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LIMERICK

Volume 6 · 285 words · 1778 Edition

a county of Ireland in the province of Munster, is bounded on the east by Tipperary, on the west by Kerry, on the north by the river Shan- non, and on the south by Cork. It is 48 miles in length, and 27 in breadth; being a fertile country and well inhabited, but has few good towns: the west parts are mountainous, and the rest plain; and it is divided into nine baronies.

or Lough-Meath, a market-town, a bo- borough, and a bishop's see, now the metropolis of the province of Munster. It is an elegant, rich, populous city, and of singular strength, seated partly on an island of the river Shannon, and is counted two towns; in the upper stands the castle and cathedral. It has two handsome bridges of stone, as also bulwarks and little drawbridges, the one leading to the west and the other to the east; to this the lower town is joined, and is strengthened with a wall, a castle, and a fore-gate, at the entrance into it. It was besieged by king Wil- liam III. in the year 1690; and though there was no army to assist it, the king was obliged to raise the siege. In the year 1691, it was again besieged by the English and Dutch on the 21st of September; and it was obliged to surrender on the 13th of October fol- lowing, not without the loss of abundance of men: however, the garrison had very honourable and advan- tageous conditions, being permitted to retire where they thought fit, and the Roman-catholics by these ar- ticles were to be tolerated in the free exercise of their religion. W. Long. 8. 30. N. Lat. 52. 35.