v - - A MEMOIR ON MANUSCRIPT MAPPED AND OTHER TOWNLAND SURVEYS IN IRELAND. (1640-1688.) BY W. H. HARDINGE, ESQ. r I ' FROM THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY, VOLUME XXIV. ANTIQUITIES. READ NOVEMBER 10th and 29th, 1862, DUBLIN: PRINTED BY M. H. GILL, PRINTER TO THE ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY. 1863 . CONTENTS. Historical Narrative from 1640 to 1653 1 Earliest Surveys by Estimation in 1651, 1652, and 1653, 5 Nature of the Government established in 1652 and 1653, 5 Amount of the Revenue and Charges against it in 1654, 6 Proceedings by ordnance of Parliament and otherwise, preliminary to a General Survey by estimate and admeasurement of the Forfeited Lands in 1653, 7 Establishment of an office of Registrar of Forfeitures, 8 Names of several successive Surveyors -General from 1652 to 1688, 9 The Gross or Estimate Survey, and its mapped admeasurement, 9 Discovery of two relics of that Survey, 10 Reasons for rejecting and putting a stop to the Gross Survey undertaking, 12 Discovery of a relic of Stratford’s Survey, 12 The Civil Estimate Survey undertaking, and its history, 13 The Registrar of Forfeitures’ set of that Survey, and what became of it, 15 The Surveyor-General’s set of same, and what became of it, 16 The discovery by the Irish Record Commissioners of a number of volumes of this latter set at Headfort House, county of Meath, and the subsequent purchase and appropriation thereof by the Commissioners of Woods, 16 The manner in which these volumes came into Lord Headfort’s possession, 18 A description of the missing residue of these volumes, 19 The Down Survey Admeasurement undertaking, and its history, 20 Observations on Petty’s History, edited by Larcom, on his part of the Down Survey, . . 21 The portion thereof jointly executed by the Surveyor- General and Petty, 24 The Maps of that Survey returned into the Surveyor-General’s office were not the original Maps, with reasons for that conclusion, 25 Discovery in 1837 of many of these original Maps ; also of duplicates of the Official Maps, and a Soldiers’ Allotment Map, 27 Indication of the present habitat of the residue of these Maps, 31 Observations upon a set of Barony Maps preserved in the Imperial Library at Paris, and hitherto considered to be Down Survey originals, 32 Observations upon an erroneous statement made in the preface to a volume of “Calendars to the Patent Rolls of Chancery,” compiled under the direction of the Irish Master of the Rolls, to the effect that King James II. carried away the Down Survey Maps to France, . '14437 32 IV CONTENTS. FA6E. Analysis of the Civil and Down Surveys, 33 Historical observations and evidence respecting the fall of the Commonwealth, and the restora- tion of the Monarchy, 35 Indication of a contemporaneous history of the period between 1640 and 1662, .... 36 Appendix A. Articles of Surrender of cities, forts, &c., 1649 and 1653, 37 Appendix B. Specimen of Gross Survey of West Meath, 1653, 39 Appendix C. Specimen of Gross Survey of Kilkenny, 1653, 41 Appendix D. Specimen of Strafford’s Survey of Tipperary, 42 Appendix E. Geographical arrangement of the Down Survey Baronial and Parochial Maps made 1655 and 1659, and references to the habitats of such of them as now exist, 45 Table, geographically arranged, exhibiting and distinguishing profitable and unprofitable for- feited Irish plantation acreable barony areas, 100 Table, similarly arranged, exhibiting the Irish plantation and the equivalent English statute measure acreable county areas, 103 Table, similarly arranged, exhibiting and distinguishing in English statute acres the for- feited, unforfeited, and gross areas of each county, exclusive of water, the result of which corresponds with the Ordnance Survey figures, . . 104 Appendix F. Copy of the fly-leaf in Dr. William Petty’s MS. Register Book, 105 Appendix G. Detailed List of original Barony and other Down Survey Maps discovered in the Treasury Buildings in the year 1837, 107 Appendix H. Copy of attested copy, obtained from the Prerogative OfEce, Dublin, of Will of Sir William Petty, dated 2nd May, 1685, 110 PREFACE IT is now nearly two years since the publication, under the auspices of the Royal Irish Academy, of my earliest Paper “ On Manuscript Mapped and other Townland Surveys of a Public Character in Ireland.” In the preface to that publication it was intimated that another Paper of equal length would carry the subject down to its close and complete the narrative ; but, when I applied myself to the investigation of the surviving records relating to the momentous history of this country, from the death of Charles I. to the accession of Charles II., I found them so abundant and pertinent, that I could not, without the greatest injustice to the Survey narra- tive and myself, complete' it within the prescribed limits : it will, therefore, be extended to another, but certainly a concluding Paper. The present Paper comprises the leading facts and circumstances found in the Records between 1640 and 1688, and presents, for the first time, to the public, a continuous, comprehensive, yet intelligible account of the several Surveys, mapped and descriptive, made of the forfeited lands which, in the unhappy period treated of, came into and passed out of the hands of the Crown to the interests and individuals provided for by the Acts of Settlement and Explanation. These Surveys, officially styled the “ Gross,” the “ Civil,” and the “ Down,” are minutely examined and described in reference to their objects, origin, and extent; and with the view of enlarged practical completeness and utility, I have with much industry and care compiled and added a statistical table VI PREFACE. (Appendix E), arranged geographically and alphabetically, exhibiting at a glance the unbroken results of the survey operations. This table expresses the names of each parish, barony, county, and pro- vince into which the Surveys ran, distinguishes such of them as perished or were damaged by the unfortunate conflagration that occurred in the public repository in which they were placed in 1711, and also such as fortunately survived that fatality, together with the respective present exact habitats of each existing map. Other tables in the same Appendix exhibit the areas in Irish plantation acres, reduced to their English statute equivalents, of the forfeited and unforfeited lands in the several baronies, counties, and provinces, which combined pro- duce results agreeing with those of the Ordnance Survey. Much interesting and valuable information is thus drawn together, which will no doubt tend to diminish prejudice and exaggeration, and will prove acceptable and useful to landed proprietors, legal practitioners, historians, and others. It was my intention to have illustrated the paper with photozincographic sketches of the several classes of maps described. The kind liberality of Colonel Sir Henry James, R. E., the well known and much esteemed Chief of the Ord- nance Survey Department, to whom I applied for assistance, offered to have this proposed addition supplied for a sum of £22, being the labour wages’ cost of the operation ; and to test merit and accuracy, he had two illustration specimens photographed in duplicate at the Dublin branch office, under the management of Captain Berdoe A. Wilkinson, R. E., and presented to me free of charge. The maps so photographed were an official barony map of Leyney, in the county of Sligo, and a soldier’s allotment map of lands set out to him in the county of Tipperary. These beautiful and accurate specimens are reduced to a size adapted for easy insertion into the volume of the Academy Transactions which their pho- tozincographed and multiplied counterparts were intended to illustrate. I ex- hibited them at a meeting of the Royal Irish Academy held April 27th, 1863, and at the same time offered a few observations, published in the “ Proceedings” under that date, in reference to the value of an art that could supply with such rare fidelity any number of representations, and of any desired dimensions, of the maps in question. PREFACE. VII The suitableness and advantage of adding the proposed illustrations to the paper were fully recognised ; but the cost, small as it was, offered a barrier not to be surmounted. The Academy funds available for printing purposes seldom reach two hundred and fifty pounds per annum ; and the expense of printing my Paper, without illustrations, would alone exceed one third of that amount. The illustration project was abandoned ; and the Council of the Academy suggested that the Paper should be offered to the Treasury to print at the public expense as a document of value and importance. Two motives induced me to accede to this suggestion. I considered that, if Government assented, the circulation of the Paper would be more extended than if the Academy published ; and, farther, that there would then be a chance of having added to it the photozincographic proposed illustrations. Under these impressions, and having a strong conviction that Government would willingly accede to the proposition, I addressed a letter to the Treasury, stating all the circumstances that led to the compilation of the Paper, its value, and the probable cost of publication with and without the illustrations, and also the motives inducing the offer of publication to the Treasury ; and that there should no question arise in regard to merit, I enclosed a letter addressed to me by the President of the Academy, satisfactory and even flattering on the point. After some time a reply came to hand from the Treasury, which, not alone the Royal Irish Academy, but also all kindred institutions should be made acquainted with, inasmuch as it declares the Government publication law — that law is thus expressed in the reply adverted to : — “ My Lords do not feel justified in ordering to be printed at the public expense papers, however interesting and valuable, prepared for and read at any of the learned societies, the printing b}^ the Stationery Office being confined to such papers as it becomes necessary to print for the public service.” Inasmuch as the grounds of refusal put forward by the Treasury are those upon which the proposition to publish was made, the question is now submitted for review to that highest of all tribunals — public opinion. I regret their Lordships’ decision, for the reasons that induced me to adopt the suggestion of the Council of the Academy, and offer without personal reward for publication at the public expense, a practically valuable Paper that cost years of anxious toil to complete. PREFACE. viii I also regret that a rule of the Academy prohibits the printing additional copies of the paper for sale for the benefit of the Academy funds ; or of ac- cepting a money consideration offered by their printer for liberty to do so for sale at his own risk; — an offer which, I feel justified in observing, is very significant of the opinion entertained outside the Administration and the Aca- demy of the practical merits of my Paper. The duplicate Photographed Maps so handsomely presented by Colonel Sir Henry James, I have placed as illustrations in two of the fifty copies of the Paper the Academy allows to me as Author: one of these copies I will re- serve in my own power for future disposition ; the other I will present to the Royal Irish Academy for preservation in their Library. W. H. H. August, 1863. A MEMOIR ON MANUSCRIPT MAPPED AND OTHER TOWNLAND SURVEYS IN IRELAND, 1640-1688* -♦ At the time of the breaking out of the disastrous Rebellion in this country, on the 23rd of October, 1641, the Government was in charge of Lords- Justices. Soon afterwards the Earl of Ormond was created Lord Lieutenant by Charles I. ; and he continued to act in that capacity for a few years, and also as Commander-in-Chief of the royal army. Finding, however, his posi- tion untenable, he concluded certain articles of agreementf on the 18th of January, 1647, with Commissioners deputed for the purpose by the Parlia- ment of England, surrendering into their hands the city of Dublin, and other towns, forts, places of strength, and garrisons under his command, together with all military stores, the sword of state, and other ensigns of royalty ; and, having fulfilled these articles, he departed for France, where the King then was. This act practically terminated the rule of the house of Stuart in Ireland, until its restoration in 1660; as, although Ormond, elevated to the rank of Marquis, returned and resumed the Lord Lieutenancy, allied himself with the confederate Irish, made war on the army of the English Parliament, and even * For other Papers by the same Author, relating to this subject, vide “Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy,” Dec., 1861, vol. vii., p. 39- f Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. iv., p. i., press 14, shelf e. f. a 2 4 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. invested the city of Dublin with the forces under his command, his career was short and unsuccessful. The viceroyalty was afterwards conferred by the King upon the Earl of Clanrickard ; but the authority of this nobleman did not extend beyond a limited territory west of the Shannon, and was put an end to by the Articles of Connaught, entered into by him with the Lord President of that province on the 28th of June, 1652. The cities and other places of strength transferred to the Parliament of England in 1647 were numerous and scattered, while the force to retain them was comparatively small ; and it was not without much difficulty that the com- manders of that force maintained their ground against the confederate Irish until the arrival,* on the 6th of July, 1649, of Oliver Cromwell, in the capacity of Lord Deputy and Commander-in-Chief of the English army in Ireland, with twelve thousand horse and foot. From this era the reduction of the kingdom was rapidly achieved. It ap- pears from the articles of surrender of towns, forts, garrisons, &c. (set out in Appendix (A) to this paper annexed, and entered into by the confederate lords, at different times and places, with the commanders of the English forces), that the precise limit of military operations was from the 19th of October, 1649, when the town of Ross surrendered to Oliver Cromwell, to the 18th of Fe- bruary, 1653, when Innis-Boffyn, off the coast of Connaught, was delivered up to Commissary-General Reynolds. The recordf exhibiting these articles of surrender is one of many Privy Council volumes of the period of the Commonwealth that accidentally passed into the custody of the Auditor-General of the Court of Exchequer. Seven of the articles were made with Oliver Cromwell, as Lord Lieutenant and Com- mander-in-Chief of the forces in Ireland, between September, 1649, and Fe- bruary, 1651; and twenty-seven were made with various other military repre- sentatives of the Parliament of England, between the latter date and the 14th of February, 1653, when Innis-Boffyn was surrendered, and the rebellion may fairly be considered as extinguished. * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, roll 1649> press 62, shelf a. f Ibid. vol. iv., press 14, shelf E. f. Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 5 Quiet having been restored in Leinster, and parts of Munster, before 1653, the English Parliament directed their commissioners for the affairs of Ireland to make grants of forfeited lands to the persons undermentioned for special services. These directions occasioned orders for estimate surveys of the lands so to be granted of the dates following, viz. : — Upon a Parliament* direction of the 17th of August, 1649, in favour of Sir Charles Coote, the commissioners, on the 27th of June, 1653, order Richard Francis! to survey the manors of Gormanstown and St. Tul- locks, in Leinster. Upon a Parliament direction of the 12th of March, 1651, in favour of Com- missary-General Reynolds, the commissioners, on the 20th of May, 1652, ordered Thomas Jackson to survey the manor of Carrick, in Munster. Upon a Parliament direction of the 18th of August, 1652, in favour of Major T. Adams, the commissioners, on the 10th of January, 1653, ordered Richard. Francis to survey the lands of Terry more, in Leinster. Upon a Parliament direction of the 22nd of October, 1652, in favour of Hierome Sankey, the commissioners, on the 22nd of May, 1652, ordered Thomas Jackson to survey the manor of Kilmainham, in Leinster. The first % of these earliest Commonwealth surveys for the manor of Gormans- town and St. Tullocks, alone remains as an evidence of their nature ; and this evidence was unknown until my researches, for the purpose of this narrative, discovered it lying concealed amongst papers relating to the revenue of the time. It is interesting and valuable as a relic of these earliest Commonwealth surveys. The kingdom being reduced to complete obedience early in 1653, the Par- liament of England established a civil Government for dispensing justice, ma- naging the revenue, and correctly ascertaining and distributing the forfeited lands amongst the adventurers and soldiers. That Government consisted of — 1st. A Lord Lieutenant, or Lord Deputy, who was also Commander-in- Chief of the army in Ireland, and President of the Council Board. * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor- General’s Collection, vol. iv., pp. 137, 142, 145, 149, shelf e. f. f Ibid. vol. xvi., press 12, shelf d. t Ibid. vol. xvi., press 12, shelf d. 6 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 2nd. Three Commissioners, styled Commissioners of the Parliament of Eng- land for the affairs of Ireland, who, with the Lord Lieutenant, composed the Council Board, and from thence directed the general affairs of the country under orders from London. 3rd. Commissioners of Justice* * * § for the several provinces, whose courts su- perseded the ancient courts, and were called “High Courts of Justice.” 4th. A Court of Claims, f permanent in Dublin, for deciding all questions of right and title to lands seized upon as forfeited, and of lesser estates and interests therein. 5th. Commissioners^ for each of the fifteen precincts into which the king- dom was then divided, primarily for the management of the revenue, and other- wise for the carrying out of such orders as they might, from time to time, re- ceive from the Lord Lieutenant and Council. 6th. Sheriffs§ of counties, Justices of Peace, and a sufficient military force to enable the respective courts of justice and Precinct Commissioners to give effect to their judgments and orders. Through these instrumentalities the entire affairs of the country were con- ducted until the year 1655, when Oliver Cromwell, in the interim ■ become Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Ireland, and Scotland, abo- lished courts of high commission, and re-established the law and equity courts upon their former basis ; and he then also so far imitated royal acts as to adopt a great seal,|| and pass letters patents of lands and offices. In the year 1654 it was referred to a committee of inquiry to ascertain and report to the Lord Lieutenant and Council the exact state of the receipts of and charges against the general revenue of the kingdom.** The report of that committee so completely explains the cause of the accumulation of the large * Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor-General’s Collections, vol. x., pp. 1, 3, 28, 31, 45 — 7, 102, 112 — 115, 125, press t. f Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collections, roll 1, vols. i., ii., press 7, shelf v. J Ibid. vol. xi., p. 24, press 14, shelf e. f. § Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor-General’s Collections, vol. x., pp. 47 — 29, 61, 91, 1 17, press t. || Ibid. vol. i., Auditor-General’s Collections, Patents, passim, press 4, shelf b. ** Ibid. vol. xi., p. 34, press 14, shelf e. f. Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 7 arrears of pay due to the army, and their consequent extent of claims against the forfeited lands, that I subjoin a short precis of it: — Dr. Revenue in 1654. £ s. d. To rents of sequestered houses p ]q 7 oo 13 4 and lands, / To rents of tithes, 16,000 0 0 To rents of customs and water ^ 30,258 0 0 18,845 0 0 excise, .... To rents of land excise, . . . To assessments on the fifteen^ precincts into which the r 120,000 0 0 kingdom was divided, . .J Balance in treasurer’s hands, . 1,500 0 0 £197,304 0 0 Expenditure in 1654. Cr. £ s. d. By army payments, . . . 523,842 4 0 By civil charges, .... 106,972 5 8 £630,814 9 8 In round numbers, the revenue was annually £450,000 short of the demands against it; and although England contributed a sum of £1,566,844 13s. 4 d. to that revenue, between 6th July, 1649, and 1st November, 1656, as appears by a receiver-general’s* roll of account for that exact period, yet the arrears of officers’ and soldiers’ pay, and the expenditure for other military purposes, went on increasing from year to year until the debt became alarming ; and this was the substantial reason why the claims of the officers and soldiers were taken into consideration, and satisfied, before those of the adventurers to whom no in- terest on their respective advances of money by way of adventure, not loan, as its repayment was dependent upon success, was contracted for by the Government of England. To carry out an early and exact settlement of the debts due to these respec- tive interests,! an Act or ordinance of the Parliament of England was passed on the 27th September, 1653. This Act, and the orders of the Privy Councils of both countries which it embodies and adopts, demonstrate that a general sur- vey and admeasurement of the forfeited lands, for the purpose of their distribu- tion, had been some time in progress. The nature of the survey and admea- * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, Roll 1649-1656, press 62, shelf a. f Scobell’s Acts; also Larcom’s “ History Down Survey,” pp. 353-372. 8 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. surement operations, in consequence of the loss or destruction of the survey records, are best collected from the Act, and were governed by the rules therein enjoined, as follow, viz.: — 1st. The Lord Lieutenant and Privy Council were required to have a per- fect admeasurement and survey made of all lands, distinguishing between for- feited lands, crown lands, and ecclesiastical lands. 2nd. These surveys and admeasurements were required to be made up in books in duplicate, one part for the Surveyor-General of Lands’ Office, and the other part for an office, then newly created, called the Office of Registrar of For- feitures. 3rd. Power was conferred upon the Privy Council to make all necessary appointments and arrangements to enforce the prescribed survey and admea- surement. 4th. To distribute the lands as surveyed and admeasured in the exact priority and manner laid down in the Act, which ratifies and confirms all such surveys and admeasurements as had been taken under the authority of the Council of State in England or Privy Council in Ireland antecedently to the passing of the Act on 27th September, 1653. In pursuance of the authority conferred by the Act of Parliament, the Lord Lieutenant and Council established the office of Registrar of Forfeitures, and appointed a registrar. This office continued from 1653 to 1678, when the entire business of the surveys, mapped admeasurements, and distribution of the forfeited lands being finished, the records then remaining in that office, and consisting of books of descriptive and mapped surveys, distribution books, de- crees, certificates, and commissioners’ orders, were delivered up to the Auditor- General of the Court of Exchequer in Ireland, in obedience to the 60th section of the instructions annexed to the Act of Settlement.