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Arthur Dillon, Count Dillon

Arthur Dillon, Count Dillon (1670–1733) was a Jacobite soldier from Ireland who served as colonel of Dillon's Regiment in the Irish Brigade in French service. He fought in the Nine Years' War and in the War of the Spanish Succession where he excelled at the Battle of Cremona against Prince Eugene of Savoy.

Arthur Dillon
Born1670
County Roscommon, Ireland
Died5 February 1733
Château-vieux de Saint-Germain-en-Laye
Allegiance
Service/branch
RankLieutenant général (French Army)
Battles/warsWilliamite War in Ireland; Nine Years' War (1688–97); War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14)
RelationsTheobald, 7th Viscount Dillon (father)

Birth and origins

Family tree
Arthur Dillon with wife, parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
Robert
Dillon

of Loughglynn
Rose D.
of
Streamstown
d. 1681
Theobald
7th
Viscount

d. 1691
Jacobite
Mary
Talbot

d. 1691
Henry
8th
Viscount

d. 1714
Arthur
1670–1733
Christina
Sheldon

1684–1757
Richard
9th
Viscount

1688–1737
Charles
10th
Viscount

1701–1741
Henry
11th
Viscount

1705–1787
Charlotte
Lee

d. 1794
Heiress
Charles
12th
Viscount

1745–1813
Henrietta-
Maria
Phipps

1757–1782
Arthur
1750–1794
French
general
Legend
XXXSubject of
the article
XXXViscounts
Dillon

Arthur was born in 1670[2] in County Roscommon,[3] Ireland, probably at Kilmore, his parents' habitual residence.[4] He was the third son of Theobald Dillon and his wife Mary Talbot.[5] His father was the 7th Viscount Dillon of Costello-Gallen[6] and supported James II in the Williamite war in Ireland. His father's family was Anglo-Norman in Ireland and descended from Sir Henry De lion (a name that became Dillon in later generations), who came to Ireland with Prince John in 1185.[7]

Henry's mother was a daughter of Sir Henry Talbot of Templeogue and his wife Margaret Talbot, who was a sister of Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell.[8] The Talbots also were Old English.

Both his parents were Catholic. He was one of eight siblings,[9] who are listed in his father's article. His elder brother Henry would succeed as the 8th Viscount Dillon.

Early life

In 1688 his father raised two regiments for James II, one commanded by his son Henry, the other by his son Arthur, the subject of this article.[10] In 1690 James II and Louis XIV agreed that an Irish Brigade of 5,400 men would be sent to France in exchange for six French regiments sent to Ireland with Lauzun. Arthur Dillon's Regiment was part of this Irish Brigade, which was led by Lord Mountcashel. Arthur, aged 20, landed with it at Brest on 1 May 1690.[11][12]

Both his parents were killed in the Williamite war. His father fell at the Battle of Aughrim on 12 July 1691,[13] whereas his mother was killed during the second Siege of Limerick by a shell fired into the town on 7 September 1691.[14]

At that time France was in the middle of the Nine Years' War (1688–97) of which the Williamite War in Ireland had been a theatre. Dillon and his regiment were sent to Roussillon and Catalonia, another theatre of this same war, where they fought the Spanish, among others at the siege of Roses under the Duc de Noailles, in 1693.[15] In 1695 the duc de Vendôme succeeded to Noailles. Vendôme besieged Barcelona, which was defended by its governor, the Conde de la Corzana, and by Prince George of Hesse-Darmstadt. The town surrendered on terms after a siege of 52 days on 10 August 1697.[16]

Marriage and children

The Nine Years' War ended in 1697 with the Treaty of Ryswick and four years of peace followed. Dillon found the time to marry. His chosen wife was Christina Sheldon, a maid-of-honour to Mary of Modena, queen consort of James II of England. Christina's parents were Ralph Sheldon of Ditchford, Worcestershire (1633–1723) and Elisabeth, heiress of Daniel Dunn of Garnish Hall in Essex. Dominic Sheldon, the Jacobite general, was her uncle. Her family was English and Catholic. She continued to serve Mary of Modena as lady-in-waiting at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[17]

Arthur and Christina had five sons:

  1. Charles (1701–1741), became the 10th Viscount Dillon[18]
  2. Henry (1705–1787), became the 11th Viscount Dillon[19]
  3. James (died 1745), became Colonel of Dillon's Regiment and fell in the Battle of Fontenoy[20]
  4. Edward (1720–1747), succeeded his brother as Colonel of the Dillon Regiment and then fell in the Battle of Lauffeld[21]
  5. Arthur Richard (1721–1806), became a French archbishop[22]

—and five daughters:

  1. Frances, became a Carmelite nun[23]
  2. Catharine (died 1753), became a Carmelite nun and died at St. Denis[24]
  3. Mary (died 1786), died at St Germain[25]
  4. Bridget (died 1785), married Baron Blaisel, a Lieutenant-General in the French Army[26][27]
  5. Laura (died 1741), married Lucius Cary, 6th Viscount Falkland, a Jacobite[28]

War of the Spanish Succession

The War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714) broke out after Charles II of Spain, the last Habsburg king of Spain, died without heir. Dillon and his regiment were first sent to the Rhine in 1701 where he served under François de Neufville, duc de Villeroy, but Villeroy and Dillon were soon transferred to northern Italy where France and its ally Savoy were trying to seize the Duchy of Milan, which belonged to Spain. French troops under the command of Marshal Nicolas Catinat fought the Austrians under Prince Eugene of Savoy. However, after Catinat lost the skirmish of Carpi on 9 July 1701, the command of the French troops in Italy was given to Villeroy under whom Catinat then served as second in command. On 1 September 1701 Prince Eugene defeated Villeroy at Chiari.

On 16 September 1701 James II died at Saint-Germain-en-Laye[29] and was succeeded by James Francis Edward Stuart, James III for the Jacobites, the Old Pretender for the supporters of William III in England, who was succeeded by Queen Anne on 8 March 1702.[30]

Eugene's next move in northern Italy was to surprise Villeroy in his winter quarters in Cremona on the night of 31 January to 1 February 1702, an action also called the Battle of Cremona. Villeroy was taken prisoner, but the French were saved from defeat by Dillon's and Bourke's Irish regiments, who held the Po-gate and the bridge over the River Po against the Austrians, thus preventing Eugene from effecting his junction with the troops he had on the other side of the river.[31] Eventually, Eugene could not hold the town against its garrison and had to retreat.[32]

Villeroy was replaced with the duc de Vendôme, under whom Dillon had already served at Barcelona. Under Vendôme Dillon and his regiment fought in the battles of Santa-Vittoria on 26 July 1702, and Luzzara on 15 August 1702.[33] On 1 October 1702 Dillon was promoted to brigadier.[34] In 1703 Vendôme tried to effect a junction with the Bavarians, allied with the French against Austria, through the Tyrol and penetrated as far as Trent. Dillon took the town of Riva at the northern tip of Lake Garda.[35] However, on 13 August 1704 Marlborough and Eugene beat the French and Bavarians at Blenheim. Savoy switched side and Vendôme had to retreat. In 1704 Dillon, aged 34, was promoted to maréchal de camp.[36] On 16 August 1705 Vendôme repulsed Eugene at Cassano. Three Irish regiments, including Dillon's, played a key-role in halting Eugene's attack.[37] Dillon was made a commander of the Order of Saint Louis.[38]

On 23 May 1706 Marlborough beat Villeroy at Ramillies in the Spanish Netherlands. Thereupon, Louis XIV ordered Vendôme with a big part of the Armée d'Italie to Flanders to redress the situation there. Dillon and his regiment stayed behind in Northern Italy. Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, who would rule France as Regent from 1715 to 1723, replaced Vendôme in Italy, taking up his new position in July.

