User:Jnestorius/Resources

Wiki
Guides
 * Complete diff and link guide
 * Extended image syntax

Saoirse McHugh
 * Talk:Theresa Greenfield
 * businesspost 2021 "What lies in store for the eco firebrand? ... Last year, Saoirse McHugh was the subject of a vigorous and almost existential debate on Wikipedia."
 * independent 2021 attended pre Rabharta Glas meetings
 * IT 2023 Finbar Cafferkey, killed fighting fit Ukraine, was brother of her partner, Colm, the Irish language officer in Achill.

Permanent linking
Help:Permanent link


 * Special:Diff/675392431 is a shortcut to https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Composition_of_Connacht&diff=prev&oldid=675392431
 * But if you pick adjacent revisions in history and hit "difference" to get https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Composition_of_Connacht&type=revision&diff=675392367&oldid=675296181 then oldid is [as the name suggests] the earlier revision, not the later one so
 * Special:Diff/675392367 compares the after with the before
 * Special:Diff/675296181 compares the before with the before-before
 * Special:Permalink/675296181 link to version rather than diff

TL;DR: diff=prev&oldid=nnn is misleading, as "prev" is older than "oldid".

Common reference template partials
http://opac.oireachtas.ie citations:

Direct link to Irish charts record example. jnestorius(talk) 16:42, 15 March 2024 (UTC)

For id:
 * Template:Cite_book list of builtin foo parameters bar
 * Category:External link templates has foo templates for id parameter id including
 * Project MUSE

Ping
like but not formatted as vocative.

as WP:MENTION says, "Mention templates don't work in edit summaries." use format . in edit summaries to ping a user discreetly, e.g. here.

Anchors
Prefer

==Subhed==

to

==Subhed==

As the former ensures Foo will not scroll beyond the heading

See Redirect:
 * 1) Don't give an anchor the same name as a section heading – this creates invalid code, as anchor names must be unique.
 * 2) Be careful with anchor capitalization – section redirects are case-sensitive in standards-compliant browsers.

Or else

==Subhed==

Wrap/nowrap
Suppose a table has two types of column: those who data is always short, and those which may be long. Ideally:
 * 1) On a wide screen, the short-data columns should be wide enough for no linebreaks but no wider, while the long-data columns will use the browser's table-fitting algorithm to fill up the width and minimise the line breaks and row height.
 * 2) On a narrow screen, even the short-data columns need to have line breaks for maximum use of screen space.

How can we do this? Adding style attribute values? width column header violates #2 if fixed pixels and won't work if percent; max-width doesn't work anywhere in tables. What about finding the widest cell in the column and adding to that? nowrap also violates #2 and avoid wrap does not work. Use, adjusting by trial and error so that it's just wide enough to fit on one line (with some margin for variant CSS schemes). My example is this edit where the widest Location is "🇫🇷 Paray-le-Monial" (10em) and the widest Date is "1952 -" (9em). Those columns never expand beyond those maxima (allowing Notes and Theme to grow as the screen widens) but will shrink on narrow screens.

Note that the aforementioned edit also makes judicious (i.e. minimal) use of avoid wrap on dates: only where the format is yyyy Mn1 dd1-Mn2 dd2 and between the Mn and the dd.

Tables

 * Table alignment with  but rowspan or colspan may interfere and need manual override
 * shy – Can be used to help narrow columns by adding a soft hyphen to a word to allow it to wrap.
 * sticky header - Makes column headers stick to the top of the page while scrolling through table data.
 * sort under - moves the sorting arrows under the headers.
 * row hover highlight - adds row hover highlighting, and option for white background.
 * static row numbers - adds a column of row numbers to a table.

More


{|class="wikitable" ! Markup !! Output !! Comment
 * Fine Ghaedheal
 * Fine Ghaedheal
 * blah blah blah Nefertari blah blah
 * blah blah blah Nefertari blah blah
 * prevent erroneous wikilinking to the wrong article. Mainly useful where the topic is nonnotable so no existing article and a redlink would be inappropriate
 * blah blah blah George Washington blah blah
 * blah blah blah George Washington blah blah
 * as previous but note you need a space
 * http://www.jstor.org/stable/30006971?seq=14
 * JSTOR page reference link
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * http://www.jstor.org/stable/30006971?seq=14
 * JSTOR page reference link
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * JSTOR page reference link
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * Use for top left cell in table
 * For aligning decimal numbers on decimal point. Note also that the Markup column uses pre rather than nowiki tag to show the wikitable syntax; nowiki would not preserve linebreaks.
 * he said "blah blah [i.e. foo] blah".
 * 1) [Link1
 * 2) [Link2]
 * 3) [Link3]
 * 4) [Link4]
 * 5) [Link5]
 * he said "blah blah [i.e. foo] blah".
 * 1) [Link1]
 * 2) [Link2]
 * 3) [Link3]
 * 4) [Link4]
 * 5) [Link5]
 * bracket logic checks for first parameter &#91;
 * 1) OK — simple URL as unnamed parameter → template understands
 * 2) Bug —  complex URL → skips unnamed parameter, assumes first parameter is undefined. See also #4 and #5
 * 3) Workaround — explicitly make URL the first parameter
 * 4) OK — ill-formed URL, but it proves the ? and # chars are OK
 * 5) Bug — proves the = char is the problem
 * Hans von Schweinichen
 * Hans von Schweinichen
 * Hans von Schweinichen
 * Hans von Schweinichen
 * Hans von Schweinichen
 * Hans von Schweinichen


 * See e.g. Special:Diff/944873363; useful where most columns are numeric. But all cells in any one numeric column must have same number of decimal places. Also — cycles through 4 orderings instead of 2.
 * Annotated image is for cropping as well as annotating. Note Name.ext not File:Name.ext
 * Annotated image is for cropping as well as annotating. Note Name.ext not File:Name.ext
 * Annotated image is for cropping as well as annotating. Note Name.ext not File:Name.ext
 * Annotated image is for cropping as well as annotating. Note Name.ext not File:Name.ext
 * 1) Superimpose float Red circle thick.svg on base WW2-Holocaust-Europe.png
 * 2) Image frame to add frame and caption. Issues:
 * 3) * caption text won't auto-wrap to image; you need to add  to prevent right overspill.
 * 4) * Manually add magnify icon to simulate the thumbnail icon Magnify-clip.svg
 * first 2 letters...
 * first 2 letters...
 * Help:Magic words and Help:Conditional expressions; see also mw:ParserFunctions but note #StringFunctions $wgPFEnableStringFunctions is false. Hence see...
 * ...Module:String; also len sub  sublength  match  pos  str_find  find  replace (gsub)  rep  escapePattern  count  join  endswith
 * Infobox mapframe has a transient lagging-update bug (FAQ Q4) if the wikidata item is updated:
 * 1) all-blue map due to co-ordinates 0°N,0°W
 * 2) if override coord via Template parameter (to workaround 0°N,0°W bug) map shows a pushpoint not a shape even when
 * 3) wikidata item has property "OpenStreetMap relation ID" AND
 * 4) Template parameters forced to point=none and shape=yes/inverse
 * text text text.
 * text text text.
 * See Multiref
 * first discussion second discussion
 * first discussion second discussion
 * See Reflist-talk; used on talk pages to prevent references being subject headings
 * to Dublin City Council
 * to Dublin City Council
 * See also Template:Ifexist not redirect for use in 1945 Irish local elections to link to 1945 Dublin Corporation election unless it redirects back to self
 * pval
 * pval
 * parameter name equals symbol
 * #REDIRECT The Crown
 * 1) wikidata item has property "OpenStreetMap relation ID" AND
 * 2) Template parameters forced to point=none and shape=yes/inverse
 * text text text.
 * text text text.
 * See Multiref
 * first discussion second discussion
 * first discussion second discussion
 * See Reflist-talk; used on talk pages to prevent references being subject headings
 * to Dublin City Council
 * to Dublin City Council
 * See also Template:Ifexist not redirect for use in 1945 Irish local elections to link to 1945 Dublin Corporation election unless it redirects back to self
 * pval
 * pval
 * parameter name equals symbol
 * #REDIRECT The Crown
 * pval
 * pval
 * parameter name equals symbol
 * #REDIRECT The Crown
 * #REDIRECT The Crown


 * See at Divisible crown
 * Better than
 * 1) REDIRECT The Crown
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * blah
 * Useful in case page is subsequently moved. Of course in short term of hatnote's life such a move is unlikely, and in long term Talk may well be archived; but still a tiny advantage over hardcoding.
 * normal bg normal bg
 * normal bg normal bg
 * Only works for one line, span not block
 * foo
 * foo
 * }
 * normal bg normal bg
 * normal bg normal bg
 * Only works for one line, span not block
 * foo
 * foo
 * }
 * }
 * }

Linkrot
Template:Internal search templates common doc

Special:LinkSearch e.g. pages linking to "historical-debates.oireachtas.ie/S"

regex101.com to ttest search and replace


 * historical-debates.oireachtas.ie gives no response, whereas debates.oireachtas.ie and oireachtasdebates.oireachtas.ie redirect to www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates although to the day's index page, not the relevant debate within that date.
 * sometimes the count corresponds, sometimes they are one out; for 1st and 2nd Dáil sometimes well out, see
 * the format of anchors change from #N123 to #para_123 ; need to check whether they match
 * the new format lacks column numbers

Irish

 * teanglann.ie Dictionary and Language Library
 * Foclóir Gaeilge-Béarla (Ó Dónaill, 1977)
 * English-Irish Dictionary (de Bhaldraithe, 1959)
 * Grammar Database with downloadable inflection XML files
 * Pronunciation Database
 * focloir.ie New English-Irish Dictionary
 * gaois.ie Fiontar
 * tearma.ie Bunachar Náisiúnta Téarmaíochta don Ghaeilge
 * logainm.ie Placenames Database of Ireland
 * ainm.ie An Bunachar Náisiúnta Beathaisnéisí Gaeilge
 * duchas.ie National Folklore Collection of Ireland
 * eDIL Old/Middle Irish

Lists

 * https://wikipedialibrary.wmflabs.org/users/my_library/
 * irishstaterecords.blogspot.ie
 * Irish State Administration Database
 * discovery.dho.ie most resources copied from other sites, qv. "As of August 31st, 2013, the activities of the Digital Humanities Observatory have ceased. Although DHO:Discovery will continue to be hosted, there will be no further updates to collections or development of new data visualisations."
 * Irish History Online (RIA) part of a European network of national historical bibliographies
 * External resources (list from RIA site)
 * QUB Centre for Data Digitisation and Analysis list of projects, some linked
 * Anonymously published in nineteenth century periodicals
 * curranindex
 * Wellesley index-- subscription only?

