Cork (Ireland) -- CommerceSee also what's at your library, or elsewhere.
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Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Commerce- Cork; its trade & commerce (Guy & co., ltd., 1919), by D. J. Coakley and Cork (Ireland) Chamber of commerce and shipping (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Cork, its trade & commerce : official handbook of the Cork Incorporated Chamber of Commerce & Shipping : with classified trade indices in English, French & Spanish (Guy & co., ltd., 1919), by D.J. Coakley and Cork Incorporated Chamber of Shipping and Commerce (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Remarks upon the religion, trade, government, police, customs, manners, and maladys, of the City of Corke. : On trade; bankers, beef, Mallow-lane [,] France and smugling. Government. Charter, staple, by-laws, courts, of law [,] of Bishop, D'oyer hundred, and their ministers and officers... In maladys are comprehended the infirmities of the body, and corruptions of the mind. As detractions, gluttony and the gout, drunkenness, health and the hips, fornication [,] lues, and obscenity. (Printed by George Harrison,, 1737), by William Boles and the coppersmith Alexander (page images at HathiTrust)
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Filed under: Cork (Ireland)- Cork and the American cork industry (Cork institute of America, 1938), by Arthur Louis Faubel (page images at HathiTrust)
- The ancient and present state of the county and city of Cork. (Guy & co., ltd., 1893), by Charles Smith, Walter Arthur Copinger, Robert Day, Richard Caulfield, and Thomas Crofton Croker (page images at HathiTrust)
- The ancient and present state of the county and city of Cork : containing a natural, civil, ecclesiastical, historical and topographical description thereof (Fercor Press, 1973), by Charles Smith (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Description and travelFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- Economic conditions- Remarks upon the religion, trade, government, police, customs, manners, and maladys, of the City of Corke. : On trade; bankers, beef, Mallow-lane [,] France and smugling. Government. Charter, staple, by-laws, courts, of law [,] of Bishop, D'oyer hundred, and their ministers and officers... In maladys are comprehended the infirmities of the body, and corruptions of the mind. As detractions, gluttony and the gout, drunkenness, health and the hips, fornication [,] lues, and obscenity. (Printed by George Harrison,, 1737), by William Boles and the coppersmith Alexander (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Fire, 1920Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- History- The glamour of Cork (Talbot Press, 1919), by D. L. Kelleher (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- The history of the county and city of Cork. (T.C. Newby, 1861), by Charles Bernard Gibson (page images at HathiTrust)
- The Cork remembrancer; being an historical register containing a chronological account of all the remarkable battles, sieges, conspiracies (et al.) that have happened since the creation to the present year, 1783, particularly for England and Ireland, and more especially for the City of Cork. (J. Sullivan, 1783), by John Fitzgerald (page images at HathiTrust)
- Annals of the county and city of Cork (O. Savage and son, 1837), by Francis H. Tuckey (page images at HathiTrust)
- History of Cork (McGlashan and Gill, 1875), by Mary Francis Cusack (page images at HathiTrust)
- The ancient and present state of the county and city of Cork. : Containing a natural, civil, ecclesiastical, historical, and topographical description thereof. (Published by Guy & Co., Ltd., 70, Patrick Street., 1893), by Charles Smith, Walter Arthur Copinger, Robert Day, Robert Day, Richard Caulfield, Thomas Crofton Croker, and Cork Historical and Archaeological Society (page images at HathiTrust)
- Windele's Cork : historical and descriptive notices of the city of Cork from its foundation to the middle of the 19th century (Guy and Co. Ltd, 1910), by John Windele and James Coleman (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- True nevves from Cork being the copie of a letter sent from thence to Master Oliver Daniell citizen ..., from his brother ... in Cork : wherein is declared the severall proceedings of the Protestant armie from the fifth of May to the 12, 1642 : likevvise ... intelligence of a great insurrection made by the papists in Cork on the 7 day of this instant moneth : with a declaration how by the valour ... of my Lord of Cork and Sir Thomas Meer they were appeased, disarmed and their store and munition seized on for the use of our English : also many other ... passages concerning ... the Earl of Ormond, Sir Charles Coot, Sir Christopher Loftus, Captain Morra, and the Protestant army in the neweries : whereunto is annexed another remarkable passage concerning Oneal late prisoner in the Tower. (... London : Printed for F. Rogers, May 17, 