«*Wi E] |ruiJi Tin]fiirO[fin][rifO[ ]iJi]pi]Jju^ i I I 1 1 I I i THE LIBRARIES COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY I 1 1 1 1 * 1 1 General Library s 1 1 El pnJ [ rm] f riJT] | rin^ i^lrnJ[fni]n^|E" PROTESTANT EXILES FROM FRANCE. PROTESTANT EXILES FROM FRANCE IN THE REIGN OF LOUIS XIV. OR, THE HUGUENOT REFUGEES AND THEIR DESCENDANTS IN GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND. THE REV. DAVID C. A. AG NEW. Index-Volume, with Analyses, Alphabetical Tables, AND Notes. Also, Introductory Memoirs OF Refugees IN Former Reigns. LONDON: REEVES & TURNER. EDINBURGH: WILLIAM PATERSON. 1874. v3 PREFACE, In order that the two volumes on " Protestant Exiles from France in the reign of Louis XIV.," may be serviceable to historical and genealogical students, it is necessary to provide this Index-Volume. The author takes the opportunity of introducing new memoirs, and illustrative documents and notes — especially memoirs of refugees in former reigns (fugitives from the Duke of Alva, the St Bartholomew Massacre, &c.), and their descendants. The surnames in volumes first and second are re-produced in a careful analysis of the whole work. Additional surnames, admitted in conformity with the plan of volume third, are incorporated in the Analysis, and the Alphabetical Tables refer to the pages in volume third. The original work has thus been zealously supplemented, annotated, and corrected, so that the possessors of volumes first and second have in this Index- Volume all the advantages of a new and improved edition, without the disadvantage of their former purchase becoming reduced in pecuniary value. It is impossible that the author can reprint the original work. For the sake of new purchasers, therefore, the third volume must be complete in itself. And, accordingly, some repetitions will be observed, which the possessors of volumes first and second are requested to excuse. A large number of the books and documents quoted in this work can be consulted in the library of the English Presbyterian College, Queen Square House, Guildford Street, London. i 'v GENERAL VIEW OF THE CONTENTS OF THE INDEX-VOLUME. Analysis of Historical Introduction to Memoirs of Refugees in the Reign oi Louis XIV., Memoirs of Refugees in former Reigns, Analysis of Volume First, Analysis of Volume Second, Additional Chapters, Alphabetical Tables, 76 I I to ^ 75 131 '32 to 149 150 to 241 241 261 TABLE OF NEW MEMOIRS AND NOTES. The Naturalis.\tion Lists re-copied fro.m the Patent Rolls, with Notes, 27 to 71 Notes to Historical Introduction, . . . 5, 6, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 72, 75 MEMOIRS OF REFUGEES IN FORMER REIGNS, AND THEIR DESCENDANTS. I. The Radnor Group, ....... 76 Earl of Radnor and the families of Bouverie and Pusey. Bonnell. Crawley-Boevey. Francis Lamot, or La Motte. Gleanings from Wills, 1568 to 1598. Houblon. Du Cane. Le Thieullier. Lefroy. De la Pryme. Janssen. Delm6, &c. II. The Clancartv Group, ...... 89 Earl of Clancarty, Lord Ashtown, and the family of Trench. Odet de Chatillon. Vidame of Chartres. Papillon. Dubois, or Wood. Chamberlaine. Inglis, or Langlois. Le Jeune. D'Ambrun, or Dombrain. Paget. Emeris. Despard, or D'Espard. Dobree. Groslot. Brevint, &c. III. University Group, ....... 108 Le Chevalier. De Marsilliers. Cousin. Bignon. Regius. Baro, or Baron. Castol. Casaubon. De Mayeme. Vignier. Levet. Lamie. Hoard. De Lambermont. De Garcncieres. Vasson. Conyard. Du Moulin. D'Espagne. Herault, &c. I\'. .\ Miscellaneous Group, ...... 125 Waldo. Howie (see Chap. 32). St Michel. Le Keux. Conant. Calamy. De Laune. Briot. D'LTrfe). C0.V7£.VTS OF THE INDEX-VOLUME. Notes, ADDITIONS TO VOLUME FIRST. 132- 134, i38> 140, 143. '44, 14S ADDITIONS TO VOLUME SECOND. Letter from a French Protestant, 12 th October 1686, . . 190 Memoirs OF CoLOMiis, MifiGE, AND De LA Heuze, . . . 164,168 Memoir of Dean Drelincourt, ...••• '95 Inventory OF the Marquise De Gouvernet, .... 199 Memoirs of Suzanne De L'Orme, Helena Lefevre, &c., . . 205 Marquis de la Musse, ..-••■• 207 Rev. S. Lyon, Chatelain, &c., . • • • • • 209 Sir Donald M-Leod, K.S.I., C.B., ..... 213 Will of Philip Delahaize, Esq., Proved 29th November 1769, . . 217 Memoirs of Bishop Terrot and Rev. V. Perronet, . . . 226 Sir Fr.\ncis Be.\ufort, K.C.B., F.R.S., ..... 229 Richard Chenevix, T. G. Fonnere.\u, Professor Rigaud, J. R. Planch^, A. H. Kenney, D.D., B. Langlois, M.P., .... 232 Notes, 152, 154, 155, 156, iS7. iS8> 163, 165, 167, 169, 170, 171, 172, 185, 1S7, 188, 190, 191, 192, 198, 199, 211, 213, 215, 216, 221, 223, 224, 228, 229, 231, 232, 238, 239 ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. Chapter XXX. Refugees, being Converts from Romanism, .... 241 Bion, De Brevall, Chariot d'Argenteuil, Du Veil, Gagnier, De Luzancy, Malard, De la Pillonniere, Le Vassor, &c. Chapter XXXI. Descendants in Britain of Huguenots who were Refugees in other Countries, 246 Thellusson, Labouchcre, Prevost, Du Boulay, Fourdrinier, Maty, Aubertin, &c. Chapter XXXII. Additional Facts and Notes, 252 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. I Rffucees of earliest Dates, and their Descendants, . II. Refugees during the Reign of Louis XIV., and their Descendants, III. Naturalizations, &c., • • • • • ' IV. Miscellaneous Names, ••••■■ 261 262 269 281 ANALNSIS OF X'OLUMLi riRST Willi XOTF.S AND DOCUMENTS. !