Schools 1835, Kinsale, Leighmore, Lislean, Morragh, Moviddy, Rathclaran, West Cork, Commissioners of Public Instruction.
04 Tuesday Nov 2014
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in04 Tuesday Nov 2014
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in19 Tuesday Mar 2013
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inThe National Archive of Australia has details on line of those who served with the Australian forces in World war 1. Included are a number who came from the Bantry and overall west Cork area. During the war there were attempts to bring in conscription in Australia they failed. Details can be accessed by clicking on the links.
Bandon
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=1960272
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3084567
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3502489
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=8010905
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3084567
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=8388437
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3029436
Bantry
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=7980778
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4519432
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4516388
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4420591
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4377963
http://naa12.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3131386&I=1&SE=1
Skibbereen
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3061005
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3515045
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4414344
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4416301
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4503968
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4527180
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4540058
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4541130
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4553676
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=5233310
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=4553676
Service in Boer War, China.
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=8089098
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=8347756
Ballydehob
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3484947
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/DetailsReports/ItemDetail.aspx?Barcode=6469267
Drimoleague
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=5218100
KInsale
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3515087
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3515049
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3483164
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3268386
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3162569
http://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/scripts/Imagine.asp?B=3029436
21 Friday Sep 2012
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inTags
cappoquin surveyors road making ballylickey bantry kealkil cousane shannon lough derg waterford, Chief secretary papers griffith nimmo, Clodagh River, dublin castle, Granard, Inchigeela, Kilmichael, Kilorglin, kinsale, Lough Derg., Tramore Strand
These maps are taken from the papers of the Chief Secretary 1818-1823, Dublin castle a précis of which is now on line. They are drawn in a very attractive fashion very pleasing to the modern eye. It is unknown which of the proposed works went ahead.
12 Saturday May 2012
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inTags
From Trinity College/Circle.
The commons of the town of Kinsale have shown the K. by their petitition displayed before the K.’s Jcr of Ire. that that town is situated in the marches among the K.’s Irish enemies and English rebels, so that no victuals [or other] sustenance can come or be brought to that town by land, but only by water. And although that town is not enclosed by a wall for the greater part, so that the commons dare not go out of the same town for fear of its capture and loss in their absence by the K.’s said enemies and rebels, yet they are often called and compelled to come to to wards, musterings and parleys [wardas, mustrizonas et parliamenta] at various remote places outside that town by the K.’s keepers of the peace and other ministers and commissioners appointed by the K. in co. Cork; and for not coming they are gravely amerced from time to time, to the grave damage and prejudice of those commons and the manifest peril of the nullification of that town. They seek remedy.
The K. has considered the good place that the said commons daily hold towards the K. and his faithful lieges of the vicinity, and also their diligence, assiduity and the immense costs they sustain and incur upon the enclosing of the same town with a stone wall in aid of the salvation of the neighbouring country in resistance of the malice of the said enemies and rebels. Of the K.’s special grace, GRANT to the same commons and each of them, for their good service performed and to be performed in future, that they shall not be compelled or distrained to come to any wards, musterings and parleys by the K.’s keepers of the peace or any of his other ministers or commissioners whatsoever, nor shall they be amerced because of their absence from such wards, musterings and parleys; but rather they shall be exonerated henceforth from coming to all manner of wards, musterings and parleys by the tenor of these presents, during pleasure.
CPI, p. 84.
RCH; BL, Egerton MS 78, p. 24; Bodl., MS Laud Misc. 613, f. 308.
The following abbreviations are used within in the text of CIRCLE
This glossary is by no means comprehensive. Readers may also wish to consult standard references books such as Joseph Byrne, Byrne’s dictionary of local Irish History from the earliest times to c.1900 (Cork, 2004); P. G. Osborn, Osborn’s concise law dictionary, ed. Sheila Bone (London, 2001).