Together with Jacques Eléonor Rouxel de Grancey, comte de Médavy, Dillon defeated at the Battle of Castiglione on 9 September 1706 a Hessian unit under Prince Frederick of Hesse-Kassel[39] that had arrived too late from Germany to join the main body of Eugene's army. Their victory had no effect, because the day before the French lost the decisive Battle of Turin (7 September 1706) and had to evacuate northern Italy.

On 24 September 1706 Dillon was promoted to lieutenant général for his action at Castiglione.[40] Under Marshal Tessé[b] Dillon and his regiment participated in the successful defence of Toulon in the Siege of Toulon (1707). In 1707 Austria signed the Convention of Milan ending the war in northern Italy.

in 1708 Dillon's regiment was transferred to the Moselle where Dillon served under Claude Louis Hector de Villars and James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick.

In 1709 Berwick, and Dillon with him, were transferred to the Dauphiné to guard this French province against attacks from neighbouring Savoy. Dillon defended Briançon and on 28 August 1709 defeated Bernhard Otto von Rehbinder [it], a Baltic German in Savoyard service, at the Pont de la Vachette.[41] It was rumoured that while in Grenoble Dillon had an affair with Claudine Guérin de Tencin who was at that time a nun at the convent of Montfleury at Corenc near Grenoble. She managed to leave her nunnery in 1712.

In 1711 Dillon was created comte Dillon in France by Louis XIV.[42][43] commander

In 1712, when the French opened peace talks with the English, James Francis Edward was told to leave France. He decided to take refuge in Lorraine (not yet part of France at that time). He left Saint-Germain-en-Laye on 6 September 1712 and arrived in Lorraine in February 1713 after a short stay in Châlons-sur-Marne.[44]

The Peace of Utrecht on 11 April 1713 ended the war between France on one hand and Britain, the Netherlands, and Savoy on the other hand. In the treaty, France recognised the Hanoverian Succession and formally ended its support for the Jacobites.[45]

However, the war between France and Austria continued. Comte Dillon, as he was now, was transferred from the Dauphiné to the Rhine for the campaign of 1713, where he served under Villars capturing Kaiserslautern on 24 June 1713[46][47] and the Castle Wolfstein.[48] He then participated in the siege of Landau, 24 June to 26 August 1713, under Marshall Jacques Bazin de Bezons and in the siege of Freiburg, 20 September to 17 November 1713.[49] The Treaty of Rastatt on 17 March 1714 ended the war with Austria.

However, the war still raged on in Spain where Catalonia tried to preserve Catalan autonomy by supporting Charles III against Philip V as Spanish King. Dillon was transferred to Spain under the command of Berwick where he returned to sit before Barcelona as he had done already in 1697. This Siege of Barcelona (1713-1714) was his last campaign.[50] The town was stormed on 11 September 1714 and capitulated on the 12.[51]

Later life

Count Dillon was later appointed commander in the Dauphiné and governor of Toulon.[52]

As a French General, Dillon was not allowed to participate in the Jacobite rising of 1715. Returning from Scotland following the failure of the rising, James Francis Edward found himself not welcome in Lorraine anymore and established himself at Avignon on 2 April 1716.[53] On 1 February 1717 he appointed Dillon his plenipotentiary to the French court in Paris.[54] In this role Dillon, together with Georg Heinrich von Görtz, and Carl Gyllenborg tried to convince Charles XII of Sweden to help the Jacobites to invade England. Dillon organised funds to support the project.[55]

In 1718 Dillon was ordered to command a French contingent sent to Italy during the War of the Quadruple Alliance (1718–1720). He was replaced as agent in Paris initially by James Murray and later by Daniel O'Brien.[56]

James Francis Edward, whom Dillon recognised as King James III, awarded him the Irish titles of Baron and Viscount on 1 February 1717 in Avignon.[57] James III neglected to specify territorial designations for these titles. In 1721 James III gave him Scottish titles by creating him Earl Dillon, also Viscount and Lord.[58] In 1722 he was made a (Jacobite) Knight of the Thistle.[59]

He was also a grandfather of the French generals Arthur Dillon and Théobald Dillon. He was a cousin of Gerard Lally. He was a great-grandfather of the famous memoirist Henriette-Lucy, Marquise de La Tour du Pin Gouvernet, née Henriette-Lucy Dillon.

In 1730 he retired from active service, handing over the command of the regiment to Charles, his eldest son.[60]

Death, succession, and timeline

On 5 February 1733 N.S., Arthur Dillon, comte de Dillon, died at the Château de Saint-Germain-en-Laye.[61][62] His eldest son Charles, already colonel, now also succeeded to his father's titles: comte de Dillon in France and Earl of Dillon in the Jacobite peerage.

Timeline
As only the year but not the day of his birth is known, all ages could be a year younger.
Age Date Event
0 1670 Born in Ireland.[2]
18–19 1689, 13 Feb Accession of William and Mary, succeeding King James II[63]
19–20 1690, 1 May Debarked at Brest with the regiment.[11]
20–21 1691, 12 Jul Father fell at the Battle of Aughrim.[13]
20–21 1691, 7 Sep Mother killed during the Siege of Limerick.[14]
26–27 1697, 10 Aug Fought at the Siege of Barcelona.[16]
26–27 1697, Oct The Peace of Ryswick ended the Nine Years' War.[64]
30–31 1701, 16 Sep James II died at Saint-Germain-en-Laye and was succeeded by James Francis Edward.
31–32 1702, 1 Feb Fought at Cremona[31]
31–32 1702, 8 Mar Accession of Queen Anne, succeeding King William III[30]
33–34 1704 Made maréchal de camp[36]
33–34 1704, 13 Aug Battle of Blenheim[65]
35–36  Sep Victorious in the Battle of Castiglione
35–36 1706, 26 Sep Made lieutenant-général.[40]
38–39 1709, 28 Aug Defeated Rehbinder at Vachette near Briançon.[41]
40–41 1711 Created "comte de Dillon" in France by Louis XIV[42]
40–41 1711 Made a commander of the Order of Saint Louis[38]
42–43 1713, Feb James Francis Edward moves to Avignon.[53]
42–43 1713, 11 Apr The Peace of Utrecht ended the War of the Spanish Succession and France drops the Jacobites.[45]
42–43 1713, 24 Jun Besieged and took Kaiserslautern[46]
43–44 1714, 1 Aug Accession of King George I, succeeding Queen Anne[66]
43–44 1715, 1 Sep Death of Louis XIV; Regency until the majority of Louis XV[67]
52–53 1723, 16 Feb Majority of Louis XV[68]
59–60 1730 Retired from active service and handed the regiment over to Charles, his eldest son[60]
62–63 1733, 5 Feb N.S. Died at the Château-vieux de Saint-Germain-en-Laye[61]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ This family tree is partly derived from the Dillon family tree pictured in La Tour du Pin.[1] Also see the list of children in the text.
  2. ^ René must not be confused with his younger brother Philibert-Emmanuel de Froulay, chevalier de Tessé, who fought in Ireland during the Williamite war.