^t0tortcal ^ntroDuction. CONSISTING OFTEN SECTIONS (Vol. I., pages I tO 8l). Section I., (pages i to 8). — The Persecution which drove the Protestants from France and its causes. I need give no summary of the historical statements down to the date of the mass.acre of the Huguenots (or French Protestants) by the Romanists, by order of King Charles IX., on St liartholomew's day 1572. But I insert an abridgement of the remainder of Section I. In order to understand the justification of civil war in France at tliis period, we must con- sider sonie points of ditference from our views of law and loyalty, belonging to the very constitutions of ancient government as comiiared with more modern monarchy and executive authority. After considering that the St Bartholomew massacre made personal self defence a Huguenot's only protection, the reader must picture a French Protestant congregation, forbidden to carry any arms, yet surrounded by Roman Catholics, armed with weapons which a raging priesthood stirs them up to use against the unarmed worshippers, the law not visiting such murderous assaults with any punishment. It must also be realised that it was consistent with loyalty for a noble to have a fortress over which the king had no active jurisdiction, and for a town such as La Rochelle to be equally independent of the sovereign. Such a town, by feudal right, was as effectual a sanctuary against the king's emissaries as any ecclesiastical building. It was as lawless for the king to go to war with the town, as for the town to send an invading army against Paris. The independent rulers of a fort or walled town had some duties to their own dependents, to which e\en the king's claims must be post- poned. The supreme authority of a king over all towns and castles was a state of things svhich in theory the King of France might wish : but it was not the constitution of France ; and therefore such coveting was a species of radicalism on his part. The inhabitants of La Rochelle owed to their independence their escape from the St. Bar- tholomew massacre. The Queen of Navarre, though decoyed to Paris, escaped by the visita- tion of God, who removed her " from the evil to come," and to the heavenly country, about two months before. A very great Huguenot soldier, second to none but Coligny, survived the massacre, namely, Francois, Seigneur de la Noue. This " Francis with the Iron Arm" had been Governor of La Rochelle. He was at Mons at the date of the massacre, but was spared, and graciously received by the king. Assuming that he would recant in return for his life, the Court sent him to La Rochelle to see if the citizens, on their liberty of conscience being promised, would surrender to royal authority. La Noue, as an envoy, was coldly re- ceived. Finding the citizens firm and courageous, he again accepted the cliief command in the Protestant interest, and the Royalist besiegers withdrew in the summer of 1573. An edict, dated nth .August 1573, conceded to the Huguenots liberty of domestic worship and the public exercise of their religion in La Rochelle, Montauban, and Nismes. The A 2 FREXCH PROTESTANr EXILES. Government relieved its feelings of chagrin at such concessions by inventing, as the one legal designation of French Protestantism for all time coming, the contemptuous title, " La Religion Pretendiie Reformee " (the pretended reformed religion), or " La R.P.R." Henry IIL succeeded Charles IX. in 1574, but his reign must here be passed over. When he was assassinated in the camp near Paris in 1589, the Protestants under King Henry of Navarre were in his army, taking the loyal side against the rebellious Roman Catholic League. The Papists continued the rebellion, with a view to displace Henry of Navarre from the throne of France, which was his rightful inheritance; and thus the Protestants, being evidently loyal still, require no apologist. It is alleged, however, that by now becoming a party to a treaty with the king of the country, the Protestant Church of France assumed an imijerial position which no civilised empire can tolerate, and that, therefore, the suppression of that Church by Louis XIV., though executed with indefensible cruelty, was the dictate of political necessity. The reply to this allegation is, that this treaty was only the re-enactment and further extension of a peculiar method of tolerating Protestants, devised by the kings of France as the only plan to evade the necessity of being intolerant, which the coronation oath made them swear to be. The plea that Protestants, as religionists, were not implicitly subject to the King, but were to be negotiated with like a foreign power, was the only apology for tolerating them, consistent even with the modified oath sworn by Henry IV. — " I will endeavour, to the utmost of my power, and in good faith, to drive out of my jurisdiction and from the lands under my sway all heretics denounced by the Church" of Rome. As to this political treaty with the Huguenots in its first shape. Professor Anderson* remarks, " Instead of religious toleration being secured to them by a powerfully administered law, their protection was left in their own hands, . . . as if there was something in their creed which must for ever render them incapable of amalgamating with other Frenchmen." Royalty, which planned the treaty, was at least as guilty as the Protestant Church, which entered into the plan. If persecution and extinction were the righteous wages of the transaction, the humbler accomplice was not the only party that had earned them. The only crime was consent to a royal programme, to which the successors of Henri IV. made themselves parties by deliberate and repeated declarations. Tlie treaty to which we allude is the celebrated Edict of Nantes, dated 1598, as a pledge of the observance of which the Protestant Church received several towns, with garrisons and ammunition, to be held and defended by their own party in independent feudal style. That tins was a political eye-sore in a statesman-like view, is now acknowledged. But that it was the last chance for religious peace and tolerance in France, cannot be denied on the other hand. And to say that it was the cause of the Great Persecution would be a historical blunder. The bigotry of the Roman Catholics was the cause. In the provinces persecution was perpetual. Illegal treatment of individuals and congregations of the Protestant party was rarely punished ; while the local magistrate, instead of a protector, was often a leading persecutor. Through priestly instigation and intimidation, the atmosphere of France was heated with uncontrollable and unextinguishable malignity against the Protestants, who gained nothing by fighting with truce-breakers. It was in the reign of Henri's son, Louis XIIL, that fighting in defence of edictal rights came to an end. The majority of the Protestants grew weary of fruitless battles and sieges, lieing always conscientiously loyal, they began to wish to make an ostentation of their loyalty, and to rely upon that for fair and paternal treatment from their King and his Cabinet. Undoubtedly, the King's animus was against the feudalism as well as the Protestantism of the cautionary towns. The former was their special offensiveness to the powerful Prime Minister of France, Cardinal Richelieu. * Introductory Kssay by Willi.