per issues, 172, Note. On the issues of the Bank of England, 185, Note. On circulating medium, 191. On the importance of education, 403. His observations on Foundling Hospitals, 424. On the Foundling Hospital at Petersburg, 434. On a commutation of tithes, 495, Note. On early marriages, 578. His Essay on Population, 680. Account of his system, ib. His account of the increase of population, ib. On the checks to po- pulation, 681. Services rendered to humanity by, 691. On the proportion of military men to population, 693, Note. See Ensor. Maltravers, Lord, patent granted to, for making farthings, ii. 150.
Mamtrasna, mountain of, i. 33.
as, 498. Dung and straw, 499. Turf ashes used as, 500. Derived from fossil substances sinks down, from animal matters ascends, ib. Practical account of, used in Ireland, 489. Linen considered the first of, ib. Chalk used as, in Essex, 491. Limestone Gravel, used as, ib. Map of Ireland, defects of General Vallancey's and Mr. Arrowsmith's, i. 3; and Mr. Macken- zie's, 5.
Maple, value of, in Ireland, i. 533.
Maps, imperfection of the bog, furnished by the commissioners, i. 111.
Mar, account of the forest of, i. 522. Maragall, Anti-Burgher Seceders at, ii. 498. Maragoold, religious sects and parties at, ii. 596. Marble, description of the Irish, i. 125. Of Kil- kenny, ib. Account of, mill, ib. Mode of po- lishing, 125. At Crayleath, ib. Near Tralee, ib. In the islands near Dunkerron, ib. Of Castle Hyde, ib. Different kinds of, in Cork, ib. Marches, invariable maxims on all, ii. 369, Note.
Managers, of estates, directions in the selection of, Marefield, Mr. Bagwell's mansion at, i. 73. High i. 291.
Manchester, bleach-green near, i. 693. Manganese, abundant in Ireland, i. 136.
Mangerton, height of, i. 67. Beautiful views from the top of, 68.
Manifest of the rebels, extract from the, ii. 690. Manley, J. Esq. farmed the postage of Great Bri- tain in 1652, for £10,000. i. 664.
Mann, Abbé, on the change of climate, i. 161. Manners of the ancient Irish, i. 238. Manners, a court tends to refine, ii. 324. Contem- plation of the present state of, 377. Manners, Lord, the present chancellor of Ireland, ii. 340. Character of, ib.
Manorial rights, effects of, on landed property, i.
Manufacturers, linen, earn less than farming la- bourers, i. 700. Should not engage in the labours of agriculture, 701. Cause of the unhealthiness of, ib.
Manufactures and National Industry, i. 678. Manufactures, advantages of the establishment of, i. 678. Among the Egyptians, ib. In China, 680. Of Ireland, general view of the, 758. Want of a proper division of labour in, 760. Mode of ob- taining, 762. Starved for want of capital, ii. 13. On exchanging, for gold and silver, 70. Manure, on the use of turf as a, i. 102.
limestone and calcareous sand a, 491. Marl used as, 492. Coral a, 493. Sea sand a, ib. River sand a, 494. Sea weed a, ib. Bog and lime- stone grave mixed used as, 497, Fossil shells used as, ib. Bog manure, ib. Use of flax-water
price of land near, i. 277. State of Society at, ii. 769.
Marine school, Hibernian, report on the, ii. 441. Inconsiderable result of the, ib.
Marine force of Britain, how it should be improved, ii. 818.
Market, the ancients acquainted with the method of going to, ii. 74.
Market Hill, Anti-Burgher Seceders at, ii. 498. Markets, for wheat, on the, i. 437. Importance for increasing the corn, 602. Benefits of creating, for the productions of the soil, 603. Canals will not create, 654. Habits of the people must be changed to produce, ib. Proper for fisheries, ii. 137.
Marl, mode of conveying, on the Chat Moss, i. 108. Benefit of, on the Chat Moss, 109. Where found in Ireland, i. 112. Description of, 492. Properties of, as a manure, 493. Marny's land, tillage at, i. 417. Maronites, character of the, i. 236. Marquises, list of the Irish, ii. 286. Marriage, mode of accomplishing in Ireland among fashionable people, ii. 797.