Newspapers

 * https://www.independent.co.uk/archive/1999-03-05 shows URL format for date
 * https://news.google.com/newspapers Google News Archive
 * see also support.google.com born-digital news searches

Stormont

 * stormontpapers Commons debates

Hansard

 * Parliament.uk from 1988:
 * Commons
 * Lords

Indexes of
 * MillbankSystems 1803-2005:
 * Offices includes e.g. attorney-general-for-ireland
 * Constituencies e.g. Cork County
 * http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/bills/government-of-ireland-bill for any bill
 * http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/bills/p#PROTECTION%20OF%20PERSON%20AND%20PROPERTY%20(IRELAND)%20ACT%20REPEAL%20BILL for PROTECTION OF PERSON AND PROPERTY (IRELAND) ACT REPEAL BILL and later synonyms, variants, and misspellings.

Missing volumes
Missing pre-1900 are on HathiTrust ([1] means only 1 sitting, ie one day for Lords or Commons, is missing from millbanksystems). Some are also on UFDC, more structured than HathiTrust.


 * series 1
 * 2 16 17 18 23 25 26 28 29 32 33 34 38
 * series 2
 * 20 21 25 (UFDC 20, 21-25)
 * series 3
 * 43 74 106 112 254 255 257 291 316 355
 * series 4
 * 6 23 26
 * Vol 74 cc.137-158 HL 7 July 1899
 * Vols 96, 98, 100, 117, 127, 128, 155, 161, 168, 170, 190, 199
 * series 5 Commons
 * Vols 2, 6, 20, 33, 37, 40, 49, 57, 59, 63, 67, 75, 76, 78, 79, 81, 89, 93, 96, 97, 98, 100, 102, 110 [1], 111, 115 [1], 124, 129, 132, 136, 137, 139, 141, 142 [1], 144, 145, 146, 147, 158, 160, 164, 165, 168, 171, 172, 178, 179, 180, 184, 190, 196, 201, 212, 213, 220, 221, 228, 229, 232, 243, 246, 250, 258, 271, 282, 294, 297, 306, 308, 316, 340, 354, 366, 367, 375, 379, 384, 394, 405, 410, 412, 418, 424, 429, 442, 451, 454, 455, 471, 490, 492, 506, 519, 525, 534, 541, 559, 576, 593, 611, 628, 647, 665, 683, 700, 719, 726, 752, 789, 802, 824, 844, 862, 869, 873, 879, 900, 920, 937, 956, 966, 993 (Part 1), 993 (Part 2)
 * series 5 lords
 * Vols 14, 16 [1], 23, 24, 25, 44, 46, 88, 90, 97, 135, 168, 370 (1 missing)
 * (Lords archive only from 567 1995-22-15 so no missing from millbanksystems are available there)
 * series 6 commons
 * Vols 10 [1], 11, 30, 43, 66 (Part 1), 66 (Part 2), 85, 104, 117, 141 (Part 2)
 * Volume 142 on from 1988-11-22

Records of the Parliaments of Scotland

Journals

 * JHC v.65 is 1819 insterad of 1810 in catalog.

Procedure

 * Redlich The procedure of the House of Commons; a study of its history and present form:
 * Vol.1
 * BOOK I— HISTORICAL
 * PART I The Growth of the Historic Orderi of Business
 * CHAPTER I General Survey 3
 * CHAPTER II Procedure in the Estates Parliament 6
 * CHAPTER III The Development of the Historic Procedure of Parliament 26
 * CHAPTER IV The Order of Business and the Development of THE System of Party Government (1688-1832) ... 52
 * PART II Reforms in Procedure since 1832
 * CHAPTER I Reform of the Antiquated Procedure (1832-1878)... 73
 * CHAPTER II Obstruction by the Irish Nationalists and its Overthrow (1877-1881) 133
 * CHAPTER III The Urgency Procedure and the Introduction of the Closure (1881-1888) 164
 * CHAPTER IV Mr. Balfour's Procedure Reforms (1888-1902) ... 186
 * Vol.2
 * BOOK II MODERN PROCEDURE
 * PART I AUTHORITIES AND LITERATURE
 * CHAPTER I LEX ET CONSUETUDO PARLIAMENT! 3
 * CHAPTER II ORIGINAL AUTHORITIES AND LITERATURE :
 * I LIST OF AUTHORITIES ... ... ... ... 10
 * II LIST OF BOOKS CONSULTED 14
 * PART II THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE BUILDING AND THE RECORDING OF PROCEEDINGS
 * CHAPTER I THE MEETING PLACE AND ARRANGEMENT OF SEATS ... 21
 * HISTORICAL NOTE ... ... ... ... ... 26
 * CHAPTER II PUBLICITY OF PROCEEDINGS AND REPORTS OF DEBATES... 28
 * HISTORICAL NOTES :
 * I THE ADMISSION OF STRANGERS ... ... ... 34
 * II PUBLICATION OF DEBATES ... ... ... 36
 * CHAPTER III PARLIAMENTARY PAPERS 39
 * HISTORICAL NOTE 47
 * PART III THE SITTINGS OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
 * CHAPTER I OPENING OF THE SESSION AND CONSTITUTION OF THE HOUSE 51
 * HISTORICAL NOTE 62
 * CHAPTER II PROROGATION AND DISSOLUTION ... 65
 * CHAPTER III MAKING AND KEEPING A HOUSE AND THE ARRANGEMENT OF THE SITTINGS ... ... ... ... ... ... 68
 * HISTORICAL NOTES :
 * I THE QUORUM 75
 * II THE TIME OF THE SITTINGS 76
 * PART IV THE CONSTITUTIONAL POSITION OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS AS AFFECTING ITS PROCEDURE
 * CHAPTER I THE RELATION OF THE Two HOUSES AND ITS EFFECT ON PROCEDURE ... ... ... ... 79
 * CHAPTER II THE CROWN, THE GOVERNMENT, AND THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 89
 * PART V THE RELATION OF PROCEDURE TO THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
 * CHAPTER I THE PARTIES AND THE RULES 103
 * HISTORICAL NOTE AS TO ATTENDANCE AT THE HOUSE 112
 * CHAPTER II THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ... 115
 * PART VI THE ORGANS OF THE HOUSE
 * CHAPTER I THE SPEAKER AND HIS OFFICE 131
 * CHAPTER II THE FUNCTIONS AND LEGAL POSITION OF THE SPEAKER... 140
 * CHAPTER III THE HISTORY OF THE SPEAKERSHIP ... ... ... 156
 * CHAPTER IV THE SPEAKER'S DEPUTIES 169
 * CHAPTER V THE OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ... ... 172
 * HISTORICAL NOTE 177
 * CHAPTER VI COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS... ... ... 180
 * 1. STANDING COMMITTEES ... ... ... ... 182
 * 2. SESSIONAL COMMITTEES ... ... ... ... 184
 * 3. SELECT COMMITTEES ... ... ... ... 187
 * 4. JOINT COMMITTEES 197
 * 5. COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE HOUSE ... ... 198
 * CHAPTER VII HISTORY OF COMMITTEES IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ... 203
 * PART VII THE FORMS OF PARLIAMENTARY WORK
 * 1. MOTIONS 215
 * 2. PUTTING THE QUESTION 221
 * 3. AMENDMENTS ... ... ... ... ... ... 228
 * 4. DIVISIONS 233
 * 5. PETITIONS 239
 * 6. QUESTIONS ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 241
 * 7. ADDRESSES TO THE CROWN 244
 * 8. ADJOURNMENTS AND URGENCY MOTIONS 248
 * 9. BILLS 252
 * HISTORICAL NOTES :
 * I PARLIAMENTARY FORMS ... ... ... ... 258
 * II THE MAJORITY PRINCIPLE 261
 * Vol.3
 * BOOK II— MODERN PROCEDURE— (continued)
 * PART VIII The Course of Business in the House of Commons
 * CHAPTER I General Survey i
 * CHAPTER II Classification and Division of Business 8
 * CHAPTER III Order of Proceedings at Individual Sittings ... 27
 * Historical Note ... ... 37
 * PART IX Order ln Speaking and in Debate
 * CHAPTER I Freedom of Speech ... 42
 * CHAPTER II Order in Debate 51
 * CHAPTER III Penalties for Breaches of Order ... 70
 * Historical Note ... ... ... ... ... 82
 * PART X The Process of Legislation
 * CHAPTER I Discussion of Bills in the House of Commons ... 85
 * CHAPTER II The Share of the House of Lords in Legislation ... 100
 * CHAPTER III Royal Assent to Bills io5
 * Historical Note 109
 * PART XI Financial Procedure
 * Preliminary Observations 113
 * CHAPTER I Fundamental Principles 114
 * CHAPTER II Discussion of the Estimates ... ... ... ... 133
 * CHAPTER III The Finance of 1903 153
 * CHAPTER IV History of Financial Procedure 159
 * BOOK III— THEORETICAL
 * Introduction 175
 * CHAPTER I Bentham's Theory of Parliamentary Procedure and its Reception ... ... ... ... 177
 * CHAPTER II Theory of the Order of Business 189
 * SUPPLEMENTARY CHAPTER Changes in Procedure since 1905 202
 * APPENDIX
 * I — Standing Orders Relative to Public Business 227
 * II — Sessional Orders 244
 * III — Speaker Brand's Urgency Rules 247
 * IV — Closure Rule as Proposed by the Government in 1887 ... ... ... ... ... 251
 * V — Standing Order No. i as Adopted in 1888 ... 252
 * VI — Supply Rule of 1896 ... ... ... ... 253
 * VII — Procedure Reform Scheme of 1902 ... ... 254
 * VIII — Proclamation Dissolving Parliament and Summoning Another ... ... ... ... 262
 * IX — Order in Council for Issue of Writs ... 263
 * X — Motion and Amendment ... ... ... ... 264
 * XI — Amending a Bill in Committee... ... ... 265
 * XII — Weekly Summary of the Position of Legislation ... ... ... ... ... ... 267
 * XIII — Votes and Proceedings of the House of Commons ... ... ... ... ... ... 268
 * XIV — Closure by Compartments ... 274
 * XV — Specimens of Form of Estimates ... ... 275
 * XVI — Vote on Account 278
 * XVII — Appropriation Act, 1904 ... ... ... ... 279
 * XVIII — Statistics as to Legislation by the House OF Commons ... ... ... ... ... 282
 * XIX — Financial Summary, 1903 ... ... ... ... 283
 * INDEX 285