Citations

  1. ^ La Tour du Pin 1913, pp. 14–15. "Note généalogique sur la Maison des Lords Dillon"
  2. ^ a b Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 12. "Arthur, b. [born] 1670, went into French Military service ..."
  3. ^ Murtagh 2004, p. 199, right column, line 4. "... [Henry] was born in co. Roscommon."
  4. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 193, line 41. "... he [Theobald] resided chiefly at Kilmore ..."
  5. ^ Murtagh 2004, p. 199, right column, line 5. "... [Henry was] the third but second surviving of six sons of Theobald ..."
  6. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 5. "Theobald, 7th Viscount Dillon (refer to Sir Luke Dillon, 2nd son of 1st Viscount), Lt.-Col. in the Guards of James II, reformed the Dillon regiment in 2 Bns. [battalions] in 1688. His Lordship was outlawed in 1690."
  7. ^ Webb 1878b, p. 149, line 7. "... [Sir Henry Dillon] came to Ireland in 1185 as secretary to Prince John ..."
  8. ^ Burke & Fox-Davies 1912, p. 683, left column, line 49: "Sir Henry Talbot, Knt. of Templeogue, co. Dublin, and Mount Talbot, co. Roscommon, m. [married] Margaret, dau. [daughter] of Sir William Talbot, Bart of Cartown, co. Kildare and sister of Richard, Duke of Tyrconnell, and by her (who d. [died] 14 Dec. 1662) ..."
  9. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column. Lists of sons and daughters
  10. ^ D'Alton 1855, p. 584. "He [Theobald] raised two Regiments for King James's service; the one ... commanded by the above Colonel Henry Dillon, his eldest son ... The second Regiment was put under the command of his second son, the Honorable Arthur Dillon ..."
  11. ^ a b O'Callaghan 1854, p. 8, line 28. "... the Irish reached Brest, and were landed there, early in May."
  12. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 214, line 28. "On 17 March, a squadron ferried 6,000 French troops over to Ireland and brought back 6000 Irish recruits for French service; they arrived back in Brest on 1 May [1690]."
  13. ^ a b Boulger 1911, p. 243. "Lord Galway and Lord Dillon (Theobald) were killed."
  14. ^ a b Cokayne 1916, p. 359, line 24. "His widow was accidentally killed a few weeks later, 7 Sep. 1691, in Limerick, during the siege, by the explosion of a bomb."
  15. ^ Murtagh 2004, p. 199, right column, line 32. "... the taking of Roses (1693);"
  16. ^ a b Quincy 1726a, p. 350. "Voilà de quelle manière s'éxecuta & se termina le fameux siege de Barcelonne, qui dura cinquante deux jours de tranchée ouverte. Il fit d'autant plus d'honneur à M. le Duc de Vendôme que tout le monde voyait des difficultés presque insurmontables dans cette grande entreprise."
  17. ^ Murtagh 2004, p. 200, left column, line 13. "Some time before 1701 he had married Christiana (Catherine) Sheldon (1684–1757), a lady-in-waiting to Queen Mary of Modena."
  18. ^ Debrett 1828, p. 748, line 26. "... father of Charles, 10th Viscount, who m. [married] Frances, only child and h. [heir] of the 9th viscount, and d. [died] without surviving issue, 1741;"
  19. ^ Debrett 1828, p. 748, line 29. "Henry, 11th Viscount, who served in the French army as col. of Dillon's regiment, which command he resigned before the act of preventing British subjects from entering into foreign service ..."
  20. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 64g, right column, line 23. "James, Kt. of Malta, Col. of the Dillon Regt. fell at its head at Fontenoy, 30 April 1745."
  21. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 25. "Edward, b. [born] 1720, s. [succeeded] his brother in the command of Dillon's Regt. and was mortally wounded at Lauffeld, 1747."
  22. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 27. "Arthur, in Holy Orders, b. [born] at St Germains in 1721, successively Bishop of Evreux, 1753, Archbishop of Toulouse, 1758, and Archbishop of Narbonne, in 1762, Cmdr. of the Order of the Holy Ghost 1776, Primate of the Gauls, and Pres. of the States of Languedoc; d. [died] in London 5 July 1806 ..."
  23. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 196, line 1. "Daughter Frances, a Carmelite nun, died at Pontoise."
  24. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 196, line 2. "Catharine, also a Carmelite nun, died at St. Denis in 1753."
  25. ^ La Tour du Pin 1913, p. 15. "Mary Dillon, mourut à Saint-Germain-en-Laye en 1786."
  26. ^ Lodge 1789, p. 196, line 4. "Bridget, was married to the Baron Blaisel, a Lieut.-General in the service of France."
  27. ^ La Chesnaye des Bois 1863, p. 311, left column, line 29. "Blaisel (du) Seigneur de Belle-Isle, de la Neuville en Picardie ..."
  28. ^ La Tour du Pin 1913, p. 15, extreme right. "Laura Dillon, épousa Lucius Cary, Lord Viscount Falkland, pair d'Ecosse. Elle mourut en 1741, laissant une fille unique Lucy."
  29. ^ Burke & Burke 1915, p. 38. "James II (who d. [died] 16 Sept. 1701, at St. Germains, where he was buried.) ..."
  30. ^ a b Fryde et al. 1986, p. 45, line 31. "Anne ... acc. 8 Mar. 1702 ..."
  31. ^ a b O'Callaghan 1854, p. 215, line 11. "... acknowledged (as well as the enemy) that it was the obstinate courage of the Irish in defence of the Po gate that the preservation of Cremona was principally owing ..."
  32. ^ Quincy 1726a, p. 628. "Ce fit de cette manière que le Prince Eugène manqua une entreprise si bien concertée, & qui avait eû de si favorables commencements. On en doit toute la gloire aux ... mais particulièrement au Régiment des Vaisseaux, aux deux Régimens Irlandois ..."
  33. ^ Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 288. "... et en 1702 à l'armée d'Italie, où il combattit à San-Vittoria et à Luzzara."
  34. ^ Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 288, last line. "On le créa brigadier, par brevet du 1er octobre [1702] ..."
  35. ^ O'Callaghan 1854, p. 220"... by which he was able to reach and take the town of Riva ..."
  36. ^ a b Webb 1878a, p. 170, left column, line 32. "In 1704 he was made maréchal-de-camp ..."
  37. ^ Saint-Hilaire 1911, p. 185. "... les regiments de Dillon ... chargèrent si vivement les ennemis "
  38. ^ a b Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 17. "was commander of the Order of St. Louis ..."
  39. ^ Quincy 1726b, p. 182. "M. de Dillon combattoit à la droite avec le même succez, de manière que les ennemis également poussés partout ..."
  40. ^ a b Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 289, line 14. "Promu au grade de lieutenant-général des armées du roi, par pouvoir du 24 du même mois [Sep], il fut employé à l'armée de la frontière du Piémont, sous le maréchal de Tessé  ..."
  41. ^ a b Saint-Hilaire 1914, p. 199, line 17. "Il arriva même que le Général Rebinder, qui s'étoit avancé au pont de la Vachette, près Briançon ... y fut bien battu par Dillon ..."
  42. ^ a b Burke & Burke 1915, p. 646, right column, line 16. "He was created Count Dillon by Louis XIV, 1711 ..."
  43. ^ La Chesnaye des Bois 1865, p. 892, line 12. "Dillon. Arthur Dillon, né en 1670, Lieutenant-Général & Colonel d'un Régiment Irlandais, mourut le 5 Février 1733. Il avait épousé Christiana Sheldon, mort le 5 Août 1757 ..."
  44. ^ Gregg 2004, p. 675. "... arrange for James to take up residence in the neighbouring duchy of Lorraine, which he did in February 1713."
  45. ^ a b Miller 1971, p. 147, line 8. "On 11 April 1713 the peace was signed at Utrecht: in return for the acknowledgement of his grandson as Philip V of Spain, Louis had had to recognize the Hanoverian and Protestant succession in England."
  46. ^ a b Hollensteiner 1860, p. 42. "... am 24. Juni [1713] ... unter Anführung des Generallieutenants Grafen von Dillon ... Schloss beschossen und nach kurzer Belagerung die ganze Besatzung nebst dem churpfälzischen Obersten Wolf gefangen nahmen ..."
  47. ^ Saint-Hilaire 1916, p. 79. "Dillon s'empara de la ville et du château de Kaiserslautern ..."
  48. ^ Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 289, line 33. "Il fit ensuite enlever le château de Walfsteim ..."
  49. ^ Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 289, line 34. "Il monta plusieurs tranchées aux sièges de Landau et de Fribourg."
  50. ^ Jullien de Courcelles 1822, p. 289, line 35. "Il servit, en 1714, au siège de Barcelonne, que le maréchal de Berwick emporta d'assault: ce fut sa dernière campagne."
  51. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 358. "Because the Catalans had no help of hope, the only future for Barcelona was suffering, so it capitulated on 12 September [1714]."
  52. ^ La Tour du Pin 1913, p. 16. "Il fut longtemps commandant en Dauphiné, gouverneur de Toulon ..."
  53. ^ a b Gregg 2004, p. 676. "... James was forced to take up residence in the papal enclave of Avignon where he arrived on 2 April [1716]."
  54. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 232. "[1717], Feb. 1. Lieutenant-General Arthur Dillon to be Plenipotentiary to the Court of Paris."
  55. ^ Miller 1971, p. 223. "The matter was concerted between Baron Görtz, Swedish minister to the Hage, Baron Spaar, another minister, Count Gyllenborg, the Swedish ambassador in London, and General Dillon ..."
  56. ^ Miller 1971, p. 235. "... James had managed very diplomatically to rid himself of General Dillon's services as his agent in Paris."
  57. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 40, line 5. "Hon. Arthur Dillon, Lieutenant-General of his Majesty's armies, was on 1st February 1717 created by King James II and VIII Baron of [___] and Viscount of [?Dillon] [I. [Ireland]], with remainder to the heirs male of his body."
  58. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 40, line 8. "On 24th June 1721 he was further created, by the same King, an Earl and Peer of Parliament, as Earl of [Dillon], Viscount of [___] and Lord of [___]."
  59. ^ Ruvigny 1904, p. 194. "K.T.'s ... 1722. May 26. Arthur Dillon, first Earl [S] and viscount [I [Ireland] ] (?Dillon)."
  60. ^ a b O'Callaghan 1854, p. 48, line 36b. "In 1730, quitting the service, as he was then in his 60th year, resigned his regiment to his eldest son;"
  61. ^ a b O'Callaghan 1854, p. 48, line 38. "... died February 5th, 1733, at the Palace of St. Germain-en-Laye, aged 63 years."
  62. ^ Cokayne 1916, p. 360, line 12. "... Hon. Arthur Dillon, Lieut. Gen. in the French service (d. [died] 5 Feb 1732/3) ..."
  63. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 45, line 11. "William III. ... acc. 13 Feb. 1689 ..."
  64. ^ Lynn 1999, p. 262. "Representatives of France, the Dutch Republic, England and Spain agreed to the Treaty of Ryswick on 20 September. The emperor at first resisted the treaty, but finally signed it as well on 30 October ..."
  65. ^ Goubert 1984, p. 404, line 41. "[1704,] 13 aôut: Défaite à Hochstedt des généraux français Marsin et Tallard battus par Marlborough et le prince Eugène de Savoie."
  66. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 45, line 38. "George I … acc. 1 Aug. 1714;"
  67. ^ Goubert 1984, p. 406, line 5. "1715, 1er septembre: Mort de Louis XIV."
  68. ^ Goubert 1984, p. 406, line 43. "1723, 16 février: Majorité de Louis XV."