Marriages, greater proportion of, in Ireland than any other country in Europe, ii. 563. Propor- tion of, in England and Wales, ib. Proportion of, in France, ib. In the Pays du Vaud, ib. In Norway, ib. Annual number of, among the Ca- tholics, ib. Price of licenses for, ib. Collections at, for the priests, ib. Not so early among Pro- testants as Catholics, 577. Early, injurious to the human species, 578. Attention of the Gauls and Germans to, ib. Political evils of early, ib. Greater proportion of, among Catholics than Pro- testants, 580. Registers of, lately introduced into Ireland, 683. Early, encouraged by the Catholic clergy, 690. Frequently occur to escape from parental authority, 691. Sudden, 798. Early, evils of, 800.
Marrishool, barony of, i. 36.
Marshall, Mr. his process for analyzing all calcare- ous earths, i. 491. His advice to landlords on chusing tenants, 588. On the official rates of value, ii. 59.
Marshes, the Pontine, i. 82. In Norway, ib. Of Savenbaz, in Hungary, ib. In Britain, 83. In Holland, ib. In Holstein, ib. Definition of the English, 86.
Martello Towers of Wexford, ii. 816.
1766, 587. Religious sects and parties in, 617. Proposition of catholics to protestants in, ib. Muzieres, Philip de, on the herring fishery, ii. 113. McCabe, Mr. T., one of the founders of the cotton manufacture in Ireland, i. 703. Account of his introduction of cotton machinery, 704. M'Donnel, Dr., author's obligations to, i. 192. On the increase of the population of Belfast, ii. 696. His account of the island of Magee, ib.
Martenz, Frederick, his account of a whale, ii. 106, Meadows, distinction of, in Ireland, i. 466. Rea- Note.
Martial law, whole districts frequently placed under, ii. 568.
Martial spirit of the people accused, ii. 374, Martin, Mr. possesses the largest territorial extent of any man in Britain, i. 259. Mary, Queen, change of religion affected by, ii. 460. Reign of, a blot in our history, ii. 507. Attempted palliation of her conduct, ib. Maryboro', influence of the parish priest at, ii. 555.
Mascon, council of, excommunicated those who did not pay tithes, ii. 481, Note. Mask, Lough, i. 34.
Mass, licence, published for the celebration of, ii. 460. Fees to the priest for each, 564. Massarene, Earl, family name and descent of, ii. 288.
Mass houses in Ireland in 1731, ii. 584. In the diocese of Clonfert, 585. In the diocese of Kil- macderagh, ib.
Massey, Lord, description of the domain of, i. 72. Massey, Baron, family name and descent of, ii.
Masters, careless, make bad servants, i. 291. Masters of the schools of royal foundation, ii. 408. Of the schools of private establishment, 410. Masters of schools, places in the church should be in the reach of, ii. 442.
Matula Jovis, Ireland called, i. 180.
Maule, Dr. his account of the population of Ireland, ii. 600. His account of the population of Ireland in 1733, 684. Maxwell, Rev. Dr. related to the Foster family, ii. 387.
sons for cutting so late, ib. Harrowing and roll- ing neglected in Ireland, 467. Causes of the high price of, ib.
Meara, Rev. Mr., his account of the land in Water- ford, i. 281.
Measurement of Fair Head, i. 12. Of the Queen's
Measures, derivation of, ii. 195. Rules for forming dry, ib. On liquid, ib. Beautiful simplicity of the origin of, 196. Comparative table of the, of Ireland and England, 197.
Meat, peasants of Ireland seldom taste, i. 604. Meath, extent and description of the county of, i. 46. Landed proprietors of the county of, 268. On the pasture land of, 312. Dairies in, 332. On the cattle of, 339. Tillage of, 413. Method of draining in, 482. Manures in, 490. Work- ing animals in, 520. Linen manufacture in, 690. Fuel in, 624. Table of weights and measures in, ii. 201. Prices of articles in, 204. Table of prices in 1811 in, 220. Representation of, 307. Rising of the people in, 365. Loyalty of the ca- tholic gentry of, 367. Precedence of the bishop of, 466. Income of the bishop of, 469. Propor- tion of catholics to protestants in, 583. Popula- tion of, in 1766, 587. Account of the catholic station in, 605. Religious sects and parties in, 617. Proportion of catholics to protestants in, ib. Property of catholics in, ib. Marquis of Lans- downe's estate in, 632. Customs, manners, and habits in, 778.