Irish Parliament

 * 1879 Return of all MPs (204 MB) from Bodleian


 * Statute rolls Hathi index vols 1-5
 * Vol.1 John to Henry V
 * History of the Irish Parliament Ulster Historical Foundation
 * constituencies
 * Search Biographies of MPs / Statutes 1692-1800 / Election Results 1692–1802
 * Irish Legislation Database QUB
 * Names
 * Acts by Session
 * The origin and history of the constitution of England, and of the early parliaments of Ireland William Betham, 1834
 * pp 273-281 are on the 1299 parliament of Wogan, naming towns (in Latin) which were taxed, and specifying 2, 3, or 4 MPs per shire and borough. Does not say whether named towns sent MPs. Betham doubts the proceedings merit the label "parliament", both for form and function; the justiciar met the burgess before the parliament, which they did not attend; and most places named were "market towns of little note or character". Some other names -- abbeys and cantreds. All interesting.
 * p.316 has 1374 list
 * pp323-4 1377; 325-7 1380; 327-9 1381
 * The Irish Parliament Rolls of the Fifteenth Century (1943) - proctors, unlike England where Convocation was separate from Parl; maybe only assented on relevant decisions; p.455 has list of abbeys represented. (seems inferior clergy had separate representation -- two proctors per diocese, but Armagh by custom sent only in in 15C, maybe as inter anglicos only? -- p.457).
 * Parliaments and councils of Mediæval Ireland Richardson and Sayles (1947 IMC)
 * 1420–21 PhD p.256
 * eleven counties and liberties (Meath, Dublin, Kildare, Louth, Wexford, Kilkenny, Tipperary, Cork, Limerick, Waterford and Carlow)
 * the clergy from their equivalent dioceses (Meath, Dublin and the chapter of the prior of Holy Trinity, Kildare, Armagh inter Anglicos, Ferns, Ossory, Cashel, Cork and Cloyne, Limerick, Waterford and Lismore, Leighlin )
 * and nine cities and towns (Dublin, Drogheda, Wexford, New Ross, Kilkenny, Cork, Kinsale, Youghal, Limerick)

Penal laws
Gorges Edmond Howard 1775 p.179 fn "penal" vs "remedial" laws [against Popery]:
 * As these expressions remedial law and penal law, have often occurred throughout this collection, it may not be amiss to mention the following distinction which has been made between them; viz. a remedial law, is, where before there was a right of a private nature arising from natural justice, without any adequate remedy. But where an act of parliament prohibits any thing to be done, which is not malum in se, or commands a thing to be done for the good of the community, under a penalty, or by way of satisfaction of damages, it is properly penal; vid. Andrew's Rep. 116

Newenham p.184 fn annual count of certificates of conformity filed at Irish Chancery: 1703–8 under "first" Popery Act [2 Ann c.6] and 1709–73 under "second" Popery Act (1709 [8 Ann c.3])

Statutes Passed in the Parliaments Held in Ireland
Earlier printings listed in

The Old series includes acts not included in the new series

Parliamentary papers

 * University of Southampton Hartley Library Ford Collection @ archive.org:
 * British Non-Parliamentary Publications
 * British Parliamentary Publications mainly Ireland-related

hathitrust "Parliamentary papers" and "Sessional papers"
 * 1797 -- 3 vols not Parliamentary papers in the usual sense; historical addresses and standing orders
 * 1801-95 -- 1979 vols full view – sorted by session-date and volume-num; incomplete but good start
 * 1829-42 -- 68 vols full view - mixed in with later search-only
 * 1900-63/4 fullview nearly all 1900-02, a few 1910-20, many 1959-64, few others
 * HL 1714-1805 (1978 reprint) possibly only indexes for 1714-94 (subset also here)
 * HL 1840 2, 5, 15, 17, 20, 40, 46 and 2, 5, 7-8, 19-21, 23, 26
 * HL 1900-02, 20-22
 * HL 1933-54
 * Bills 1932-68


 * Indexes:
 * 1801–1832 (1834)
 * 1801–1852
 * HL 1801-59
 * HL 1859-1913 partial : 1859-70 : 1871-1884/5 : 1903-05 : 1908-10 : 1912-13


 * Specific interesting:
 * Accounts of the net public income and expenditure of Great Britain in each financial year from 1688 to 5th January 1801; and of the other receipts into and issues from the Exchequer, distinguishing the amounts raised by creation of debt, and the amounts applied to the reduction of debt, showing also the balances at the beginning and end of each year; similar accounts of the net public income and expenditure of Ireland, 1688 to 1800, inclusive; accounts of the gross public income of Great Britain, and of the gross public expenditure, for each financial year from 5th January 1801 to 5th January 1817; similar accounts of gross public income and expenditure of Ireland, 1801 to 1816; similar accounts of the gross public income and expenditure of the United Kingdom for each financial year from 5th January 1801
 * Part I: 1688–1816, and Appendix 1–6; pp.1–479 HC 1869 XXXV (366) 1
 * Part II: 1816–1868, and Appendix 1–13; pp.1–733 HC 1869 [? XXXV] (366-I) [? c.490]
 * Appendix XIII p. 313ff. is "Explanatory and historical notices"

Historical geography

 * Irish Historic Towns Atlas Online > Chronological listing of available towns/cities 1. Kildare; 2. Carrickfergus; 3. Bandon; 4. Kells; 5. Mullingar; 6. Athlone; 8. Downpatrick; 10. Kilkenny; 11. Dublin, part I, to 1610; 12. Belfast part I, to 1840; 13. Fethard; 14. Trim; 15.Derry~Londonderry; 18. Armagh; 20. Tuam; 21. Limerick; 22. Longford; 23. Carlingford; 24. Sligo; 25. Ennis;
 * GIS at UCD and on the Web: Find Spatial Data & Other Datasets for Ireland
 * The Quagmire of Administrative Districts from website of Eneclann, "A TCD Campus Company!
 * Dec/Jan 1605/6 Erection of Wicklow, incl Inquisition on bounds and subunits and orders effecting (Nos. 35-39 from A Repertory of the Inrolments on the Patent Rolls of Chancery in Ireland, Commencing with the Reign of King James I. Vol. 1, Part 1; John Caillard Erck (J. M'Glashan, 1846))
 * libguides.ucd mapscalesandsymbols details on old OS
 * Wikishire British Isles map w detached parts of counties
 * libguides.ucd mapscalesandsymbols details on old OS
 * Wikishire British Isles map w detached parts of counties


 * 1836-42 county and barony changes: Statutory Orders etc, 1st ed; Vol.2; County, Ireland; 2: boundaries; h: Dublin 1839-11-18; pp.42–45 includes all Dublin baronies, not just intercounty transfers.

Hardinge; has list of baronies from various surveys, might predate those of List of baronies of Ireland

See User:Jnestorius/Town boundaries

Parl papers HC 1847 56 (697) 329 Road Sessions Towns one per barony.


 * Ordnance Survey letters John O'Donovan et al



Printed gazetteers

 * Parl Gaz Ireland:
 * Google Books Vol. I: A–C, Vol. II: D–M, Vol. III: N–Z
 * Archive TXT Vol. I: A–C Vol. II: D–M Vol. III: N–Z
 * Parl Gaz England & Wales:
 * Archive TXT Vol.1 A-D
 * Lewis Topog Dict
 * Ireland
 * 1st ed 1837 libraryireland Google v.1
 * 2nd ed 1849 v.1 1849 Anbbey-Julianstown [v.2 1840 ]

https://books.google.ie/books?id=dDQE_stxs-AC&dq=%22Topographical%20Dictionary%20of%20Ireland%22&pg=PP13#v=onepage&q&f=false
 * England
 * 1st ed 1831: v.1, v.2, v.3, v.4
 * 7th ed. 1848
 * Wales 1849
 * Scotland 1846
 * Charles Smith The Ancient and Present State of the County and City of Cork (1776 ed.; 1750 ed. Oireachtas PDF) has barony-by-barony, including "cantred of Kilbritton" and "barony of Bear and Bantry"
 * 'Kilbrittain, MacCarthy Reagh's chief fortress, with a large tract around it, had been taken from the De Courceys. This conquest must have taken place in comparatively recent times, for, when Smith wrote, this district was not included in the barony of Carbery, but was classed by itself as the Cantred of Kilbrittain.' (Journal of the Cork Historical & Archaeological Society (April–June 1904) "The Barony of Carbery" p.75 W. F. T. Butler


 * An Hibernian atlas (1776) Oireachtas has bad maps (e.g. Dublin looks post-1842) but some interest (e.g. Tipp shows Ileagh; Cork Ibane and Barryroe separate).

Civil parishes

 * Church and state - Ireland subject index
 * Account of Parishes united and disunited by Order of Lord Lieutenant in Ireland 1718-1818
 * A RETURN of Unions of Parishes in Ireland dissolved under the Act 3 & 4 Will.4, c.37 ; s.124. 1834-44
 * Footnotes of "Parishes" section note where a Parish in Petty's map corresponds to a townland in the Townland Index.

Catholic parishes

 * Wexford / Ferns - lists all townlands (not all docs archived)
 * lists shared townlands


 * dioceses shapefile available on CSO site ED_SA


 * describes project but no link to online. "This paper outlines the results of a project that attempted the initial digitisation of Catholic parish boundaries to make them more available."
 * describes project but no link to online. "This paper outlines the results of a project that attempted the initial digitisation of Catholic parish boundaries to make them more available."


