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Acts of Parliament, 3 and 4 Philip and Mary, chap. 9, for reviving
three statutes for punishment of heresy, 245

explanation of the three statutes, 246

gloomy prospect opened by them to Protestants, 248

purpose of carrying them into effect, 249

3 and 4 Philip and Mary, chap. 8, for repealing statutes against
the See of Rome, 244

its provisions, 245

3 and 4 Philip and Mary, chap. 10, for the discharge of the first-
fruits, 246

its provisions, 247

2 Eliz. chap. 1, for restoring the Crown's ancient jurisdiction, 257
2 Eliz. chap. 2, for the uniformity of Common Prayer, 258
for Uniformity, remarkable enactment at its conclusion, 259
impropriety and inapplicability of it, 260

for Uniformity, of Queen Elizabeth, still in force when the
Liturgy was superseded by the Directory, 586

2 Eliz. chap. 3, for restitution of first-fruits to the Crown, 262
2 Eliz. chap. 4, for annulling election of bishops by deans and
chapters, and vesting it in the crown, 263

hesitation about carrying it into effect, 266

correspondence between the queen and council about it, 267
deviation from the rule, and probable causes of it, 268

11 Eliz. chap. 6, to prevent the nomination of improper persons

to cathedral dignities, 287

12 Eliz. chap. 1, for the erection of free-schools, 290

its occasion, 290

and provisions, 290

28 Eliz. chap. 2, against witchcraft and sorcery, 313

3 and 4 Philip and Mary, prohibited the bringing of the Scots
into Ireland, 367

repealed by 11 James I., 367

10 Charles I., for improving the estates of the Church, 483

in Ireland, for Uniformity of Publick Prayers, 17 and 18 Charles
II., its preamble, 645

and principal enactments, 645, 646

its operation on nonconformist ministers, 647

17 and 18 Charles II., chap. 10, for disabling persons to hold
benefices both in England and Ireland, 649

of Charles II., enacting an annual thanksgiving for the King's
Restoration, 635

ditto for preservation from the late Rebellion, 636

of Uniformity in England, proceedings connected with it, their
effect in Ireland, 637

of Attainder, passed in the parliament of King James II., 709
its preamble, 709

its enactments, 710

five lists of persons proscribed by it, 710-713

its spirit of fraud, violence, and cruelty, 713

of Repeal of the Act of Settlement, its injustice, 708

opposition made to it, 709

its effect on Protestants, 710

Acts of Parliament, of James II., for annulling the jurisdiction of the

Church, 718

of James II., concerning tythes and ecclesiastical dues, 719

of Settlement and Explanation, promises that they should be
maintained inviolable, 704

lands of Ireland for the most part held under them, 705
means for compelling the repeal, 705

ADAIR, Archibald, bishop of Killalla, suspected of favouring the Scotch
Covenanters, 542

deprived of his bishoprick, 543
appointed to Waterford, 543

ADAIR, Mr. Patrick, his account of the conference between Bishop
Leslie and the nonconforming ministers, 521

ADAIRE, Robert, signs the Scotch Covenant, 527

correspondence concerning him, 528

ADRIAN, Pope, had no right to the kingdom of Ireland, 109.
AGARD, Thomas, his letter to Lord Cromwell concerning the preaching
of the Gospel, 144

Aghadoe and Ardfert, bishopricks of, their extreme poverty, 445
ALAN, John, archbishop of Dublin, his narrative of a miraculous con-
quest gained over the prince of darkness, 56

Cardinal Wolsey's instrument for dissolving some of the lesser
monasteries, 155

ALLEN, Lord Chancellor, joins in an answer to Lord Cromwell, touch-
ing religious matters, 150

with other members of the privy council visits the four counties
above the Barrow, 150

detail of their proceedings, 151

ALLEN, Thomas, informs Lord Cromwell of favour shown to the
Papists, 143

ALLEN, Master of the Rolls, recommends the king's supreme dominion
to be recognized by the regal title, 166

