Waring, Thomas.
A brief narration of the plotting, beginning & carrying on of that execrable rebellion and butcherie in Ireland. With the unheard of devilish-cruelties and massacres by the Irish-rebels, exercised upon the Protestants and English there. Faithfully collected out of depositions, taken by commissioners under the Great Seal of Ireland. Hereunto are added observations, discovering the actions of the late King; and manifesting the concernment of the Protestant-army now imployed in Ireland. Published by special authority.
London: printed by B. Alsop and T. Dunster. And are to be delivered at Bernard Alsop's house in Grub-street, MDCL. [1650].
ESTC No. R204016.Grub Street ID 81044.
Waring, Thomas.
An answer to certain seditious and Jesuitical queres, heretofore purposely and maliciously cast out, to retard and hinder the English forces in their going over into Ireland. Whereby is fully proved that the British were the first, and most ancient proprietors, and inhabitants of that land (which was at the first called Britain the Less) before the accession of the Irish thither, and that the Irish came in but by the sufferance of the British; of what countrie the Irish at the first were; their often rebellions and defections; the subduing and reducing all o them to obedience, aswel long before the conquest of England, by William the Norman, as since; together also with the names of the new kings, which the Irish have lately elected and made amongst themselvs, with manie other necessarie discoveries of great concernment, fully manifesting the English interest to that land, and the miserable sufferings of the English there, in all ages, by the barbarous and bloudie actions of the Irish.
London: printed by William Du-Gard, printer to the Council of State, 1651.
ESTC No. R13161.Grub Street ID 61284.