* The Surveyor-General was an important functionary in these forfeiture pro- ceedings ; and as this office will, in the course of my narrative, be frequently introduced to the reader’s notice, I subjoin the names and dates of the appoint- ments of the several successive Survey ors-General from 1640 to 1688,f in con- * Irish Statutes, 1662, 14 and 15 Car. II., vol. ii., cap. ii., p. 239. f Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, lib. xxxv., p. 235, press 6, shelf d; “Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy,” vol. viii., part i., p. 44. 9 Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. tinuation of a list supplied in a former and earlier paper on “Manuscript Mapped Townland Surveys in Ireland of a Public Character,” read before the Academy on the 9th December, 1861, and published in its “ Proceedings,” vol vii., page 39: — No. 11. Benjamin Worsley, q during pleasure, / No. 12. Vincent Gooken, do., No. 13. Allan Brodrick, for q life, . . . • J 1652. 11th Jan., 1657. 2nd Aug., 1668. No. 14. No. 15. No. 16. Jolm Pettie, for | 18thSq>M660 . S'J^cSham.for, ]3th ^ life, . ... J Arthur Turner, . . 2nd Jan., 1678. Early in 1653, when the Commissioners of the Parliament of England for the affairs of Ireland, who constituted the Council of Ireland, felt themselves in a condition to proceed with a survey of the forfeited lands, they had, as a necessary preliminary, to decide upon the manner of its execution. The ancient modes known in law were two: — 1st, by inquisition out of the Chancery or Exchequer, after the precedents of the surveys of the Desmond for- feitures in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and of the Connaught and part of Munster surveys under the government of Lord Wentworth (afterwards Earl of Strafford), in the reign of Charles I. ; 2nd, by commission under the great seal, after the precedent set by James I. in the survey of the six escheated coun- ties in the north of Ireland in the year 1609. The latter mode was adopted, probably because there were not then existing Courts of Chancery or Exchequer, and the judges of the substituted courts of high commission might have doubted the extent of their own powers ; but, more likely, because the survey by commission would secure the absolute control of that most important work within the power and authority of the Irish execu- tive Government and the Parliament of England. The survey thus undertaken was never completed, but the portion of it executed was technically called THE GROSS SURVEY. Commissions were simultaneously issued in the month of August, 1653, to the public officers then acting as commissioners of revenue within the fifteen precincts into which, as I have before explained, the kingdom had been divided, with instructions to have the surveys made and returned in duplicate to the VOL. xxiv. _ b 10 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. offices of the Surveyor-General and Registrar of Forfeitures, respectively, in exact accordance with the Act of Parliament, and such return was limited, in respect of time, to the 1st October, 1653. I have failed to discover even one of these commissions ; but that they were issued, and that their date, nature, and limit of time of return, were exactly as described, is proved by an item of charge appearing in a scrivenery bill* for work executed in 1653, furnished to the Privy Council, and paid for by their order upon the Receiver-General at the Treasury. The item referred to is in the words following: — “For certain letters of remonstrance to the Revenue Commissioners, complaining that many of the surveys had not been returned, as directed, on 1st October, 1653.” Conclusive proof to the same effect is supplied by a fire-damaged, although otherwise well-preserved record, f containing many of the baronies of the county of Westmeath. This volume is certified at foot by three commissioners for the precinct of Athlone, on the 7th November, 1653, who declare “that the survey was taken in pursuance of a commission to them directed from the Right Plonourable the Commissioners of the Commonwealth of England for the affairs of Ireland, bearing date the 19th August, 1653.” It is an original gross survey volume, yet it continued up to this time undistinguished as such amongst the Surveyor-General’s collection of records; For specimen, refer to Appendix (B) annexed to this memoir. Further proof to the same effect is supplied by an imperfect portion of an ori- ginal and also undistinguished gross survey! volume relating to the county of Kilkenny, preserved amongst the Auditor-General’s collection of records.- This volume attributes its origin to orders issued by the commissioners of the re- venue for the precinct of Kilkenny. For specimen, refer to Appendix (C) an- nexed to this memoir. These record relics testify to a want of discrimination in the surveyors and auditors-general who successively filled these respective offices subsequently to 1711. By extant official reports the fire of that year is stated to have consumed * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, Original Warrants, press 154, shelf d. f Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor-General’s Collection, vol. xiv., press t, shelf 2. £ Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor- General’s Collection, vol. xvii., press 12, shelf d. li Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. the entire gross survey ; and in that erroneous statement the Irish Record Com- missioners, appointed in 1810, concurred. It is fortunate that original specimens of the gross survey should have sur- vived to testify to its exact nature. These original specimens show that the gross survey extended into the counties of Kilkenny and Westmeath. A carefully arranged and bound collection* of officially certified copies, bearing the autograph of Thomas Taylor, who was Deputy-Surveyor-General between 1660 and 1679, and preserved amongst the records formerly belonging to that office, proves the further extension of the survey into the counties of Antrim, Down, and Tyrone. And the annexed abstract, made from original Privy Council warrants upon the Treasury, directing payments of money to be made to the several surveyors employed to admeasure and map the lands within the several baronies therein expressed, prove its further extension into the coun- ties of Cavan, Cork, Fermanagh, Longford, and Sligo. Whether the gross survey embraced, as was intended, other counties than those enumerated, cannot now be determined, in consequence of the destruc- tion by fire of large quantities of the public records. The gross or estimate survey was the evidence of the lands forfeited or seized upon as forfeited, but not of the acreable area or value of the lands. These additional important incidents to guide the distribution amongst the soldiers and adventurers were, by the Act of Parliament before quoted, ap- pointed to be ascertained by mapped admeasurements. There is no satisfactory evidence of the extent to which the mapped ad- measurements proceeded ; but the following precis of the original warrants of payment above referred to distinctly prove admeasurements and maps of lands within the counties of Cavan, Cork, Fermanagh, Kilkenny, Longford, and Sligo, viz.: — Order of payment of — £ s. April 14, 1654, to Simon Richardson, of 136 0 for admeasuring 68,000 acres in Cavan. April 22, 1654, to Charles Bolton, of . 190 0 „ 95,000 acres in ditto. May 9, 1654, to Thomas Jackson, of . 196 0 „ 98,000 acres in Cork. April 14, 1654, to Simon Garston, of . 142 0 ,, 71,000 acres in Fermanagh. * Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor- General’s Collection, vol. xv., press t, shelf 2. b 2 •12 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. Order of payment of — April 14, 1654, to Francis Cooper, of . May 6, 1654, to William Wright, of . April 14, 1654, to Alexander Smith, of April 24, 1654, to William Betts, of . April 24, 1654, to William Webb, of . 148 18 for admeasuring 57,000 acres in Kilkenny. 100 0 „ 50,000 acres in ditto. 64 0 ,, 32,000 acres in Longford. 118 0 ,, 57,000 acres in Sligo. 86 0 „ 43,000 acres in ditto. The rate of payment was forty shillings for every 1000 acres of land admea- sured and mapped, and no distinction of charge appears between profitable and unprofitable acres. Every warrant, before submission to the Privy Council for order of payment, was certified as correct by Benjamin Worsley, the then Sur- veyor-General, which is conclusive evidence that the field books, maps, and their reference sheets, came into the custody of that public officer. The gross survey undertaking and its mapped admeasurements were sud- denly put an end to about the time of the issue of the above warrants of pay- ment, or probably in the autumn of 1654, in consequence of the great discon- tent .expressed by the soldiers at inaccuracies of many kinds that vitally affected their interests. That there were such inaccuracies is plainly deducible from the will* of Sir William Petty, dated May, 1685, which states “ that, perceiving the admeasurement of the lands forfeited by the rebellion of 1641, and intended to regulate the satisfaction of the soldiers who had suppressed the same, was most insufficiently and absurdly managed , I obtained a contract, dated 11th De- cember, 1654, for making the said admeasurements.” Thus the expectations of an immediate satisfaction being made to the soldiers and adventurers from the gross survey and lands’ admeasurement undertaking were disappointed; and eighteen months intervened before the next survey, which in its nature was also a gross or estimate one, and the lands’ admeasure- ments based upon it became available for the purpose. But, before describing this survey, I will again refer to the subject of record discoveries in reference to myfirstpaper on “ Manuscript Mapped Townland Sur- veys of a Public Character,” already quoted. At p. 53 of that paper it is stated, upon the authority of Stone’s Report, in reference to the fire of 1711, that the entire of Strafford’s celebrated survey records were burned. I have, however, idem * For attested copy of this will, refer to Appendix (H). 13 Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. tified amongst the Auditor-General’s class of records an original volume of the barony of Owny Mulrian, in the county of Tipperary, not the mapped ad- measurement, but the descriptive result of the preliminary survey operation taken of the lands, their qualities, bounds, and estimated contents, as returned by sworn juries, and attested under their hands and seals. I had no difficulty in my identification of this interesting relic of the survey in question from its intrinsic internal evidence ; and my judgment is confirmed at page 55 of Petty’s “ History of the Down Survey,” edited by Larcom, by a most minute descrip- tion given of the volume in question in a report made by the Surveyor- General and Major Myles Sumner, in June, 1654, to the Privy Council, who directed the book to be handed over to Dr. William Petty, on the 22nd May, 1655, in aid of his survey proceedings in the county of Tipperary. The book was not again restored to its original and proper habitat in the Surveyor- General’s office, but came into the Forfeiture Office, from whence it reached that of the Auditor-General in 1678, with other records, as already stated. For specimens of this survey volume, refer to Appendix (D) annexed to this memoir. the civil survey, which in its nature was also a gross or estimate survey, was so named to distin- guish it from that survey, and because it was commenced and completed under the special management of the civil authorities. Commissions were issued to sets of commissioners for each county in Ireland, excepting the county of Clare, in Munster, and the counties of Galway, Mayo, Roscommon, and Sligo, in Connaught, for which Strafford’s Survey, then ex- tant, contained as specific and satisfactory an account of the lands, their pro- prietors and possessors, as any new work of the kind could do. The civil survey was therefore that from which the lists of lands to be admeasured in twenty-seven counties were taken; and Strafford’s Survey supplied the resi- due of the lists for so many baronies of the five remaining counties above par- ticularly named as were admeasured. In the issue of the commissions* for this survey, regard was had to the * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. ii., p. 49, et passim, press 14, shelf e. f. 14 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. priority of the land distributions determined upon, and expressed in the Act of Parliament of the 27th of September, 1653.* The soldiers were first considered, because every passing day increased their arrears of pay, and to their claims, therefore, those of the adventurers were postponed. Seventeen counties were specially appointed for the satisfaction of these two interests, the residue being reserved for other and future contingencies. Priority of distribution governed the selection of the counties to be surveyed, and the respective dates of the commissions accurately determined the course of that priority. The following list exhibits the name of each county surveyed, and the date of each commission. For further information as to the names of the commis- sioners, and reference to the record of each commission, the inquirer is referred to Appendix (E) annexed to this narrative, under the head of the particular county sought after : — 1. Antrim, Commission dated 1 2. Armagh, „ 3. Down, „ 4. King’s, „ 5. Limerick, „ 6. Meath, „ 7. Queen’s, ,, 8. Tipperary, „ 9. Waterford, „ 10. Westmeath, „ 11. Kilkenny, „ 12. Wexford, „ 13. Donegal, „ 14. Kerry, „ 2 June, 1654. 26 July, 1654. 28 July, 1654. 15. Londonderry, Commission^ 16. dated )>28 July, 1654. ; Longford, » 17- Tyrone, „ ; J I 18. Dublin, 11 4 Oct., 1654. 19- Cork, 11 15 Feb., 1655- 20. Kildare, H 20 Sept., 1655. 21. Carlow, » 1 22. Louth, . i>24 Dec., 1655. 23. Wicklow, J 1 24. Leitrim, 11 13 June, 1656. 25. Monaghan, 11 1 Sept., 1656. 26. Cavan, 11 i j- Not Found. Fermanagh, 27. „ J The scope of the several commissions was alike. The instructions were very explicit and stringent ; and from them I have extracted, and subjoin, a few important points illustrative of their nature and this narrative, viz. : — 1st. The Commissioners were empowered and directed to hold courts of * Scobell’s “ Acts and Ordinances,” cap. xii. ; also Petty’s “ History Down Survey,” by Larcom, pp. 353-381. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland, 1640 to 1688. 1.5 survey, and discover and describe in barony books all honours, manors, lands, tenements, &c., forfeited to the Commonwealth any time since the 23rd of Oc- tober, 1641, and return same in duplicate under their hands and seals, or under the hands and seals of three of them — one set into the office of Surveyor-General, and another set into the office of Registrar of Forfeitures. 2nd. They were to transmit similar duplicate baronial returns of all honours, &c., that belonged to the Crown in 1630, or at any time afterwards. 3rd. They were to transmit similar duplicate baronial returns of all honours, &c., belonging to any archbishop, bishop, dean, dean and chapter, or other officer belonging to that hierarchy in Ireland, in right of his archbishopric, &c. 4th. They were to transmit similar duplicate baronial returns of the lands claimed by any English, or Protestants ; how bounded ; what number of acres they contained by estimation ; what leases, annuities, rents, or other profits, were arising out of same to the Commonwealth in right of forfeiture. It is manifest that this improved and most important descriptive survey was not intended for the sole purpose of supplying lists of lands to be admeasured and mapped, and then cast aside as useless, as would be the result had it related to forfeited lands alone. But, as it comprehended all other estates and interests, — the Crown’s hereditary estates, ecclesiastical and unforfeited, corporate and lay estates and possessions, — the record is most valuable as a pilot or guide to lead any interested inquirer back towards the original title from the Crown, or into the hands of the Crown, and is a solemn confession of a then possessory and unforfeited title in the individuals in whose respective names the unforfeited lands may have been returned by the commissioners. For these reasons, and others that might be added, the fate and present habitat of this duplicate survey record, or of so much thereof as may have escaped the accidental casualties of fire before adverted to, is one of much importance. The set of barony books, which must be presumed to have reached the office of Registrar of Forfeitures, should have been transferred to the Auditor- General, as the other records of that office were, under the 60th section of the instructions annexed to the Act of Settlement, about the year 1678, as before de- scribed; but there exists no evidence whatever from which to infer such a transfer; and I am of opinion that this set of barony books was appropriated antecedently to that year by some person officially or otherwise closely connected with the 16 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. office of Registrar of Forfeitures ; and that at this moment they are reposing in some private library, where their nature and value are alike unknown. I trust that this notice of them may evoke, especially in England, inquiry, the result of which, if successful, should be forthwith communicated to the Trea- sury, and also to the President or Secretary of the Royal Irish Academy. The other set, which unquestionably reached the office of the Surveyor-Gene- ral, is stated by Surveyor-General Stone to have been consumed in the fire of 1711. This statement implies that the set was complete, and in this office when the fire occurred, but the statement is inaccurate. A large portion of the set had been removed from the Surveyor-General’s office, as I will presently show, before the close of the year 1667, and was not afterwards restored. In the year 1810, when the late Sir Robert Peel was Chief Secretary for Ireland, he instituted an Irish Record Commission. It was an important branch of the duties of that commission to discover and take account of all public records and documents relating to Ireland, wherever they might be found. These commissioners having learned, in the year 1817, that very va- luable manuscript maps, books, and papers relating to the forfeitures of 1641, were preserved in the library of Viscount Headfort, at Kells, in the county of Meath, with the consent of his lordship, despatched two sub-commissioners, of whom my late father, PIenry Hardinge, was one, to examine and report upon their nature, extent, and value. The report* of these sub-commissioners bears date the 30th of June, 1817, and is published in an Appendix to the Eighth Annual Report of said Commis- sioners to the Prince of Wales, then Regent. That report identifies the eighty- four original Civil Survey Barony Books underenumerated, as being then in the possession of Lord Headfort, viz. : — All the baronies of Donegal, being ... 5 All, except New Castle and Upper Cross, of Dublin, 5 All, except Ophally, of Kildare, ... 10 All of Limerick, 12 All of Londonderry, 4 Forward, 36 Forward, 36 All the baronies of Meath, 13 All of Tipperary, 14 All of Tyrone, 4 All of Waterford, 9 All of Wexford, except Forth, .... 8 Total Baronies, .... 84 * Irish Record Commissioners’ Reports, 1816-20, vol. ii., pp. 21-24. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland, 1640 to 1688. 17 The missing barony books, which relate to seventeen of the twenty-seven counties surveyed, must either have been consumed in the fire to which the Surveyor-General refers in his report, or have been in whole or in part ab- stracted, as the others certainly were, from that office antecedently to 1711. There is an instructive circumstance connected with the ecclesiastical lands’ barony book of the county of Waterford returned by the sub-commissioners in their report to have been at Headfort in 1817, which it is necessary to notice here to account for the absence of that volume, when afterwards the purchase of that collection of documents was made by the Commissioners of Woods and Forests. This ecclesiastical lands’ volume* was publicly advertised for sale in the year 1844 ; and the description given of it so attracted my attention, that I ex- amined, identified, and reported upon its nature and value in the proper quarter ; and in obedience to instructions received, had the book seized, and its possessor summoned before the magistrates of Henry-street police office. The magistrates, being convinced by the evidence offered of the public cha- racter of the book, made an order, on the 16th of February, in that year, com- mitting it to my provisional charge on behalf of the Crown ; and it is now, after an absence of two centuries, deposited in its proper habitat amongst the records of the late Surveyor-General’s Office, in the Landed Estates Record Office. There can be no doubt but that this one of the eighty-four barony books above described was abstracted from Lord Headfort’s library, at some time subsequently to the 30th of June, 1817. The circumstance suggests a conjec- ture that the missing barony books may once have been in that library, and surreptitiously abstracted between 1667 and the date of the sub-commissioner’s report in 1817. But, however this may be, I entertain a hope, as in the case of the Registrar of Forfeitures’ set, of the discovery and restoration of the entire or some part of these missing barony books to their legitimate place of deposit. The entire of the Headfort collection, excepting this volume, was purchased with the sanction of the Treasury, by the Commissioners of Woods and Forests in 1837, and deposited in their office of Quit Rents at the Custom- * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. xviii., press 12, shelf d. VOL. XXIV. C 18 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. house Buildings, Dublin, where the public may have ready access to them. But enough has been said in reference to the Civil Survey portion of that col- lection to convince any unprejudiced person that the repository selected was, to say the least of it, a mistake, and that these valuable survey records should have been placed in the same custody with the Surveyor-General’s records ; and where, side by side with other cotemporaneous evidences relating to the for- feitures of 1641, and of earlier periods, their utility would be enhanced, and their real nature, value, and bearing more generally known and appreciated ; and besides, being records relating altogether to landed estates, consistency claims their transfer to the Landed Estates Record Office. It now remains to be shown, and it is essential to the record service of the public to do so, by what accident Lord Headfort became the possessor of the very valuable collection of maps, books, and other papers, principally relating to the forfeitures of 1641, described in the report of the sub-commis- sioners before referred to, of the 30th of June, 1817. It is almost superfluous to state that the Headfort family name is Taylor. At page 15 of the aforementioned report will be found copied an original me- morandum and autograph attached to a county Meath volume of the collection it describes in the words following : — “ Sir William Petty and Sir Thomas Taylor’s Down Survey and Maps of the Baronies in East Meath, of which the greatest care should be taken by my family. “ Thomas Taylor.” This Thomas Taylor* was Deputy-Surveyor-General, under John Pettie, who was Surveyor-General from the Restoration in 1660 to the 13th of February, 1667, when Sir James Shaen succeeded Pettie.