 * ESB rural electrification 792 "rural areas" often Catholic parish
 * Scan of contemporary national map (was crude to begin with, and is physcially faded and tirn, and scan is low-res)
 * Google map layer x-links to contemporary map fragments

Acts

 * 11 Eliz sess. 3 Chap. IX (Rot. Parl. cap. 19.) 1569 authorises shiring of Ulster and Connaught, excluding "liberties of Tipperarie or Kerie" and "any franchises or liberties" given to archbishops or "any other person or persons, bodies politique or corporate, their heirs or successours, or to the heires or successours of any of them"

Census towns

 * 1958 Dáil answer on "census town" definition change.

Outside Ireland
Parl rep papers by session:
 * Oct 1830 - April 1831 pop of Eng Wales Scot boroughs, and other communications
 * Sept 1831 pop of Eng and Wales boroughs, and other communications.


 * 1832 parliamentary boundaries:
 * Surveys: IX. "The English Reform Legislation" Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1820-1832, ed. D.R. Fisher
 * "Parliamentary Representation" from General Alphabetical Index to the Printed Bills, Reports, Estimates, Accounts and Papers, of Session 6 December to 16 August, 1831–32 pp.39–42 (gives a good view of the various confusing parallel numbering schemes for papers, volumes, etc.)
 * "Parliament" from General Index To The Papers, Printed By Order Of The House Of Commons 1801–1832 (1834) pp.278–282
 * [Vol 36] has lots of preliminary reports; (hathitrust 1832 parl papers search has 26 of 48 vols, but not 36; searching by title/desc in index vols gives no matches)
 * Ireland 36 (435) 613; [36 (550) 625];
 * Vol. 37 England old boroughs info
 * Boundary commissioners: (Eng+Wal 8 vol indexed) I see from inclusion of Merthyr in Cardiff that these are not the final adaptations, but maybe the boundaries themselves were as specified.
 * visionofbritain zoomable map gives indirect link to maps.
 * e.g. Westbury
 * England cover all 3 Vols, each in two parts: 38.I incl general info; 38.II; 39.III Kent–Middlesex; 39.IV Monmouth-Somerset; 40.V; 40.VI Vol.41 (357) divisions of counties
 * Wales Vol 41.VII; Vol.41.VIII
 * Scotland 42 (408) 1 NLS soft index and hi-res maps — maps show only new bdy, not old; instrs (p.1) say "His Majesty's Government, after an examination of several of the Plans and Reports of the different Commissioners, con siders it advisable to take advantage of the intervening period, to have the whole reconsidered and revised, for the purpose of attaining a greater degree of uni formity in the system followed. ... Two of the Commissioners will assist you in carrying on the revision; and in general, without being controlled by local divisions or jurisdictions, you will assign such Boundaries as the circumstances of each Burgh may seem to require, making sufficient allowance for the future extension of the Town." — I interpret as meaning "the Eng and Ir reports (or maybe the previous round of Scottish reports? 'In carrying these Instructions into execution, it may be necessary that some of the Burghs should be revisited by the Commissioners.'compatible with either) show there's no point in considering ancient bdys, so just cut to the chase.
 * Ireland: 43 (519) 1 scan unfolds some maps but not others; most maps (Cashel an exception) show only prop bdy, not pre-existing bdy (unlike 1837 rpt). OTOH this Dungarvan map though described by antique-prints-maps.com as "Published by Charles Knight in "The English Encyclopaedia" in 1854" seems an error (see English Encyclopaedia "Dungarvan" article) whereas it matches Parl Gaz sv "Abbeyside" desc "one of two maps of Dungarvan in the Report on Borough Boundaries"; while |new proposal map is unfolded in hathitrust, old map is folded, but visible edge matches antique-prints-maps.com one.
 * Contents lists towns most "Boundary report and Plan" but Dungarvan and Mallow are "Boundary report and two Plans"; "Manor of Mallow" and "Mallow"
 * Vol.5 first 3 papers are reports of select committees considering commissioners' reports, on Arundel, Dungarvan Youghal and Mallow

(see 1938 index of 1801–52 papers; 1837 index of 1801–37 papers)
 * 1835 Mun Comm Eng Wal:
 * First Report [HC 1835 (116) xxiii 1 / HL 1835 (38)]
 * Appendix [Summary statistics and tables; pp. 52–131 of First Report] — foldout tables not unfolded in Google scan
 * Appendix to the First Report [distinct from above Appendix; this Appendix comprises the reports on individual boroughs]:
 * Part I; M W and SW pp. 1–662 [HC 1835 (116) xxiii 133 / HL 1835 (38a)]
 * Part II: SE and S pp. 663–1408 [HC 1835 (116) xxiv]
 * Part III; N and N Mid pp. 1409–2080 [HC 1835 (116) xxv]
 * Part IV; E and NW pp. 2081–2860 [HC 1835 (116) xxvi 1]
 * Part V; Home / "not in any district" pp. 2861–2940 [HC 1835 (116) xxvi 787]
 * Analytical Index [HC 1839 xviii (402) 1] (to first report and appendix)
 * [Second Report; London and Southwark] [HC 1837 (239) xxv 1] Extracts:
 * Statistical journal and record of useful knowledge (October 1837) Vol.1 No.1 pp.1–19 "It is thought that the first number of a Statistical Journal, published in the metropolis, cannot commence more appropriately than with a copy of the last report of the Municipal Corporations Commissioners to the Crown, relative to the corporation of the city of London." Following are subsets of this:
 * Extracts from [various reports in favor of the Extension of Municipal Institutions to the Metropolis pp.3–6] Metropolitan municipal association 1867
 * English Historical Documents, 1833-1874 No. 194 pp.639–641
 * Most of T. J. Hogg's missing reports [HC 686 (1837-8) xxxv 223] (instead of p.221 is p.71 in the index of the Google-scan; but that index is a later typescript, perhaps inserted after some reports had been removed from the volume?)

1837 Ireland mun corp borough boundaries
 * Report books.google; maps folded up.
 * Maps in colour limerickcity


 * GIS boundary datasets created by the project (1831-1851) The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure
 * preceding states following two eliminate Scottish exclaves:
 * Inverness and Elgin County Boundaries Act, 1870
 * Boundaries of counties and parishes in Scotland as settled by the Boundary Commissioners under the Local government (Scotland) act, 1889 (published before some changes were finalised) introduction states how many exclaves there are; explains how had already been done away with for some purposes; states how the 1889 act completely does away with all of them (except one in Dunbartonshire). Later gives the text of the orders reassigning them (search for "cease to be part of that county").

Municipal Boundaries Commission (Ireland), 1880

 * Three [monochrome scans of colour] maps, including suburban townships, police district, bridge tax district, and proposed fire district.
 * mostly in alphabetical order; colour scans
 * looseleaf colour scans of all maps except Cork: first Belfast [unnumbered] then rest numbered 1–105, ordered as in C.3089-I except Dublin 1-3 inserted as Nos.39-41 [and much better, colour, scans]
 * Maps show "current boundary", "proposed boundary of inner area" [often the same as the current], and "proposed boundary of outer area" [sometimes much wider], and sometimes [current?] ward boundaries
 * mostly in alphabetical order; colour scans
 * looseleaf colour scans of all maps except Cork: first Belfast [unnumbered] then rest numbered 1–105, ordered as in C.3089-I except Dublin 1-3 inserted as Nos.39-41 [and much better, colour, scans]
 * Maps show "current boundary", "proposed boundary of inner area" [often the same as the current], and "proposed boundary of outer area" [sometimes much wider], and sometimes [current?] ward boundaries
 * looseleaf colour scans of all maps except Cork: first Belfast [unnumbered] then rest numbered 1–105, ordered as in C.3089-I except Dublin 1-3 inserted as Nos.39-41 [and much better, colour, scans]
 * Maps show "current boundary", "proposed boundary of inner area" [often the same as the current], and "proposed boundary of outer area" [sometimes much wider], and sometimes [current?] ward boundaries
 * Maps show "current boundary", "proposed boundary of inner area" [often the same as the current], and "proposed boundary of outer area" [sometimes much wider], and sometimes [current?] ward boundaries

Censuses

 * Census Volumes 1926 to 1991 CSO
 * 1841 census on Google
 * townland indexes archive.org: 1861, 1871, 1881 supp, 1891 supp, 1901, 1911 supp
 * NI censuses 1926 to 2001 (with topog. index 1926 and 1937 suppl; but not 1961 index, or 1971 suppl )

Addenda to the census of Ireland for the year 1841; showing the number of houses, families and persons in the several townlands and towns of Ireland, containing the population figures for townlands — would be useful for small towns not recorded in 1851 census.

Maps

 * UCD index of OS town plans
 * Dublin 1848 index
 * Dublin Sheet XVIII index
 * South Dublin Historical Mapping
 * "Layers > Duncan 1821" shows old baronies (includes Upper [and a bit of Nether] Cross in blue, Donore in Yellow, Sepulchre in red; boundaries of other baronies and "City of Dublin Liberties" not coloured -- are they shown at all?
 * Maps of the escheated counties of Ireland, 1609 / copied at the Ordnance Survey Office in Southhampton, Colonel Sir Henry James, Director http://digital-library.qub.ac.uk/

Oireachtas

 * Oireachtas Committee Reports 1922-2007
 * archive.oireachtas.ie not available 2015-10-29
 * 193.178.2.84 times out 2015-10-29
 * archive.org


 * Bills index and Title index:
 * http://oireachtasdebates.oireachtas.ie/debates%20authoring/debateswebpack.nsf/titleindex?readform&chamber=seanad&year=1935&month=03 is Seanad 1935-03 title index for month (year doesn't work alas).
 * Parent year http://oireachtasdebates.oireachtas.ie/debates%20authoring/debateswebpack.nsf/datelist?readform&chamber=seanad&year=1927 allows click of months to provide previous.

