Londerias, or, A narrative of the siege of London-Dery which was formed by the late King James the 18th of April, and raised the 1st of August, Anno Dom. 1689 : written in verse / by Joseph Aickin.
- Title
- Londerias, or, A narrative of the siege of London-Dery which was formed by the late King James the 18th of April, and raised the 1st of August, Anno Dom. 1689 : written in verse / by Joseph Aickin.
- Author
- Aickin, Joseph.
- Publication
- Dublin :: Printed by J. B. and S. P. ...,
- 1699.
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- James -- II, -- King of England, 1633-1701.
- Londonderry (Northern Ireland) -- History -- Siege, 1688-1689.
- Ireland -- History -- 17th century -- Sources.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26575.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Londerias, or, A narrative of the siege of London-Dery which was formed by the late King James the 18th of April, and raised the 1st of August, Anno Dom. 1689 : written in verse / by Joseph Aickin." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A26575.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 20, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- To the Worshipful the MAYOR: To the Ho∣nourable ROBERT ROCHFORT, Esq Attorney-General, and Speaker of the Honour∣able House of COM∣MONS, the Recor∣der: And to the Al∣dermen, Burgesses, and Free-men of the City of LONDON-DERY.
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text
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Londeriados. Lib. I.- Sect. 1.
-
Sect. 2. The Occasion of the War. -
Sect. 3. K.James 's Application to the K. ofFrance for Aid. -
Sect. 4. The King ofFrance 's Answer. -
Sect. 5.
The Lord MontjoyPrisoner in France. -
Sect, 6.
King Jameslands in Ireland. -
Sect. 7. KingJames 's Council of War. -
Sect. 8. Tyrconnels
Speech. -
Sect. 9. Sarsfield
's Opinion. -
Sect. 10. Teague Oregan
's Speech. -
Sect. 11. The General's Ordered. -
Sect. 12.
King James's Horse. -
Sect. 13.
King James's Dragoons. -
Sect. 14.
King James's Foot. -
Sect. 15. The Protestant Army in theNorth. -
Sect. 16. The Protestant Horse, Foot and Dragoons. -
Sect. 17. The Protestants Council of War. -
Sect. 18. Detachments sent to Guard the Fords ofFin. -
Sect. 19.
The Engagement at Lifford. -
Sect. 20.
The Engagement at Cladyford. -
Sect. 21. Londee
's Treachery. -
Sect. 22. The March of the Irish Army toLondon-Dery.
-
Londeriados LIB. II.- Sect. 1.
-
Sect. 2.
A Description of London-Dery. -
Sect. 3.
The Charter of London-Derybroke by Tirconnel. -
Sect. 4. The Protestant's refuse to Admit the Earl's Re∣giment. -
Sect. 5. The Contributers towards the holding out of the City against KingJames. -
Sect. 6. The late KingJames 's Offers to the City. -
Sect. 7. Col.Murray moves the City to hold out. -
Sect. 8. Londee 's Impeachment and Discharge. -
Sect. 9. Baker andWalker chosen Governours, and Eight Regiments formed. -
Sect. 10. The Reformee of the Foot. -
Sect. 11. Galmoy's
& Ramsey'sCamp near Balliugryhill, West. -
Sect. 12. Gen'ralHammilton's andMaimont 's Camp atBrookhall, North. -
Sect. 13. The LordLowth 's Camp on the East over the Lough. -
Sect. 14. BrigadierKearnie's Camp on the South.
-
Londeriados. LIB. III.- Sect. 1.
-
Sect. 2.
The Battle of Penny-burn-Mill. -
Sect. 3. Col.Murray killsMaimont the French General. -
Sect. 4. The Irish Foot beaten. -
Sect. 5. The Governours Encouraged by this Victory to Act. -
Sect. 6. GeneralHammilton takes CollonellMurray 's Father Prisoner, and sends him to move his Son to quit the Town. -
Sect. 7.
The Battle near Elah. -
Sect. 8.
Collonel Parkersover-sight. -
Sect. 9. A Council added to the Governours upon some Grie∣vances. -
Sect. 10.
The Battle of Windmill-Hill. -
Sect. 11. The burning of the Enemies Fascines. -
Sect. 12. The Enemy Entrench themselves over the Bog. -
Sect. 13.
Co Murraynell beats Col'nell Nugentin Pic∣queering. -
Sect. 14.
The second Battle of Wind-mill-Hill. - Sect. 15.
-
Londeriados. LIB. IV.- Sect. 1.
- Sect. 2.
-
Sect. 3. The English Fleet-appears in theLough. -
Sect. 4. The Exploit of the Barge of Intelligence. -
Sect, 5. Glencarty's
Bravado. -
Sect. 6. The Scarcity of Food and Pestilential Feaver. -
Sect. 7.
Governour BakerSickens. -
Sect. 8. The Bombarding of the City. -
Sect. 9. The driving of the Protestants to the Walls, to move the City to yield. -
Sect. 10. GovernorBaker's Death and Character. -
Sect. 10. A Treaty of Surrendring propos'd by the Enemy. -
Sect. 11. The Walls atButchers-Gate Stormed and ColonelMurray Wounded. -
Sect. 12. CaptainBrowning and CaptainDowglas relieve the Town, with two Merchant Ships and theDart∣mouth Frigat. -
Sect. 13. The Service of our Cannon from the Church-steeple and Bulwarks. -
Sect. 15. The Enemy withdraw their Siege, and Major GeneralKirk marches the English Forces toDery.
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