-im Aiulcrson, ProfL-.ssor in the Andc-rsonian University, (Ilasgow (1S52), prefixed to liis translation of "Jean Migault; or the Trials of a l'"iench Prottslant Family during tlic period of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes." ANA/A'SfS OF VOLUME FI/iST. 3 Another argument against Protestants resorting to civil war, was that poHtical malcontents, bigots of the Roman Catholic creed, often joined their ranks, and gave a bad colour to their designs. Such a malcontent made advances to them in 1615 — viz., the Prince of ConiK^ who induced the justly-honoured Protestant Henri, Due de Rohan, to take the field. Hut their greatest ami best counsellor, the sainted Du Plessis Mornay, entreated his fellow-Protestants to keep back. He said, " The Court will set on foot a negotiation, which will be carried on till the Prince has gained his own ends, when he will leave our churches in the lurch and saddled with all the odium." Such actually was the result. (Histoire des Protestants, par De I'Y'lice, p. 294, 2ik edit.) If the fall of La Rochelle and the other cautionary towns has been ascribed to the luke- warmness of the Huguenots themselves, it may, with at least equal reason, be inferred that there was a [)rinciple in their inaction. To exchange the appearance of feudal defiance for statutory subjection to their King was a lawful suggestion and experiment. Accordingly, not only did the majority of the Protestants stay at home, but many of them served in the royal amiies. And after the i)acification of 1629, they rested all their hopes of religious liberty upon that monarch's satisfaction with their complete subjection to royal jurisdiction, and with the very strong loyalty of their principles and manifestoes. During the minority of Louis XIV., their fidelity and good services were acknowledged by the Premier of France Cardinal Mazarin, under whose administration they enjoyed much tramiuility, and by whose recommendation they filled many imiiortant offices in the financial department of his Majesty's Government. Any right or privilege rendering the Edict of Nantes theoretically dangerous, as inconsistent with regal domination, had no being after 1629. The monarch who carried out the great and terrible persecution of the seventeenth century had no such materials wherewith to fabricate a political justification. The kingdom of France was not devoted to the Pope; and the liberties, which its (iovem- ment maintained in opposition to Papal ambition, might have made the King and his ministers sympathise with the Huguenots in their love of toleration. Unfortunately, however, the very fact that French royalty could not please the Pope in some things, made it all the more willing to please him in other things. And the persecution of the Protestants was the one thing which the Pope clamorously asked and promptly received as an atonement for all insubordination. This violence pleased not only the Pope, but also the father-confessors, whose powers of absolution were in great demand with a dissolute King and Court. Any a[)ologies for this persecution, alleging that the Roman Catholic authorities had other motives than sheer bigotry or brutality, are either untruthful harangues, or mere exercises of ingenuity, dealing not with things but with phrases. The climax was the revocation of the Edict of Nantes— that is, the repeal of the law or treaty made by Henri IV. — a repeal which left Louis XIV. under the dominion of the fearful clause of his coronation-oath on the extermination of heretics. Unqualified and exaggerated loyalty, without the menacing safeguards of a treaty, was thus no defence to the Protestants. The privileges of the edict had, during many years, been revoked one by one, first by explaining away the meaning of the phrases and clauses of that legal document, but latterly without any reason, and by the mere declaration of the King's pleasure. " I am above the edict," said Louis XIV. So the " revocation" in 1685 was merely the destruction of the surviving sealing- wax, ink, and parchment. Four years before, the province of Poictou had been the scene of the first experiment of employing dragoons as missionaries. The Manjuis de Louvois, having dragoons under him, and being anxious to regain his former ascendency over Louis, was ea"-er "to mix the soldiers up" with the work of converting heretics. Their intervention was not only a contribution of physical force, but had also a legal effect ; because resistance to his Majesty's troops was seditious. Before the introduction of the " booted missionaries," con- versions had not made any perceptible change in the statistics of Protestantism. In 1676 Locke, who resided fourteen months in Montpellier, made the following entry in his diary : 4 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. " They tell me the number of Protestants within the last twenty or thirty years has manifestly increased here, and does daily, notwithstanding their loss every day of some privilege or other." The dragoons changed this to a great extent in i6Si. At that date refugees in con- siderable numbers came to England, of whose reception I shall speak in a subsequent Section. In 1685 the dragoons bore down with ten-fold violence upon the Protestants