Digitized libraries

 * Global
 * Online Books Page index
 * archive.org  "a just dissatisfaction with their municipal" in text of 1836 works
 * britishparliamentarypublications can search text of this collection


 * National
 * kbr.be
 * search.obvsg.at at Österreichische Nationalbibliothek
 * gallica.bnf.fr Gallica at Bibliothèque nationale de France
 * Lyon
 * Germany
 * digitale-sammlungen.de Münchener DigitalisierungsZentrum for Bayerische Staatsbibliothek
 * staatsbibliothek-berlin.de
 * digitalesthueringen.de
 * bdh.bne.es
 * Pomeranian Digital Library


 * University
 * Canada
 * utoronto.ca
 * Germany
 * bib-bvb.de uni-augsburg.de
 * tu-darmstadt.de
 * uni-duesseldorf.de
 * uni-frankfurt.de
 * ub.uni-heidelberg.de
 * UK
 * BL theses search
 * Bodleian Oxford [on Google books, but available outside US]
 * Ireland
 * Crawford Gallery


 * Other
 * Kildare Library Journal of the Co. Kildare Archaeological Society (1891-2006) and Kildare Observer (1880-1935)


 * Directories
 * Directory of manuscripts
 * European Studies: Digital Libraries of Europe
 * theeuropeanlibrary.org search multiple catalogues

Indexes
Subject Index is useful

Particular
Some of these allow manual specification of URL beyond the last page


 * Select Committee on fictitious votes
 * Three reports listed here; 1st's Appendix has list of all electors in all counties; 3rd's ditto for some boroughs incl Dublin


 * 1833 Poor Law Commission and State of poorer classes
 * 1st report

Google books
 * 1835 Mun Corp
 * id=c9VbAAAAQAAJ Index this one; might have it all
 * id=ZUcxAQAAMAAJ "Southern, midland, western and south-eastern circuits, and part of the north-eastern circuit, Part 1" includes all of those, maybe more
 * id=B1MSAAAAYAAJ
 * Part III conclusion of NW (p.1002 real and Google, though start of book)
 * St Johnstowne, Longford (p.1287-93 real; pp.1283,104-9 Google)
 * Dublin Index p.112 (previous is St Johnstowne, Longford, which is pagenumbered in error with the after rather than the before section;
 * Dublin Ctd. p.117 (first after index, ie pp.1-116 not included in sequence)
 * Dublin Appendix 1: Guilds p.269
 * Dublin Appendix 2: Manorial jurisdictions or Liberties p.289
 * Specific ones:
 * The liberty of St. Sepulchre.
 * The liberty or manor of Thomas Court and Donore.
 * The liberty of the Deanery of St. Patrick.
 * The manor of Glassnevin or Grange Gorman, and liberty of Christ Church.
 * The manor of Kilmainham.
 * Generalities

EPPI
 * 10925 - 638 pages first report
 * TOC Report
 * Report p.1 of 40
 * TOC Appendix
 * Summary stats
 * TOC Dublin pt 1 followed by pp1-116
 * App pt 1: S, Mid, W (not rest, ie SE and Part NE)
 * App table
 * 10926 - 32 pages first report: supplement
 * Same App table
 * 10927 - 120 pages City of Dublin: report, part I
 * Same Dublin pt 1
 * 10928 - 880 pages Catalogued as "appendix part I" but unrelated Commission into electoral abuses, and start of Poor commission.
 * 10930 - 204 pages appendix, part II: North-Eastern Circuit and part of North-Western Circuit
 * 11044 Catalogued as "appendix, part III: North-Western Circuit" but unrelated
 * 11045 City of Dublin: report, part II; transcript, but no page images.


 * Manor courts:
 * 1837 report: evidence per manor from each seneschal, includes lists of townlands (but note e.g. Dungarvan manor = Dungarvan (UK Parliament constituency), OS c.1840 6-inch boundary comprises loads more than seneschal lists, so I guess he used bigger denominations than Richard Griffith. Oh well.


 * 1855 Fairs & markets
 * Placewise index of minutes

[Grand Jury Presentments (1815-27); Dublin (1822-5); Limerick (1820-2); tolls and customs (1826, 1834)]


 * Local taxation lists of towns
 * 1853 town commissioners list
 * 1855 town commissioners list
 * 1865
 * incl markets and fairs App 8
 * 1866-8
 * 1869
 * 1872
 * 1896 tables IV–VII


 * Returns of local taxation in Ireland, 1865 includes introductory description and classification;
 * on p.9 of poor rates, grand jury cess, town rates, DMP rate, harbour rates, etc.
 * p.10 poor rates and cess are based on same valuation

LGBI reports
All archive.org except EPPI* — 1 - 1873 2 - 1874 3 - 1875 4 - 1876 5 - 1877 6 - 1878* 7 - 1879 8 - 1880 9 - 1881 10 - 1882 11 - 1883 12 - 1884 13 - 1885 14 - 1886 15 - 1887 16 - 1888 [ 17 - 1889] 18 - 1890 19 - 1891 20 - 1892 21 - 1893 22 - 1894 23 - 1895 24 - 1896 25 - 1897 26 - 1898 27 - 1899 28 - 1900 29 - 1901 30 - 1902 31 - 1903 32 - 1904 33 - 1905 34 - 1906 35 - 1907 36 - 1908 37 - 1909 38 - 1910 39 - 1911 40 - 1912 41 - 1913 42 - 1914 43 - 1915 44 - 1916 45 - 1917 46 - 1918 47 - 1919 48 - 1920 [ 49- 1921]

Griffith Valuation etc

 * Griffith testimony at County Cess, Ireland: report from the Select Committee on Grand Jury Presentments of Ireland; last page Q.690 on dividing townlands by parish:
 * You have used the word parish and townland; are the boundaries in any degree commensurate, that is to say, will the boundary of a townland, for example, be the boundary of the parish? The boundaries of parishes are always boundaries of townlands; that is to say, one townland cannot be conÂ¬ tained in two parishes ; it sometimes happens that an estate may lie on both sides of the boundary of a parish, and that the townland in each parish is called by the same name, and is considered to be one townland, but in such cases I have always divided the townland, and added the word upper or lower, east or west, to the original name, to serve to distinguish them. As each parish will be separately assessed, it is necessary that no confusion should arise as to the boundaries of any denominaÂ¬ tion or division belonging to it, consequently in all cases the boundary of a parish must likewise be the boundary of a townland as far as that parish or the county assessment is concerned.
 * Griffith testimony at Select Committee on general valuation, 1869; Q.1318 says 69000 townlands.
 * askaboutireland maps
 * Sir Richard Griffith's three valuations of Ireland, 1826-1864 Smyth, William Anthony (2008) PhD thesis, National University of Ireland Maynooth
 * And  because the  boundary legislation did not take cognisance of any ecclesiastical division other than parishes, Griffith was obliged to determine the precise status of the  numerous granges which had  been recorded  as separate ecclesiastical divisions in the copies of the diocesan registers which Griffith had received.
 * Griffith had developed  an effective  method  to  determine  what townlands were  to be  allocated  to each parish:  he simply allotted  a  townland  to that parish to which it paid  tithe. If a townland was exempt from tithe it was allocated to the parish to which it paid church cess and if a townland paid neither tithe nor church cess it was allocated to the parish by which ‘it was wholly or for the most part surrounded
 * Similar  to Griffith’s use  of the  tithes to determine  parish boundaries, he  employed  the  county presentment records to determine inter­county boundary disputes, as in the case of the disputed boundary between the ‘county of Derry [and] the county of Antrim’ ... . In Griffith’s opinion, if the whole  of the  river  belonged  to the  ‘county of Derry’ [sic]  then the ‘county of Antrim should not pay any portion of the expense of the mason work.’
 * This 1834 report showed that twenty­ seven counties contained detached portions of baronies ‘insulated’ within  other  baronies of the  same  county ... seven counties (Cavan, Dublin, King’s, Meath, Queen’s, Tyrone  and  Waterford) had  a  detached  portion insulated within  other  county bounds. ... Griffith considered it important that the consolidation of these detached portions should be completed before the Ordnance Survey maps were drawn.
 * Before  the  assistant boundary surveyor commenced the  perambulation of a parish, he  received a  list of the  townlands drawn up  by the high  constable  of each  county. Although these lists were the official record of townlands, Griffith considered them to be ‘generally very imperfect’; so much so that, by 1828, the general practice within the boundary department was to regard estate papers as a more reliable townland list.
 * as townland  boundaries were  generally coextensive  with estate  boundaries, a  person familiar  with the boundaries of each  estate  would  be  of assistance to the  survey’s deliberations. ... . In essence, Griffith advised  the assistant boundary surveyor that, for townlands totally contained within an estate, he could simply lay out the townland boundaries from the tracings of the estate maps. In the case of townland boundaries that were co­extensive with the boundaries of an estate the surveyor could accept the agreed view of the proprietors on both sides of the townland boundary as to what was the lie of the townland boundary
 * Townlands divisions were  not considered  to  extend  into larger lakes such as Lough Neagh and Lough Erne but to end at the ordinary water mark (which is part of the explanation as to why the total parish area does not always equate to the sum of the area of the townlands it contains). However, county, barony and parish boundaries had to be defined through inland bodies of water but all boundaries were terminated at the ordinary high water mark on the seashore.
 * In addition those ‘ancient’ demesne lands that were on the original high constables’ list supplied  to the  assistant boundary surveyor were  to be marked  as townlands in  their own right. If the  demesne  was found  to have  been enlarged then the assistant boundary surveyor was obliged to mark out the boundaries of the  townlands which had  been subsumed  into the  modern demesne  lands.
 * Within  the boundary department there  were  three elements to be  officially considered when deciding upon what place names would  be inserted on the boundary sketch map: 1. the official list of townland names supplied by the high constable; 2. the name recorded in the estate papers; 3. information gleaned from local residents.
 * Griffith’s Instructions (1832) also outline the procedure to be adopted when the assistant boundary surveyor came upon two (or more) townlands within a single parish that possessed the same  name  even though they were  distinct townlands in their own right. In order to distinguish one from the other, Griffith employed the same technique as Petty had  used  whilst conducting  the  Down survey. He instructed  his assistant boundary surveyor to affix some characteristic term such as north, east, upper or lower to the townland name. This agnomen was to be affixed after, and not before, the place name, so instead of writing East Crossterry the correct format was Crossterry East. If,however, a parish boundary passed through a single townland, this townland was to be recorded  as two distinct and  individual townlands within  each parish  under the same name without any distinguishing appendage.
 * The  assistant boundary surveyors, during  their perambulation of the  townland boundaries, were also ‘to ascertain, and register’ in their field books the names applied to localities that contained several townlands such as ‘Bollinagleragh, in the county of Leitrim’, or bigger areas that contained several parishes such as Connemara, in County Galway, and to list the townlands or parishes which these tracts of land  contained  in their field  books
 * the assistant boundary surveyor was instructed to  draw up  a list of the townland  names according to the manner  in which they were  pronounced  by the  local people
 * However, whilst the  Irish scholars George  Petrie, Eugene  O’Curry, John O Donovan and  poet James Clarence Mangan were recruited  into the  Ordnance  Survey topographical department it would seem that the office of the boundary survey retained the  final authority to decide  the orthography of the  place names. But it has been suggested from 1832, Colby informed  the  boundary department that  they had  no authority to alter  the ordnance survey map for the county effectively putting an end to Griffith’s involvement in decisions regarding place names.
 * Indeed, from 1834, following representations from a  number  of country gentlemen, all demesnes were  marked  by distinctive  shading  on the  Ordnance Survey maps, their extent and  names being supplied by the proprietors