Meath, Earl of, account of his wool, i. 716. Fa- mily name and descent of, ii. 287. Mechanics, consequence of the scarcity of, in Ire- land, i. 676. In Norway, ib. Note. Medicines, the priests generally administer, to their flock, ii. 565.
Meetings of the Catholics, perfectly free from danger to the state, ii, 562.
Meggins, on the proportions of silver and gold in Europe, ii. 189. note.
Mela, Pomp. his account of the climate of Ireland,
Members, account of the independent, ii. 313. Of the Roman catholic, ib. Of the protestant, ib. Returned by the influence of patrons of boroughs, ii. 314. Unacquainted with Ireland, ib. Of close boroughs, ib. Returned by patrons of boroughs, ii. 316. Who vote with their patrons, ii. 318. List of neuter, on the catholic question, ib. Inde- pendent, 319. Undetermined, ib. Of close bo- roughs, ii. 319. Evils of the absence of, 320. Influence of ministerial county, ib.
Men, dissertation on the number of, in ancient and modern times, ii. 678.
Mendicants, care of the ancients to procure em- ployment for, i. 680.
Merchandise, duty on imported or exported, ii. 241. Merchants, inquiry of English, acquiring seats in - parliament, ii. 64. Not fit to be statesmen, ib. Complaints against the, ii. 148. Catholic, educa- tion does not keep pace with the property of the, ji. 545. Conduct of the, ib. Treated with great contempt, ib. Catholic, account of the, 545. Forming a powerful aristocracy, ib. The old catholic families seldom associate with the, ib. Catholic, ignorance of the, 546. Wealth of Dublin, Limerick, Cork, and Waterford, princi- pally acquired by, ib.
Mercia, the kingdom of, tithe established in, ii. 482...
Mercury, Mr. Cooper's seat, account of, i. 38. Merino sheep, improvement of Irish wool by, i. 717. On the introduction of, i. 720. Merit, the present system of representation excludes some men of the greatest, ii. 321. Note. Not always attended to in the disposal of benefices, ii. 475.
Meslin, description of, i. 440. Cultivation of, ib. Messina, account of the fishery for sword fish at, ii. 79.
Meteorological Journal of the weather at Kilkenny, i. 200.
Methodism, progress of, in Armagh, ii. 597. Methodists, influence of the parish priest among the hearers of some, ii. 555. In Antrim, ii. 593. In Belfast, ib. At Lisburn, 594. In Armagh, 597. In Carlow, 598. In Dublin, 608. In Li- merick, 615.
Metropolitans, Irish, first subjection to the pope, ii.
McEvoy, Mr. his account of the tenures of land in Tyrone, i. 277. On cattle and grazing in Ty- rone, i. 340. On the use of bog-timber, i. 524. Mexborough, Earl, family name and descent of, ii. 288.
Mexborough, Baron, family name and descent of, ii. 294.
Mexican Gulph, depression of the seat in the, i. 168.
Mexico, height of the plains in, i. 141. Tempera- ture of, 142.
McGilleycuddy's Reeks, the highest mountain in Ireland, i. 10.
M'Hardy, Rev. C. his account of the forest of Mar, i. 522.
Mica, yellow, found at Inistioge, i. 122. Middle-man, account of a good, i. 288. Middle-men, on the general abuse of, i. 286. Let- ting to, ought to depend on the property and cha- racter of, ib. Description of two sorts of, 288. Ways in the power of, to ruin tenants, 287. Occupation of, 288. System of, bad, 289. Of property of, utility of, 427. Exertions of the wealthy, ii. 9.
Middle ranks, description of the people termed, ii. 548. when enlightened form the best bulwark of liberty, ib. On the benefits of the linen manu- facture to the, i. 699. Causes of the establish- ment of, in Ulster, 700.
Middleton, Viscount, estate of, in Cork, i. 250. Fa- mily name and descent of, ii. 291. Middleton, income of the rectory of, ii. 469. Middleton, Mr. on the working of oxen, i. 521. Migrations of salmon, ii. 85. Of herrings, descrip tions of the, ii. 110. Opinions on the, 111. Milan, account of the canals between, and Lodi, i. 483. Meadows of, celebrated in consequence of irrigation, 487.
