| 414 pages
...kingdom, in that, for the space of 350 years at least, after the conquest just attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit...though they earnestly desired and sought the same."' Such a sentence as the following is worthy of note : ' The persecution of English Protestants by Mary... | |
| Edmund Spenser - 1890 - 462 pages
...kingdom, in that, for the space of 350 years at least after the conquest first attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit...as long as they were out of the protection of the law, so as every Englishman might oppress, spoil, and kill them without controlment, how was it possible... | |
| Nottidge Charles Macnamara - 1896 - 406 pages
...England ; in that for the space of many years after the so-called conquest of Ireland, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit...though they earnestly desired and sought the same." Sir * Frost's " History of Clare," p. 36. t Sioda was killed in Limerick, AD 1369. J Tiege, killed... | |
| Thomas Addis Emmet - 1903 - 382 pages
...great defect in the Civil Policy of this Kingdom, in that for the space of three hundred and fifty years at least after the Conquest first attempted,...the Irish, nor the benefit and Protection thereof allow'd unto them, though they earnestly desired and sought the same. For, as long as they were out... | |
| Patrick Weston Joyce - 1904 - 586 pages
...Davies writes : — ' This then I note as a great defect in the civill policy of this Kingdom, that the English lawes were not communicated to the Irish,...though they earnestly desired and sought the same.' a This measure ' would have prevented the calamities of ages, and was obviously calculated for the... | |
| Nottidge Charles Macnamara - 1910 - 328 pages
...England ; in that for the space of many years after the so-called conquest of Ireland, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit and protection thereof allowed into them, though they desired and sought the same." Sir John states that no true idea can be formed... | |
| Edward Raymond Turner - 1919 - 530 pages
...John Davies, attorney-general in Ireland in the time of James I, "that for the space of 350 yea res at least after the Conquest first attempted, the English...communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit and protection therof allowed unto them, though they earnestly desired and sought the same." 8 And he says: Perhaps... | |
| Constantia Maxwell - 1923 - 408 pages
...the conquest first attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefst and protection thereof allowed unto them, though they...as long as they were out of the protection of the law, so as every Englishman might oppress, spoil, and kill them without controlment, how was it possible... | |
| A. L. Rowse - 2003 - 480 pages
...kingdom, in that, for the space of 350 years at least after the conquest first attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit and protection thereof allowed unto them As long as they were out of the protection of the law . . . how was it possible they should be other... | |
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