Term |
Explanation |
---|---|
advowson |
The right of patronage or presentation to a church benefice. |
allocate, writ of |
A writ authorizing allowance to be made by the officers of the Ex. of a specified amount: often this amount is to be off-set against the debts owed to the K. by the beneficiary. |
alterage |
A form of affinity proscribed in late medieval Ireland between the Irish and the English, whereby a man stood sponsor for a child at baptism; (also) gossipred. |
assize |
Technical term for legal proceedings or various kinds. See mort d’ancestor, novel disseisin. |
avener [Lat. avarius] |
provider of oats, esp. for the household of the K. or his chief governor |
avoirdupois |
Miscellaneous merchandise sold by weight. |
bonnaght [Ir. buannacht] |
The billeting of mercenaries or servants. |
cask |
See tun. |
certiorari, writ of |
Letters close issued by the K. to his officers commanding them to supply information to him concerning a specified matter, normally by searching the records. |
chattels |
Property, goods, money: as opposed to real property (land). |
dicker [Lat. dacra] |
A measure of 10 hides. |
dower |
Portion (one third) of a deceased husband’s estate which the law allows to his widow for her life. |
escheat |
The reversion of land to the lord of the fee to the crown on failure of heirs of the owner or on his outlawry. |
extent |
A survey and valuation of property, esp. one made by royal inquisition. |
falding [Ir. fallaing] |
A kind of coarse woollen cloth produced in Ireland; the mantle or cloak made from the same. |
fee-farm |
A fixed annual rent payable to the K. by chartered boroughs. |
fotmel [Lat. fotmellum] |
A measure of lead. |
engrossment |
Technical term: the action of writing out, for instance patent letters and charters; (also) the documents thus written out. |
enrolment |
Technical term: the action of recording in the records of the K., esp. the registering of a deed, memorandum, recognizance; (also) the specific item or record thus enrolled. |
hanaper |
A repository for the keeping of money. The ‘clerk of the hanaper in chancery’ was the chancery official responsible for the receipt of fines for the issue, engrossment and ensealing of writs, patents and charters issued by the chancery. |
herberger [Lat. herbergerius, hospitator] |
One sent on before to purvey lodgings for an army, a royal train (OED). |
galangal [AN galyngale] |
The aromatic rhizome of certain Asian plants of the genera Alpinia and Kaempferia, of the ginger family, used in cookery and herbal medicine; (also) any of these plants (OED). |
generosus [Lat.] |
Term designating social status: translated as ‘gentleman’. |
king’s widow [Lat. vidua regis] |
The widow of a tenant in chief: so called because whe was not allowed to marry a second time without royal licence. |
knights’ fees |
Units of assessment of estates in land. Originally a single knight’s fee was the amount of land for which the military service of one knight (=knight service) was required by the crown. ‘Fee’ derives from the Latin feudum, which in other contexts translated as ‘fief’. In practice the descent of landed estates meant that many knights’ fees came to be subdivided and, in the later Middle Ages, personal service was frequently commuted to money payments (=scutage). |
liberate, writ of |
A chancery writ issued to the treasurer and chamberlains of the Ex. authorizing them to make payment of a specified amount, often the annual fees, wages and rewards of the K.’s officers. |
linch [Lat. lincia] |
A measure of tin. |
livery |
The delivery of seisin, or possession, of an estate hitherto held in the K.’s hand, for instance when a minor reaches the age of majority. |
mainprize |
Legal term: the action of undertaking to stand surety (=‘mainpernor’) for another person; the action of making oneself legally responsible for the fulfilment of a contract or undertaking by another person (OED). |
mass [Lat. messa] |
A standard measure of metal. |
messuage |
A portion of land occupied, or intended to be occupied, as the site for a dwelling house; (also) a dwelling house together with outbuildings and the adjacent land assigned to its use (OED). |
mort d’ancestor, assize of [Lat. assisa mortis antecessoris] |
A legal process to recover land of which the plaintiff’s ancestor (father, mother, uncle, aunt, brother sister, nephew or niece) died seised (=in possession), possession of which was since taken by another person. |
nolumus, clause of [Lat. cum clausula nolumus] |
A standard clause inserted especially in letters of protection by which pleas and suits are delayed for a specified period of time. |
novel disseisin, assize of [Lat.assisa nove disseisine] |
A legal process to recover land from which the plaintiff claims to have been dispossessed (=disseised). |
pensa | See wey. |
piece [L. pecia] | A standard quantity of merchandise. |
pendent seal | Seal hanging from engrossed letters patent attached to a tongue or tag of parchment. |
perpresture | An illegal encroachment upon royal property. |
plica | A fold along the foot of engrossed letters patent and charters to create a double thickness of parchment, used for attaching the ‘great seal pendent’ to the letters. An incision was made in the plica and through which a tag of parchment was attached. A wax impression of a seal was then affixed to the tag. |
protection | An act of grace by the K., granted by chancery letters, by which the recipient is to be free from suits at law for a specified term; granted especially to persons crossing overseas or otherwise out of reach of the courts in the K.’s service. |
quare impedit, writ of | An action brought to recover the advowson of a benefice, brought by the patron against the bishop or other person hindering the presentation. |
scutage | The commutation of personal military service to the crown for a money payment. Normally called ‘royal service’ in Ireland. |
seisin | Formal legal possession of land. |
sendal [Lat. cendallum; ME cendal] | A thin rich silken material (OED). |
stallage [Lat. stallagium, estallagium] | Payment for a market stall. |
tun [Lat. dolium] | A large cask or barrel, esp. of wine. |
valettus | A term designating social status: translated ‘yeoman’. |
Vidua Regis [Lat.] | See King’s widow. |
volumus, clause of [Lat. cum clausula volumus] | A standard clause inserted esp. in letters of protection by which pleas and suits are delayed for a specified period of time. In full the clause runs: volumus quod interim sit quietus de omnibus placitis et querelis (=we wish that meanwhile he be quit of all pleas and plaints). |
waif | A piece of property which is found ownerless and which, if unclaimed within a fixed period after due notice given, falls to the lord. |
waivery [AN weiverie] | The technical term for proceedings of outlawry in the case of women. |
wey [Lat. pensa, peisa, pisa] | A standard of dry-goods weight. |
worsted [ME wyrstede] | A woollen fabric or stuff made from well-twisted yarn spun of long-staple wool combed to lay the fibres parallel (OED). |
writ [Lat. brevis] | Letters close containing commands by the K. to certain specified persons, esp. royal officers. Returnable writs, which were not normally enrolled in the chancery rolls, were to be returned by the officer to chancery with details of the actions taken by the officer in response to the contents. See also allocate, certiorari, liberate. |
12 Saturday May 2012
Posted Uncategorized
inFrom Trinity College,/Circle.