Account of the Of the Clare, county, 607,
Militia of Ireland, observations on the, ii. 373. Observations of the Irish, 380. Policy of the change of Irish for English, ib. Carlow, 599. Of the Cavan, ib. .600. Account of the Dublin Galway, 609. Kilkenny, 612. King's County, 613, 614. Limerick, ib. Leitrim, ib. Louth, 616. Monaghan, 620. Account of the Roscom- mon, 621. Waterford, 624. Table of catholic commissioned and non-commissioned officers of, 630. Proportion of the catholic to protestant pri- vates in the, ib. Reasons for not stating the pro- portion of catholics in the, 633. Of recent insti- tution in Ireland, ib. Protestants preferred to catholics for the, ib. Observations on the Eng- lish supplementary, 651. List of men liable to serve in the, in Antrim, 692. Account of the exemptions from the, ib. Persons in Belfast liable to serve in the, 693. The Irish, 819. 826... Ex- change of with the English, 821. 831. Not raised by ballot, ib.
Military, the, may gain the good-will of the people, ii. 372.
Military policy, Captain Pasley's work on, ii, 634, Military roads, description of the, in Ireland, i.
Military of Ireland, ii. 829. See yeomanry and militia table of expenses, 852.. Milk, price of skimmed, i. 323. Used by the an- cients as food, ib. Note. In the district of the Welsh mountains, 329. Advantages of, in Ma- cullee, 331. On the, of alum in, ib. In Meath,
332. Of the Holderness cattle, 336. Observa tions on a woman's, ii. 430. Note. Millar, Professor, on the utility of banks, ii. 194. Note. On the Irish parliament, 281.
Millar, Mr. on the soil for a nursery ground, i. 542.
Mills, Mr. on the improvement of Wicklow harbour, i. 631. Note.
Mills for grinding corn and oats in Ireland, i. 759. Mill-stones, duty on, i. 122. Price of, ib. Man- ner of making, ib. Near Drumquin, ib. Milner, Dr. his statement of the veto to be given to the crown, ii. 536. Was not authorized to com- municate with Mr. Ponsonby, 539. This inter- ference has injured the cause, ib.
Milton, Lord, his account of the flannel-hall at Rathdrum, i. 712. His idea of books, ii. 400. Note.
Miltown, Earl, family name and descent of, ii. 288. Miltown Malbay, description of, i. 59. Trees taken from the bogs at, 526. Hot and cold baths at, 631. Lobsters and crabs at, ii. 123. Mind, Mr. Townsend's observations on the, ii. 405. Mineralogy of Ireland, i. 139.
Minerals of Ireland, i. 112.
Mines of silver in Kildare, i. 131. Of copper at Ross Island, ib. At Mucross, 132. At Crone- bane, 183. At Ballymurtagh, ib. List of the copper, 134. Of lead at Glendallagh, ib. Of lead, at the Scalp, 135. List of the lead, 135. Causes of the bad success in working, 137. On the pro- duce of the gold, ib. Of the silver, ib. Of the copper, at Killarney, ib. At Ballymurtagh, 138. Of gold and silver, a branch of the royal revenue, ii. 261.
Minister, description of a, proper for Ireland, ii. 329. Directions in forming the port-folio of an Irish, ib. Importance of the office of, in the re- bellion in 1798, 360.
Ministers, errors of, ought to be productive of much good, ii. 368. Propositions of the catholics to, 536. The English, have been unsuccessful and blundering in their war measures, 817. Are ig- norant of the real state of Ireland, 825. Mint, account of the first, in Ireland, ii. 138. At Dublin in 1459, 141. At Trim, ib. Mr. Mo- ryson's account of the Irish, 144. Sir C. Peck- ham, treasurer of the, in 1553, 245. Stanley comptroller of the, in 1553, ib. Mints established by James II. ii. 153. Mirabeau, M. de, his Tableau Oeconomique, i. 596. Mismanagement in the nursery of the Foundling Hospital, ii, 429.
Missionaries, saying of the Indians to the, ii. 649.
Mist, a means of prognosticating the weather, i. 234.
Mists, allusions to, in the works of Ossian, i. 22. Note. On the, of Ireland, 217. Different sorts of, ib.
Mitchelstown, cavern near, i. 74. Tillage at, 417. Mityleneans, anecdote of the, respecting education, ii. 395. Note.
M'Namara, tomb of, at Queen's Abbey, ii. 390, Note.
M'Nevin, Dr. one of the United Irishmen, ii. 361. Mob, conduct of a, at a general election, ii. 532. Easy to raise, but difficult to allay the passions of the, ib. Prejudices of the, against foreigners, ib. Mæris, account of the fishery of the lake, ii. 71. Mohir, cliffs of, i. 59.
