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48. History of St. Canice, by Graves and Prim, especially pp. 187 and 193; also Mr. Graves’s Presentments, p. 79; Archdall’s Lodge’s Peerage, art. ‘Mount Garrett.’

49. It is hard to say whether the instructions for John Estrete, attributed by Mr. Gairdner to the very beginning of Henry’s reign, are by him or by Richard III. Henry would hardly have promised to make Kildare Deputy for ten years on condition of his going to Court, and the allusions to Edward IV. are more likely to have been made by Richard.—Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. i. p. 91. The three letters in the Appendix cannot be earlier than 1488.

50. Writing to Morton or Fox, Octavian says, ‘Profano coronationis pueri in Hiberniâ sceleri, me solo excepto, nullus obstitit manifeste.’ This hardly gives due credit to the Bishop of Clogher.—Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. i. p. 383. Henry’s letter to Pius II. is at p. 94. ‘Armachanensis’ must be a mistake on the King’s part.

51. Lambert was crowned May 2, 1487.

52. Book of Howth, and an account in Carew (followed by Smith), iv. p. 473.

53. Bacon; Book of Howth; O’Donovan’s Four Masters, ad ann. 1485. The battle of Stoke was fought June 16, 1487.

54. Henry’s letter to Waterford is in Smith’s Waterford; the letter of the Dublin people in Ware’s Annals.

55. Sir Richard Edgcombe’s voyage, in Harris’s Hibernica.

56. Book of Howth; Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. i. p. 384.

57. The Earls of Kildare; Harris’s Dublin; Four Masters, ad ann. 1492.

58. Ware; Gairdner’s Life of Richard III.; Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., ii. 55.

59. Irish Statutes, 10 Henry VII., Dec. 1, 1494.

60. Ibid., chaps. iv. and xxii.

61. Gilbert’s Viceroys, p. 454, and Ware. The Act is not in the printed statutes.

62. Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. ii. pp. lxxvi. 237, 242, 299; Histories of Waterford, by Smith and Rylands; Four Masters and Annals of Lough Cé ad ann. 1505.

63. Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. ii. pp. 64 and 67.

64. Hattecliffe’s accounts in Letters of Richard III. and Henry VII., vol. ii. pp. 297-318.

65. Ware; Hattecliffe’s Accounts; Earls of Kildare.

66. Gairdner’s Richard III.; Smith’s Waterford, where is given the correspondence between Henry and the city; Carew, vol. v. p. 472, where the events of 1487, 1495, and 1497 are mixed up; Sir Piers Butler to the Earl of Ormonde, in Graves’s St. Canice, p. 193.

67. Four Masters, with O’Donovan’s notes, under 1485. The ‘Annals’ of Andreas and the ‘Douze triomphes de Henri VII.,’ are in Memorials of Henry VII., ed. Gairdner.

68. Sir Piers Butler to the Earl of Ormonde, in Graves’s St. Canice, p. 193. Stanihurst says Sir Piers waylaid his enemy.

69. All the authorities bearing on this event are collected in Graves’s St. Canice, pp. 193-198.

70. The Acts of this Parliament (supposed lost) are printed by Mr. Gilbert in his Facsimiles of Irish National MSS., vol. iii., from the English Patent Rolls. Ware; Four Masters.

71. Four Masters and O’Donovan’s notes, under 1487, 1488, and 1498.

72. Ware; Four Masters.

73. Sidney to Leicester, March 1, 1566, in the Irish State Papers. The account of the battle of Knocktoe is made up from Ware, Stanihurst, the Four Masters, and the Book of Howth. The Four Masters seem to have thought that the forces of the Pale were not engaged, and O’Donovan rather countenances them, but the Annals of Lough Cé say Kildare mustered ‘all the foreigners and Irish of Leinster and of Northern Ireland.’ (Ad ann. 1504.) The details in the Book of Howth may not be all correct, though there is nothing antecedently improbable in Lord Gormanston’s truculent speech.

74. Irish Statutes, 24 Hen. VII.; Letters and Papers of Henry VIII., Oct. 7, 1515.

75. The statutes referred to are printed in Hardiman’s Statute of Kilkenny. See Gilbert’s Viceroys, p. 459.


Ireland under the Tudors

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