of France, stupefied by the tale or the memory of the former brutalities of the troopers, and deluded into a life of unguarded and un vigilant security by the lying promise of toleration, embodied in tlie Edict of Revocation. Every Huguenot, who desired to continue peaceably at his trade or worldly calling, was forced to declare himself a proselyte to the Romish religion, or an in- quirer with a view to such conversion. In the eye of the law they all were converts from Protestantism, and were styled New Converts, or New Catholics. Bishop Burnet mentions the promise contained in the Edict of Revocation that " though all the public exercises of the religion were now suppressed, yet those of that persuasion who lived quietly should not be disturbed on that account." But how was that promise kept ? "Not only the dragoons, but all the clergy and the bigots of France broke out into all the instances of rage and fury against such as did not change, ujion their being required in the king's name to be of his religion (for that was the style everywhere) I saw and knew so many instances of their injustice and violence, that it exceeded what even could have been imagined ; for all men set their thoughts on work to invent new methods of cruelty. In all the towns through which I passed, I heard the most dismal account of those things possible. . . . One in the streets could have known the new converts, as they were passing by thenfi, by a cloudy dejection that appeared in their looks and deportment. Such as endea- voured to make their escape, and were seized (for guards and secret agents were spread along the whole roads and frontier of France), were, if men, condemned to the galleys; and, if women, to monasteries. To complete this cruelty, orders were given that such of the new converts as did not at their death receive the sacrament, should be denied burial, and that their bodies should be left where other dead carcases were cast out, to be devoured by wolves or dogs. This was executed in several places with the utmost barbarity; and it gave all people so much horror that it was let drop." British Christians heard the tidings with tears and forebodings. John Evelyn, in his Diary, under date 3d Nov. notes, " The French persecution of the Protestants, raging with the utmost barbarity, exceeded even what the very heathens used. ... I was shewn the harangue which the Bishop of Valentia-on-Rhone made in the name of the clergy, celebrating the French king as if he was a god for persecuting the poor Protestants, with this expression in it, ' That as his victory over heresy was greater than all the conquests of Alexander and Caesar, it was but what was wished in England; and that God seemed to raise the French king to this power and magnanimous action, that he might be in capacity to assist in doing the same there.' This paragraph is very bold and remarkable." A few sentences in Lady RussclFs Letters give an affecting view of thosetimes, for instance: 15/// Jan., 1686. — "The accounts from France are more and more astonishing; the jier- fecting the work is vigorously pursued, and by this time completed, 'tis thought, all, without exception, having a day given them. . . . 'Tis enough to sink the strongest heart to read the accounts sent over. How the children are torn from their mothers and sent into monas- teries, their mothers to another, the husband to ]jrison or the galleys." Haijjjily, three hundred thousand found refuge in Pjigland, in America, in Holland, in Switzerland, m Brandenburg, in Denmark, Sweden, and Russia. These (including the fugitives of 1681 and some others) are the famous French Refugees.* * Competent scholars have averred that many clever essayists and writers of smart political articles are igno- rant of history; their friends must furnish them with facts, and their imdertaking is to clothe the facts in words. it is not their business to ascertain whether the " facts" are, or arc not, correctly st.ited. Hence wc occasionally meet with ludicrous paragraphs', such as the following, which might l>e introduced into an Examinalit)n I'apei-, to be corrected by studious youth : — "The Huguenots were long a persecuted body in France. When they were many and .strong, Ihcy strove o regain their rights liy the sword; when they were few and weak, by secret and patient niachinalioii. Thus ANALYSIS or VOLUME FIRST. S NOTE. The eloiiuence of the Rev. Rol)ert Hall found a stirring tlieme in the Revocation Edict. Although the ])oints on which he fixed were almost the same on each of the two occasions on which he alluded to it, both passages are worthy of (juotation: — " The Gallican Church, no doubt, looked ujjon it as a signal triumph, when she prevailed on Louis the Fourteenth to repeal the edict of Nantes, and to sup])ress the protestant religion. But what was the conse(|uence ? Where shall we look, after this period, for her P'enelons and her Pascals, where for the (listinguished monuments of piety and learning which were the glory of her better days? As for piety, she perceived she had no occasion for it, when there was no lustre of christian holiness surrounding her; nor for learning, when she had no longer any op- jionents to confute, or any controversies to maintain. She felt herself at liberty to become as ignorant, as secular, and as irreligious as she pleased ; and, amidst the silence and darkness she had created around her, she drew the curtains and retired to rest. The accession of num- bers she gained l)y suppressing her opponents was like the small extension of length a body acquires by death; the feeble remains of life were extinguished, and she lay a putrid corpse, a public nuisance, filling the air with pestilential exhalations." — (Hall's Works, 12 mo, vol. ii., p. 284.) " It will not be thought a digression from the present subject [Toleration], to remark the consequences which followed in France from the repeal of the edict of Nantes. By that event France deprived herself of a million