Moidores, value of, in 1736, ii. 157. Moira, Anti-Burgher Seceders at, ii. 497. Moira, Countess of, her account of a human body preserved by moss, i. 89.
Moira, Earl, family name and descent of, ii. 288. Moisture of the climate of Ireland, i. 220. Molesworth, Viscount, family name and descent of, ii. 291.
Molineaux, W. Esq., R. S. S., his account of Dub- lin harbour, i. 627, Note. Molloy, Mr., account of his farm, i. 317. Monaghan, extent and description of the county of, i. 29. Landed proprietors of the county of, 269. Wretched state of the land in, ib. Linen manu- facture in, 685. On the cattle of, 339. Tillage of 361. Religious sects and parties in, ii. 620. Account of the militia regiment of, ib. Table of prices in 1811 in, 212. Table of weights and measures in, 199. Prices of articles in, 204. Re- presentation of, 307. Population of, in 1766, 587.
Monasterevan, malting house at, i. 745. Monasteries in Ireland, support of the, ii. 565. Monck, Viscount, family name and descent of ii.
Mondes, celebrated for perfumes, i. 679. Moneymore, circulation at, ii. 177, Note. Religious sects and parties in, 616. Monetary system of Ireland, account of the, ii. 190. Monewood, Rev. Mr., his table on the population and state of Portaferry, ii. 706.
Money, practice of hiding, in Ireland, i. 593. Pre- valent practice of buying in Holland, 594. High interest of, in Ireland, a check to trade, ii. 5, Note. And circulating medium in Ireland, ii. 137. The use of, speaks a degree of civilization, 138. Introduction of into Ireland, ib. The an- cient Lusitanians had no, ii. 138, Note. Note used in the Balearian Islands, ib. Introduction of, into Rome, ib. Account of, being coined in Ire- land, 139. In the reign of King John, ib. Of Henry III. ib. Of Edward I. 139. Of Edward III. 140. Foreign, brought into Ireland, ib. Of Richard II. 141. Of Henry V. ib. Of Henry VI. ib. Of Edward IV. ib. Raised in value in 1467, 142. Care of the legislature in 1472 to preserve, ib. Scarcity of, in 1476, 143. Value of, in 1476, ib. Of Richard III. ib. Of Henry VII. ib. Of Henry VIII. ib. Struck in 1541, 144. Coinage of brass, by Henry VIII. 144. Of Edward VI. ib. Of Queen Mary, 145. Of Philip and Mary, ib. Of Elizabeth, ib. Policy of Eli- zabeth in the supply of, for Ireland, 146. To be coined in England for the use of Ireland, 247. Consequences of the introduction of the new, 148.
Value of the, coined in the reign of Elizabeth, 149. Of James I. ib. Value of English, in Ireland in 1612, 149. Amount of, coined in the reign of James I. 150. Of Charles I. ib. The title of Irish, abolished, ib. Coined from plate in 1641, ib. Struck during the siege of Dublin, ib. Dur- ing the commonwealth, 151. Of Charles II. ib. Patent to Sir T. Viner and Co. for coining silver, ib. Coined at Kinsale in 1662, 152. Proclama- tion against exporting current, ib. Value of, in 1688, 152. Scarcity of, in Ireland, ib. Conduct of James II. respecting, ib. Currency of brass and copper, mixed, 153. Per centage allowed by King James on, ib. Copper and brass, made by King James, 154. Of King William, ib. Re- gulations of Queen Anne, respecting, ib. Of George I. ib. Coined in the Tower in 1736, 156. State of, in 1736, 157. Cause of the changes of, in Ireland, 160. Evils of the variations in, ib. On the right of coining, 160. Reasons for stamp- ing the king's arms on, ib. Dishonesty of alter- ing, ib. Ways of altering, ib. Altering, injuri- ous to the state, 161. Alteration in the value of, by the Romans, ib. In France, ib. Conduct of the Duke of Orleans respecting, ib. Conduct of Frederick the Great respecting, 162. Inconve- niences of debasing, ib. Note. Attempt to reduce the interest of, in 1788, 164. On the substitu- tion of paper, 167. Note. On the due proportion of coin to paper, 171. Note. Amount of the cir- culating medium in, 194. Received at the ex- chequer in the reign of William the Conqueror by weight, 183. Note. Proposed equalization of English and Irish, 114. On the proportion of, to trade, 194. Bacon's description of, 269. Monies paid on account of the Irish Forces, ii. 823. Monk's Hotel, coach from, i. 670.
