear] of Sandwich), commander at sea, from the Montague collection. The letters (<> Montague are from Oliver Cromwell, Charles II., Secretary Thurloe, Samuel Pepys, Sir Gilbert Pickering, Genera] Monck, William Penne, Sir 'William Wheeler, General Blake, Admiral Stoakes, and others. Among the papers are some relative to the Cadiz licet, the Dutch flee!, the siege of Mardyche, &c. The period embraced ie that between L656 ami 1661. This volume is indispensable for the history of the Navy during the Commonwealth. Many of the papers are printed in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," rol. ii. pp. !)(i-208. 3a Vol. 74, formerly marked " BBB," folio. The contents of this volume comprise the period between the years 16)4 and 1G83. Letters and papers from the collection of Edward Montague, afterwards Earl of Sandwich, chiefly connected with the Navy and Army. Among them is a paper headed " Memoria de las " Pinturas que se vendieron al S 1 " Embax or de Espana en el Palacio de " Somerset, y que eran del Key y de la Reyna ;" private letters from his family ; papers relating to the puhlic revenue, and other matters ; petitions, &c. ; keys to ciphers before and dining the Rebellion. Some of the above are printed in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. i. pp. 46-48, and vol. ii., pp. 87-92. Vol. 75, formerly marked " CCC," folio. The contents of this volume relate to the period between 1662 and 1671. Papers and letters about Tangiers, from the Earl of Peterborough, Lord Teviot, Lord Bellasis, Colonel Fitzgerald, Colonel Norwood, Sir J. Lawson, Sir Charles Harbord, and Consuls of Spanish ports. Articles of peace made with Cidcader Guilun, the Moorish Chief. Letters, orders, and instructions from the Duke of York, Lord High Admiral of England, to the Earl of Sandwich, Vice-Admiral of England, chiefly about the Duteh fleet; letters from Sir W. Coventry to the Earl of Sandwich, relative to the same. Account of the destruction of Chatham Dockyard by the Duteh. Letters of the Duke of Albemarle, Lord Culpeper, Sir Thomas Clifford, and Sir William Penn. Letters from Charles II. to the Duke of York. Papers and letters during the Earl of Sandwich's embassy to Spain to conclude a treaty with that Crown ; his speeches to the Queen of Spain ; letters of instructions about the treaty from Lord Arlington, Lord Chancellor Clarendon, the Earl of Manchester, and others. Papers and letters relative to the treaty of Breda (August 1667). Letters to the Earl of Sandwich after his departure from Madrid ; one from the Duke of Medina. Letters and papers relative to Queen Christina of Sweden. Public and private papers, especially relating to naval affairs. Vol. 76, formerly marked " DDD," folio. Papers between the years 1643 and 1715, principally news letters (all original) to the Earl of Huntingdon, from August 1690 to 1695, and some from 1695 to 1715, relative to occurrences both at home and abroad, particularly to the settlement of Scotland and Ireland after the Revolution — the wars in Flanders, Italy, and Germany, and with the Turks — naval affairs, sea fights and captures during those wars — the death of Queen Mary, consort of William III. There is a letter from the siege of Buda in 1686 — an account of the action at Brentford (1643)— letters from F. Salisbury to the Earl of Huntingdon, 1663- 1670 — notes made at the council table at Hampton Court when Keeling was examined about the Rye House Plot, 23 June 1683. — The above appers are seemingly from the Huntingdon collection. Vol. 77, formerly marked "EEE," folio. "Modus coronandi Regis," translated from an old vellum roll temp. Ric. II. by the Earl of Huntingdon, according to King James II. 's order. Letter from Queen Elizabeth to the Earl of Shrewsbury, about Mary Queen of Scots. Doughty's Narrative and Charge against Sir Francis Drake. Letter from the Earl of Essex to the Council, on bis departure for Plymouth. Papers ol' the reign of Queen Elizabeth and of James I., particularly about the treasons imputed to Sir Walter Raleigh and Lord Grey of Wilton. Papers relating to occurrences in Parliament, and the King's speeches there from 160]" to 1620. Papers relative to the charge against, and sentence upon, Lord Chancellor C 2 36 Bacon ; a letter from the Lord Keeper to the Earl of Essex, with the latter's answer and speeches against him in the Star Chamber. Papers connected with parliamentary proceedings from 1620 to 1631. News letters (original) to the Earl of Huntingdon in 1634 and 1635, relating to affairs at home and abroad. Papers concerning the Duke of Buck- ingham's relation of the battle of Lutzen. Letters relative to ecclesias- tical affairs, chiefly about Dissenters, from 1663 to 1695. Miscellaneous papers from 1601 to 1732. Vol. 78, formerly marked " FFF," folio. Copies of papers relative to the families of the Earl of Huntingdon, Lord Hastings, Lord Loughborough, Lord Hungerford, the Earl of Derby, and others. Cases of law and equity, with counsels' opinions. Ex- tracts from the Pipe Rolls and public records, and copies of private deeds. They extend over a period from the reign of Edward III. to a.d. 1731, and seem to belong to the Huntingdon collection of papers. Among them are a few letters from Cardinal Pole to the Countess of Huntingdon, his niece, in 1555. Vol. 79, formerly marked " GGG," folio. This volume contains a paper respecting a design on King Charles I.'s life when he was in the Isle of Wight, and an apology for Lord Wharton's concealment of it. Prince Rupert's Narrative of the Engage- ments of the Fleets. Papers in connexion with Parliamentary affairs, from 1673 to 1700. News letters (original) to Mr. William Wharton, relative to foreign and domestic occurrences from 1677 to 1694. Letters to Mr. Thomas Wharton, Comptroller of the Household of William and Mary, from officers in the Irish Army, dated from 1688 to 1691. Letters to the same from Mr. James Vernon, relative to domestic and foreign occurrences, from 1691 to 1698 ; &c. — The volume was part of the collection of papers of Philip Lord Wharton. Vol. 80, formerly marked " HHH," folio. Papers relative to proceedings in both Houses of Parliament, from 1640 to 1679. A collection of papers of the proceedings of the Scotch and English Commissioners, from 1643 to 1648, relative to the Scotch invading England under pretence of preserving peace. Papers con- cerning Osborne's discovery of a design upon King Charles's life by poison while he was in the Isle of Wight, and Lord Wharton's conceal- ment of it. Papers and letters from Lord Grey of Wilton to his mother, during his confinement in the Tower on Raleigh's and Cobham's plots. A very interesting letter from Winchester, 27 Nov. 1603, giving a full account of the trials of the priests, Lord Cobham, Sir Walter Raleigh, and Lord Grey, and of other occurrences. Another from Salisbury, giving a full account of what passed at Winchester on their being brought to the scaffold for execution, &c. Papers relative to affairs in the years 1610, 1611, 1613, 1631. Letters to Sir Rowland Wandesford relative to affairs in Ireland from 1633 to 1646. Among the miscel- laneous contents of this volume are : — A grant of augmentation of arms lo Thomas Lord Wharton and his heirs, for his services against the Scots at Solenness, Saint Katharine's eve, 34 Henry VEIL, dated 2'.; April, 7 Edw. VI. Answer given by Queen Elizabeth to the Polish Ambassadors' oration. An Association for the Preservation of Queen Elizabeth's person. A holograph letter of Edmund Waller (accused of being concerned in a plot) to Colonel Goodwin, 1642. Lord Grey of Wilton's letter to liis mother, sending his translation of Cyprian dc Patientia. — The volume was part of the collection of Philip Lord Wharton's papers. 37 Vol. 81, formerly marked " III," folio. The contents of this volume are dated from 1640 to 1695. Papers on ecclesiastical affairs, such as the Act of Uniformity and the Con- venticle Act. Papers relative to the Popish and Oates's plots, and to the trial of Lord Stafford ; about the trials of Peers, and Bishops sitting in criminal causes ; about the Fifthmonarchy men's plot ; Parliamentary matters (especially as to Lord Wharton's not having kissed the book on taking the oath) ; the impeachment of Lord Danby ; and about (he Colonies (particularly New England, Connecticut, and Virginia). Papers especially relating to Lord Wharton. Papers relative to naval affairs, &c. &c. — The volume formerly belonged to Lord Wharton's collection of papers. Vol. 82, formerly marked "KKK," folio. It contains the correspondence of Marquis d'Effiat, ambassador of Lewis XIII. to England for the marriage of Henrietta Maria to Charles I. Extracts from the " Histoire de Marguerite d'Anjou, Reine d'Angleterre," and from " La Vie, etc., dc Cardinal Wolsey." A paper respecting M. do Chastillon's embassy in England, December 1537 to March 1539. Extracts concerning the negotiations of M. de Christople de Ilarley, 1603 ; with many other papers in French. Extracts from and catalogues of the works of ancient chroniclers ; among them is "Elen- chus contentorum in MS. S. Victoris Parisicnsis, 419," mentioning, inter alia, the following : — "Chronica Franciae et Anglia: ab anno 1139 ad 1238, auctore Ricardo Ilagulstadensi " (f. 133). " Chronica brevis et compendiosa Ducum Normannias " (f. 42). "Historia; Normannorum libri 8, per Guil. Gemeticensem " (f. 68). " Tractatus de pace inter S. Ludovicum et Henricum Angliae Reges " (f. 179). " Cousuetudines Regni Anglia? et persecutio Thom;e Canturacen." (f. 193). Vol. 83, formerly marked " LLL," folio. Catalogue of public instruments in France relative to England, and Notices of Treaties between England and France, and other papers con- cerning England in France, from 1200 to 1625. " Trait 6 d'alliance " between Charles VI. and Owen Prince of Wales ; Paris, 14 July 1404. " Traites entre les Rois d'Angleterre et les Rois de Castille." M. de Pay's justification of De Thou against Cardinal de Richelieu. Extracts concerning the negotiations of the Comte de Marest and of M. de Montreuil in England. " Negotiations de M. de Montreuil en Angleterre depuis le 10 Aout 1645 au 4 Sept. 1648." Vol. 84, formerly marked " MMM," folio. "Livre des Negotiations de M. Sabran, envoye resident en Angle- terre pour le service du Roy Tres-Chrestien depuis le 17 jour de Mai 1644 au 8 Septembre 1648." Vols. 85 and 86, formerly marked " NNN," folio. Vol. 85 contains letters from M. de la Boderie, ambassador in England, dated from May 1606 to Dec. 1607. Vol. 86 contains letters from the same, from January 1608 to January 1611. Vols. 87 and 88, formerly marked « 000," folio. Volume 87. — Letters of M. Antoine de Noailles, Ambassador in England, dated from December 1552 to May 1556 ; with a letter from Wollray to T. Carte. 38 Volume 88. — Letters of M. Gilles de Noailles, dated from June 1556 to January 1559, with Mons l'Abbe de Lisle's (Gilles de Noailles) in- structions and negotiations in Scotland, from January 1560 to June 1561. Vol. 89, formerly marked " PPP," folio. This volume contains copies of treaties and papers relative to nego- tiations between England and France, from 1193 to 1612. Vol. 90, formerly marked " QQQ," folio. This volume contains copies of treaties and papers relative to nego- tiations between England and France, from 1294 to 1617. Vol. 91, formerly marked "RRR," folio, on vellum, in the original binding in wood of the 15th or 16th century. The contents of this volume are very miscellaneous ; many of the papers relate to the foundations of French monasteries. Amongst the papers is one entitled : — " Sensuit la maniere et ensaignement darpenter, cordeler et messurer terres ; et la maniere de nombrez et prisaiges icelles terres, jardrins, vergieres, boys, virgnes, prez, landes, estangs garannes, coulombiers et aultres chouses heritaux : scelon la situacion et assiete des lieux, des pais et des ressors diceulx." The period comprised by these papers is from 1204 to 1503, and they all relate to France. Vol. 92, formerly marked "SSS," folio. This volume consists of notes on French manuscripts, all in Carte's handwriting. Vol. 93, formerly marked " TTT," folio. Extracts from Journals of the House of Lords in 1572, 1575, 1605. and 1606. Copies of Acts of Parliament, temp. Hen. VII. et Hen. VIII, Extract from Year Book 1 Hen. VII. of the case of John Flouredewe, concerning Writs of Error in Parliament, that the Lords only by counsel of the Judges shall correct errors, and not the Commons, &c. Vol. 94, formerly marked " UUU," folio. Copies of Patents of creation of Peers, from the Empress Maud to King Richard III., taken from the Patent, Charter and Parliament Rolls. Vol. 95, formerly marked " VVV," folio. Journal of the House of Commons on January 16th, 18 James L, with an account of the King's speech, and with the speeches of members and debates till 28 November 1621. Vol. 96, formerly marked " WWW," folio. Treatises and other papers concerning the relations of England and Spain in tbe reigns of Elizabeth and James I. ; among them a discourse addressed to Sir E. Montague by Sir Robert Cotton, showing that the House of Commons lias equal judicial power with the House of Peers <1621). Vol. 97, formerly marked " XXX," folio. Extracts out of Lord LovePs MS. History of the Irish Rebellion in 1641, c piled out of the Nuncio Rinuccini's papers by an Irish priest, entitled "De Elaeresis Anglican® intrusione et progress!*, et de Bello '• Catholico ad annum 1641 coepto, exindeque per aliquot annos gesto '■ Commentarius." Vol. 98, formerly marked " YYY," folio. An answer to tin; Earl of Anglesea's objections to the Duke of Ormonde; or, •• Sonn- of die Earl of Anglesea's errors detected in " reference to the Affaires of Ireland." 39 Advertisement. — "The reader of this discourse will soon be informed " from the 3 following letters between the Duke of Ormonde and the " Earl of Anglesey that the Earl is charged with mistakes in his book " writ against the Earl of Castlehaven's memoirs touching the wars of " Ireland, and that his late Majesty and bis servant the Duke of " Ormonde are therein much misrepresented to the world in reference 11 to the Cessation made with the Irish rebels in 16413, and the two " peaces of 1646 and 1648 which afterwards ensued." Vol. 99, formerly marked " ZZZ," folio. Copies of the letters of the Marquis of Clanricarde, from October 1641, when the Irish rebellion broke out, to August 1643, when he was going to treat for the Cessation. Many of these letters are printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. pp. 39-171. Vol. 100, formerly marked " AAAA," folio. "Avis, censures et lettres sur 1'histoire d'e M. le President do Thou." Miscellaneous papers on literary subjects, extracts from various authors &c. A catalogue of old chronicles in the Cotton Library. Several letters to and from Thomas Carte. Lists of manuscripts in the Dean and Chapter's Library at Durham. The period embraced in this volume is from 1640 to 1727. Vol. 101, formerly marked " BBBB," folio. LettersofM.de Thou, notes upon the " Thuani Historia," and papers relative to Dc Thou's works. " Projet pour perfectionner le gouverne- " ment desEtats," given to T. Carte by the Abbe de S. Pierre. Letters of Thomas and Samuel Carte about records and English ordinations, especially in reference to the "Nags-head story." List of MSS. in the Library of St. Victor, at Paris. Catalogue of the Petyt MSS. in the Inner Temple Library. Papers on literary subjects. The period comprised is from 1615 to 1726. Note. — After the above volume the manuscripts are not numbered on the outside, and No. " 102 " seems to have been omitted, the next number being 103, in pencil. Vol. 103, formerly marked " CCCC,"* folio, rebound, but not numbered outside. The period embraced in this volume is between the years 1542 and 1737. Original letters and papers daring the Rebellion in England, from Lord Loudon, Sir Philip Stapleton, Colonel Arthur Goodwin, the Earl of Essex, Lionel Copley, Arthur Jephson, J. Hampden, the Council of War, Lord Dacre, Oliver Cromwell, and others, with a full relation of the campaign in Flanders under General Morgan. These seem to be from the Wharton Collection of Papers. Dean King's Account of Affairs in Ireland to the King and Council at Paris ; and other papers relative to public affairs. Papers relative to the Duke of Buckingham's expedition to Rochelle (1627). Letters on private subjects to T. and J. Carte ; a great number from Dr. Raynes. Letters from Mr. Anstis, Mr. Woolhouse, Dr. Rawlinson, and others. Letters from and to Sir Robert Southwell ; one from Sir W. Dugdale. Extracts from various books. Letters to General Morgan ; one from Oliver Cromwell, signed by him. Vol. 104, formerly marked "FFFF," folio, rebound, but not numbered outside. Inside the cover it is numbered " 104." Miscellaneous papers between 1680 and 1741, consisting of copies of letters relative to the negotiations of Lord Middleton during his embassy * This MS. is also called " EEEE." 40 at Vienna in 1680. Letters between Lord Middleton and Sir Leolinc Jenkins, from the Elector of Brandenburgh to the King of Spain, and from Lord Bodmyn, Sir Robert Southwell, and Lord Conway. Letters and papers on private and literary matters and other subjects unconnected with Irish affairs. Papers relative to the late King James II., in 1692. Vol. 105, formerly marked " HHHH," folio, rebound, and numbered " 105 " in pencil. Letters and papers of the reign of Elizabeth relating to the succession to the Crown, the Bishop of Ross's book on Queen Mary of Scotland's right to the English Crown, &c. ; with an Advertisement from a loyal subject to his Sovereign James I. Little or nothing having reference to Ireland. Vol. 106, formerly marked " IIII," folio, rebound, and numbered " 106 " in pencil. Principally notes from Dugdale's Baronage, Monasticon, and History of Warwickshire, &c, with indices to his Baronage and Monasticon. Excerpta from MSS. in the Bodleian and Cottonian Libraries. Catalogue of Alien Priories, &c. All unconnected with Ireland. Vol. 107, formerly marked " KKKK," folio, rebound, and numbered "107" in pencil. A miscellaneous collection of papers, chiefly relating to the offices of Earl Marshal and High Constable of England ; notes from Sergeant Trimpet's Diary, temp. Edw. IV. and Hen. VII. ; papers relating to the trial of the Earl Castlehaven, 1631, the arraignment of Robert Earl of Essex, 1600, &c. Vol. 108, formerly marked " LLLL," folio, rebound, and numbered " 108 " in pencil. Chiefly collections relating to Wales. Catalogue of Vauchan Library (165 MSS. described), and of Sir John Sebright's Library. Extracts from and copies of Chronicles — among others of the " Annales " Britannia? : " Incip. Introductio : " Temporum summam lineamque " descendentem ab exordio Mundi." Expl, Introductio; " Vitia detes- '* tando Deum timere et amarc nos admonet." Incip. Lib. I. c. i. " For- " matus itaque Adam homo primus de limo terra?." Expl. Lib. VIII. c.xv. " Et Humfridus Dux Gloucestrise Protector Anglia?, et vicesimo quarto " anno Regni sui accepit in uxorem Margaretam filiam Duci Andegaviae, " [ex qua genuit unicum filium suum Edwardum ;] et tunc Dominus " Ricardus Dux Eboracensis Regens erat Regni Franciae." Vol. 109, formerly marked " MMMM," folio, rebound, and numbered "109" in pencil. Miscellaneous papers referring to matters between 1587 and 1743, such as extracts from printed books, &C. ; the Duke of Ormonde's preface to liis Answer to Lord Anglesea, and other j>apers respecting the Duke ; papers and letters of the Carte family ; news letters ; original letters and copies of letters, many to Archbishop Sancroft ; notes by Philip Lord Wharton, ami other papers respecting the Wharton Family ; account of Irish MSS. in the Bodleian Library. Vol. 110, formerly marked ' NNNN," folio, rebound, and numbered "' 10" in pencil. This volume chiefly consists of extracts from printed books and manu- scripts, chiefly upon topographical and ecclesiastical matters, curious in their way, hut of little account with reference to Ireland. 