Language

 * jlawler/levin.verbs
 * jlawler/levin.verbs

Dictionaries

 * Green’s Dictionary of Slang
 * English Dialect Dictionary — eddonline Search; archive.org scans: Vol 1: A–C, Vol 2: D–G, Vol 3: H–L, Vol 4: M–Q, Vol 5: R–S, Vol 6: T–Z Suppl Bibliog
 * Green’s Dictionary of Slang
 * English Dialect Dictionary — eddonline Search; archive.org scans: Vol 1: A–C, Vol 2: D–G, Vol 3: H–L, Vol 4: M–Q, Vol 5: R–S, Vol 6: T–Z Suppl Bibliog
 * Green’s Dictionary of Slang
 * English Dialect Dictionary — eddonline Search; archive.org scans: Vol 1: A–C, Vol 2: D–G, Vol 3: H–L, Vol 4: M–Q, Vol 5: R–S, Vol 6: T–Z Suppl Bibliog

Oxford English Dictionary

 * Publication dates for the parts of the OED
 * archive.org
 * NED/OED1
 * upenn.edu good scans pre-1923
 * all vols, some poorer q
 * OED Supp 1 A-G (1972), 2 H-N (1976), 3 O-Scz (1982), 4 Se-Z (1986)
 * OED 2
 * 1 A
 * 2 B.B.C.
 * 3 Cham
 * 4 Creel
 * 5 Dvandva
 * 6 Follow
 * 7 Hat
 * 8 Interval
 * 9 Look
 * 10 Moul
 * 11 Ow
 * 12 Poise
 * 13 Quemadero
 * 14 Rob
 * 15 Ser
 * 16 Soot
 * 17 Su
 * 18 Thru
 * 19 Unemancipated
 * 20 Wave

Style guides

 * Guardian
 * Economist 2011 archive
 * Univ Oxford (PDF; brief, for students)
 * BBC News
 * Daily Telegraph
 * Seven from archive.org:
 * BBC News Styleguide2007.pdf
 * Carolina A&T SU Stylebook 05-06.pdf
 * European Commission English Style.pdf
 * Modern Humanities Research Association- StyleGuide-V1- .pdf
 * Reurters- Handbook Of Journalism.pdf
 * The Guardian stylebook.pdf
 * WHO style guide- PUB- 04.1.pdf

Sport

 * History of IFAB, including minutes of the meetings Soccer South Bay Referee Association
 * History of IFAB, including minutes of the meetings Soccer South Bay Referee Association

State Papers and Calendars

 * Liber munerum publicorum Hiberniae, ab an. 1152 usque ad 1827, or, The establishments of Ireland: from the Nineteenth of King Stephen to the Seventh of George IV., during a period of six hundred and seventy-five years by Rowley Lascelles is not online.
 * Appendix III: Index to "Liber Munerum Publicorum Hiberniæ." Deputy Keeper of Public Records in Ireland: Ninth report (1877) pp.21–58



IMC Proclamations 1660–1820:
 * 1: 1660–1685 Chas 2
 * 2: 1685–1714 Jas 2, W & M, Anne
 * 3: 1714–1760 Geo 1, Geo 2
 * 4: 1760–1790 Geo 3.1
 * 5: 1791–1820 Geo 3.2

Bibliotheca Lindesiana
See also Bibliotheca Lindesiana. The 1910–13 printing consolidated all the 1890s provisional versions

Excerpts
Royal arms as used in Ireland: description "The arms on Irish proclamations have always been the same as those on English publications of the same date. However, during the reign of Queen Anne a number of flags were added to the arms. On Nos. 209,210 212 these flags show St. George's Cross and the Irish form of the Union Jack, but Nos. 213 and 214 show either a St. Patrick's or a St. Andrew's Cross." nos 209-214 images Nos.209 to 214

Compare 17C map of Connacht (by Johan Blaeu?) where arms have white cross on blue and white saltier on red; but same map coloured differently as George and Patrick. (Ulster same blue-red as 1st Connacht)

1846–1847 special famine presentment sessions at towns in barony; not always the same town, e.g. Johnstown and Urlingford for Galmoy, co. Kilkenny.

Ormonde
Irish Manuscripts Commission Calendar of Ormond Deeds 6 vols 1932–43: 1 1172-1350; 2: 1350-1413; 3: 1413-1509; 4: 1509-47; 5: 1547-84; 6: 1584-1603

Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts Calendar of the Manuscripts of the Marquess of Ormonde 1902-20: (hathitrust vols 1-8 excl 6) Internet Archive has vols 1-7 bound as 4 docs, makes multivol searching simpler:
 * 1: 1572-1660 general correspondence;
 * 2: 1641-1653 letters relating  to  the government  of  Ireland  during  the  rebellion  of  1641,  papers relating  to  the  early  life  of  the  first  Duke  of  Ormonde  and to  the  life  of  Lord  Bellasyse,  and  extracts  from  Charles  the First's  table  and  cellar  book;
 * 3: 1660-1675; general correspondence  from  the  year 1660  to  the  year  1675,  papers  relating  to  the  Irish  revenue, and  letters  from  the  first  Duchess  of  Ormonde
 * 4: 1675-1685; general correspondence from  the  year  1675  to  the  year  1678,  letters  from  Sir  Robert Southwell,  letters  relating  to  Oxford  University  and  the King's  household,  and  licences  for  the  Irish  wool  trade.
 * 5: 1679-1681; general correspondence
 * 6: 1681-1683; general correspondence
 * 7: 1683-1688; general correspondence
 * 8: 1688-1715; the correspondence of  the  second  Duke  of  Ormonde  from  his  succession to  the  title  in  the  year  1688  to  his  departure  from  England in  the  year  1715,  with  a  Diary  of  Events  in  Ireland  during the  reign  of  James  the  Second.  Of  the  value  of  the  second Duke  of  Ormonde's  correspondence  high  hopes  were  entertained,  but  it  has  proved  to  be  disconnected,  and  to  be almost  entirely  confined  to  the  administration  of  Ireland during  his  tenure  of  the  office  of  Lord  Lieutenant  between the  years  1703  and  1707  and  1710  and  1713

Public records

 * EPPI subjects
 * Justice,Administration of - Ireland/Public records - Ireland
 * Public records - Ireland
 * Commissioners of Public Records in Ireland: 1 (1810) to 19 (1829) in EPPI #1
 * 6-10 Google books
 * Reports by Commissioners for Publication of Ancient Laws and Institutes of Ireland [are minutes of committee, not the publications themselves]
 * Prelim (1852)
 * 1st, 2nd (1857-59) EPPI #1
 * 3rd, 4th (1861, 1863)
 * (1886-98) EPPI #1
 * 1902 on 5th and 6th vols
 * Actual texts
 * Vol.1 1865
 * Vol.2 1869
 * Vol.3 1873
 * Vol.4 1879
 * Vol.5 1901
 * Vol.6 1901
 * Deputy Keeper of Public Records in Ireland
 * Vols 1-32 (1869-1900) in EPPI #1
 * Vol 33 (1901) [not in EPPI #1 or #2]
 * Vols 34-52 (1902-1921; numbers "33-40" are actually 34-41; 42-52 are correctly indexed) in EPPI #2
 * Vols 53–59 Oireachtas library
 * 53 1926 73.5 MB
 * 54 1927 66.5 MB
 * 55 1929 175.3 MB
 * 57 1936 130.6 MB
 * 58 1951 138.1 MB
 * 59 1962 94.8 MB
 * List of reports and main contents in
 * Fiant for Vols. 7-22 incl Fiants obvsly.

Chancery

 * CIRCLE: A Calendar of Irish Chancery Letters, c.1244–1509 TCD digitized


 * excoriates Patent and close rolls of Chancery etc as inaccurate

John Caillard Erck J. M'Glashan,
 * A Repertory of the Inrolments on the Patent Rolls of Chancery in Ireland, Commencing with the Reign of King James I.:
 * Vol. 1, Part 1 (1846)

"Inquisitions,Post Mortem and Inquisitions Post Attainder—lesser-used sources for Irish genealogy" (History Ireland)
 * Inquisitionum in officio rotulorum cancellariae Hiberniae asservatarum (Eliz - Will.3):
 * Leinster vol I 1826 (hathitrust has Vol.1 with vol.2 title page)
 * Ulster vol. II 1829
 * Munster and Connaught only munscript copies in NLI.


 * CPI: Chartae, Privilegia Et Immunitates, Being Transcripts Of Charters And Privileges To Cities, Towns, And Other Bodies Corporate, […] 1171–1395 (Pr. For RCI, Dublin, 1829–30; Published, 1889)


 * RCH: RCH: Rotulorum Patentium Et Clausorum Cancellariae Hiberniae Calendarium, Hen. II–Hen. VII, Ed. E. Tresham (RCI, Dublin, 1828)

Calendar of State Papers (England)
british-history.ac.uk mostly subscription
 * Border Papers
 * Close Rolls : Edward I - Richard II
 * Early Mayor's Court Rolls: 1298-1307
 * Papal Registers, Britain and Ireland
 * Patent Rolls : Edward I - Henry III
 * Colonial, America and West Indies
 * Colonial, East Indies, China and Japan
 * Domestic : Edward VI - Anne
 * Foreign
 * France
 * Ireland
 * Milan
 * Scotland
 * Simancas
 * Spain
 * Vatican
 * Venice

De L'Isle Papers
Report on the manuscripts of Lord de l'Isle & Dudley preserved at Penshurst place Hathi Vol 2-5 full-view; 2 includes some 1570s Ormond--UpperOssory letters.

Rushworth, Historical Collections of Private Passages of State

 * Volume 5, 1642-45 includes material on Ireland

Calendar of ancient records of Dublin, in the possession of the municipal corporation of that city.