1642), by Benjamin Daniell (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- More happy and joyfull newes from Ireland: or, The victorious proceedings of the Protestants in that kingdome, from the 28. day of March, to the 6. day of Aprill, 1642.: Shewing, in a most reall, and exact relation, how these four famous pillars of Protestant religion, the Earl of Ormond, the Lord Iones, the Lord Moor, Sir Henrie Titchburn, and Sir Richard Grenvile, with 4000 men, and 6 field-pieces, gave battle to the rebels, neer Corke, kild 5000. men, took some of their commanders prisoners. The rebels being in number 13000. conducted the great rebell Donmadoff, and the Lord Mountgarret; who after a long and tedious battle were forced to fly, leaving great store of ammunition behind them, such a tryumphant victory the Protestants never had, since the rebellion. Whereunto is annexed the copy of a letter sent from Mr. Hunt in Ireland, which was read in the honourable House of Commons, and commanded immediately to be printed. Hen. Elsing. Cler. Parl. D. Com. (London : Printed for H. Luudon [sic], 1642), by R. Good newes from Ireland Hunt and England and Wales Parliament (HTML at EEBO TCP)
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- History -- Early works to 1800
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- History -- Fire, 1622 -- Early works to 1800Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- History -- Siege, 1690Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- History -- SourcesFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- History, MilitaryFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- NewspapersFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- Pictorial worksFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- Poetry
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Poetry -- Early works to 1800Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Politics and government- Remarks upon the religion, trade, government, police, customs, manners, and maladys, of the City of Corke. : On trade; bankers, beef, Mallow-lane [,] France and smugling. Government. Charter, staple, by-laws, courts, of law [,] of Bishop, D'oyer hundred, and their ministers and officers... In maladys are comprehended the infirmities of the body, and corruptions of the mind. As detractions, gluttony and the gout, drunkenness, health and the hips, fornication [,] lues, and obscenity. (Printed by George Harrison,, 1737), by William Boles and the coppersmith Alexander (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Cork (Ireland) -- Sanity affairsFiled under: Cork (Ireland) -- Social conditions- Remarks upon the religion, trade, government, police, customs, manners, and maladys, of the City of Corke. : On trade; bankers, beef, Mallow-lane [,] France and smugling. Government. Charter, staple, by-laws, courts, of law [,] of Bishop, D'oyer hundred, and their ministers and officers... In maladys are comprehended the infirmities of the body, and corruptions of the mind. As detractions, gluttony and the gout, drunkenness, health and the hips, fornication [,] lues, and obscenity. (Printed by George Harrison,, 1737), by William Boles and the coppersmith Alexander (page images at HathiTrust)
Filed under: Lee River (Cork, Ireland)Filed under: Youghal (Cork, Ireland)Filed under: Church plate -- Cork (Ireland)
Filed under: Ireland -- Commerce- Reflections and resolutions proper for the gentlemen of Ireland, as to their conduct for the service of their country. (Printed by R. Reilly, for G. Ewing, 1816), by Samuel Madden and Samuel Alexander Madden (page images at HathiTrust)
- The commercial system of Ireland reviewed and the question of union discussed, in an address to the merchants, manufacturers and country gentlemen of Ireland. (Printed by James Moore, 1799) (page images at HathiTrust)
- The rise of the Irish linen industry, by Conrad Gill ... (The Clarendon press, 1964), by Conrad Gill (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Ireland: its agricultural, industrial, and commercial resources (Govt. Print. Off., 1924), by Fred Albert Christoph and United States Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce (page images at HathiTrust)
- English interference with Irish industries (Cassell, 1886), by J. G. Swift MacNeill (page images at HathiTrust)
- The rise of the Irish linen industry (The Clarendon Press, 1925), by Conrad Gill (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Modern Irish trade and industry (E.P. Dutton and company, 1920), by E. J. Riordan and George Augustine Thomas O'Brien (page images at HathiTrust)
- The arrangements with Ireland considered. (J. Stockdale, 1785) (page images at HathiTrust)