41 Vol. Ill, formerly marked "OOOO," folio, rebound, and numbered "111" in pencil. This volume consists for the most part of extracts from books and notes on various subjects. A list of them lias been made, but as the papers have no reference to Ireland they are not introduced into this Appendix. Vol. 112, formerly marked "PPPP," folio, rebound, and numbered "112" in pencil. This volume contains copies of papers concerning the relations between England and France, from 1190 to 1625, evidently prepared for Carte's General History of England, but having no relation to Ireland. Vol. 113, formerly marked " QQQQ," folio, rebound, and numbered "113" in pencil. Copies of Papers on French and English affairs from 1190 to 1625. 56 Irish Petitions, 1696-1701. Vol. 114, formerly marked "KRRR," folio, rebound, and numbered "114" in pencil. A number of papers concerning the relations between England and France, from 1399 to 1667. A considerable collection of printed papers on literary subjects. Sir YV. Dugdale's Additional Sheet in his Baronage for the Huntingdon Family (Hastings), pp. 579-582. Almanacks from 1660 to 1692. Vol. 115, formerly marked " SSSS," folio, rebound, and numbered "115" in pencil. Manuscript clean copy of Dr. Brady's Treatise on the Parliament of England. Vol. 116, formerly marked " TTTT," folio, rebound, and numbered "116" in pencil. Transcript of Dr. Brady's Treatise on the Parliament of England. Vol. 117, formerly marked "UUUU," folio, rebound, and numbered " 117" in pencil. Extracts from MSS. and printed books. Pedigrees. Order of Council. Warrant by Lord Deputy Wandesford. A sign manual of Charles II., granting a pass for five of Lord Wharton's children to France, 1662, and other papers concerning Lord Wharton. Papers of the Carte family. Letters of Speaker Lenthall and others. The Duke of Monmouth's Speech and Confession in Council, 12 Dec. 1683. The Concordate of Nonjurors. Other papers relating to public and private affairs; very little relating to Ireland. The period embraced is between the years 1396 and 1739. Vol. 118, formerly marked "WW," folio, rebound, and numbered "118" in pencil. Papers of J. Carte and T. Carte. Among them is one headed " Papers " remaining of Lord Egmont, which Mr. Carte is desired to return," from 1627 to 1685. Letters to and from Sir Robert Southwell. Letters and papers relating to Ireland. Correspondence between the Duke of Ormonde and Lord Orrery. Correspondence of Ormonde with Secre- tary Coventry, Lord Danby, Sir Edward Nicholas, King Charles II., the Duke of York, Lord Arran, the Earl of Rochester, and others. The letters from Ormonde are chiefly copies or drafts in his own hand. Some of these papers are printed in the " Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. App. pp. 111-117. Correspondence of Primate Boyle aud the Earl of Orrery. 42 Vol. 119, formerly marked "GGGG," (same as "WWWW,") folio, rebound, and numbered " 119 " in pencil. Tracts in print and manuscript. Speeches by the King, the Lord Keeper, and the Speaker of the Parliament, in April 1640. Speech of Sir Robert Cotton at the Council Table, about alteration of the coin, 1626. Papers relating to the history of Parliament and the Star Chamber. Vol. 120, formerly MS. marked "XXXX,"* folio. A common- place book of J. Carte's. Vol. 121, formerly marked " A a," folio. A collection of miscellaneous papers of the time of James I. and Charles I., viz., papers relating to King James's general pardon — two reports signed by Sir Francis Bacon — papers relative to licences and compositions for alienations, privileges of Baronets and the revenue — petitions — list of noblemen's sons, of Ireland, to be sent into England, &c. &c. Vol. 122, formerly marked " A b," folio. A short Compendium of all the Offices and Officers, their duties, and proceedings, in the Exchequer. Vol. 123, formerly marked " Ac," folio. Letters of James I. and Charles I. mostly addressed to the Earl of Suffolk, Lord Treasurer. Orders of Council, chiefly concerning the Army; with a few orders of the Commissioners of the Admiralty. Most of the papers are original, some bearing the sign manuals of James Land Charles L, and they embrace the period between 1614 and 1638. Vol. 124, formerly marked "Ad," folio. A miscellaneous collection of legal papers, containing, inter alia, a manuscript treatise on the antiquity of the Common Law and of Tenures before the Conquest, by Sir Walter Raleigh (imperfect, containing 349 pages) — extracts from Parliament Rolls, Escheat Rolls, temp. Hen. III., Edw. L, and Edw. II., &c. — inquisition p. m. on John Duke of Norfolk at Baklie in Suffolk, 16 Jan., 11 Hen. VI. — notes of records relating to Shropshire, &c. Nothing relating to Ireland. Vol. 125, formerly marked " A c," folio. A collection of miscellaneous papers : — letters from the Privy Council to Lord Chancellor Ellesmere — a letter from King James I. to Lord Chancellor Verulam — Thomas Earl of Strafford's defence against the articles of bis impeachment, 1715 — extracts from Lord Grey's letters to his mother — extracts from printed books and manuscripts — papers relating to the Wharton family — Archbishop Usher's discourse about the reception of the Civil Law in Inland — extracts concerning Bishop More's embassy t<> Spain, 1523', from MS. 234 of his collection — excerpta from ancient chronicles, &c The whole comprises the period between 1523 and 1742. Vol. 126, formerly marked " A f," folio. It contains a copy of those parts of Dome-day Book which refer to the counties of Cornwall, Norfolk, Huntingdon, and Devon, and other matters connected with the Domesday Survey. * The volume marked "YVVY," folio, described in an old inventory at the Bodleian ;>- " Hook of Aydes, Grand Serjeautiee, and Baronies, temp. Edw. I. kept in Sir T. Fanshaw'a office in die Exchequer," is not now among the Carte Collection; nor in the volume marked " ZZZZ," folio, described as "a common-nlace book of " J. Carte's." 43 Vol. 127, formerly marked •' Ag," folio. This volume contains extracts from the collections of Mr. John Ansl is, Garter King-at- Arms, principally relative to heraldic, legal, ami ecclesiastical matters. Little or nothing relating to Ireland. Vol. 128, formerly marked " A h," folio. This volume consists of miscellaneous papers, the most important of which are the following : — A catalogue of Treaties, Letters of Am- bassadors, Instruments, &c, in the Paper Office — Catalogues of Papal Bulls, the King's Charters, &c, relating to Durham — extracts from Keeords, the Fine Polls, Pell Polls, printed books and manuscripts — Sir Pobert Howard's Report, 11 June 1684, concerning the Lords affirming the judgment against Mr. Oatcs, &c. — letters from Mr. Hume and Mr. Lewis Morris to Thomas Carte — letters of the Duke of Ormonde to his relations on the death of the Earl of Ossory, Lady Hamilton, &c. (printed in the "Life of Ormonde," vol. ii. App. pp. 121-126). Very little relating to Ireland. N.B. Some of the papers,- mentioned in the catalogue as being contained in this volume, have not been found. Vol. 129, formerly marked " A k," folio. This volume contains miscellaneous extracts and papers on literary subjects. Many refer to Durham. There are also some London Gazettes for August 1745 ; copies of records, &c. Nothing relating to Ireland. Vol. 130, formerly marked "Al." A curious collection of papers and letters, many of the latter holo- graphs. The most important of them are the following : — Extracts from printed books and manuscripts ; one concerning the embassy of De Noailles ; another about Queen Mary of Scotland — a considerable number of letters, amongst them is one from Salmasius to King Charles II. ; one from the Queen Mother to the same — letters to and from Secretary Long — one from Charles II. to Prince Coude — one from Charles II. to the Emperor of Morocco — several from the Privy Council to Lord Herbert — a few from the Duke of Ormonde — very many from Robert Price — a few from King James II. — letters to and from Colonel Ellis, &c. Miscellaneous papers concerning public affairs, embassies, King Charles II. 's residence in Holland, &c. &c. They are dated between 1631 and 1749. MS. marked u DDDD," folio, consisting of two volumes. " Catalogue des Poincons et des Carres de Medailles et de Jettons " dans le Bureau de Medailles du Roy de France." Six volumes, folio, of Ormonde's Letters 1649-1650. Do. 1662-1664. Do. 1662-1669. Do. 1664-1668. Do. 1667-1681. Do. 1667-1684. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled " Army Orders in Ireland, 1660, and Irish Petitions, 1665-1669." The Army Orders commence 16th July 1660, and end 7th December 1660. due Petitions begin 23rd November 1665, and end 29th July 1669. Each Petition has its answer at the end of it. There is an alpha- betical list of the Petitions. 44 Vol., small folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled " Irish Petitions, 1648-9." Commences 9th March 1648, ends 28th May 1649 ; with an alphabetical index. Each Petition has its answer annexed. Vol., small folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled " Irish Petitions, 1649-50." Commences 8th August 1649, ends 8th March 1649-50; with an alphabetical index. Each Petition has its answer annexed. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled " Irish Petitions, 1650." Commences 12th March 1649-50, ends 25th October 1650. Each Petition has its answer annexed. An alphabetical index of Petitions at the beginning and another at the end. Vol., folio; rebound (no old title); entitled "Irish Warrants and Petitions, 1660-1662." Commences 4th January 1660, to 10th March 166|. The Warrants are by the Lords Justices ; with an alphabetical index of persons. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled "Irish Petitions, 1662-1664." The Warrants commence 31st March 1662, and end 31st July 1662 ; they are by the Lords Justices. The Petitions commence 28th August 1663, and end 27th April 1664. Each Petition has its answer annexed. There is an alphabetical index of persons to the volume. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; " Irish Warrants and Petitions, 1668-1687." Commencing 26th May 1668, and ending 22nd December 1685 ; followed by Warrants from the Lord of the Regality of Tipperary, 10th May 1687. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title); entitled "Irish Petitions, 1682- 1685 ; and Portsmouth Prize Office, 1672-1673. Petitions to the King (relative to Ireland) 21st June 1682, to 12 July 1684, and one to the Duke of Ormonde, 6th February 1685. At the end of the volume are some accounts belonging to the Ports- mouth Prize Office, which are followed by Petitions to James Duke of Ormonde relative to the County Palatine of Tipperary, from 11th August 1683 to 27th June 1684 ; followed by a list of Final Orders signed in England in 1684. Vol., small folio; rebound; old mark "B, Aug. 1, 1649, Nov. ,1650;" entitled " Warrants by the Duke of Ormonde, Aug. 1649— Nov. 1650." Commence 6th August 1649, end 20th October 1650 ; with an alphabetical index at the end. Vol., small folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; "Warrants by Ormonde and Ossory, 1660-1669.". Commence 26th June 1660, end 15th September 1669 ; with an alphabetical index at the end. Vol., large folio ; rebound (no old title) ; " Irish Warrants, 1662-1666." Commence 8th March 1661, and end 14th Mty 1666; they are by the Lord Lieutenant-General of Ireland. Index of persons at the end. Vol., Bmall folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; "Irish Grants, 1685." limits for grants, commencing 6th April 1685, and ending 20th November 1685. 45 Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled "Irish Grants, 168o." Fiats or Fiants for Grants, in 1685. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; " Letters of Lord Arran, 1682-3." Commence 2d May 1682, end 18th August 1683 ; nearly all ad- dressed to the Lord-Lieutenant ; some few to the Lords of the Treasury on public business. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; " Letters of Lord Arran, 1683-4." They commence 21st August 1683, and end 16th July 1684. They are nearly all addressed to the Lord-Lieutenant on public business. Vol., folio; rebound ; old mark " 110 ;" entitled " Letters of the Lords Justices of Ireland, 1693 to 169.5." Commence 12th August 1693, and end 29th January 169$. The Lords Justices were " Capell, Cyrill, Wich, W. Duncombe." Vol., large folio, in old vellum binding ; "Ireland Establishment, 1682, Tanger included." It contains the sign-manual of Charles II., and also the signatures of L. Jenkins, Rochester, J. Ernie, Ed. Dering, J. Godolphin, and Ste. Fox on each page. It is a list of all payments to be made for civil affairs, to begin from the Christmas of 1682 ; payments for military affairs from 2oth December 1682, with the signatures of the King and others above mentioned on every page. Also, an establishment for Tanger, sigr.ed as above. Also, an establishment for ships to attend the service of Ireland and Tanger, signed as above. Also, an establishment or list, containing pensions paid out of the revenue of Ireland, signed as above. Vol., small folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; " Irish Wool Licences, 1677-9." Licences for transporting wool into England from 29th August 1677 to 14th October 1679 ; and an account of the money received by the Lord-Lieutenant for such Licences. Vol., folio ; rebound (no old title) ; entitled " De prasulibus Hibernian, Lynch." 715 pages, imperfect at the end. Vol., folio ; rebound, not numbered ; entitled " Irish Ecclesiastical Preferments, 1662-1669." Significations, Licences, Presentations to Churches, and Nominations to Bishoprics. Commences 12 August 1662, and ends 10 August 1669, during the Lord-Lieutenancy of Ormonde and Ossory. Vol., small folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; " Lombarde's Archeion, 1591." A manuscript of the 16th century. Vol., large folio ; rebound (no old mark) ; " Tabula Cart arum Dunelmcnsium." A manuscript on vellum, 13th century, or perhaps 14th century, beginning (rubric) : " Hec est Tabula Bullarum Papalium." It contains 78 pages, and two leaves marked " 60 " and " 69." Vol., folio ; rebound (no old mark). Relative to Carte's proposal for publishing a History of England, with the original list of subscribers, &c. 46 Vol., marked " A ;" rebound, and lettered " Documents relating to Ireland." It is not numbered. This volume contains Depositions, Petitions, Letters, Orders of the Lord Deputy and Council of Ireland; Articles with the Irish Rebels for continuing the Cessation of Arms from time to time ; Commissions from the Marquis of Ormonde ; and other papers relating to Irish matters, dated from 1428 to 16-50. They are nearly all original, and on parchment. Manuscripts in 4 to. Vol. marked " Ireland," 4to, not rebound, but iu the old half binding and unarranged. Original letters and papers, mostly connected with Lord Deputy Fitz- william's government in Ireland from 1561 to 1575 ; many holographs, among them several from the Earl of Ormonde, Cecil, the Countess of Desmond, O'Neil, O'Carrol, Lord Barrymore, the Earl of Bedford, the Earl of Desmond, &c. Another series of papers from 1653 to 1690, containing original letters to the Marquis of Ormonde from Sir Edward Hyde, Peter Talbot, Sir H. de Vic, and others ; with papers relating to various subjects, among them a declaration of Oliver Cromwell for a Council of State, dated 30 April 1653. Some of this series are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. ii. pp. 63-89. Vol. marked "A," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original and holograph letters between the years 1650 and 1660, being the correspondence of the Marquis of Ormonde with Lady Ormonde, the Queen Mother, Sir Edward Hyde (Lord Chancellor), the Countess of Bristol, the Countess of Roscommon, Charlotte de Chata, Lady Diana de Moll, the Abbess of Gand, Cardinal de Retz, the Earl of Norwich, Lords Ossory, Byron, Digby, Jermyn, Crofts, Castlehaven, Mordant, and Inchiquin, M. de Schomberg, Dr. Barwick, Sir Edward Nicholas, Sir George Radclifle, Sir G. Hamilton, Daniel O'Neil, Father Peter Talbot, Sir H. de Vic, and others. Some are in a cipher, which has been deciphered. These letters relate to the affairs of Charles IT. and his adherents till the time of his Restoration. The volume also contains the following : The Complaint of Sir G. Downing to the States General of Holland that Charles Stuart and the Earl of Ormonde have been in their dominions, that Sir E. Hyde is at Breda, and Lord Taafe, O'Niel, and other rebels at the Hague. Dated 10 Sept. 1658. A paper containing the opinion of Cardinal de Retz as to the King's voyage to Spain. Letters from the King to the Princess of Orange, the Queen to the King, Cardinal Mazarin to the King, and from the King to Turenne. Memoranda sent to Mazarin. Many of the above letters and papers are printed in "Carte's Ormonde Papers," 8vo. vol. i. p. 365, and vol. ii. pp. 69-317. Vol. marked "B," 4to ; rebound, but noi numbered. Original and holograph letters, chiefly to the Duke of Ormonde and lii- Secretary Sir George Lane, from Queen Catherine, the Dukes of York and Albemarle, the JYincc of Orange, Lord Clarendon, the Earls of Devonshire, Pembroke, Litchfield, and Dover, Lords Strafford, Arran, Ardi . Aungier, Clancartie, Ranelagh, and Dillon, M. de Caracena, Sir T. Wharton, Colonel Yere Cromwell, Mr. R. Boilings, and -others mentioned in the account of the preceding volume. There are also a few 47 from the Duke of Ormonde to several of the same persons. They relate to the important events of the period between March 10(30 and Decem- ber 1663 — the King's Restoration and marriage, the Bill of Settlement for Ireland, the delivery of Dunkirk, &c. Some are in cipher. Inter- spersed among them are many papers relating to various subjects. The most important are the following : — Reasons of the Marquis of Ormonde for the King's stay at Breda. Clause for the Act of Oblivion. Paper of Lord Broghill and Sir G. Clotworthy, containing a proposition for the Settlement of Ireland. Grounds for suspecting the Irish of intending a fresh Rebellion. A Design for planting lands in Ireland. Prisoners in Dublin Castle for a Plot. The Discovery by Mr. Wyers of Blood's lurking. Account of suspected persons in King's County. A few of the documents in this volume are printed in " Carte's Ormonde Papers," vol. ii. (8vo.) pp. 319-343. i Vol. marked " C," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original and holograph letters between January 1664 and December 1668, chiefly addressed to Ormonde and Sir George Lane. They are from Archbishop Boyle, the Bishop of Killaloe, the Earls of St. Alban's, Burlington, and Falmouth, Lords Ossory, Fitzharding, Carlingford, Dungaunon, and Kingston, Lady Clanricarde, Lady Thurles, Lady Clan- cart ie, Sir A. Broderiek, Colonel Cooke, and many of the persons already mentioned in the descriptions of the preceding volumes. They relate principally to Irish affairs. A few letters of intelligence from Brussels and Rome. Vol. marked "D," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original and holograph letters, addressed for the most part to the Duke of Ormonde, and dated from March 1679 to May 1684. They are chiefly from the Earls of Arran and Rochester, Lady Mary Caven- dish, Lords Longford, Hyde, Mountjoy, and Sunderland, Secretary Jenkins, Sir Robert Walsh, Sir William Stewart, Sir Cyril Wyehe, Sir Robert Reading, Colonel Fitzpatrick, and W. Bridgman. They relate to public affairs : the marriage between Prince George of Denmark with Anne, daughter