Sources

  • Boulger, Demetrius Charles (1911). The Battle of the Boyne. London: Martin Secker. OCLC 1041056932.
  • Burke, Sir Bernard; Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1912). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Ireland (New ed.). London: Harrison & Sons. OCLC 1045621157.
  • Burke, Bernard; Burke, Ashworth Peter (1915). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, the Privy Council, Knightage and Companionage (77th ed.). London: Harrison. OCLC 1155471554.
  • Cokayne, George Edward (1916). Gibbs, Vicary (ed.). The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, extant, extinct, or dormant. Vol. IV (2nd ed.). London: St Catherine Press. OCLC 228661424. – Dacre to Dysart
  • D'Alton, John (1855). Illustrations, historical and genealogical, of King James's Irish army list, 1689. Dublin: Published by the author. OCLC 838655763. (For Dillon)
  • Debrett, John (1828). Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. II (17th ed.). London: F. C. and J. Rivington. OCLC 54499602. – Scotland and Ireland (for Dillon)
  • Fryde, Edmund Boleslaw; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986). Handbook of British Chronology. Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks, No. 2 (3rd ed.). London: Offices of the Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-86193-106-8. – (for timeline)
  • Goubert, Pierre (1984). Initiation à l'histoire de la France (in French). Paris: Fayard-Tallandier. ISBN 978-2-235-01484-7.
  • Gregg, Edward (2004). "James Francis Edward". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 29. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 673–678. ISBN 0-19-861379-2.
  • Hollensteiner, Carl (1860). Kaiserslautern, wie es war – wie es ist – was es litt [Kaiserslautern, as it was – what it suffered] (in German). Kaiserslautern: J. Kayser. OCLC 7294370.
  • Jullien de Courcelles, Jean Baptiste Pierre (1822). Dictionnaire historique et biographique des généraux français [Historic and Biographic Dictionary of French Generals] (in French). Vol. Tome cinquième. Paris: chez l'auteur. OCLC 1071691485. – Coss to Exc
  • La Chesnaye des Bois, François Alexandre Aubert de (1863). Dictionnaire de la noblesse (in French). Vol. Tome troisième (3rd ed.). Paris: Schlesinger Frères. OCLC 797014713. – BER to BRA
  • La Chesnaye des Bois, François Alexandre Aubert de (1865). Dictionnaire de la noblesse (in French). Vol. Tome sixième (3rd ed.). Paris: Schlesinger Frères. OCLC 797014713. – COE to DOU
  • La Tour du Pin, Henriette-Lucy, Marquise de (1913). Journal d'une femme de cinquante ans [Diary of a Woman in her Fifties] (in French). Vol. I (7th ed.). Paris: Librairie Chapelot. OCLC 1047408815.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Lodge, John (1789). Archdall, Mervyn (ed.). The Peerage of Ireland or, A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom. Vol. IV. Dublin: James Moore. OCLC 264906028. – Viscounts (for Dillon)
  • Lynn, John A. (1999). The Wars of Louis XIV 1667–1714. Harlow, England: Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-05629-9.
  • Miller, Peggy (1971). James: Old Pretender. Lanham MD: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780049230569.
  • Murtagh, Harman (2004). "Dillon, Arthur, Jacobite, Earl Dillon (1670–1733)". In Matthew, Colin; Harrison, Brian (eds.). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 16. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 199–200. ISBN 0-19-861366-0.
  • O'Callaghan, John Cornelius (1854). History of the Irish Brigades in the Service of France. New York: P. O'Shea Publisher. OCLC 1046538374.
  • Quincy, Charles Sevin de (1726a). Histoire militaire du règne de Louis le Grand [Military History of the Reign of Louis the Great] (in French). Vol. III. Paris: Denis Mariette. OCLC 312096140. – 1694 to 1702
  • Quincy, Charles Sevin de (1726b). Histoire militaire du règne de Louis le Grand [Military History of the Reign of Louis the Great] (in French). Vol. V. Paris: Denis Mariette. OCLC 312096192. – 1706 to 1708
  • Ruvigny, Melville Henry, Marquis de (1904). Jacobite Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Grants of Honour. Edinburgh: T C & E C Jack. OCLC 655825906.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Saint-Hilaire, Armand de Mormès, seigneur de (1911). Lecestre, Léon (ed.). Mémoires de Saint-Hilaire (in French). Vol. Tome quatrième. Paris: Librairie Renouard. OCLC 1049621979.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) – 1704 to 1706
  • Saint-Hilaire, Armand de Mormès, seigneur de (1914). Lecestre, Léon (ed.). Mémoires de Saint-Hilaire (in French). Vol. Tome cinquième. Paris: Librairie Renouard. OCLC 1049698378.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) – 1707 to 1710
  • Saint-Hilaire, Armand de Mormès, seigneur de (1916). Lecestre, Léon (ed.). Mémoires de Saint-Hilaire (in French). Vol. Tome sixième. Paris: Librairie Renouard. OCLC 1049683465.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) – 1711 to 1715
  • Webb, Alfred (1878a). "Dillon, Arthur, Count". Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Son. p. 150. OCLC 122693688.
  • Webb, Alfred (1878b). "Dillon, Theobald, Viscount". Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Son. p. 149. OCLC 122693688.

