George Hamilton, Comte d'Hamilton
Sir George Hamilton | |
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called "comte d'Hamilton" | |
Successor | Anthony Hamilton |
Died | 1 June 1676 Col de Saverne, France |
Spouse(s) | Frances Jennings |
Issue Detail | Elizabeth, Frances, & Mary |
Father | George Hamilton |
Mother | Mary Butler |
Sir George Hamilton, comte d'Hamilton (died 1676) was a 17th-century Irish soldier in English and French service and a courtier at Charles II's Whitehall.
At Whitehall he was a favourite of the King. He courted La belle Stuart and married Frances Jennings, the future Lady Tyrconnell, who was then a maid of honour of the Duchess of York. He appears in the Mémoires du comte de Grammont, written by his brother Anthony.
He began his military career as an officer in the Life Guards but was dismissed in an anti-Catholic purge in 1667, upon which he took French service and commanded English gens d'armes and then an Irish regiment in the Franco-Dutch War (1672–1678). He served under Turenne at the battles of Sinsheim and Entzheim in 1674. He also fought at Sasbach (1675) where Turenne was killed. He then covered the retreat at Altenheim. He was killed in 1676 in a rearguard action at the Col de Saverne while serving under Luxembourg. His final rank was Maréchal de camp (major-general). He was known as "comte", but whether he was really ennobled by Louis XIV is not sure.
Birth and origins
George was probably born in the late 1630s at Roscrea, County Tipperary.[1][a] He was the second son of George Hamilton and his wife Mary Butler. His father was Scottish, the fourth son of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Abercorn, and would in 1660 be created Baronet of Donalong and Nenagh.[4] The Dunnalong (or Donalong) estate, south of Derry, was his father's share of the land granted to his grandfather Abercorn during the Plantation of Ulster.[5] George's mother was Irish, the third daughter of Thomas Butler, Viscount Thurles and a sister of the future 1st Duke of Ormond (see Family Tree).[6] She was a member of the Butler dynasty, an Old English family that descended from Theobald Walter, who had been appointed Chief Butler of Ireland by King Henry II in 1177.[7]
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He was one of nine children:[9]
George listed among his siblings |
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He appears among his siblings as the second child:
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Both his parents were Catholic, but some relatives, on his father's as on his mother's side, were Protestants. His grandfather, James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Abercorn, had been a Protestant,[10] but his father and all his paternal uncles were raised as Catholics due to the influence of his paternal grandmother, Marion Boyd, a recusant.[11] Some branches of the Hamilton family were Protestant, such as that of his father's second cousin Gustavus (1642–1723). His mother's family, the Butlers, were generally Catholic with the notable exception of the future 1st Duke of Ormond, his maternal uncle. His eldest brother, James, would turn Protestant when marrying Elizabeth Colepeper in 1661.[12] His brother Thomas seems to have made the same choice as he became a captain in the Royal Navy.[13]
Early life
Irish wars
His father, Sir George Hamilton, Baronet, served in the Irish army and fought for the royalists under his uncle James Butler, Earl of Ormond, in the Irish Confederate Wars (1641–1648) and the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland (1649–1653) until he followed Ormond into exile in 1651.[14]
His uncle Claud, Lord Strabane, had lived in the Castle of Strabane until his death in 1638. During the Rebellion, in 1641, Phelim O'Neill burned this castle and took Hamilton's aunt Jean, Claud's widow, prisoner.[15]
On 17 September 1646, Owen Roe O'Neil, who had taken over from Phelim as leader of the Confederate Ulster army, captured Roscrea where little George Hamilton lived. The confederates spared him, his siblings, and his mother but put everybody else to the sword.[16][17] Owen O'Neill was leading his army south after his victory over the Scottish Covenanters at Benburb in June and was now attacking the royalists as directed by Rinuccini, the papal nuncio.[18][19]
In October 1650 his father was governor of Nenagh Castle, 30 kilometres (19 mi) west of Roscrea, when the Parliamentarian army under Henry Ireton attacked and captured the castle on the way back from their unsuccessful siege of Limerick to their winter quarters at Kilkenny.[20]
First exile
In spring 1651, Sir George Hamilton, Baronet, and his family followed Ormond into French exile.[21] They first went to Caen[22] where they were accommodated for some time by the Marchioness of Ormond. They then moved on to Paris near where Charles II and his mother Henrietta Maria lived in exile at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Young George Hamilton, aged about 15, became a page to Charles.[23][24] His father was employed in various missions for Ormond and the King, whereas his mother found shelter in the convent of the Feuillantines in Paris, together with her sister Eleanor, Lady Muskerry.[25] France was at that time involved in the long-going Franco-Spanish War (1635–1659). In 1654 France gained Cromwell as an ally against the Spanish resulting in the Anglo-Spanish War (1654–1660), and in consequence Charles had to leave France. He moved his court first to Cologne, then in March 1656 to Brussels,[26] and then to Bruges. On 2 April 1656, the Treaty of Brussels was signed. On 14 June 1658 the Battle of the Dunes was fought. Charles then moved to Antwerp. On 3 Sep 1658 Cromwell died. In November Charles was allowed back to Brussels.