of the Duke of York ; the Rye House Plot ; the proceed- ings of the Duke of Monmouth ; a French plot in Ireland ; &e. &c. The following papers are interspersed : — A Proposition for the Settle- ment of French Protestants in Ireland. The Common Serjeant's Account of the Poll for a Lord Mayor. The Conditions on which the French King will accommodate his difference with the King of Spain. Abstract of the Revenue <'t' Ireland. Petition of the Bishop of Downe to the Duke of Ormonde for a new licence of absence. Vol. marked " E," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original letters and holographs, addressed chiefly to the Duke of Ormonde, from the same persons as in the last volume ; with a few of the Duke's own letters to various persons. They are dated from May 1684 to January 1690, and relate to the affairs of England and Ireland : the Duke of Ormonde's removal from the office of Lieutenant-General ; the Duke of Monmouth's Rebellion ; Argyle's Rising in Scotland ; the remodelling of the Irish Army by Tyrconnel ; the presence of King James II. in Ireland, &c. &c. Letter from King James to the Lord Primate against duels. List of Officers dead or discharged, and of new ones put in. Certificate by Ormonde of the loyalty of Valentine Smith's father. Dr. Littleton's funeral sermon on the death of the Duke. An Essay written on the same event. A large number of letters from Lord Anglesea to Ormonde, dated from August 1662 to September 1668. and 48 relating to the public affairs of that period — the Great Fire in Loudon ; the entrance of the Dutch Fleet into the Thames ; the Peace with Holland ; the Impeachment of Lord Clarendon, &c. &c. A few letters from Lords Clarendon and Ranelagh to the Duke and Duchess of Ormonde. Vol. marked "F," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original letters and papers relating for the most part to the fiscal matters of Ireland between the years 1662 and 1687. The letters generally are addressed to the Duke of Ormonde, from the Earls of Southampton and Longford, Lords Aungier and Ranelagh, Sir Charles Meredith, Sir J. Temple, Lord Chief Justice Keating, T. Sheridan, Sir B. Southwell, and others ; with Ormonde's letters to many of the same persons. Vol. marked " G- 1," 4to ; rebound, but not numbered. Original letters and copies of letters from Ormonde, dated from 1660 to 1683, to the following persons: — Mons. de Witt, Lady Clanricarde, M. de Boutervillc, the Duchess de Chastillon, Lord Montrath, Count de Fuensaldanna, the Earl of St. Alhan's, Prince de Ligne, the Lords Justices of Ireland, Lord Clanricarde, Lord Clancarty, Mr. O'Neil, King Charles II., Lord Chancellor Clarendon, the Archbishop of Dublin, the Marquis de Traisny, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, the Lord Primate, the Countess Dowager of Devon, Lord Keeper Bridg- man, the Marquis of Worcester, the Bishop of Meath, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, Sir T. Wharton, Lord Ranelagh, Lord Strafford, Lord Ar- lington, Sir G. Lane, the Earl of Ossory, the Earl of Arran (a great number), Lord Devonshire, Lord Derby, Trinity College Dublin, the Duke of Grafton, and others. They relate mostly to public affairs. There are also a few letters from Sir George Lane and others. Vol. marked " G 2," 4to ; in the original binding. Original letters and copies of letters from the Duke of Ormonde to the Earl of Arran and others, relating to Arran' s public and private affairs, dated from 1st January 1684 to 2nd April 1687. Holograph letters from the Earl of Ossory to Ormonde, dated from 16th June 1664 to 18th March 1675. Vol. marked " G 3," 4 to ; in its original binding. Original and holograph letters and copies of letters, addressed chiefly to the Duke of Ormonde, the Earl of Ossory, and Sir George Lane, between the years 1660 and 1684, from the Archbishop of Armagh (Bramhall), the Earl of Mount Alexander, Lord Arlington, Cardinal Barbarini, the Internuncio Vecchi, the Nuncio Rospighari, Sir II. Bonnet, P. Walsh, Sir G. Rawden, Anthony Gernon, and others ; they relate mostly to the Church and Sectaries in Ireland. There are also interspersed among the above ;i Dumber of papers relating to various subjects. At the end are a number of Ormonde's own Letters to various persons. Vol. marked "II" 4to ; in original binding, half calf, marble. A valuable collection of news letters, dated from 1662 to 1684, and relating to occurrences both at home and abroad. A list of these papers has been made, but it is too long to be inserted here. Vol. marked "I," 4to; in the old half binding. Domestic letters to the first Earl of Sandwich (1662-1667) from W. Montague, Abbot of St. Martin's, chiefly about the education and travels of Edward Lord Hinchinbrok, son of Lord Sandwich; from 49 Mons. do Jacquieres and Mons. de Prata, Lord Sandwich's son's pre- ceptors ; and from Lord Ilinchinbrok while on Ins travels. Also Letters from Lord Sandwich, when at Madrid, to Ins son, from Lady Sandwich to her husband and son, from Edward Montague to his uncle (1643), from the Countess of Rutland to Colonel Montague (1651), from Lady Jemima Montague to her father (1661), from Lord Crewe (1662), Lady Burlington, and Lady Jemima Carteret. Letters and orders from Colonel Montague relative to naval affairs ; letters from James Duke of York, from the Duke of Holstein (Christian Albert) to General Montague (1659), from the Duke of Manchester to Admiral Montague, from the Earl of Lauderdale, from Sir J. Lawson, Lord Arlington, &c. Vol. marked "K," 4to ; in the original binding. Miscellaneous papers referring to matters between the years 1561 and 1717, and consisting principally of extracts from printed books on ecclesiastical matters and history, biography and general history ; with copies of letters and papers relative to Mary Queen of Scots. Vol. marked " L," 4to ; in the original binding. Extracts from letters to M. de Thou; extracts relative to Frois- sart, the Concilia, Grotius, &c. ; and copies of letters and papers on various subjects of little or no value. There are some original letters on literary matters. The contents refer to the period between 1581 and 1728. Vol. marked " M," 4to ; in the original half-binding. Private letters to Mr. T. Carte between 1728 and 1737, from M. do Targny, librarian to the King of France, M. de Camuzat, Abbe de Crozat, Pere le Quien, M. d'Hozier, Abbe de Thou, M. Tabarie, M. Clairam- bault, Abbe des Fontaines, Pere Montfaucon, M. Gibert, Abbe Granet, Mark Perrot, Mr. Wbolhouse, Charles Count Richler (relative to a MS. of Froissart in la Bibliothcque de R. Elizabeth a Breslau*), T. Salkeld, Marquis d'Aubaix, Abbe Macdonagh, De Veze, the Duke of Ormonde (in 1713), and others. Vol. marked " N," 4to ; in the original half-binding. Private letters to Mr. T. Carte, from 1728 to 1736, very character- istic of their writers, such as those from T. Sheridan and T. Hearne. Notes of manuscripts borrowed by Carte. Vol. marked " 0,'' 4to ; in the original half-binding. In bad condition, nearly all the papers loose. It embraces the period from 1625 to 1701, and contains the following papers: — News letters to Lord Wharton, 1666-1701. Petitions and Reports concerning Lord and Lady Claneboy, in Cromwell's time. Papers relating to Lord Wharton's committal to the Tower, &c. A Bill of Mortality, 1625, from 21 April to 15 Dec: of all diseases, 49,881 ; of the plague, 35,283. Dangerfield's Discovery of a Plot for assassinating the King, 1679. Taft's Narrative of the Lancashire Plot in 1695. Papers relating to the Huntingdon Family. Vol. marked " P," 4to ; in the original half-binding. It contains the following pamphlets in manuscript : — 1. The Improvement of Ireland ; pp. 1-61. * It differs considerably from Denis Sauvagc-'s printed edition. D 50 2. The Title of Protestants to Lands in Ireland ; pp. 1-45. 3. A letter on the Act of Eepeal ; pp. 1-30. 4. State of the Nation in 1712. 5. The Horrid Injustices done by Protestants since the Beginning of the Pretended Reformation in England unto the Catholics of Ireland : taken chiefly out of that Author called a Lover of his King and Country, and printed in the year 1695 ; pp. 1-50. 6. The State of Ireland in brief, from the 14 last years of Queen Elizabeth's reign unto the year 1703 ; pp. 1-20. 7. A Speech, before Justice sitting in her Tribunal, against the Breach of Public Faith which is resolved upon by the present Parlia- ment, or Assembly of the Protestant States of Ireland in this year 1704, to the destruction of the Catholics of that kingdom ; pp. 1-43. 8. For the Reinthroned King, a Method of governing England, Ire- land, and Scotland ; pp. 1-4. 9. A Light to the Blind, whereby they may see the Dethronement of .Tames the Second, King of England, with a brief Narrative of his War in Ireland, and of the War between the Emperor and the King of France for the Crown of Spain ; pp. 1-740. Vol. marked " Q," 4to ; in the original half-binding. A portion of " An Enquiry into the Ancient and Present State of the County Palatine of Durham," pp. 1-24 ; a very scarce tract. Also a miscellaneous collection of letters to Carte on literary matters, and extracts made by him for his History of England, with notices of manuscripts in the Duchy of Lancaster office. Vol. marked " R," 4to ; in the original binding ; in a very dilapidated state. Extracts from various authors by J. Carte ; letters and anecdotes by him. Vol. marked " S," 4to ; in the original half-binding. Original letters and papers, and copies of letters and papers, between the years 1597 and 1741, chiefly relating to Ireland. The letters are mostly from and to the Duke of Ormonde. N.B. A number of letters to T. Carte seem to have been removed from this volume. Vol. marked " T," 4to ; in the original rough binding. " A la main " news letters to Lord Wharton, from July 1696 to August 1698. Letters from the Duke of Shrewsbury, Lord Somers, the Archbishop of York, Lord Halifax, Lord Cowper, and others, to Lord Wharton. Papers between 1693 and 1720. There are also two letters to Archbishop Sancroft. The above form a portion of the Wharton Papers. Vol. marked "U," 4to ; in the original rough binding. This volume is in a very dilapidated state. Several letters have been removed from if, as they related to the private affairs of T. Carte and his family. It is a sort of common-place hook, containing extracts and papers relating to matters between 1306 and 1738. Amongst other papers there is a petition from the Common Council of London to Parliament against the South Sea Directors. Vol. marked "V," 4 to ; in the original rough binding. It contains only extracts by T. Carte from printed books, chiefly relating to ecclesiastical and controversial matters. 51 Vol. marked " W," 4to ; in parchment covers, unbound. Abbe Charles I. to Charles I. to Charles I. in Charles 1. to Mr. Brown's ( iharles I. to Charles I. to Charles I. to Charles I. Id Charles 1. i<> Charles I. to Charles [.to Charles I. to Ormonde - the Irish Treaty Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde. Ormonde. Ormonde. Ormonde. Ormonde - ( Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Note ( Irmonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - Ormonde - ( Ormonde - ( Irmonde - Ormonde - Carte's Select. 3. „ 4. „ 6. „ 11. „ 14. „ 17. „ 19. 21. 23. 26. 29. 33. ?* 37. 39. 43. 64. 67. 69. 71. 78. 53 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Charles I. to Ormonde - Charles I. to Ormonde - Charles I. to Ormonde - Charles I. to Ormonde - Charles I. to Ormonde - Remonstrance of the Irish Parlia- ment. The Lord-Lieutenant's Speech to the Parliament. The Lord-Lieutenant's Speech to the General Assembly of Confed- erate Catholics. Charles I. to Ormonde. Charles I. to Ormonde. Ormonde to the Bishop ofDromore. The Speaker of the Irish House of Commons( J. Temple) to Ormonde. Ormonde to the Speaker The Irish Parliament's Address to the King. The Speaker of it to Ormonde. Ormonde to the Speaker Secretary Nicholas to the Irish Lords Justices. Ormonde's Speech to the Irish Par- liament. Ormonde to the Speaker Narrative of the Parliament's Pro- ceedings, &c. Ormonde's Speech to the Parliament Ormonde's Speech to the Parliament Ormonde's Speech to the Parliament Ormonde to John Walsh Ormonde to the Bishop of Meath - Ormonde to Sir Allan Broderick - Ormonde to the Earl of Orrery Ormonde to the Earl of Ossory Ormonde to Clarendon Ormonde to Clarendon Clarendon to Ormonde Lord Cornbury to Ormonde - Ormonde to Lord Cornbury - Ormonde to Ossory ... Carte's Select. 80. „ „ 83. „ „ 85. ?5 » 87. „ 82. Vol. A, No. 128. Vol. 59, No. 87. Vol. 63, No. 258. Vol. 31, No. 244. Vol. 44, No. 516. Vol. 44, No. 533. Vol. 44, No. 513. Ormonde's letter - book, 1667-1684. The draft in Ormonde's hand is in Vol. 44, No. 519. Ormonde's letter - book, 1667-1684. Vol. 49, No. 257, and Ormonde's letter-book. Vol. 49, No. 268, and Ormonde's letter-book. Vol. 49, No. 274, and Ormonde's letter-book. Ormonde's letter-book. Vol. 48, No. 151, and Ormonde's letter-book. Vol. 48, No. 304, and Ormonde's letter-book. Vol. 48, No. 305, and Ormonde's letter-book. Ormonde's letter-book. Do. Do. Do.,andVol.48,No.l52. 54 Page of Vol.11. Letters and Papers. "Where to be found. 42 Ormonde to Lord Conway ,, Ormonde to Ossory * 43 Ormonde to Orrery - 44 Ormonde to Orrery - ,, Ormonde to Ossory ... 45 Ormonde to Lord Conway 46 Ormonde to Ossory ... 47 Ormonde to Ossory - 48 Ormonde to Orrery - „ Ormonde to Orrery 50 The King to Orrery - „ Ormonde to Lord Conway 51 Ormonde to the Earl of Cat 'ling-ford „ Ormonde to Ossory - 53 Ormonde to Ossory - 54 Ormonde to Ossory - 55 Ormonde to James Hamilton ,, Ormonde to Orrery - 56 Orrery to Ormonde - 57 Ormonde to Orrery - 58 Orrery to Ormonde - 60 Ormonde to Orrery - „ Ormonde to Ossory - 61 Ormonde to Lord Chancellor Boyle 62 Ormonde to Ossory - „ Ormonde to Ossory - 63 Ormonde to Ossory - 64 Ormonde to Ossory - - 65 Ormonde to Ossory - „ Ormonde to Ossory - 66 Ormonde to Ossory ... 68 Ormonde to Ossoiy - 69 Ormonde to Ossory - 70 Ormonde to Lord Chancellor Boyle ., Archbishop Sheldon to the Vice- Chancellor of Oxford. 71 Report of Sir Heneage Finch „ Colonel Talbot's Petition (imperfect) 83 Ormonde's Memoir to the King, 167". 90 Earl of Ossory's Speech ., Prince of Orange to Ossory - 91 Ormonde to Sir Robert Southwell - ,, Ormonde to Sir Robert Southwell - 92 Ormonde to Sir Robert Southwell - „ Ormonde to Sir Roberl Southwell - 93 Ormonde to Sir Roberl Southwell - ,, The King to ( Jrmdnde - ,, Ormonde to the King - 94 Oil le to the King - - - ,, Duke of York to Ormonde 95 ( >rmonde to tin- I >uke of York „ Ormonde to the Duke of York Ormonde's Do., and Ormonde's Do. Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do. Do. Do. Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do., and Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do. letter-book. Vol. 48, No. letter- book. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 49, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 49, No. Vol. 49, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol.48, No. Vol.48, No. Vol. 49, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 49, No. Vol.48, No. Vol.48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol.48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 48, No. Vol. 48, No. 155. 156. 289. 157. 158. 295. 297. 164. 169. 175. 323. 178. 341. 183. 190. 193. 195. 196. 198. 205. 218. 219. 55 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. The Lord Chief Justice Keating to the Earl of Arran. Ormonde to the King - The Queen to Ormonde Ormonde to Sir W. Temple - Ormonde to Arran - Ormonde to Arran - 100 Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Lord Massareene Ormonde to Arran The King to Ormonde - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to the Duke of York Ormonde to the Duke of York Ormonde to Arran Ormonde to Sir Robert Southwell - The King to Ormonde - The Duke of York to Ormonde Ormonde to the Duke of York Earl of Rochester to Ormonde Ormonde to Rochester - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Sir R. Southwell Ormonde to Rochester - Rochester to Ormonde - Ormonde to Rochester - Ormonde to Sir R. Southwell Ormonde to Sir 11. Southwell Ormonde to the Karl of Ossory, his grandson. Ormonde's letter-book. Do. Do. Do. Do., and in Vol. G 1 (4to.), No. 103. Ormonde's letter-book, and in Vol. G- 1 (4to.), No. 104. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. G 1(4 to.), No. 110. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. Gl (4to.), No. 114. Ormonde's letter-book. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. G 1 (4to.), No. 122. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. Gl (4to.), No. 123 Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. G 1 (4to.), No. 125. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. G 1 (4to.), No. 127. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. Gl (4to.), No. 116. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. Gl(4to.),No.l32. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. G 1 (4to.), No. 133. Ormonde's letter-book. Do. Do. Do. Do., and Vol. Gl, No. 188. Ormonde's letter-book. Do., and Vol. 118, No. 122. Ormonde's letter-book, and Vol. 118, No. 123. r Do. Do.,andVol.ll8,No.l24. Do.,andVol.ll8,No.l26. Do. Do. Do. Do. Do.,andVol.ll8,No.l25. Do.,andVol.ll8,No.l27. Do. Do. 56 Pape of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Tol.II. 121 Ormonde to his mother, Lady Thurles. Vol. 128. 55 Ormonde to his sister, Countess of Clancarty. Do. 122 Ormonde to the same - Do. Ormonde to the same - Do. 123 Ormonde to the same - Do. Ormonde to the same - Do. 124 Ormonde to the same - Do. ?> Ormonde to the same - Do. 125 Ormonde to the Earl of Arlington - Do. 126 The Lord Chamberlain to Ormonde Do. 127 Papers of devotion found in Or- monde's red desk after his decease. 132 Lands granted to Ormonde by the Act of Settlement. Appendix to Carte's Life of Ormonde, Vol. IIL (London, folio, 1735.) Pa pc of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Tol. III. 1 Lord Deputy Wentworth to monde. •- Vol • 1, No 57. 2 Lord Deputy Wentworth to Cliri topher Wandesford. 3- 55 55 65. 14 Lord Deputy Wentworth to the Kin o* o Vol . 66, No 14. 16 55 5 5 » 5 5 55 55 16. 17 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 18. 18 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 20. 19 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 22. 21 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 25. 22 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 27. 23 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 29. 24 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 31. 26 55 55 55 55 - 55 55 35. 27* The King to Ormonde - - Vol • 1, No 164. 55 Earl Strafford to Sir A. Loftus - Vol .66, No 37. 28 „ to Ormonde - . Vol • 1, No. 178. 29 „ to Ormonde - - 55 55 214. 5» „ to Sir A. Loftus - 55 55 212. 30 Sir II. Vane to the Lords Justices • *5 The King to Ormonde - - 55 55 234. 31 Ormonde to Sir II. Vane - 55 55 249. 55 Sir 1 1. Vane to Ormonde - 55 55 250. 32 Sir (J. W'cnl worth to Ormonde - 55 55 254. 55 Ormonde to Sir IT. Vane - 55 55 258. 33 Sir If. Vane to Ormonde - 55 55 259. 55 Sir 1 1. Vane to Ormonde - 55 55 263. 34 Ormonde to the King - - 55 55 270. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. The King to Ormonde - - - Ormonde to the King - Sir VV. Cole to the Lords Justices. Endymion Porter to Ormonde The King to Ormonde - Vane to Ormonde - Sir Gr. Wentworth to Ormonde Sir W. Saintleger to Ormonde " " Earl of Clanricarde to the Earl of Bristol. Sir W. Saintleger to Ormonde Ormonde to Vane - Ormonde to the King - Clanricarde to the Earl of Essex - Clanricarde to Lord Cottington The King to Clanricarde Sir W". Saintleger to Ormonde Petition of the Lords and Gentry of the English Pale. Their Apology for taking Arms - Their Letter to the Queen - Lord Esmond to Ormonde Lord Upper Ossory to Ormonde - Ormonde to Clanricarde Lords of the Pale to the Nobility and Gentry of Gahvay. The King's Proclamation against the Irish Rebellion. Clanricarde to the King Lord Gormanston to Clanricarde - Clanricarde to the King Clanricarde to the Duke of Rich- mond. Ormonde to Lord Gormmiston Examination of Henry Dillon The Council to the Earl of Leicester Order of the Council to Ormonde - Sir W. Saintleger to Ormonde Order of the Council to Ormonde - Ormonde to the Lords Justices The Council to Ormonde Sir John Temple to Ormonde Sir Henry Tichborne to Ormonde - Ormonde and his OHicers to the Lords Justices. 5' »5 55 55 Sir II. Tichborne to Ormonde Lord Moore to Ormonde Ormonde to the Lords Justices The Council to Ormonde Vol. 1, •> No. 55 268 273. Vol. 2, No. 4. 55 55 o 55 55 6 55 55 10. 55 55 1.']. 55 55 19 Vol. 99, P- 10. Vol. 2, No. 29 55 55 36 55 55 48 55 55 70 55 55 71. Vol. 99, 1»- 27. 55 55 31. Vol. 2, No. 92. .•5 55 94. 55 55 144 55 55 119 55 55 103. 55 55 110. 55 55 111. 55 55 129. Vol. 99 P« 88. Vol. 2, N Vol. 2, No. 181. Vol. 99, p. 95. 76. 80. o. 20,5. 204. 210. 211. 214. 231. 249. 250. 255. 256. 258. 259. 261. 264. 262. 2(55. 58 Page of Tol.HI. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 70 Speaker Lenthall to Ormonde Vol. 3, No. 31. 33 The King to Ormonde - 35 33 34. 71 Secretary Nicholas to Ormonde 55 46. 33 Vote of the English House of Com- mons. 33 33 65. 33 Ormonde to Speaker Lenthall 33 33 67. 72 Sir W. Saintleger to Ormonde 35 33 87. 73 Nicholas to Ormonde - ,, 91. 74 Clanricarde to Ormonde „ 106. 75 Ormonde to the Lord Lieutenant - Vol. 4, No. 88. 76 The King's Commission to Ormonde Vol. 3, No. 84. 77 Ormonde to Nicholas - Vol. 4, No. 127. ?> Clanricarde to the Earl of Essex - Vol. 99, p. 245. 79 Clanricarde to Ormonde Vol. 3, No. 114. 80 Ormonde to Clanricarde Vol. 99, p. 268. 55 Lord Ranelagh to Clanricarde „ 269. 81 Clanricarde to the Lords Justices - ,5 271. 87 Clanricarde to Ormonde Vol. 3, No. 155, and Vol. 99, p. 279. 88 Clanricarde to Ranelagh Vol. 99, p. 282. 89 Nicholas to Ormonde - Vol. 3, No. 177. 90 Sir Francis Annesley, Viscount Valentia, to Sir Maurice Eustace. „ 192. 92 Speaker Lenthall to Ormonde 33 35 235. 55 Nicholas to Ormonde - „ 200. 93 Lord Inchiquin to the Council „ 205. 95 Ormonde to Nicholas - „ 207. 55 Ormonde to the King - Vol. 4, No. 123. 96 Ormonde to the Commissioners for Irish Affairs. Vol. 3, No. 216. 98 Clanricarde to the Lords Justices - Vol. 99, p. 290. 99 Nobility and Gentry at Kilkenny Vol. 3, No. 209, and Vol. to Ormonde. 99, p. 395. 55 Petition of the Catholics of Ireland Vol. 99, p. 395. 100 The King to the Council Vol. 3, No. 253. 55 Ormonde to the King - „ 307. 101 Ormonde to Viscount Valentia Vol. 4, No. 87. 55 Ormonde to Nicholas - Vol. 3, No. 243. 103 Ormonde to the King - 33 35 ^G5. 104 Ormonde to the Speaker of the English House of Commons. „ „ 274. 35 Ormonde to the Speaker of the English House of Commons. „ 290. 106 Ormonde to Viscounl Valentia „ 301. 3' ( ilanricarde to the King Vol. 99, p. 377. 108 ( Ilanricarde to Sir Robert King 55 33 380. 110 Petition of the Catholics of Ireland to the King. „ 398. 111 Petition of the Catholics of Ireland to the Queen. „ 400. 1 12 Lord [nchiquin to ( )rmonde - Vol. 4, No. 5. [13 'J'lic Supreme Council to Clanricarde Vol. 99, p. 405. I 1 \ Clanricarde to Lord Gormanston - „ 406. Page of Vol.111. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 117 The King's Commission to Ormonde Vol. 1, No. 164 118 Nicholas to Ormonde - 33 „ 172. 33 The King to Clanricarde 33 „ 173. 119 Tlie King's Declaration against the Rebels in Gal way. 33 „ 174. 120 General Preston to Clanricarde 35 „ 185. » Clanricarde to Preston 33 „ 185. 123 Sir John Netterville to Ormonde - 35 „ 191. 124 Ormonde to Clanricarde Vol. 9£ >, p. 442. 125 55 33 35 Nicholas to Ormonde - Vol'.' 4, „ 443. No. 202. 53 The King to the Council 35 „ 207. 126 Ormonde to the King - 53 5, 212. 127 Remonstrance of the Army - 33 „ 190. 129 The Officers of the Army to the Council. 33 „ 193. 35 Their Address to the King - 33 „ PJ2. 130 Ormonde to Nicholas - j» Nicholas to Ormonde - 33 „ 215. 131 Supreme Council to the Lords Com- missioners. 55 55 216. 132 Ormonde to the King - 35 „ 241. 133 The Council to the Speaker - 35 „ 242. 135 The King to Ormonde - 55 „ 257. 136 33 33 Remonstrance of the Catholics of Ireland. 33 33 „ 263. „ 310. 145 Petition of Prisoners in Dublin Castle to the English Parliament. 33 „ 327. 147 Petition of Prisoners in Dublin Castle to Ormonde. 35 „ 326. 35 Ormonde to Speaker Lenthall. 148 The Lords Justices to Lenthall 55 ., 320. 150 Ormonde to the King - Vol. 5, No. 10. 151 53 53 33 The Council of Ireland to the King- 55 33 „ 12. „ 18. 153 Ormonde to the King - 35 „ 43. 154 Ormonde to Nicholas - 31 „ 48. 155 Mr. Justice Donellau to Clanricarde Vol. 9J , p. 486. 35 Petition of the Army - Vol. 5, No. 68. 156 Chancellor of Ireland to Nicholas - 55 55 65. 157 Clanricarde to the King Vol. 99 , p. 491. 159 The King to JBorlase and Tichborne Vol. 5, No. 84. 53 Commission to Ormonde 35 35 76. 160 The King to Ormonde - 35 „ 86. 33 33 Ormonde to Clanricarde Vol? 9! .. 127. , p. 500. 161 Donellau to Clanricarde 33 „ 501. 162 The Lords Justices to the King. 163 Ormonde to Sir Michael Ernie Vol. 5, No. 140. 164 Ormonde to the King - 33 „ 205. j> Nicholas to Ormonde - 33 ., 210. 165 The King to the Earlof Leven 33 „ 234. 60 Page of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Vol.III. 166 The King to Ormonde - Vol. 6, No. 8. • 5 Ormonde to the King - - 33 35 27. 168 Ormonde to Inchiquin - - 33 33 62. 35 The King to the Lords Justices - 35 35 74. 169 Nicholas to Ormonde - - 55 33 79. 170 Ormonde to Clanricarde - Vol. 9S 3 P. 539. 171 35 55 55 - J3 35 549. 172 The King to the Lords Justices - Vol. 6, No. 235. 173 Nicholas to Ormonde - - 33 55 310. 174 Ormonde to Dr. Fennell - 35 55 353. 33 The Privy Council and Officers' 33 35 307. Approbation of the Cessation. 175 Grounds and Motives inducing the King to agree to a Cessation. 177 Clanricarde to Ormonde - Vol. 7, No. 5. 178 Lord Digby to Ormonde - 35 53 10. 55 55 55 - 33 33 22. 179 Nicholas to Ormonde - - 35 33 105. 180 The Queen to Ormonde. 55 Ormonde to Orlando Bridgman - 55 55 114. 181 Lord Digby to Ormonde - - Vol. 7, No . 120. "5 Ormonde to the Archbishop of 35 33 152. 183 York. The Council to the Speakers of t ic Noticed in the Catalogue English Parliament. as being in Vol. 7, No. 169, but it is not there. 193 Inchiquin to Ormonde - 35 33 205. 194 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 33 33 204. 196 Digby to Ormonde - 33 35 216. 55 Nicholas to the Lords Justices - 53 35 241. 197 Digby to Ormonde - 33 55 253. 198 Ormonde to Bridgman - 35 55 256. 55 Archbishop of York to Ormonde - 55 53 262. 200 Ormonde to the King . 55 35 286. 55 Ormonde to the Earl of Clanricar le 53 55 290. 201 Digby io Ormonde - 33 53 303. 203 Ormonde to Inchiquin - 33 53 325. 204 Archbishop of York to Ormonde _ 33 53 324. 20o Sir Gr. Kadcliffe to Ormonde - 33 33 327. 206 Nicholas to Ormonde - 31 35 331. 55 The charge against Sir W. Parsons 33 35 222. and others. 208 Arthur Trevor to Ormonde - 33 53 342. «. Lord Inchiquin to Ormonde - 33 55 355. 209 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 35 33 361. 210 Clanricarde to Ormonde - _ 33 33 - 362. 55 Ormonde to Sir F. llawley - 33 33 383. 211 Bridgman to Ormonde - 33 33 393. 213 Digby to Ormonde - 35 55 396. 2 1 5 Clanricarde to Ormonde - Vol. 8, No. 32. 217 Ormonde to Lieut.-Col. Matthews 55 55 69. 218 Radcliffe to Ormonde - 55 55 74. 219 35 33 ?J 33 83. 61 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 266 267 269 Ormonde to Lord Muskery Ormonde to Sir James Montgomery Digby to Ormonde Inchiqnin to Ormonde Ormonde to Sir William and Sir Robert Stewart. Ormonde to Digby Ormonde to Lord Byron - Ormonde to Lord Inchiquin Radcliffe to Ormonde Prince Rupert to the Assembly at Kilkenny. Trevor to Ormonde Ormonde to Sir O. Bridgman Ormonde to Digby Ormonde to the King The King to Ormonde Digby to Ormonde Col. Jones's Speech to Ormonde "1 Ormonde's Answer - / Ormonde to Digby Earl of Thomond to Ormonde Ormonde to Sir J. Montgomery Inchiquin to Ormonde Digby to Ormonde The King to Ormonde Digby to Ormonde Inchiquin to Ormonde Earl of Cork to Ormonde - Trevor to Ormonde Radcliffe to Ormonde Digby to Ormonde Daniel O'Neil to Ormonde Trevor to Ormonde Extract from a letter of D. O'Neil Sir Edward Nicholas to Ormonde. Ormonde to Dr. Fennell - Archbishop of York to Ormonde. Ormonde to Digby Digby to Ormonde Radcliffe to Ormonde. Trevor to Ormonde Ormonde to Radcliffe Ormonde to Digby Digby to Ormonde Clanricarde to Ormonde - Digby to Ormonde Nicholas to Ormonde Nicholas to Ormonde and the Council. Trevor to Ormonde Clanricarde to Ormonde Muskery to Ormonde Vol. 8, No. 104. >> 55 107. >> 55 126. 5' 55 271. 55 55 286. 55 55 304. 55 55 327. 55 55 330. 55 55 335. 55 55 344. 55 55 348. 55 55 349. Vol. 9, No 2. ?> 55 41. 4. 14. 21. 24. 26. 27. 47. 61. 81. 98. 137. 13S. 139. 144. 187. 188. 225. 247. 55 55 260. 55 55 250. 55 55 269. 277 55 5» 55 55 293. 55 55 55 T> *5 300. 319. 333. Vol. 10, No 1. 2 55 55 55 55 3. 55 55 9 32 62 Page of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Vol.III. 270 Supreme Council to Ormonde Vol. 10, No. 33. 271 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 36. 275 55 5' - 55 55 55. 55 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 58. 276 Radcliffe to Ormonde 55 55 61. 277 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 62. •5 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 110. 55 Trevor to Ormonde - 55 55 122. 278 Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 55 134. 279 55 55 - 55 55 151. 280 Ormonde to Prince Rupert - 55 55 180. 281 Ormonde to Daniel O'Neil - 55 55 192. 55 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 !5 194. 283 Clanricarde to Colonel Barry. 55 Propositions from Clanricarde to 55 55 196. Ormonde. 284 Daniel O'Neil to Ormonde - 55 55 217. 285 Ormonde to Sir Philip Percival - 55 55 251. 286 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 254. 288 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 272. 55 Ormonde to Muskery - 55 55 262. 289 Ormonde to the Archbishop of York 55 55 278. 55 Ormonde to Digby - '5 55 283. 291 Ormonde to Mr. Belling - 55 55 294. 292 Digby to Ormonde - - 55 55 303. 55 55 55 - 55 55 311. 293 Advertisement of the Catholics Ireland. of 55 55 316. 295 Archbishop of York to Ormonde - 55 55 321. 55 Digby to the Marquis of Ormonde - 55 55 338. 299 Ormonde to the Archbishop of York 55 55 359. 55 Radcliffe to Ormonde - 55 55 388. 300 Earl of Antrim to Ormonde - 55 55 396. 55 Ormonde to Antrim - 55 55 397. 301 Ormonde to Mr. Belling - - 55 55 398. •5 Archbishop of York to Ormonde - 55 55 412. 302 Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 55 418. 303 The King to Ormonde and the 55 ?5 426. Council. 304 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 430. 305 Ormonde to Clanricarde - 55 55 437. "i Percival to Ormonde - 55 55 444. 307 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 463. 308 D. O'Neil to Ormonde - 55 55 465. 309 Clanricarde, &c. to Ormonde - Vol.11, N o. 8. 310 Ormonde to Sir J. Mennes - 55 jj 28. 31] Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 ji 36. 312 Ormonde to Antrim - 55 ?? 53. 55 Lord Lieutenant and Council Nicholas. to 55 ?? 66. 314 ( >rmonde to Digby - 55 ? j 85. 316 Radcliffe to Ormonde - - 55 102. 317 Inchiquin to Ormonde - - 55 » 107. 63 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. - I Ormonde to Digby Antrim to Ormonde Trevor to Ormonde Ormonde to Antrim Ormonde to Digby Ormonde to Antrim Tbomond, Clanricarde, and others to the King. Ormonde to Digby - D. O'Neil to Ormonde - Radcliffe to Ormonde - Inchiquin to Sir J. Powlett - Digby to Ormonde Ormonde to Digby . - Ormonde to Nicholas - Ormonde to Antrim - Inchiquin to Clanricarde Inchiquin to Clanricarde Inchiquin to Ormonde - Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Digby - Clanricarde to Inchiquin Inchiquin to Clanricarde D. O'Neil to Ormonde - Endymion Porter to Ormonde Digby to Ormonde -.-.'- Clanricarde and others to Ormonde Trevor to Ormonde -..-..- Digby to Ormonde - Clanricarde to Ormonde Ormonde to Clanricarde D. O'Neil to Ormonde - Trevor to Ormonde - Ormonde to Digby . - Dr. Fennel! to Ormonde Ormonde to Fennell - Ormonde to Inchiquin - - - 0'IIertegan to the Supreme Council ;> 55 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 Bishop of Cloyne to Inchiquin Bishop of Cloyne to Dean Pryse - Petition of the Bishops and Clergy of Ireland to the King. The King to Ormonde - Clanricarde to Ormonde Ormonde to Clanricarde The King to Ormonde - 55 " Nicholas to Ormonde - Vol. 1 1 . No 150. 55 55 179. 55 55 187. 55 55 198. „ 55 230. 55 55 242. 55 55 266. 55 55 288. 55 55 290. 55 5) 302. )5 55 312. 55 55 330. 55 55 329. 55 55 338. 55 55 55 55 342. 364. 55 55 375. 55 55 386. 55 55 391. 55 55 393. i Vol. 12, No. 3. 55 5' 17. 47. 55 55 55 55 50. 55 55 54. 5) 55 74. 55 55 79. „ 55 225. 55 55 246. 55 55 251. 55 55 269. 55 55 288. 55 55 304. 55 55 305. 55 55 340. 55 55 339. 55 55 355. 55 55 364. 55 55 374. Vol. 13, N ». 6. 55 55 37. 55 55 40. 55 55 90. 55 55 97. 55 55 165. 55 55 175. 55 55 241. 55 55 293. 55 55 339. •5 „ 55 55 340. 363. 64 Page of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Vol. III. 374 Clanricarde to Ormonde Vol. 13, No 372. 376 Ormonde to Clauricarde - - Vol. 14, No 11. 377 Ormonde to the King - - - 5) 53 14. 5? Ormonde to Digby - - 55 55 15. 379 Muskery to Ormonde - - - 55 53 31. 380 Ormonde to Montrose - - - 55 55 32. 381 Digby to Ormonde - - 35 5) 58. 382 D. O'Neil to Ormonde - - - 35 33 68. 383 Digby to Ormonde - - 33 33 71. 384 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 33 33 78. 385 Ormonde to Mr. Humplu ey Gal- 33 33 86. braith. 386 Clauricarde to Ormonde - - 33 33 91. 387 The King to Ormonde - - - 35 53 98. 388 Ormonde to Digby - - 33 33 102. ?> Sir Robert King to Ormonde - 33 33 117. 389 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 33 53 118. 390 Digby to Ormonde - - 33 33 121. 392 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 55 33 137. J5 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 33 55 138. 393 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 33 33 142. 394 Sir E. Hyde to Ormonde - - 33 33 147. 395 Ormonde to the Council at Kilkenny 33 33 161. 55 Archbishop of York to Ormonde - 33 33 169. 397 Ormonde to Digby - - 33 33 181. 399 Ormonde to Dr. Fennell - - 33 33 196. ?> D. O'Neil to Ormonde - - - 33 33 217. 400 Ormonde to Digby - - 33 33 232. 401 Ormonde to the King - - - 33 33 288. 404 Ormonde to Digby - - 35 33 294. 405 Digby to Ormonde - - 55 33 307. 406 35 55 - - 53 33 326. 407 The King to Ormonde - - - 33 33 330. 408 55 55 - - 33 33 331. 409 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 35 33 346. 410 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 35 33 352. 412 55 53 - - 35 33 356. 413 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - Vol. 15, No . 13. 414 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 33 35 33. 33 33 55 - - 33 33 43. 415 Digby to Ormonde - - 33 33 54. 416 •■> >> - - 33 33 80. 417 j> »» - - 33 33 86. 418 The King to Ormonde - - - 53 33 198. 419 Digby to Ormonde - - 3» 33 204. 420 Digby to Lord Muskery ai d others 33 33 208. 421 The King to Prince Rupei t - - 33 35 212. 422 Trevor to Ormonde - - 3» 33 276. 424 ( Irmonde l<> Clanricarde - - 33 33 298. 425 Sir Brien O'Neil to Tirlog h ( J'Neil 3) 33 315. 426 Dean Boyle to the Bishop c f Cloyi 10 35 33 334. 427 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 35 33 374. 33 Digby to Ormonde - - S3 33 423. 65 Pap Letters and Papers. When.' to be fODIld. Vol.III. 428 Ormonde to Digby . Vol. 16, No 33. 431 The King to Ormonde - - - 55 55 45. 55 Ormonde to Percival - - - 55 55 51. 432 II. Galbraith to Ormonde - - 55 55 14:5. 433 The King to Ormonde - - - 55 55 189. 434 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 55 55 201. 55 Ormonde to Muskery - - - 55 55 210. 435 H. Galbraith to Ormonde - - 55 55 215. 436 Ormonde to Nicholas - - - 55 55 244. 440 55 55 " - - 55 55 258. 55 Ormonde to the King - - - 55 55 259. 55 Ormonde to the Duke of York - 55 55 273. 441 The King to Ormonde - - - 55 55 277, 278. 442 Ormonde to the King - - - 55 55 280. 55 Ormonde to Nicholas - - - 55 55 279. 443 Ormonde to the King - - 55 55 281. 445 The King to the Lord Lieutenant 55 55 293.. and Council. 446 Nicholas to the Council - - 55 55 297. 447 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 55 55 300. 448 Ormonde to the Earl of Glamorgan 55 55 310. 449 The King to Ormonde - - 55 55 321. 55 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 55 55 322. 450 Sir E. Hyde to Ormonde - - 55 55 366. 451 The King to Ormonde - - Vol. 17, No. 2. 452 The King to Digby - - 55 55 6. 453 Nicholas to Ormonde - - - 55 55 8. 55 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 55 55 16. 455 The King to Ormonde - - 55 55 35. 456 Digby to Ormonde - - 55 55 40. 457 Ormonde to Digby - - 55 47. 458 Ormonde to Muskeiy - - - 55 53. 459 Ormonde to the King - - - 55 56. 55 Digby to Ormonde - - 55 55 57. 460 Ormonde to the Marquis of Montrose 55 55 66. 461 Digby to Ormonde - - 55 55 103. 55 Ormonde to Digby - - 55 55 135. 462 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 55 55 209. 4(53 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 55 55 208. 464 55 55 - - 55 55 2] ;. 466 55 55 - - 55 55 216. 468 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 55 55 230. 237. 55 55 55 55 55 4(39 55 55 - - 55 55 207. 472 Clanricarde to Ormonde - - 55 55 156. 474 The King to Ormonde - - 55 55 272. 55 Ormonde to the King - - - 55 55 27J>. 475 Ormonde to Clanricarde - - 55 55 281. jj Digby to Ormonde. N.B. — This is entered in tl ic cat alogne as be Dg in Vol. 17, No. .'510 : it i> not tl iere, howc ever, inn n V ol. 68, No. 234 478 The Queen to Ormonde - - I Vol. 17, No 31-3. 479 Hyde to Ormonde - - | Vol. 15 No . 66. 66 Page of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Vol.111 479 Ormonde and the Council to King. the Vol. 17 No . 328. 481 The Prince of Wales to Ormon le - 55 55 334. 482 Ormonde and the Council to King. the 55 55 348. 486 55 55 55 55 55 350. 488 Digby to Ormonde - Vol. 18, No 5. 489 The King to the Speaker of the 55 55 21. House of Lords. 490 Ormonde to Arthur Annesley others. and 55 55 36. 491 Digby's Declaration about the Peace 55 55 71. of Ireland. 492 Ormonde to the King - - 55 55 77. 55 Ormonde to Hyde - 55 55 111. 55 Ormonde to the Queen - - 55 55 114. 493 Ormonde to the Prince of Wales 55 55 210. 55 Remonstrance of the Bishops Clergy of Ireland. and 55 55 120. 495 The Queen to Ormonde - 55 55 148. 496 Prince of Wales to Ormonde - 55 5? 149. 55 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 283. 498 55 '5 - 55 ?5 289. 499 Ormonde to Sir J. Montgomery - 55 55 285. 55 Ormonde to Clanricarde - 55 55 305. 500 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 311. 55 Sir George Lane to Sir T. Nug ent 55 )5 313. 501 Ormonde to Cardinal Mazarine - 55 55 318. 502 Ormonde to the King - 55 55 329. ?> Ormonde to Lord Jermyn - 55 55 347. 503 Ormonde to Lord Taafe - Vol. 19, No . 15. 55 Ormonde to Clanricarde - 55 55 16. 55 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 31. 504 Ormonde to Glamorgan - 55 55 34. 55 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 74. 505 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 93. 55 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 98. 506 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 101. 55 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 104. 507 55 55 - 55 >5 118. 508 Ormonde to Digby - 55 55 137. 509 Ormonde to Lord Taafe - 55 55 154. 510 Ormonde to General Preston - 55 55 157. 55 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 186. 