^ Taylor and Pettie were also, during some period, sub-commissioners for reporting to the commissioners appointed to carry the Acts of Settlement and Explanation into execution upon all claims made for forfeited lands. Thus, these gentlemen were placed in direct custody of the very records which were purchased, as above described, in * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. xv., p. 14, press t., shelf 2. t Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor-General’s Collection, all volumes, press r. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 19 1837, from the lineal descendant of Thomas Taylor ; and that they had access to all the other records of these forfeitures, wherever deposited, as was essential to the duties cast upon them, is clear from a set of survey and distribution books,* part of said purchased collection that once belonged to the Auditor- General’s office. These books indicate references in the case of each item of land distributed, not only to the decree or certificate granted by the commis- sioners for executing the Acts, and that were then deposited in the office of Registrar of Forfeitures, but also to the Books of Enrolments of the Letters Patents passed under the great seal upon such decrees and certificates, which were a form of record peculiar to, and then and ever afterwards in the custody of the successive Auditors-General until the abolition of that office in 1822. And I further find, as if reserved to confirm the conclusions that are inevi- table from the premises stated, that Sir James Shaen, the successor in office of John Pettie, finding that records had been removed from the Surveyor- General’s office, sought for and obtained a royal letter, f dated the 20th of Sep- tember, 1671, directing that all muniments appertaining to the Surveyor- General’s department, in whosoever’s possession they might be found, should forthwith be restored and delivered up to him. There can exist no reason- able doubt but that the Headfort, now the Quit Rent office remnant of the Civil Survey, originally appertained to, and was derived from, the Surveyor-General’s office. To facilitate the recovery of the residue missing of that set, if perchance they may have escaped destruction by the fire of 1711, I annex their detail, viz. : — Baronies. Counties. Baronies. Counties. Baronies. Counties. Baronies. Counties. 5 of Antrim. 8 of Down. 5 of Leitrim. 13 of W. Meath. 5 „ Armagh. 8 „ Fermanagh. 6 „ Longford. 6 „ Wicklow. 5 „ Carlow. 8 „ Kerry. 4 „ Louth. 'New Castle, Dub. 7 „ Cavan. 11 „ Kilkenny. 6 „ Monaghan. 3 Ophaley, Kildare. 19 „ Cork. 11 „ King’s. 8 „ Queen’s. -Forth, Wexford. These one hundred and thirty-eight barony books, if found, added to those * Landed Estates Record Office, Quit Rent Office Set Distribution Books, called “ Taylor’s Set.” 1 Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor- General’s Collection, lib. xxxv., p. 235, press 6, shelf d. C 2 20 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. already enumerated, will complete the Surveyor-General’s Civil Survey set of the seven-and-twenty counties into which that survey ran ; and, as I have before observed, the recovery of a perfect set of these records would be an important acquisition to the aids now available for the discovery of titles from the Crown to real estates, the possessors of which continued untainted by participa- tion in any subsequent rebellion. Many persons are under an impression that the Civil Survey was designed as the basis of the satisfactions afterwards made to the soldiers for arrears of pay due to them, and that it was rejected by the Government in consequence of complaints of its inaccuracy. Such an impression is altogether erroneous. This survey was not designed for the purpose assumed. It was a preliminary work, essential to the discovery and description, in a legitimate and solemn manner, of the forfeited lands, and from which lists, technically called “ terriers,” were afterwards supplied to the several surveyors for their ad- measurement and mapping. It was by these maps, and their index sheets, when approved by the Sur- veyor-General, and sanctioned by the Government, and not by the Civil Survey, that the land satisfactions were made to the soldiers and adventurers, as well as to the other interests afterwards let in by the Acts of Settlement and Ex- planation. And, therefore, as relates to landed estates and interests dependent upon the distributions of that period, these maps, when in existence, are the first and earliest link in the chain of title; and, connected with the distribu- tion books, decrees, and certificates of the Parliamentary Commissioners, and the subsequent letters patents under the great seal, commonly although not universally founded thereon (all of which records are now deposited in the Landed Estates Eecord Office, Dublin), complete the evidence of title into and out of the hands of the Crown of the proprietors of about eleven-twenty parts (as hereafter is shown) of the surface area of Ireland. I now proceed to a particular account of the survey by admeasurement and mapping of said forfeited Crown and Ecclesiastical lands, and which is fami- liarly known by the name of THE DOWN SURVEY. This title, applied to the mapped surveys of the Commonwealth period, is not inappropriate. Petty could not expect them to be called after his own Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1C40 to 1G88. 21 name, as he was but a contractor for about one half the area (the soldiers’ por- tion) of forfeited lands, the residue being, by an order of the Lord Lieutenant and Council, placed under the joint management of the Surveyor-General, Worsley, and Petty. A generic name, therefore, common to both sets of maps, was necessary, and that name was borrowed from the expression that conveys to the mind the operation by which the measurements of the lands in area and form were transferred to paper from the field books, and that expression was “ laying down.” The name was applied to the maps by the Lord Lieutenant and Privy Council so early as 1658, and it has been adopted by the Acts of Settlement and Explanation, and officially retained ever since. The present appears the opportune time and place to refer to and observe upon Petty’s History of his own Survey, recently so ably edited by Major-Gen. Sir Thomas A. Larcom, under that learned body, the Irish Archasological Society, and with which this section of my narrative might be supposed to conflict. The annotations on the several chapters of the History, and the additional valuable matter so judiciously introduced by Sir Thomas, were alone wanting to constitute the publication a perfect one in its way. It is now a valuable authority in the hands of those experienced in the survey history of the period ; but it is not, and was not designed to be, a compilation for reference to by pro- prietors or others requiring practical survey information relating to the 1641 forfeitures. This inappropriateness as a handbook will not surprise, when it is remem- bered that the History was primarily, if not exclusively, written by the author as a defence against certain charges alleged against him of false quantities and qualities in the admeasurement and mapping of the lands. The accuracy of the facts adduced in his defence haye been fully borne out by the researches I have made amongst the yet surviving documents of the period. The effect of the charges brought against Petty, if true, would seriously diminish the value of the land satisfactions made to the officers and soldiers for their arrears of pay, as well as to all the other interests concerned in the forfei- tures. So far, however, from there being any diminution of value, it is beyond a doubt that the acreable contents of the townlands expressed on the face of 22 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. the Down Survey, and by which the distribution was governed, are less by about one fifth part than their actual contents. And by just such au increased ratio have all interests satisfied out of the lands forfeited in the year 1641 been placed in a more advantageous position than was acknowledged, or probably known at the time. It is certainly true that this enhancement of the satisfactions would not compensate for the amount of retrenchments the several interests had after- wards to submit to under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation ; but their sacrifice would have appeared much less than it did, had two* out of the eleven millions of acres actually forfeited been returned for distribution by the Go- vernment, instead of being by some inscrutable uniform admeasurement mis- take suppressed, and so placed to the credit of these respective interests. Thus the assailants of Petty did not know, and perhaps, if they did, would not have acknowledged, how much he was their real benefactor. The earliest undertaking! for the admeasurement and mapping of the for- feited lands on the basis of the Civil Survey was entered into between Benjamin Worsley, Surveyor-General, on behalf of the Commonwealth, and Dr. William Petty on his own behalf, by articles bearing date 11th December, 1654. Their prominent features, as respects the nature and character of the record of them returned for public use and preservation, are as follow : — 1st. To survey and admeasure all the forfeited lands, both profitable and unprofitable, within the baronies of half of ten counties appointed for the offi- cers and soldiers by the Act of Parliament of 26th September, 1653, namely : Antrim, Armagh, Down, King’s, Limerick, Meath, Queen’s, Tipperary, Water- ford, and Westmeath ; as also such other lands as should be set out for same interest in Cork, Donegal, Kerry, Kildare, Kilkenny, Londonderry, Longford, Tyrone, Wexford, and Wicklow, and the then remaining undisposed forfeitures in Carlow and Dublin. Thus a large portion of twenty-two counties was com- mitted for admeasurement and mapping to Petty’s sole responsibility. 2nd. To survey and admeasure all Crown lands within the scope of the survey. 3rd. To survey and admeasure, within same limits, all lands belonging to any * Appendix (E) to this paper annexed. t Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. ii., p. 205, press 14, shelf e. f. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 23 archbishop, bishop, dean, dean and chapter, or any other officer belonging to that hierarchy, in right of his or their office. 4th. To protract and lay down the several parcels of lands, with their qualities, areas, metes, and bounds in baronies , so that the civil meares and bounds of each barony might be better known and preserved ; and to return perfect and exact maps for public use of each barony and county. 5th. To deliver said maps (baronial) with perfect plotts of each townland thereon, and perfect books of reference, into the office of Surveyor-General. 6 th. To deliver, when required, to officers and soldiers, maps with plotts and books of reference showing their several allotments. 7th. To complete said survey within thirteen months from the date of said articles of agreement. 8th. To receive payment for his work and labour, £7 3s. 4 d. current money of England for every 1000 acres forfeited profitable land admeasured by him, and actually set out to the soldiers ; and £3 per 1000 acres for Crown, eccle- siastical, and unforfeited lands. The Civil Survey of most of the baronies included within the said articles was returned by the commissioners for executing that survey before March, 1655, and many of them before the date of Petty’s articles of undertaking; so that no impediment interposed to prevent his making an immediate commence- ment of the admeasurement and mapping work. The maps of the baronies executed under these articles of agreement were completed by Petty within or very close upon the limitation period of thirteen months, as the committee (of which Petty was one) appointed to distribute the lands to the disbanded officers and soldiers, in satisfaction of the arrears of pay due to them, accomplished their task about the autumn of 1656. But the barony maps so completed, and by which the distribution was made, were not the official record of the survey returned into the Surveyor-General’s office in the latter end of 1657, as the Lord Lieutenant and Council, by order of 15th April in that year,* enlarged the time for depositing that record, on the expressly admitted grounds that the maps were then imperfect, and required correction ; and no one can rationally believe that the committee of distributions would * Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor-General’s Collection, Preface to many of the volumes in press s. 24 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. employ inexact maps as the standard of so solemn an act as the adjustment of the arrear debts due to the army. The disbanded soldiers’ claims having been satisfied, the next adjustment to be made was with the adventurers ; and, as a preliminary thereto, an exactly analogous course of admeasurement and mapped baronial survey of the residue of the forfeited lands was necessary. So much dissatisfaction had been expressed by discontented military men with Petty’s work, that the Government would not entrust the adventurers’ survey to the sole responsibility of the man whose services all persons admit- ted could not be dispensed with. A middle course was accordingly adopted ; and I find that the Lord Lieu- tenant and Council issued an Order and Instructions of Survey,* dated 3rd September, 1656, directing Benjamin Worsley and Dr. William Petty con- jointly to have admeasured and mapped the residue of the forfeited Crown and ecclesiastical lands in the counties following, excepting only such lands as lay within the liberties of the towns of Galway and Athenry, viz. : — Antrim, Down, Limerick, Queen’s, Armagh, Fermanagh, Longford, Sligo, Carlow, Galway, Louth, Tipperary, Cavan, Kilkenny, Mayo, Waterford, Clare, King’s, Meath, and Cork, Leitrim, Monaghan, Westmeath. Further Orders of Council,! bearing date 3rd April and 29th December, 1657, were issued to Dr. Petty, to admeasure and map the forfeited lands within the liberties of Galway and Athenry. These orders were so addressed to Petty only, because the lands were appointed for the satisfaction of a soldier, Lieutenant John Whaley, and the payment for the work to be done was governed by the articles of agreement with the Doctor, of 11th December, 1654, under which the rest of the soldiers’ satisfactions were admeasured and paid for. The committee (of which Petty was one) appointed to distribute the lands * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. ii., p. 241, press 14, shelf e. f. f Landed Estates Record Office, Surveyor- General’s Collection, vol. vii., press t, shelf 1. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 25 to the adventurers in satisfaction of the sums of money respectively adventured by them accomplished their task about the autumn of 1658 ; and therefore, as in the case of the previous admeasurement of 1655, the baronial maps were completed within a period of about thirteen months ; but, as in the soldiers’ case, the barony maps so completed were not the official records of the survey returned into the Surveyor-General’s office in the latter end of 1659, under a Council Order dated 8th August, 1659, issued upon the expressly admitted grounds that the maps were then imperfect, and required correction. Antecedently to the year 1831, there existed no stronger evidence than that above offered of there having been any other Down Survey Maps than the • barony and parish maps returned in 1657 and 1659 into the Surveyor-General’s office — evidence which had not before that time been considered in the light I have viewed it. But, subsequently to the concentration made of the records of a variety of abolished offices at the Custom-house Buildings, Dublin, in and after 1831, new evidence presented itself of an interesting character, which proves the compilation of earlier maps than those so returned as the records for public use and preservation. The earliest of these new evidences I found amongst the miscellaneous and then unclassed books of the Auditor-General. The volume offers intrinsic evidence of having been the private register of Dr. Petty : it contains a variety of original papers of statistical value ; also on political and other subjects, cha- racteristic of Petty ; and concludes with powers of attorney, and other matters purely personal to the family and estates of that eminent man. But the chapter in that register which is most pertinent to my narrative purpose is one entitled, “ A brief Account of the most material Passages relating to the Survey managed by Dr. Petty in Ireland, Anno 1655 and 1656.”* The volume was compiled at various times between 1654 and the death of Sir William Petty, which happened between 1685, the date of his will, and 1688, the date of its probate. I annex from that “ Brief Account” a few points which distinctly prove that the original survey and its maps were, as the Articles of 1654 stipulated, * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, vol. xiii., p. 3, press 1 4, shelf e.f. ; also, Appendix (F) to this paper annexed. VOL. XXIV. d 26 Mr. Hakdinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. in baronies ; that these baronies, as a general rule, were laid down on one uni- form scale of 40 perches to an inch ; that their subdivisions were into parishes and townlands ; and that all the particulars requisite for a distribution of the lands were entered upon the face of the several maps, such as names, qualities, quantities, &c. The “ Brief Account” further distinctly proves that the maps returned into the Surveyor-General’s office were compiled from these, and on a variety of scales, to accommodate the baronies and parishes to a sheet of paper (royal) of uniform dimensions — the effect of which, as the Surveyor- General’s record testifies, was to reduce the original barony maps to scales varying between 80 and 640 perches to a square surface inch ; and the original parish maps to scales varying between 40 and 160 perches to a square surface, inch. The points of the “Brief Account” I wish to fix attention upon as substan- tiating these conclusions are the following, viz. : — 1st. The author states that a magazine of royal paper was brought from England. 2nd. That a perfect and uniform field book was prepared. 3rd. That large sheets of paper, five or six feet square, divided through into areas of ten acres each, according to a scale of forty Irish perches to an inch, were lined out. 4th. That from the field books there was drawn upon said large paper a model or plott of the lands admeasured according to the aforesaid scale, and that these lands were so drawn in baronies. 5th. That the next work was reducing the barony plotts, which were some- times eight or ten feet square, within the compass of a sheet of royal paper, whether the scale happened to be greater or less (it was never less) than forty perches to an inch, that all the barony plotts, being reduced to one size, might be bound up together into one uniform book. 6th. That there remained of the work parish and barony maps of as large a scale as a sheet of royal paper would contain. 7th. That same were bound up in large books according to the counties, and were preserved in a cabinet of the most exquisite joiner’s work made for the purpose, and valued at £60. 8th. That there would be published maps of each county and province, as also Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 27 of the whole kingdom, according to the several ancient and modern divisions of the same. The “ Brief Account” professes only to describe the process of the manufac- ture of the maps contracted for by the articles of 11th December, 1654, but it is no doubt applicable to the subsequent Down Surveys under the Council Orders before recited. Each piece of new evidence, as it turned up, strengthened the assump- tion of an original set of barony maps ; and it only required another disco- very, of which I subjoin a succinct outline, to convert that assumption into certainty. In the year 1837, 1 was directed to inspect and have removed from the Trea- sury Buildings, in the Lower Castle-yard, the last remaining remnant of the re- cords of the abolished offices of Vice-Treasurer and Auditor-General. These buildings were erected as substitutes for the fire-destroyed offices of 1711. They were completed in 1713, when the last abovenamed offices, toge- ther with those of Teller of the Exchequer, chief and second Chamberlain, and clerk of the Pells, were removed there, and there they remained until their abolition between 1821 and 1835. In the performance of the duty imposed upon me, an antique press, which to all appearance had been undisturbed for a century, came under my observa- tion. There were no keys to the locks, and the memory of the oldest officer then living, extending back to 1780, could not recall its having been once opened. I had the locks forced, and to my surprise and satisfaction found the press filled with ancient barony maps on the 40 perch scale, on the 5 or 6 feet square paper, ruled and unruled, as Petty describes, having the year 1654 printed off in the margins of many of them, and in every other respect answering the description of the “ Brief Account,” and confirming my previous conclusions. I also discovered there duplicate reduced official barony and parish maps ; and what is curious, and verifies my notions that the reduced or official maps were not used in the work of the distributions, and that the original barony maps were so used, is, that the former are comparatively fresh, while the latter pre- sent all the appearance of having seen much service. I give in Appendix (G) to this paper annexed a detailed statement of the maps so discovered, with the scale upon which each was drawn, d 2 28 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. the; name of the practical surveyor, where given, distinguishing the original from the official duplicate maps, to which the reader’s attention is particularly directed. The original barony and parish maps on the 40 perch scale extend into the counties of Antrim, Carlow, Donegal, Down, Dublin, Kerry, King’s, Water- ford, and Wexford ; and the official barony and parish maps on the reduced scales into the counties of Carlow, Kerry, Leitrim, Sligo, Waterford, and Wicklow. The maps, original and official, relating to Kerry, are of more importance than the others, as the Surveyor-General’s official set of maps of that county were destroyed by the fire of 1711. Amongst the documents so discovered is one specimen of the class that Dr. Petty, by his articles of the 11th December, 1654, undertook to supply to officers and soldiers, exhibiting their several allotments of lands. This specimen* is in duplicate, the copy on parchment, the original on paper, and is entitled, “ Part of the Barony of Upper Ormond and County of Tipperary, set for the satisfaction of the particular Arrears of Colonel Pretty, Anno 1656.” The plotts of the lands and the reference numbers by which each was distinguished, situated within the parishes of Dollow, Killiniffe, Kilmore, and Templederry, are distinctly expressed, together with an index table in one corner, linking the numbers of reference on the map with the names of the townlands, and also supplying their respective Irish plantation acreable areas, amounting together to 3,939. The copy on parchment appears to have been necessitated by a serious fading away of the outlines and particulars in the original, arising from damp and frequency of use. These duplicate soldiers’ maps satisfactorily indicate the official source from whence the entire of the discovered collection originally came. Colonel Pretty, for whose use they were prepared, had to establish his claim before the Committee of Satisfactions, and obtain their consent and order for possession of his lands ; and that claim, and the documents supporting it, * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, maps 1 and 2, shelf Tipperary, press 270, a. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 29 must necessarily pass through the office of Registrar of Forfeitures, in which was recorded the amount of debt due to each officer and soldier, and the par- ticulars of the land credit set off and allowed in liquidation. Here, no doubt, the Colonel deposited and left his maps, which thus came, with the other records of that office, to the Auditor-General in the year 1678, as before explained. The same observations apply to the original and duplicate official barony and parish maps, which no doubt were lodged by Petty with the Registrar to decide points of dispute between them and individual allotment maps put for- ward by dissatisfied soldiers, and were not afterwards removed. The present Lord Dunally, the descendant of Colonel Pretty, may have a curiosity to inspect the allotment map referred to, which I shall be most happy to gratify. His lordship may ascertain the number of acres his ancestor had to retrench to entitle him to the benefits of the Acts of Settlement and Explana- tion, by comparing the number of acres allotted by the map of 1656 with the number actually granted by the letters patents* passed to Henry Pretty on the 26th June, 1666. The existence of an earlier and more intrinsically important set of Down Survey maps than the official set returned to the Surveyor-General for public use and preservation being now established beyond question, it becomes a matter of much interest, possibly of much practical importance, to discover where the residue of them may be found. Some persons may imagine that the introduction of these maps upon the stage now would have the effect of disturbing possessions, and give occasion for suits at law wherever a discrepancy of bounds was found to exist between them and the official maps. Such apprehensions, however, have no solid foundation. The originals undiscovered must, as the discovered originals so far as I have examined them do, correspond in every feature with the official maps reduced from and substituted for them. And assuming that any dis- agreement, even an important one, was realized, and further assuming that a possession of 200 years did not sanctify the error, a court of justice must pro- nounce judgment in favour of the official maps of the Surveyor-General, which, * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, lib. iii., p. 17, press 4, shelf c. 30 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. when forthcoming, are the legal evidence of the lands forfeited in 1641, and dis- posed of under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation. The value of these original baronial maps is, that they supply a link hitherto wanting in the history of the celebrated survey and period to which they be- long ; and when found, and made accessible, will enable the public to estimate more correctly the real character and abilities of Petty. The council orders granting increased time to amend errors in the official maps should suffice to convince the most sceptical that these maps were ac- cepted by the Government as the record for public use and preservation, and as the fulfilment of Petty’s articles of agreement of the 11th December, 1654 ; and also as the fulfilment of the joint undertaking of Worsley and Petty under the Council Order of the 3rd of September, 1656. Yet, notwithstanding this circumstance, I feel that Petty should not have been permitted to appropriate the original baronial maps on the 40 perch scale as private property. And I further feel that these first fruits of the Down Survey work should not have been allowed to be officially represented by the reduced maps substituted for them. I have already clearly shown that the distributions made of the for- feited lands to soldiers and adventurers between 1654 and 1659 were not made by the official record, which, at the times of the distribution, had no recognised existence but by the original maps. It should not be concluded, as it very commonly is, that when retrench- ments were made and new titles taken out by the respective interests under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation, that practically there was a seizin of the lands anew into the hands of the Crown, and a consequent practical fresh dis- tribution. No such process took place. The operation was one on paper, which calculated and exhibited the exact portion of the lands previously assigned to each soldier and adventurer that should be retrenched by each possessor, and placed at the disposal of the commissioners for executing the Acts for the benefit of the new participating interests, namely, the Established Church and lay cor- porations, innocent Protestants and Roman Catholics, and a number of ancient land proprietors specially protected by the Acts. When a paper retrenchment was thus effected, the commissioners confirmed the respective parties in the resi- due of their lands by certificates granting a fee-simple estate to them, their heirs and assigns, for ever. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland, 1640 to 1688. 31 I do not consider, either, that the operation required the aid of the Down Sur- vey maps ; but if it did, I am satisfied that the originals, and not their official sub- stitutes, were the maps employed, as the adventurers or soldiers, or their represen- tatives, would naturally prefer restoring their several retrenchments by the maps under which they received them than by others, however accurate they might be, to which these respective parties were not privy. And there could be no difficulty in such a course, as Petty and the original maps were then in Dublin, and Petty’s brother, John Pettie, was one of the two sub-commissioners ap- pointed to adjust the retrenchments, an appointment, 1 doubt not, made as well in acknowledgment of William Petty’s services, as for the security and speedy return to him of the original barony maps that might be made use of in the business. That John Pettie had the custody of some of these maps is clear from a tracing made of the barony of Dunkerin, in the county of Kerry, on the 40 perch scale, found amongst the lot of maps discovered in 1837, and which is certified by him as having been taken from the original platt. It merits no- tice that John Pettie spelt his surname during his official career “Pettie.” The object, if any, underlying the circumstance is not apparent. From what I have stated in reference to these original barony maps, it must be admitted that their discovery would be an interesting and even important event, and the ensuing observations are proposed to aid in that discovery. In the year 1685, when Sir William Petty made his will,* these barony maps were in his possession, as they are unmistakably described in that testa- mentary document, together with other valuable writings relating to the dis- tribution of the forfeited lands; and he estimates the entire collection as worth £2000, an amount, considering the fall in the price of the precious metals, very significant of the real value of the maps in question. There is no reason to suppose that these maps escaped out of the posses- sion of Petty’s family, and I have no doubt that they are now in the custody of his lineal descendant, the Marquis of Lansdowne. It is but justice to that nobleman to state, that he has, in a letter lately addressed to me upon the subject, signified his willingness to give every facility of research amongst the family archives preserved at Bowood, for the purpose of discovering the maps, should * See official attested copy of that will, Appendix (H). 32 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. they really be in existence. I trust that the Treasury, who have been made acquainted with the fact, will take advantage, before it is too late, of so liberal a disposition, and gracefully become the successful medium of recovering and restoring to the public at large a treasure that has lain so long concealed and profitless. A set of barony maps of the Down Survey, preserved in La Bibliotheque Imperial, at Paris, have by many been supposed to be these originals. The Irish Parliament and the Government were led into this mistake, when Colonel Vallancey, R. E., was engaged, at a heavy cost, in 1791, to make copies of them for the office of Surveyor-General of Crown Lands in Ireland. The Irish Re- cord Commissioners fell into the same error ; and it has been recently reiterated in the preface to a “Calendar of the Patent and Close Rolls of Chancery in the reign of Queen Elizabeth,” compiled by Mr. James Morrin, and published under the directions of the Master of the Rolls in Ireland, with the further addi- tional statement “ that the Down Survey records were carried to France by King James II., and that they still remain there.” But I beg to assure the Academy that all the original official and duplicate official maps of that important record that have survived the casualties of time and fire, are either deposited in the Landed Estates Record Office, Dublin, or amongst the family archives of Lord Lansdowne, at Bowood, in England, excepting duplicate official maps of twenty- seven baronies in the counties of Kerry, Limerick, Louth, Meath, Queen’s, Tipperary, Waterford, and Westmeath, which, by some accident, escaped out of the Auditor-General’s collection, and are deposited in the Quit Rent Office. References to the habitats of all these maps will be found under the head of each respective county in Appendix ( E). I personally examined the Parisian set of barony maps many years ago, and after a very careful comparison of them with an original volume belonging to the Surveyor-General’s set brought with me for the purpose, can authoritatively pronounce the Parisian maps to be but copies of the Down Survey barony maps, enlarged in their text by introducing into their parochial subdivisions the out- lines and names of the townlands ; and this enlargement was made by Petty from the Surveyor-General’s set of Down Survey parish maps. The difference be- tween the Down Survey and Parisian set of barony maps is so striking, that I am surprised that any official examiner should have concluded the Parisian set Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 33 to be originals. The history of the Parisian maps is this: — “ A French pri- vateer, cruising in the Channel in the year 1710, captured a ship having on board these maps, in transit from Dublin to the son and heir of Sir William Petty at Lothbury, London, when they were immediately carried to Paris, and deposited in La Bibliotheque du Roi, where they have remained ever since.” Were this set of barony maps restored by the French Government, they would be of no more value than the copies made of them by Vallancey. They were compiled, as described, from the Down Survey barony and parish maps, be- tween the years 1660 and 1678, while Vallancey’s copies of these were made in 1790 and 1791 ; but neither set would be received as evidence, except by consent, in any court of justice in these kingdoms. To return, after this digression, to the discovered maps — I now produce three class specimens, which show the great superiority of the original barony maps on the 40-perch scale over the reduced official barony and parish maps prepared from them, and substituted in their place as the record for public use and preservation. The first specimen comprehends the original barony maps of Ballyboy, in the King’s County, and Upperthird, in the county of Waterford, on unruled paper ;* also the baronies of Forth and St. Mullins, in the county of Carlow, on the lined paper described in Petty’s “ Brief Account,” exhibiting on its margin in Roman numerals the year 1654. The second specimen comprehends duplicate official barony maps, on reduced scales, of Clanmorris and Mogunnihy, in the county of Kerry. The originals from whence these maps were reduced covered a surface of paper eight * times their respective limits. The third specimen comprehends duplicate official parish maps of Lucan, in the barony of Newcastle and county of Dublin, on the same scale with the original barony maps ; and of Toysista, in the barony of Glannarroughty and county of Kerry, on a scale of 160 perches in an inch, being just one fourth the size of that parish on the original barony map. To render practically useful the account submitted to the Academy of the Civil Survey and its mapped expression in the Down Survey, I compiled, * Landed Estates Record Office, Auditor-General’s Collection, respective counties, in press 270 a. VOL. XXIV. e 34 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. with much labour and care, an Appendix (E), in provincial classification, and in county, barony, and parish sub-arrangement, exhibiting in appropriate and consecutive columns the information following, viz. : — 1st. The surveys from which the lists of the lands admeasured and mapped were taken. 2nd. The dates of the respective commissions of survey, and names of the commissioners. 3rd. The names of the undertakers of said admeasurements and maps (commonly called the Down Survey), and dates of their commissions. 4th. The names of the actual admeasurers and protractors. 5th. The baronial and other territorial divisions of the kingdom. 6th. The baronies and parishes into which the admeasurements and maps ran. 7th. The dates of the maps so protracted or laid down. 8th. The scales upon which the original barony, and reduced or non- reduced official parish maps, and reduced official barony maps, were taken. 9th. The name of the public officer, and office or place into which the maps were returned, and date of such return. 10th. The subsequent fate or present condition of said maps. 11th. The references to their respective present habitats. In aid of this Appendix, I have also compiled three tables, exhibiting the following additional information in geographical arrangement, viz. : — The number of acres, Irish plantation measure, profitable and unprofitable, admeasured as forfeited in each barony. The combined number of profitable and unprofitable acres, converted into English statute measure, forfeited in each county, with the number of unfor- feited acres, together producing the gross contents, exclusive of water, returned as the area of the several counties upon the Index sheets of the Ordnance Survey. These tables show the proportion of lands forfeited in each respective pro- vince, as compared with the gross area thereof, to be — In Leinster, about \ In Munster, about § In Ulster, about ~ In Connaught, about f And in the whole kingdom about ^th parts — a proportion much less than Mr. IIakdinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 35 what has historically and otherwise been reputed as the result of the unhappy disturbances of 1641 ; and that proportion will be still more diminished when there is withdrawn from it, as there should be, the number of acres retrenched by the adventurers and soldiers under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation for the benefit of nonforfeiting proprietors, namely, the Established Church, lay corporations, innocent Protestants and Roman Catholics, and old and favoured inheritors, called by the Acts nominees. The extent of this diminu- tion I hope at some future time to be able to communicate to the Academy. The prevailing opinion of the extent of the forfeitures of 1641 is well exem- plified in a printed speech of the Right lion. John, Earl of Clare, Lord High Chancellor of Ireland, addressed to the House of Lords on Monday, 10th Feb., 1800, upon the occasion of the memorable debate relative to the then proposed Union of Great Britain and Ireland. At page 16 of that printed speech his lordship asserts, “ That the Act of Settlement, dealing with the forfeitures of 1641, vested three fourths of the lands and personal property of the inhabitants in the King.” Upon what authority this sweeping statement is made I cannot imagine. The surviving records relating to these forfeitures were then in a far worse and more inaccessible condition than they are at present, and it would have been impracticable to have worked out from them the approximate and all but precise results that I have laid before the Academy. But his lordship only adopted the erring voice of tradition. Had the extent of the forfeited area of the kingdom been as stated to the Irish House of Lords in that speech, my calculation, instead of eleven, must have produced fifteen millions of forfeited • and only five millions of unforfeited statute acres. But suppression or igno- rance of truth always produces exaggeration. In connexion with this period, I take the present opportunity of stating, that my researches have revealed a few facts not hitherto prominently, if at all, noticed by historians. I find that the Commissioners of the Parliament of England for the affairs of Ireland issued an order upon the Receiver-General of the Public Revenues at the Treasury, dated 14th November, 1659, to pay Major John Barret a sum of fifty pounds for his expenses as the envoy of the General Council of Officers of the Army in Ireland with despatches to General Monck. This document is evidence of an intimate intelligence of the army here with the e 2 36 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. recognised agent of the English army, who, at the very time the order indicates, was settling the condition of the Articles of Breda with King Charles II., as the terms of his restoration. It further shows that the avowed Nonconformist members of the Privy Council, Corbet, Jones, and Tomlinson, who signed the order for payment, were cognizant of the correspondence, and in so far com- bined against the Commonwealth they aided in creating, and to restore the monarchy they helped to destroy. I further find that these commissioners and members of the Privy Council proclaimed a great approaching change in the month of September, 1659, as in every warrant for the payment of the quarter’s salaries of all civil functiona- ries, officers, clerks, and others, to the 29th of that month, these significant words were inserted, viz. : — “ And for that expectations hath been for settling the courts, &c., and it not being intended to continue the payment thereof (meaning each particular salary) any longer than until September the 29th, without special directions of Parliament,” &c. It is manifest from these evi- dences that the restoration of King Charles II. was a proposed measure of universal notoriety and acceptance. In concluding this second part of my narrative on Manuscript Mapped and other Surveys of a Public Character in Ireland, I would observe that there should be somewhere in existence, in print or manuscript, a full official statement of the principal events that occurred in this kingdom from the death of King Charles I. to the restoration of King Charles II., as I find that a salary of three hundred and forty pounds per annum was paid to Dr. Henry Jones, said to have been Bishop of Meath, for (as the warrants of payment express) “ the compilation of a Narrative of the late bloody Rebellion in this Nation” — a work which there exists reason to believe was executed by him, but, for some reason or other, withheld from publication. Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 37 APPENDIX (A). Articles of’ Surrender of Forts, &c., referred to at page 4, antea , taken from vol. iv., press 14, shelf E f, Auditor-General’s Collection of Records in Landed Estates Record Office. Articles, &c. Dates. Pages of Record. Ross — Between Oliver Cromwell, L d . Lieu 1 , oflreland, & the Governor, 19 Oct., 1649, 1, 11 Proposals from English Residents at Cork to Oliver Cromwell, — Nov., 1649, 12, 14,16,22 Cahir Castle — Between Oliver Cromwell & Cap 1 . G. Mathews, 24 Feb. 1650, 23, 25 Kilkenny — do & the Go- vernor, . 27 M ch . 1650, 24 Between Oliver Cromwell and Comm rs . on behalf of Irish Protestants under Lord Ormond, 26 April, 1650, 26, 53 Clonmel — Between Oliver Cromwell & the Town and ; Garrison 18 May, 1650, 34 Fethard — Do. & Co 1 . P. Butler, 3 Feb. 1650, 35, 37 j Islands S 4 . Martin and S 4 . Agnes, in Scilly — Between j Admiral Blake and Col. Parke on behalf of the Par- liament of England and John Greenfield, Governor of the Islands, for the King, 23 May, 1651, 38, 43 Athlone — Between S r . C. Coote, L d . Presd 1 . of Con- naught, & L d . Vise 1 . Dillon, 18 June, 1651, 44, 45 Between Charles 4 th Duke of Lorrain and Lord Vise 4 . Taaffe, Sir Nicholas Plunket and Geoffry Browne on behalf of the Kingdom and People oflreland, . . No date, 46 Between Lord Balcarras & Rob 1 . Overton and Richard Lilburne, for disbanding his Lordship’s Regm 4 . at Invarnasse, 3 Dec r . 1651, 49, 50 Ballileage — Between Commy.-Gen 1 . Reynolds & Cap 4 . Fargus Farrell, 24 Feb. 1652, 51 Between Tho 3 . Lord Baron of Broghell & Co 1 . Florence M°Carthy, No date, 52 Between Comm y .-Genh Reynolds and Co 1 . Teige O’Con- nor Roe, 2 Ap 1 . 1652, 53 Roscommon — Between do. and Cap 4 . Edw d . Daley, 3 Ap 1 . 1652, 54 Galway — Between S r . Charles Coote and the City Authorities, 5 Ap 1 . 1652, 119, 123 38 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. Articles, &c. Dates. Pages of Record. Galway — Growing out of preceding Articles, . . . j 11 2 0&} 1652 ’ 6, 65, 113 Jamestown — Between Comm^.-Gen 1 . Reynolds & Co 1 . John Kelly, 7 Ap 1 . 1652, 55 Drumrouske — do. & Col. Rich d . Bourke, 8 Ap 1 . 1652, 56, 58 Free Grant of Major-Gen 1 . S r . H. Waller to Capt n . Walter Walsh, 19 Ap 1 . 1652, 70, 71 Limerick — Between do. and Co 1 . Mark O’Brien, Com- mander-in-Chief of Irish Brigade, 21 Ap 1 . 1652, 66, 69 Clare — do. do., 21 Ap 1 . 1652, 114, 116 Between Comm/.-Gen 1 . Reynolds and Capt n . Hugh O’Reyley, 22 Ap 1 . 1652, 59 Kilkenny — Between do. and S r . Walter Hon- gan and others, 12 May, 1652, 6, 9 Dromagh — Between S r . H. Waller and Capt n . Hu O’Keeffe 23 May, 1652, 72 Ballyshannon — Between S r .C.Coote& Major O’Rourke, 26 May, 1652, 73, 74 Newtowne, do andDonoghO’Harte, 3 June, 1652, 82 Kosse — Between LVGen 1 . Ludlow and Lord Muskerry, 22 June, 1652, 75, 81 Ballymote — Between S r . C. Coote and Maj r .-Gen 1 . Luke Taaffe, 24 June, 1652, 86, 87 Mullagh — Between Col. Jn°. Foulke & the Lord of Slane, 28 June, 1652, 88, 89 Between Lord Clanrickard, Lord Dep y . of Ireland, & Sir Charles Coote, 28 June, 1652, 90, 92 Between Comm^.