Irish History for English Readers, From the Earliest Times to the Close of the Year 1885

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To prevent a renewal of this tryanny, the ninth article provided that "the oath to be administered to such Roman Catholics as submit to their majesties' government shall be the oath aforesaid (of allegiance), and no other;" and this article was kept as faithfully as the rest of the treaty. Articles III., IV., V., and VI. extend the priv- ileges of the first two articles to merchants and other classes of men; the seventh permits Roman Catholic noble- men and gentlemen to carry arms and keep a gu...n in their house, and the eighth gives the right of removing goods and chattels without search.
The tenth article guarantees that no person who hereafter breaks any of these articles shall cause any other person to lose the benefit of them; the two next stipulate for the rati- THE TREATY OF LIMERICK. 85 fication of the articles within eight months. The thirteenth and last provides for the debts of Colonel John Brown, commissary of the Irish army.
The nineteen military articles provided for the honorable exile of all who wish to leave the country and to serve in foreign armies, for the reception into William's army of any who wished to remain, and for the cessation of hostili- ties.


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