All-Hallows, monastery of, given by the Corporation of Dublin as a
site for an university, 318

Altars and chapels, numerous in the same place, 100

Altar-stone, on which a leper passed from England to Ireland, 78
AMBROSE, St., two forged prayers attributed to him by the Church of
Rome, 209

Anniversaries for celebrating private masses, 99

Antichrist, doctrine concerning, in the Irish Articles of Religion, of
questionable propriety, 386

Anti-remonstrants, refuse to acknowledge the king's temporal power, 653
Antrim, county of, earliest Presbyterian congregation formed at Broad
Island, 367

Apology for authorized and set forms of Liturgy against the pretence
of the Spirit, by Bishop Taylor, 648

Apostolical succession, how maintained in the Church of Ireland, 270
unquestioned and unquestionable, 271

in what persons maintained, 285

how maintained at the Restoration, 597

Archbishops, commanded by the king to be careful of the improve-
ment of the clergy, 438

Archbishops and bishops, their full attendance on parliament in 1615,

381

their judgment against toleration of religion, 422

their sees and family names, 423, 424

their petition to King Charles I., in behalf of the inferior clergy,

483

disasters which befell them in the Rebellion of 1641, 562

proscribed by the Act of Attainder, 709

Archbishops of Armagh and Dublin, question of precedence between
them finally settled, 479-481

Archbishopricks, how filled by Queen Elizabeth, 284

Ardagh, bishoprick of, united to Kilmore, 613

cathedral church of, its antiquity and ruinous condition, 435
Ardfert, abbey of, contest between its prior and the bishop of the
diocese, 23

Ardfert and Aghadoe, bishoprick of, united to Limerick, 613

ARMAGH, Archbishop of, Primacy restored to him by Queen Mary,

233

his precedency before Dublin decided, 481

Archbishops of, their jurisdiction independent of the Pope, 4

the first among the Irish prelates, 7

rivalry between them and Archbishops of Dublin, 18

archbishoprick of, five persons nominated for it to King Edward,

213

difficulty of providing a fit person, 215

Goodacre appointed to it, 216

injured by rebellion, 283

improved by Lord Wentworth and Bishop Bramhall, 508

cathedral of, destroyed by Shane O'Neal, 281

restored by Archbishop Hampton, 379

cathedral and town of, destroyed in 1566, 302

laid waste in the Rebellion of 1641, 558

clergy of, opposed to the king's supremacy, 114

diocese of, report of its state, as to ministers, parsonage-houses,
churches, benefices, &c., in 1622, 396

province of, commission for inquiring into the state of its several
dioceses, 395

detailed reports of the dioceses with only one exception, 395
abstract of the report, 396

university of, its celebrity, 37

Army, new-modelled for the promotion of James's purposes, 681

Protestants displaced and Papists substituted, 682

Aroasian monks, a branch of the Augustinians, 41

Articles of Faith, with respect to candidates for the ministry, described
differently in English and Irish Canons, 500

Articles of Religion, brief declaration of, in 1566, 272

its object and contents, 272-275

corresponding to one in England, 275

general conformity of the Irish clergy to those of the Church of
England, 382

plan of forming new Articles for the Church of Ireland carried
into effect, 383

Articles of Religion, account of these Articles, 383-388
their incorporation of the Lambeth Articles, 384
their diffuse and excursive character, 385
exceptions taken to them at the time, 387

the impediment they presented to an union between the Churches
of England and Ireland, 387

put forth by the Convocation, 388

question concerning their authority answered, 388
question concerning their repeal, 389

those of England proposed to be adopted in Ireland, 484

account of the proceedings connected with their adoption, 485–491
Articles of Church of England adopted by Church of Ireland, 490
question of the effect thus produced on the Articles of the Church
of Ireland, 491-494