-Gen 1 . Reynolds and Co 1 . John M c Dermot, 29 June, 1652, 85 Surrender of Major Charles Kelly, 30 June, 1652, 94 Exchange of Prisoners between Col. Venables and Lieff.-Gen 1 . Farrell, 8 July, 1652, 93 Connaught — Between S r . Charles Coote & Lord Vise 4 . Mayo and others, 14 July, 1652, 96, 99 Inchlogher — Between Co 1 . H. Sankey and Co 1 . Rich d . Grace, 14 Aug. 1652, 47, 48 Ulster — Between Commy.-Gen 1 . Reynolds & Co 1 . Myles ( 21 Sep. 1652, 104, 109 Reyly and others, j 2T Ap 1 . 1653, 110, 112 Fort Arkyn in Arran — Between do. and Co 1 . Oliver Sinnot, 15 Jan. 1653, 83, 84 Innis Buffyn — Between do. and Col. Richard Burke, 14 Feb. 1653, 100, 103 Between Capt n . T. Cookely & Capt n . Manus m c Sheehy, 12 Jan y . 1655, 133 Between Co 1 . Robert Phaire and do., 21 Jan y . 1655, 117 Peace, Friendship, & Commerce — Between the Com- ( Gazetted 1 10/1 1 QO 1 70 monwealth of Eng d . & France, j 20 Nov. 1655,/ X i & Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 39 APPENDIX (B). Notie. — Where the sentences or words are broken in the following Specimen, the original Record is injured or destroyed. Gross Survey Volume. — Specimen relating to Westmeath, referred to at p. 10, antea , taken from vol. xiv., pp. 000, press T, shelf 2, Surveyor-General’s Collection of Records in Landed Estates Record Office. “ The County following Kilkenny, Brawny Territory Clonlonan, Moycashell, Moygoise, Foure \ Bar 0 , Moycashell and Magherederno containeth y e Baro Rathconra Corkerr n, . . . . artullagh, Ferbill, . Mullingare, Corporation, 119 162 175 149 “ The Barony of Clonlonan contayneth the parishes of Balleloghloe, Kilcrumirragh p\ Killmanaghan p*, and Kilcleagh. Subdivisions and the Barony of Cloonlonan Value of the said lands & 1641. And also of Dowers, Mortgages, & other second entre giously. Dated 3 d 8 bre . 1653. Balleloghloe Parish Gilyvekile one plowland and one Cartron containing by estimacon acres Contry measure, 49 acres plantacon measure, esteemed of arrable 26 acres, — medowe, 4 acres, — pasture, 19 acres, — boggs - acres, — held amongst other parcells by Thomas lo : Viscount Dillon of Costello the 23 rd of 1641 ; being then of full age and by descent in fee simple ; the yearly value thereof was then ultra repriss 10 M .” 40 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. With like description of all other lands in the preceding and all other parishes in said barony ; and at the conclusion is a summary for the revenue benefit, as under, viz : — THE EXCHEQUER. Parishes. Plowlands. Ballyloghloe, . = 34 el sic cum ceteris. Cartrons. = 0 Qrs. Car- trons. County Measure Acres. Plantation Acres. = 2 1491 = 4736 = Exchequer Rent. £ s. d. 07 5 2 Yearly Value, 1641 . £ s. d. 970 0 0 Each barony is certified at its conclusion by the surveyors’ autographs, and this par- ticular one exhibits the names, “ Jo. Dillon - H. Gawly - Ger. Dillon - Hu. Furir.” And at the end of the volume is the following certificate, signed by the commis- sioners, viz. : — “ In pursuance of a commission from the Rt. Honble the Comrs. of the Comonwealth of England for the affaires of Ireland, bearing date the 19th of August last, directed unto us the Comm 18 of Revenue for the Precinct ofAthlone; Wee have appointed the most fitt persons that could be found in e9y Barro 7 (giving them full instruccons according to the tenor of the s d Commission, with such rules (for method and forme) as we conceivid might best discover the truth & facilitate the worke) to enquire of all the particulers, con- tainid and expressed therein, who have upon their Oathes given in the acc* aforegoing of the said County, and of ev y Barr 7 therein respectively, and subscribed to y e same which have discharged of our trust) diligently examined Wee Wee are required returne under our hands. Dated “ Athlone, 7 th Nov., 1653. “ Jas. Shaen, “ G. Southcote, H. Wadington.” The volume finishes with an alphabetical index to the several denominations of lands described in it. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 41 APPENDIX (C). Gross Survey Volume. — Specimen of part of the Barony of Fassaghdynyng, and county of Kilkenny, referred to at page 10, antea, taken from vol. xvii., press 12, shelf d, of Auditor-General’s Collection of Records in the Landed Estates Record Office. Baronie of a. Booke of all y e Castles, Manors, Lordshipps, Lands, Hereditam‘% ffas saghdynyng. ^ p^es an{ j Rectoryes within the Barony of Fassaghdyninge, in the countie of Kilkenny, whoe were the Inhereto rs or owners in An 0 . 1641, and whoe now doe enjoye, possess, and clayme the same with the number of acres, either by survey or estimation, after the proportions of 21 foote to the perch, this by virtue of the Honble the Comm rs of y e Revenue their Order to us directed, Dated the 30 th of August, 1653. “ Markett Castle and Loughill, in the Parish of Lewghill, the Earl of Ormond proprietor and in possession of Mr. William Alfry in the yeare 1641, at £50 p anum, as we are in- formed, estimated about 600 plantation acres, besides mountaine, and nowe sette by the said Comm rs of Revenue for £13 p anu to Thomas Hollaghan. Mortgaged to Mr. Pat r . Bryan, of the Cittie of Kilkenny, by the said Earle and his Countesse, for £200 Ster, now possessed by the said Path and his ten ts . Value to be worthe in the yeare 1641. 100 u .” The book, which contains only five pages, is defective, wanting much of the lands sur- veyed, and other information the surveyors of the Gross Survey were required to return, as well as the names of the surveyors of this particular barony. VOL. XXIV. f 42 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. APPENDIX (D). Note. — Where the sentences or words are broken in the following Specimen, the original Record is injured or destroyed. Strafford’s Survey Volume. — Specimen of the Barony of Ownymulrian, in the county of Tipperary, referred to at page 13, antea, taken from vol. xxxi., press 12, shelf c, of Auditor-General’s Collection of Records in the Landed Estates Record Office. ( Endorsement .) “Bar 0 . Ow CONTAINE Killoscu Kilneragh Index Observations Index Proprietors Index Numbers (l 6t pagei) “ The par? of Killoscully William 6 Kelly Daniell 6 Mulryan Dermot 6 Mulryan Dermot roe 6 Mulryan Dounogh 6 Glissane. “ William M c Daniell: Being all duly sworne upon y e holy Evangelists have set forth the bounds and meeres names and bye names of all y e quarters, plowlands, and other Denominations of lands lying in y e pish of Killoscully, together with all the Owners and proprietors of y e said lands their names and by names to bee as follows. And to y e said information have at the end hereof subscribed their names. “ Richard Crispe Sworne Measurer for y e parish of Killoscully doth present upon his oath the true quantities and qualities of all y e lands lying in y e parish of Killoscully to be as followes, and to y e said presentment hath at y e end hereof subscribed his name. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 4 .‘ (2 d “ Par Killoskully Bar Ownymulrian County Tipperary. Ann ARP B. 1 B. 2 B. 3 R. W. P. W.P. 1 W. P. 2. W. The pariah of Killoscully, contaynes 34 J p 1 . which are surrounded thus 5 17 — 4 — 2 — 8 — 1 — 1 — 1 — Surrounds in all 39 : 2 : p 1 . 1. p 1 . £ P 1 - *Pj- i P- i P 1 - pcell of 2 acres, pcell of Coin". 34* p'. AGHCOWLET. 1 pd. being of the pish of Stradalt. Arable and some rough pasture mixt. -Jjj wast. Bog. ^ P fitt - Bog. Wast. Bog. Wast. Ruffe wody past. J- pfit. Pasturable Woods. | pfitt. Woody Pastu r . r pfitt. Timber Wood. 4 Wast. 35 I P 1 - IP'- fpl. Connor O’Mulrian of Arragb, Esq. Donogh m‘John mac Donagh O’Mulrian of Ballinacloghy. Wm. Lord Baronn of Castle Connell. 0000 0000 0000 000 0000 0000 ; 0000 210 : 048 : 0000 000 : 0006 : 117-: 0009 : 0000 0000 045 : 269 : 0000 0000 000 Each denomination of land, its qualities, area of plowlands, proprietors, and contents in areas in this parish, with the three figures of reference (which are on the original coloured respectively, black, red, and blue), is exhibited in the same manner as the one above 44 Mr. Harbinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. described; and at tbe conclusion of tbe parish the gross acreable contents are thus described : — “Sumatot, 1490 = 11217=897. Suma Sumaru, .... 13604. ” Then follows, viz. : — “ Observations in y e pish of Killoscully. 1 Castle in good Repaire standing in no 4 1 Church Ruined w th a castle & a mill both in repaire in no 10 1 Good thacht house & mill in repaire in no 15 1 Mill & a tucking Mill going to decay in no 17 The Parish Church in good repaire in no 22 1 Castle ruined standing in no 29.” Then follows an alphabetical list of 87 proprietors within the parish, and references to the denominations of lands where each proprietor’s name appears, with their several proportions of the 34^ plowlands contained in the parish, of which it is stated that all the church lands in the parish is a glebe in N°. 10. Next follow the certificates of the surveyors and of the measurer, in the words fol- lowing : — “ Soe are all the true merres and bounds of all the severall lands lying in the parish of Killoscully and Killcomunty united, together with all the proprietors of the said lands, upon our Oathes and to the best of our knowledge Witness our hands William O’Kelly . Daniell O’Mullryan . Dermod O’Mullryan his x mark . his x mark . his x mark Dermod Roe O’Mullryo his x mark = Donnogh O’Glissane William M c Daniell his x mark Soe are the true quantities and qualities of all y e severall lands lying in the parish of Killo- scully & Kill Comunty united upon my Oath & to y e best of my skill and knowledge, Witness my hand Richard Crispe.” Such is the detail of the entire barony of Owny Mulrian survey book ; and at its conclu- sion a summary is given of churches and chapels, which returns 1 as repaired, and 3 in ruins — of Irish castles, which returns 2 as repaired, and 3 in ruins — of houses English-like and with chimneys, which returns 1 in repair — referring to the very parishes and town- lands where they would be found. Mr. TIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1040 to 1G88 4 5 voi. P=J X §f> a, Ph $ S -* S O ~ ^ 3 ■aaj »Ji o p +n o •*■> b O tM g tH M o ° a ° c3 o3 'Tj c/3 « ‘ 0 H gHO^ Jj ° ° - CD ^ Qj » J 2 +e TO ^■H r— j 'Tj 0 .— i E3 *3 1-1 -H > - aj H ft+H '"F? CD « W rfS <2 hH O *0 ^ CP O 0 r o Cj O 0 n n ^ bD £ Ph - 2 & r—H 03 C3 O o ^ Ph g-« « o Ph x CD +-> 5 » M# C/3 M • rH _j .sflj « S3 2 | *-%&£ . >■ a O CD § Sp o S m +3 rrt 05 to 0 c3 o o kO'^o ^<1 o £ O c3 &X3 g .2 ■a c3 p£! .- ^ -SgS ^ a .-, ■" P > a Q „ O S d S S lZ 0 Pi— I • rH G -*H» c3 g £ .'S o o_r g O 2 P ^ H aM o . t' ^ ^ p x ^v- 1 P-l (ZJ a a O ■ o.S P ^ cj ® O ^ O ~H 2 ® a fl “ — ! rt CD t» 2 « io o m h a ” a <& '■ 03 fz; o hH H H > W P5 cq n H Ph O 'A O H H A » § a v n o e a s ° 2 ° ® |S ® pq ^ ^ P - g. _ a. olfl Ig I. I S •r «a ° ° cq % cq g P3 cq cq O ^ d odooci £ o iH Pq * ^ M P> Pk Ph < ° s S Szj >• g w s 5 « « e 02 ^H I— I w cH Ph O pq o M }> o Ph PH P C/2 O P ,, 'h© o Cl Oi I- Cl Cl Cl I - —« CO 00 Cl o CO • ^ *i Cl Cl n H Cl c# Cl Cl H Cl Cl '^J f-4 f-i —* i •f Oi O »o fl ° o n V'C Ph 'S Is o3 III ■Jo 0 £ .a= !•§•§ C §H ot si S£*I o g QJ «w rt cs 53 S. O ^ O' C«PC42 « GJ .§1 5^ 9fi cf 3 - "o.2 <— i f - -3 rt • cc.2c o3 0,0 O — S'^'co •2 a3 2 '> O r co 2 ° 8 (U tfl H I o g X|fH crT lO uo CO CO Ph GO r^T — T iO uo CO CO ooooooooooooo rttco-^OOOO^OOTtiOOCO^Tfirfi oooooooooooo ’^CO'^'^TjiCO^iT^OOGO^T^ o O l O CO CO r>- cn lO >o CO CO Ph 6 bD *2 ^2 ^ ^ e Q3 ^3 -g qfS | ll’gj'l.g) caeqa^aqa^ c S . . 'rt 3 rt ^ ^ ^ oocqpqooota a g c "So p ^ =i-3 3 SP W CH q pq Ph d Cq p5 cq ca do cs r — - <73 — > c ^ C C ^3 O C3 os cp cp ; •«? ® 3 l qLH f£, Ph _ fee" Q® ^ S O H — J a pa qP H « r* o Oq CO o o Q ~ IO O ^ .S o CT Cq^C O 2 O CO ^ 'H ^3 r3 .a a PC P '(^ io •* r oq § v »o -g — r CO ' — ’—I S T3 Z, ^ 3 . tr o _co g. - “*0 -HQ *f g := M EOS «“ cj > 5 XXIV. PROVINCE OF LEINSTER, COUNTY OF CARLOW — continued. 46 Mr. Haedinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1G40 to 1688. Folio. .1 g 'S ^ o «C03030C0NW30 Ch(N«««(NW(N(M(NCO(N ^ s 30 CO CO .. 03 O iO 03 CO N W»3(NCO(N(N(N^ tH CO r d e2ni>t>t>^!NiOCOtD O co Ci N CO N O CO °° CO CO CO CO CO 30 o5 i co 04 > 1 CO i V o ----- o ^93 - -- -- -- -- O cO O c3 '*-1 K> ■2 O -o o cO Q cO O P ps o P^g f-< £ o gas; “yes « S E coPhco 8 .■* . 5 O Srd o^-p 8 « B'-S'S 3 1 P -2 Efi » Jh p. © flJcS'gig G G co‘3 C > „ H 0.2 3 to S “ms 15 « H / o (» SB O o M - - Pd ►4 o « R Pd A O T3 o .. O - O o pq o hO K td = = = Wed 03 C5 03 03 SO sO O sO CO cc CO CO ^ QQ - - - - C3 05 30 »0 CO to 30 — — — pq o a 3 r3 co o w P v** p C G a W) fctf) bJD W 3> £ >>c Op?^ „ * - a ~ • . O £- c3 _2 cS .-2 ^ gj S '-H -"i o o o JS kT kT IP CD fcD be t) -c 03 03 P-irJ (H P P . ^'Sja a os jj to® B E .b P. < 2 bPIc-g c'SsSE^SgaiS: ^ 0 > j= tp 2 c5«-S’S fg'gsfa . .’OdJ®cii!i3 A O <1 -aj fn M K M M H Ph = = s 6 r r -S (V S =1 . . a = S-3 pq cq .2 3 jj oowm 5 A ►J »— I % M 02 p 13 ►d p H 03 o o o so * = £ - »° ?. 2 2 02 := rK ^ ^ ^ rS ^ O Q) C Sh O I. Ph'P rt CO > 02 c Pu S > o rn '. — £ S’® s £ B S ■2 W> •td c3 w a 2 so r S o o - co o o ’“l ^ 1 <8 ^ TO* Q rH u o o , o : t> 5 (-4 Pd P P P O P Eh Pi P O o f- CO CO H q q ® r/T O M (4 3 9 cd O : - K cd 30 30 CO CO s CQ o Ph o to fl o 2 - CQ 03 _. §! CO eO pq cq p 5s "p CO CO _Q CJ QJ 32 C CO o W Q p do fi C^-S oed L3 >1 £ w § "d H 'S ^ P t-J Pd Pd H EE^c ^ ^ tE H H H Pd ^S|5 £ _- ■S S 3 S = o S H O 'O.CB C-) ^ cf s p. S?ii . 2 ^ £ :3 -b 5 5 p . HJ 3 -fcj C/0 J ^ r 9 ^ C o 03 H U H H P - Pq — 03 £Q : PdL pT cT ^ ^ o or;^ »o o <« Pi H 3 r/ r co w ® S Pq « • S 2 s e °i qO E ^ H Ph b CO "2 r-l 30 H ^ 3 I £%\ p. "t3 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1(540 to 1(588 47 cn ^ *o 00 co cm CO CO CO CO CO CO >© *<*» Cl N W IN M ©4 04 O H H H O O Cl H IM Cl ,, O O *H H Cl Cl IN Cl Cl (M IN IN (M Cl Cl Cl 1 Ol Ol 30 ! so i 2 D &30 29 28 5 1 40 1 5 ! 75 ^ *f CO H H HI H H ri | | CO 1 - CO CO ‘O 'O C 1 OC,|.Ci s s S E E S S a 3 p p p p © p cT Sseesseesesese | O 1 P Dublin, S E = = = .9 Zo s p a P 1 E S = E S S E < -f ◄ E gw s Pg of p P P P orfSEE-aEcsaesESE c/T P P P P P gw - 1 P P P P P 1 Ico-'gcft-ppppp P ©4 ©4 d d d d « - - - - « = E E S E = = = P - = = = | Pa « :s| II E E E E E E E E E E E ► W W Pi W 4 •3 >4 4 'O o o O h 3 o o O Vj o P oo P O fd O Ph 0 O :K«i ; E« ^ P P P P m r>T t-T ‘O 10 10 1(0 CO CO co co rH CO O I m i>r lO co Ph CO »o >o co co too I o o o o o I ^ 00 I 00 CO GO Tft o o CO 00 o CO o 00 o o o CO oo o o o o o o CO GO co 00 CO Tf ooooooooooo o ^^T^^GOCOCO^OOCOCO Tjl a £ :Pi Pa E EPi Pi E E E CP PPPPEEPEPEPE OO O O O ^ • d fl • P > ^P •S . t2 M '*■» « 2 n Naule Palmersto Wespalsto 1> 0. B. M., Castleknoi Kilsoghan Mallaliede Ward 0. B. M., Clogheran Coolock Finglas Killegh Killostery Howth Mallahide Mayne Portmarm Rathenny Sautry St. Marga Swords o O' C/3 « rji C CS 3 r^J d -? o ^ .5 3 O £ w J o H O M o o o o o Q - >3 03 Sps j w « m 53 53 q ^ td 03 £9 a 03 Pa E piS PP 9 “fe~ OO W Ph di a H Ph <«Pa - o MOPS .fcp *n « « £ -i Pa r d q q rt h-T O <3 — O -CO pi ^ Pa" -a ^ O -a W •Sid £-5 2 J »-o Ph o > o .3 C3 £ > o -O etf e§ £ o3 o %s° c.2 -a C 2 > c3C-t .22 05^5 £ fts=i cm £ 03 £ O ^ 2 to 5S ° 3 05 §<-g *§ «g 2« " g o<5 ■alls | !•§.-! CS q CO .— 'B r to ^ § § s £ o «« o+J o 2 o a. 3 2 05 o> rt sg| os > 52 •e ££ o3 S3 2 43 05 oQjS §,§n S+ 3 « cS *— c ° o 9 gjs o t. ! O'H c3 05 O „ S ►»*« *9 | g oog |og® C0 c3 Q ,a O Q a H <1 05 A o -2 »o >» .. u to y «; ^ ^ "Xj t— i ^ ’-h 1 ^ 6 & *a cq • ^ n c jT , . &t» *-> o »-• »-H gs*"! > Ph i— i ^ P >> 05 O Or"S o r -« >-* ti m -2 O - W o n cl .o « • a os CS o> cn -P *-H H £ O Jl 03 in r-s'isl-S > r_l P r = g"T3 : r a S M a 3 5 « Q O g :s t i £ lO % > rH rr t-n Ph I S H tzs o co‘ I I I I Oh 6 . Pi P£ . u o< ^ M >> , 05 >> £» s S «S -£> *2 C ! cs cS cS cS f ; , “, u ^ CQOOOP {* Pn P PP P5 <1 O ill'll .2 a 22 « ^ . b 05- £ £ |> J l*al S !> W Pa02 O fc d co rH rH iO iO CD CD Kildare, B.M., ?? ?> »> 11 11 11 S r 1 3 3 3 3 3 I 3 03 ns M « , 05 ^ ^ ^ ^ f-> 1 IS nS u g r ri Sf 3 3 3 | 3 3 3 | cS ns na M ® I E ; 1 515 t 1 ai ; 02 3 3 3 3 3 | ® ® 3 3 3 3 3 E | to 3 3 3 1 a 3 3 I o o O P3 P 3 E I 3 E | 3 3 « 3 3 3 3 3 | 3 P* 3 3 3 3 3 3| 3 3 3 | 3 3 3 | w w (4 >4 >4 d d N (N 05 O I rH 00 | H CO iS I *T3 o o c/5 i i CD - - - - »- 0 ) £L CO ® a £ 3 ja 5P S» 2 1 § 1 s g I A § M 3 -c S •§ & S - a • ^ p n ^ o *--3 .9 Ocapqoofi^H . s 40 2 "£ •* O ® CQ o es Sih J ^ 05 0 5 p: d -rt -U • I 5 d ^ — cS OOiOM^gOPS a 55 o H J iz o o o .S a o § o !z p^ 05 Pn Ph pa 05 05 m P bcS' : p o » O CO i > ri O T3 is ►* O 02 S .s w J . eS O pq *3 2 'O 3 ^1 3 ?. ?, *5 Cj fl CJ r; «P ° * C S C h O s s c a s .s as/ OOf <« , >aW , xtt < a *3 SgP3 M O Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 . 49 I I I! I I I II I I I I ss I O W ^ | HU 5 CO | *£ 0^0 ~ >> nd £ "o' i3 'd i3 O m O eo © CO o -*-> sl sl 4 d sl 4 4 4 © © © rS © © © © rz © rd © r d' © nd Td tT © © © tT © nd tT © © •id © S r = | | | I S S II S s 1 1 1 1 S S I r - Ctf - - - . 1 - 1 3 1 | « c3 1 - | -2 5 1 - CO 60 -*-> * CO CO 03 -4-» £ £ O £ si 'Z sl sl sl sl sl 1 ^ sl 44 4 *5 Js rij. di2; j j a o i -3 fl o 2 2 cs"o d jjf J? JS 5 © g £ 5 2 o ?2 I « a ^ '&§|g s| g '§ ». 'g a> G-- S si - c f ^- 3 Se:?= = sg: = £-2 to • ° h « 5 !"i O 5 5 S ^ =S a - - - = o © > o gl J- nl* £1.3 . ej TZ 2 c 3 .£ co Ch - - 6 * s 3 . © X bpJ . J 5 « g = 5 « » aa := c S 3 2^j • a ««=■-•- a GMWOQW^hJ do ill* 5 ® S c3 3 a 6 c ^ o Nl «l • c S O O r a £ r- 5 b£) rr- ►>. © 4- p r“ J-i ^ op J f r tD £ jo « g _ O fcJDSdj O j h 4 o, © » O d >. 2 P'S ^ be ^ ^ s2 5 So 2 ;§ * fog w) OOOWWWMJ ° 4 o£h c3 <; 4 ~ kz Ld O 2 o 5 ^ m < -Ji K 4 " O < < S 3 CS W M *» 03 O .*_> co 4 ^ 5 © © 2 ; fc-» £ t*» a O 5 o os h a is fi d'S r g x £ k» « 4«4 Q^O | © © 43 03 03 « © Ph 6 a d a d a of © .© cS C 3 o a o © 42 03 93 C3 a o a 3 a d o -O c3 a o a o a VOL. XXIV h PROVINCE OF LEINSTER, COUNTY OF KILKENNY. 50 Mr. Haiidinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 . OSNiONOO u ^^OO^WOONOSOH( H(M(N(N(N(^(N^(N(N(N^(NH!N(N' HCO^eOC 5 (NOOO(N 0 lONC 5 ON W^HOION W l> CO O O >0 (N CO ^ ^ ^ ^ T}1 4 o « o o r d'-*a . a) cj o If si ls° !«•§ te o e> 02 o x/i C 5 ™ QJ t, 5 f “ o 2 <» ©p 3 2 i ^ 33 ? 5 ^ XT' 03 o> ^■SS !§•«§ » 3? r oi § ^ g. Ph - ^ 43 J cj fl eS ‘ I «— I G ' S "jj fl? ^ ^ 0 ^ G ~ j£j cqcqcqpoQUQtPhOb^^^HH bD si I = !« o> r= S3 = S.S kooooq riririS to O G co 5 03 0 0 ^° 40 G s « a dj| . • cS Ph’ r °Jl> 3 « d. CQ ^ ' 43 ^3 e rs ^ J 44 + „ &pl 3 o g .is a £ j " - -5 ”o = 5 P 3 MOOQP * 44 o 3 c C « p 343 CD ■= fl 3 CQ j ^ Ph H H © .s S H K B “ ffi ffl !> ** g fc O § •S m «5"5 « K w Cs £ « o Q rl r -rig 03 03 >-< l=< 4i O a j co ^3 a g? , q® 3 ( •r; w ■*-* i y h s uo - ^ r fl *- co ^ o . o“ 5 H S IqH c -C' 1 __Q s ; n tT'rS a. 0*^*5 m , a> QJ 32 >32 T 3 jTIO s- LO v-t a a> co So OH ca S H CQ (N Ph > d) G O S ii S ca §M « S. . c5 o O O ts b ctT co~ aT >> co~ ^ r o GgG-S^to^a) w ^ ft ’" o Si « 2=3- - I ^ V C riJ t- A 1 ^ 5t> O §5 H H k H G ^ in ’ ih Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 51 I N 00 O W O C<5 CO CO 03 O ^ rr O O W iO O | ^ ^ CO ^ CO O l> coc5o^(noo^^o2h^w 2 ^ ^ 21 21 15 2 2 ^ S 2 2 2 13 CO (N(N(M(N(^(M(N(M(N(M(N O O (M Cl h O CO £ 3 - ^ of GO S - - - of S S J s 6 p4 W .-4 o cd O cd O cd OOOOOOOOOOO IOOOOOO o 5 OOCOCO-^tJIt^t^-^OOOOCO I OO CO X ^ CO co O 3 0 0 0-2 00 CO O 00 CO ® „o o o 2 o o o 2 O O 3 'OOCOX M OOOOOO w cc O CO 0^5 - oooooo 00 M ~ OOOOO^COO o £ o £ o 0,0 o £ P5 £ £ •o o r- •A I * s s 3 c o o o o ^ S . w a 5 tc 1-; - § S' - >■ cC CT £* — ^ . — cC s = S^„5 = ?2“ 2 ■ 2 S tctf ~ >>o o O O^iw p- o coo r n C2 3 o s e .3 i ? S 2 2 § S 3 jiSo -s S be?* 3 - •-** w x S ’-— ~ ^ "o ,y O ^ ^ c, " cr ■ <2 £ 5 £ ; £ I 72 © 3 : .'H 1 CO O ; *3 O ’■ ~3 7Z T2 ■ w 14 l4 ~ S3 $ P4t4PI p* 6 ** o£ . it) « < d o o 2 I 5 S & _X Jj O a J> 3 P O P ft, =*■ ? ® 5 = x c — - 0 "5. 5 t3 a ~ F *> -S 3> s Co 3 = 3 * s * 2 £= = ^SOSiSHHHP P-, - « S3 u *r+ . QJ -*-> O sj ° “3 S fcJD rc , be C -J- ^ ^ rt -j 1-5 Ph Ph oommmw izf'S Bgg PC — | CP H 1 !i< s-2 £ ^ - a ° ^”S : = rh *- »- ;£? ”3 2 'TS w o o> CO i- 2 O cd c M o o O o P o P o P d P o P o Q PROVINCE OF LEINSTER, COUNTY OF KILKENNY — continued. 52 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. o Sts c [§ o-g O A , Cf C /2 ^ CO 2 ,*2 . * 8 ° ««a s&iS <3»s« 8 9 .2^3 ,13 bD-p "o .S ^ *53^ O t/5 C3 2'S S3 ^ Cl.’Ph.S 32 2-g gg§r P. R 02 c5 °0 W m 3 f* o ^ 43 esg 5s£ 8 5?-3 ^ g <» ■S3®S “Hq i S oil’ as^ si's 53 o a -C O 4^0 -22 “ ° a sti o 3 ~ r - O O i 02 - - - - e8 P d .9 *■ ^4 a ^"2 a f 2 c /2 O ) r ] SB 6D >> "bD W A _ „_ . 6D -5Ws3t^Mt3! i to 3 !jg °1 « pq I 3 1 A" fe £ °aS)|g°®s 5 . ■a »• 8 «a a « £ ” a o • a ' °® 3 3 g 3 O g >3 >0 lO £; oo o — £S«3t9.c2' c ' 0 2 . >h £ o .."“l ’ H t» S-t3 3 w o S ,;b < p2 +j oi in a -S ~J? ts iP a ~ w 9-2 2 S-° 9 S ^ P S^»o .-5 J? =5 t> r ° fi 33 i, O »0 oOEiHrHaoSm 2 >■ >h CO (N !N — 1 p •P O tx H n o o 0Q b Si M M o « M p o ^ ^ ~ it P 3 *. p pCO r ^3 -a CS CS ®2 a a M o ^ ts 525 'A P J s > . 0 co S ^ ■■E NtZ § <1 d . f- d CQ § 3 K «* g cp E OrtU 6 IN»C 05 CCOTj tT OOOO^ -p> 0 a ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ rti co CO a> ^ O 5=5 si TD r CO „ ■g iH 5 z< § s r P 3 ^ ^ ^ ^ P o S' S - m 0 . B. P., 0 . B. P., R. 0 . B. Ballyboy Killaghy D. 0 . B. 0 . B. M., Aghacon Birre Coibally Etagh Kilcolmar Kennitty Roscomra Roscrea Shirkiran H O _ s« S w P <1 P M P *. 0**0 a c m O Hp r^T r C 5 _ _ _ a S > ** sa’S § »T “ 9 a a d * O „ ^ . . - .if 6 :a ■ g|-a 2 2 ^-a S-g3f g g (M HH LO W u. I p ® a M 35 P W P a Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1G88. 5 « CO r?HO(NNX(N>OHCQOO(MO »-h »-< t-h r-i »-h (MCOCOCO(MCMCOC^COCO(N(MCO(M (N ^ N CO CO CO GO O Ci I CO ^ (M CD CO i© COCONOO H H H r-t (M r}i CD CO l> 00 o> 6 U CO "fcfi s 5 o o sq JM „ o ^ co C fcfl a .s a o O < ©i 02 m ----- 1 of - - 1 «' P P = s = = of GQ - - - - *4* Saf p ~ - • ’o r^* §«= = = = = = PS PS E = - = PS‘ sesssjses PS p p4 a a o« d w H w w H a a J PS J ‘ a ►4 tJ d a O’ © o rs O rS o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ O Good, Injured, ll - 'rT © © c 5 £---:::: o O O a r d s o ^ ^ ^ ^ a rd o _ o d - o - a £'S © £* GQ d pi d (4 d d d gd CO z z z z z d GQ P5 czj c/5 C/2 Pp aj r - - - - © x© o CO CO »© CO r>. x© co Ci Ci x© »© co co C 5 CS x© o co co o X© CO x© co co r~- x© x© co co CO t- x© *o CO co I o o CO - z t z 03 co © oooooooooooooo CO-^-^l^-TCO^Xr^OOGOCO^OO o o o o o o CO GO 3C GC 00 30 o o co co 'TS © o o CO CO 3 Patrick Ragget, Patrick Ragget, Patrick Ragget, Thomas AVilson, O ■f) 5 G o H John Courtnay, Patrick Ragget, Patrick Ragget, Patrick Ragget, Potty, as above, Petty, as abovo. Petty, as above, S.-G. and Petty, as above, S.-G. and Petty, as above, S.-G. and Petty, as above, Tetty, as above, cT > O eO «8 m cj % Ci< Petty, as above, © © © © o . © Q a a a a a i ■ 6 6 6 © 6 a a a a a a a VOL. XXIV. i CO COUNTY OF LONGFOED. 54 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 . OOOOfNCO CO OflJNrl r-i .2 a c §1 P H CD to . Mi B i 'S £ ® pa « s M-Stg s • ~ l 2 in O o a o CD 05 -M r-, • ^ O 03 ! -5 I p A I ” § Jp 1 03 0 f-( P-T r £ ,_ a> ax c o Ph'pS cj co t> TtH • »0 »!, J 3 r O o g CD p (N w S o »o to CD G.Q O . ; -td • o I c o“ s < l— l > c 3 Ph ^ of o c/5 >» D a. ^ u2 s^t fe* b- COUNTY OF LOUTH. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 55 O »H 1C | C 3 iO O |^ 00 t> (NCO-rfOCO N^COCONCONODCOiON^O 1 I t-H rH r— I r-i rH HrIHHHHHrIHrtHrIH ■5 ci i o o o o o ft = s = - = = ft ft E '= E = = P = ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft : 'ts 5 0> ? 'CP', £ ^ o-g d 3 CD — hD ffl ,rt SS £ XJ 3 o S E ^s 1 ^ J-i —• CO rd CD O Cj 3 s “ C3 ^3 ** S c3 ft ft ,3 o o o O ~ ~ e. o disg ■£ oO ^ oS o 9 to 9 to O ■s^ 8 &! CO ~ ~ - di s ■g a o<3 PH 6 „ m Si, CD M .