511 Clanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 187. '5 Digby to Ormonde - 55 55 197. 5 1 2 ( Jlanricarde to Ormonde - 55 55 199. 55 ( >rmonde <<> Digby - 55 '5 201. 5 1 3 Ormonde to Clanricarde - 55 55 202. )> ' irmonde to Digby - 55 55 206. r,\ \ l)i^l)y to Ormonde - •5 55 211. 5 1 •", 55 55 - 55 55 232. 516 55 55 - 55 55 262. 67 Pa#c Vol. III. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 517 Clanricarde to Ormonde .519 Digby to Ormonde „ Ormonde to Digby - 520 Clanricarde to the Nuncio 522 Digby to Ormonde ------ 55 55 »» 523 Ormonde to Digby - 525 Digby to Ormonde - — — 528 Clanricarde to Ormonde 529 „ „ - „ Ormonde to Clanricarde 530 Ormonde to Digby - ,, Digby to Ormonde - 531 Ormonde to General Preston 532 General Preston to Ormonde „ Ormonde to Preston - „ Ormonde to Clanricarde 533 Preston to Ormonde - „ Ormonde to the Queen - „ Ormonde to Digby - 534 Digby to Ormonde - - - - 536 Ormonde to Preston - ,, Ormonde to Clanricarde 537 Clanricarde to Ormonde 5) 55 55 538 Ormonde to Clanricarde 539 Clanricarde to Ormonde „ Preston to Ormonde - 540 Ormonde to Nicholas Plunket 543 Ormonde to the Queen „ Digby to Ormonde - 544 „ „ - 545 The Queen to Ormonde „ Ormonde to Digby - 546 The Prince to Ormonde 547 Clanricarde to Sir Luke Fitzgerald 548 Digby to Ormonde - 549 Ormonde to the King - - - 550 Ormonde to Digby - 551 Clanricarde to Ormonde. 552 Ormonde to Clanricarde 553 Digby to Ormonde ,, Ormonde to Digby Clanricarde to Ormonde 554 Ormonde to Winter Grant - „ Digby to Ormonde 555 Ormonde to Digby 556 Digby to Ormonde 557 Clanricarde to Ormonde „ Ormonde to Clanricarde 558 Ormonde to the King - „ Digby to Ormonde 559 Ormonde to Digby Vol. 19, No. 27',. 55 55 276. 55 55 L'SO. 55 55 281. 55 55 312. 55 55 321. 55 >5 320. 55 55 324. 55 55 329. 55 55 331. 55 55 332. 55 55 335. 55 55 336. 55 55 337. 55 55 338. '5 55 339. '5 55 340. 55 55 397. 55 55 419. 55 55 425. 55 5' 4 XL'. Vol. 20, No 27. 55 55 47. 55 55 49. 55 55 57. 55 55 61. 5> 55 64. 55 55 87. 55 55 112. 55 55 208. 55 55 226. 55 55 246. Vol. 22, No 25 Vol. 20, No 2.32. Vol. 22, No 28. Vol. 20, No 273. Vol. 63, No 24. Vol. 20, No 291. 55 55 305. Vol. 21, N X 1. 55 55 AO. 55 55 49. 55 55 .'.o. 55 55 61. 55 55 126. 55 M 131. 55 55 135. 137. 55 55 55 55 167. 55 179. 55 1^2. 55 , 196. 68 Page of Vol. III. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 559 560 562 564 55 565 55 571 574 » 575 577 579 580 577* 582 583 580* 581* 583* ij 584 585 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 55 604 605 607 607 608 Digby to Ormonde - " " Ormonde to Digby ... Digby to Ormonde - " " Relation of Irish Affairs Digby to Ormonde - Prince of Wales to Ormonde - Nicholas to Ormonde - Inchiquin to Ormonde - Ormonde to the Prince of Wales - Ormonde to Secretary Long - Prince of Wales to Ormonde - Ormonde to the Queen - Ormonde to the Prince of Wales - Ormonde to Lord Jermyn Ormonde to Lord Taafe Ormonde to Clanricarde Prince of Wales to Ormonde - Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Inchiquin - Ormonde to Taafe - Nicholas to Ormonde - Sir Richard Blake to the Nuncio - Abstract of the Charge against the Nuncio. The King to Lord Hatton Ormonde to Lord Broghill Ormonde to the Prince of Wales - 55 55 55 Ormonde to Inchiquin - Ormonde to Digby Digby to Ormonde Ormonde to Inchiquin - Prince <>i' Wales to Ormonde - The Prince's order ( Irmonde to Digby Prince of Wales to Ormonde Ormonde to Lord Hatton ( Jrmonde to Digby Ormonde to the Prince of Wales ( Irmonde to Jermyn Ormonde to the Prince of Wales. ( Irmonde to Clanricarde ( Irmonde to Colonel Parry ( llanricarde to ( )rmonde 1 >igby to Ormonde < Irmonde lo Nicholas. Ormonde to Kins Charles II. Vol.21, No. 198. 55 „ 206. 55 5, 213. 55 „ 218. 55 „ 221. 55 „ 226. 5> „ 257. 55 ., 270. 55 ,. 291. Vol. 22, No. 14. 55 „ 68. 55 „ 129. 55 „ 130. 55 „ 148. 55 5, 162. 55 „ 167. 55 55 175. 55 „ 198. 55 „ 213. 55 „ 216. 997 55 55 ' '•• 55 „ 230. 55 „ 231. 55 „ 253. 55 „ 255. 55 „ 256. 55 „ 289. 55 „ 360. 55 „ 362. 55 „ 364. 55 „ 402. 55 5, 416. 55 ,5 422. 55 „ 434. 55 4 9 4 55 ^^^r. Vol. 23 , No. 20. 55 5, 27. 55 „ 28. 55 „ 96. 55 ,5 134. 55 „ 182. 55 „ 190. 55 „ 193. 55 „ 205. 55 „ 317. 55 321 55 «•»— 1. 55 „ 330. 55 ., 345. 338. The pagea of this volume are erroneously numbered. 69 " Carte's Ormonde Papers," Vol. I. (London, 8vo, 1739). Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Sir P. Wemya to Ormonde - 55 55 Relation of Edgehill Fight Art Inn- Trevor to Ormonde - Sir Robert Poyntz to Ormonde Trevor to Ormonde - 55 55 Captain Byreh to G. Carr, Ormonde's Secretary. Sir Robert Byron to Ormonde Lord Byron to Ormonde. Sir R. Byron to Ormonde Declaration of the Marquis of Mon- trose against the Scots invading England, 1643. Archbishop of York to Ormonde (x c also the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 254). Sir G. Radcliffe to Ormonde (see also the "Life of Ormonde," vol. iii. p. 258). Ormonde to the Archbishop of York Archbishop of York to Ormonde - D. O'Neil to Ormonde - - - Trevor to Ormonde - 55 5? D. O'Neil to Trevor. Trevor to Ormonde - •» 5? Archbishop of York to Ormonde - Lord Byron to Ormonde News from the King's Army in Scotland. Trevor to Ormonde - Lord Digby to Ormonde Lord Byron to Ormonde Sir R. Grenville's Narrative of His Majesty's Affairs in the West of England. Lord Hopton's Relation of the Pro- ceedings in the West. Proceedings of the newly-moulded Army, by Col. Wogan. Ormonde to Lord Byron Ormonde to Sir Maurice Eustace - D. O'Neil to Ormonde - Relation of the Battle of Preston - The Bishop of Deny to Ormonde - Ormonde to Lord Hatton Carle'- Papers. Vol. 1, No. 274. 281. Vol.3,Xo.331 ;Vol.G5,No.23 Vol. 4, No. 85. Vol. 5, No. 213. Vol. 8, No. 44. „ 52. Vol. 8, No. 291. Vol. 9, No. 44. Vol. 11, No. 10 55 55 14S 55 55 168 55 55 199 55 55 240. Vol. 12, No. 203 55 55 223. 325 Vol. 14, No. 24. „ „ 211. „ „ 286. ,, ,, COG. Vol. 15, No. 424. Vol. 17, No. 175. Vol. 13, No. 168. Vol. 17, No. 74. Vol. 21, No. 336. „ „ 263. „ „ 276. 296 Vol. 22, No. 125. „ „ 184. ., •■ IJo. 70 Page of Vol. I. Letters and Papers. Where to be found. f 166 1168 { 170 181 185 188 /190 1191 195 f 197 1199 201 f203 1204 f 206 1208 213 216 217 220 f 222 1224 f 225 1227 235 237 240 242 243 245 /247 1250 255 258 260 263 265 267 268 270 Sir E. Nicholas to Ormonde - Extract inclosed - - - - Nicholas to Ormonde - Extracts from London and elsewhere inclosed. Hatton to Ormonde The King's Letter inclosed (see also "Life of Ormonde," ii. 17, Ap- pendix). Nicholas to Ormonde - Extracts in the preceding Declaration of the King of France against the Proceedings of the Parliamentarians. Nicholas to Ormonde - Extracts inclosed. A Parliamentarian to a Friend in France. Nicholas to Ormonde - Advertisements inclosed Nicholas to Ormonde - Advertisements inclosed Nicholas to Ormonde. Lord Byron to Ormonde. Nicholas to Ormonde - Dr. Winstad to Nicholas Nicholas to Ormonde - Advertisements inclosed Nicholas to Ormonde - Advertisements inclosed. Nicholas to Ormonde. Lord Byron to Ormonde Duke of Hamilton to Ormonde Earl of Lauderdale to Ormonde General Digby to Ormonde - Nicholas to Ormonde - Advertisements inclosed. Nicholas to Sir G. Lane Letter of Salmasius on the Murder of Charles I. Nicholas lo Ormonde. Memorial of the King's Council to the Lords Deputies for the States ( l-eneral. Advertisements from Hague and Paris. Secretary Long lo Ormonde - The King to ( >rmonde - I. 'ml Byron to Ormonde Vol. 22, No. 378. „ „ 290. j, „ 385. „ 200. „ 398. 401. 413. 414. 367. Vol. 23, No. 253. Vol. 23, No. 270. „ „ 271. „ „ 283. „ 257. Vol. 24, No. 8. 9 & 10. 21. Vol'.' 23, No. 309. Vol. 24, No. 109. Vol. 24, No. 195. 010 „ „ 210. „ „ 211. „ „ 214. „ „ 233,234. „ „ 236. Vol. 26, No. 463. Vol. 24, No. 190. Vol. 24, No. 246. „ 250. „ „ 252. „ 258. 71 Page of Letters and Papers. AVI ere t i he found. Vol. I. |271 1273 Nicholas to Ormonde Vol. 24, No . 372. Extracts inclosed. (279 Nicholas to Ormonde - . Vol. 24, No 373. J 281 Extract of a Letter from Lord Hat ton . I „ Extracts inclosed. r282 1284 Nicholas to Ormonde - 33 412. Extracts inclosed. 286 Ormonde to Lord Digby - 3> 33 471. f 290 \292 Nicholas to Ormonde - Vol. 25 No . 5. Extracts inclosed. 294 Nicholas to Ormonde - 5) 33 6. f 295 \297 >? ?) - 55 33 111. Extract inclosed. 299 Lord Jermyn to Ormonde - 55 33 134. 306 Nicholas to Ormonde - . )) 3, 291. 307 Letter to the Marquis of Clanricai ■de 55 )3 301. 309 Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 35 325, 326. 312 53 55 - 55 33 324. 314 55 55 - 55 35 430. 316 Secretary Long to Ormonde - - 55 33 454. 318 Lord Byron to Ormonde - 55 33 456. / 321 1323 Nicholas to Ormonde - 35 33 457. The Scot's Letter inclosed ; signed " Loudon Cancellarius." 326 Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 53 464. 327 Sir R. Browne to Secretary Nicholas 35 33 438. 330 55 55 55 »3 439. 331 Lord Jermyn to Ormonde - Vol. 26, No 269. 332 Note inclosed. 333 Lord Byron to Ormonde - 55 35 401. 335 Sir R. Browne to Nicholas - - J5 3> 409. 337 Lord Byron to D. O'Neil - 55 35 414. 340 Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 33 429. 345 Proceedings of Montrose - 55 35 344. 351 News inclosed in Nicholas's Letter 55 35 336. 355 The King to the Estates of Scotland 55 33 325. 356 The' King to the Marquis of Mon- 55 35 326. trose. 358 Nicholas to Ormonde - - 55 55 462. 359 Lord Byron to Ormonde - Vol. 27, No 1. 361 Secretary Long to Ormonde - - 55 53 6. 363 List of Despatches sent. j> Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 35 22. 365 H. Seymour to Ormonde - Vol. A. 4to, No, 7. 367 Long to Ormonde - Vol. 27, No. 60. 371 The King to Ormonde - - 33 33 63. 373 Long to Ormonde - 35 33 102. f 375 \377 Nicholas to Ormonde - 35 33 L69. The King's Order inclosed " 33 35 201. 378 Nicholas to Ormonde 33 55 290. 380 Relation of the Battle at Dunbar - Vol. 28, No. 277. 384 D. O'Neil to the Marchioness Ormonde. of 1 » 37S. 72 Letters and Papers. "Where to be found. Propositions to the Spanish Ambas- sador. D. O'Neil to Lady Ormonde - The King's Conferences with Dr. King. Dean King's Relation of the King's Condition in Scotland. The King to Ormonde - Ormonde's Answer. Instructions for Dean King - Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Nicholas - Nicholas to Ormonde - Papers inclosed - Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 55 Extract. Nicholas to Ormonde - Extracts - - Nicholas to Ormonde - Extract - Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Sir E. Nicholas - 55 w Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Nicholas - Nicholas to Ormonde - Inclosures - Nicholas to Ormonde - - - Inclosures - - - - - List of the Committee of the Scotch Estates. Ormonde to Clanricarde. Ormonde to Nicholas - Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Lord Taafe Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Nicholas - Vol. 28, No. 379. 55 55 430. 55 55 388. 55 55 384. Vol. 29, No 508. Vol. 28, No 385. Vol. 29, No. 140. 55 55 177. 5? 55 179. 55 55 185. 136, 159. 55 55 212, 218. 55 55 220. 55 55 171, 214. 55 55 239. 55 55 243. 55 55 265. 55 55 267. 55 55 272. 55 55 307. 55 55 304. 55 55 309. 182, 224 55 55 320. 397 55 55 55 55 341. 55 55 273, 306. 55 55 309. 55 55 339. 55 55 354. 55 55 358. 55 55 360. 362. " Carte's Ormonde Papers,' ' Vol. II. (London, 8vo, 1739). r e 0! V6\ 11. Letters and Tapers. Where to be found.' 1 4 5 7 Nicholas to Ormonde - Ormonde to Nicholas - ( )i tnonde to Sir E. IFyde Ormonde to Lord Dighy - - Vol. 29, No. 374. „ „ 377. 55 55 386. „ 386(a). 73 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. 102 Ormonde to the Queen - Nicholas to Ormonde - Mr. Fanshaw'a Letter inclosed Ormonde to Lord Taafe Ormonde to Sir E. Nicholas - Ormonde to Lord Inchiquin - Ormonde to Nicholas - Nicholas to Ormonde - Extracts - Letter from Perth - Nicholas to Ormonde - D. O'Neil to Ormonde - Mr. Fanshaw to Ormonde Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 55 Ormonde to Nicholas - Nicholas to Ormonde - 55 55 Colonel Venables to General Mon- tague. 55 55 The King to the Duke of Neuburg Ormonde's Memoir to the Duke of Neuberg. Ormonde to Neuberg - Neuberg to Ormonde - Ormonde to Neuberg - - - Neuberg to Ormonde - Winklehausen to Ormonde - Hyde to Ormonde - Sir Henry de Vic to Ormonde Hyde to Ormonde Colonel Richard Talbot to Ormonde »> >> Sir G. Radcliffc to Ormonde - Inchiquin to Ormonde Letter from London - Another, of same date. Ditto - Peter Talbot to Ormonde John Thurloe to General Montague Letter from London - Another, of same date. Thurloe to Montague - Letter from London. Thurloe to Montague. 55 55 Walsingham to Ormonde Letter from an English Romanist (inclosed) Thurloe to Montague - Vol. 29, No 388. 55 389. 55 55 343. 400. 55 413. 55 55 427. 428. 55 408. 55 380. 55 346. 55 55 424. 55 55 55 55 435. 439. 55 55 443. 55 55 55 55 55 55 455. 4 7. ->. 461. 55 55 493. Vol. 74, No . 43. 55 Vol. 30, 55 No 16. . 260. 55 55 267, 270. 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 265. 261. 263. 262. Vol'.'" 264. Ireland," 4to, No. 170. „ 177. „ 169. ito, No. 31. Vol. 55 55 " A," - 55 55 55 55 55 Vol.' „ 36. „ 46. „ 52. „ 53. 55 05. 'Ireland," 4to, No. 163 55 „ 164 Vol. «A,"4to, No. 51. Vol. 74, No. 24. Vol.'Treland," 4to, No. 166. Vol. 74, No. 25. Vol. 73, No. 3. Vol. " A," 4to, No. 49. 55 55 ^y. Vol. 73, No. 4. 74 Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Thurloe to Montague Ormonde to Hyde -_-..- Ormonde's Account of his Proceed- ings in England. Hyde to Ormonde - Ormonde to Hyde. Earl of Bristol to Ormonde - Hyde to Ormonde. Ormonde to Hyde. Hyde to Ormonde - Ormonde to Hyde - Bristol to Ormonde. Hyde to Ormonde - Ormonde to Cardinal de Retz De Retz to Ormonde - 55 55 Ormonde to De Retz ... De Retz to Ormonde - Ormonde to De Retz - 55 55 De Retz to Ormonde - 55 55 Ormonde to De Retz - De Retz to Ormonde - Ormonde to De Retz - De Retz to Ormonde - Ormonde to De Retz - The King to the Princess Dowager of Orange (in French). The King to the Princess Dowager of Orange (in English). Protector Richard Cromwell to G. Downing, Envoy in Holland. Downing to Thurloe R. Cromwell to Downing R. Cromwell to Gen. Montague Lord Mordaunt to Ormonde - Treaty between France, Holland, and R. Cromwell. Later Agreement - - - - English Commissioners to the King of Sweden. Sir Robert Honywood to Montague The Queen Mother to the King Ormonde to 1 [yde ... Vol. 73, No. 7. 55 55 11. 55 55 15. 27 55 55 55 55 68. 55 55 69. Vol. 'A 55 ," 4to , No. 66 „ 66 68. Vol. 30, No. 317. 55 „ 318. Vol. " A, " 4to, N< 3. 69. 70. 55 55 55 55 100. 55 55 103. 55 55 94. 55 55 105. 55 55 92. 55 55 98. 55 55 96. 55 55 110. 55 55 140. 55 55 137. 55 55 196 55 55 158 55 55 166 55 55 170 129 130. Vol. 73, No. 129. 55 55 161. 55 55 177. 55 55 165. 55 55 168. 55 55 169. Vol. 'A ," 4to, No. 176 Vol. 73, No. 181. 55 55 191. 55 55 195. 5) 55 199. Vol.' 'A ," 4to, No. 195 55 55 55 55 200 204 75 Letters and Tapers. Where to be found. 191 J crray n to Ormonde ... Vol. " A," 4to, No 214. 192 Ormonde to Hyde - 55 55 201. 193 Lord Crofts to the King 55 55 207. 55 Jermyn to Ormonde ... 55 55 210. 194 Mordaunt to the King - Vol. 30, No. 352. 201 Dr. Barwick to the King Vol. "A,"4to, No. 216. 217. 221. 205 55 55 Hyde to Ormonde ... 55 55 55 55 206 Bishop of Deny to Dr. Earles 55 55 224. 208 209 Swedish Taper given in to the Com- missioners of Parliament. Hyde to Ormonde. Vol. 73, No. 211. 213 55 55 215 Nicholas to Ormonde - Vol. " A," 4to, No. 225. 216 55 55 55 55 243. 218 Hyde to Ormonde ... Vol. 30, No. 333. 220 Mordaunt to Ormonde - Vol. " A," 4to, No. 249. 222 Mordaunt to the King - 55 55 251. 223 55 55 55 55 263. 231 Hyde to Ormonde •• Vol. 30, No. 335. 237 Nicholas to the King - Vol. '•A,"4to,No. 276. 238 Mordaunt to Ormonde - 55 55 286. 240 Hyde to Ormonde - . - Vol. 30, No. 338. 242 55 55 5 „ 340. 244 Mordaunt to the King - 5 „ 343. 250 Hyde to Ormonde -. .. - 5 „ 345. 254 Jermyn to Ormonde - Vol. " A," 4to, No. 302. 256 Dr. Barwick to the King . - 55 55 299. 257 Hyde to Ormonde - Vol. 30, No. 349. 259 Duke of York to Mordaunt - 5 „ 348. 261 Bristol to the Prince of Conde 5 „ 351. 262 Ormonde to Mordaunt - Vol. "A," 4 to, No. 311. 264 Mordaunt to Ormonde - 55 55 309. 265 Hyde to Ormonde - Vol. 30, No. 354. 268 Duke of York to Mordaunt - 5 „ 356. 269 M. de Schomberg to the King Vol. " A," 4to, No. 315. 271 M. de Schomberg to Ormonde 55 55 372. 272 M. de Schomberg to the King 55 55 373. 273 55 55 55 55 376. 276 Hyde to Ormonde ... Vol. 30, No. 358. 283 55 55 5 „ 362. 288 55 55 Vol. " A," 4to. No 335. 290 Hyde to the King ... 55 55 327. 291 Proposed Letter from the King 55 55 329. >> Ormonde's Memoranda for Cardinal Mazarin. 5> 55 339. 296 Ormonde to Hyde - 55 55 344. 297 The King to M. de Turenne - 55 55 3-45. 29S The State of England - Vol. 30, No. 373. 300 Ormonde to Jermyn - 5 " ^1^' 302 55 55 > 55 377. 304 55 55 Vol. "A," 4to, No 391. 305 Thomas Luttrell to Ormonde 51 55 381. 76 Pa#e of Letters and Papers. Where to be found. Vol. II. 306 Lord Crofts to Ormonde Vol. « A," 4to, No. 434. 307 Jermyn to Ormonde - 55 55 436. 308 Luttrell to Ormonde - 55 55 438. 309 55 55 - 55 55 459. 312 55 55 - 55 55 470. 313 55 55 - 55 55 481. 314 The King to Sir Charles Coote. 315 Mordaunt to Ormonde - - 55 55 480. 316 55 55 - 55 55 499. 317 Luttrell to Ormonde - 55 55 495. 319 Thomas Howard to the King - Vol. " B," 4to, No . 14. 321 Ormonde to Howard - 55 55 39. 322 Howard to Ormonde - 55 55 29. 324 Mordaunt to Ormonde - - 55 55 33. 325 55 55 - 55 55 70. ?? Dr. Betts to Ormonde - - 55 55 69. 328 Mr. H. Coventry to Ormonde - Vol. 30, No. 413. 329 Mordaunt to Ormonde - - 417 55 55 XA • • 331 Ignatius White to Ormonde - - 419 55 55 T:i-»^. 332 Earl of Northampton to the King - 499 55 55 t:--. 334 White to Ormonde - 427 55 55 rr — ' • 335 Mordaunt to Ormonde - - 55 445. 336 Coventry to Ormonde - - „ 452. 337 Sir T. Wharton to Ormonde - Vol. « B," 4to, No. 98. 339 White to Sir G. Lane - _ Vol. 30, No. 455. 342 Earl of Clancarty to Ormonde - Vol. " B," 4to, No. 128. 343 Peter Talbot to Ormonde - 55 55 127. 345 Lord Aungier to Ormonde - - Vol. 30, No. 457. 347 55 55 - 55 55 466. 349 Sir M. Eustace to Ormonde - - Vol. 21, No. 295. 351 Mr. Denham to Ormonde _ Vol. 22, No. 34. 353 Ormonde to Denham - Vol.22, No. 41. :j Ormonde to the Scotch Commis- Vol. 24, No. 92. sioners. 354 E. Walsingham to Ormonde - Vol. 25, No. 340. 358 Sir E. Hyde to Ormonde - Vol. 22, No. 232. 359 Ormonde to Nicholas - - Vol. 24, No. 29. 363 The King to Ormonde - 55 55 56. »> 55 55 - 55 55 67. 364 55 55 - „ 69. 365 The Queen's Instructions to Lord Vol. 27, No. 49. Byron. 367 The King to Ormonde - Vol. 24, No. 107. 368 Ormonde to the King - - „ 244. :;to The King to Ormonde - - 5, 288. 37 i Ormonde to Prince Rupert - - „ 323. 373 Ormonde to Mr. Fanshaw - 55 55 043. 374 Ormonde to Prince Rupert - - „ 394. 375 Prince Rupert to ( Irmonde - - „ 352. : J T f i The King to ( hmonde - „ 438. :;:: Ormonde to the Queen - 5, 474. 379 Ormonde to Nicholas - - 5, „ 487. 383 Ormonde to the King - - Vol. 25, No. 11. 77 of Vol.11. Letters and Papers. Where to be found 388 391 392 394 396 402 405 407 413 414 415 416 417 421 423 424 426 427 430 432 433 436 441 442 445 446 449 450 453 455 458 459 460 Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Lord Digby Ormonde to the King. The King's Warrant for Ormonde to be KG. Ormonde to the King. 53 5' Ormonde to Jermyn - Ormonde to Byron - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Nicholas - Ormonde to Jermyn - Ormonde to the Kins - The King to Ormonde - » >» Ormonde to the Bishop of Deny - Ormonde to Secretary Long - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Lord Byron Ormonde to Jermyn - Ormonde to Long ■ - Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Long - The King to Ormonde - - - Ormonde to Cottington and Hyde, Ambassadors in Spain. Ormonde to the King - Ormonde's Reasons why it is better for him to attend on the King. The King to Ormonde - Ormonde to Clanricarde Ormonde to Lord Taafe Ormonde to the King - Ormonde to Clanricarde Vol. 25, No. 37. S3 >> 40. 