| Edward Lillie Pierce - 1868 - 36 pages
...to Switzerland, Holland, England and America. They entered the armies of the continent, and aided in the victory of William of Orange at the battle of the Boyne. Never did a country pay more dearly and more speedily for injustice perpetrated on the weak. Many branches... | |
| John Patrick Prendergast - 1887 - 300 pages
...February, 1687, and the Civil War or Revolution that commenced in the following year and ended with the victory of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne, no further proceedings were had in the suit. Soon after the accession of King William and Queen Mary,... | |
| Edward Lillie Pierce - 1896 - 420 pages
...Switzerland, Holland, England, and America. They entered the armies of the Continent, and aided in the victory of William of Orange at the battle of the Boyne. Never did a country pay more dearly and more speedily for injustice perpetrated on the weak. Many branches... | |
| Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire - 1911 - 302 pages
...and att other meetings . . . . . . - oo 04 oo Paid to John Bury for clothes for sayd Boy and is. zd. cost of a chest, shoes, stockings, and a cravat 02...Limerick. The capture of Namur in Flanders on the 2gth May, the 5th November, the King's Coronation Day, and the Queen's Birthday, were all observed.... | |
| Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society - 1915 - 384 pages
...Procter, rector of Rufford, who had access to the churchwardens' books, has recorded that " the news of the Battle of the Boyne was announced by the ringing...concluding the treaty of Limerick. The capture of Namur, the 5th November, the king's coronation day, and the queen's birthday were all observed. The ringers... | |
| Barbara Norman - 1987 - 212 pages
...forgeries. Following upon the Jacobite glasses were Williamite glasses, which were engraved to celebrate the victory of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. Again, only a few genuine examples have survived. But the custom was growing of celebrating... | |
| Simon James - 1999 - 164 pages
...resulted in the Protestant triumphs (as they have been remembered) of the defence of Londonderry and the victory of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. In 1700, then, Ireland was largely under the domination of recently arrived English (and in... | |
| Himani Bannerji, Shahrzad Mojab, Judith Whitehead - 2001 - 268 pages
...interests took precedence over Irish interests whenever those interests were in conflict. Following the victory of William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne in 1691,4 a system of Penal Laws was enacted which aimed to suppress the rights of Catholics. These... | |
| Sir Ivor Jennings - 1960 - 420 pages
...Parliamentary Party, I, pp. 274, 275. Orange Order founded in the late eighteenth century1 to celebrate the victory of William of Orange at the battle of the Boyne. Nor were the Orange Lodges exclusively whig, as their association with the Glorious Revolution might... | |
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