£ d d ^ bo ^ ri£l'S £ Sofiko c+-i cn ^d Dh ^ pu d d d • d Jjn “ * d CD o> | a>s « 1 1 1 ^ ^ 5 "§) o'-a .a . 5 .2 5 9 o o 2 Oft Ooftft WftSo S ft ft. o- ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft {Zi ft o tn o Ph ft Ph P3 ft ft ft CQ a co o H a 2 C3 O CO -31 &■! £ U 3 o 9 o CO 3 g cd co rt a ft S >2 oO a <* o r cy 'd m d - cj 22 § logons ft ^Hft^ft^ft'ftft g -o „ 3 d * a H Ph i-d 3S £ T3 ft '5 3 " g ■q® “Sft ft 2 Sfll^ Td g I s 1 §* g . O ^ ft to £ • r d r£ CO r O s s d ^ '. C--T 3 Oj co a> g ^ lO ft ^ og°°g, 5 9 . 2 < < o »gft £ Q .3 O S o,ft :d tj ts 5 ft o .-o U w O “ S «o Cj d H Ph >> CD Ph a o Sft:r3 u co O -M c -ft ft Oft 03 ^ O Ci_i ® -fd 'ft ° 2 -ft sgs°s ft O b CL) ^ Q c go i 2 gq=J3a |1-S ®S=°S d~ , L S' 2 >T — Ji o d 3 P o co M-S ft 2 2 ft Jf-H -§2 S - dricD^cj^rd^ u & g ^ I'S.o § Sr^^-fd ^ ° d -Tj KOp-’ftWb cs a Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 57 e* x ^ © © x ec © -N »c ^ o io - h -h co o ^ co eo t? ^ « coco ^^cococo-^co tt co ^ i-h ,-i rn i-h ©»©t>©X©©C5© ONOO^OiOHiMCOO H (N CO « O W C1N H iC Ci N rt(N(N(N(NlNCl^N(N HC'4C004(MCsC'4CO | TJ« | 00 ^ 00 © O © I©©©©©© © c^x^ Ix^xxxx © X TH © X I I © X Ph - - - - - - 5 © « S > 2* jg © Tc O S3 O' 4/ 2 ffl c3og; i w j>»jS 'oj O U? c2 s ^s tX'F S*> ®5 ^ C ® S ,3 * * — sz J2 cx 5 5 •— ■ — •— -5 © C fafafafa2!z c F W H H *5 .2 . r ^ c 5 ® B S k. £ § fa o ■ . o' s § ? 2 C K x 2 = "fa Q O < fa fa S fa B £ o cq Q d d j* _ O j. o _ -H ^ fc. fc, >» O fc. !?.£§« § 5 Sfafafa §•§ fa G fa fa fa fa fa s - = « a •- 3) o 2 t u . .a ® ■§),£» >■« C 03 (S C rn q S c c o £: c , C = C o fa >-> ; o o o cs o . o g g fa a a > fa fa g g _ ■**< fa Oo «« 55 Cz] — Cfa o fa t> Ofa 2 Op? s fa © :b 3 b e *2 b «2 *2 ®»" sj " 5 ^ tT o fa - r - s ^ ^ s r >. •> .E £ 3*.E ^ c/5 ^ H r /5 ^ g c O • fl fa ^ *c • 5^ "o Cfa *© ^ t-i s 'c © T3 c t-i "2 © :g 2 S : O 'm . c/J -2 , • c c . c . « j o c > C- . a w i ;faQ^^’ 5 |g « W 2 w • b h^CQ ◄ | ◄ d ’fa cS ftl < © ft. © Ph 3 cs d m o o eS tn a O © o Si C3 CD C5 © fi 6 O o G © G © G © Q © G © G VOL. XXIV k PROVINCE OE LEINSTER, COUNTY OE MEATH — continued. 58 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. m ~ ~ ~ (NCDOOOOOt>C3iOCO^Hifi !>Cl5HO^NCOHOCO»ONi0^tflNiOO^ tH i-i HCO^^CO'^CO'^^COCOWCOCOCO'^COCOCO COCCOOOiflO>(N^OO^(MNC5^ GO -------- 5tt O eT .2 '-4J ^ eT .2 0 pS d pi = SS = E = SS = ::E |o U« p p - ^ p p - p - - ^ - p p p p p © 0 © w l rf Ed 0 d d« 'd © Hd d pi d a 3 hP O' & % S . O O M (U'5 ft "c3 T3 o i O -d tT © P pg 5 }-> r & ' 5 # 0 P ?-i f-< - 3 ~ 3 - nu • 9 - 3 r O T 3 - - 0 a 0 _c 0 H 3 © r-T s ff! Ph s - -.' 2 1 r d' •£> O G ’d d © _r d r- b£ r d -pd P E « g .= g S 3 0 O O & © d g d d g g |o ft g® ft i pi g ®i d g 1 O HP O p 13 g 3*a ■g °o ii O ■ 02 p o 02 fen O PE W 02 p p oT oT *o lO CD CO Ph o P3 m of £ moq u Pi 3 | o o o I ^ ^ oo © , -d 6pg-d o_, ,r* 58 © a CO 73 ©,2 fli Q,+^ ^d || gS ft”+= G 33 . p: °P c c o 2 Ifl l| a.a J g p ,3 3 03 3 *;_, ’t_ 3 P3MKHHH Ph o Ph o r fcD . 3 O cq © ^ o 3 SfrljS* ® XI J3 O ^ .3 a C to £ £ bpo 3 c 09 £30 ^OP d . £ o © c -t-s a J m r C £ [ 3 © 'u >* iHHHB OP3 « g g g . . u O p- © QO' < Z <1 ,d ffi H -«! O H ft Pd Z w Ed « M CO Ed Z HH <1 ft m < S«P^ © ©r-. - * i-i !z; O .S««| 1 I • £ ^ 'd ^ co .9 ^ 9 -3 3 IIP i-i g-g S “g to © £ a) "d e U-S’i’S! 5“^ §3^ dg-is 4 " 3dv. a) co ^ 0 | >> ^ vV, % cxT ^°!.i§« _, su jj r . C o®S g-l" s O ^ d d S 5 "H "2 "3 '. 0-^3 03 CO U1 tjT u « d. ® d O ^ . O CO P-. ^ *-S »H "5 'Td tU lO ij 1 — * £3 a> co © tH 3 'O T-l { P4 o sL qT aT kI : a ^ c g I PP D £ W : ^0 © 1 ^ | qTP a t: ; a ^ I ^ r=3 flrd*- H d. O 3 - 95 T3 *-3 ^ co 'o *" >> O C -73 CO ‘-S 3 - K* O - ^ CO N _ . ^ 3 ^ • a — 3 .- 3 CO § s © *Q 1 QUEEN’S COUNTY. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland, 1640 to 1088. 59 PROVINCE OE LEINSTER, QUEEN’S COUNTY — continued. 60 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. o O C A « S 'w £ § * g 2 ^ g<3 -i .a T3 CO C cc,;n P > f 5 <« Cts 2 j;T3^ E ~ ce V- 03 £ O io?S e S-O gs^pg O c ® - -P g 2 g'*S g 6 | b| g- I 5^ 6 S J §“ ICOC^IOIN^OCO^HOCOOHOJIXHNO c? s£ o o o b £ sc- £ cS ® 1 .£ f i >i.SP b 2 c3 o'ra : c c£ '®' c “S'^ -5b -ate SoggSiSacaF'S^ SS Rj | \ ps b ££ PH R O a. co K co •Pq C5 * ^ ■- !S o AS° af. luip a; •- o 5 5 o *o * o 1-1 - . w h— • w ~C sT *0 P O h c Sco SO H c3 TO >— i CO CM .H C O Cj nr} r c ^ > r C3 CD P c c 6 r co i 2 ■£ -d o : H H -Ac £ PJ « “ c CO ~ Q> M S3 3 'S c3 r n o ^ - ® W EH H EH 1 O CO o o . r£ «S d. P - o - P *0 C£> 3 O i-t GO O CO N O N W. Meath, v. 1, W. Meath, v.l, 11 11 11 11 > o a 6s W. Meath, v. 1, 11 11 ii G Q K K * K of - - - o o o o PS PS PS PS f4 p4 fA H P d ►4 4 O ~ - O O GO o co O GQ o o o o o CO CO r}i co ooooooooo oooooooo 'CD'nHOOOO'^'^-^rjiOO CDCDTtiT^Tji-^CCOO »o £ £ £ ~ .. ..CD ur> _ - - >o irs - CD CD R - - - o _c Us a in c 03 a -3 s jb "Si ^ S to c 3 c a c . S = A =3 pq S b A S obmSS R o cJ e **> p c3 g °a o o o S — £ a _ P5 C 0) P P C 3 p "p g r bE^ 5 PP « e> <6 - g; a § « | s o r® a ^ A 3 d Co _ E «3 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 61 c ^ c; O X M O -- 'O N C5QO«-dNO--«C5WOW H iQ CO ^ N h?4(N(NIN^(Nh^hji O t}< lO CO -I Ol O O Ol O CO H — H i—* — H r-H H —H w W CO CO CO CO CO (N CO O (M X CO ' go p p - GO* £ £ £ S | W ; s ; W : : : ; s go p o: ^ ^ ~ | go - cf cT .2 .2 o & d go o o o a d" 15 g o. = = = = = = = = 03 ‘o p4 ^ O . 005 = = = = = = = 03 = - - - §03 - - - 03 03 h s« ======== d" 03 o . 03 o ^ 05 03 o K -h5 03 d 03 ^ d d 03^ d c? a r£ 8) rS rS tT o - -- -- -- -- e: o - -- -- -- -- -- 0 - - - - o - s - s 2 s s s s s 5 s a s s s s u a o 55 o d o a - Oh o d Oh d d Oh d d d d d ^ y5 - -- -- r- - CO s: co - s z z G m - - - ui r r - - - c6 - ^ - - - - P3d cT oT t>r cT cT cT cTcT r>T t- o cT o o »o o »o 30 O o iO »o >o a? o ca CO CO CO CO co co co CO CO y ~* ^ 1— ’ T-( -H oooooooooo o oooooooooooo o o o o © o o o o o o o o o © o o o o o o o o oooooooooo '^a:xx'rxxxxx o COCOXXXXXXXXXX CO X X X X co co X co co CO X X X X X CO x X X ^ X X OcOX'^XXX’^X'tf -H — i -1 T-( rH -H 1-1 P-' 6 73 ps JS da • d o 73 # c *2 _ 5 Sc ’ 5 a a ~ 3 2 ' r r.'^ 55 j:=3?ii3 Zz* 'j* G G G r J} 'A .2 'C p- - -- -- -- -- - O 1 2 a •J- g .§ £* d «« a 05 3 .* T ~ ®-§-§ £ 3; is • . ^ o .s j r r 'J - o °S| j = "5 2 £ ' • • a S3 c •= •- .5 ,2 ® COUOOHi!^J«ZZ Ch * o (5 ? ? . £ s a « g 1 1 fo d a a 5 iz Oh = = o s r n « a ^ ai . . U c B O S3 % 2 g • . ►» = 3 QoaZa Oh O . J 3 £ *E ,c to .5 u a PQ - ^ w . 3 o a o 3 0*3 S > 5 , c « •= “ rt 03 < o 03 55 OS Ch = = O a m 3 'S,— o 05 £> « 5> be ® « • .S S « « “ ’S. o s s a s s a . vs = « a i 3 , 03 Od 03 03 03 co H Oh = o 04 J-r 05 o 005 ^° 3 2 ■ •« ja § ~ •- Q O 05 O O 03 Oh j= & « a OSH E-* a os S3 co _ -5 J O J 0- 03 o >3 Oaf O £ HH «d h a PS O S la 6 a aa j o -S «-a o ^ a 5 CO O CO c CO 9 2 *. as CO O CO 6 G 6 G 6 G 6 G 6 G 6 G 6 6 G G 6 G 6 G VOL. XXIV. i PROVINCE OF LEINSTER, COUNTY OF WEXFORD. 62 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. tf o H CO O Folio. CO 00 COiON^(NOiCldOOH^C3M05^ ,.000 01 I>COCOI>-COI>COiOt>COCOL>-iOt>Q050COl>- CO L''» l> O CO CO N ^ CO w PS H A W « P-. H Volume. of <8 ~ ^ ~ ~ ~ CD * Wexford, v. 1, = = = = = v a ^ = = = = = = = = = = k 0 25 in ~ c--S"3 G3 'd 'S g 3 Ph iO CO t>f »o CO tH Scale of Irish Perches per Square Inch. O do O O O O I oooooooooooooo oo o CO ■^•^OO^'^ 1 rjl ^ 320 160 O O O O O co oo ^ri co oo o o o CO 00 co OO O OOOOOOO O co co co co a oo co co o co Dates of the Maps Pro- tracted and Reduced. »o __ co - - - y— < 1655, ii = = = = = = = = r - = = = = = = = = = <5 kr-5 r^, Baronies and Paris] Admeasured. 0. B. M., Ardemaine 0. P Balleslane ,, Ballihoskart „ Ballivalden „ Ballivalloe „ Castle Ellish „ Donnaghmore ,, Edermine „ Killaconry „ Killancony „ Killcormack ,, Killenagh „ Killilly Killiske ,, Killmacrish „ Killmalloek „ Kilnamanagh „ Millinagh „ Monimoling „ Skreene „ St. Margret’s „ St. Nicholas, „ Templeshanon ,, R. 0. B. M., Adamstown 0. P. Ballilane ,, Ballykeoge „ Carnagh „ Chappel ,, Clonmore „ Corleckan „ Downony ,, Killany „ ■ Killegny „ Kilcowan ,, New Ross „ Old Ross „ Rossdrehid ,, Ross Liberties „ St. Moling „ St. John’s „ Templedican „ Whitechurch „ Whitechurch ,, Baronial and other corresponding Geographical Di- visions. BALLAGH- EEN, BANTRY, Names of the Admeasurers and Protractors. W. Hurly and J. Bedwell, J. Bedwell, » W. Hurly, 11 11 T. Bedwell, W. Hurly, T. Bedwell, W. Hurly, T. Bedwell, W. Hurly, T. Bedwell, W. Hurly, T. Bedwell, W. Hurly and T. Bedwell, W. Hurly, W. Hurly and T. Bedwell, T. Bedwell, T., W., and G. Hunter, Do., and John Smith, T., W., and G. Hunter, Do., and John Smith, T. W., and G. Hunter, 11 11 Do., and John Smith, T., W., and G. Hunter, Do., and John Smith, a jj 11 11 11 T., W., ’’and G. Hunter, Do., and John Smith, Names of Undertakers of the Down Surveys, and Dates of their Authorities. Petty, per Articles, 11th Dec., 1654, Instrtic. Surv., vol. ii. p. 205, also Council Or- der, 15th April, 1657, Petty, as above, ♦ Names of Commis- sioners of these Surveys, and the Dates of their Com- missions. Ambrose An- drews, Barth. Hussey, Thos. Dowse, Edwd. Thomlins,Mat. Stothard, Edw. Withers, and others, 26th July and lstDec.,1654, Instruc. Surv., yol. ii. pp. 80 and 157, Do. Surveys from which Terriers of Lands Ad- measured were taken. Civil Survey, •oa Mr. Hakdinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 63 t'COCOOOOOCOWQOCOXCOOOCOCOCOCOX) V > o o o o PS .. _ a a a a a a a a o o o o GO o co O C2 c n ~eT o «o o o O O to oooooooooooooooooooooooo £>r - © - s c p g © .2 2 5 : wp i , : «3 th Sis E5 » Sat S C PS C5 WH = 3 a? rt c £ & 1 S .1= 3 ** co S'S a a „ , O « >% . o 3 B +* $ T 3 C/^ *3 « 4 H ° ^ 5 °«p| 55 <13 . ^ sSg Ci « 4 -i ®3 0 f 3 >Js I 04JC.Sc O *$* 05 2 .2 <4- 0 CO 0 2 R£.g °s S 3 b H § H= pq hO pq d pq ^ « wS Wh 4 co . q B o i s « 0 o ^ 03 * p rW < 03 L> ^ ic ^ 7,10 C o o f- s °o S - 3 2 ^ 3^5 C ;s hh <0 On . ^ -5 M J o 2 O CO r-i g >• oS O p-f M o Fh O &H | 2 i P O o O 10 ff9«01Ht>fl0O'0«)Tjlo a P=H O w to to to co co o o CO a y* p O g s 2 ^ -2 © =„ . „ a x-P l 03 G Q3 H 03 03 CO S‘35 ^ ft ^ -g *P p t3 5 5 P £ p cz 2 03 m ^ a CM ; cs » o a I > rH Mr. IIarding e on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 65 | -r C. N O X j C^IOUOCOCO’^CO’^IO r - I O (M H (M eg IN H JI W H CO 1 Cl CJ d r tC uO O o C£> fa fa t>- o o o o fa O fa r-T iO iO CC o o o o o © Cl ~CO o o o CO r-» ^-! 1 -H o - o o o o o o o Cl 5 3 3 ^ ra « ra ra a o B Z h h ■a-S .S o © c © Q o C © G © Q o C VOL. XXIV m PROVINCE OF ULSTER, COUNTY OE ANTRIM. 66 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. VO 8 7 6 rH »H CM c3 WHOOCOCOP^INN^ CM CM CM CM CM CM vo vo CM CO CD O N P CO CO ^ COCDHOJ^OOOlM rH CM H eg (M rH (M rH CO Antrim, - = s 0, Antrim, Antrim and Armagh, ? rl H rH T— ( s' s' •c _‘P3 1 "1 “ ? Antrim and Armagh, = = t = = s = Antrim, »» 5) ?) 11 11 11 GQ = p s CO - rH GO GO t>Tt>r tCtC i>T tC t>T VO VO VO VO VO VO lO VO cococo coco cococo C5 m d d p=I d . I . I 02 PS 02 e K 03 t>* t"» t>» t> t> VO VO VO VO VO CO CO CO CO CO ■g S&s 'd £ 3 C/3 ^ C/2 o o CM CM CO CO oooooooooooo CM'cHCOOOT^r^CO^CO-^r^OO I I I I i O Gr-j oo o £ ^vo vO CO CO *! OT 0 c3 C3 03 H Pa H P=3 P5 pq a A H £ A Q PS H Ss PP A A S S : \ as o £ s w o >2 # v u C3 > . •£ -3+2 ot Urr'H.H nd 1/3 o D § SjS lfip| u t." > r . 72 u VO p-c vo s S CO 3 o cj O H (fi W PL| n , *xs z: th O CM s r > o AD n2 £ *5 ^ -*-» p, g § 2 a & • * o H c • O .2 o ® g £ o+^o £ 'S s a .3 || 4 | . »l'S? § ^ss-a Is^l « == ° a iosE ! g S I - 2 1 ! 2 8 ; h P5 r* d S 2 1o ^ 53 o c O ^ ‘C ‘G S ^ 'VI a^® w J2 - ^*5 alls'll i 02 g- rt “ ’ ►s (P I S5 O' h2 " d :d 03 _4 CO' o vo t> v-( > Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 67 INOOOIO = = Antrim, » » S = = P = = c = = = = K = = Antrim. Antrim an( Armagh, s _ < *4* ^ --‘ ee s- a sw d pH - P o „ a •5 P ■= .2 S n ; h . a 5 2 B c 5M . 3 h a oaca < EP o o p ■< a 02 S? «» a c a a PS o o H 3 - 2 -i -5 O « 'o, >-5 pp >-» 0 Ph a f 3 o £> 6 * ■ ® <5 P w o <1 § ps P=H o >* H S 25 P O © <) h « q S fa' O a <1 Ph S3 © o 5 '*- H rA ^ 1 CJ 'J1 fM 2 P r a a - - i 2 2 2" § o h m(b 2 u fcT *© <« © © C ^ S a.'© «e co h co -,.2 cs «* o *? 2 k. a © 33 ^ ^ ^2 r ^ <0 v ^ fl .O ^ eg ' © -U OT . ^ I £ P 1 I _4 co c© ' o *o -f ! > T-* CM PROVINCE OF ULSTER, COUNTY OF ARMAGH — continued. 68 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 03 c3 03 g,c o ’3 § & s o?j) gp& 2 I ^ 5 P So 03 ° O ^ T3 ^ S ft'l'g 53 m 5 O .S -H *d r G 2 co cfl.2a C3 g,G C ,_ » p/g} ■~ P Sv S £ P O O P O 03 « a 0^0 w 3 ^ U ^ Eg? C3 c H fc! 9 - 1 «! § £.g ^ O) (D § 9 £.2 CO © +3 ^5® o ®8 | .2 g « g Q S ori O 2 ‘p £ . |Sl1! p r« o J 3 c3 SiH 3" G _q+- <0 Q O “2 & o rH >.- ? ~ .12 ^ > •* ^iT3 -p »0 ^ iO ij * bo a 2 < S -• o d OMiJH o pL, o ^ m bO 3 © 2 ° G S .5 T3 ^ G J- 03 ; 2 §3 H ^2 -h d egt B g CD CD a o a c» CD PB 7_ -a g S § §S CD i CD za *— urj •> G o c5 as > CQ s r . ! Pu CU 1 a 03 • £ m :s -K U ^ G 3 -3 -? 03 03 P PH O '. P< r O c$ co > xn g O . 03 O C/3 « 'G ^.5 ^•SsS : 5 M 2 t tu - a , n3 t-..g ^ a J a M a -CD y> - "S o. § - a ta -a « ®, CD CD vs a a _F ;|“se - 3 G c = ^!z;D^ rU 03 5 03 -.Sf bo-S ; 5«b: H(N < > .3 sg cq S .2 . 2 gS G Ofl c,v ‘" to ^ '3 ;Sw: fH DD o A o J CD "lib" c n (M 03 ^ .i ftj ; CD £ !» P3 S ? 1 ’S >. CL,r3 c3 CO ► CO co ^ e c ii o p CO 5 r Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 69 i © e* — < oo tH CO . 2 s 2 OB:£d£ — « o © c '■go 20 ■s J S 4 2 — = S 2 = ° = o B « 2 e d Q H c = o«$ 9 2 to o a -J) — o a ? © c3 to^S© -a — 2 . © a 3 2 5 2ES | § E | COODQIillijJJOH P 6 ►w © *- JS Qj3 © S © rS ji> j3* • g cj a 73 "o. 22 522i S Pi = - s = ^ o ^ Kr : “s>&E 3 -§) * | I §4 2 . fl l- ^ S M 0 '. «5 GO P _ © H3 j: fl O 63 *3 d 2 ^ © c > « o d 2 C5 2 > C O VOL. XXIV. ft PllOYINCE OF ULSTEE, COUNTY OF DONEGAL. 70 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. cooot>ior^t>aoco eg eg < < — ^ of " o »o CD CD ccPLco 0 . ^ o c-d Zt °* © ^■gg 1 i'll o a ! w CD - -CD »o lO ^ CD CD - - - "C « (U S' 3 r o on G c3 1 s r G 5<3 PL, - | a - « p-i 6 ft : : i <3> l-T § & X C3 'g *G - • M ^ o o rS bn CQc-c.S 2 o 3 «^c) • §*.£ a > 5 S :g S S Ooo£,5MMWWt4 £ 9 § 2 a « a a. CJ Gh £ s QJ O) tJ H pq | do &| § _ .9 1 G 9 .y -fCD © a> c 'G -*j -2 p—5 | ■§ § a g -g i* — o « O g £ a, OOQBhrtH 5h ?■ * M -g* ? s a .£. 2 ©/— \ 9 ^ 3 d;_«,i S B 'G O --C fe © G g 3 ,b g . c P V CD £ bJD fcp^ O £ _0 _G F3 w£ «8*p a « o ^ofioddMWSM 1 ; -a B 5 G G H H S 1 PQ xt . M> O 2 fcb £ C/2 c _ o ) ^ 9 r= .00 O fe . U 0 ^3 C3 C5 ” C3 Kfl,j JKMMH _ a ,3 e<£*2 * P3 e £ | .5 « B a -2 c • 8 i B ■■ # OQOHMH 5 “S <=.5~ C3G ~ (( i So: c ,_ S'P.-E .2 5 g-p gsu g o § Jw" 5° <1 PQ PQ sS 1° CO Tt CO co co W^pq 3^: =pq pq ^ pq -p: pq H H H H H H hF HH £ Eh rG 5 ^ © o -I rG ®«3 r* o 0 ’ a 'O : s-s s S fe >»«s.2 $Ss;°a a.2 s s 3 S 'G CU ^•g-P ^ . SSflil gai§a 3 P- CO G ^ G 'G i«-. ni O G a i-g S o 5 d) D, O qj D <5 g ^ o ^ m«o ^ c oT ^ G ^ G a) oT Snfg'g.bS; •=£SW« Eh > b *° t ! to i; < rt .ffl ^ 3 aa ii ’ °° o > COUNTY OF DOWN. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 71 PROVINCE OP ULSTER, COUNTY OE DOWN — continued. 72 a Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. ° o « m'rt Pk e S'Cg Q O c3 r 3 , S .C G ^ •s .p; 03 o 5 g gd P-< n. ** JH °„-g § ■fi . CS^J Ph cd 'd d C co oj 03 cn ^ 2 S 3§ P >p C- c „ p D -Ijj < 4-1 2 H +2 °Qq? S" g 03 <*i 53 52! ° w cd a Us?* O^g'So •S S gg l s s g ° a pal »5 w cc os Q o|^ co ->H ^ P^d o ' ~ q 75 >X3 b .$H § CQ *l°a 03 00 03 »>• 00 <£> _T ■Sb^ cC - £ 5 *- p c~ ’3i«#J , fab<3 a ~ E & « ~ £ I O £ S= «p ^p 3 =a "S * 9 is ^ O P ■< =g«T Sfcj o o p4 P p o bD c3 a d Q .§ ¥ ■Jo 3 o C3 PP o cd P C 5 Pi co P 03 Pi" cd P O Pi" (d "iPcP io o CO CD o cd I I P o d 6 « £ r goo a>oo p g£ o a s«o |Q« ||o P 5 5 g> ■§)•§> 1 ^ W H fl -U W P HH cd W <1 o ►-3 3 — 3 & d £ cj r bD 'd ,cu 03 O ^2 bD c • - n d % 3 2 s ^3 r-.rd.gP ^ 1 G ^ 5 £* 03 ‘p! o d U2 c3 03 pqpqpqPPWMWH P c« S 1/3 r° ^ c3 w § p o p pi « G3 s ^ . — I »o 3 «5 ioq’S d ^ O. s-i . CP Si .q I -*P • d C3 <3 co S ^ a 12 O _ S 2 > - io si io CO 3 o rH CQ (M d CQ - » 05 ^ dii . H CQN a - 13 -m 04 5 OO M ^ C3 . o h £m2 s Jl jl' r d CO r— i 03 03 O S- O O O-^d 03 CO HH >• 2 'd ^. 2 % , a' o dod | S-i 5 S 35 J; 5 W | ^ P §I.SS ® oT S ! -a ■ -a? •£ > M a e p. .q __ ■-epppP^^pPPH »— < -*r „ go i— • CO O QJ *J1 rj P P^i 1-5 > ■gill ) Q- rq p« q i «• °> ; !£■ <» ! O wo : >■ t-h W O <1 a Ph W Fp Ip O H P O 03 I ^ ° p = o 8 O P o £ . 1° d o >i c3 PQ g _ ,d 3 ° JZ 5 PQ 03 k. r- rd ^ 3 gj'a 6 2 5 'd -pa a d . ./d s-T cd" r ® ! I ® Ph o rO CO d bo r d ^ 3 ■« . cu d p ^ o b 3 3 O 03 CO O Si CO ». Ph H O CO W > U1 S3 d .2 co no" "s i £ <2 & a GQ V 5 Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 73 0 N OC [' x 0 11 0 -d w ==« = ^ a - eg ~ 2 m 5 'to S 3 2 « ; r 1 | 'to | M 3 C3 3 c c 3 5 4 '3 *£ — T J1 0 = = r 33 ^ ' 1 ! 6 O * ^ * r l— ' ^ ~ c4 H ►3 J 00 00 I I 9 i i ° 2 CQ *tb ? .*2 2 © = t0 t0 -3 < - O C c - ^ CO C3 O O ^ ^ 3 ® ~ a O _ Kr Gig o « rj >, » cu "3 aT g l ■ eS G m « m ^ © 55 O O » CO 55 PH P3 - o p o pH H £5 c d ■s? to o O r-; l S a>-j =s a - - a a to o <1> r-5 C c © o Q a to O © T3 c a © o a a o « w a o « w a o « K >4 o <3 9 W o m C5 I 03 ooooooooooo -^CXJ'^OO-^CO^'^^OO^ 9 03 o o c o o ■?. be S 3 -2 o 3 £ CS O = :3 -< u a Q US « o a ss Hi « d ci c; «»P» to t- c h co c 3 <3 © to •rt r; — ~ ^ ■ - J a to - bb 5? > g S> c 3 C 3 ►- — ■ y " to _ a ^ a § «rt a - o c3 > ~ ^ ^ WJ -C«tOfcC ^■ " 3,2 a C > C 3 fl fill- tj fl O O •- X < fe « ’ ^ <10 > a ~ s 5 ^ £ -H Eh S pH O W1 a <1 do W £ IDh a 3 W 0 m a I ? a ‘to tf to a» KH tO .r C « ~ a a> - o > *“S H ^ u tz © si. •2 o o a 5 . o o w a-ta u o» 3 +■> ©£}©*© if* <3 3 £ O H S t • 3 b lO O 3 O HCO Ol -.*5 3 6 S'S ^ ^ sf ^ g4i,?o 3 03 W © §;■« 2 r S' ^ 1 8 j -• § S SP r_ g 5 ; 3 •S«2i5^<3«si^l h PROVINCE OF ULSTER, COUNTY OE LONDONDERRY — continued. 74 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. o 2 ©U G* S&jS 2 i 'O £ ° Crrt 0^73 y 05 05 ^ S pl s 5 PJ C.S fl C3 O ft P«*S ^ lL O sis gsg 2 ,,SS a) a) h 2 T3 -D 'Sh'q, 'S ® a) j , .g'd J fn a c Er .- 2 2 - S w ® OftH a — . PP O 55 I *e S3S 1 go'-i o« § a M 15 5 a oo _2 0 (h cS fcS §g OM pq a 65 HH a J a a W pq £p M . H H ^ o *c P ^ y co v o ^ : 4; '2 *— i g S | . fiW?OP£i o ( ' 4s V Q a ■>o' l>- : co ^ • Oh c 1H - cj g to ■> 5 <1 K P5 <1 o PR O Eh 0 O o =3 9 02 CD - - - r^i P^ o ^ § c p B J=> C O o O C3 K*> PQ_ _ . b£A "3 H O <3 O H H ^ S' c Sf ® tT - 1 . 1 -as S 3 Ph o rO i -1 to in 3 bo r Is ■§ ^ 35 gi 6 ^ * iS ^ ^ s ■« d S » o ’g '. o.hOco CO c O C£) N O -i CO 05 tN C5 CO N >0 ' oy CO - - - - - co ^ p ? O pi w hi w hi 'g S) o § a o ~ ^ ^ tD P P C3 £ 9 02 o o o o o o CD 00 00 SO CO 00 ft. o r so w> ^ J -s Hijc • 60 A O < O A § C- > •c t- “5 a pq pq o o » *. CO £ E E S S o o v t- v: m -*f — ss-ilJv, ® a « ► O 5 C ! w . _ . iTrS „«o riSH _ H3 tiT-H id b ^ d ^ 13 CSH fS c! ® Cl fl 3 d a >■ *id h c. E 3 x> ^ 3 S S' 3 COUNTY OF TYRONE. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 75 =3 O cs w o ~ z © o - - co - - © eg -r ^ *£. ~ — p « |J o £ £ a D O •'S «T § § COWWCOCO ^^^ iN ^^ iOiOOtNC ^ W ^ O t - N O CO O Ci X O H (N H « (M fl I ►> r 'S sf ^ cf .cf** be - 5 £ £ 2 < C3 ^ - cu •fl p |h c Ph* w hi a a o o co o co O c/5 O co oooooooo oooooocooocooooo P5 .© o •- be ~ £ x a. ^ O — * aj “ O O « co S5 5 tc © — © 5 g g f*-2 o ^ * o g : jh e .73 o >»•— i a> !- © *r P bp 5 g .= 5 .2 W -5 C <, CS ; . "5 B § § J 0.0 5 Q Q Q Q Q.Q 5d « W 3Scc = £2 = = b 1 2 f-"® •- .* 5 U r — a 5 5®®® ■* Si-f) E £ 5 5 5 .11 Q H £ E-£ m is c 2 H so b r . B 5 c ® ® ® S e -S &f r 0 3 Jej ii;. o® « «« . >-obc3®®b Q Q W hJ 53 H H t> O *jJ«OOQqQ ® - •?. ?. 7^ IM w •*- *© •- S © 5© _ ^ = ’"* *© <3 : .. co r c — i >, © p 5 'JS < ♦5 *o © o io i 0 ) *3 ^ O »-l * C 2 a.® I ||o — < 5 « t£ t lias! ° £ "c « : 1 /o'i" : S C » ^ .."l c« g--3 oT ?T P os - op: o y : = “ > — a ft PROVINCE OE MUNSTER, COUNTY OE CLARE. 76 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. I ! I I I II I I II II II II I I! I I I I 5K O I I O p P ^ § o o T3 -P» r — o * g » * S?J ® , -d s o Crt (h^D CO CO 0,2 Se-'S'S 2 §2 dt. “ gM C5 I CO o cd o o cd 9 cd O cd i i 00 » £ ~ » Hrjj C3 aj SI S g 5 a Q^r-J I l ^ c3 Oh £ ~ O .H fO O g £* « . A d fl io S © ^ g S g | I S-S 5Sgsss S3 d(£i 5 ooQ^Ht 4 «^i!jwM 3 y a cS a oj -a h m s 13 .a w • a >— * - S js 2 -§ . ••S-S.2'" ~ i-5 3 IS p o &J0 p b“ © H tj a f ■ g >,.S .2 .g Ph § * £ Sg 3 'S' 2 i? 1 2^'3 ■y P a-L S3 g 2 g a ■ j a cii cp 03 C?H H S £ £ g g -S . S © S o § pqJggS""" . ,0 t. 22 « P P p O^IOOPPPP O <2 E W> II be be a es OK 5 s-( ,11 E pq 2*^ “gf.s El'S m ^3 T3 m p cs a 6 &S 22332 u- J a x £ ! ^ 5? II 3 1 fijM g► - tS . 2 13 'g S ^ ® o rO H (/} a bo T3 a su a) * aw <» a a o o ca d-^h Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 77 I I I I I I II II I I I I I II I I I 1 II I I II I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I f I II I I I I I I I I I I I II I I « I I I I I I I II I I II I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I I I o PS 4 ■4 I I I I I I I I I I o co - z O c6 O * ■« o s © s © c ■s.«jS b S s « S55 ' fcci- ■ . . o »- s^wospstSososos^HH of ◄ w“ Q PS o 4 pq fa 4 J ►j CO o 4 a H W Ph o o pH o pH Eh O © c „ a Vj P- _ © 1| d g «3 o cd O co O PS 4 4 o o cd . .d PS a . w> o«s -d hi to « « o a *2 o .2 “ o 2 5 QPOh c c _S A ‘p° 2 §b 6o J ' £•£*!! §3 §£ © © E fa 3? Efjj 4 4 S O oa CB H W OS PS < PS o >. a & s >» »h rSi J-S K H a 1 1 ® -ii i d 2 P ss° S-S-- H 8 r | £ ~ | SjSj^ 3.2 6 ^ * fc -© 3 b W o H qj S ^ t- ^ tB-p i iiint Cu g :a YOL. XXIV PROVINCE OE MUNSTER, COUNTY OF CORK — continued. 78 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. N(N(NW(N^OOO(NOHNiCiH HCO t> O *3 O W o O o PS ~ » - Ph PS H d d d d d ^ g • O O m ©|g g« 13 pi, M O O O o o ^ ^ o O CO o CO O co ■m d.,3 .« O o vS ».q o%p -< Q. 5" - Cj O CD SI £ rt .§1 S> «5 rC 2 'be . 2 « pa 3 a .IcE 0«i P # fap > ■ . PQ 3 d no sag a a £ o o 5 fl QOQOflfiO'"3 o d >, bficS^ i £ C c« -i - s © ■ §« q c c3 .5 ^ S * c3 :£ WM MW be +3 CO -u 32 a? >3 ^ | .3 §2 .. pq d p be C *r- ^ c 3 J s as cS PQ p p j. o >, £ o g rs >> S’-.'tb »£ S as £ £ o-eSa o o tie es q S 2 2 2 2 ,£1 £ O 5 PQ pQ jrt -5 _ .^«C ci oj os c: c3 cs o.-£ O <5 2 £ 02 PMJ PQ - p ~ p -r P £ cu tu CD «+i _ . _ . g s -g s *s s 0 h C 3 G ^ J M CG H «2 pH P5 o ^ • ^ w a • be § be o Cm H T3 go CS >> C3 5 ^ _ £ S '> s J o a; 3 cd o HbHbHM. : t>> oT CD C CD hJ dL W pJ8 PS ^ ps i 22 O I S 'ai M ~ « > M i^l s In °fio| fl gii m dCH C3 jZj° ! 2 .2 S S+^o u co O o §]§ J ■S|£ll S G f ° 3 e.2g| ^ Q 2 -t< Q o := 2 >o o t- s 5* & . p- 1—1 *7" ^ g o <1 tf a P h ^ o) 3 o ’ ->o > S K.oHA s d > f- Pi „ g a a ^ t * r 1 ! rv i u - r '-3 Ps( Tti g c™ — (>. A SjS'S^P'S ° pfacSSngt. § b"ai 3 ISsSu S-a^S* ®?°a t- CO Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 79 iO®ONNOH-< v XNHiONO^^Tf(OCOM^OO M « H h <^^!N'^'n’NC^COC^o 3 , 5 , COC 5 COWeOWiOrtN«(NlNCOO COW> O s> <5 O m C n ^ i*} o ^ to 2 « s 2 c ^ ^ t?i1 lilt! gffllili 1 §>1 -1 ^ § 3 - J jo P is o 11 g o © tg ^ III I !!!!•! JJf&J!!!i j I §5 !i=5 riim 5Qa(2q£^£Si— w -- w — d C3 bfi d ^ * c- -© g -C © a- H » of p£ - to „ ■£ « 1552c. 2 *? 1 g a %, £ ! 2 s w . - — ^ c . •* _ JIM i 1 i*g§§ issassa .s | J ^'a H ^ r 4 >-5 Ci H .. o ^ tB d eS O .2 o o d g ^ g d sk2 © ■“i r* *-i 3 J g B - :g‘| c © = S , ^ K tfl ^ o c C d> •CO © s g c o M 5 b i ^ I o>» 5 o ^ §S° Ou o Cd (5 M •3 . o | d c © o d r =11 i O = nr. s g S T3 S R§-2 w °o g « «- 5 !3 oi o 3 £S s £‘|l 1 a « ja o 2 as o 5 02 Pd to" Sg| s* © © SQ rO '/) sO >> 2 ta 22* g a © .2 cs "d fcf -o' ca . d. ^5 »0 > ,-T c; so a 2 rO 5 L° limits H J C » ^ d s s § ■a s *. anOcoH 02 PROVINCE OE MUNSTER, COUNTY OP CORK — continued. 80 Mr. Hardin ge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. ; 13 ° .2 ,, © S c ° 5 S-“o . £ H « t, » O 43 C .r2 d O'*-* <3 © o ... o „,d -rj *fig£| !£>S S go go 5 w CO 03 525 Q C5 O s? « « & r-Z lO O 3 « CO ^ fi-jn -a j o ^ ^ <; rj a ~ hh o *- a> 3 > OO &w Oh - .