arthur, dillon, count, dillon, 1670, 1733, jacobite, soldier, from, ireland, served, colonel, dillon, regiment, irish, brigade, french, service, fought, nine, years, spanish, succession, where, excelled, battle, cremona, against, prince, eugene, savoy, arthur,. Arthur Dillon Count Dillon 1670 1733 was a Jacobite soldier from Ireland who served as colonel of Dillon s Regiment in the Irish Brigade in French service He fought in the Nine Years War and in the War of the Spanish Succession where he excelled at the Battle of Cremona against Prince Eugene of Savoy Arthur DillonBorn1670County Roscommon IrelandDied5 February 1733Chateau vieux de Saint Germain en LayeAllegianceJacobitesFranceService wbr branchJacobite ArmyFrench ArmyRankLieutenant general French Army Battles warsWilliamite War in Ireland Nine Years War 1688 97 War of the Spanish Succession 1701 14 RelationsTheobald 7th Viscount Dillon father Contents 1 Birth and origins 2 Early life 3 Marriage and children 4 War of the Spanish Succession 5 Later life 6 Death succession and timeline 7 Notes and references 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 SourcesBirth and origins EditFamily treeArthur Dillon with wife parents and other selected relatives a RobertDillonof LoughglynnRose D ofStreamstownd 1681Theobald7thViscountd 1691JacobiteMaryTalbotd 1691Henry8thViscountd 1714Arthur1670 1733ChristinaSheldon1684 1757Richard9thViscount1688 1737Charles10thViscount1701 1741Henry11thViscount1705 1787CharlotteLeed 1794HeiressCharles12thViscount1745 1813Henrietta MariaPhipps1757 1782Arthur1750 1794FrenchgeneralLegendXXXSubject ofthe articleXXXViscountsDillonArthur was born in 1670 2 in County Roscommon 3 Ireland probably at Kilmore his parents habitual residence 4 He was the third son of Theobald Dillon and his wife Mary Talbot 5 His father was the 7th Viscount Dillon of Costello Gallen 6 and supported James II in the Williamite war in Ireland His father s family was Anglo Norman in Ireland and descended from Sir Henry De lion a name that became Dillon in later generations who came to Ireland with Prince John in 1185 7 Henry s mother was a daughter of Sir Henry Talbot of Templeogue and his wife Margaret Talbot who was a sister of Richard Talbot 1st Earl of Tyrconnell 8 The Talbots also were Old English Both his parents were Catholic He was one of eight siblings 9 who are listed in his father s article His elder brother Henry would succeed as the 8th Viscount Dillon Early life EditIn 1688 his father raised two regiments for James II one commanded by his son Henry the other by his son Arthur the subject of this article 10 In 1690 James II and Louis XIV agreed that an Irish Brigade of 5 400 men would be sent to France in exchange for six French regiments sent to Ireland with Lauzun Arthur Dillon s Regiment was part of this Irish Brigade which was led by Lord Mountcashel Arthur aged 20 landed with it at Brest on 1 May 1690 11 12 Both his parents were killed in the Williamite war His father fell at the Battle of Aughrim on 12 July 1691 13 whereas his mother was killed during the second Siege of Limerick by a shell fired into the town on 7 September 1691 14 At that time France was in the middle of the Nine Years War 1688 97 of which the Williamite War in Ireland had been a theatre Dillon and his regiment were sent to Roussillon and Catalonia another theatre of this same war where they fought the Spanish among others at the siege of Roses under the Duc de Noailles in 1693 15 In 1695 the duc de Vendome succeeded to Noailles Vendome besieged Barcelona which was defended by its governor the Conde de la Corzana and by Prince George of Hesse Darmstadt The town surrendered on terms after a siege of 52 days on 10 August 1697 16 Marriage and children EditThe Nine Years War ended in 1697 with the Treaty of Ryswick and four years of peace followed Dillon found the time to marry His chosen wife was Christina Sheldon a maid of honour to Mary of Modena queen consort of James II of England Christina s parents were Ralph Sheldon of Ditchford Worcestershire 1633 1723 and Elisabeth heiress of Daniel Dunn of Garnish Hall in Essex Dominic Sheldon the Jacobite general was her uncle Her family was English and Catholic She continued to serve Mary of Modena as lady in waiting at the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye 17 Arthur and Christina had five sons Charles 1701 1741 became the 10th Viscount Dillon 18 Henry 1705 1787 became the 11th Viscount Dillon 19 James died 1745 became Colonel of Dillon s Regiment and fell in the Battle of Fontenoy 20 Edward 1720 1747 succeeded his brother as Colonel of the Dillon Regiment and then fell in the Battle of Lauffeld 21 Arthur Richard 1721 1806 became a French archbishop 22 and five daughters Frances became a Carmelite nun 23 Catharine died 1753 became a Carmelite nun and died at St Denis 24 Mary died 1786 died at St Germain 25 Bridget died 1785 married Baron Blaisel a Lieutenant General in the French Army 26 27 Laura died 1741 married Lucius Cary 6th Viscount Falkland a Jacobite 28 War of the Spanish Succession EditMain article War of the Spanish Succession The War of the Spanish Succession 1701 1714 broke out after Charles II of Spain the last Habsburg king of Spain died without heir Dillon and his regiment were first sent to the Rhine in 1701 where he served under Francois de Neufville duc de Villeroy but Villeroy and Dillon were soon transferred to northern Italy where France and its ally Savoy were trying to seize the Duchy of Milan which belonged to Spain French troops under the command of Marshal Nicolas Catinat fought the Austrians under Prince Eugene of Savoy However after Catinat lost the skirmish of Carpi on 9 July 1701 the command of the French troops in Italy was given to Villeroy under whom Catinat then served as second in command On 1 September 1701 Prince Eugene defeated Villeroy at Chiari On 16 September 1701 James II died at Saint Germain en Laye 29 and was succeeded by James Francis Edward Stuart James III for the Jacobites the Old Pretender for the supporters of William III in England who was succeeded by Queen Anne on 8 March 1702 30 Eugene s next move in northern Italy was to surprise Villeroy in his winter quarters in Cremona on the night of 31 January to 1 February 1702 an action also called the Battle of Cremona Villeroy was taken prisoner but the French were saved from defeat by Dillon s and Bourke s Irish regiments who held the Po gate and the bridge over the River Po against the Austrians thus preventing Eugene from effecting his junction with the troops he had on the other side of the river 31 Eventually Eugene could not hold the town against its garrison and had to retreat 32 Villeroy was replaced with the duc de Vendome under whom Dillon had already served at Barcelona Under Vendome Dillon and his regiment fought in the battles of Santa Vittoria on 26 July 1702 and Luzzara on 15 August 1702 33 On 1 October 1702 Dillon was promoted to brigadier 34 In 1703 Vendome tried to effect a junction with the Bavarians allied with the French against Austria through the Tyrol and penetrated as far as Trent Dillon took the town of Riva at the northern tip of Lake Garda 35 However on 13 August 1704 Marlborough