Restoration
At the Restoration, George Hamilton was accepted into the Life Guards that Charles II and the Duke of York established, early in 1660 in preparation of their return to London in June.[30] He served in the King's troop,[31] which was commanded by Charles Gerard as Captain and Colonel.[32] George was an officer rather than a private.[33]
After the King's return to London in May 1660[34] Hamilton attended the court at Whitehall in addition to his military duties. He, like his brothers James and Anthony, and his sister Elizabeth, were part of to the inner circle around the King. Samuel Pepys tells us that Hamilton was present at the Queen's Birthday dance on 15 October 1666 at Whitehall.[35]
In January 1663 Philibert, chevalier de Gramont arrived in London.[36] Gramont had been exiled by Louis XIV because he had courted Mademoiselle Anne-Lucie de la Mothe-Houdancourt, on whom the King had set his eyes.[37][38][39][d] Gramont was welcome at Whitehall as he came from the court of which Whitehall was the imitation. He had no difficulties to integrate as French was the predominant language at the English Restoration court.[40]
At court Hamilton met Elizabeth Wetenhall and fell in love with her, but she was married.[41] He then courted Frances Stewart, called "La Belle Stuart" or the "fair Stuart", a maid of honour of the Queen,[42] Catherine of Braganza. Gramont warned Hamilton about courting the fair Stuart as the King had set his eyes on her.[43] Eventually, he met and courted Frances Jennings, a maid of honour of Anne Hyde, the Duchess of York.[44] Macaulay describes her as “beautiful Fanny Jennings, the loveliest coquette in the brilliant Whitehall of the Restoration."[45]
Marriage and children
In 1665 Hamilton married Frances Jennings.[46][47] The King granted the couple a pension of £500 per year.[48] His marriage is the sixth of the seven marriages with which end the Memoirs of Count Grammont.[49]
George and Frances had six children[50] but only three (all daughters) are known by name:
- Elizabeth (1667–1724), married in 1685 Richard Parsons, 1st Viscount Rosse as his 3rd wife, and was mother of Richard Parsons, 1st Earl of Rosse[51][52]
- Frances (died 1751), married Henry Dillon, 8th Viscount Dillon in 1687[53][54][55]
- Mary (died 1736), married Nicholas Barnewall, 3rd Viscount Barnewall in 1688[56][57]
Elizabeth, the eldest, was born in England in 1667 and baptised on 21 March at St Margaret's, Westminster in an Anglican ceremony.[58] The other two were born in France and were brought up as Catholics. According to the conventions of the time, the eldest, being a Protestant, married a Protestant; the younger two, being Catholics, married Catholics. All three married Irish viscounts and were therefore known as the "three Viscountesses".[50]
Lord Beaulieu, who had the Portrait of George Hamilton used in this article in his collection of paintings, was one of Elizabeth's grandsons. Her descendance through her two sons went extinct in 1764. However, her second daughter, called Catharine, married in 1705 James Hussey[59] and was by him mother of Edward Hussey-Montagu, 1st Earl Beaulieu[60] (open the collapsed family tree below).
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Later life
Second Anglo-Dutch War
On 4 March 1665 the Second Anglo-Dutch War (1665–1667) broke out. It seems that George volunteered in the Royal Navy and participated on 3 June 1665 O.S. in the naval battle of Lowestoft, an English victory.[61]
Second exile
On 28 September 1667 in an increasingly anti-Catholic political climate, the King felt obliged to dismiss from his Life Guards the Catholics who refused to take the Oath of Supremacy, and among them, Hamilton.[62] The king arranged with Louis XIV that Hamilton would be made the captain-lieutenant of a company of gens d'armes under Louis's direct command as captain.[63] On 1 February 1668 Hamilton left England for France passing by Dover and Ostend.[64] He seems to have been knighted by Charles before his departure as he is called Sir George Hamilton for the first time on his pass dated 14 January 1668.[65][66] Sir George Hamilton's gens d'armes were part of Louis's body guard.[67]
His wife followed him to France and converted to the Catholic religion.[68] She stayed in Paris.[69] The War of Devolution 1667/1668 was about to end; France was in peace talks with Spain that would lead to the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle on 2 May 1668.[70] In 1668 Sir George Hamilton acquired French nationality.[71]
In 1671 Sir George Hamilton raised a regiment in Ireland.[72] Several of the officers engaged in this régiment d'Hamilton are well known people: Patrick Sarsfield, Justin McCarty, George's younger brothers Anthony and Richard, his cousin Gustavus Hamilton, Governor of Enniskillen, and Thomas Dongan who was appointed lieutenant-colonel.[73]