of her most industrious subjects, who carried their industry, their arts, and their riches into other countries. The loss which her trade and manufactures sustained by this event was, no doubt, prodigious. But it is not in that view my subject leads me to consider the ill consequences of that step. She lost a people whose simple frugal man- ners and whose conscientious piety were well adapted to stem the growing corruption of the times, while the zeal and piety of their j)astors were a continual stimulus to awaken the exer- tions of her national clergy. If France had never had her Saurins, her Claudes, her l)u Plessis Mornays, her national church had never boasted the genius of Bossuet and the virtues of Fenelon. From the fatal moment she put a period to the toleration of the protestants, the corruptions of the clergy, the abuses of the Church, the impiety of the people, met with no check, till infidelity of the worst sort pervaded and ruined the nation. When the remote as well as immediate effects of that edict, which suppressed the protestants are taken into the ac- count; when we consider the careless security and growing corruption which hung over the Gallican Church in consequence of it; it will not be thought too much to affirm, that to that measure may be traced the destruction of the monarchy and the ruin of the nation." — (Hall's ^\'orks, i2mo, vol. vi., p. 378). Section II., (pages 8 to 11). Tlie Refugees in the Reigns of Edtuard VI., Elizabeth, and James I., and their Churches. This Section, containing historical notes, begins with an ex- planation that memoirs of refugees before the reign of Louis XIV. did not come within the scope of my two volumes. In this new volume, however, Memoirs of Refugees in former reigns will be found as a supplementary section, following the Analysis of the Historical Introduction. The reign of Edward VI. witnessed the founding of Churches for Protestant Refugees. John a Lasco, (page 9) a refugee Polish nobleman and pastor at Embden in East Friesland, they were whilst excluded ; tliey ceased to be so when restored to their natural station and function as citizens. Th^y were twice excluded and twice restored, and at each tri.al the result was the same ; until finally a just and healing policy gave to their great men, to their Conde, Catinat, and Turenne, the privilege of employing their talents for their country's gloiy, and, in part, repaired the mischiefs which the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes had caused her by dooming her prote.stant subjects, .soldiers, artisans, and statesmen to exile, or to disgust and alienation at home." — A plain slatcment in support of the Political Claims of the Koman Catholies, in a Letter to the Rev. Sir, George Lee, Hart., by Lord Nugent, M.P. for Aylesbury (London 1826), p.ige 56. 6 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. app. . .ment in 1648 for a charter for a cluirch, and was encouraged by Arch- bishop Cranmer, the Duke of Somerset, and Secretary Cecil. Bishop Latimer supported his cause in a sermon before the king. Many French refugees came over in 1549, whose case was represented in a memorial signed by Bucer, Mart)T, Alexander, and Fagius. In 1550 a royal charter granted to a Lasco a Refugees' Church in London, since known as the Dutch Church in Austin Friars; at the end of the year the chapel of St. Anthony in Threadneedle Street (page 10) was granted for worship in the French language for Huguenots (Protestants from France Proper) and Walloons (Refugees from French Flanders). The first French minis- ters were Francois de la Rivii'-re and Richard Fran9ois (page 9). The death of Edward VI. dispersed these congregations. Protestant rule returning with Queen Elizabeth, the charters were restored, and Grindal, Bishop of London, became the superintendent of the Churches. LTnder the patronage of Parker, Archbishop of Canterbury, the celebrated refugee congregation, assembling in the Crypt of Canterbury Cathedral, was founded (page 10). Thousands of refugees came over in this reign, especially from French Flanders in 1567 and 1568, from France in 1572, after the Massacre, and in 1585. In the Pope's (Pius V.) Bull of 1570, the Protestant Refugees were characterized as omnium infestissimi, but were defended by Bishop Jewel (page 10). NOTES. As to the planting of French Churches throughout England, I refer to two books, Burn's History of Foreign Protestant Refugees, and Smiles's Huguenots.* For the purpose of anno- tating this volume I have ransacked Strype's numerous folios, and have been much indebted to them. Strype's best documentary information is from the papers of Queen Elizabeth's great minister. Sir William Cecil, known as Mr Secretary Cecil, after 1570 as Lord Burghley, and after 1572 as the Lord High Treasurer of England. In 1562 the Queen was prevailed upon to send succour to the French Protestants. Sir Nicholas Throgmorton had interviews in France with Theodore Beza and conveyed to Cecil a letter from that famous divine, dated at Caen 16 March 1562, (signed) T. de Belze. This letter is printed in Strype's Annals of Queen Elizabeth, Second Appendix, B., Vol. I. In 1567 a Secret League was concocted among the Popish Potentates for the partition of Europe among rulers attached to the Church of Rome (Mary, Queen of Scots, to receive the English crown), and for the extiqjation of Protestantism — the eleventh Article was to this effect, " Every man shall be commanded and holden to go to mass, and that on pain of excommunication, correction of the body, or death, or (at the least) loss of goods, which goods shall be parted and distributed amongst the principal lieutenants and cajjtains (Annals of Q. Eliz., i. 538). In 1568 there was a great influx of refugees and an extensive founding of settlements for them throughout England. Strype assures us {Ibid. p. 555), "This year flesh, fish, wheat and other provisions bore a very ciieap price ; and tiiat which gave a greater re- mark to