 * hathitrust has search-only of missing vols; may be accessible from US IP.
 * niallbrn blogpost on Gilberts, John Francis Weldrick, and the project.

Statutory Rules and Orders

 * 1st ed. (8 vols) published 1896; covers up to 1890
 * Vol.2 contents incl "County, Ireland" and "County Court, Ireland"

Details:
 * Index to 13 vols.
 * no "Ireland" entry, which is a pity.
 * County (Ireland)
 * Local government, Ireland
 * County (Ireland)

Banks
Exchequer bills: 1878 bank per county for deposit of
 * Bank of Ireland: Carlow Dublin Galway Louth Mayo Meath Queen's County
 * Provincial Bank of Ireland: Armagh Cavan Clare Cork Kerry Kilkenny King's County Leitrim Limerick Sligo Tipperary (North Riding) Tipperary (South Biding) Tyrone Waterford Wexford
 * National Bank of Ireland: Longford RoscommonWestmeath Wicklow
 * Belfast Banking Company: Donegal Down Londonderry Monaghan
 * Northern Bank: Antrim
 * Ulster Bank: Fermanagh
 * Hibernian Bank: Kildare

Pre-1922 statutes
The Statutes Project: Site Map "The primary aim of The Statutes Project is quite simple: to put the entire corpus of English / British parliamentary law online, for free, in multiple and easily reusable formats."


 * Henry Hardcastle (1892) APPENDIX B. POPULAR OR SHORT TITLES OF STATUTES. A Treatise on the Construction and Effect of Statute Law

SLR 2007 s.8 lists sources:

! Abbrev !! Pub date !! Publisher !! Period !! Full title
 * H.M.D.I. || 1870 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1172 to 1320 || Historic and Municipal Documents of Ireland
 * C.D.I. vol. 1 || 1875 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1171 to 1251 || Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland
 * C.D.I. vol. 2 || 1877 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1252 to 1284 || Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland
 * C.D.I. vol. 3 || 1879 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1285 to 1292 || Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland
 * C.D.I. vol. 4 || 1881 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1293 to 1301 || Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland
 * C.D.I. vol. 5 || 1886 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls || 1302 to 1307 || Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland
 * P.R.O. vol. 1 || 1907 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || King John to Henry V || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 2 || 1910 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || Henry the Sixth  || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 3 || 1914 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || 1st to 12th years of the reign of King Edward IV || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 4 || 1939 || auth Min Fin under dir Min Just || 12th and 13th to the 21st and 22nd years of the reign of King Edward IV || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 5 || 2002 || National Archives of Ireland || Richard III to Henry VIII || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * }
 * P.R.O. vol. 1 || 1907 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || King John to Henry V || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 2 || 1910 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || Henry the Sixth  || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 3 || 1914 || LC of HMT under dir Master of the Rolls in Ireland || 1st to 12th years of the reign of King Edward IV || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 4 || 1939 || auth Min Fin under dir Min Just || 12th and 13th to the 21st and 22nd years of the reign of King Edward IV || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 5 || 2002 || National Archives of Ireland || Richard III to Henry VIII || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * }
 * P.R.O. vol. 4 || 1939 || auth Min Fin under dir Min Just || 12th and 13th to the 21st and 22nd years of the reign of King Edward IV || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * P.R.O. vol. 5 || 2002 || National Archives of Ireland || Richard III to Henry VIII || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * }
 * P.R.O. vol. 5 || 2002 || National Archives of Ireland || Richard III to Henry VIII || Irish Record Office Series of Early Statutes
 * }

I think the irishstatutebook versions are:

Irl
Statute Law Revision Act 2007 s.8: "Evidence of certain early statutes, etc."




 * Oireachtas PDF:

Re Statute Law Revision Act 1983:
 * The supposedly exhaustive Irish Statutes at Large (1310 to 1800) published by authority in 20 volumes omits all pre-1310 writs and ordinances and a considerable amount of post-1310 legislation as well. Recourse has therefore been had to the Irish Record Office Series of Early Irish Statutes published in four volumes, the first three edited by Henry Berry and the fourth by James Morrissey in 1939. A footnote at the bottom of the first page of the Schedule gives the references.

See also Short Titles Act, 1962 Schedule 1

GB
User:Jnestorius/UK Statutes links to original text of all Eng/GB/UK acts up to 1880

From the Statutes Revised
 * pre-1909:
 * 1st edition Hathi Trust has some vols incl vol.1
 * 2nd edition Hathi Trust has most vols to 1900 (1-3,5-10,13-20 + index v1 of 2 and 2-6,8,9,12,13) so could work out "revised up to".. from the publication date of each volume as follows:



! Vol !! Yrs !! Pub !! link
 * 1 || 1235-1713 || 1888 || Hathi full
 * 2 || 1714-1800 || 1889 || Hathi full
 * 3 || 1801-14 || 1889 || Hathi full
 * 4 || 1814-30 || 1891 || Hathi full
 * 5 || 1830-6 || 1892 || Hathi full
 * 6 || 1837-42 || 1893 || Hathi full
 * 7 || 1843-6 || 1893 || Hathi full
 * 8 || 1847-52 || 1893 || Hathi full
 * 9 || 1852-7 || 1895 || Hathi full
 * 10 || 1858-1862 || 1895 || Hathi full
 * 11 || 1862/3-1867/8 || 1895/6 || [url link]
 * 12 || 1868-71 || 1896 || Hathi full
 * 13 || 1872-5 || 1897 || Hathi full
 * 14 || 1876-80 || 1899 || Hathi full
 * 15 || 1881-3 || 1900 || Hathi full
 * 16 || 1884-6 || 1900 || Hathi full
 * 17 || 1887-9 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 18 || 1890-2 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 19 || 1893-5 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 20 || 1896-1900 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 21 || 1900/1-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 22 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 23 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 24 || 19-1920 || 1929 || [url link]
 * }
 * 13 || 1872-5 || 1897 || Hathi full
 * 14 || 1876-80 || 1899 || Hathi full
 * 15 || 1881-3 || 1900 || Hathi full
 * 16 || 1884-6 || 1900 || Hathi full
 * 17 || 1887-9 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 18 || 1890-2 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 19 || 1893-5 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 20 || 1896-1900 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 21 || 1900/1-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 22 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 23 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 24 || 19-1920 || 1929 || [url link]
 * }
 * 20 || 1896-1900 || 1909 || Hathi full
 * 21 || 1900/1-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 22 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 23 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 24 || 19-1920 || 1929 || [url link]
 * }
 * 23 || 19-19 || 19 || [url link]
 * 24 || 19-1920 || 1929 || [url link]
 * }
 * 24 || 19-1920 || 1929 || [url link]
 * }

Foreword to Third edition (1950):
 * The first twenty volumes of the Second Edition, bringing the work of revision down to the year 1900, were published at intervals over a period of twenty-one years, and the last of these volumes was not published until 1909. Similarly, the last of the four subsequent volumes of the Second Edition, bringing the work of revision down to the end of 1920, was not published until 1929. None of the volumes of the Second Edition revised the earlier volumes, with the result that much of that edition was already out of date before it was completed.

As enacted (e.g. Finance (1909-10) Act, 1910 sec 2(3) was amended in 1912, not recorded in the online text.)
 * post-1909:

See also
 * Short Titles Act, 1962 Schedule 2: ENGLISH STATUTES APPLIED BY POYNINGS' ACT, 1495
 * Short Titles Act, 1962 Schedule 3: ENGLISH STATUTES APPLIED BY THE MAINTENANCE AND EMBRACERY ACT, 1634
 * Short Titles Act, 1896


 * The Statutes of the Realm

Miscellaneous

 * UNZ Review "alternative" viewpoints search is useful as index for articles in certain journals.
 * Mullaney-Dignan, Karol Anne (2008) State, Nation and Music in Independent Ireland, 1922-51. PhD thesis, National University of Ireland Maynooth (discusses adoption of national anthem)


 * The Wild Birds Protection (Amendment) Bill 1927 was passed by the Seanad and rejected by the Dáil at second stage; only such Dáil rejection in 1927.

Per User:Jnestorius/Free State constitution amendments, the Constitution (Amendment No. 25) Bill, 1934 was passed by the Seanad but not even considered by the Dáil.

DIB Index

Samuels Collection of printed ephemera, TCD — each of the 5 boxes has an index of docs; whence:
 * box 1 no.4 SF 1917 convention minutes
 * box 2 no.82 "The truth about the army crisis" Liam Tobin
 * box 4 no.72 Morning Post "The Cause of World Unrest" anti-semitic series, including No. VII synopsis of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion
 * box 4 no.121 Cumann na Poblachta manifesto 1922
 * Tricolour
 * box 4 no.115 "Put him in to get him out: vote for McGuinness the man in jail for Ireland" tricolor poster for 1917 South Longford by-election
 * box 5 no.48 "Fold me in the tricolour flag" green white and gold
 * box 5 no.96 "Green, white and gold"
 * box 5 no.100 "The tri-colour flag" "The Green and the White and the Orange so bright" — 'air "Orange and Green"'
 * box 5 no.112 "Beneath our flag green white and gold"
 * box 5 no.142 "The flag of freedom" (Joseph Stanley) "Then raise the Orange, White and Green" [p.3]
 * Soldier's Song aliases
 * box 5 no.45 "Soldiers are we"
 * box 5 no.30 "A soldier's song: barricade song of the Irish Volunteers 1916"
 * box 5 no.88 "Republican soldier's song" "with apologies to Peodar o Cearnaig [sic] "Some now are false to Eirn,s [sic] rights"

Administration (IPA journal)
 * Issues since v63 2015 open access
 * Hathitrust search v9-56 1961-2009




 * Fasciculus I (1855):
 * I. The Hymn of St. Sechnall in Praise of St. Patrick.
 * II. The Hymn of St. Ultan in Praise of St. Brigid.
 * III. The Hymn of St. Cummain Fota in Praise of the Apostles.
 * IV. The Hymn of St. Mugint.
 * Fasciculus II (1869):
 * V. The Hymn of St. Colman Mac Ui Cluasaigh.
 * VI. The Hymn of St. Cuchuimne.
 * VII. The Hymn of St. Hilary in Praise of Christ.
 * VIII. The Hymn of St. Colman Mac Murchon, in Praise of Michael the Archangel.
 * IX. The Hymn of St. Oengus Mac Tipraite in Paise of St. Martin.
 * X. Gloria in Excelsis Deo.
 * XI. The Magnificat, or Hymn of the Blessed Virgin.
 * XII. The Benedictus, or Hymn of Zacharias.
 * XIII. Te Deum Laudamus.
 * XIV. The Hymn of St. Columba, "Altus Prosator."
 * XV. The Hymn of St. Columba, "In te, Christe."
 * XVI. The Hymn of St. Columba, "Noli Pater."
 * XVII. The Prayer of St. John the Evangelist.
 * XVIII. The Epistle of Christ to Abgarus, King of Edessa.
 * XIX. Prefatory Remarks on the Hymn of St. Fiacc, in Praise of St. Patrick.
 * XIX. Prefatory Remarks on the Hymn of St. Fiacc, in Praise of St. Patrick.

