Lodge's chief work,
The Peerage of Ireland, comprises four volumes, and was published in 1754. His own interleaved copy, with numerous manuscript notes, is now in the
British Library (Add MSS 23703-23708). A second edition, revised and enlarged to seven volumes by
Mervyn Archdall, was published in 1789. In 1770 Lodge published anonymously
The Usage of Holding Parliaments and Preparing and Passing Bills of Supply in Ireland, stated from record, and in 1772, also without his name, a selection of state papers and historical tracts illustrating the political systems of the chief governors and government of Ireland during the reigns of Elizabeth, James I, and Charles I, which he called
Desiderata curiosa Hibernica. His collection of record indexes were deposited in 1783 in the office of the civil department of the chief secretary to the lord-lieutenant at Dublin in return for annuities of £100 a year to his widow and £200 a year to his son. These indexes were in constant request by
Rowley Lascelles when engaged on his
Liber Munerum Hiberniæ. At the sale of Sir William Betham's library a transcript of a portion of them fetched £155. Lodge's other manuscripts in the British Library are: •
Pedigrees and notices of Irish families, ... with numerous additions by Sir W. Betham, Add MSS 23693-23702. •
Historical and genealogical notes relating to the English, Irish, and Scotch nobility, Add MS 23709. •
Collections for a Baronage of Ireland, ... with additions by Sir W. Betham, and an alphabetical index, Add MS 23710. • ''Notes and additions to 'The whole works of Sir James Ware concerning Ireland''', Egerton MSS 1783-1786. ==References==