and Eugene beat the French and Bavarians at Blenheim Savoy switched side and Vendome had to retreat In 1704 Dillon aged 34 was promoted to marechal de camp 36 On 16 August 1705 Vendome repulsed Eugene at Cassano Three Irish regiments including Dillon s played a key role in halting Eugene s attack 37 Dillon was made a commander of the Order of Saint Louis 38 On 23 May 1706 Marlborough beat Villeroy at Ramillies in the Spanish Netherlands Thereupon Louis XIV ordered Vendome with a big part of the Armee d Italie to Flanders to redress the situation there Dillon and his regiment stayed behind in Northern Italy Philippe II Duke of Orleans who would rule France as Regent from 1715 to 1723 replaced Vendome in Italy taking up his new position in July Together with Jacques Eleonor Rouxel de Grancey comte de Medavy Dillon defeated at the Battle of Castiglione on 9 September 1706 a Hessian unit under Prince Frederick of Hesse Kassel 39 that had arrived too late from Germany to join the main body of Eugene s army Their victory had no effect because the day before the French lost the decisive Battle of Turin 7 September 1706 and had to evacuate northern Italy On 24 September 1706 Dillon was promoted to lieutenant general for his action at Castiglione 40 Under Marshal Tesse b Dillon and his regiment participated in the successful defence of Toulon in the Siege of Toulon 1707 In 1707 Austria signed the Convention of Milan ending the war in northern Italy in 1708 Dillon s regiment was transferred to the Moselle where Dillon served under Claude Louis Hector de Villars and James FitzJames 1st Duke of Berwick In 1709 Berwick and Dillon with him were transferred to the Dauphine to guard this French province against attacks from neighbouring Savoy Dillon defended Briancon and on 28 August 1709 defeated Bernhard Otto von Rehbinder it a Baltic German in Savoyard service at the Pont de la Vachette 41 It was rumoured that while in Grenoble Dillon had an affair with Claudine Guerin de Tencin who was at that time a nun at the convent of Montfleury at Corenc near Grenoble She managed to leave her nunnery in 1712 In 1711 Dillon was created comte Dillon in France by Louis XIV 42 43 commanderIn 1712 when the French opened peace talks with the English James Francis Edward was told to leave France He decided to take refuge in Lorraine not yet part of France at that time He left Saint Germain en Laye on 6 September 1712 and arrived in Lorraine in February 1713 after a short stay in Chalons sur Marne 44 The Peace of Utrecht on 11 April 1713 ended the war between France on one hand and Britain the Netherlands and Savoy on the other hand In the treaty France recognised the Hanoverian Succession and formally ended its support for the Jacobites 45 However the war between France and Austria continued Comte Dillon as he was now was transferred from the Dauphine to the Rhine for the campaign of 1713 where he served under Villars capturing Kaiserslautern on 24 June 1713 46 47 and the Castle Wolfstein 48 He then participated in the siege of Landau 24 June to 26 August 1713 under Marshall Jacques Bazin de Bezons and in the siege of Freiburg 20 September to 17 November 1713 49 The Treaty of Rastatt on 17 March 1714 ended the war with Austria However the war still raged on in Spain where Catalonia tried to preserve Catalan autonomy by supporting Charles III against Philip V as Spanish King Dillon was transferred to Spain under the command of Berwick where he returned to sit before Barcelona as he had done already in 1697 This Siege of Barcelona 1713 1714 was his last campaign 50 The town was stormed on 11 September 1714 and capitulated on the 12 51 Later life EditCount Dillon was later appointed commander in the Dauphine and governor of Toulon 52 As a French General Dillon was not allowed to participate in the Jacobite rising of 1715 Returning from Scotland following the failure of the rising James Francis Edward found himself not welcome in Lorraine anymore and established himself at Avignon on 2 April 1716 53 On 1 February 1717 he appointed Dillon his plenipotentiary to the French court in Paris 54 In this role Dillon together with Georg Heinrich von Gortz and Carl Gyllenborg tried to convince Charles XII of Sweden to help the Jacobites to invade England Dillon organised funds to support the project 55 In 1718 Dillon was ordered to command a French contingent sent to Italy during the War of the Quadruple Alliance 1718 1720 He was replaced as agent in Paris initially by James Murray and later by Daniel O Brien 56 James Francis Edward whom Dillon recognised as King James III awarded him the Irish titles of Baron and Viscount on 1 February 1717 in Avignon 57 James III neglected to specify territorial designations for these titles In 1721 James III gave him Scottish titles by creating him Earl Dillon also Viscount and Lord 58 In 1722 he was made a Jacobite Knight of the Thistle 59 He was also a grandfather of the French generals Arthur Dillon and Theobald Dillon He was a cousin of Gerard Lally He was a great grandfather of the famous memoirist Henriette Lucy Marquise de La Tour du Pin Gouvernet nee Henriette Lucy Dillon In 1730 he retired from active service handing over the command of the regiment to Charles his eldest son 60 Death succession and timeline EditOn 5 February 1733 N S Arthur Dillon comte de Dillon died at the Chateau de Saint Germain en Laye 61 62 His eldest son Charles already colonel now also succeeded to his father s titles comte de Dillon in France and Earl of Dillon in the Jacobite peerage TimelineAs only the year but not the day of his birth is known all ages could be a year younger Age Date Event0 1670 Born in Ireland 2 18 19 1689 13 Feb Accession of William and Mary succeeding King James II 63 19 20 1690 1 May Debarked at Brest with the regiment 11 20 21 1691 12 Jul Father fell at the Battle of Aughrim 13 20 21 1691 7 Sep Mother killed during the Siege of Limerick 14 26 27 1697 10 Aug Fought at the Siege of Barcelona 16 26 27 1697 Oct The Peace of Ryswick ended the Nine Years War 64 30 31 1701 16 Sep James II died at Saint Germain en Laye and was succeeded by James Francis Edward 31 32 1702 1 Feb Fought at Cremona 31 31 32 1702 8 Mar Accession of Queen Anne succeeding King William III 30 33 34 1704 Made marechal de camp 36 33 34 1704 13 Aug Battle of Blenheim 65 35 36 Sep Victorious in the Battle of Castiglione35 36 1706 26 Sep Made lieutenant general 40 38 39 1709 28 Aug Defeated Rehbinder at Vachette near Briancon 41 40 41 1711 Created comte de Dillon in France by Louis XIV 42 40 41 1711 Made a commander of the Order of Saint Louis 38 42 43 1713 Feb James Francis Edward moves to Avignon 53 42 43 1713 11 Apr The Peace of Utrecht ended the War of the Spanish Succession and France drops the Jacobites 45 42 43 1713 24 Jun Besieged and took Kaiserslautern 46 43 44 1714 1 Aug Accession of King George I succeeding Queen Anne 66 43 44 1715 1 Sep Death of Louis XIV Regency until the majority of Louis XV 67 52 53 1723 16 Feb Majority of Louis XV 68 59 60 1730 Retired from active service and handed the regiment over to Charles his eldest son 60 62 63 1733 5 Feb N S Died at the Chateau vieux de Saint Germain en Laye 61 Notes and references