Compare 1587 edition:
1
2
3 Touching the name
Ibernia,
The name Ibernia whence it procéedeth.
Hiſtoriogra|phers are not yet agréed frõ whence it is de|ducted. Some write it
Hybernia corruptly, & ſuppoſe that the eſtraungers finding
it in an odde end of the world, foiſty and moiſty, tooke it at the firſt for a
very cold countrey, & ther|of named it Hybernia, as to ſay,
the Winter|land. But this errour beyng vpon ſhort expe|riẽce reformed, it
could not be, that the name ſhould haue liued long, eſpecially the firſt
im|poſitours EEBO page image 2 ſub [...]s the triall, and able to al|ter the firſt no win [...].Ireland.
[...]th [...] bo [...]
[...] gueſh, that it ſhould be named of Irelande. But be|cauſe I read nothing
of them [...]any probable hiſtory, I purpoſe not to builde vpon that cõ|iecture. Moſt
credibly it is holden, that the Hiſpaniardes, the founders of the Iriſh, has
deuotion towardes. Hiſpayn, called then Ibe|ria of Iberius t [...]e ſonne of Iuhall,
[...]tus the [...]ſpaniſhe [...]
[...] in [...] in Ca [...]i. Scotia ma| [...]r. Scotia mi| [...]r.
Compare 1587 edition: 1[...] [...]cke of Bagganbun [...],Baggan|bunne.Ireland [...]ea [...] loſt and wunne.
Compare 1587 edition: 1 2 For the remembraunce of which riuer ſo notoriouſly faw [...]uſed, a [...] can [...]th great likely|hoode that the name ſhould be to the whole realme, generally aforebed. Sundry latin au|thors write Ireland, Inuerna; others Iuerna, Inuerna. Ioan. Ca|mertes in cap. 35. So|lini. dingus I [...]erna Claudius nameth it Iberno. The diue [...] ſ [...]e of which names grew; for that [...] their tyme the true and certayne name was not knowen, ſo that they were contented to take it, as they found it, which matters is hãd|led by Hermolaus Barbards. Hermol. Barb. c. 16. in lib. 4. Plin. caſtig. The name Iriſhe and Ireland curiouſly ſeuered.