this favourable providence of God to the nation was, that this happened contrary to all men's expectations ; for all had feared, but a little before, a great dearth. This was esteemed such considerable news in England that Parkhurst, Bishop of Norwich, in his cor- respondence with the divines of Helvetia, wrote it to Gualter his friend, one of the chief ministers of Zurich, and added tliat he was persuaded, and so were others, tiiat this blessing from God hap[)ened by reason of the godly exiles, who were hither lied for their religion, and here kindly harboured ; whereby, in their strait circumstances, they might provide at a cheaper • In the preface to my second edition I did not mention Mr Smiles's compendious volume, because that popular author was not a predecessor. My first edition having appeared in 1866 and his work in 1867. How- ever, in that preface I declared my obligations to printed books, and in the pages of my second edition, where I was indebted \o .Smiles' s I lugucnols, I made a distinct note of the debt. As his interesting compilation embraces all the centuries of French Trolestantism, I shall be a little more indebted to it in this volume on account of Ihc memoirs of refugees before the reign of Louis XIV'., and specially to the third edition published in 1S70. AiVALYSIS OF VOLUME FIRST. 7 rate for themselves and their faniihcs." Strj'pe complains of a mixture of Anabaptists, and disoriierly and criminal people among those refugees, but adds, " many (it must be acknow- ledged) were very pious and sober, and some very learned too. Of tlieir wants this year compassion was had among the bishops ; and I find liishop Jewel, May 3, sending up to the Archbishop three pounils six and eightpence, for the use of the poor exiles, for his ])art." Influenced by the allegation (already alluded to) unfavourable to the religion and morals of some refugees, the Government macle a numerical and religious census of foreign residents. Str)pe prints (supplement to .\nnals, vol. iv., No. i)the I-ord Mayor's return of " Strangers in Lontlon, anno 156S" — beginning with these words : — " As to the number of strangers as well within the city of London as in certain otlier liberties and exempt jurisdictions adjoining nigh unto the same, both of men, women, anti children of ever)' nation, as well denisons as not denisons, with their names, surnames, and occupations — and what Houses be pestered with greater number of strangers tiian hath of late been accustomed — and to whom they pay their rents for the same, and how many of them do resort to any of the strangers' churches." The number of strangers (including SS Scots) was 6704, of whom 880 were naturalized, 1815 were of the English Church, and 1008 " of no churcli." The Dutch formed an overwhelming majority, their number being 5225 ; the French numbered 1 1 19, (the other continental nations being all represented by 271 only). 1910 were of the Dutch Church, 1810 of the French Church, and 161 of the Italian Church. In 1572, the year of the St Bartholomew massacre, Sir Francis Walsingham was Queen Elizabeth's Ambassador at Paris ; his house was respected, and permitted to be a sanctuary for fugitive foreigners, which favour he formally acknowledged, at the same time requesting an official communication of " the very truth" regarding the massacre. The massacre Walsing- ham called "this last tumult" and "the late execution here"; Catherine De Medicis the Queen-Mother's phrase was " the late accidents here." Some garbled narratives were com- municated during August ; and on the ist September King Charles IX. sent for the Ambassa- dor and conversed with him. The French Court wished it to be believed (as appears by Walsingham's despatch of Sept. 13) that the French Protestants having been detected in a secret conspiracy, the massacre had been designed to remove the ringleaders ; but now, "the heads being taken away, the meaner sort should enjoy (by virtue of the edicts) both lives and goods and liberty of their consciences." " The very truth" was first heard in England from the mouths of the refugees ; our Queen rebuked the French Ambassador, La Motte, for his self-contradictory tales, in the most solemn strain. In December her Majesty had an oi>por- tunity, which she vigorously employed, to rebuke King Charles IX. himself " for that great slaughter made in France of noblemen and gentlemen, unconvicted and untried, so suddenly, it was said, at his command," declaring her conviction founded on evidence that " the rigour was used only against them of the Religion Reformed, whether they were of any conspiracy or no." — (Strypis Annals, vol. ii., p. 167) And in reply to his request that refugees might be discouraged from settling in England, our Queen instructed the Earl of Worcester, when in Paris, to say to the King, "that she did not understand of any rebellion that the refugees were ever privy to, and that she could perceive nothing but that they were well affected to their Prince. But when such con-Tion murdering and slaughter was made, throughout France, of those who professed the same religion, it was natural for every man to flee for his own defence, and for the safety of his life. It was the privilege of all realms to receive such woeful and miserable persons, as did flee to this realm only for defence of their lives. As for their return to France, the chiefest of them had been spoken to, and they made their answer, that the same rage of their enemies, which made them first to flee hither, did still continue the cause of their tarrying here, &c." Strype adds, '• The better sort of the Queen's subjects were very kind unto these poor Protestants, and glad to see them retired unto more safety in this country ; but another sort (divers of the common people and rabble, too many of them) behaved themselves otherwise towards these afflicted strangers, and would call them by no other denomination but French dogs. This a French author, sometime afterward, took