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Page 37
... wall of the Ardfert chancel , probably as Mr. Wakeman says , the oldest portion of the ruin , began to fall inward some thirty or forty years ago , during Mr. Crosbie's absence from Ireland , and either through the fall of the wall , or ...
... wall of the Ardfert chancel , probably as Mr. Wakeman says , the oldest portion of the ruin , began to fall inward some thirty or forty years ago , during Mr. Crosbie's absence from Ireland , and either through the fall of the wall , or ...
Page 69
... walls and their covering blocks of our " Hags ' Beds , " " " Beds of Grania and Diarmod , " or " Giants ' Graves , " whilst the Anta answers rather to our dolmen , or , perhaps , to the larger terminal chamber of the giant's grave . I ...
... walls and their covering blocks of our " Hags ' Beds , " " " Beds of Grania and Diarmod , " or " Giants ' Graves , " whilst the Anta answers rather to our dolmen , or , perhaps , to the larger terminal chamber of the giant's grave . I ...
Page 75
... wall which we believe have never yet been noticed by any archæologist , and this even in Kilkenny , where everything has been so well described . There are two pairs of doors and windows in a continuation of the same wall in which the ...
... wall which we believe have never yet been noticed by any archæologist , and this even in Kilkenny , where everything has been so well described . There are two pairs of doors and windows in a continuation of the same wall in which the ...
Page 76
... wall that a domestic apartment was attached to the old church , which may have been used by the clergy long after the founding of the new church . And later on the site increased in importance . On the space in front of the old church ...
... wall that a domestic apartment was attached to the old church , which may have been used by the clergy long after the founding of the new church . And later on the site increased in importance . On the space in front of the old church ...
Page 85
... wall have already disappeared , but their foundations can easily be traced . The southern side - wall is perfect , and also the northern wall of the chancel ; and few of our medieval churches show more clearly than this interest- ing ...
... wall have already disappeared , but their foundations can easily be traced . The southern side - wall is perfect , and also the northern wall of the chancel ; and few of our medieval churches show more clearly than this interest- ing ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey ancient Antiquaries antiquities appear Aran Aran Islands arch Archæological Ardfert arms arrow-heads barbs belfry Bishop Book of Leinster Bronze Age cairn carved castle Cathedral century chancel chapel church Clare Clare Island Connaught Corb Cork crannogs cromlech cross decoration Dublin Earl east Ennis fairies Fellow figure Fitz Gerald fragments Franciscan friary Galway goldsmith head hills incised inscription interesting Ireland Irish island James John Journal Kerry Kilkenny King lands Leinster Limerick Lord Loughcrew lozenge MAQI Meath Members Miss mitted a freeman monument Mycena Navan nave O'Brien ogam Ogham original ornament Paper parish Patrick patterns Probably then dead proposed remains Richard Rostellane round tower Royal ruins Secretary side silversmith slab Society specimens spiral spur stone Templepatrick Thomas tiles tomb Tory Island town transept Verdon Vice-President Wakeman wall Waterford Wexford William window
Popular passages
Page 272 - On the shore grows samphire in plenty, ring-root or sea-holy, and sea-cabbage. Here are Cornish choughs, with red legs and bills. Here are ayries of hawkes, and birds which never fly but over the sea ; and, therefore, are used to be eaten on fasting days : to catch which, people goe down, with ropes tyed about them, into the caves of cliffts by night, and with a candle light kill abundance of them. Here are severall wells and pooles, yet in extraordinary dry weather, people must turn their cattell...
Page 286 - These new colonies consisted of several families who became settlers, "not together, but at different times;" and whose descendants are known to this day under the general appellation of the "Tribes of Galway...
Page 271 - is almost paved over with stones, soe as, in some places, nothing is to be seen but large stones with wide openings between them, where cattle break their legs. Scarce any other stones there but limestones, and marble fit for tombstones, chymney mantle trees, and high crosses. Among these stones is very sweet pasture, so that beefe, veal, mutton are better and earlyer in season here...
Page 273 - We might be disposed, trusting to Irish traditions respecting the islands, to accept these people as representatives of the Firbolgs, had not Cromwell, that upsetter of all things Hibernian, left in Aranmore a small English garrison who subsequently apostatised to Catholicism, intermarried with the natives, and so vitiated the Firbolgian pedigree.
Page 179 - Armorial Families, a Complete Peerage, Baronetage, and Knight-age, and a Directory of some gentlemen of coat-armour, and being the first attempt to show which arms in use at the moment are borne by legal authority, compiled and edited by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies, numerous illustrations.
Page 337 - And for the more convenient Payment of small Sums, be it enacted, by the Authority aforesaid, that Mark Newbie's half-pence called Patrick's half-pence shall, from and after the said Eighteenth Instant, pass for halfpence Current pay of this Province; provided, he the said Mark give sufficient Security to the Speaker of the House, for the use of the General Assembly from Time to Time being.
Page 273 - Bay, have their own very strongly-marked type, in some respects an exaggeration of the ordinary Gaelic one, the face being remarkably long ; the chin very long and narrow, but not angular ; the nose long, straight, and pointed ; the brows straight or rising obliquely outwards ; the eyes light, with very few exceptions ; the hair of various colours, but usually dark-brown. "We might be disposed...
Page 58 - DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF THE COLLECTION OF ANTIQUITIES, and other Objects Illustrative of Irish History, exhibited in the Belfast Museum, at the Meeting of the British Association, Sep. 1852, with Antiquarian Notes. 8vo, sewed.
Page 252 - ... It is not, in fact, more than fifty fathoms deep. He further above states the surrounding wall to be " in compass as big as a large castle bawn ;'' but finding that description conveyed no definite idea of its extent, he tried to define it better in the Ogyg., place, on the brim of a high clifft, a hundred fathoms deep : being* a great wall of bare stones without any mortar, in compass as big as p. 175, by stating that it would " contain 200 cows in its area.
Page 288 - the stern and unbending justice of the Chief Magistrate of this city, James Lynch FitzStephen, elected Mayor 1493, who condemned and executed his own guilty son, Walter, on this spot.