122. 38 33 33 S3 348. >> SS 369. 3? 33 385. 33 35 389. Vol. 26, No. 173. j) 33 184. 33 S3 1ST. 186. 33 35 242. 33 33 264. 33 33 339. 33 33 395. Vol. 27, No. 196. Vol. 28, No. 21. 33 33 42. 33 33 43. 50. 35 33 136. 281. 35 )3 276. 2;)!). Vol. 29, No 86. 89. 510. 133. 146. 1 52. 251. APPENDIX C* Notices of Missing Volumes of the Careav MSS. E. (Now MS. Bodl. Laud. G12.) 1. The Ancient Estate of the Bishoprics of Deny, Eaphoe, and Clogher ; fol. 1. 2. Reasons for the Restoration of Bishoprics, erecting of Churches and Schools of Learning ; fol. 5. 3. Nomina Regum Anglicorum, &c ; fol. 9. 4. De origine Gigantinm ; fol. 14. 5. Episcopi Hibernue; fol. 16. * The lists of the contents of the volumes not in the Lambeth Library are taken from the Catalogue of the Carew Tapers now at Lambeth, viz., Nos. G3G, 037, & 638. 78 6. The issue of Gerald de Windesore ; fol. 16. 7. Ancient brief notes of England and Ireland ; fol. 17. 8. A description of the power of the Irishry, out of an old copy ; fol. 19. 11. Ilerenaches and Ternion Lands, by Sir Oliver St. John collected ; fol. 30. 12. The Names of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal of Ireland that were at the proclaiming of Henry VIII. King of Ireland ; fol. 34. 13. How the Noblemen of Ireland were ranked in Parliament, tempore Henry VI. ; fol. 38. 25. A Journal of the service done in the Island of Hila by Sir Oliver Lambert in anno 1614 ; fol. 77. 32. An Abstract of Records, Deeds, &c, concerning the Baron of Slane in Ireland ; fol. 123. The Earl of Ormonde's pedigree ; fol. 214. The motives why Cahir Mac Art Kevanagh was created a Baron of Parliament in Ireland in anno 6 Edward VI. ; fol. 241. 9. The chai-ge of the Lord Deputy's house in Ireland in anno 1585 ; fol. 23. 14. In what sort the Irishmen of war are waged in Ulster ; fol. 41. 10. The Lord Mountjoy, his suit, which he obtained of King James, of lands in Ireland, in anno 1603 ; fol. 24. 15. The number of horsemen, gallow-glasses, Scots, and kearne enter- tained by the Lords of Ulster, and collected by Sir Nicholas Malbye in .anno 1574 ; fol. 41. 26. Articles and Ordinances to be observed by the Seneschal, Sheriff, and Justices of Peace in the County of Wexford, 1585 ; fol. 82. 28. The offers of Theobald no Long Burgh, who called himself Mac William, in anno 1601 ; fol. 86. 30. A Commission from the Lord Deputy and Council unto Captain Soger Hervey, in anno 1601 ; fol. 102. 29. A relation of James of Desmond to Sir George Carew, Lord President of Minister, in anno 1601 ; fol. 98. A summary Report of the State of Ireland in anno 1597 ; fol. 115. The Partition of the Earl of Ormonde's lands in England between St. Ledger and Bullen, in anno 10, Henry VIII. ; fol. 172. The advice of William Meade, late Recorder of Cork, upon the second chapter of the Act of Parliament concerning going to the Church in anno 1611 ; fol. 199. The prices of corn and acatcs in the market of Dublin in anno 1602 ; fol. 204. 27. A Division of the Province of Connaught into Counties, Baronies, &c, collected by Sir Richard Bingham in anno 1586 ; fol. 82. Theobald ne Long Burghe, his demands in anno 1597 ; fol. 215. 20. The power of the Lord Deputy of Ireland, by the Queen's Letters Patent ; fol. 68. 21. An estimate of the Lord Deputy's entertainment and profits, in anno 1612; fol. 6!). 22. A aote of the yearly profits growing due to the Lord Depuiy in times past ; fol. 70. 23. Divers commissions of authority to the Lord Deputy ; fol. 72. L6. [instructions lor Captain Warren employed to the Earl of Tyrone in anno I 596 ; fol. 42. 17. Tin' causes why the Earl of Tyrone would not come unto Dundalk, to General Norris, and the answers to the same, in anno 1596; fol. 50. 11). The Karl of Tyrone's grievances, 24th December 1596 ; fol. 62. 79 51. The Pope's Letter to the Earl of Tyrone, in anno 1G01 ; fbl. 176. 18. A lease of sundry lands and lordships passed from I I>t Biajes thr Earl of Tyrone in anno 1586 ; fol. '>■'>. 37. Don Juan de Aguila, his letter to the Earl of Tyrone, 28th December 1601 (stylo novo) ; fbl. 138. A disputation at Salamanca in Spain concerning Tyrone's rebellion, the 7th of March 1602 ; fol. 239. The names of the principal persons that fled out of Ireland with Tyrone and Tyrconnel in anno 1607 ; fol. 196. 31. A list of the army as it stood in Ireland in 1602 ; fol. 106. A monthly charge of the army in Ireland as it stood in July in anno 1602; fol. 183. An estimate of the money expended between the 1st February 1-601 unto the last of February 1602 upon three forts in Munster ; fol. 184. A book of Her Majesty's ordinary charges in Ireland for general officers, officers of the four courts, officers of provinces, kearne, warders, pensioners, &c., not contained in the establishment, made in anno 1599 ; fol. 249. 24. A letter of advice from Sir Henry Sidney to the Lord day. Lord Deputy of Ireland, in anno 1580 ; fol. 74. 50. A letter from the Pope to the rebels in Ireland in anno 1600 ; fol. 175. 52. A letter from James Fitz Thomas, i he supposed Earl of Desmond, unto the King of Spain, 14th March 1599 ; fol. 180. A letter from James Fitz Thomas, the supposed Earl of Desmond, to ili King of Spain, 14th March, 1599 ; fol. 188. 45. Los nombres de los Gapitanes que vinieron a Irlanda con lo exercito Espagnol, in anno 1601; fol. 155. 47. The promises which Don Juan de Aguila made to the inhabitants of Kinsale in anno 1601, fol. 157. 33. A discourse wherein Don Juan de Aguila reports his present estate and of such things as are needful to effect his enterprise, written after his landing at Kinsale in anno 1601; fol. 128. 34. Questions interrogated by Don Juan de Aguila with Dr. Brown, and his answers, in anno 1601 ; fol. 132. 39. A discourse in Spanish written by Don Juan de Aguila, of his estate after his arrival at Kinsale in anno 1601; fol. 144. 35. A letter from Don Juan de Aguila, al Capitan Juan de Albornos y Andrada, in anno 1602 ; fol. 135. * A letter from Don Juan de Aguila to the Earl of Tyrone in anno 1601 ; fol. 138. ,"ii. A letter from the Pope's Archbishop of Dublin unto Don Juan de Aguila in anno 1601 ; fol. 136. 40. Sundry Spanish letters translated into English, dated in anno 1601 ; fol. 147. 41. A letter from the Duke of Lerma unto Don Juan de Aguila, the 30th January 1602 ; fol. 151. 42. A letter from the King of Spain unto Don Juan de Aguila. ."»l-t January 1602 ; fol. 152. 44. Sundry other letters sent out of Spain unto Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 153 and 154. 43. A letter from Don Pedro de Franquesa, 30th January 1602 ; fol. 152. The composition between the Lord Deputy and Don Juan de Aguila for the rendering of the town of Kin-ale, 1601 ; fol. Lib * Crossed out in MS. 80 38. Don Juan de Aguila, his demands of shipping and victual to transport himself and his men into Spain ; fol. 140.^ 46. Victuals delivered by the commissary of the victuals for the trans- portation of the Spaniard from Kinsale, 1601 ; fol. 25 and 156. A note of the Spanish Captains and their companies shipped at Kinsale, anno 1601 ; fol. 168. 48. Don Juan de Aguila, his apology in Latin, anno 1602; fol. 158. I. Now MS. Bodl. Laud. 613. Auxilium Regi per Concessionem Papas in anno 1 1 Hen. III., pag 47. Sic. Archiepiscopatus et Episcopatus conceduntur Episcops Dunelmeusi in anno 12 Hen. III. ; p. 47. Abbatia Sti Thomas fundata, 35 Edw. III., pag 69. Abbatia de Mellifont, anno 15 Edw. II.; pag 84. Articuli pro statu Hibernian, anno 17 Edw. II. ; pag 85. Articulis observandis, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 87. Abridgement of Statutes from page 163 unto page 245. Articuli ordinati apud Nottingham in anno 17 Edw. I. ; p. 263. Articuli pro Statu Hiberniae, anno 26 Edw. III. ; p. 264. Articuli pro Statu Hiberniae, anno 26 Edw. III. ; p. 265. Articles between the King and his Lieutenant of Ireland in anno * Sic - Ric. II ; p. 278. Articles between the King and his Lieutenant of Ireland in anno 9 Hen. IV. ; p. 281. Admissio ad Concilium, anno 35 Edw. III. ; p. 295. Broccatores, anno 31 Edw. III. ; p. 146. Brotherhood of St. George, p. Barones Scaccarii, anno 9 Ric. II. ; p. 145. Barones Scaccarii, anno 29 Edw. III. ; p. 7. Bona Testatorum, anno 28 Edw. I. ; p. 59. Concessio terrarum in anno 52 Hen. III. ; p. 44. Custodia terrarum Wardorum, 13 Edw. I. ; p. 59. Custuma Lanarum in anno 4 Edw. I. ; p. 61. Custumre Colligendae in anno 16 Edw. II. ; p. 85. Computus Vice-comitum, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Castra Regis Emendenda, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Custumarum Collectores, anno, 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Computatores inveniant manucaptores, 5 Edw. III. ; 89. Concessio Libcrtatum Civitati Waterfordiae in anno 2 Hen. VII. ; p. 112. Concessio Libcrtatum Civitati Corke, 15 Hen. VII. ; p. 120. Cdncessio Libertatum villas KUdarias, 7 Hen. VIII. ; p. 121. Concessio Libertatum villas Athy, 7 Hen. VIII. p. ; 121. Custos Minerarum Eiibernias, anno 6 Hen. VIII. ; p. 121. Commissio pro Parliamento Julii 18, 23 Hen. VII. ; p. 121. Concessio Majori de Corke, a 28 lien. VIII. ; p. 124. Captiones victualium, anno 31 Edw. HI. ; p. 147. Champarti, anno R. R Edw. III. 31 ; p. 150. <^ ic . Compotus Vice Comites, anno .')! Edw. III. ; p. 151. Cancellarius Eiibernias, anno 28 Edw. III. ; j). 70. Clericue Marcati in anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 155. Courts of Law erected, anno 11 lien. III. ; ]>. 254. Complainl against Liberties, 26 Edw. III. ; p. 259. Concilium Convo :atum in anno .'}(> Edw. III. ; p. 265. Covenants aboul ( )'] ianlovne's Country, anno 1573 ; 301. 89. Sic. Sic. p. 1.34. Sic. '3. Sic. 81 Charters granted to sundry Towns by diver- Kings ; p. 308. Defectus ct reformatio Hiberniae, 26 Edw. III. ; p. 70. DeDecimis Hiberniae, 16 Edw. II'. ; p. 84. Donation's Regis revocatio, 15 Edw. III. ; p. 86. Defensio Ilibernicorum prohibit////*, 5 Edw. III. ; p. De Declarations, &c, anno 43 Edw. III. ; p. 144. Discordia inter Anglos et Hibernieos, 31 Edw. III. Donatio Regis in Hibernus, 15 Edw. III. ; p. 264. Episcopatus Dun et Conner ; 73 & 262. Errores in Hibernire Corrigendi, 15 Edw. ; p. 7i Episcopatuum Waterford et Lismore unio 12 Hen. III. ; p. 47 Extortiones Ministrorum in Seaccario, 31 Edw. III. ; 152. Errores in Recordis Corrigendis, anno 17 Edw. II. ; p. 263. English Laws established in Ireland temp. R. Johaunis ; pp. 256 & 274. Enfranchising of some Irishmen, 3 Edw. II. ; 275. Feoda pro Mareschallo Hiberniae Colli^end^, 27 Edw. II. ; p. 73. Sic. Filiaj co-heredes, anno 24 Hen. III. ; p. 74. Fratres et clerici de Hibernia, anno 9 Edw. II. ; p. 83. Frumentum ad opus Regis, anno 18 Edw. II. ; p. 85. Feoda ministrorum Regis, anno 18 Edw. III. ; p. 87. Fines, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Falsum iinprisonamentum, anno 31 Edw. III. ; p. 153. Hibernici mere non tiant niiuistros Regis, 34 Edw. III. ; pp. 70 & Sic. 265. Hobelarii et pedites pro bello Scotieo, 15 Edw. II. ; 84. Hibernici resideant in terris suis, 5 Edw. III. ; p. 89. Justiciarii, &c. non acquirant terras in Hibernia, tempore Edw. III. ; p. 70. Idle-men, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 89. Inquisitio ministrorum Regis in annis 5 et 31 R. I£ Edw. III. ; pp. 89 &153. Jurisdiction Royal in Ulster and Meath, anno 3 Edw. III. ; p. 259. Indeutura de Regimine Hibernia?, 23 Edw. III. ; p. 264. Inquisitio de gestibus ministrorum Regis, anno 34 Edw. III. ; p. 265. Injuriarum reformationes, anno 31 Edw. III. ; p. 151. Indeutura inter Regem et Justiciarium Hib. de auno 23 Edw. III. et 12 Augusti anno 1281, 20 Edw. IV. ; pp. 69 & 285. Irishmen require traffic with Portugal in anno 3 Ric. II. ; p. 296. Leges AngliiB teneantur in Hibernian de annis 11 Hen. III. & 12 Sic, Hen. III. ; pp. 47 & 256. Littera? Regis magnatibus temp. R. Edw. I. et Edw. II. ; pp. 50, 51, 7". 76, 77, 79. Lana?, anno 4 Edw. I. ; p. 61. Litteroe Regis magnatibus tempore R. Edw. II. ct Edw. III. ; pp. 81, 85, 263. Licencia constituendi Justiciar, 37 Edw. III. ; 71. Libertates et chartae de anno 33 Edw. III. ; 71. Literal ct charts in online ponendae, 15 Edw. II. ; p. 73. Leges emendendae de anno 10 Edw. II. ; p. 84. Litterse Regis Nobilibus, et Mercatoribus, anno 18 Edw. II.; p. 85. Litterae Regis ad Maurittt films Thomae, 8cc, 16 die Julii, anno Sic. 1 Edw. III. ; p. 85. Lex una hat in Hibernia et Angli:;, 5 Edw. III. : p. 87. Locum-tenentes Hiberniae tempore Edw. III., Ric. II., ct Hen. IV.; pp. 72, 142. Liberies Eccleske, anno 31 Edw. III. ; p. 146. Sic. 82 Latrones anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 148. Le°"es Anglia? anno 12 Hen. III.; p. 256. Liberties in Kerry and Desmond, &c. 3 Edw. III. ; p. 259. Lords or Palatines, tempore Edw. III.; p. 259. Modus capiendi prisas vinorum in Dublinia. Anno 33 Edw. I. ; p. 60. Manerium de Cromeline, 3 Edw. III.; p. 61. Miners Argentea in Hibernia, tempore, Edw. I. et 3 et 6 Hen. VIIL; pp. 61, 74, et 121. Mercantia, anno 18 Edw. III. et 45 ; pp. 71 et 266. Magnates non recipiuntur in plegium, 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Ministri Regis non acquirunt terras, 34 Edw. III. ; pp. 86, 265. Maritagium, anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 149. Money. 3° die Maii, anno 10 Edw. III.; p. 73. Ministri Regis in Scaccario, anno 41 Edw. III.; p. 266. Ordinationes, &c, annis 35 & 42, Edw. III.; pp. 70, 71. Officium Ostiarii, anno 37 Edw. III.; p. 71. Officium Serjeantia? in Coin Kildaria?, 46 Edw. III. ; p. 71 et 266, et 47 Edw. III. Ordenance pour faire Monoye 10 Edw. III.; p. 73. Ordinatio Regis in Parliamento, 14 Edw. II.; p. 84. Obsides pro Conservatione pacis, 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Ordinationes pro reformatione, 17 Edw. II.; p. 157. Ostmen or Esterlings, 5 October 11 Edw. I.; p. 256. Ordinatio pro Statu Hibernia?, anno 17 Edw. II. ; p. 263. Sic. Ordinationes observand^, anno 35 Edw. III.; p. 265. Officium Mareschalli in Banco Regis, anno 34 Edw. 1IL; p. 265. Sic. Officium Serjeante in Com Louth, 46 Edw. III.; p. 266. Pro pecuniis levandis, anno 2 Hen. III.; p. 47. Pondera, anno 25 Edw. III.; p. 71. Pardonatio Majoris Dublinia?, &c, 12 Edw. II.; p. 84. Pardonatio Mortis, anno 14 Edw. II.; p. 84. Pardonationes prohibiti, anno 5 Edw. III.; pp. 87 et 260. Protectiones, anno 5 Edw. III.; pp. 87 et 88. Plegii, anno 5 Edw. III.; p. 88. Parliamenta singulis annis in Hibernia teneantur, anno 10 Edw. II.; pp. 84 & 157. Proclamatio ut Hibcrnici revertentur ad Hiberniam, anno 17 Hen. VI.; pp. 73,262. Pardonationes, annis 31 Edw. III. et 3 & 12 Hen. VII.; pp. 112, 113, 118 & 149. Parliamentum, anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 146. Placita in Scaccario, annis 30 et 31 Edw. in.; pp. 150, 296. Potestas concessa Justiciario ad amovendum Ministros Regis, anno 23 Edw. III.; p. 264. Proclamation to style the Kings of England Kings of Ireland, anno :,:. R. ]£., Hen. VIIL; p. 273. Reformatio terra? Hibernia?, annis 17 Edw. II., 5 Edw. III., et 17 Ric. II.; pp. 72, 84, et 264. Revenue of Ireland, tempore Edw. III.; p. 254. Robes in Parliament instituted ; p. 260. Si.-. Sfatiitum pro Clero, anno 15 Ric. II.; p. 72. Supplicatio Hibernicorum, anno 2 Edw. III.; p. 86. Senesehallus alicujus Domini Hibernia? non fiat official 1 Regis, anno 5 Edw. III.; p. 88. Statuta, tempore Edw. III.; p. 145. Suggestiones scandilosse, anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 151. Btapula, anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 150. 83 Subsidium, tempore lien. V.; p. 158. Si sine damno Hibernicos utere possint Legibus Anglicanis, anno 2 c;„ Edw. HI.; p. 268. Saltus Salmonu, anno 12 Edw. III.; p. 264. Subsidium, anno 44 Edw. III.; pp. 71 et 266. Shire ground made, 34 Hen. VIII. et 3 .Maria' ; p. 297. Terra? extendenda?, &c, anno 18 Edw. III. p. 70. Terras Regis dimittendee, anno 2 Edw. III.; p. 86. Treugae, anno 5 Edw. III. ; p. 88. Thesaurarius Hibernise, anno 31 Edw. III.; p. 274. Vice-Comites et Coronatorea, 5 Edw. TIL; p. 88. Utlagatus, anno 5 Edw. III.; p. 88. Vice-Comites, anno 5 Edw. III.; p. 88. de Wardis, anno 5 Edw. III.; p. 87 et 263. Wearing of Robes in Parliament instituted ; p. 260. Wardorum terrarum custodia, 13 Edw. I.; p. 59. Yoghall incorporata, 25 August, 12 Hen. VII.; p. 119. K. Now MS. Bodl. Laud, 614. The form of the oath of allegiance made to King Henry VII. by the Lords and Gentlemen of Munster ; p. 13. The form of the recognizances wherein the Lords of Ireland stood bound unto the King for their allegiances, anno 3 Hen. VII. ; p. 21. Another form of the oath of allegiance taken by the Lords of Ireland unto King Henry VII.; p. 27. An oath of allegiance devised for the Earl of Kildare to be taken unto King Henry VII.; p. 28. A certificate from the Lords of Ireland to King Henry VII. of their taking the oath of allegiance ; p. 29. Recognizances concerning the oath of allegiance, with their conditions, 12 Julii, anno 3 Hen. VII. ; pp. 30, 31, 32. The oath of allegiance which the Earl of Kildare and all the Lords spiritual and temporal, mayors, officers, &c, took unto King Henry VII.; p. 33. The first beginning of the faction between the Geraldines and Butlers in Ireland, tempore R. Ric. II.; pp. 151 & 152. The ancient manner of baptizing of infants, marriage, and paying of tithes in Ireland, tempore lien. II. j p. 160. Covenants between Francis I., the French king, and the Earl of Desmond, in anno 1523 ; p. 185. The acts of Papiron, the Pope's Legate in Ireland, tempore Johannis R%; p. 197. De Baculo Jesu, anno 3 Edw. III.; pp. 199, 200. Covenants between King Henry VI. and the Duke of York, Lord- Lieutenant of Ireland ; pp. 203, 326. The agreement between King Henry II. and O'Conner, Kal. Octob. anno 1175 ; p. 233. English laws established in Ireland ; pp. 209, 226, 307. 308, 311, 316, 326, 365, 429, 432, 434, 435, 508, 511, 512, 527. Ireland divided into shires, tempore R. Johannis ; pp. 308, 329, 330, 331, 364, 513. Palatinates erected in Ireland, and their privileges tempore R. Johannis ; pp. 308, 441. Grants made unto Irish Lords, 3 Hen. III.; p. 310. When Ireland began to decay, annis 10 Edw. II. et 30 Edw. III. ; pp. 315, 319, 497. F 2 84 The Abbey of Mellifont built, 1144 ; p. 147. Waterford burnt iu anno 1087 ; p. 157. The issue of Nesta, wife to Gerald of Windesor, tempore Hen. I.; p. 161. The pedigrees of Clare and Marshall, Earls of Pembroke ; p. 169. The town of Ross walled in, anno 1265 ; p. 167. Dublin, Waterford, and Limerick built, circa annum 155 ; pp. 191, 363, 413. St. Patrick's Church in Dublin founded in anno 1197 ; p. 363. Meath, why so called ; p. 381. When the Liberty of Kildare ceased, in anno 28 Hen. VIII. ; p. 445. Chamberlain of Ireland, anno 1233 ; p. 491. The first distinction between English blood and English birth, 15 Edw. III.; 319. Coygnie and Livery ; pp. 201, 320, 499. The entertainments of horse and foot under Lionel, Duke of Clarence, 36 Edw. III.; p. 321. Brehon Law, anno 40 Edw. III.; pp. 322, 330. An accorapt of the profits of Ulster in annis 42 Hen. III. et 5 Edw. III.; pp. 312, 322. An accompt of Ireland, tempore Edw. III. ; p. 322. Ireland farmed in anno 47 Edw. III.; p. 323. A statute for absentees, tempore Ric. II. ; p. 324. Privileges granted to the Earls of Desmond, 7 Edw. IV. ; p. 327. The fraternity of St. George in Ireland, anno 14 Edw. IV.; p. 327. Subsidy ; pp. 328, 329, 368, 487, 523, 528. Resumption of lands, tempore Hen. VI. ; p. 328. Poundage, tempore Hen. VI. et 15 Hen. VII.; pp. 328, 431. Customs ; pp. 332, 429, 430. The reasons why William de Brewes was confiscated, tempore R. Johannis ; p. 357. The Pope's Bull to permit King Henry II. to conquer Ireland, and the confirmation of the same ; pp. 287, 361, 362. The revenues of the noblemen in Munster ; p. 366. Of the Monarch of Ireland ; p. 370. Prophesies ; pp. 389, 423. Mint and Monies ; pp. 210, 431, 432, 433, 434, 485, 508. Tanistry ; p. 434. Gavel-kind ; p. 437. Fishing of the Ban ; p. 439. Du commenda ; p. 440. Counties Palatines, tempore Hen. II.; pp. 308, 441. Premunire ; p. 446. Bastardy ; p. 447. Ireland called Insula Sanctorum ; p. 425. Bishops of Ireland in former times consecrated in England ; pp. 263. 