In April 1672 France and England declared war on the Dutch Republic; the former starting the Franco-Dutch War (1672–1678), the latter the Third Anglo-Dutch War. Sir George Hamilton would pass the rest of his life fighting with his Irish regiment for France in the Franco-Dutch War, eventually being killed in action. The first three years he served under Henri, Viscount of Turenne. At the beginning of the war Hamilton's regiment was part of the garrison of Liège,[74] but it joined the Louis's main army after the passage of the Rhine in June 1672.[75] It participated in the siege of Utrecht, which fell on 20 June 1672.[76] After the Dutch had flooded the land to the north, most of the French troops retreated but Hamilton's regiment stayed behind with the small army of occupation under Marshal Luxembourg. It was stationed at Zutphen in Gerderland to the east of Utrecht.[77][78] In the summer 1673 he joined Turenne's army.[79]
In February 1674 England and the Netherlands concluded the Treaty of Westminster (1674), which ended the Third Anglo-Dutch War. This peace did not affect Sir George Hamilton as he served under French command. However, from there on to the end of the war, the English Parliament pushed for measures to forbid the King's subjects to fight in French service. On 8 May 1675 the Parliament forced Charles to make a proclamation demanding the immediate return of all his subjects that had gone into French service since the date of the Treaty of Westminster and forbidding all his subjects to enter that service. This made recruiting for Hamilton's regiment difficult.[80][81]
On 16 June 1674 Turenne fought the battle of Sinsheim, south of Heidelberg, against the Imperials under Aeneas de Caprara.[82] Hamilton commanded three battalions at that occasion, the two of his own regiment and one from the Monmouth regiment.[83][84] In July Hamilton's regiment participated in the first ravaging of the Palatinate.[85]
On 4 October he fought the Imperialists under the Duke von Bournonville at Entzheim[84] in Alsace south of Strasbourg, where Hamilton's Regiment attacked on the right wing. Sir George and his brother Anthony were wounded.[86][87]
In March 1675 Sir George Hamilton visited England with his younger brothers Anthony and Richard. Sir George returned to France from England, whereas Anthony and Richard continued to Ireland to recruit as Sinsheim and Entzheim had left gaps in the ranks of the regiment.[88] The recruits were picked up by French ships at Kinsale in April[89] after a missed appointment at Dingle in March.[90]
George's and Anthony's wounds and the voyage to England caused them to miss Turenne's winter campaign 1674/1675, during which the French marched south and surprised the Imperialists by attacking them in Upper Alsace, leading to Turenne's victory at Turckheim on 5 January 1675.[91]
On 27 July 1675 Sir George Hamilton fought at Sasbach, where Turenne was killed.[92][93] The French army retreated, pursued by the imperial army under Raimondo Montecuccoli, resulting in rearguard actions known as the Battle of Altenheim where Sir George Hamilton and his Irish excelled.[94] In this battle the French army was commanded by the comte Guy Aldonce de Durfort de Lorges and the marquis de Vaubrun, who was slain in the action.[95] Sir George Hamilton and his unit were part of the rearguard under Louis de Boufflers.[96]
In January 1676 Sir George Hamilton went to Ireland to recruit as Altemheim had taken its toll. The recruiting was tolerated by Essex, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland on instruction by the King.[97] In February 1676 Sir George Hamilton was promoted maréchal de camp (major-general) for his achievements at Altenheim.[98][99] After Altenheim the command of the Rhine Army passed to Louis, Grand Condé.[100] and finally to François-Henri de Montmorency, duc de Luxembourg in 1676.[101]
Comte d'Hamilton
French sources generally call Sir George Hamilton not chevalier but comte[87][96][83] and once even marquis.[99] The Gazette of 26 June 1674 mentions Comte d'Hamilton as one of the French commanders at the Battle of Sinsheim.[102] This might simply reflect the belief held by the French that he was a nobleman in England, Scotland, or Ireland, or shear cautious politeness from their part. The French genealogist Aubert de Chesnaye des Bois mentions Hamilton as a Scottish noble family that gave rise to a Duc de Châtelleraut and mentions Comte Antoine Hamilton but not George Hamilton.[103]
Many English sources also call him count.[57][104] Ó Ciardha says he was made a count in February ennobled by Louis XIV,[98][94] This might simply echo the French use taking for truth what is perhaps a mistake or politeness. To call Georhe Hamilton the elder the Baronet and his son the count is a neat way to distinguish them. Sergeant thinks he was made a count soon after he obtained French nationality.[105] Ó Ciardha seems to believe he was made a count in February 1676 after his achievements at Altenheim.[98][94]
No source mentions a territorial designation and none mentions that Sir George Hamilton owned land that was erected as comté as was done in other cases.[f]