The town of Kinsale, co. Cork, sits by the sea-coast, and the burgesses of that town have lately suffered a grave attack by the K.’s Spanish enemies, and also the K.’s Irish enemies and English rebels daily plan to destroy of the same town with force (which God forbid!). Having consideration for the salvation of that town, which holds the greatest place in that county, and so that the same town might be enclosed with a stone wall for its salvation against the malice of the said enemies and rebels—just as the burgesses have begun to enclose the same town at their own costs, according to the testimony of the K.’s beloved clerk, master John Colton, dean of Dublin, Jcr of Ire., and others of the K.’s council there—, GRANT to the provost and commons of that town of custody of the K.’s small custom derived from all merchandise carried outside the port of that town by sea, to have for as long as it ought to pertain to the K. by the form of a grant made by the prelates, magnates and commons in the last parliament held at Dublin, rendering annually to the K. at his Ex. of Ire. 10m at Easter and Michaelmas by equal portions. John Galvy and Patrick Galvy have become pledges and mainpernors of the provost and commons of that town. The K. wishes that if anything should remain to the provost and commons of that custom beyond those 10m, they should spend it upon the construction of the walls of that town.
CPI, p. 79.
RCH.
The following abbreviations are used within in the text of CIRCLE
This glossary is by no means comprehensive. Readers may also wish to consult standard references books such as Joseph Byrne, Byrne’s dictionary of local Irish History from the earliest times to c.1900 (Cork, 2004); P. G. Osborn, Osborn’s concise law dictionary, ed. Sheila Bone (London, 2001).
Term | Explanation |
---|---|
advowson | The right of patronage or presentation to a church benefice. |
allocate, writ of | A writ authorizing allowance to be made by the officers of the Ex. of a specified amount: often this amount is to be off-set against the debts owed to the K. by the beneficiary. |
alterage | A form of affinity proscribed in late medieval Ireland between the Irish and the English, whereby a man stood sponsor for a child at baptism; (also) gossipred. |
assize | Technical term for legal proceedings or various kinds. See mort d’ancestor, novel disseisin. |
avener [Lat. avarius] | provider of oats, esp. for the household of the K. or his chief governor |
avoirdupois | Miscellaneous merchandise sold by weight. |
bonnaght [Ir. buannacht] | The billeting of mercenaries or servants. |
cask | See tun. |
certiorari, writ of | Letters close issued by the K. to his officers commanding them to supply information to him concerning a specified matter, normally by searching the records. |
chattels | Property, goods, money: as opposed to real property (land). |
dicker [Lat. dacra] | A measure of 10 hides. |
dower | Portion (one third) of a deceased husband’s estate which the law allows to his widow for her life. |
escheat | The reversion of land to the lord of the fee to the crown on failure of heirs of the owner or on his outlawry. |
extent | A survey and valuation of property, esp. one made by royal inquisition. |
falding [Ir. fallaing] | A kind of coarse woollen cloth produced in Ireland; the mantle or cloak made from the same. |
fee-farm | A fixed annual rent payable to the K. by chartered boroughs. |
fotmel [Lat. fotmellum] | A measure of lead. |
engrossment | Technical term: the action of writing out, for instance patent letters and charters; (also) the documents thus written out. |
enrolment | Technical term: the action of recording in the records of the K., esp. the registering of a deed, memorandum, recognizance; (also) the specific item or record thus enrolled. |
hanaper | A repository for the keeping of money. The ‘clerk of the hanaper in chancery’ was the chancery official responsible for the receipt of fines for the issue, engrossment and ensealing of writs, patents and charters issued by the chancery. |
herberger [Lat. herbergerius, hospitator] | One sent on before to purvey lodgings for an army, a royal train (OED). |
galangal [AN galyngale] | The aromatic rhizome of certain Asian plants of the genera Alpinia and Kaempferia, of the ginger family, used in cookery and herbal medicine; (also) any of these plants (OED). |
generosus [Lat.] | Term designating social status: translated as ‘gentleman’. |
king’s widow [Lat. vidua regis] | The widow of a tenant in chief: so called because whe was not allowed to marry a second time without royal licence. |
