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Church lands, instructions for preserving them from waste and aliena-

tion, 279

examples of such abuse, 280

Churchwardens, appointment of fit persons recommended, 325

censured for neglect of duty, 532

Cistercian, or white monks, their establishments, 42

nuns, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, 42

CLANEBOY, Viscount, instrumental in introducing nonconformists into
the ministry of the Church, 454-456

signs the petition against the Scotch Covenant, 541

CLANRICKARD, Marquis of, Book of Common Prayer used under his
protection, 593

CLARENDON, Henry, Earl of, his appointment to the Lord Lieutenancy
of Ireland, 680

a blind, to hide the intended proceedings, 681

displaced from the government, 683

his speech on leaving the country, 683

Clergy, their remarkable agreement to resist all lay power and juris-
diction, 17

their abuse of their privileges, 31

indignation at being liable to civil penalties, 32
their innocence, how said to have been vitiated, 32
before the Reformation, their moral character, 30
their intellectual character, 36

concubinage no discredit to them, 34

complaints against them, before King Henry's commissioners, 130
before the Reformation, their great ignorance, 136

their disobedience to Archbishop Browne, 147

their non-residence corrected, 173

required to use the English Liturgy, 195

illiteracy attributed to them, 196

married, deprived of their benefices, 234

declaration to be made by them in 1566, 272

improvement of their condition recommended, 300

in Queen Elizabeth's time, their disordered lives and unprofessional

behaviour, 321

their orthodoxy questioned by Bramhall, 449

their mean condition, 474

many of their wives and children recusants, 475

the rural, their extreme contempt and beggary, 483

inferior, their condition improved by Bishop Bramhall, 508

instructed to preach against the disorders of the disaffected, 524
their liberal gift to King Charles I., 457

miseries inflicted on them in the Rebellion of 1641, 560

parochial, their condition in 1660, 666

Irish, one only a member of the Westminster Assembly of Divines,
576

obstructed in the recovery of their property in reign of James II.,
687

their increased difficulties of living, 688

their persecutions from the Irish Papists in the reign of James II.,

700

Clergy, ineffectual attempts to attach them to the Romish commu-

nion, 691

congratulate King William on his victory at the Boyne, 731

of Dublin, sermons preached by them for the instruction of the
Papists, 335

of Dublin express their gratitude to the Marquis of Ormonde for
his care of the Church, 584

of Dublin, their declaration to the Parliamentary Commissioners
concerning the Book of Common Prayer, 587

reasons for their adherence to it, 588

their petition to be still allowed to use it, 590

names and stations of the Clergy who signed the declaration, 591
of Dublin, acts of violence inflicted on them by the Papists in
James the Second's reign, 701

illegitimate, evil of their admission to cathedral dignities, 287
checked by Act of Parliament, 287

of Scotland, driven from their country by the Covenanters, and
hospitably received in Ireland, 541

Clergyman, peculiar outrage upon one in 1641, 561

Clogher, bishoprick of, vacant several years by reason of the wars, 284
bishoprick of, its revenues augmented by King James the First,
so as to become one of the richest in the kingdom, 392

diocese of, its neglected state from the absence of the diocesan, 355
its poverty and augmented revenues, 356

diocese, held together with Derry and Raphoe, 355

held together with Meath, 356

diocese of, account of its benefices, ministers, churches, parsonages

&c., in 1622, 401

Presbyterian ministers who refused to qualify for the Church, 627
Clonmacnoise, cathedral of, scandalously pillaged, 203

Clonmel, jury of, their charge against the clergy, 36

CLOTWORTHY, Sir John, presents to the Long Parliament a petition
from some Protestants of Ulster, 549

a lay assessor of the Westminster Assembly of Divines, 576
CLOYNE, bishop of, how called from his poverty, 445

bishoprick of, united to Cork and Ross, 613

again separated, 613

COLE, Dr., commissioner for lashing the Irish hereticks, 250

his disappointment, 251

Coleraine refuses the Solemn League and Covenant, 580

COLLIER, his statement respecting the Articles of the Irish Church, 491
COLLYER, Jeremy, his Ecclesiastical History, objections stated in it
against the Irish Articles of 1615, 387

Commission for the suppression of abbeys, 156

for restoring Popery, 234

for punishing the hereticks of Ireland defeated by a remarkable
incident, 250

for inquiring concerning repair of churches and supply of incum-
bents, 354

Commissions for inquiring into the state of churches, 247

Commissioners for inquiring into the state of the kingdom, result of
their inquest, 129

Commissioners of Publick Records in Ireland, a document from their
report cited, 369

COмYN, John, archbishop of Dublin, his canon at a provincial synod,
relative to the clergy, 33

Conference between Lord Deputy and Primate Dowdall, 208-211
Confession, auricular, its supposed efficacy, 232
Congé d'élire, its inutility and absurdity, 11

adjudged not necessary by common law, 263
annulled by Act of Parliament, 263
Consecration of bishops, different forms of, 218
dispute about the use of them, 219

Conforming Presbyterian ministers justified in so doing, 647
Conformity to the established religion required of the undertakers in
Ulster, 362

to Episcopacy and the Liturgy declared by the Lords, and agreed
to by the Commons, 632

