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Date | | | | 1331 | | Sir William Birmingham, and Walter his son, taken by stratagem by Sir Anthony Lucy, lord justice, at Clonmel, and committed to Dublin Castle. Sir William was hanged in Dublin next year, and his son liberated, because he was in holy orders. A great famine relieved by a prodigious shoal of fish, called Turlehydes, being cast on shore at the mouth of the Dodder. They were from 30 to 40 feet long, and so thick that men standing on each side of one of them, could not see those on the other. Upwards of 200 of them were killed by the people. | | 1332 | | Arklow Castle taken by Sir Anthony Lucy, at the head of the citizens of Dublin. John Decer, the great benefactor of the city, dies. | | 1333 | | Parliament sat in the Carmelite Convent. | | 1335 | | Confederation for the mutual defence of their privileges, between the citizens of Dublin, Cork, Waterford, Limerick, and Drogheda. Maurice, earl of Desmond, lord justice, died in Dublin Castle. | | 1338 | | Severe frost from the beginning of December to the beginning of February, in which the Liffey was frozen so hard that the citizens played at foot-ball, and lit fires on the ice. | | 1342 | | A great booty brought into Dublin from the O'Dempseys, of Leinster, by Maurice, fourth earl of Kildare. | | 1343 | | St. Thomas-street burned accidentally. | | 1348 | | A great pestilence raged through many parts of the world, and carried off vast numbers in Dublin. | | 1350 | | The mountain septs of the Harolds, O'Beirnes, and Archbolds, submit to the English Government. | | 1359 | | A second justice added to the court of King's Bench, at a salary of £40, with liberty to continue to practise as a lawyer. | |
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