■ ^+j o _ ^T*o j- *-o OJ CO 3 o C3 'C rt CC c^ W o H 03 o3 b! r t- 5 ^ 111 M.§ o 03 a 0!C:«35S r 7?r< >0 ^— ^ “J |> >• 2 rK H 50 ^ O rlsp eo„,H " k t* CM C- OtN^COClOJ^OOCOr-iiOOCD <03 03 CMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCMCM C3 i co co Tti r> o | co t>» | co • I CO CO CO CM 03. H-i S PQ i« . i ra ’ o '■if' O -a' c O O Q rf ' s = s 5 K E E E afaaaaSESEEEES ft" oq : ; ; : ; | E a 1 ® o o o o o ft' ft ft a s s s a s | a 1 * ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft no o o o E a Q no no 03 03 >b bu n3 rrf ® 03 - ^ C ~ il C3 -■£ S fl © £ s § fi Q ft ft d 9 d d d W m m CO ll LO CO <03 l> TT< <03 »o> CO rH <03 cT LO co oooooooooo COOOCOOOGOOOCOCOOOOO I I LO CO H 0) ^ £ cs ?-< a ph % ►- 1 a a ° „ ®g§»3 s a ae-H : * a : .3 .a .s 03 03 o .a S . cs 3 U4 « H H Q OPQQ rO - 3s w ; Of _ c3 •r; C 03 03 r o S 53 a ^ a s Q O Q3 £ C fla3Coojc5ra(c d -e ^ 2 P> Id — ^ u H ° cC cu •a saaa So^ QQ^MMMlZiH Oja O 03 M h « w M t3 o o o J h3 <1 d P ft H >T O eg S J§ ft e pj H 0 ft < O ft o ft ft ft o ft ft s? rO O _ c no c 3 >» § ^ c s !> « H w S §« s ® a 6 b no h 3 p; w uo LO ft. - ft CO O 2 O ® >,o s ^ 03 . te fa o ►* PO >> o I* s tt d ft o ft o ft d ft o ft © ft Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 81 a ©J O I |0«0 lOCiCiOOCO *-t I I ^ ^ niOOiOX WIN ^ (N ^ Ci r-t i-i r-i * P P o o c t3 o o o o o o 00 co ^ O' I 1 1 II I o o o o o 0C X X T ■*? 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G ^ I o _ coo wm wwbSpbs ts .2 E S s r bfl SB a s £ 2 i & ^ 0.5 rj C-2 rj go.ft.2 .2 § 2 -E c 2 £P g§S a w o CQ nd 'O 'TS .S' 5? kT 5 &T c3 o' cj i , Cl qj 131 *5 CO J? » a > » a ,i5 o o C3 > ri t: a® i gfip3 (D ^ * a o os “ 4J *« o a a .2 » S“B3 ■ *J H P <5 03 o a p 1 d, p -u Q ° iO 3s ^ £ a o5 g „ rO H co ^ bo r S -w . o. r2 w > - pio — lO n a) O 3 o c3 T3 tH CO (N p 1 O 3 •« HH m p v/2 £ t-K S-I • 4_> ? T3 (O M O a> QO © U. p o I. PhU COH > m r ! W|H(S I’ E » .9 « J. «, , . § a BB . -3 6o Tf 2 :p P3.S.« §"3 2-r 80, S'=< ^ . rt M-p a bSl il sijr «s°g co 53 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 83 PROVINCE OE MUNSTER, COUNTY OF KERRY — continued. 84. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. Folio. II ” 1 4 & 5 120 6 Passim 115 i i i r 122 119 Volume. Kerry, Kerry, Munster, Kerry, Munster, Kerry, III 1 INI 3 Munster, * « 1 Miss; m 1 1 llllg mi p~ i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 P~ Ph H p p i M 1 p4 ! ! 1 1 1 1 1 p Ml ^ 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 d Ph T3 CU ns p p p p p p P o O O ' o cs o a o a o a) ci © c « 3 £6 ■H oO : O P o P I .1 GO -PS (O -PS r>* t>T t>* t>T ia to to to co co co co 9 GO 9 GO ~ps ps o' kO CO CO CO 9 GO 9 02 9 GO O i GO 9 GO 9 GO W ~ & tl 3 § « §• ^8 O I I I 2 i •o (.£"» 0 M 05 2 m m CD 2 1 &S1 cj H ?3 ftj fl fl r C Gj C 3 Q5 MH C- 'd d s 1 O a. a O cu c5 % .5 a O- d o ?> c3 CCS >,o Pi O pS . d d c« O H ,2 03 cD .'S 13 >* CU 3 § > ■ 3 CO O.S ~u o Pi W ci s .2 o Do. with each. O cS Pc H ° rd Oh rj o .d 03 P ! p o o s @ H o P-i 6 d ~ Cj U 0r d I, .s , J3 CC < S 8 < 1 PD g £ x-l =!? 1 ° r £ c ® © O ®3 ^ >3 *S 2 m S S.jf §ai gif O g « o ^ S a p o y 3 PQ J 2 — £ £ S, ho "5 3 53 3 a O g >..2 P -3 5-> CT P £ d'P £ 'g pj 3 .SE S w 2 fl r, - T3 g - a o -c ° 2 £p13 ■ £ e s 3jS 6 omooSaSi? F= C..2 ffl 2 « d”* >, o §■§ g «p3 O 2^ >>■“ % & a p ~ O fl ZD a T3 t> ► ^ kO U CO 3d o CO GO S X x: o * co ^ . a°r ^ ^ 3 c -g 3 O ..„•>« ^PP ^ -C ^ Q 2 tH ^ "~1 ^ 1-1 53 d, cc o G -gp^pqo^^ g ° « l-a (M ►— 1 C ©d 3 ■ S “'d c ^ a 25 53 3 3 6 2 ^ 3 ~ “>°a •? 3 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 85 I I I I I I I “ I I I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I 1 I fl I % I I f I * a I I I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I = 1111111*1111 I I 11 1 1 1 ~ £ niljin i 1 a f 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - r = p p Si O = = s «a‘ s = , s.-a, a s £ £ c; i'- s I I I I I I IS I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II I a © a s. ccccccrcr:: — 3 a s..®- a — £ g* ,11 l&'LJj I 5«14ii!!«!!li IS1= II I illllllliii oc-s<:«ss:s:u3 u: u; a g c < ra i ; ^ ^ iE ^ ^ tc £ rr )Oc3i2i355^0KH o< w pSH o o o -(N(N(N!N(MM«r-((Nr^(NM(N(N(NH | O l'* ' o o CO a a •* §f CP cd S s,-see,,i,e:, = ks c 3 1 | !" c c c c c 1 G J* •c 1 G of pppppppp^ppppppp « 1 of = = c s s «r r r o o o G ^ PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP P3 1 * c c c c c * c4 H w K g G G G 1 s = ■ft ■s . r ,1*1 & o o C/2 ~pppppppp > -3 i Tji TT rr CC r}* • 00 | 00 O 2 pppppppppppppppp o | ci £ - — —IS ^rppr0.ppppppppp ^ !•£ ^ s 5 s d. , = .- o 4|iflii|i.ililli "MJJUsIJililll “II -A ^.s « s f.-a§ I ^JUipU I f S3 G C G ►4 O G U 23 4 a Vj 1 J5 ilgjp ISlfsis f.plljs p, - .rO~<«S 1 |!lll,J 9|i rrj *2 _ _ Mm > a a r rt! g> fc® s X p. © © o 2 "■» O 15 K a w £•>« ® g ~2i >-» l s I af = _. •i?3 w -J^G£«r2:= 5 k a « 1 2 « fr t 5 VOL. XXIV. PROVINCE OF MUNSTER, COUNTY OF LIMERICK — continued. 86 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. o CO (N co (N 05 CO ^ CO H 50 03 — ( 2 CO CO CO OJ SS 1 ! i I 1 | | | (NCTiiOO^COCOCCNCO 1 1 1 O ^ rf N -f O iO iO d d r ,__5 ,r & <= s r^< t^* P =5 r =5 CO B CQ CQ a a a a • 5 ® as CJ as CJ y-* aa *3 as i ii i i *u o 2 2 2 2 2 .a .y -y ■r = "Sill II III 03 - p p ^ o QJ a 3 5 o 3 03 3 .1 s 2 s 2 a s £ s £ £ a s a 3 2 3 a a •—I vJ a 3 co" = = = — 1 oT s = = = OS" o>“ s s s » 1 ® 03 - ^ | OS' p l“l 1 1 1 1 III «r s s = s s s s r s ^2222 Sfcf cf o r "o •* r. a> o o o o o o ■o A o o o M « S 0 0 0 |« a o = = a l W ' |9 = |« = 1 1 1 1 1 III « = = = s : r = = = C 2 ^ ^ ^ ^ W a a a a a a a d a a a , O ~ ~ p 3 ® ® ~ ?J S'p , o£S«5 3'pTsS J ?“o^i J) 2~o.£o£oq£q~E~2o£o2 |»0£0a0 5»5 S g S g0 S 0| Ofi o B OfiQQOQQ « o T3* r O „ o> 03 rr cL >> C C 3 c o|| Qq o ■S2° 11 ! 9 aj a O P3 aj O a5 03 03 O IQ CO CO o2ip r O , p c3 Isa I I oooooooooo (M-^'^CO^ri'^OOOOrtiQO $&! I II >o 2 2 £ £ ‘O - io 'd fa 03 'g | S g s g *S 3 C <3 c3 « ~ s a> ~ cu 'of) a P zz 'P, p >, 2 r 2 'c? w 5_ - o s :q :q 22 UOOOOCflO^WW <£! c2 . 5 3 i I as >> rt* c : ^.S S3 g i 2-r ? ^ > ! ^ C 3 3 1 § o 03 d Jz; « « i H 3 O CQ ao >> ■& S A I - a = 5 ‘So 2 .!£ § 3 3? m g m g != ca cS JE O bJ3 — ^ B'JODWOy H S |® ^ si B &l • « 1 = I B S ro TJ £ CJ £ W -C s= 22 2 £ 22 2 S 33 s3 o aj 22 bJO E- 5 pH 6 g >,1- d r o r o £ S 03 m £S C3 cJ S bj) :0 .2222 pq © |2 g 12 6^333 5 fcfliq '2'3 f ^ to E o‘2 £ .2 a 2 'r to S§ 9 Of a S a .5 « -g a § 8 1 a ■C3 ■<} a o o o < i a 03 O o << Cd H 03 o o »3? V * ssg .gSPH 2 :»n *3 > 'S I I £ « 2 t* co r i| S|g |s Ph 'o r O ^ co 2 bO r nq *3 3 -w . a, C m < 1 - q ft o . CS 2 o £ 2 •- . M * g ” is OSSotSo '. ftnOeOH b> co .£ ^ 2 uo ^ ic 2 5 o 3 O ai 'P T-t CO !M g £ ? S t> « J5 H ^ o : o S ^ c «o *-> o o co OS T-H « >rt(N Mr. Hardin ge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 87 a o oo co 1 1 « I M # ca o = o o ,2 o o o ^ o o 1 rf o • « | 85 S S = = 3 3 , , „ o 3 = j « c 3 o 3 3 3 d 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 d* a Good, Destroyed, Good, Damaged, Good, n o O r o' o ; ; ^ o O Good, Damaged, >> Destroyed, Damaged, Good, o o o ca 3 i' o o CO CO C m O CO P=H O P 3 cT cT vo >o co o I I oooooooooooooooo n ^ t- “** £ O X ^ g X? 2 s 3 S - § •§.— J J S j§ e 2 300033:2530 C s © a> © !s ” o 3 . ~ s J s § 3 Q -5 = •= ^ .2 c ° 53 13 .C fe-s-g 3 °3 O c: r y - *3 a s'Ss - s ^.S2 -a cc o a '• Ch o z g 5 a 3 w - C3 o.S ? o 2 . r a g u « J S .2 © ~ ej ~3 3 C £ .2 2 o < < < 2 3 ® 5 • . . a S° § Q - E a it. Ill fill 2 - C' w' r bD - i. c © _= o *o ■£ 33 «5 £ hO? B S3 3 3* t- — •- .S rt X *- * rt ^ o oo o ; m oT |s ca £ S 3 £ ca •J 3 ■• 1 1 1 1 §>>3 -3 is 3 3 ■§ > O 33 ro iQWWWSggcococococo cu tko CQ jj*§?i g> ..0.000 o«a oh 3 3 K ffi 3 H « > eq O r d H GJ « C . r 75 ci *3 --S g § OflS = j « • . be « c£ J 5 QOCK^O 35 oo H d 33* 33* ,"2 a a CO : £ I 1 * 1 M 13 .2 .2 ’> > ’ 5 © © 3 O o PP a c o ** 9 3 co O co X 73 5 s -2 — ;2 O co O PROVINCE OF MUNSTER, COUNTY OF LIMERICK — continued. 88 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. O '3 ■s o° “do *3 2 i ' d . S P S' r> °'^'0 § cc ^ PH 2 S 53 o P o P 5 3" . e o a; s CS Tj « O ~ © C a> +-* c3 to o ^ d o o o y ^ c ^ o P 2 3 5 2 « S ! .2-^ = 3 Logg Q °' S 3. O S ■ E © o3 a> ,-P C 3 c s « o = 2 k 2 ^3 ^ p- •— ^ c £ m . c cS "S "3 73 Z Is B 2 ^ 3 ood i-P= P ; tp o 1^2 rP S O ?3 H 5 I ^ I if §1 1 p 15 I 0 go £ c/5 s co O co P 53 > 03 r P ig *-05 ; ±r ^ a ^ , rO r * H co 03 be ; p -*-» cm S C 0) to P ci t-h CO £ £ g Jc x o O o3 jz ■jn h g « CQ cu - « 3 «o n i- — oSQK £P"g^ 33 c.^, 5 5“ „ * ■ oi ® rj « to § ~ .. _ w -d >o c: ■~ *-? o *o 00 e f- " ja -a M ° O Ph m rH |Zi P O O (N m I CM | tjt A H £• M- CM C. H H 1 1 CO - | 03 1 * 1 cT 0 -g - ^ - 35 ? o • M3 >. E £ S ^ : ' c af *2 > - V S3 M3 — C3 © .2 S® = T n P o rO go *2 I ’3 i. chOcoh > CO ■s s-S 2 g f Kffi-? ' 0J P = C C a c S . CJ ~Jfl ^ • u o :P ^ . 2 - bej w *P C P _D T — . *S«^^° : =M3Sio 3 C3 P-( P— K* 1 -— Pd - y—l I > 33 Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1G40 to 1G88 89 O 1— « CO 2 I I 00 Tt« *0 50 o o CN iO IO ^ CO O H (N I eOOCOOOOK N t-» (-■ <2 PS - o O PS ;;;;;;; |M PPPPaPP 'o a <3 a> a o p 4 a o a a a PS o PS a p 1 Q d CO cf o o d d cf >o> eo l I I I i l | I o o © © o | I CO X ^ 00 X o CO o o o o CO 00 o I I I I •£ © X£3 *r* r tCi — ^ > 5 ^ : 2 5 © i-S3 i O a> — * S £ s 5 o >, 3 ^ c 5 5 © •- - ^ rs :2 « « © o o 2 3 c 3 « QQHOMMMmm JwMcntnajHHE-'H I? »• §•£ . -H , • * §SO. g © £:* 3 © « o <3 * sa tc 5 2 S 5 2 ^ 3 £ 3 3 3 »s. Q) c/> 3 Cl. O fcl)^> to >. g o S' »© "r? jr? — TI 3 ~ O 3 3 — 3 •— ■ — asau3S:^^> "tb-S 8 "3 ^ c-"S . o £ '= : 3 « as <» i c pq Q> f/? O’ -5 -3 ”3 js ja a a- - I* §‘6 'So. i = g. o So e -2 I S 2 05 o m JJ ~ o o W ^ 9; " - d -3 3 a *-m _3 CJ . cj c5 « _, S to „ = £ s C3 8 ^ 2 ,2 •§ 2>J •= a pq « g ►> J -g -g 9 -s 3 i Q 5 l£ 6 <1 c3 03 c5 « PQ O ’ ' _fco_e a 3 Q a O a pa -» o — 'S o = O b. ca , -s g-§ o V0E. XXIV S PROVINCE OF MUNSTER, COUNTY OF TIPPERARY — continued. 90 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 6 1 1 1 I I | 1 1 1 | 1 III 1 1 t> CO ca | t^. o >o — ( CO O CO (N 05 w 1 1 1 CO N N a 00 1 II II II 1 II 1 1 1 1 l 1 CM 1 CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CO CM 1 1 1 03 C -3 (M 03 CM T — 1 CM 03 T-H Cm 03 CM Ph ' • i & rd »» § PQ M B D c 3 b 1 I] 1 1 1 I II j 1 | 1 ] 1 1 3 V 1 CN S U O - 1 1 5 ; ^ s c 3 CH Cd Qu Cd C. Pd H a. ^Q. fa H H H H r - 1 1 ! 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C a; •H'O O ■£ c3 « O Ill'll a .2 i3 »3 W CQ ^ ft Q 03 O S S'i o P fa <3 ^ » 5 ’§® § IS si* i >, m to ' 'a C VS OJ c 3 Ph It! -C "' u a ^ . 2 f — 2 r-" 2 O £ rt £ n3 ti - o c ^ > o «o C h 3 a a? p 02 PufC g s . « „ | -5 O ° ^ O g C S5 5 oD^-gfig c afafai>«^gfa»>S l> u 3 02 Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 91 CO 'O CO C3 N CO CO O - 'O CC O -f 4 CM t t - CO lOOOOiOOOOiO^OO^Oo^tO^CO'^i^iO — Cu £.£• s o O -s-I o c" w • J C £ I rs ^33 to o zr o c o C G - 5 ~ »- c 3 c 3 o g "O s= e» 6 o » o G 03 II II I 1 1 I 1 1 I I I I I 1 1 I I tf.JZ ? rP z *e £ -= © = es ;3 — 3 'r? k 4E3 ^ ;- .3 ~ O ,0 r O C5S >■ — ^ "35 3 Ofi do.§ s f K OOOQ3GQH © — to — o ^ W I ® i:* 3 « oS Ch^ «e © - « 5s a U e M '2'2^,'p. — S = a | S I 2 | § -r- ^ *-. y c bJD g.5 o 3 a> cs «Os-a .*?» = J - O _ ^ = *-a G G g o c >> . « = -3 ,*« = _, £3 - = / 3 m 2-2rt^’tbg^S^§^2« ■&■§) « = 2 £ ^5 i:= c “ « ^ A c -= - ^ « g =3 jg "3 3 3 C Jr -- - „ “ <— « •— >— • - rZ Z ■n 3 T. t /#» o < ~U JZ. ,- r _ __ 3 'O to ?z o o ^ '—■ -j b/) a» G 73 73 3 q o° . *-' 32KOCQW^WWtiMjJ 3 S tZ H £-> S s' S s Q „~ 2§ 13 : ~ og -r C . 0 / — :* § « 5 » 3 — S' % 3 | I II I 1 U C zz £ a c . o> # *"0 okJ — I I r r*» 3 3 © 3 33 © 3 3 25 C . o> _r 3 55 .2 3 "3 HI =1 c P3 o O 3 3 © 3 '3 a; 5b t/, 2 -2 1 1 w = a 1 1 c . Ofc> 3 ►3 G PROVINCE OF MUNSTER, COUNTY OE TIPPERARY — continued. \ 92 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. IC 50 ^'MNN‘fl‘ 0 «COO^CHOO?OCO ft H ft H O P$ p4 o f=5 i-3 O r; ^ ~ o o o S : 5 ph O tzi O i m - cp f/2 'W *C p:G G . - 3 ^ o w C a G s *p4| .2 <5 2 *r c p SP O G O p 2 05 g °o — K" ~ ^ O ®5 " t» >= . J ! -8 i £ -3 , ^ fl) O 5 C3” 3 «|^jssE = • «G G c3 •*— • ,— 1 • ■ — •■— ••— 1—1 r? m o ei -G ft £ ? s ^ Ph - ~ o b m b ^ bl) 5 s .S t. pq -S .5 | « -S) § * 5.3 g -S .'rt' - ? § o P G g g £ ft ft ; dpppodpodPSwi Sc®. a s .s s*.® &■§ ai' = - rs ! A i s-s ! w o : 3 a G ►» g G O £ % O £ . ft ^ < ! G G 1 l cj O c » G C 3 c | 5 W c , tb.a * > « ~ 1 o 13 . ; 5»- s « > tf-i ^ • OPh o ^ Is Oo rd ^ ^ Cl, p [Z! lH M !Z A >• r « 5 « <1 a< A a § o 2 o tc <3 w O G • G w 2 p o i £p 05 Q) w c$ Ph 003 S • P Gd lih c 3 Ph Ph pp « 05 H ^ O GJ -2 P^ w fill « Vh cj 5z; o S 2 . G'S'G p V 3 o G -G a ^ o 03 ^ .2 O CO “ ^ W s s f ® a §.§ gs 2o J c.£ . *- 1— I ft ^ W ' r 3 g , <1 o q g M G 5 Q O *G ft^ Q rH -M ft S ‘O ij I C 05 ft «H (j-OH P I >. OT CO ft | -a b 05 "G 2 05 CJ r- ft S' G G S j 2 * 1 * O P s ^ "fco j 'g 5 r3 .5 "o : 3 a, 35 > 05 , r® &U r.S c P 2 _ "3 2 > o -4 yi , v* I.23S ,P P ^ r- . «SS3§ g-sjsa CO^Og COUNTY OF WATERFORD. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 93 t VOL. XXIV. PROVINCE OE MUNSTER, COUNTY OF WATERFORD — continued. 94 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. (N ^ (N « w >c o I I I I II I £ ICC c !gg p sg s p r ~gof 4S.G 3 pq 5** fa O o - o o p< PS PS cj p4 W p p o PS d cT tT a a o o O I I ■** s o <1> 1 Ph co i> rC iO o CO CO fed fei d _t>5 03 _PSc/2 * t>r ** t>r O *0 1C lO to ZO CO CO p 0 PS 02 p o p o KaiKai t~ C" C~ C' iO lO lO lO uo 'O CD CD CD CD CD CD 0 1 P=H O W CQ t>* t-T »o lO CD CD tjrd 2 fts " a, i— i ° jd 2 V $3 e 3 g P a* 02 '“'co I I io ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ CD £ P E £ - i S '2 3 p . o p p ; Ssa « 3 • 3 S 2 2 3 hS £ w 5 2 2 o o u ? cl ® i -a 2 o) 'S a w g (ii s a ~ ~ -a ° 60,2 _ 60 M SO £ « .■e^g , Q'gti 5 'Sg ] g-|§^ 3 §S§§)a CQ ^ C W '- : ' C 3 O w^C'to-gU'iOD CO 5 fcj 'd Q 2 mft’ 5 -«!HA-Oo 3 ft*A d d © u w * fl d 'OC& CG S a oT « e-c o w p ^ go b« &c o © d ^ a 'h .. ce P=< :P £ P o .fa^„ o o m o = PSq o: <5 O = O «! OpPEnOOfcsJPfciSSPSPPSPS -g ffl P P) S 3 bS P °j 3 m i- SS aj b~ bm .2 p © g. c 3 g.“ g g ooSSffl & c o ■ o ^ -2 = o <» >-s P H 02 COM 5S?a .3 « g •; c t to o s o i "» r-r-1 ^ Q Sf h— 1 a j K p£ -2 ox s S H | PS P P OS P P p a P H P . as §P P H ps as P 3 H-J |8g og| co 3 P © co rt S go Ip «s ■3^ o PS_ b ^ -Q o G nd cj C0 IPI . ■a Js-gC pgs| S-* 3 s c3P ^ co © y 'c Sd o S (U^O . 6dd ^ co o -m c .d a Ofei aj O o i: ° ° £ ^.§ g^gog §.2SS a r/i g gS-o 5 • , -r^ ^ 5J-H S >G g 1-2 £ .3^ S -1-1 .O O E 3 .cj cd a* -a i— i ry co ' d • r] ^ © ^ O d , ^ n ° O-W Q O lO d S c 3 'd CO >. ^ '•IC ^ lO CD 3 o 1-t CO s s ’ c3 3 . > rg ; CO d CO . !-• 5hi H •d r< §s fc' to c p : ® 5 d ! 3 o c« . Cj t-O ’ ^ © | in § a. ■ ! S “3 S I ^ o I 1 /PS 5 "ot Ss i jq P P oSrt “ PcP . >o ’S ^ T3 o d > aS 6 « o p PROVINCE OF CONNAUGHT, COUNTY OF GALWAY. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 95 PEO VINCE OF CONNAUGHT, COUNTY OF GALWAY — continued. 96 Mr. Hakdinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. O c m ©*s .52 gj cl J3 3C ^ P. ^ o 0 -0 2 “ P.s5 •2 « U ® £3 2« fH I 5*=! £ tip ■g’2 S A § 3 2 I _ Ph d £ d g s bfl > p o o b O © « ® Sgg S£ .3 o) 2 S C2 ^ r— O C (u^n o o § 2 § w m 'Cm C (- X--*- .2 w G > f/> P Eh - - O PS p4 3 o 05 o 02 s> .2 1 >J-g t O PS 05 a o 55 (3 31 3 & O 5* O H m m O PS P O? hi! P Eh g 3 3 >.2 S

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M o ° P” = 3 ddooQhSSS _ ^ P © j -p t: hj S ^ -P - o © ^ . ■ g 5 m-5 3 3 . . c .= — — 3 O O «H is o p r d 3 op © • rt £ P tH P-i o rO H cZ2 ^ d * c go g — bp 2 HS5 3 S 3 C -5 — P-T3 03 * o3 . c3 O w o COUNTY OF MAYO. Mr. Hakdinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 97 o a x © O c A - O ps x; cT cT »o o CO CO o o o o ^ aT ^ eo o o l # I co A cT -T VO 05 0 1 co I I I I I II g ! I 1 I c co .o <£> < - ° tp w g-'J J ^ g to -s? ’C ’ ^ ~ o - « 1637, 1637, 1637, 1637, 1637, 1637, 1637, *=; s 3 >> >, >> c a c c © o o © o o © CS o eS o eS © cs © eS © £ ?* cj © PS c « g rq > ^ o « § « S « s CQ > ^ © s « © £ C * ® *2 c * g-s S-8 s-s 5 o o o o o o J i S g *.2 S “litf O • ~-© kTO >. « C ' 9- SI C3 3*. gS r ^ 'o 'Ss-S *5 ►> . 'g c cs w "i 2 to « rj c & >3 "d o ; J §0J3 g .= a g £ 75 a> “•o • “uP f “« ■ & h-S Ji- - 8 = Cue: O 2 ^3 •-* — C ** v £ jt k s — — — a - P S'* -3 75 g § = - = = - o. = o 3 -a PS := g .C.nU^UacSu oa -aj -. t ”b _fe» c S o c ju ■oS J5 3 8 <£3 S ~ ■“ >2 d 2 PS W CS o S3 03“ j o w o w H 03 O O la* w W g w 03 5 . w G ps G s M -c < s PS O S a px H C5 « r > W OM *4 5 S g M PS PS P 1 -d •» c ~ « 5 C •« O 73 ^ < *d wT s % DC T3 7> I A S ‘i « £ 3 a, £ -a a •g « g? CS u. ^3 W - o> c« w CO r n rs = r3 tT »o O c c a o> co '. S *5 « “w a) a -Th- o ^ x - -C CO fc. ^ ^ ^ oT c «2 VOL. XXIV U PROVINCE OE CONNAUGHT, COUNTY OF MAY 0 — continued. 98 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1G40 to 1688. (*< s'* f oO •C §,2 O >.3 ^ £ 2 "E 3 ^ $ rdCZi'S £ §I|I l£i a ° ® j§ >••-+-. -2 £.2 d o> OT © E S3 S 2 •£ < £ 'TS 5 i£ 'P 2 ^IS-g ® - 3 3 3 g!=H«“ 3 X CD “> °s o M to £ £ £ £ g> a a ^ ®» | §* 0> ^ <3 © hlfiSH M'S P O £ a o o m O Ph Pi O P H P. P O © '-i iC m3 S' D « -. 02 CO ^ _ 3 .3 - 1 § ® is 3 S 00 o 2. § "o 0.^1 Q CO M > CD © ,0 pq o o 02 O O o 9 02 d U- O CO rQ to rH k. OT P3» *> «■= o SgH p cS u a u a i— i ~ 9 3 L oS r^{ T3 pq pq pq a o cq a> y d = s § m a <1 C3 -g co ’53 3 w oT p^fl® g 1 ® ?s ^ t2 -5 "d Ol o fl !>>-o -o a O © (— I p xn P O pi EH (25 p O O ■oaiONN-^Mlo 'o uo > Jh sa o W 3 p P o PS oi C3 CP uo lO to to to „ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ CL, - - • l_: •- b/) ^ OPQ^S | J J *? POCoQPSMco Sh PS p « PS <2 £ -3 a> a> d P>A3 rO as pq Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. r:oo-w^iNMOCi c ^ > on < 00 o .*> of r n i a r— © © CJO o 5 o = d to fe d , i PP /j cT cT »c o CO *©> & O 02 - ~ ~ Ci Ci id o co *o d ftp oi cT cT id o CO CO Pi 6 ftp 02 cT cf io o O CO I ! I I I I I IS I I I I I 1 1 I I O CO CO 5 ri r/j Oi T, "2 w tt eS rt £ © ^ c s « S ^ a, « t r S£--o- -L “ K Q> /-. O Q ( a < PS t-J S 5 c w w Ph 6 Q o a o a o a d o a o a o a o a 100 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 SI • rO s O ■o &H X HH Q £ Ph Ph Ph O d PQ ^d t* d d 'i <3 o Sh a> PH o <5 d o d d £ O pH a> g 3 S 3 O) -H &C S 3 * a> sa i— ! co <1 H Ph W H 02 i— i H Ph O W o ft M > o PH Ph ^ CO (M O o (N H CO H CO Koimiminhco COl-' C5 O H -H CO CO of cT cm cT co* oo © oo © oo o h- © t-i © iO © © (N lO H H © CO © © © CM (N CO © © rH © 1^. 00 © O H (M uO ‘O cT t>T © (NO^O©©NNiO(Nh© CO © © © t>* © © l>» © © © tiT ~4* t>T cT oT TH CO tCtCio rCcxT (M CO H^HHINHHnH ©©©©©©©© rH © © © © © © O t''.COuOCO'>^(MtO3. fe O m ° » ill 3 ,* © "fcb * ps j 3 ,3 & tt> m - T r'g sT Sn~B « <2 O ^ ®< c a^ 3 ■g "3 S C £> ^ P P O lS CC pfi fcX) pC £ r ss h> -■ S 3 ° < 3 Qfe J o «2 •— ' i — 1 — i „pC a? p 5 § T co* © tH (M © TH I I © © r-l I © CM rH © © LO -'f H iO © UO © © H l>- © ^ © © © ©~ t>T cT co ©HWM(N©H(M©© Nl>l>vOt>OMT)CiO(N 1 -*©©CM © © © © rH © © © © © © i C 5 20 ^ ^ © OJ (N © CM © T* © © H US CM ^ © N (M CM t> © r-i LO ^ © 20 ©©©©^©©© © — -“■* — * — * — 1 ~ © ©CMiHi— I ©©©UO©©(M©tH© ©©TtccO©©(MCM©CM 2 oTrH'<^c>r(^©'ocrt>'t^'Tjr ©©©©©©©©©©© tHO©©©©©©©©© ©©^Hrtc«0Ttc©©(M2O© ©C020©Ht>l^©C2(M© ©^©■^ril|>-(M©©©©t>- i-T t^T cxT ©~ -h~ io~ r-T oT t>T r— < iH tH Ttl r- l rH tH C- © Tf © © © © © t>. oo rH © T^C © © CM O^CO ©~ r-T t>T cb~ c O rCl o H m a -£ a P- Ch P «b p a a o H O pH S > ’ Cj aj W co ^ O HJ TO d' M o • O h *H lull?! c 3 ccJ O 3 a nd c aj nb ^ c P « cj t-i P a> •§i c uoo wM 3 ) ^ rf- s 3 _ ^ ctf ^ « • ■— PCS W !zc O oa H be = bC OO | J » sSoo (S 2 , >.rg ^ "rt ,2 WfflPO o os ◄ o § tt ^ p p PROVINCE OF LEINSTER — continued. Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688 101 VOL. XXIV, X PROVINCE OE ULSTER — continued. 102 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1G40 to, 1688. I ° i J- C •* C £ S g>.g | c § 1 2 3qo£ Ph QO CM P3 O CO 00 POO o o P3 o ^ o o CO CO . 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S«4 M !Sl ©> £^COHCO»OCO tH ©iO^3OC0©bCD ©©©©©©©© © ©©©©©©©© © TH©b*©r>©©»> 03 *0 03 CO (N (N CO CO CO 00 l> (M l> 1C H CO © CO oo~ of cT tjT t >r l> r^'_r CM rH rH 03 rH © r> 03 O- © 3-0 © Th © © © t> bf © oo © CO © br 03 b- co^oo 03 rH © rH © © © © © © 03 © © © © © rH CO © O©C3(NHI>HC0b^(Ni0(Ni0 I ° I © © CO © © © i> CO © © © t>r c b- © © 03 CO UO © © C^T}^© rH T* © o' of co to o' ocT rH 03 CO © CO © • S 'g r « • I J J .5 .o33W • "c <3 -S 'rt • • s ►» • rC r. •r >, p- Pi O r a 03 o a t: 03 pG o tx a J- cd p C ed 05 j * pq« b S fc M W oT^O | « a o . .S5 s = " •- 2 £ C* rt « 5 b CO « 6d6ooftfewh5w5SSg6 £ oT 2 I opgg- I g* J g -5 f JlsJlP OOPOPP PROVINCE OF CONNAUGHT. Mr. IIardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 103 104 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. c3 Ph *"3 o c3 -4-> rn o >-< 3| S S P> CO h-h t>, o CD ► | 3 3“ S 8 Vy rt « 3 4f| § 5 C jH o 2? 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OOCO^H^iO^O>t> oT *cT crT co aT co~ t^'^iTo' HOCO^'^H’CCO^ ■^W(NOT}1CO^Ht> O i—l 03 CO O O H 03 H O03C303CD00^Tj303 03HC010031003^03 iO CO N h 05 03 CO t> N u J < s’ 5 •* i & s O O -r < c$ < % W 5 § H r5 >• 5 ^ Oh tf ^ O o &q ft B) ‘CHoPPhhSh " : : "'8: PP PP Eh 02 I Ph O P3 o ►H l> o p 3 Ph rf< CD CD 00 O 00 N « CO CD CO CO O CO O CO T-H o cT o' -^T ©f coT o' CDCOOCDTflO O OO 1 — © O 03 O H 03 03 03 H CO CD 03 00 O o *-h o ^ N03I0C0ON tjT ©f oT cT aT i>T OilCDOOCOH H CD ^ 03 03 03 H 03 03 03 CO CO 03 CO O >C H N 03 O 03 03 t-H CO CO O O O 03^00 o co~ t*T ©f oT t>T O 05 CO 00 O CO CD r-H CO CO 00 03 ' ’ > g • ’ * m tf O „ o < Jsipl 5 § J S ooMhh? O E £ Z H © 0 O CD Ph O PP CD (Zi P O PP PH 03 CO CO CO 03 CO — < r* ©3 Cl H X H H CO CO o o co - CO -H CO CO iO 05 03 CO T* 03 03 03 CO O 00 CO ^ H CO CO -^o'co'^'cT 03 03 'O 00 00 H 03 03 H H 03 03 O CO O CO 03 CO O O C3 C5 t> N CO T^rH t }3 t^CO^ t-T co" cT cT O ^ lO CO no CO H o CO 03 . . i Pm g ^ S o g c S H 5 g C H O m OhHSWa: Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 105 APPENDIX (F), Referred to at page 25, antea. A Copy of the Fly Leaf Subjects, or Referential Index to a Volume endorsed Dr. Petty’s Register, 1655, a 1670, vol. xiii., deposited in press 14, shelf ef, Landed Estates Record Office, Dublin, viz. : — Fol. 1. The number of Square Miles and Akers in every Shire of England. 2. The like of Ireland. 3. A briefe Accompt of y e Survey of Ireland. 6. An Abstract of y c Baronys set out toy 6 Soldiers disbanded anno 1653, and also to y e Adventurers. 8. An Abstract of y e Survey of y e rest of y e 3 Provinces of Ulster, Leinster, et Munster. 11. Verbum Sapienti, or a Discourse about Taxes and y c Value of People. 19. The Cittyes of Ireland, and Lands appointed for y e 49 men. 20. Several Accomptes & Estimates tending to y e better Settlement & Goverm 1 of Ireland. 24. The Quantys & Values of y e land set out to y e Sold 18 an 0 1655, 1656, &c. 26. Lands exempted and suspended from being set out. 27. An Abstract of y e Lands set out to Single Persons after y' generall Lotts. 30. An Abstract of y e People in Ireland that payd Poll Money, 1660. 31. An Abstract of y e Unprofitable Lands. 32. The Abstract of Lands restored to y e Irish, with Estimates, in order to y e Expla- natory Act, w‘ h y e Lord of Orrerys Computancy to same purpose. 32. An Abstract of Lands Profitable, Unprofitable, & Church. 83. Private Distribucons of Lands made before y e generall Allottments. 41. Importacons and Exportacons of Ireland, anno 1664. 38. Customs & Excise, anno 1657. 39. Estimates of y' Revenues & Expences of England and Ireland distinctly. 43. Disbursements on the Ship Experiment. 45. Abstracts of y e Contents of Parishes in y e scvcrall Countyes, in Acre, prof, and unprof. 52. Lothbury Accounts. VOL. XXIV. y 106 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 53. The disposition of Lands by Decree of y e first Court of Claimes. 