Death and timeline
Count Hamilton was killed on 1 June 1676 while commanding Luxembourg's rear-guard at the Col de Saverne (Zebernstieg in Alsatian[107]) where imperial troops under Charles V, Duke of Lorraine pursued the French who were retreating eastward to Saverne in lower Alsace.[108] His younger brother Anthony succeeded him as comte d'Hamilton,[109] but King Charles and his brother the Duke of York insisted that Thomas Dongan should succeed as colonel buying the regiment from the Hamiltons.[110]
Timeline | ||
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As his birth date is uncertain, so are all his ages. | ||
Age | Date | Event |
0 | 1635, estimate | Born in Ulster, Ireland.[a] |
5–6 | 1641 | Sister Elizabeth born.[3] |
10–11 | 1646, 17 Sep | Spared by O'Neill at the capture of Roscrea.[17] |
13–14 | 1649, 30 Jan | King Charles I beheaded.[111] |
14–15 | 1650, Oct | Father defended Nenagh Castle against the Parliamentarians.[20] |
15–16 | 1651 | Fled to France with his family; became a page to Charles II.[23] |
20–21 | 1656, 2 Apr | Charles concluded the Treaty of Brussels with Spain. |
22–23 | 1658, 14 Jun N.S. | Battle of the Dunes |
22–23 | 1658, 3 Sep | Oliver Cromwell died. |
24–25 | 1660, 29 May | Restoration of King Charles II.[34] |
24–25 | 1660 | Followed Charles II to England; was an officer in the Life Guards[33] and a courtier at Whitehall. |
29–30 | 1665, early in | Married Frances Jennings.[46] |
29–30 | 1665, 3 Jun O.S. | Participated in the naval Battle of Lowestoft against the Dutch.[61] |
31–32 | 1667, 21 Mar | Daughter Elizabeth baptised at St. Margaret's, Westminster, London.[58] |
31–32 | 1667, 28 Sep | Dismissed from the Life Guards.[62] |
32–33 | 1668, 1 Feb | Left England and went to France.[64] |
36–37 | 1672, 12 Mar O.S. | Beginning of the Third Anglo-Dutch War.[112] |
37–38 | 1673, 6 Jun | His eldest brother James died after losing a leg in a sea-fight with the Dutch.[113] |
38–39 | 1674, 19 Feb | First Anglo-Dutch War ended with Treaty of Westminster[114] |
38–39 | 1674, 16 Jun | Fought at Sinsheim.[84] |
38–39 | 1674, 6 Oct | Fought at Entzheim and was wounded.[86] |
38–39 | 1675, 8 May | The King's proclamation concerning French service.[80] |
39–40 | 1675, 27 Jul | Fought at Sasbach where Turenne was killed.[92] |
39–40 | 1675, Aug | Fought a noted rearguard action at Altenheim.[96] |
40–41 | 1676, 1 Jun | Killed in a rearguard action on the Col de Saverne.[107][108] |
Notes
- ^ a b Strictly speaking, his birth date is constrained by the marriage of his parents (mid 1629)[2] minus the gestation of his eldest brother James, and the date of birth of his sister Elizabeth (1641).[3]
- ^ The inscriptions read: "S. Harding delt / W. N. Gardiner sculp / Pubd Sep 20, 1793, by E & S Harding, No 102, Pall Mall / GEORGE HAMILTON. / From an original Picture in the Collection of Lord Beaulieu at Ditton Park." The engraving was published in the Edwards (1794) edition of the Mémoires du Comte de Grammont.[27] A print is preserved at the British Museum.[28]
- ^ According to Kathryn Walter (pers. comm.) from National Portrait Gallery, the original oil painting, painted about 1670, was lost in a fire at Ditton Park House in 1812, the one at NPG (NPG 1468) is a copy. The NPG website identifies the sitter as "Sir George Hamilton, 1st Bt (circa 1607-1679)", but older catalogues identify him as "George (Count) Hamilton".[29] This painting is reproduced in Sergeant (1913) where the caption reads "Sir George (Count) Hamilton From a photograph, by Emery Walker, of the picture in the National Portrait Gallery". We therefore have two contradicting identifications.
- ^ The girl courted by Louis and Philibert in 1662 was Anne-Lucie de La Motte-Houdancourt, who would marry René-François de La Vieuville in 1676. Walpole, when translating the Mémoires du comte de Gramont into English, confused her with Anne-Madeleine de Conty d'Argencourt, who had been a lesser mistress of Louis XIV four years earlier, in 1658.[39]
- ^ miniature by Samuel Cooper c. 1665, NPG 5095
- ^ For exemple when Claude de Mesmes was ennobled as comte d'Avaux in 1638.[106]
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 389, left column, line 12: "He was probably born at his father's house in Roscrea, co. Tipperary, in the late 1630s."
- ^ Burke 1949, p. 3, right column, line 2: "[Sir George] m. (art. dated 2 June 1629) Mary, 3rd dau. of Thomas, Viscount Thurles ..."
- ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 146, left column: "[Elizabeth] was born in 1641."
- ^ Burke 1869, p. 2, right column, bottom: "George (Sir) of Donalong, co. Tyrone, and Nenagh, co. Tipperary, created a baronet of Ireland, in 1660, for his services to the royal cause."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 110, footnote: "The great proportion and manor of Donalong on his third son George and his heirs ..."
- ^ Lodge 1789, p. 40, line 14: "Mary, married to Sir George Hamilton, ancestor by her to the Earl of Abercorn, and died in August 1680."