Articles of 1615, proposal for confirming them in 1635, 490
answer to the proposal, 490

question as to the effect produced on them by the adoption of the
Thirty-nine Articles, 491

different opinions recounted, 491

opinion of Archbishop Ussher, 492

intention of the governments and Bishop Bramhall, 493

different practices consequent thereupon, 493

attempt to procure a ratification of them by Act of Parliament, 494
rejected by Lord Deputy with indignation, 495

fell into neglect after the Restoration, 496

Assembly of Divines at Westminster, Ireland not free from its con-
tamination, 576

nominates Archbishop Ussher one of its members, 575
causes him to be voted out again, 576

Athenry, church of, burnt by the Mac an Earlas, 303

unnatural and impious answer on the occasion, 303

Augustinian monks, why particularly numerous, 41
Auricular confession, mischief of it, 148

Austin or Crutched Friars, their establishments, 43

Authority of the Church, set forth in a sermon, delivered to his clergy
and published by Henry Leslie, bishop of Down and Connor,

516

BACON, Sir Francis, his letter to Secretary Cecil on the state of
Ireland, 328

recommends toleration of religion, 329

BALE, John, bishop of Ossory, his description of the Popish celebra-
tion of divine worship, 60

his early life, 217

his promotion by King Edward VI., 218

his consecration, and circumstances of it, 218-221

his zeal in preaching the gospel at Kilkenny, 222

his horror at the Popish enormities, and description of them, 223

his account of the subjects of his preaching, 224

his charge against Archbishop Browne for not using King
Edward's Second Book, 225

his unbecoming grossness of manner, 226

BALE, John, bishop of Ossory, his diligence in his charge, 227
his account of the proclamation of Queen Mary at Kilkenny, 230
his flight beyond the seas, 234

his persecutions and dangers, 236

named in the warrant for consecrating Archbishop Parker, 236
Ballinderry, old church of, where Jeremy Taylor officiated, 600
Ballybogan, abbey of, an image of our Saviour there destroyed, 141
Baptism, sacrament of, not used in some parts in Queen Elizabeth's
reign, 299

canons relating to it, variation between them, 499

BARON, Roland, appointed to the Archbishoprick of Cashel, 240
BASSENET, Edward, dean of St. Patrick's, a supporter of Romish
superstitions, 125

Bastards, Archbishop Browne's children, born in lawful wedlock, so
called by parliament, 247

BEDELL, William, his early life, 433

made Provost of Trinity College, 434

and Bishop of Kilmore and Ardagh, 434

his letter to Bishop Laud, giving an account of his diocese, 435
his exemplary conduct in the management of his diocese, 441

some of his alterations of a questionable nature, 442

his letter to the Lord Deputy on the increase of Popery, 465

his sense of the necessity of a strong military force for the repres-
sion of Papists, 466

his gentle and persuasive means for their conversion, 467

his attempt to convert the Romish priesthood, 467

and to circulate religious books in Irish, 468

his experiment a subject of speculation, 469

his peculiar merit in making it, 469

his plan of religious improvement not approved by the Govern-

ment, 470

his captivity and sufferings in the Rebellion of 1641, 566
Popish testimony to his character, 566

description of his tomb, and the inscription on it, 567
mark of respect shown by the rebels, 570

BEDLOW, James, does penance in Dublin, 307

Bell, book, and candle, manner of cursing by, 28

Bell, narrative of the remarkable sanctity of one, 618

Benedictine monks, their establishments, 42

Benefices to be given to such as could speak English, 123

in England or Wales made not tenable with benefices in Ireland,

649

BERKLEY, Lord, lord lieutenant, his instructions concerning reli-

gion, 651

his arrival welcomed by the Popish party, 653

refuses to support the Remonstrants, 655

his submission to the arrogance of the Popish Archbishop Talbot,

656

BERNARD, Dr., his life of Archbishop Ussher, 331

his account of the method of catechising practised in his time, 440
Bibles, large, placed in the choir of the two Dublin cathedrals, 265
small, their scarcity in Dublin, 266

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