- Ireland : accounts relating to the trade with the colonies : viz. (1.) An account fo all the imports from Canada, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Cape Breton, and Newfoundland, into Ireland, in each year, from 1800 to 1813 ; (2.) An account of all the exports from Ireland to Canaca [etc.] from 1800 to 1813 ; (3) An account of the number and tonnage of the ships and vessels, and the number of men employed therein, which entered inwards into Ireland, from Canada [etc.] and cleared outwards to the same colonies and settlements from 1800 to 1813 (s.n., 1815), by Great Britain Board of Trade (page images at HathiTrust)
- A view of the natural, political and commercial circumstances of Ireland (Printed for T. Cadell & W. Davies ..., 1809), by Thomas Newenham, Samuel John Neele, and Cadell & Davies (page images at HathiTrust)
- An enquiry how far the restrictions laid upon the trade of Ireland, by British acts of Parliament, are a benefit or disadvantage to the British dominions in general, and to England in particular, for whose separate advantage they were intended : with an address to the gentlemen concerned in the woollen commerce of Great Britain, and particularly to the members of Parliament ... : to which is added a letter to Sir John Duntze, Bart., in which a union between the two kingdoms is discussed (Printed for H. Mugg, 1779), by James Caldwell and John Duntze (page images at HathiTrust)
- Observations on the fisheries of the west coast of Ireland : having reference more particularly to the operations of the London and West of Ireland Fishing Company (Chapman and Hall ;, 1855), by Thomas Edward Symonds (page images at HathiTrust)
- Seasonable remarks on trade : With some reflections on the advantages that might accrue to Great Britain, by a proper regulation of the trade of Ireland. (Printed by S. Powell, for George Ewing ..., 1728), by John Browne (page images at HathiTrust)
- Address and resolutions of the two houses of Parliament in Ireland : and accounts of the commerce and revenue of Great Britain and Ireland. (s.n.], 1800), by Ireland. Parliament, Robert Marshall, Thomas Irving, Inspector General of Ireland. Imports and Exports, Ireland. Exchequer, Inspector Gerneral of Great Britain. Imports and Exports, and Great Britain Exchequer (page images at HathiTrust)
- Protection to home industry : some cases of its advantages considered : the substance of two lectures delivered before the University of Dublin, in Michaelmas term, 1840 : to which is added an appendix, containing dissertations on some points connected with the subject (Hodges and Smith ;, 1846), by Isaac Butt (page images at HathiTrust)
- Report of the Transatlantic Packet Station Committee : appointed at a meeting held on the 21st August, 1851, at the Mansion House, Dublin. (James McGlashan, 1852), by Dublin. Transatlantic Packet Station Committee (page images at HathiTrust)
- Über direkte Handelsverbindungen Westgalliens mit Irland im Altertum und frühen Mittelalter. (Reichsdruckerei, 1909), by Heinrich Zimmer (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- Some thoughts on the bill depending before the right honourable the House of Lords for prohibiting the exportation of the woolen manufactures of Ireland to foreign parts, humbly offer'd to their lordships. (Dublin : Printed by Joseph Ray ..., 1698), by Richard Cox and England and Wales. Parliament. House of Lords (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- Essays on trade and navigation in five parts / by Sir Francis Brewster, Kt. (London : Printed for Tho. Cockerill ..., 1695), by Francis Brewster (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- The interest of England, as it stands, with relation to the trade of Ireland, considered the arguments against the bill for prohibiting the exportation of woollen manufactures from Ireland to forreign parts fairly discusst ... (London : Printed by John Atwood ..., 1698), by Simon Clement (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- A plea for the bringing in of Irish cattel, and keeping out of fish caught by foreigners together with an humble address to the honourable members of Parliament of the countries of Cornwal and Devon, about the advancement of tin, fishery, and divers manufactures / by John Collins. (London : Printed by A. Godbid and J. Playford, 1680), by John Collins (HTML at EEBO TCP)
- The interest of England in the Irish transplantation, stated: wherein is held forth (to all concerned in Irelands good settlement) the benefits the Irish transplantation will bring to each of them in particular, and to the Common-wealth in general, being chiefly intended as an answer to a scandalous, seditious pamphlet, entituled, The great case of transplantation in Ireland discussed. Composed and published at the request of several persons in eminent place in Ireland, to the end all who desire it, might have a true account of the proceedings that have been there in the business of transplantation, both as to the rise, progress, and end thereof. By a faithfull servant of the Common-wealth, Richard Laurence. (London : printed by Henry Hills, and are to be sold at the sign of Sir John Oldcastle near Py-coruer [sic], MCDLV. [1455, i.e. 1655]), by Richard Lawrence (HTML at EEBO TCP)
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