- ^ Debrett 1828, p. 640: "THEOBALD LE BOTELER on whom that office [Chief Butler of Ireland] was conferred by King Henry II., 1177 ..."
- ^ Cokayne 1910, p. 4: "Tabular pedigree of the Earls of Abercorn"
- ^ Debrett 1816, p. 92, line 17: "He [Sir George] m. Mary, 3d daughter of Thomas, Viscount Thurles, son of Walter, 11th earl of Ormond and sister of James, duke of Ormond, and had issue 6 sons and 3 daughters ..."
- ^ Metcalfe 1909, p. 234, line 10: "Her [Marion Boyd's] husband had been a staunch Protestant, an elder in the Kirk, and a member of the General Assembly."
- ^ Metcalfe 1909, p. 234, line 12: "During his [James Hamilton's] lifetime she had evidently conformed; but after his death she had evidently relapsed."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 16: "James Hamilton's marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir John Colepeper ... took place as early as 1660 or 1661. As the lady was a Protestant, James Hamilton left the Church of Rome shortly before his marriage, to the great sorrow and anger of his devout mother ..."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 13: "... Thomas, Anthony's junior had entered the Navy in 1666 or earlier."
- ^ Millar 1890, p. 177, left column, line 46: "... the Marquis of Ormonde, whom he [George's father] followed to Caen in the spring of 1651 with his wife and family."
- ^ Paul 1904, p. 50, line 12: "[Jean Gordon] who was taken prisoner by Sir Phelim O'Neile, in the rebellion of 1641, when he burned and destroyed the castle of Strabane, but whom she afterwards married ..."
- ^ Sergeant 1913, p. 145, line 21: "For some reason, when the rebel leader Owen O'Neill took Roscrea, Tipperary, the home of the Hamiltons, in September 1646, and put the inhabitants to the sword, he spared Lady Hamilton and her young children ..."
- ^ a b Carte 1851, p. 265: "... after taking Roscrea on Sept. 17, and putting man, woman, and child to the sword, except sir G. Hamilton's lady, sister to the marquis of Ormond ..."
- ^ Hayes-McCoy 1990, p. 197: "He [Owen Roe O'Neill] listened to the nuncio's plea, 'quitted the opportunity of conquest in Ulster' and marched south."
- ^ Coffey 1914, p. 178: "Now seemed the time to follow up the victory of Benburb and subdue the whole North of Ireland; but it was not to be for letters from the Nuncio caused O'Neill to withdraw from the North and move South ..."
- ^ a b Warner 1768, p. 228: "... taking Nenagh and two other castles, on the tenth of November, he came to his winter quarters at Kilkenny."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 5: "In the spring of 1651 took place, at last, the event which had such a determining influence on the fate of the young Hamiltons. Sir George Hamilton left his country for France with his family ..."
- ^ Millar 1890, p. 177, left column: "Marquis of Ormonde, whom he followed to Caen in the spring of 1651 with his wife and family."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 8, line 12: "Thanks to Ormond, always mindful of his relatives' welfare, George, the second son, was made a page to Charles II ..."
- ^ Paul 1904, p. 53, line 26: "Sir George Hamilton who was page to King Charles II. during his exile ..."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 8, line 27: "... his [Antoine Hamilton's] mother and his aunt, Lady Muskerry, had apartments at the Couvent des Feuillantines in Paris ..."
- ^ Fraser 1980, p. 147: "... Charles secured permission to come to Brussels, the capital of the Spanish Netherlands, arriving there in March 1656."
- ^ Hamilton 1794, p. 254: Between pages 254 & 255
- ^ O'Donoghue 1910, p. 426: "Hamilton, (Count) George; b. of Count Anthony H.; killed at Saverne 1667. 1. H L to r. in wig and armour. From picture in National Portrait Gallery. Photograph."
- ^ Cust 1907, p. 179: "SIR GEORGE, COUNT HAMILTON."
- ^ Cannon 1837, p. 2: "His Majesty selected from among them eighty cavalier gentlemen, who had adopted the profession of arms and adhered to the royal cause with unshaken fidelity, and on the 17th of May, 1660, constituted them a corps of LIFE GUARDS for the protection of the royal person."
- ^ White-Spunner 2006, p. 56: "... Sir George Hamilton of the King's Troop ..."
- ^ Akin 1797, p. 171: "The first troop was raised in the year 1660 and the command given to Lord Gerard;"
- ^ a b Paul 1904, p. 53, line 27: "... and after the Restoration [George] was an officer in the Horse Guards till 1667 ..."
- ^ a b Seaward 2004, p. 127, right column: "… he sailed to England and on 29 May [1660] he entered London in triumph."
- ^ Pepys 1895, p. 65: "As many of the men as I can remember presently, were, the King, Duke of York, Prince Rupert, Duke of Monmouth, Duke of Buckingham, Lord Douglas, Mr. [George] Hamilton ..."
- ^ Auger 1805, p. 2: "Près de deux ans après le rétablissement de Charles II, arriva à Londres le fameux chevalier de Grammont, exilé de France ..."
