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[STOCK ( Joseph ), Bp.]. A narrative of what passed at Killalla

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:80.00 - 120.00 EUR
[STOCK ( Joseph ), Bp.]. A narrative of what passed at Killalla

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 19 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[STOCK ( Joseph ), Bp.]. A narrative of what passed at Killalla, in the County of Mayo, and the parts adjacent, during the French invasion in the summer of 1798. By an Eye-Witness. Dublin, printed : London : re-printed for J. Hatchard and J. Wright … Printed by T. Baylis, 1800Pages (2), 182, (2, advertisements), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good to nice copy.This issue, with 'Hatchard and Wright' rather than "Wright and Hatchard' in the imprint, is not in ESTC. An uncommon issue of "The most authentic record extant of the episode it describes, written with a rare impartiality. Its liberality is said to have been a bar to the bishop's advancement." - "In January 1798 Stock was elevated to the episcopal bench as bishop of Killalla. He applied himself energetically. In June he and a number of magistrates formed a committee to administer the oath of allegiance to the local Catholic clergy and their congregations. It appeared that the area would escape serious disorder until the unexpected arrival, on 23 August, of a French expeditionary force under General Humbert, while Stock was holding his first episcopal visitation. He was captured and his episcopal residence commandeered as a military headquarters. Things could have been worse. Humbert threatened to send Stock to France when he failed to procure boats and cars for military service, and it was suggested that he should accompany the military as a hostage. Stock was spared this fate and, though his son was chosen instead and the French occupation resulted in his losing goods to the value of £600, both his published and private accounts of his experience betray little evidence of bitterness. Indeed his Narrative of what Passed at Killala …, which was published anonymously, was not only the most authentic published record of what transpired but was also written with an uncommon degree of impartiality, which may have been a bar to his advancement. There is little doubt that Stock's decision to stay in the town when he could have fled, combined with his ability to communicate with the French officers in their own language, helped to keep the level of material destruction in the region within bounds, but it would be wrong to conclude that Stock was unaffected by the experience. His diary records his disappointment at the tardiness of the crown forces in delivering protestants 'from perpetual pillage and [the] daily and nightly expectation of murder' ten days after the French force was defeated at Ballinamuck. ". - ODNB.D.N.B.ENGLISH PRE 1801; IRELAND; HISTORY; 1798 REBELLION; MAYO; ; ; ; ; ; ;