EditNotes Edit This family tree is partly derived from the Dillon family tree pictured in La Tour du Pin 1 Also see the list of children in the text Rene must not be confused with his younger brother Philibert Emmanuel de Froulay chevalier de Tesse who fought in Ireland during the Williamite war Citations Edit La Tour du Pin 1913 pp 14 15 Note genealogique sur la Maison des Lords Dillon a b Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 12 Arthur b born 1670 went into French Military service Murtagh 2004 p 199 right column line 4 Henry was born in co Roscommon Lodge 1789 p 193 line 41 he Theobald resided chiefly at Kilmore Murtagh 2004 p 199 right column line 5 Henry was the third but second surviving of six sons of Theobald Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 5 Theobald 7th Viscount Dillon refer to Sir Luke Dillon 2nd son of 1st Viscount Lt Col in the Guards of James II reformed the Dillon regiment in 2 Bns battalions in 1688 His Lordship was outlawed in 1690 Webb 1878b p 149 line 7 Sir Henry Dillon came to Ireland in 1185 as secretary to Prince John Burke amp Fox Davies 1912 p 683 left column line 49 Sir Henry Talbot Knt of Templeogue co Dublin and Mount Talbot co Roscommon m married Margaret dau daughter of Sir William Talbot Bart of Cartown co Kildare and sister of Richard Duke of Tyrconnell and by her who d died 14 Dec 1662 Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column Lists of sons and daughters D Alton 1855 p 584 He Theobald raised two Regiments for King James s service the one commanded by the above Colonel Henry Dillon his eldest son The second Regiment was put under the command of his second son the Honorable Arthur Dillon a b O Callaghan 1854 p 8 line 28 the Irish reached Brest and were landed there early in May Lynn 1999 p 214 line 28 On 17 March a squadron ferried 6 000 French troops over to Ireland and brought back 6000 Irish recruits for French service they arrived back in Brest on 1 May 1690 a b Boulger 1911 p 243 Lord Galway and Lord Dillon Theobald were killed a b Cokayne 1916 p 359 line 24 His widow was accidentally killed a few weeks later 7 Sep 1691 in Limerick during the siege by the explosion of a bomb Murtagh 2004 p 199 right column line 32 the taking of Roses 1693 a b Quincy 1726a p 350 Voila de quelle maniere s executa amp se termina le fameux siege de Barcelonne qui dura cinquante deux jours de tranchee ouverte Il fit d autant plus d honneur a M le Duc de Vendome que tout le monde voyait des difficultes presque insurmontables dans cette grande entreprise Murtagh 2004 p 200 left column line 13 Some time before 1701 he had married Christiana Catherine Sheldon 1684 1757 a lady in waiting to Queen Mary of Modena Debrett 1828 p 748 line 26 father of Charles 10th Viscount who m married Frances only child and h heir of the 9th viscount and d died without surviving issue 1741 Debrett 1828 p 748 line 29 Henry 11th Viscount who served in the French army as col of Dillon s regiment which command he resigned before the act of preventing British subjects from entering into foreign service Burke amp Burke 1915 p 64g right column line 23 James Kt of Malta Col of the Dillon Regt fell at its head at Fontenoy 30 April 1745 Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 25 Edward b born 1720 s succeeded his brother in the command of Dillon s Regt and was mortally wounded at Lauffeld 1747 Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 27 Arthur in Holy Orders b born at St Germains in 1721 successively Bishop of Evreux 1753 Archbishop of Toulouse 1758 and Archbishop of Narbonne in 1762 Cmdr of the Order of the Holy Ghost 1776 Primate of the Gauls and Pres of the States of Languedoc d died in London 5 July 1806 Lodge 1789 p 196 line 1 Daughter Frances a Carmelite nun died at Pontoise Lodge 1789 p 196 line 2 Catharine also a Carmelite nun died at St Denis in 1753 La Tour du Pin 1913 p 15 Mary Dillon mourut a Saint Germain en Laye en 1786 Lodge 1789 p 196 line 4 Bridget was married to the Baron Blaisel a Lieut General in the service of France La Chesnaye des Bois 1863 p 311 left column line 29 Blaisel du Seigneur de Belle Isle de la Neuville en Picardie La Tour du Pin 1913 p 15 extreme right Laura Dillon epousa Lucius Cary Lord Viscount Falkland pair d Ecosse Elle mourut en 1741 laissant une fille unique Lucy Burke amp Burke 1915 p 38 James II who d died 16 Sept 1701 at St Germains where he was buried a b Fryde et al 1986 p 45 line 31 Anne acc 8 Mar 1702 a b O Callaghan 1854 p 215 line 11 acknowledged as well as the enemy that it was the obstinate courage of the Irish in defence of the Po gate that the preservation of Cremona was principally owing Quincy 1726a p 628 Ce fit de cette maniere que le Prince Eugene manqua une entreprise si bien concertee amp qui avait eu de si favorables commencements On en doit toute la gloire aux mais particulierement au Regiment des Vaisseaux aux deux Regimens Irlandois Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 288 et en 1702 a l armee d Italie ou il combattit a San Vittoria et a Luzzara Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 288 last line On le crea brigadier par brevet du 1er octobre 1702 O Callaghan 1854 p 220 by which he was able to reach and take the town of Riva a b Webb 1878a p 170 left column line 32 In 1704 he was made marechal de camp Saint Hilaire 1911 p 185 les regiments de Dillon chargerent si vivement les ennemis a b Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 17 was commander of the Order of St Louis Quincy 1726b p 182 M de Dillon combattoit a la droite avec le meme succez de maniere que les ennemis egalement pousses partout a b Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 289 line 14 Promu au grade de lieutenant general des armees du roi par pouvoir du 24 du meme mois Sep il fut employe a l armee de la frontiere du Piemont sous le marechal de Tesse a b Saint Hilaire 1914 p 199 line 17 Il arriva meme que le General Rebinder qui s etoit avance au pont de la Vachette pres Briancon y fut bien battu par Dillon a b Burke amp Burke 1915 p 646 right column line 16 He was created Count Dillon by Louis XIV 1711 La Chesnaye des Bois 1865 p 892 line 12 Dillon Arthur Dillon ne en 1670 Lieutenant General amp Colonel d un Regiment Irlandais mourut le 5 Fevrier 1733 Il avait epouse Christiana Sheldon mort le 5 Aout 1757 Gregg 2004 p 675 arrange for James to take up residence in the neighbouring duchy of Lorraine which he did in February 1713 a b Miller 1971 p 147 line 8 On 11 April 1713 the peace was signed at Utrecht in return for the acknowledgement of his grandson as Philip V of Spain Louis had had to recognize the Hanoverian and Protestant succession in England a b Hollensteiner 1860 p 42 am 24 Juni 1713 unter Anfuhrung des Generallieutenants Grafen von Dillon Schloss beschossen und nach kurzer Belagerung die ganze Besatzung nebst dem churpfalzischen Obersten Wolf gefangen nahmen Saint Hilaire 1916 p 79 Dillon s empara de la ville et du chateau de Kaiserslautern Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 289 line 33 Il fit ensuite enlever le chateau de Walfsteim Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 289 line 34 Il monta plusieurs tranchees aux