- ^ Hamilton 1713, p. 104: "LA MOTTE HOUDANCOURT étoit une des filles de la Reine-Mère."
- ^ Auger 1805, pp. 2–3: "Près de deux ans après le rétablissement de Charles II, arriva à Londres le fameux chevalier de Grammont, exilé de France pour avoir voulu disputer à son maître le cœur de mademoiselle La Mothe-Houdancourt."
- ^ a b Hamilton 1888, p. 107: "La Motte-Agencourt was one of maids of honour of the queen dowager ..."
- ^ Auger 1805, p. 2, line 25: "... enfin on parloit françois à St.-James presqu'aussi habituellement qu'à Versailles."
- ^ Hamilton 1888, p. 301: "Hamilton, upon the whole, was pretty well treated by her [Mrs Wetenhall], if a man in love who is never satisfied until the completion of his wishes, could confine himself within the bounds of moderation ..."
- ^ Hartmann 1924, p. 15: "The mayds of honour were likewise in wayting, viz. Mrs. Cary, Mrs. Stuart ..."
- ^ Hamilton 1888, p. 345: "Believe me, my dear friend, there is no playing tricks with our masters, I mean there is no ogling of their mistresses. I myself wanted to play the agreeable in France ..."
- ^ Green 1967, p. 23: "Of her sisters, Frances, eight years Sarah's senior, preceded her to court as a maid of honour."
- ^ Macaulay 1855, p. 639.
- ^ a b Burke 1949, p. 3, right column, line 12: "George (Sir), Count of France, and Maréchal du Camp; m. 1665 Frances dau. and co-heir of Richard Jennings ..."
- ^ Sergeant 1913, p. 201: "The date of this grant was April 20th, 1666, so that the wedding evidently took place in the spring of that year."
- ^ Sergeant 1913, p. 201: "... the King in particular hastened to show his approval of the marriage by bestowing on Hamilton a pension of £500 a year."
- ^ Hamilton 1888, p. 365: "George Hamilton, under more favourable auspices, married the lovely Jennings;"
- ^ a b Bagwell 1898, p. 336: "Of her six children by Hamilton, three daughters, Elizabeth, Frances, and Mary, married Viscounts Ross, Dillon and Kingsland and were well known in Ireland as the 'three viscomtesses'."
- ^ Burke 1869, p. 3, left column, line 18: "Elizabeth, m. to Richard, viscount Ross;"
- ^ Burke 1949, p. 1725, left column, line 38: "RICHARD, 1st VISCOUNT ROSSE, who was elevated to the peerage, 2 July, 1681, as Baron of Oxmantown and Viscount Rosse with remainder to the male issue of his great-grandfather; m. 1stly, by licence 27 Feb. 1676-7, Anne (d.s.p.), dau. of Thomas Walsingham, m. 2ndly, 14 Oct. 1681, Catherine Brydges (d.s.p. 24 Aug. 1682), dau. of George, Lord Chandos. He m. 3rdly, 1685, Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Sir George Hamilton (and niece of Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough), by whom he had two sons and three daus. He d. 30 Jan 1702–3 and was s. by his elder son."
- ^ Burke 1869, p. 3, left column, line 19: "Frances, m. to Henry, Viscount Dillon;"
- ^ Burke 1949, p. 603, left column, line 91: "HENRY, 8th Viscount Dillon, MP Westmeath in James II's Parliament in Dublin, Lieut, of Roscommon 1689, and Col. in JAMES's army and Gov. of Galway, m. July 1687, Frances, 2nd dau. of Count Sir George Hamilton, by his wife, Frances Jennings, afterwards Duchess of Tyrconnel ; by whom, who m. 2ndly, Patrick, eld. son of Sir John Bellew, Bt., of Barmeath, he has issue. He died 13 Jan. 1713 and was s. by his son."
- ^ Cokayne 1916, pp. 359-360: "His [Henry Dillon's] widow who was b. in France, m. Patrick BELLEW of Barmeath, who d. v.p., 12 June 1720. She d. 16 Nov. 1751."
- ^ Burke 1869, p. 3, left column, line 20: "... Mary, m. to Nicholaus, Viscount Kingsland."
- ^ a b Cokayne 1910, p. 428: "NICHOLAS (BARNEWALL) VISCOUNT BARNEWALL OF KINGSLAND &c [I.], s. and h. by his 2nd wife. He was b. 15 Apr. 1668. He sat in King James's Parl. [I.] in May 1689. He m., 15 May 1688, Mary, 3rd and yst. da. and coh. of Sir George HAMILTON (Comte Hamilton and Maréchal du Camp in France), by Frances ..."
- ^ a b Sergeant 1913, p. 202: "... before a year had passed, a child was born. On March 21, 1667, a daughter was baptized at St Margaret's, Westminster, under the name of Elizabeth ..."
- ^ Burke 1866, p. 419, right column, line 33: "1. Catharine m. to James Hussey, Esq. of Westown, co. Dublin."