notice 8 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. of in print, to tlie disparagement of the English nation. But Ceorge Abbot, D.D., (afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury) in one of his morning lectures [on Jonah] preached at Oxford, vindicating our kingdom from a charge that lay only u})on some of tlie meaner and worse sort, said, ' Those that were wise and godly used those aliens as brethren, considering their distresses with a lively fellow-feeling ; holding it an unspeakable blessele or transplantations of nations. But I will propound unto you two grounds of nature, as more proper to this purpose. One is that we should give to others the same measure that we would receive from them, which is the golden rule of justice, and the other is that we ought by all good means to * The or.ilor seems to have paid his audience the compliment of leaving llic Latin quotations untranslated. IV-rhap^ the transcriber ouglil lo apologize to his readers for occasionally interpolating a translalion. A.y.U.YS/S OF rOf.CME F/A'Sr. n strengthen tlic links of society l)et\veen man and man (turn artibus, turn ojiera, tum facultatibus, (levincire hominum inter homines societatem), and that they wrench in sunder the joint society of mankind who maintain that the cause of a citizen shoiiKl have lliat attention which is denied to the foreigner ((|ui civium rationem dicunt esse habendam, externorum negant, hi dirimunt communem liumani generis societatem). The law of (loil is next, which in infinite places commendeth unto us the good usage and entertainment of strangers ; in Deuteronomy, Gtui lovdh the straiii^t-r, s^ivin;:, him food and raiment. Therefore love ye the stranger. In Leviticus, If a stranger sojourn with you in your land, ye shall not ve.x him. But the stranger lohich dwelleth with you shall be as one of your- selves, and ye shall love him as yourselves. For ye 7oere strangers. In Ezekiel, it appeareth that tlie land of jjromise was by God's ap[)ointment allotted as well to the stranger as to the Israelite ; for they shall /art the inheritance with you in the midst of the tribes of Israel, saith the text. And the commandment which is given for the observation of the Sabbath forbids the stranger to labour on that day ; whereby it may well be gathered, that at other times it is lawful for him to exercise his lawful trade or vocation. So that for this point I may well con- clude with Mr Calvin, who saith that 'tis an inhospitality and ferocity worthy of a savage to o]>press miserable strangers who take refuge in our safeguard (barbaries et immanitas inhospitalis niiseros advenas opprimere qui in fidem nostrani confugiunt). It hath been confessed that the arguments used against this bill do carry with them a great show of charity, which (say they) being severed from ])olicy is now no chanty, but folly. I will answer that if it be a good rule and principle in divinity morals before ceremonies (moralia sunt anteponenda ceremoniis), it ought much more to be overruled in all consultations, that things human be postponed for things divine ; (humana sunt postponenda divinis). Therefore policy without charity is impiety. But let us consider, how doth this charity overthrow our policy ? Forsooth (it is said generally) by impoverishing the natural subject and enriching the stranger ; by nourishing a scorpion in our bosoms ; by taking the children's bread and casting it to dogs; and (more particularly), first, by multitude of retailers (for the more men exercise one trade, the less is every one his gain), and secondly, by the strangers' policy, which consisteth either in provid- ing their wares in such sort that they may sell better cheap than the natural subject, or else by persuading our peojile that they do so. To the general accusation — if I should use no other defence but this, that these people (the denizens I mean, for of them and for them only do I speak) having renounced their obedience to their natural governor and countries, and having subjected themselves even by their oaths to the obedience of Her Majesty, to her laws and authority, are now to be accounted of us, though not natural yet naturalized subjects — though not sprung uj) from our root, yet firmly grafted into our stock and body — though not our children by birth, yet our brethren by adoption — if (I say) I should use no other defence but this, I doubt not but I, in the opinion of all or the most jiart of this honourable house, might clear them of the envious title of the rich strangers, of the odious name of the venomous scorpions, and of the uncharitable term of contemptible dogs. But because the strength of the general accusation consisteth in the validity of the par- ticular objections, I w'ill, by your favour, in a word or two, make answer to them. It cannot be denied that the number of retailers is somewhat increased by these denizens ; but yet not so much, that the burden of them is so insupportable, as is pretended. For by the confession of their adversaries, they are not in all, denizens and not denizens, in and about the city, of all manner of retailers, above the number of fifty or thereabouts ; whereof it is probable that the denizens (whom only my purpose is to maintain) exceed not the number of thirty — who, being divided into many irailes and companies, cannot so much impoverish any one trade or company in the city of London by their number only, as is suggested. As touching their policy, which consists in drawing of customers to their shops or houses, cither by selling cheap indeed, or else by persuading us that they sell their wares more cheap 1 2 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. than our nation can do, I take it (saving reformation) very easy to be answered. For if the first be true that they do indeed sell better pennyworths, then we have no cause to punish but to cherish them as good members of our commonwealth, which by no means can be better enriched than by keeping