371, 416, 426, 446, 480. The celebration of Easter reformed in Ireland, in Anno Domini 660 ; p. 446. Tribute and Ecclesiastical duties paid to the Pope out of Ireland ; pp. 220, 348, 447, 421, 485, 542. Archbishops, when first in Ireland; pp. 41, 85, 147, 157, 182, 197, 371, 410, 481. What Archbishops and suffragan Bishops are in Ireland ; p. 231. Bishopries in Ireland never bestowed by the Kings of England until tin; reign of King James ; p. 331. Abbeys and religious houses in some parts of Ireland never reduced into charge until the reign of King James ; p. 331. 85 When Christianity was first received in Ireland, in anno 335 ; pp. 295, 369, 468. Councils held in Ireland; pp. 41, 209, 226, 233, 274, 287, 306, 362, 395, 446, 482, 524, 527. King Henry II., his voyage into Ireland ; pp. 86, 159, 160, 209, 230, 255, 273, 261, 285, 305, 345, 395, 420, 481, 542. The answers of the Irish to King Henry II.; pp. 286, 481. A final accord between King Henry II. and Roderie, King of Con- naught ; p. 233. Tribute promised by the Irish to King Henry II.; pp. 254-, 542. John, the King's son, his voyage into Ireland ; pp. 42, 86, 239, 254, 274, 305, 345, 508. King John, his voyage into Ireland ; pp. 105, 209, 275, 287, 307, 346. Ireland given by King Henry III. to his son Edward ; pp. 87, 313, 423, 509, 543. King Richard II., his first and second voyages into Ireland ; pp. 94, 95, 121, 133, 177, 178, 246, 270, 324, 473, 476, 488, 543. Kings of England protectors of the Cities in Ireland before the Conquest ; p. 433. Ireland, by Parliament, united to the Crown of England, 28 Hen. VIII.: p. 434. Submissions of the Irish to King Richard II.; pp. 133, 134, 142, 230, 273, 285, 307. The names of the submittees to King Richard II.; p. 142. The Lords of Ireland attended King Henry VII. in procession, anno 3 Hen. VII.; p. 388. When Ireland was first inhabited with the several plantations in it ; pp. 190, 304, 405. How many Kings did reign in Ireland before the English did conquer it ; pp. 412, 457. Itinerant Judges discontinued in Connaught, revived by King James ; p. 331. Aids sent out of Ireland ; pp. 73, 246, 293, 325, 365, 386, 485, 487, 490, 503, 524, 543, 544. The Earl of Ormonde's pedigree ; p. 145. The Earl of Kildare's pedigree ; p. 148. Darcy's pedigree ; p. 149. Mr. William Burke's pedigree ; p. 149. A discourse of St. Barnard upon St. Malachy ; p. 450. A description of Ireland ; pp. 247, 257, 274, 289, 294, 457. Ireland inhabited by Spaniards ; pp. 190, 245, 294, 295, 296, 377, 408,457,465, 470, 541. Ireland invaded by Danes and Norwegians, circa annis — 826, 888, et 1040 ; pp. 302, 303, 369, 370, 397, 398, 411, 412, 457. Dublin won by the Scots ; p. 299. Picts marrying with the Irish ; pp. 419, 453. Petitions of the Irish to enjoy the benefit of the English Laws, anno 2 Edw. III. ; p. 317. Commissioners sent into Ireland, 3 Ric. II. ; p. 323. Pledges in anno 1210 ; p. 508. Officers in anno 1210; p. 508. St. Patrick's Purgatory ; p. 473. Limerick Castle ; p. 507. Kinsale taken by Spaniards and there defeated in anno 13S0,3 Ric. II. ; p. 267. Exchange at Dublin, anno 9 et 10 Edw. I. ; p. 433. Proclamations, anno 17 Ric. II. et 33 Hen. VIII. ; p. 269, 505. 86 A Miracle ; pp. 198, 242. Ireland given by King Henry II. to his son John ; p. 237. Lands given by King Henry II. to divers men in Ireland ; pp. 237, 305. Ulster granted to Hugh de Lacy in anno 1172 ; pp. 308, 306, 445. Thomond granted to O'Brien, 6 Hen. III. ; p. 310. The County of Tipperary granted to Grandison in anno 18 Edw. I. ; p. 313. Thomond granted to Clare, 18 Edw. I. ; p. 313. Steward of Ireland in anno 1171 ; p. 345. Marriages of priests forbidden in Ireland in anno 1131 ; p. 394. Poundage granted to the King, 15 Hen. VII.; p. 431. Privileges granted to Waterford, 3 Hen. VII. ; p. 430. Privileges granted to Dublin, tempore Hen. II. ; p. 431. Meath granted to Hugh de Lacy, tempore Hen. II. ; pp. 305, 448. 482, 500. Trim annexed to the Crown, 10 Hen. VII. ; p. 445. The Arms of Marshall, Earl of Pembroke ; p. 509. All Ireland granted by King Henry II. ; p. 305. Leinster, the Kingdom of Cork, the Kingdom of Limerick, a great part of Connaught, the territory of Waterford, and lastly all Connaught, granted by King Henry II. ; pp. 237, 238, 305, 306. Connaught and Thomond granted by King Henry III. ; p. 310. Thomond and Tipperary granted by King Edw. I. ; p. 313. Kerry and Tipperary granted by King Edw. III. ; p. 316. Liberties granted to Thomas Fitz- Anthony, tempore Edw. I. ; p. 441. Privilege granted to Waterford and Dublin, tempore Hen. II. & 3 Hen. VII. ; pp. 429, 430, 431. Kildare granted by King Edward I. and continued a Liberty until anno 28 Hen. VIII. ; p. 445. The Pope's authority abolished in Ireland in anno 28 Hen. VIII. ; p. 512. When Parliaments were first instituted in Leland, tempore Edw. II. ; pp. 511, 527, 528. Abbeys suppressed 33 Hen. VIII. ; p. 512. Kings of England when first recognized Kings of Ireland, 33 Hen. VIII. ; p. 512. ' Religion established in Ireland, 2 Eliz. ; p. 512. Monasteries, Churches, Castles, and other public structures built in Ireland ; pp. 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521. Kildare grant with a Liberty, anno 1317 ; p. 523. Knights Templars confirmed and suppressed in anno 1311 ; p. 523. Collections out of sundry Authors ; p. 523. Observations upon the Geraldines ; p. 525. The Life of St. Malachy ; p. 547. Lands given by sundry persons to the Geraldines, and especially unto John Fitz-Thomas, who was afterwards the first Earl of Kildare ; p. 554. The resignation of the Western Isles by the King of Norway unto the King of Scotland ; pp. 249, 250. R. Tin; division of Ireland into provinces; fol, 1. The provinces into counties ; Col. 1, 2. The length and breadth of Ireland ; fol. 2. (low many cantreds of lands there are in Ireland ; fol. 3. Now many villages, and how many plough lands, and the contents of every plough land; fol. 3, 4. 67 The description of Minister 5 fol'. 4, .">. Order taken for the plantation of Minister, and the course which Was set down for it; fol. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. An estimate of the yearly expenses of the Lord Deputy's household and stable ; fol. 13, 14, 15. A brief note of the Lord Deputy's entertainments ; fol. 16. A view of the particular rents in money, and port com upon certain farms for the Lord Deputy's provisions ; fol. 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25. An abstract of indentures between the Queen and sundry persons, viz., Sir Donnel O'Connor Sligo, Hugh Reogh O'Reilly, Sir Hugs O'Donnel, Philip O'Reilly, Edmond O'Reilly, Surley boy Mac DonneL and Hugh Mac Guillye ; fol. 26, 27, 28. A note of rent to be paid to the Queen by Sir Cormack Mac Teg of Muskrye ; fol. 28. The ancient orders which were to be observed by the officers at arm-, &c. ; fol. 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40. The first foundation of the Office of Arms ; fol. 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49. T. Now MS. Bodl. Laud, 615. This book is an old parchment manuscript written in Irish, contain- ing the prophecies of St. Columb vulgarly called Columb-kiln. X. A discourse of Leland, written by Captain Thomas Lea, and by him delivered unto Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, wherein a great number of abuses and treasonable actions committed by sundry great officers and others in that kingdom are discovered ; beginning at fol. 2, and ending at fol. 47. A discourse of the beginning and continuance of the rebels in Ireland by degrees truly discovered and presented unto Queen Elizabeth by Thomas Lovel ; beginning at fol. 54, and ending at fol. 60. A direction for the plantation of Ulster, containing in it sundry heads, viz. : The securing of that wild country to the Crown of England. The withdrawing of all the charge of garrisons and men-of-war. The rewarding of old servitors to their content. The means how to increase revenues to the Crown, with an yearly very great sum. To establish the purity of religion there. How the undertakers may be with security enriched. — All which was written by Thomas Blenerhassett. and dedicated unto Prince Henry ; beginning at fol. 62, and ending at fol. 77. A remembrance of some part of the services performed by James Fitz-Gerald, of Mocolpa within the county of Waterford, written by John Pitz-Gerald, his son, and dedicated to the Lord Carew, 1610 3 beginning at fol. 7l>, and ending at fol. 89. A book entitled the Supplication of the Blood of the English, mosl lamentably murdered in Ireland, crying out of the earth for revenge, and dedicated unto Queen Elizabeth ; beginning at fol. 92, and en at fol. 129. 88 Y.* Two main impediments of the conquest of Ireland ; p. 4. The faint prosecution of the war ; p. 5. How the war hath been prosecuted since the 17 Hen. II.; p. 7. The first attempt was but an adventure of private gentlemen ; p. 8. With what forces the King himself came into Ireland ; p. 9. How the war was prosecuted in King John's time ; p. 19. How the martial affairs were carried from the 12 of King John to the 36 Ed w. III.; p. 26. An army sent into Ireland with Lionel, Duke of Clarence, and the entertainments ; p. 31. What services the Duke performed ; p. 35. Sir William Windesor, Lord-Lieutenont of Ireland, his forces and services ; p. 36. The state of the revenue of Ireland in the reign of King Edward III.; p. 37. How the war proceeded in the time of King Richard II. ; p. 37. The Lord Thomas of Lancaster, his services ; p. 52. The Lord Furnival, his services ; p. 54. Richard, Duke of York, his services ; p. 56. How the war was maintained in the reign of King Edward IV.; p. 60. The fraternity of St. George ; p. 61. How the war was prosecuted in King Henry VII.'s time ; p. 63. Sir Edward Poyninges, his services ; p. 65. The Battle of Knoctoe in Connaught ; p. 66. How the war was carried during the reign of King Henry VIII. ; p. 66. The Earl of Surrey, Sir William SkefFmgton, the Lord Leonard Grey, their services ; p. 67. The fight at Belaboo, in Meath ; p. 68. Sir Anthony St. Leger and Sir Edward Bellingham, their services ; p. 69. The Earl of Sussex, Lord Deputy of Ireland ; p. 70. How the war was prosecuted in the time of Queen Elizabeth ; p. 70. The Rebellions of Shane O'Neil and the Earl of Desmond ; p. 71. The Earl of Tyrone, his rebellion ; p. 72. The defects in the prosecution of the war ; p. 74. Why none of the Kings of England did finish the Conquest of Ireland ; p. 75. How the several Kings of England were diverted from the Conquest of Ireland ; p. 78. The defects of the civil policy and government of Ireland ; p. 99. The Laws of England were not given to the mere Irish ; p. 100. The mere Irish not admitted to have the benefit of the Laws in England ; p. 102. The mere Irish reputed aliens ; p. 102. The mere Irish reputed enemies to the Crown ; p. 108. The Irish desired to be admitted to the benefit of the English Laws, but could not obtain it ; p. 113. What, mischief did grow by not communicating the English Laws to the Irish ; p. 116. What benefit would have ensued if the mere Irish had been governed by English Laws; p. 118. Three general submissions of the Irish; p. 119. * This is Sir John Davis, his discourse of Ireland, and is in print. 89 The English Laws are executed only in the English Colonies ; p. 121. The lands conquered from the Irish werenol well distributed ; p. 132. The proportions of lands granted to the first adventurers were too large ; p. 133. All Ireland distributed unto 10 persona of English nation ; p. 135. The liberties granted to the first undertakers were too great ; p. 137. The inconveniences which grew by the large grants of lands and liberties ; p. 142. The inconveniences which did grow by the large grant of lands and liberties ; p. 142. The English Lords in Ireland made war and peace at their pleasure ; p. 143. The war and dissension of the English Lords one with another ; p. 145. The first adventurers obtained their liberal grants because the Kings did not prosecute the war at their own charges ; p. loo. The English Colonies rejected the English Laws and customs, and embraced the Irish ; p. 1G4. The nature of Irish customs ; p. 165. The Irish Law in Criminal Causes ; p. 166. The Irish customs ofTanistry and Gavel-kinde, with the mischiefs that did arise by these two customs ; p. 167 et 168. The wicked custom of Coygnie and Livery, and the mischief that did arise thereof; p. 173 et 174. Cosherings, cessings, cuttings ; p. 177. Gossipride ; p. 180. How the English Colonies became degenerate, and when ; from p. 182 unto p. 185. Scots overran Ireland ; p. 186. When and how the extortion of Coignie and Livery began among. the English ; p. 190. The loss of a great part of Leinster, the Earldom of Ulster, recovered by the Irish, and the defection of Connaught ; from p. 19.5 unto p. 198. What courses have been taken to reform Ireland since the English Colonies became degenerate ; p. 200. King Edward III. first endeavoured a reformation ; p. 201. A resumption of Liberties in his time ; p. 202. Maurice Fitz-Thomas, the first Earl of Desmond, the first author of oppressions and dissensions which destroyed the English Colonies, and the fortune of the house of Desmond ; p. 206. The course of reformation pursued by Lionel, Duke of Clarence ; p. 211. The Statutes of Kilkenny ; p. 213. The Statutes of Kilkenny did much reform the degenerated English; p. 215. The Absences of our Kings and of the English Lords was the chief cause why the realm was not reduced ; p. 217 and 219. The reformation intended by King Richard II. ; p. 224. The reformation intended by King Henry IV. ; p. 228. The course of reformation held by Sir Edward Poynings in the time of King Henry VII. ; p. 231. The reformation intended by the Lord Leonard Gray and Sir Anthony St. Leger ; from p. 23S unto p. 241. Four general submissions of the Irish ; p. 241. The Irish and degenerate' English renounce the Pope : p. 242. The course of reformation prosecuted by the Earl of Sussex in the reign of Queen Mary ; p. 248. The course of reformation followed by Sir Henry Sidney ; p. 250. 90 The reformation advanced by Sir John Perrott, and the services of Sir William Fitz-Williams, tending to the same ; p. 256 and 257. How the errors in the government of Ireland have been supplied and amended since the beginning of His Majesty's reign ; p. 259. Errors in the carriage of martial affairs amended ; p. 261. Defects in civil government supplied ; p. 262. The good effects which followed the execution of the Laws throughout the kingdom ; p. 267. How the Commissions of Surrenders and defective titles have been put in execution ; p. 276. No grants of Irish Captainship or Seneschalship since His Majesty's reign ; p. 278. The plantation of Ulster ; p. 280. D. D. Now MS. Bodl. Laud, 611. The Consecrations of Bishops in Ireland appertained to the Arch- bishops of Canterbury ; fol. 1. Petitio populi Dublinii pro sacrando Patritio, to Lanfranc, Arch- bishop of Canterbury ; fol. 1. Professio Patritii Dubliniensis Episcopi ; fol. 1. Professio Donati Dubliniensis Episcopi ; fol. 1. Professio Samuelis Dubliniensis Episcopi ; fol. 1. Professio Gregorii Dubliniensis Episcopi; fol. 1. Professio Patritii Limericensis Episcopi ; fol. 1. Turvill to be seized of the Bishopric of Ossery, by the King's Warrant to the Lords Justices of Ireland, in anno 28 Hen. III. ; fol. 2. A letter from King Hen. III. taxing the Primate of Armagh for .sending to the Pope in Causes Ecclesiastic ; fol. 2. Appellations to the Pope forbidden by the King, in anno 8 Hen. III. ; fol. 3. The Pope's letters Episcopo Finaborensis in Hibernia, anno 40 Hen. III. ; fol. 4. An acquittance for the tribute to Rome ; fol. 5. Excommunication threatened (against Mendicant Friars) by the Pope, in anno 8 Edw. II. ; fol. 5. Bulla Johannis Papse 22 to Edw. II., King of England, clearly ac- quitting the tribute of Rome, in anno 12 Edw. II. ; fol. 5. A letter from Pope Gregory unto Terdellvachus King of Ireland ; fol. 5. An order to command the Lords of England that had lands in Ireland to send sufficient men to guard the same against the Irish, in anno 5 Edw. III.; fol. 7. De deputando sufficientes custodes in terris quorundam magnatum Anglian in Hibernia. Anno 5 Edw. III. ; fol. 7. De veniendo ad Regem ad tractandum super passagium suum in Hiberniam, anno 5 Edw. III. Directed to William de Burgo, Earl of Ulster ; fol. 8. A petition of the Commons concerning the Earldom of Ulster, it' Lionel, the King's son, should have no issue. Anno 21 Edw. III.; fol. 9. A branch of an Act of Parliament in anno 34 Hen. 6, concerning the Earldom of Waterford given unto Talbot ; fol. 9. Fragments of Records of Ireland in sundry kings' reigns, the originals whereof are with .Sir Robert Cotton ; Pol. 13. Acta of Council in the reign of King Hen. VI.; fol. 16. Abolitio domini Rs Elizabeth 33 ; fol. 140. A discourse of Florence M'Carties, collected out of sundry ancient Irish Chronicles, from the first inhabitation of Ireland unto the eonquest of the same by King Hen. II. ; fol. 166. *E.E. A Preface dedicatory. Le case de proxies ; fol. 1 . Le case de custumes payable pour marchandises ; fol. 7. Le case de mixt moneys ; fol. 18. Le case de Tanestrie ; fol. 28. Le case del Dean et Chapter de Femes ; fol. 42. Le Resolution des Justices touchant le Irish Custome de Gavelkind ; fol. 49. Le course del trial de Legitimation et Bastardie ; fol. 51. Le case de Royal pischarie de le Band ; fol. 55. Le case del countie Palatine de Wexford ; fol. 58. Le case de Commenda ; fol. 68. Le case de Praemunire ; fol. 84. F. F. This book is the Book of Common Prayer, translated into the Irish tongue by William, Archbishop of Tuam, in anno 1608, and printed with privilege. J. J. Now MS. Eodl. Laud, 610. This is an old Irish parchment manuscript containing sundry matters, viz. : — Divinity, Prayer, and Homilies ; folios 26, 28, 29. The life of Constantino and Hellena his mother ; fol. 6 et 10. * (This is printed under the name of bir John Davis's reports.) 93 Of Saint Patrick and Irish Saints ; fol. 38 et 10S. Of Saint Denis and Saint Ilellena; fol. 45. A genealogy from Herimon and Ivor ; fol. 7o, 10. The years of the reigns of divers Irish princes ; fol. 87. An Epitome of Beda, his ecclesiastical history ; fol. 8S B. A genealogy from Herimon ; fol. 75, 108. Roman Emperors ; fol. 112, 114. Kings of Assyria and Israel ; fol. 113. Popes of Rome ; fol. 114. A genealogy from Herimon ; fol. 106 B. K.K. The rebellion of Hugh Earl of Tyrone, and the appeasing thereof ; written in form of a Journal by Fynes Morrison, containing 301 pages, and imprinted at London in anno 1617. N.N. The printed book of the Statutes of Ireland, in English, from the tenth year of King Henry the Sixth until the Parliament held in anno 13 Regina3 Elizabeths?. O. C. Discursus panegyrici de nominibus tribulationibus et miraculis Sancti Patricii Hibernorum Apostoli cum exhortatione ad persecutiones pro fide patienter ferendas, et Apostrophe ad Hiberniam, etc. Impressum Duaci 1617, dedicatum domino Ricardo de Burgo Palatino Clanricardiae prsesidi Conacia? Barona? de Dunkellin et Leitrim. Authore Gulielmo Thireo Hiberno Corkagiensi sacra^ Theologiaa Doctore, &c. P.P. Analecta sacra nova, et mira de rebus catholicorum in Hibernia, pro fide et religione gestis divisa in tres partes, quarum : — 1. Continet semesrrem gravaminum relationem. 2. Paroanesin ad Martyres designatos. 