sieges de Landau et de Fribourg Jullien de Courcelles 1822 p 289 line 35 Il servit en 1714 au siege de Barcelonne que le marechal de Berwick emporta d assault ce fut sa derniere campagne Lynn 1999 p 358 Because the Catalans had no help of hope the only future for Barcelona was suffering so it capitulated on 12 September 1714 La Tour du Pin 1913 p 16 Il fut longtemps commandant en Dauphine gouverneur de Toulon a b Gregg 2004 p 676 James was forced to take up residence in the papal enclave of Avignon where he arrived on 2 April 1716 Ruvigny 1904 p 232 1717 Feb 1 Lieutenant General Arthur Dillon to be Plenipotentiary to the Court of Paris Miller 1971 p 223 The matter was concerted between Baron Gortz Swedish minister to the Hage Baron Spaar another minister Count Gyllenborg the Swedish ambassador in London and General Dillon Miller 1971 p 235 James had managed very diplomatically to rid himself of General Dillon s services as his agent in Paris Ruvigny 1904 p 40 line 5 Hon Arthur Dillon Lieutenant General of his Majesty s armies was on 1st February 1717 created by King James II and VIII Baron of and Viscount of Dillon I Ireland with remainder to the heirs male of his body Ruvigny 1904 p 40 line 8 On 24th June 1721 he was further created by the same King an Earl and Peer of Parliament as Earl of Dillon Viscount of and Lord of Ruvigny 1904 p 194 K T s 1722 May 26 Arthur Dillon first Earl S and viscount I Ireland Dillon a b O Callaghan 1854 p 48 line 36b In 1730 quitting the service as he was then in his 60th year resigned his regiment to his eldest son a b O Callaghan 1854 p 48 line 38 died February 5th 1733 at the Palace of St Germain en Laye aged 63 years Cokayne 1916 p 360 line 12 Hon Arthur Dillon Lieut Gen in the French service d died 5 Feb 1732 3 Fryde et al 1986 p 45 line 11 William III acc 13 Feb 1689 Lynn 1999 p 262 Representatives of France the Dutch Republic England and Spain agreed to the Treaty of Ryswick on 20 September The emperor at first resisted the treaty but finally signed it as well on 30 October Goubert 1984 p 404 line 41 1704 13 aout Defaite a Hochstedt des generaux francais Marsin et Tallard battus par Marlborough et le prince Eugene de Savoie Fryde et al 1986 p 45 line 38 George I acc 1 Aug 1714 Goubert 1984 p 406 line 5 1715 1er septembre Mort de Louis XIV Goubert 1984 p 406 line 43 1723 16 fevrier Majorite de Louis XV Sources Edit Boulger Demetrius Charles 1911 The Battle of the Boyne London Martin Secker OCLC 1041056932 Burke Sir Bernard Fox Davies Arthur Charles 1912 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Ireland New ed London Harrison amp Sons OCLC 1045621157 Burke Bernard Burke Ashworth Peter 1915 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage the Privy Council Knightage and Companionage 77th ed London Harrison OCLC 1155471554 Cokayne George Edward 1916 Gibbs Vicary ed The complete peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom extant extinct or dormant Vol IV 2nd ed London St Catherine Press OCLC 228661424 Dacre to Dysart D Alton John 1855 Illustrations historical and genealogical of King James s Irish army list 1689 Dublin Published by the author OCLC 838655763 For Dillon Debrett John 1828 Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Vol II 17th ed London F C and J Rivington OCLC 54499602 Scotland and Ireland for Dillon Fryde Edmund Boleslaw Greenway D E Porter S Roy I eds 1986 Handbook of British Chronology Royal Historical Society Guides and Handbooks No 2 3rd ed London Offices of the Royal Historical Society ISBN 0 86193 106 8 for timeline Goubert Pierre 1984 Initiation a l histoire de la France in French Paris Fayard Tallandier ISBN 978 2 235 01484 7 Gregg Edward 2004 James Francis Edward In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 29 New York Oxford University Press pp 673 678 ISBN 0 19 861379 2 Hollensteiner Carl 1860 Kaiserslautern wie es war wie es ist was es litt Kaiserslautern as it was what it suffered in German Kaiserslautern J Kayser OCLC 7294370 Jullien de Courcelles Jean Baptiste Pierre 1822 Dictionnaire historique et biographique des generaux francais Historic and Biographic Dictionary of French Generals in French Vol Tome cinquieme Paris chez l auteur OCLC 1071691485 Coss to Exc La Chesnaye des Bois Francois Alexandre Aubert de 1863 Dictionnaire de la noblesse in French Vol Tome troisieme 3rd ed Paris Schlesinger Freres OCLC 797014713 BER to BRA La Chesnaye des Bois Francois Alexandre Aubert de 1865 Dictionnaire de la noblesse in French Vol Tome sixieme 3rd ed Paris Schlesinger Freres OCLC 797014713 COE to DOU La Tour du Pin Henriette Lucy Marquise de 1913 Journal d une femme de cinquante ans Diary of a Woman in her Fifties in French Vol I 7th ed Paris Librairie Chapelot OCLC 1047408815 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lodge John 1789 Archdall Mervyn ed The Peerage of Ireland or A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of that Kingdom Vol IV Dublin James Moore OCLC 264906028 Viscounts for Dillon Lynn John A 1999 The Wars of Louis XIV 1667 1714 Harlow England Longman ISBN 978 0 582 05629 9 Miller Peggy 1971 James Old Pretender Lanham MD St Martin s Press ISBN 9780049230569 Murtagh Harman 2004 Dillon Arthur Jacobite Earl Dillon 1670 1733 In Matthew Colin Harrison Brian eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 16 New York Oxford University Press pp 199 200 ISBN 0 19 861366 0 O Callaghan John Cornelius 1854 History of the Irish Brigades in the Service of France New York P O Shea Publisher OCLC 1046538374 Quincy Charles Sevin de 1726a Histoire militaire du regne de Louis le Grand Military History of the Reign of Louis the Great in French Vol III Paris Denis Mariette OCLC 312096140 1694 to 1702 Quincy Charles Sevin de 1726b Histoire militaire du regne de Louis le Grand Military History of the Reign of Louis the Great in French Vol V Paris Denis Mariette OCLC 312096192 1706 to 1708 Ruvigny Melville Henry Marquis de 1904 Jacobite Peerage Baronetage Knightage and Grants of Honour Edinburgh T C amp E C Jack OCLC 655825906 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Saint Hilaire Armand de Mormes seigneur de 1911 Lecestre Leon ed Memoires de Saint Hilaire in French Vol Tome quatrieme Paris Librairie Renouard OCLC 1049621979 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1704 to 1706 Saint Hilaire Armand de Mormes seigneur de 1914 Lecestre Leon ed Memoires de Saint Hilaire in French Vol Tome cinquieme Paris Librairie Renouard OCLC 1049698378 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1707 to 1710 Saint Hilaire Armand de Mormes seigneur de 1916 Lecestre Leon ed Memoires de Saint Hilaire in French Vol Tome sixieme Paris Librairie Renouard OCLC 1049683465 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1711 to 1715 Webb Alfred 1878a Dillon Arthur Count Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp Son p 150 OCLC 122693688 Webb Alfred 1878b Dillon Theobald Viscount Compendium of Irish Biography Dublin M H Gill amp Son p 149 OCLC 122693688 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arthur Dillon Count Dillon amp oldid 1162249706, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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