knights’ fees | Units of assessment of estates in land. Originally a single knight’s fee was the amount of land for which the military service of one knight (=knight service) was required by the crown. ‘Fee’ derives from the Latin feudum, which in other contexts translated as ‘fief’. In practice the descent of landed estates meant that many knights’ fees came to be subdivided and, in the later Middle Ages, personal service was frequently commuted to money payments (=scutage). |
liberate, writ of | A chancery writ issued to the treasurer and chamberlains of the Ex. authorizing them to make payment of a specified amount, often the annual fees, wages and rewards of the K.’s officers. |
linch [Lat. lincia] | A measure of tin. |
livery | The delivery of seisin, or possession, of an estate hitherto held in the K.’s hand, for instance when a minor reaches the age of majority. |
mainprize | Legal term: the action of undertaking to stand surety (=‘mainpernor’) for another person; the action of making oneself legally responsible for the fulfilment of a contract or undertaking by another person (OED). |
mass [Lat. messa] | A standard measure of metal. |
messuage | A portion of land occupied, or intended to be occupied, as the site for a dwelling house; (also) a dwelling house together with outbuildings and the adjacent land assigned to its use (OED). |
mort d’ancestor, assize of [Lat. assisa mortis antecessoris] | A legal process to recover land of which the plaintiff’s ancestor (father, mother, uncle, aunt, brother sister, nephew or niece) died seised (=in possession), possession of which was since taken by another person. |
nolumus, clause of [Lat. cum clausula nolumus] | A standard clause inserted especially in letters of protection by which pleas and suits are delayed for a specified period of time. |
novel disseisin, assize of [Lat.assisa nove disseisine] | A legal process to recover land from which the plaintiff claims to have been dispossessed (=disseised). |
pensa | See wey. |
piece [L. pecia] | A standard quantity of merchandise. |
pendent seal | Seal hanging from engrossed letters patent attached to a tongue or tag of parchment. |
perpresture | An illegal encroachment upon royal property. |
plica | A fold along the foot of engrossed letters patent and charters to create a double thickness of parchment, used for attaching the ‘great seal pendent’ to the letters. An incision was made in the plica and through which a tag of parchment was attached. A wax impression of a seal was then affixed to the tag. |
protection | An act of grace by the K., granted by chancery letters, by which the recipient is to be free from suits at law for a specified term; granted especially to persons crossing overseas or otherwise out of reach of the courts in the K.’s service. |
quare impedit, writ of | An action brought to recover the advowson of a benefice, brought by the patron against the bishop or other person hindering the presentation. |
scutage | The commutation of personal military service to the crown for a money payment. Normally called ‘royal service’ in Ireland. |
seisin | Formal legal possession of land. |
sendal [Lat. cendallum; ME cendal] | A thin rich silken material (OED). |
stallage [Lat. stallagium, estallagium] | Payment for a market stall. |
tun [Lat. dolium] | A large cask or barrel, esp. of wine. |
valettus | A term designating social status: translated ‘yeoman’. |
Vidua Regis [Lat.] | See King’s widow. |
volumus, clause of [Lat. cum clausula volumus] | A standard clause inserted esp. in letters of protection by which pleas and suits are delayed for a specified period of time. In full the clause runs: volumus quod interim sit quietus de omnibus placitis et querelis (=we wish that meanwhile he be quit of all pleas and plaints). |
waif | A piece of property which is found ownerless and which, if unclaimed within a fixed period after due notice given, falls to the lord. |
waivery [AN weiverie] | The technical term for proceedings of outlawry in the case of women. |
wey [Lat. pensa, peisa, pisa] | A standard of dry-goods weight. |
worsted [ME wyrstede] | A woollen fabric or stuff made from well-twisted yarn spun of long-staple wool combed to lay the fibres parallel (OED). |
writ [Lat. brevis] | Letters close containing commands by the K. to certain specified persons, esp. royal officers. Returnable writs, which were not normally enrolled in the chancery rolls, were to be returned by the officer to chancery with details of the actions taken by the officer in response to the contents. See also allocate, certiorari, liberate. |