- ^ Burke 1866, p. 294, right column: "JAMES HUSSEY, Esq., of Westown, co. Dublin, and of Courtown, co. Kildare, m. 1705 ... Catherine, dau. of Richard Parsons, Viscount Rosse, and by her who d. in March, 1766, had issue ... EDWARD HUSSEY, Esq., of Westown who m. in 1743, Isabella, eldest dau. and co-heir of John, Duke of Montague, and relict of William Montague, Duke of Manchester, and assumed at the decease of his father-in-law, the name and arms of MONTAGUE ... in 1762 [he was] created a peer of Great Britain ... and in 1784,advanced to be EARL BEAULIEU."
- ^ a b Sergeant 1913, p. 196"George Hamilton we hear of as one of the volunteers who joined the fleet just before the battle."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 29: "It therefore became necessary to cashier all Roman Catholics serving in the Royal Guards, and, on the 28th of September, 1667, on the ground that they refused to take the Oath of Supremacy, they were dismissed."
- ^ Walpole 1888, p. 3: "Charles II, being restored to his throne brought over to England several Catholic officers and soldiers who had served abroad with him and his brother the Duke of York and incorporated them with his guards; but the parliament having obliged him to dismiss all officers who were Catholics, the king permitted George Hamilton to take such as were willing to accompany him to France, where Louis XIV. formed them into a company of gens d'armes, and being highly pleased with them, became himself their captain, and made George Hamilton their captain-lieutenant."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 32, line 14: "On the first of February, 1668, at last and aided by a new gift of five hundred pistols by Louis, George Hamilton managed to sail from Dover to Ostend with 100 men and horses ..."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 32, line 20: "In his pass, dated January 14, he is for the first time styled Sir Georges Hamilton, and would thus seem to have been knighted by Charles before his departure ..."
- ^ Burke 1869, p. 3, left column, line 13: "George (Sir), Knight, Count of France ..."
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 389, left column, line 50: "He entered French service, enrolled in Louis's bodyguard, and became captain general of the regiment formed by his men, which Louis permitted him to call the Gendarmes Anglais."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 28: "This marriage too, like James Hamilton's, involved a change of religion, but this time it was the bride who changed, becoming a Roman Catholic."
- ^ Wauchope 2004b, p. 688, left column: "At some time after the birth of her first child, in 1667, she converted to Catholicism and moved to Paris ..."
- ^ Phillips 1910, p. 449, right column: "The treaty of the 2nd of May 1668, which put an end to the War of Devolution, was the outcome of that of St. Germain, signed on the 15th of April by France and the representatives of the powers of the triple Alliance."
- ^ Sergeant 1913, p. 207, line 6: "To further his advancement in the French service, it was thought advisable that he should change his nationality, and on March 11th, 1668, a warrant was issued in England which permitted him to procure letters of denization in France."
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 389, right column, line 12: "Charles instructed the lords Justices of Ireland to give Hamilton permission to raise a regiment in Ireland of 1,500 men"
- ^ Wauchope 2004a, p. 523, right column, line 10: "... in 1671 was appointed lieutenant-colonel of George Hamilton's Irish regiment in French pay."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 45, line 26: "... left in garrison in Liége."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 45, line 29: "... joined the French army after the famous passage of the Rhine in June."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 46: "... proceeded to Utrecht which fell on the 20th of June."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 47: "... Hamilton's men were stationed in Zutphen on the Yssel."
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 389, right column, line 33: "Hamilton and his regiment served under the small army which Louis had left in the Netherlands, after the Dutch had opened the dykes ..."
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 389, right column, line 37: "In the summer 1673 he joined the great Maréchal Turenne ..."
- ^ a b Atkinson 1946, p. 161: "In May, 1675, a fresh proclamation was issued recalling from the French service men who had entered it since the peace and forbidding anyone from joining."
- ^ Daniell 1907, p. 110: "May 8 [1675] Whitehall. The King's answer to the address recalling his subjects from the French service."
- ^ Quincy 1726, p. 392: "Quoique les troupes de Turenne fussent harassées après une marche de trente lieues, il s'avança à Seintzeim où les ennemis s'étoient arrêtez ..."
- ^ a b "Bataille donnée aux troupes impériales & lorraines, sous le Duc Charles de Lorraine, & le Comte Caprara". Gazette de France (in French) (94): 600. 26 June 1674.
Le Comte d'Hamilton, qui estoit à la teste de deux bataillons de son Régiment & de celuy de Montmouth, lesquels faisoient partie du Détachement de Philisbourg se signalent particuliérement ...
- ^ a b c Sergeant 1913, p. 213, line 4: "In 1674 it [the Régiment d'Hamilton] was engaged in two desperate struggles between Turenne and the Duke of Bournonville, at Sintzheim on June 16th and at Entzheim on October 6th, on both occasions playing a distinguished part in Turenne's victory."
- ^ O'Conor 1855, p. 87: "... they [the Irish] had part in the plunder and the destruction of the dominions of the Elector Palatine, which tarnished the glory of the great Turenne."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 54: "George and Anthony were both wounded."