Consecration of new churches directed by the Commons, 503

of twelve bishops unparalleled, 611

notice of the fact by Bishop Taylor, 612
affecting sequel to it, 612

Conspiracy in. Ulster by the Irish nobles, 360

their pretext of religion answered, 361

how actuated by religion, 361

Convocation of the clergy, question whether it usually accompanied a
Parliament, 381

calling of one in 1615, and the important business transacted by
it, 382

of clergy in 1635, business in it affecting the temporalties and
spiritualities of the Church, 484

narrative of some of the proceedings in it, 489

recognise Bishop Bramhall's services for the clergy, 510

petition the Government concerning schools, 510

Lower House of, their contrivance with respect to the Articles of
Religion, 486

counteracted by Lord Wentworth, 487

CONWAY, Earl of, his feeling on the apprehension of Bishop Taylor, 599
CORBET, author of Lysimachus Nicanor, recommended for a benefice
to the Bishop of Killalla, 542

consequences of that recommendation, 543

Cork, disturbances there by the Papists at King James the First's
accession, 345

churches of, shut up, and Protestants excluded from them, 723
Earl of, complaint of the erection of his tomb in St. Patrick's
cathedral, 449

explanation of the fact not satisfactory, 449

and Ross, bishoprick of, an exception to the general dilapidation
of bishopricks, 445

Council of Ireland, their letter to Lord Cromwell touching the Re-

formation, 150

their progress through the four shires above the Barrow, 151
Counties of Wexford, Waterford, Kilkenny, and Tipperary inspected
by commissioners, and reported on, 133

Counties, four above the Barrow, visited by the Privy Council, 150
Covenant, national, of Scotland, attempts for introducing it into
Ireland, 524

precursor of the Solemn League and Covenant, 524

Scotch, a full confutation of it, in a speech addressed by Bishop
Lesley to his clergy, and published in 1638, 531

renunciation of it by some of the Scottish nation in Ireland, 539
new, spread over Ireland in 1680, put down by the Duke of
Ormonde, 661

Cox, his History of Ireland, incorrect statement in it rectified, 190
his narrative of the defeat of the Commission for punishing the
hereticks of Ireland, 250

his error in applying to the Irish dioceses in general, Bishop
Bedell's description of Kilmore, 437

COYN, bishop of Limerick, receives the English Liturgy, 198
CRAIKE, bishop of Kildare, injury done by him to his successors, 276
CRANMER, Archbishop, nominates five persons for the archbishoprick
of Armagh, 213

Creed, Lord's Prayer, and Ten Commandments, set up in the Dublin
churches, 141

CRESSY, Mr. Justice, his letter on the increase of Popery, 464

danger incurred by him in discharging his duty, 465

CROFTS, Sir James, appointed Lord Deputy, 202

his instructions, 203

named in the prayer for the Lord Deputy, 205
invites the Primate to a conference, 205

his letter on the occasion, 206

his conference with the Primate, 208

CUSACKE, Thomas, Lord Chancellor, complains of the scarcity of
preachers in King Edward's reign, 221

CROMER, George, archbishop of Armagh, opposed the establishment of
the king's supremacy, 108

his vehement opposition to the king's supremacy, 114

his opposition to the king's prerogative as established by law,

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remarks on the appointment of his successor, 176

CROMWELL, Henry, allowed pensions to the bishops during the Usur-

pation, 598

CROMWELL, Lord, the patron of Archbishop Browne, 112

his instructions for abolishing images, 125
hated and reviled by the common Irish, 137

CROMWELL, Oliver, his tyranny over the Irish Church, 570
his declaration concerning Bishop Bramhall, 593

Primers and Bibles, recognizing him as Protector, disallowed,

634, 635

Cross, the true, pieces of it religiously preserved, 70
Crosses, objects of religious veneration, 70

several examples specified, 72

Crusades, indulgences granted for their encouragement, 89
CULME, Benjamin, dean of St. Patrick's, unites with the clergy in
thanking the Marquis of Ormonde for his care of the Church,

584

signed the Declaration concerning the Book of Common Prayer, 592
CUNNINGHAM, Mr., deposed from the ministry, 522

insufficiency of his vindication, 523

satisfactory answer to his appeal, 523

Curates, insufficient supply of, in Queen Elizabeth's time, 305
causes of it, 305

recommended for impropriate parishes, 378

amount of provision to be made for them, 379
Curse, form of, pronounced for disobedience to the Pope, 138
CURWEN, Hugh, archbishop of Dublin, 237

recommended to the Chapter of Christ Church, 238
his religious and political sentiments, 238

supposed cause of the death of Frith, 239

counteracts the efforts of his predecessor, 239

a complier in all reigns, 239

favourable impression made by his first sermon in Dublin, 240
[rovincial synod holden by him, 241

detects a pretended Popish miracle, 255

his sermon on the occasion, 256

causes the miraculous image to be taken down, 255

project for removing him, 282

his translation to Oxford, 282

DALY, Robert, bishop of Kildare, his persecutions by rebels, 309
DALZEEL, Major, refuses to take the Covenant, 579

DANIEL, William, archbishop of Tuam, engaged in an Irish translation
of the New Testament, 294

DAVIES, Sir John, his remark on the Pope's claim to the kingdom of
Ireland, 109

his letter to Lord Salisbury with account of Sir Arthur Chiches-
ter's progress in Ulster, 353

elected Speaker of the House of Commons in opposition to the
Papists, 380

his excellent speech to the Lord Deputy, 381

Dead lady, miraculously brought to life, that she might receive extreme
unction, 77

Declaration by the Dublin clergy in favour of the Common Prayer
Book and against the Directory, 588-590

names of those who signed it, 591

DELVIN, Baron of, his son proposed for the archbishoprick of Armagh,
177

Deposition, sentence of, on certain nonconforming ministers, its neces-

sity, 523

Derry, bishoprick of, not regularly filled by Queen Elizabeth, 284
its reduced value, 446

d'ocese of, state of its ministers, churches, &c., in 1622, 401

ruinous state of its churches, and poverty of its ministers, in 1670,

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