3. Processum martyrialem quorumdam ficlei pugilum. Collectore et Relatore T. N. impressum Colonise 1617. R.R. The New Testament, translated out of the Greek into Irish tongue by Hvilliam O'Domhnuill, alias William Daniell. Dedicated unto James, King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, &c. And imprinted in the city of Dublin. S. S. Camden's Britannia, in the which Ireland is not forgotten, and treateth of these heads ensuing ; viz., Hibernia, p. 726. Qui venerunt cum Dermutio Murcardi filio in Hibernia, p. 732. Regni Hiberniae administratio ; p. 733. Fora sive tribunalia Hiberniae, p. 733. Hibernia- divisio, p. 734. Ecclesiastica Jurisdictio, p. 73.5. Momonia sive Mounster, p. 736. Comitatus Kerry, p. 736. Desmonia sive Desmond, p. 737. 94 Vodite et Coriundi, p. 738. Comitatus Corcagiensis, vulgo County of Cork, p. 738. Comitatus Waterfordiae, p. 740. Comitatus Limericke, p. 741. Comitatus Tipperarios, p. 742. Lagenia sive Leinster, p. 744. Brigantes sive Birgantes, p. 744. Comitatus Kilkenny, p. 744. Comitatus Catherloghe, p. 745. Regime comitatus sive Queen's county, p. 746. Regis comitatus sive King's county, p. 746. Comitatus Kildarise, p. 747. Comitatus Wexford, p. 748. Canci, p. 749. Comitatus Dublinensis, or County of Dublin ; p. 749. Methe, p. 753. Comitatus Methe, p. 753. Comitatus West Methe, p. 754. Comitatus Longford, p. 755. Conactia, p. 755. Thomond sive Comitatus Clare, p. 756. Comitatus Gall way, p. 757. Comitatus Mayo, p. 758. Comitatus Sligo, p. 759. Comitatus Leitrim, p. 760. Comitatus Roscommon, p. 760. Conactite Dominae, p. 761. Ultonia sive Ulster, p. 762. Comitatus Louthe, p. 762. Comitatus Cavan, p. 763. Comitatus Farmanagh, p. 763. Comitatus Monahan, p. 764. Comitatus Armagh, p. 764. Comitatus Downe, p. 766. Comitatus Antrim, p. 770. Comitatus Colrane, p. 770. Comitatus Tirowen, p. 770. Comitatus Dungall sive Tirconnell, p. 771. O'Neali et eorum nostro tempore rebellionis, p. 774. Hibernicorum mores, veteres et recentes, p. 788. Annales Hibernioe, p. 794. Insula? minores in Oceano Britannico. p. 837. Chronicon Regum Mannioe, p. 840. W. W. A map of all Ireland. A map of the province of Connaught. A map of the province of Ulster, bis. A map of the province of Munster, bis. A map of the county of Limerick. A map of Kerry and Desmond in county Cork, bis. A map of the barony of Imokelly in county Cork. A map of the river of Shannon. A map of the haven of Waterford. A map of Muscree in the county of Cork. A map of the county of Monaghan. 95 A map of part of Ulster from Dundalk to the Little Arties. A map of the Queen's County. A map of the county of Fermanagh. A sea Card of Ulster. A map of the county of Londonderry. A map of the rivers of Suir, Barrowe, and Norc, and the haven of Waterford. The fort of Castlenepark near Kinsale in Munster. The fort of Haleholin near Cork in Munster. The new fort at the south end of Cork. A fort intended at Cork on the north side. The fort of Omagh in the county of Tyrone. The fort at Lifford in the county of Donegal. The fort of Ballylorgan in the County of Monaghan. The fort of Iniskillin in the county of Fermanagh. The fort at the Blackwater in the county of Tyrone. The fort near Galway. The fort of Maryborough in the Queen's County. The fort of Duncannon in the county of Wexford. The city of Limerick in Munster, bis. The city of Cork in Munster. The city of the Derry in Ulster. The town of Killnallocke in the county of Limerick. The town of Bandon Bridge in the county of Cork. The town of Youghal in the county of Cork. The town of Carrickfergus in the county of Antrim, bis. The town of Coleraine in the county of Londonderry. The town and castle of Monaghan in the county of Monaghan. The castle of Dungeven in the county of Tyrone. The castle of Limerick in Munster, bis. The castle of the Glynn in the county of Limerick, bis. The taking of the Earl of Ormond in anno 1600. The defeat given to Sir Henry Harrington in the Byrnes country. 1599. The overthow of Sir Henry Bagenall by the Earl of Tyrone, in anno 1598. Y. Y. A genealogy written in Irish, beginning at Donell M'Cartie (who was created Earl of Clancarre by Queen Elizabeth), and of all the septs or family of the Clancarties, and so upwards unto Adam ; fol. 4. An epitome of a chronicle written in Irish ; fol. 3. Another Irish genealogy ; fol. 43. Another abstract of an Irish chronicle ; fol. 53. Irish poetry ; fol. 58. A book of Rates for the customs and subsidy of Poundage, &c, established in the Realm of Ireland in anno 1608 ; fol. 74. A collection of such orders and conditions as are to be observed by the undertakers of the escheated lands in Ulster in anno 1608 ; fol. 81. Conditions to be observed by the British undertakers of the escheated lands in Ulster in anno 1618 ; fol. 92. A discourse for the Reformation of Ireland ; fol. 99. A Rental of Sir Nicholas Bagenall (Marshall of Ireland), his lands in and about the Newrye within the country of Down in Ulster in anno 1575 ; fol. 115. A discourse of the province of Munster in anno 1600. 96 A. A. A. It containeth three whole years' wars in the Province of Munster which was during the government of Sir George Carew, Knight, Lord President of the same, viz., from the beginning of anno 1600 unto the end of the year 1602 : divided into three books. Certain Warrants, Letters Patent, Instructions, &c, which are the least part of the History yet inserted into the foresaid three books, viz. : Liber 1. The warrant for passing of Letters Patent to the Lord President ; fol. 2. The Lord President's Letters Patent ; fol. 3. The Lord Deputy's and Council's Instructions to the Lord Presi- dent ; fol. 5. The state of the Province of Munster when the Lord President came into it ; fol. 30. A letter from Her Majesty to the Lord President, concerning James Fitzgerald the young Earl of Desmond ; fol. 88. Her Majesty's Letters Patent for James Fitzgerald to be Earl of Desmond ; fol. 90. In what good estate the Province of Munster stood ; fol. 107. A letter from Her Majesty to the Lord Deputy of Ireland to pardon all such as the Lord President should nominate, certain persons excepted ; fol. 115. Liber 2. A proclamation concerning base monies ; fol. 141. Articles between Her Majesty and the Treasurer at Wars for Ireland concerning base monies ; fol. 146. A letter from Her Majesty to the Lord President concerning base monies ; fol. 140. A brief collection of Florence M'Cartie's treasons and practices with the rebels not touching anything formerly related in the course of the story ; fol. 152. The Lord President's opinion, sent to the Lords of the Council in England, of the likeliest place where the Spaniards would attempt to land their forces in Ireland ; fol. 168. The effect of the Lords of the Council's answer to the Lord Presi- dent ; fol. 169. A branch of the Lord President's Letter to Mr. Secretary Cecill ; fol. 170. A letter from Mr Secretary Cecill to the Lord President ; fol. 170. The intelligence of the Spanish Fleet coming for Ireland sent by Mr. Secretary to the Lord President; fol. 171. The cross accidents which happened to make the Lord Deputy to be offended Avith the Lord President ; fol. 172. The Lord Deputy's letter to the Lord President ; fol. 173. A satisfactory letter from the Deputy to the Lord President ; fol. 175. Don Juan de A^uila, his Declaration in answer of a Proclamation published by the Lord Deputy and Council ; fol. 188. Her Majesty's letter unto the Lord President ; fol. 196. The principal men that were in O'Donnell's Army ; fol. 199. The principal men in Tyrone's Army ; fol. 199. An (.Id Irish Prophecy proved true ; fol. 221. The names of such of the Irish as fled into Spain; fol. 222. 97 The Reasons which moved the Lord Deputy and Council to yield to a Composition ; f'ol. 228. The Articles of the Composition ; fol. 229. Captain Harvye's Commission for liis Government ; fol. 2.').'i. The Request of the Inhabitants of Kinsale to the Lord President ; fol. 236. A letter from the Lord President to Her Majesty ; fol. 236. The Examination of Richard Owen ; fol. 2 (?). Instructions for Captain George Blunte touching the Earl of Tyrone; fol. 240. A letter from the Duke of Lerma to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 243. A letter from the Duke of Lerma to the Spanish Archbishop of Dublin ; fol. 244. A letter from the Secretary Ybarra to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 244. A letter from the Secretary Franqueza to Don [Juan] de Aguila ; fol. 245. A letter from the Duke of Lerma to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 245. A letter from the King of Spain to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 246. A letter from the Lord Deputy and Council to the Lords in England ; fol. 247. O'DonnelPs landing and reception in Spain ; fol. 250. A letter from O'Sulevan Beare to the King of Spain ; fol. 253. A letter from O'Sulevan Beare to the Earl of Carazena ; fol. 254. A letter from O'Sulevan Beare to Pedro de Zubiaur ; fol. 256. An interlocutory discourse between Captain Roger Harvy and Pedro Lopez de Soto ; fol. 257. Pedro Lopez de Soto, his passport ; fol. 260. Pedro Lopez de Soto, his letter to Captain Roger Harvye ; fol. 261. A letter from the Lord Deputy and Council to the Lords in England ; fol. 262. Liber 3. In what estate the Province of Munster was in after the siege of Kinsale ; fol. 2C7. The war of Ireland censured to be lawfully maintained by the rebels in the opinions of the learned men of Spain ; fol. 267. The names of the Doctors of Salamanca who censured the lawfulness of the rebellion in Ireland ; fol. 270. A letter from the Lord President to the Spanish Cannoniers in Dunbov ; fol. 277. Sir Samuel Bagenall brought letters to the Lord President from the Lord Deputy and from Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 293. The description of Beare Haven ; fol. 302. The description of Balltymore Haven ; fol. 303. The description of Castle Haven ; fol. 303. A letter from the Lord President to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 304. The taking of the Castle of Dunboy was the cause that the army, which was prepared in Spain for Ireland, was stayed ; fol. 305. A letter from the Lords of the Council to the Lord President ; fol. 312. Instructions for Captain Harvy to write into Spain ; fol. 313. A letter written by Her Majesty's own hand to the Lord President ; fol. 315. A letter from the Lord President to Her Majesty ; fol. 315. A letter from Captain Harvy to Pedro Lopez de Soto, the Spanish Veador ; fol. 317. Captain Harvies passport sent to the Veador; fol. 320. A letter from O'Donnell to O'Conncr Kerry ; fol. 320. G 98 A letter from the Lord President to Don Juan de Aguila ; fol. 321. A letter from Don Juan de Aguila to the Lord President ; fol. 321. The Lord President's passport for Captain Edney into Spain ; fol. 322. Spanish intelligence sent from Mr. Secretary Cecill to the Lord President ; fol. 323. The Lord President's opinion sent to Mr. Secretary of a defensive war in Ireland ; fol. 324. A branch of a letter from the Lords of the Council to the Lord President ; fol. 334. Of Spaniards defeated at Kinsale in the time of King Richard the Second ; fol. 334. Pope Clement the 8th, his Indulgence to the Irish that were in rebellion ; fol. 342. A letter from Pope Clement the 8th unto Tyrone and the Irish rebels, animating them to persevere in rebellion ; fol. 343. Pope Clement the 8th, his Bull for the granting of spiritual livings unto Owen McEggan ; fol. 345. A letter from Her Majesty to the Lord President concerning the Earl of Clanricard ; fol. 352. A letter from John Burgh to the Lord President ; fol. 353. The list of Her Majesty's forces in Munster ; fol. 356. A letter sent by the Lord President from the Lord Deputy to the Lords of the Council in England ; fol. 358. Look into the Table of the Book (which is very long) for the par- ticular services done in Munster within the three years above mentioned. Maps in Liber 1. Of Munster ; fol. 1. Of the Earl of Ormond's taking ; fol. 22. Of the River of Waterford ; fol. 28. Of Cahir Castle ; fol. 40. Of Asketon Castle ; fol. 52. Of Thomond ; fol. 55. Of Glynn Castle ; fol. 62. Of Carigfoyle Castle ; fol. 65. Of Kerry and Desmond ; fol. 68. Of the Manor of Traly ; fol. 71. Of the River of Limerick ; fol. 73. Of the Barony of Conologh ; "] OfKenry; } fol. 80. Of Part of Kerry; J OfDowalla; fol. 81. Of Castle Mang ; fol. 97. Of Limerick Castle ; fol. 111. Liber 2. — Maps. Of the Siege of Kinsale ; fol. 190. Of Balltymore Bay ; fol. 234. Of the Fort at Halebolin ; fol. 236. Of Imokelly ; fol. 260. Liber 3. — Maps. Of Carbry ; fol. 271. Of Desmond ; Of Kerry ; Of Carbry j } fol. 279. Of Muskry ; Of Dowalla, &c. 99 Of Bcare and Bantry ; fol. 285. Of the Armies' passage into Beare ; fol. 287. Of the Siege of Dunboy ; fol. 290. Of Muskry ; fol. 330. Of the Fort at Ca.stlo ny Park ; fol. 334. Of the City of Limerick ; "^ Of the Town of Youghall ; Vfol. 366. Of the City of Cork ; J B. B. B. This book containeth a register of certain grants of lands in fee farm, and leases, with their several rents reserved, passed under the great seal of Ireland, unto sundry persons in the reigns of King Henry the 8th, King Edward the 6th, Queen Mary, and Queen Elizabeth, unto the 33rd year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. H. II. H. In two jiarts. The first part contains A brief of sundry Records concerning Ireland, remaining in the Tower of London, from fol. 1 unto fol. 34, where there is both a table of the Names and matter therein contained immediately following. The second part beginneth at fol. 65, and continueth to the end of the Book, viz. : This Index following is at the latter end of the book H. H. H. Certain records concerning Alan and Thomas de Galhvay, in annia 14 et 17 Regis Johannis et in anno 4to Henrici 3*" ; fol. 65, 66. A warrant unto Robert de Ufford, Justice of Ireland, to certify the King what lands John Bissett died seised of, as held of Richard de Burgo in capite. In anno sexto Edwardi I.; fol. 66. An inquisition taken of the lands that Bissett died seised of, in anno 7timo Edw. I. ; fol. eodem. A grant of Bissett's lands unto John de Athy, in anno 12 Edw. II.; fol. 67. An inquisition taken of the lands of Galfr de Costentyne, anno 37, Hen. 3 ; fol. eodem. The Creation of Fitzgerald Earl of Kildare, anno 9 Edw. 2 ; fol. 69. The Creation of Edmond le Bottiller Earl of Carrick, anno 9 Edw. 2 ; fol. eodem. A grant unto the said Edmond le Bottiler to have the return of all writs within certain limited places dated nt >upra ; fol. eodem. The Creation of Birmingham Earl of Louth, anno 12 Edw. 2 ; fol. eodem. The Creation of James Bottiler Earl of Ormond, anno 2 Edw. 3 ; fol. 70. The Creation of Fitzgerald Earl of Desmond, anno 3 Edw. 3 ; fol. eodem. The Creation of r™ „ Barnewcll Lord of Trimletiston, anno 2 Edw. 4 ; fol. eodem. The Creation of Rowland Fitzeustace Lord Portlester in the county of Meath, anno 2 Edw. 4 ; fol. 70. The Creation of Robert Preston Viscount of Gormanston, anno 18, Edw. 4 ; fol. eodem. The Creation of Robert de Vere Earl of Oxford and Marquis of Dublin, anno 9 Ric. 2 j fol. 71. 100 The Creation of Robert de Vere Earl of Oxford Marquis of Dublin, Duke of Ireland, anno 9 Ric. 2 ; fol. 72. Notes of Creations that are entered at large into the Books G. and G. G-. G., and the Creation of Butler and Talbot in the Book L; fol. 73. A letter from His Majesty unto the Lord Deputy St. John for the Creation of James Dillon Baron of Kilkenny, in the county of West Meath, in Ireland, dated 13 of November 1619 ; fol. 74. A list of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal as they stood in Ireland in anno 1620 ; fol. 75. The several times or dates of the Creation of Noblemen in Ireland since January 1617 ; fol. 77. Letters Patent of the Creation of Maurice Earl of Toniond, 7° die Jan., anno 5°, Edw. 6 ; fol. 78. Letters Patent of the Creation of Donogh O'Breen Earl of Thomond ; 1 die Julii, anno 35 Hen. 8 ; fol. 79. The brief state of the question of precedence between the Earls of Tomond and Clanricarde ; fol. 81. A brief collection of certain endowments and grants made by the ancestors of the Earl of Thomond to the Church of Limerick and other Abbeys &c, in the Province of Munster, with the title and dignity then given unto his ancestors, from whom he is lineally descended ; fol. 82. J.J.J. This book sheweth the Lieutenants, Justices, Deputies, and Gover- nors of Ireland, which have succeeded each other from the 20th year of the Reign of Henry the Second, to this day. The rest of this book is a printed chronicle of Ireland in English. 0. 0. 0. Annales Hiberniae ab anno Christ! 1162 usque ad annum 1370. The author of this Book is unknown. It was brought, as is sup- posed, out of Ireland by the Lord Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, Lord Treasurer and Earl Marshall of England, when he was Earl of Surrey and Lord Lieutenant of that Realm in anno 1 1 Regni Regis Henrici Octavi, and of late years given by the Lord William Howard, youngest son of Thomas late Duke of Norfolk, unto the learned and judicious Antiquary Mr. William Camden, who put the same in print, inserting it into his Britannia, and by him given to George Lord Carew in anno 1619. Q.Q.Q. This is a Latin printed book entitled Richardi Stanihursti Dubli- niensis de Rebus in Hibernia gestis libri quatuor, ad eharissimum suum fratrem clarissimumque virum P. Plunketum Dominum Baronem Dun- sania?. Accessit his libria Iliberniearum rerum Appendix ex Silvestro Giraldo Cambrensi pervetusto scriptore collecta ; cum ejusdem Stani- hursti adnotationibus. At Antwerp, printed 1584. R. R. R. A Discourse of the Religion anciently professed by the Irish and Scottish, shewing it to be for substance the same with that which at this day is by public authority established in the Church of England. Written unto Sir Christopher Sibthorp, Knight, one of His Majesty's Justices of His Court of Chief Place in Ireland. By the Reverend Father in God James Usher, Bishop of Meath in Ireland. 101 T. T. T. Historian Catholics Iberniffl Compendium. Domino Philippo Aus- triaco quatuor Hispaniarum, [ndiarum, aliorum Regnorum, atque mul- tarum ditionum Regi Catholico, monarchajque potentissimo dicatum. A. D. Philippo O'Sullevano Bearro Ibemo cum facilitate S. [nquisitionis Ordinarii et Regis. Ulyssippone excussunia Petro Crasbeeckio Regio Typographo anno Domini 1621. V. V. V. This Book is the Copy of the Extent of the Lordships and Lands appertaining unto the Earl of Ormond in Ireland, with Copies of Deeds and other things in the same. This Copy was taken in the 20th year of the Reign of King Edward the Fourth out of a Book called the Red Book, which was at the time of the writing thereof in the keeping of James Botler eldest son of Edmond Richardson. X. X. X. A printed Book in Latin called or entitled Florilegium Insula) Sanc- torum, seu Vitse et Acta Sanctorum Hibernian ; quibus accesserunt non vulgaria mouumenta, hoc est, Sancti Patricii Purgatorium, S. Malachie Prophctia de Summis Pontificibus : Aliaque nonnulla quorum Elenchus post Prrcfationem habetur : Omnia nunc primum partim ex M.S. codi- cibus, partim typis editis collegit, et publicabat Thomas Messinghamus Sacerdos Hibernus S. R. E. Protonotarius, necnon Seminarii llibcr- norum Parisiis Moderator. Parisiis 1624. Y. Y .Y. This volume is not described in the " Carew Catalogue ; " but the memorandum in Archbishop Sancroft's handwriting states that the volume is wanting. LONDON : Printed by George E. Etre and William Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen's most Excellent Majesty. For Her Majesty's Stationery Office. [12,060.-500.-1/64.] UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Los Angeles This book is DUE on the last date stamped below. Form L9-Series 4939 UC SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY AA 001 266 728 3 I D0 NOT REMOVE ^Ss-woy*"" ^■wnwos Uni vers»Y Research Library CD 1069 098 1864 s