- ^ a b Grimoard 1782, p. 133: "... le Comte de Hamilton Colonel d'infanterie ... furent blessés."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 56, line 10: "He [George Hamilton] left in the very beginning of March [1675], but Anthony was put in charge of the difficult expedition ..."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 56, bottom: "All in a sudden, in the first week of April, the French ships arrived unexpectedly in Kinsale."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 56, line 31: "Hamilton expected the French ships on the 8th of March but they did not appear."
- ^ Clark 1921, p. 55, line 31: "Turenne defeated them at Mulhouse on the 29th of December and at Turckheim on January 5th. George and Anthony did not, however, take part in these operations ..."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 213, last line: "Hamilton was at his side when the fatal shot struck him down ..."
- ^ Daniell 1907, p. 273: "... Marshal Turenne was shot in the breast, as he was viewing the Imperial army through a perspective glass ..."
- ^ a b c O'Conor 1855, p. 94: "Jealous as they are of sharing their fame, they admitted the Irish to all the honours of that memorable victory [of Altenheim], and the rank of major-general conferred on Count Hamilton marked the high sense entertained by the French of their obligations to his bravery on that great occasion."
- ^ Quincy 1726, p. 448: "Le marquis de Vaubrun y fut tué en donnant de grandes marques de valeur."
- ^ a b c Quincy 1726, p. 447: "Il [Montecuccoli] trouva le Chevalier de Bouflers avec ses dragons & le Comte Hamilton avec ses Anglois qui le repoussèrent après une action des plus vives."
- ^ Atkinson 1946, p. 162: "... in January 1676, Essex, being in London, Essex wrote to Sir John Temple, the Master of the Rolls in Ireland, 'Sir George Hamilton went about a month since into Ireland privately to make some levies there."
- ^ a b c Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 390, left column, line 10: "... George became a count and maréchal de camp in February 1676."
- ^ a b "Liste des officiers généraux". Gazette de France (in French) (20): 261. 20 Mar 1676.
Armée d'Allemagne ... Maréchaux de camp ... Le Marquis d'Hamilton
- ^ Longueville 1907, p. 392: "The King made Condé leave his army in Flanders to take the command vacated by the death of Turenne."
- ^ Lynn 1999, p. 144: "Luxembourg who replaced Condé in Alsace lost Philippsburg to the able Charles V of Lorrain in 1676 …"
- ^ "Bataille donnée aux troupes impériales & lorraines, sous le Duc Charles de Lorraine, & le Comte Caprara". Gazette de France (in French) (94): 600. 26 June 1674.
Le Comte d'Hamilton, qui estoit à la teste de deux batillons de son Régiment & de celuy de Montmouth, lesquels faisoient partie du Détachement de Philisbourg se signalent particuliérement ...
- ^ La Chesnaye des Bois 1774, p. 630.
- ^ Corp 2004, p. 766, right column, line 4: "He [George] was made a count and maréchal-de-camp ..."
- ^ Sergeant 1913, p. 207, line 11: "Soon after this Louis created him a count."
- ^ La Chesnaye des Bois 1770, p. 478, top: "AVAUX, en Champagne, diocèse de Reims, Terre & seigneurie érigée en comté par Lettres du mois de Janvier 1638, registrées le 4 Août 1648 en faveur de Jacques de Mesmes, Seigneur de Roissi, Conseiller d'état, & de son second fils Claude de Mesmes ..."
- ^ a b Sergeant 1913, p. 217: "At the beginning of June [1676] he took part in the battle of Zebernstieg and was engaged in covering the French retreat on Saverne when he was killed by a musket-shot."
- ^ a b Clark 1921, p. 63: "Near Saverne Lorraine [i.e. the Duke of L.] attacked his rear-guard, commanded by George Hamilton, but was driven back in a fierce combat, in which Hamilton and his regiment fought with all possible bravery, though the Imperialists spread a report that all the English and Irish in the French service had surrendered. In the moment of victory George Hamilton fell. This was on the 1st of June 1676."
- ^ Corp 2004, p. 766, right column, line 22: "In 1678, having inherited the title of count from his brother, Anthony left France."
- ^ Ó Ciardha 2009, p. 390, left column, line 27: "One of his brothers was to have taken over the command of the regiment but, at the insistence of Charles II and the duke of York, it was sold to Dongan ..."
- ^ Burke 1949, p. cclxvii, line 9: "… after the decapitation of CHARLES I at Whitehall, 30 Jan. 1649 ..."
- ^ Evelyn 1901, p. 76: "12th March 1672. Now was the first blow given by us to the Dutch convoy of the Smyrna fleet, by Sir Robert Holmes and Lord Ossory, in which we received little save blows and a worthy reproach for attacking our neighbors ere any war was proclaimed ..."
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
FOOTNOTEBurkeBurke1909[httpsarchiveorgdetailsb31363945page47 47, right column, line 78]
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Lynn 1999, p. 122: "... the English concluded a separate peace with his [Louis’s] enemies through the Treaty of Westminster on 19 February 1674 …"
References
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