Monopoly, evils of the, of the East India Company,
Montalivet, M. his report on Spanish sheep, i. 720. Montesquieu on the commerce of Ireland, ii. 1. On
the Dutch whale fishery, 82. On the origin of tithes, 482. On crimes and punishments, 492. Note. On political liberty, 569. On population in the time of Julius Cæsar, 677.
Montesquieu, Baron, on the true nature of a useful soldiery, ii. 814.
Montrath, Lord, his interest in the Queen's County, ii. 621.
Montserrat, finest hemp cultivated at, i. 462.
Moon, the influence of the, on the weather, proved to be a vulgar error, i. 183.
Moor, Mr. Sergeant, his account of magisterial out- rage in Leitrim, ii. 334.
Moore, Sir John, rout of the rebels by, ii. 369. Moore, Rev. A. master of the school at Cavan, ii. 408.
Moore, Anacreon, See Little, Thomas.
Moors, on the draining of, i. 472. In Mayo, 473. Moral doctrine of the catholic religion, ii. 641. Morality of the Scotch, moderation in church in comes, a cause of the, ii. 496.
Moravian meeting-house, in Dublin, ii. 608.
Morea, climate of the, i. 236. Morisk, barony of, i. 35. Morony, Mr. his use of sea-sand as manure, i. 493. His rents for kelp manufacture, 754. Morris, Rev. J. master of the school at Banagher, articles in Clare returned by, ii. 224. Prices of
Mortality, cause of the great, between the 20th and ii. 409. 60th year in Petersburg, i. 739. In the Found- ling Hospital, ii. 427. Arises from mismanage- ment, 429. On ascertaining population by the bills of, 670. Bills of, Capt. Grant's Observations on the, 675. Kept from 1592 to 1759, Origin of, ib. Note.
Moryson, Mr. on the Irish mint, ii. 144. His ac- count of money in the time of Elizabeth, 147. On the consequences of the introduction of new Moses, on the law of tithe as given by, ii. 478. money, ii. 148. Moss, antiquities found in, i. 97. Trees found in, ib. On the growth of, 99. Method of forward- ing the growth of, ib. Mode of cultivating the Chat, 108. On the use of rail-way on, 109. Should be drained merely of stagnant water, ib. Note.
Moss-earth, distinctions of, i. 87. In Denmark, ib. Qualities of, ib.
Mothers, the best nurses and governesses, ii. 797. Mountain improvement, in South America and Sy- ria, i. 473. In Switzerland, ib. Of the Pyrennees, 474. In Catalonia, ib. In Italy, ib. In China, ib. In Nepaul, ib. Of Ireland, ib. Considerations in, ib. Temperature, a consideration in, 474. Exposure should be considered in, 475. Steep- ness or declivity, a consideration in, ib. National importance of, ib. Depends on climate, soil, and situation, ib. By Mr. French, ib. Digging the most important operation in, 476. Plough fit for, ib. On the use of horses in, ib. On popula- tion in, 477. Mr. R. St. George's principle of, ib. Rules for, 478. Proposed in Wicklow, 480. By the Rev. R. Symes, ib. By Mr Roche, in Cork, 481. The surveys of the north- ern counties of England should be consulted in, ib. Paper on, by the Board of Agriculture, ib. Mountains, in Ireland, i. 8. Boate on the distinc- Mountain produce, on the value of, i. 309. tion between, and hills, 9. Note. Table of the eleva- tion of, in England, Scotland, and Ireland, 10. In Wicklow, 8. Arigal, 17. Of Mourne, 20. Of Belmore, 21. Of Turaw, 25. In London- derry, 28. In Galway, 83. Of Croagh Patrick, 35. Of Nephin, ib. In Sligo, 37. In Carlow, 39. In Waterford, 76. Description of the, in Donegal, 371. In Derry, ib. The inhabitants of the, in Ireland, in a wretched state, ii. 731. Mount Alt, views from the top of, i. 18. Mount Cashel, Earl, family name and descent of, ii. 289.
Moss-water, healthiness of, i. 90.
Mount Cassino, superstitious practices forbidden by the synod of, ii. 567.
Mountjoy, Lord, account of the death of, ii. 571.
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