Facsimiles of national manuscripts of Ireland
Five Vols (I II III IV-1 IV-2) of photlithographic reproductions
 * Catalogue and Index:
 * Parts I II and III transcriptions and commentary hathitrust

Encyclopaedia Britannica

 * 11th ed. Vol. 29 p.961 start of index of contributors' initials (unsigned articles mostly written by female drudges).

Google books

 * [narrative and many primary texts]
 * [revisionist, traditionalist, Marxist, unionist, etc.]
 * [revisionist, traditionalist, Marxist, unionist, etc.]

A New History of Ireland
OUP link, volumes and chapter names accessible for volume and chapter online (subscription); volume indexes for these:
 * Volume I: Prehistoric and Early Ireland not there
 * Volume II: Medieval Ireland 1169–1534
 * Volume III: Early Modern Ireland 1534-1691
 * Volume IV: Eighteenth Century Ireland 1691-1800 not there
 * Volume V: Ireland Under the Union, I: 1801-1870 not there
 * Volume VI: Ireland Under the Union, II: 1870-1921
 * Volume VII: Ireland 1921-84
 * Volume VIII: A Chronology of Irish History to 1976: A Companion to Irish History, Part I not there

Deputations

 * dail1919082000010 "Deputation accompanied by the Mayor of Limerick (Phons O'Mara) wished to make a statement to the House on the present situation in regard to the Limerick Technical Schools"
 * dail1922011000004 Labour party and trade unions
 * dail1922022800008 Three "deputations" seeking admittance: Catholic Total Abstinence Federation of Ireland, Irish Vigilance Association, and one "Re Jim Larkin". "It is an absurd matter to have deputations coming in and addressing us"; "A precedent was made when a Labour deputation was received"; "The sooner deputations understand that we are not a public meeting the better.  ... I suggest that the first thing a deputation should do would be to put its case properly on paper, and not be coming here before us making speeches that go in one ear and out another." "Every little point that has arisen here to-day has been treated in a party spirit." "The Labour deputation that was received here some time ago was not intended to be regarded as a precedent. It was regarded as exceptional—to deal with a very grave matter" "We received a deputation from Limerick a long time ago. I think that this body —the sovereign body of the nation— should not refuse to receive deputations from any public body or any bodies that are working for the nation's good." "I would suggest that an arrangement be made by which applications be considered by the Whips on both sides and by the Speaker of the House" "We should make a rule to receive every deputation or no deputation" "If it is understood that we hear this deputation and that that ends the question of deputations I will agree to it." It was then agreed by a large majority that the deputation be heard.
 * TOTAL ABSTINENCE DEPUTATION received, others apparently not.
 * dail1922050300008 Army Officers involved in the pre–Civil War negotiations Seán O'Hegarty spoke, others were Dan Breen,  Humphrey Murphy, Florrie O'Donoghue, Tom Hales, Seán Boylan. (Other negotiator were TDs anyway: Mulcahy, O'Sullivan, O'Duffy, Collins — all pro-Treaty).
 * dail1925120900011
 * I have received a communication that a deputation would wait upon the Dáil at Leinster House, representing the Nationalists of the Six Counties. In so far as this is a matter for my decision, the only precedent which I can find is this: a request was made by resolution of the Dublin Corporation for permission to come before the Dáil and present a petition. That question was raised in the House and the Committee on Procedure and Privileges was asked by resolution of the House to take up the question. They reported on 14th February, 1924, against any machinery being set up for the receiving of petitions by the House. That report was adopted by the House on 27th February, 1924. That is the only precedent which refers to the reception by the Dáil of petitions.
 * The question of allowing deputations of persons not members of the Dáil has not arisen. For my part, if I am asked to be a guide on the question of procedure, it seems to me to be contrary to all Parliamentary practice to allow persons, not members of the House, to address the House. The matter, however, is one for the House.


 * 14th February, 1924 report — "3. Provision is made in Articles 47 and 48 of the Constitution for the presentation of certain Petitions. The Standing Orders of both Houses dealing with Private Bills provide for the presentation of Petitions in certain cases. / 4. The Committee took into consideration other cases in which Petitions might be presented and recommend that the practice of presenting Petitions to the Dáil whether by Deputies or by any outside body should not be adopted."

Territorial waters

 * Griffith's Valuation of fisheries (extra-parochial) are assigned to baronies in the 1861 census; what are their respective limits?
 * p.154 Co. Donegal "The valuation, in 1861, of the Salmon Fishery (extra-parochial) in Inishowen, West, barony, £8 15s. ; of the Fishery (extra-parochial) in Raphoe, £112 • and of the Telegraph in Raphoe, £4, is included in the totals of these baronies respectively"
 * p.255 Co. Londonderry "The Valuation, in 1861, of the Telegraph in Coleraine barony, £4; in Keenaght, £7 10s.; in North East Liberties of Coleraine, £4 15s. ; in North West Liberties of Londonderry, £2 10s., and in Tirkeeran, £6 10s. ; of the Salmon Fishery (extra-parochial) in North West Liberties of Londonderry, £398 5s., and of the Fisheries (extra-parochial) in Tirkeeran, £470 15s., is included in the totals of these baronies respectively."
 * DPP v McNeill [1975] NI 177 – 66 NI court ruling that territorial waters off NI belong to NI not Republic
 * HCRP 1998 cites this. I guess in UK law the UK has the right to interpret the Govt of Irl Act 1920 even as it relates to the area no longer part of it. Maybe the fact that it predates the Statute of Westminster 1931 is relevant.
 * Des O'Malley: "One of the most significant parts of this agreement is the part which has not been dealt with at all, that is the question of Northern Ireland waters. The significance of that may not have been fully grasped here but it was grasped by Mr. John Taylor, the Unionist MEP, who, I notice, some weeks ago, devoted a fairly long speech to the fact that the Northern Ireland waters were agreed, as it were in practical terms to be waters in dispute and therefore were ignored in the same way as the Rock of Rockall was agreed by the parties to this agreement to be in dispute and ignored for various purposes and the line drawn as if it did not exist. It is useful that the British have agreed this sort of arrangement without insisting on the waters around Northern Ireland [2189] being delineated as belonging to A or B. Perhaps point 1 in the line on map A starts as far south as it does to avoid that difficulty, but we should be told the position in relation to it."
 * Des O'Malley: "One of the most significant parts of this agreement is the part which has not been dealt with at all, that is the question of Northern Ireland waters. The significance of that may not have been fully grasped here but it was grasped by Mr. John Taylor, the Unionist MEP, who, I notice, some weeks ago, devoted a fairly long speech to the fact that the Northern Ireland waters were agreed, as it were in practical terms to be waters in dispute and therefore were ignored in the same way as the Rock of Rockall was agreed by the parties to this agreement to be in dispute and ignored for various purposes and the line drawn as if it did not exist. It is useful that the British have agreed this sort of arrangement without insisting on the waters around Northern Ireland [2189] being delineated as belonging to A or B. Perhaps point 1 in the line on map A starts as far south as it does to avoid that difficulty, but we should be told the position in relation to it."
 * Des O'Malley: "One of the most significant parts of this agreement is the part which has not been dealt with at all, that is the question of Northern Ireland waters. The significance of that may not have been fully grasped here but it was grasped by Mr. John Taylor, the Unionist MEP, who, I notice, some weeks ago, devoted a fairly long speech to the fact that the Northern Ireland waters were agreed, as it were in practical terms to be waters in dispute and therefore were ignored in the same way as the Rock of Rockall was agreed by the parties to this agreement to be in dispute and ignored for various purposes and the line drawn as if it did not exist. It is useful that the British have agreed this sort of arrangement without insisting on the waters around Northern Ireland [2189] being delineated as belonging to A or B. Perhaps point 1 in the line on map A starts as far south as it does to avoid that difficulty, but we should be told the position in relation to it."
 * Des O'Malley: "One of the most significant parts of this agreement is the part which has not been dealt with at all, that is the question of Northern Ireland waters. The significance of that may not have been fully grasped here but it was grasped by Mr. John Taylor, the Unionist MEP, who, I notice, some weeks ago, devoted a fairly long speech to the fact that the Northern Ireland waters were agreed, as it were in practical terms to be waters in dispute and therefore were ignored in the same way as the Rock of Rockall was agreed by the parties to this agreement to be in dispute and ignored for various purposes and the line drawn as if it did not exist. It is useful that the British have agreed this sort of arrangement without insisting on the waters around Northern Ireland [2189] being delineated as belonging to A or B. Perhaps point 1 in the line on map A starts as far south as it does to avoid that difficulty, but we should be told the position in relation to it."
 * Des O'Malley: "One of the most significant parts of this agreement is the part which has not been dealt with at all, that is the question of Northern Ireland waters. The significance of that may not have been fully grasped here but it was grasped by Mr. John Taylor, the Unionist MEP, who, I notice, some weeks ago, devoted a fairly long speech to the fact that the Northern Ireland waters were agreed, as it were in practical terms to be waters in dispute and therefore were ignored in the same way as the Rock of Rockall was agreed by the parties to this agreement to be in dispute and ignored for various purposes and the line drawn as if it did not exist. It is useful that the British have agreed this sort of arrangement without insisting on the waters around Northern Ireland [2189] being delineated as belonging to A or B. Perhaps point 1 in the line on map A starts as far south as it does to avoid that difficulty, but we should be told the position in relation to it."