57. Goods exported out of Ireland anno 1641. 58. An Account of y e Charge payable to Dr. Petty for y e Survey. 129. The number of Houses in London, December, 1672. 129. The 49 Arreares £1,211,600. 129. The Excise of Ale, Strong Water, and y e number of Licenses. 130. An Estimate of y e Revenue of Ireland as the same is paid or payable to y e King. Note. — The fly leaf subjects end with the last folio, No. 130; but there are a few left unnoticed, which are understated, as they more completely identify the volume as a pri- vate one belonging to Dr. Petty. On folio 62 is a Table of the several scantlings and sorts of timber directed by the Lord Mayor, Aldermen, and Commons of the City of London, in Council assembled on 26th Nov., 1666, in all future Buildings and Edifices within said City. This Order was evidently required by Petty to guide certain Articles of Agreement (registered on folio 63), bearing date the 10th January, 1666 (read 1667), entered into between him and other citizens of London, and John B. Lorymer and Thos. Johnson, tyler and bricklayer, to erect and finish by 29th September, 1661, nine dwelling-houses upon the foundations of nine that had then recently been burned in Lothbury, London. On folios 113 and 114 are Powers of Attorney from Sir William Petty, of the City of Dublin, in his own right and in right of his wife, relict and widow of S r Maurice Fenton, Bar*, to Jn° Rutter, to collect Rents; and there is also, On folios 114, 115, and 116 — The heads of the several subjects, the ascertainment of which was essential to the consideration of the political anatomy of Ireland, and which, at the time, no other mind than Petty’s would have thought of. Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 107 APPENDIX (G). Original Down Survey Baronial, and Official Baronial and Parish Maps, discovered in the Treasury Buildings, Lower Castle Yard, Dublin, in 1837, as referred to at page 27, antea. Original Protractions on a Scale of Forty Perches to the Inch. Counties. Baronies. Parishes. Surveyors’ Names. Antrim, Carey, . . Ardmoy, Not given. n 11 Culfeightrim, 11 n 11 Derrichicken, 11 11 Rathlin, 11 11 11 Rathmore, 11 11 Glenarm, . Arclunis, Glenarm, and Laid, . 11 11 11 Layd, 11 If 11 Glenarm, 11 11 Kilconway, Dunaghy, 11 11 11 Finvoy, 11 11 Killagan, Loughill, 11 11 11 11 11 11 Maghmaghill, 11 11 11 Magherysharkan, 11 Carlow, Carlow, . . All the Parishes, 11 11 Forth, . . 11 11 11 St. Mullin, 11 11 Dublin, Balruddery, Donnabate, 11 11 11 Part of Lusk and Westpalstown, 11 11 11 Lucan, 11 11 11 Racool and part of Calestown and Saggard, All the Parishes, 11 11 Uppercross, 11 Down, Kinnalearty, Loughin Hand, 11 11 11 Kilmoremorian and Kilmore, . 11 11 11 Magherehowlet, 11 Donegal, Kilmacrenan, All the Parishes, 11 11 11 Clandehurke, 11 „ 11 Pay, 11 V 2 108 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. Original Down Survey Baronial Maps, &c. — continued. Counties. Baronies. Parishes. Surveyors’ Names. King’s, Balliboy, . . All the Parishes, Not given. 99 Ballicowan, . 99 99 Phillipstown, 99 99 i 99 Warrenstown, 99 99 Kerry, Acertified Trace, by John Pettie, of Dunkeran, 1 Knockane, j Templenoe, 99 | 99 9 ? Glannaroughty, Toysista, 99 99 Iraghticonnor, Knocknevire, 99 99 Mogunnihy, Kilbonane, 99 Wexford, Forth, . . Killiane, 99 Waterford, Gualtier, . . All the Parishes, 99 99 Middle third, 99 97 99 Upperthird, . Clonegaun, ....... 97 99 99 Disert, ........ 99 99 99 Kilbarrymeadon, 99 99 99 Mothell, 99 99 99 Monksland, 99 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland, 1640 to 1688. 109 Original Down Survey Baronial Maps, &c. — continued. Duplicate Official Reduced Maps. Counties. Baronies. Parishes. Scale. Surveyors’ Names. J Carlow, Catherlogh, . All the Parishes, 160 George Marshal. it .forth and St. Mullins, . . 55 55 55 55 Idronie, . . 55 55 55 55 Ravilly, . . 55 55 55 55 St. Mullins, 55 80 55 Kerry, Clanmorris, . All the Parishes, Not given. 55 Dunkeran, ii — 55 55 Glennaroughty 55 — 55 55 Magunnihy, . 55 — 55 Leitrim, Carrigallen, . All the Parishes, 160 Not given. Dromaheir, 55 160 Tim. Bedwell. 55 Leitrim, ii 160 Not given. 55 Moyhill, . . ?? 320 Anth. Adams. 5? Rosclogher, . 55 160 Tim. Bedwell. Sligo, Carbury, . . All the Parishes, 160 William Betts. 55 Corran, . . . 55 160 Capt.W. Morgan 51 Leney, . . . 55 320 55 „ Tirrariil, . . 55 160 Edwd. Wilson. 55 Tireragh, . . • ” 160 Eneas Hk'ffin. Cc Waterford, Glannehery, . All the Parishes, 80 Not given. 55 Gualtier, . . 55 55 55 Middlethird, . 55 55 55 Upperthird, . 55 55 55 Wicklow, Arklow, . . All the Parishes, 160 Giles Gilbert. Ballincur, . . 320 James Paine. New Castle, . ?i 160 Paine&Gilbert. 55 Rathdown, 55 160 55 55 Talbotstown, . 55 320 Giles Gilbert. 110 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. APPENDIX (H). Sir William Petty’s Will, referred to at page 26, antea, extracted from the principal Re- gistry of Her Majesty’s Court of Probate in Ireland. In the name of God. Amen. — I, S r William Petty, Kn*, born at Rumsey, in Haumtshire, doe, revoking all other and former wills, make this my last will and testament, premising the ensueing preface to the same, whereby to express my condition, designe, in- tentions, and desires, concerning the persons and things contained in and relating to my said will, for the better expounding any thing which may hereafter seem doubtfull therein, and also for justifing in behalfe of my children the manner and means of getting and ac- quiring the estate w ch I hereby bequeath unto them, exhorting them to emprove the same by no worse negotiations. In the first place, I declare and affirme that at the full age of fifteene years I had obtained the Lattin, Greeke, and French tongues, the whole body of common Arithmetick, the practicall Geometry and Astronomy conducing to Navigation, Dialing, &c., with the knowledge of severall Mathematicall Trades, at which, and having been at the University of Caen, preferred me to the King’s Navy, where, at the age of 20 years, I had gotten up about three score pounds, w th as much mathematices as any of my age was known to have had. With this provision, Anno 1643, when the civill warrs betwixt the King and Parliament great hatt, I went into the Netherlands and France for three years, and having vigorously followed my studies, especially that of medicine, att Utretch, Leydon, Amsterdam, and Paris, I returned to Rinsey, where I was born, bringing back with me my brother Anthony, whom I had bred, with about ten pounds more then I had carried out of England; with this £70 and my endeavours, in less than four years more I obtained my degree of Doctor of Phisick in Oxford, and forthwith thereupon to be admitted into the College of Phistians, London, and into severall clubbs of the virtuous, after all which expenses defrayed I had left twenty-eight pounds ; and in the next two years being made Fellow of Brasen Nose, and Anatomy Professor in Oxford, and also Reader atGershamColledge, I advanced my said stock to about four hundred pounds, and with£100 more advanced and given me to go for Ireland into full five hundred pounds. Upon the tenth of September, 1652, I landed att Waterford, in Ireland, Phisitian to the army who had suppressed the Rebellion began in the year 1641, and to the Generali of the same, and the Head Quarters, at the rate of 20s. per diem, at which I continued till June, 1659, gaining by my practice about £400 per annum, above the said sailary. About September, 1654, I, perceiving that the admeasurement of the lands forfeited by the forementioned Rebellion, Ill Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. and intended to regulate the satisfaction of the soldiers who had suppressed the same, was most unsufficiently and absurdly managed, I obtained a contract, dated the 11th of December, 1654, for making the said admeasurement, and by God’s blessing so performed the same as that 1 gained about nine thousand pounds thereby, which, with the £500 above-mentioned, my sallary of 20s. per diem, the benefit of my practice, together with £600 given me for directing an after survey of the advent 18 lands, and £800 more for 2 years’ sallary as Clerk of the Councell, raised me an estate of about thirteen thousand pounds in ready and reall money, at a time when, without art, interest, or authority, men bought as much lands for 10s. in reall money, as in this year, 1685, yield 10s. per ann. rent above his Maties quitt rents. Now I bestowed part of the said £13,000 in soldier’s deben- tures, part in purchasing the Earl of Arundell’s house and garden in Lothbury, London, and part I kept in cash, to answer emergencies ; hereupon I purchased lands in Ireland with sodier’s debentures, bought att above the markett rates, a great p* whereof I lost by the Court of Innocents, anno 1663, and built the said Garden called Token House yard, in Lothbury, which was for the most part destroyed by the dreadfull fire, anno 1666. Afterwards, anno 1667, I married Elizabeth, the relict of S r Maurice Fenton, Barronett. I sett up iron works and pilchard fishing in Kerry, and opened the lead mines and timber trade in Kerry, by all which, and some advantageous bargins, and with living under my income, I have, at the making this my will, the reall and personall estate -following (viz*.), a large house and 4 tenements in Runsey, with 4 acres of meadow upon the causway, and about 4 acres of arrable in the fields called Marks and Woollsworth, in all about thirty pounds per ann.; houses in Token house yard, near Lothbury, London, with lease in Piccadilly, and the Seaven Starrs, and the Blazing Starr, in Birching Lane, London, worth about five hundred pounds per ann. ; besides mortgages upon certain houses in Hogg Lane, near Shoreditch, in London, and in Erith, in Kent, worth about £20 per ann. : I have £ parts of the ship Charles, whereof Deryck Paine is master, which I value at £80 per ann.; as also the copper plates for the mapps of Ireland, with the King’s priviledge, which I rate at £100 per ann., in all seven hundred and thirty pounds per ann. I have in Ireland, without the County of Kerry, in lands, remainders, and reversions, about three thousand one hundred pounds per ann. I have of neat profits out of the lands and woods of Kerry, above eleven hundred pounds per ann., besides iron works, fishings, and lead mines, and marble quarrys, worth £600 per ann., in all £4800. I have, as my wife’s Joyn- ture, during her life, about £850 per ann., and for 14 years after her death about £200 per ann.; I have, by £3300 money at interest, £320 per ann., in all about £6700 per ann. The personal estate is as foil, viz* — in chest six thousand six hundred pounds, in the hands of Adam Loftus £1296; of Mr John Cogs, goldsmith, of London, £1251 ; in silver plate and jewells ab* £3000, in furniture, goods, pictures, coach horses, books, and watches, £1150 per estimate, in all twelve thousand pounds. lvalue my three chests of originall 112 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to' 1688. mapps and field books , the coppys of the Down Survey, with the Barrony mapps, and the chest of distribution books, with two chests of loose papers relating to the survey; the two great Barony books, and the book of the history of the survey , altogether at two thousand pounds. I have due out of Kerry for arrears, May rent, and iron, before 24th June, 1685, the sume of £1912, for the next half year’s rent out of my lands in Ireland, my wife’s joyn- ture, and England, on or before the 24 June next, £2000 ; moreover, by arrears due the 30 Aprill, 1685, out of all my estate by estimate and interest of money, £1800; by other good debts due upon bonds and bills at this time, per estimate, £900 ; by debts which I call bad, £4000, worth, perhaps, £800; by debts which I call doubtful, £50,000, worth, perhaps, 25 thousand pounds, in all, £34,612 ; and the totall of the whole personall estate, £46,412 ; so as my present income for the year 1685 may be £6700, the profits of the personall estate may be £4641, and the demonstrable improvement of my Irish estate may be £3659 per ann., to make in all fifteen thousand pounds per ann., in and by all manner of effects abating for bad debts, about £28,000. Whereupon I say in gross, that my reall estate or income may be £6500 per ann., my personall estate about £45,000, my bad and deperate debts, 30 thousand pounds, and the improvements may be £4000 per ann., in all £15,000 per ann., ut supra. Now, my opinion and desire is (if I could effect it, and if I wear cleare from the law custom and all other impediments), to add to my wives joynture | of what itt now is computed att, viz 1 — £637 per ann., to make the whole £1587 per ann., which addition of £637 and £850 being deducted out of the aforementioned £6700, leaves £5113 for my two sons, whereof I would my eldest son should have -§, or £3408, and the younger £1705; and that after their mother’s death, the aforesaid addition of £637 should be added in like proportion, making for the eldest £3832, and for the youngest £1916 ; and I would that the improvement of the estate should be equally divided between my two sons, and that the personall estate (first taking out ten thousand pounds for my only daughter,) that the rest should be equally divided between my wife and three children, by which method my wife would have £1587 per ann., and £9000 in personall effects; my daughter would have ten thousand pounds of the crame, and £9000 more with less certainty ; my eldest son would have £3800 per ann., and half the expected improve- ments, with £9000 in hopefull effects, over and above his wifes portion ; and my youngest son would have the same within £1900 per ann. I would advise my wife in this case to spend her whole £1587 per ann., that is to say, in her own entertainment, charity, and muni- ficence, without care of increasing her children’s fortunes ; and I would she should give away J of the above-mentioned £9000 att her death, even from her children, upon any worthy object, and dispose of the other § to such of her children and grand children as pleased her best, without regard to any other rule or proportion. In case of either of my 3 childrens death under age, I advise as followeth, viz 1 — if my eldest, Charles, dye without issue, I would that Henry should have f of what he leaves, and my daughter, Anne, the Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 113 rest; if Henry dye, I would that what he leaves may be equally divided between Charles and Anne ; and if Anne dyes, that her share be equally divided between Charles and Henry. Memorandum. — That I think fitt to rate the 30 thousand pound desperate debts at one thousand pounds only, and to give it my daughter, to make her aboverh 10 m and 9 m to be full twenty thousand pounds, which is much short of what I have given her younger brother ; and the elder brother may have £3800 per ann. 9 m in money, worth good more £2000 by improvements, and £1300 by marriage, to make up the whole to £8000 per ann., which is very well for the eldest son, as 20 thousand pounds for the daughter. I think, to make a codicill to my will, when I shall find myself sick or decaying, whereby to dis- pose ofseverall small legacies, with my funerall charges not exceeding one thousand pounds, I desire may be born by my wife and 3 children as near as may be, according to the pro- portions above-mentioned. Now, whereas, I have made deeds of settlement, dated . . for my wife and two sons. And, whereas I have hereby made my yearly income to be £6700, my present will that my wife shall have, besides the provision made by S r Maurice Fenton, £637 per ann. out of my said £6700, and that what by the said settlement is short thereof shall be made up out of the said £6700, and what is too much shall be abated out of £9000. By the aforemade computation, my eldest son, Charles, when his mother’s provision of £850 and £637 is taken out the s d £6700, will have £3400 per ann.; whereof if the settlement be short, it must be supplied out of the rest of £6700; if too much, his share of the £9000 must be retrencht ; the like I order concerning my son Henry. As my daughter Anne, not medling with the £3200 at interest, which is part of the £6700 per ann., I give and bequeath to her of the £6600 in chest, and £1251 in M r Cog’s hands, £2149 out of my plate and jewells, the full sume — ten thousand pounds — to be paid her at the age of eighteen years; and I intend that if shall see cause to dispose otherways of the said effects, to charge the said ten thousand pounds on some other reall security. I hereby make Elizabeth, my beloved wife, sole Executrix of this my will during her widowhood ; but if she marry, 1 make her brother, James Waller, and Thomas Dance, Exors in her room, in trust for my children. I also make my said wife Guar- dian of my children during her widowhood, but when she marrys, I appoint the said James Waller and Tho Dance Guardians in her room. I recommend to my Exors and the Guardians of my children to use the same servants and instruments for manage- ment of the estates, as were in my life time, viz 1 — the said James Waller, at the yearly sailary of one hundred pounds ste rl per ann. sterling; Thomas Dance, at fifty pounds; Thomas Milburne, at twenty, Crofton, at twelve ; and Maurice Carroll, at eight; as also Richard Orpin, at twenty; John Mahony, at twenty; Luke Parker, at five pound; Phillip Prosser, at five pounds ; and Mr. John Cogs, of London, at twelve; and Thomas Callow, at six pounds per ann. ; all which sallarys are to continue during their lives, or untill my youngest child shall be one and twenty years, which will be the 22 nd VOL. XXIV. z 114 Mr. Hardinge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. of October, 1696; unless seven of the persons above named, whereof my wife, Mr. James Waller, and Thomas Dance, shall, under their hands and seals, certifie that any of the said persons have broken their respective trusts and notably misbehaved themselves ; and after the said 22 nd October, 1696, every of my children, being of full age, may put the management of their respective concerns into what hand they please, having still a respect to such of the aforenamed as have been dilligent and faithfull in their respective trusts and imployments. I would not have my funeral charges to exceed three hundred pounds, over and above which sum I allow and give one hundred and fifty pounds to sett up a monument in the Church of Rumsey, near where my grandfather, father, and mother were buried, in memory of them and of all my brothers and sisters. I also give five pounds for a stone to be sett up in Lothbury Church, London, in memory of my brother Anthony, there buried about the 18 th October, 1649 ; I also give fifty pounds for a small monu- ment, to be sett up in Bride’s Church, Dublin, in memory of my son John, and my near kinsman John Petty ; supposing my wife will add thereunto for her excellent son, S r William Fenton, Bar*, who was buryed there 18 th March, 167^ ; and if I myself be buried in any of the s d 3 places, I would have £100 only added to the above named sumes, or that the said £100 shall be bestowed on a monument for me in any other place where I shall dye. As for legacies for the poor , I am att a stand: as for beggars by trade and election , I give them nothing ; as for impotents by the hand of God, the Publick ought to maintaine them ; as for those who have been bred to no calling nor estate , they should be put upon their kindred ; as for those who can get no work , the magistrate should cause them to be employed, which may be well done in Ireland , where is 15 acres of improve- able land for every head : prisoners for crimes, by the King ; for debt, by their prosecu- tors. As for those who compassionate the sufferings of any object, lett them relieve themselves by relieving such sufferers, that is, give them alms, pro re nata , and for Gods sake relieve those severall species above named, where the above-named obligers faile in their duties. Wherefore, I am contented that I have assisted all my poor relations, and put many into a way of getting their owne bread, and have laboured in public works and inventions; have sought out reall objects of charity, and do hereby conjure all who partake of my estate from time to time to do the same at their perill. Nevertheless, to answer custome, and to take the surer side, I give twenty pounds to the most wanting of the parish wherein I dye. As for the education of my children, which are 2 sons and one daughter, I would that my daughter might marry in Ireland, desiring that such a sum as 1 have left her might not be carried out of Ireland. I wish that my eldest son may get a gentleman’s estate in England, which, by what I have gotten already intend to purchase, and by what I presume he may have with a wife, may amount to between two and three thousand pounds per ann., and by some office he may get there, together with an ordinary superlucration, may reasonably be expected, so as I designe my youngest son’s trade and Mr. Hardin ge on Surveys in Ireland , 1640 to 1688. 115 imployment to be the prudent management of our Irish estate for himself and his elder brother, which I suppose his said brother must consider him. For as for myself, I being now about threescore & two years old, I intend to attend the improvement of my lands in Ireland, and to gett in the money debts oweing unto me, and to promote the trade of Iron, Lead, Marble, Fish, and Timber, whereof my estate is capable ; and as for studies and experiments, I think now to confine the same to the anatomy of the people and politicall Arithmetick, as also to the improvement of ships, land, carriages, guns, and pumps, as of most use to mankind, not bleaming the studies of other men. As for religion, I dye in the profession of that faith, and in the practice of such worship, as I find establht by the Law of my country, not being able to believe what I myself please, nor to worship God better than by doing as I would be done unto, and observing the Laws of my country, and expressing ray love and honour to Almighty God by such signes and tokens as are understood to be such by the people with whom I live, God knowing my heart even without any at all; and thus begging the Divine Majesty to make me what He would have me to be, both as to faith and good works; I willingly resigne my soul into His hands, relying only on His infinite mercy and the merritts of my Saviour for my happiness after this life, whereof I expect to know and see God more clearly then by the study of the Scriptures, and of His works I have been hitherto been able to do. Grant me, O Lord, an easy passage to thyself, that as I have lived in thy fear, I may be known to dye in thy favour. Amen. Dated the second day of May, in the year of our Lord Christ, one thousand six hundred eighty and five. — Wm. Petty. Probat et approbat in comuni Juris forma actisque curse Re- gise Prerogativae &c. insinuat fuit testum Suprascriptum Dni Gulielmi Petty militis nuper Parochise Sancti Jacobi infra Liber- tatem Westminister et comitatu mid defuncti (hentis &c.)necnon onus Executionis ejusdem et admo bonor &c. dicti defuncti concess i'uer et sunt per Ressum Patrem Michaelem &c. necnon Judicem &c. Dnse Elizabethaj Petty Vid et relictse dicti defuncti et unicse Ex=cri in huoi testo noiat prius ad sta Dei Evangelia virtute comnis Jurat (Salvo Jure &c.) Dat secundo die mensis Aprilis Anno Domini 1688. « r ■ r . ii ^■||| ||p r! ' r 8 s - B ■ . ' .