down the prices of foreign commodities, and enhancing the value of our own. Besides, the benefit of cheapness of foreign commodities by so much exceedeth the benefit of dear prices, by how much the number of buyers of them exceedeth the number of sellers, which is infinite. But if the second be true, that it is but our error to bclinie that they sell their wares better cheap than our nation doth, then surely I cannot but think it very great injustice to punish them for a fault committed by us. It hath been further objected unto them in this house, that by their sparing and frugal living, they have been the better enabled to sell goodpennyworths. It seems we are much straitened for arguments, when we are driven to accuse them for their virtues. From the defeat of the bill, in opposition to which the above speech was delivered, Strj'pe justly infers, " the hearty love and hospitable spirit which the nation had for these afflicted people of the same religion with ourselves." Not only was this bill refused a second reading, but the same fote happened to another, which proposed that the children of strangers should pay strangers' customs. Thus the late Archbishop Parker's maxim (he died in 1575) was still adhered to, " profitable and gentle strangers ought to be welcome and not to be grudged at." (See Strype's Life of Parker, p. 139). It will be observed that all that the refugees sought and obtained was the opportunity of earn- ing their own livelihood. They suffered none of their people to solicit alms. They maintained their own poor, a large portion of their congregational funds being devoted to this purpose. And so grand and resolute was their determination in this matter, that when the convulsions of a time of war made their trade low and their cash little, their London consistory (or vestry, as the English would have said) actually borrowed money to enable them to maintain their poor. This circumstance came to light when Archbishop Whitgift communicated to the Pasteur Castel, the Queen's desire that his congregation should contribute to the fund for raising an English Force to assist King Henry of Navarre, and to defeat the rebellion against him as the legitimate King of France. Castel's letter in answer to the Archbishop of Canter- bury was dated 19th December 1591 ; (it was in Latin and is printed in the life of Whitgift, Appendix (No. 13) to book 4th — Strype also alludes to it in the body of the life, p. 381, and in annals of Elizabeth, vol. iv. p. 82). This letter states other interesting facts. Their gentlemen had gone over to France in the hope of being repossessed of their estates. The ablebodied men had joined King Henry's army, and their travelling expenses had been paid, their wives and children being left to the charity of the church. The congregation had also been always ready to make collections for their brethren in other places, and had responded to such appeals from Montpellier, Norwich, Antwerp, Ostend, Wesel, Geneva, 6^c. Having failed to put down refugee retailers by Act of Parliament, some Londoners attempted to gain this end by threats of rioting. In May 1573 they surreptitiously issued this warning; " Doth not the world see that you beastly brutes the Belgians, or rather drunken drones and faint-hearted Flemings, and you fraudulent Father-Frenchmen, by your cowardly flight from your own natural countries, have abandoned the same into the hands of your proud cowardly enemies, and have, by a feigned hypocrisy and counterfeit show of religion, placed your- selves here in a most fertile soil, under a most gracious and merciful prince who hath been contented, to the great jirejudice of her natural subjects, to suffer you to live here in better case and more freedom than her own people. " Be it known to all Flemings and Frenchmen that it is best for them to depart out of the realm of England between this and tiie 9th of July next; if not, then to take that wliich fol- lows. There shall be many a sore stripe. /Xpprentices will rise to the number of 2336. And all the A]>prentices and Journeymen will down with the Flemings and strangers." ANALYSIS or VOLUME FIRST. 13 ,Of equal merit with this miserable prose were some verses stuck up upon tlie wall of llic Dutch Church-yard on Thursday night, 5th May 1593 : — " You strangers tliat inhabil in this land ! Note tliis same writing, do it understand ; Conceive it well, for safety of your lives, Your goods, your children, and your dearest wives." &c., &c., &c., &c. By order of the Government, the Lord-Mayor and Aldernien of London ([uictly arranged with some merchants and master-tradesmen to act as special constables. And some appren- tices and servants who were found behaving riotously " were put into the stocks, carted, and whipt." — (See Annals of Elizabeth, vol. iv., pp. 167-8.) In 1598 the refugees' patron at court, Lord Burghley, died. And in the following year we find the Lord Mayor of London forbidding the strangers, both Dutch and French, to exercise their trades in the city. But it soon apjjeared that the Christian hospitality of our Queen and of the Government had not died. By an order in council, dated Greenwich, 29th April 1599, the Queen recjuired the Lord Mayor to " forbear to go forward." The order was signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury (Whitgift), the Lord Keeper (Egerton), the Lord Admiral (Lord Howard of Effingham), by Lords North and Buckhurst, by the Controller of the Household (Sir William Knollys), by the Secretary of State (Sir Robert Cecil, younger son of Lord Burghley, and heir of his abilities), and by the Chancellor of tlie Exchequer (Sir John Fortescue). Another petty persecution was similarly stopped in 1601. Sir Noel de Caron memorial- ized the Queen on behalf of several refugee tradesmen whose cases had been brought up by informers. Lord Buckhurst, who had succeeded to the office of Lord High Treasurer, wrote from Sackville House 31st October 1601, directing the Attorney-General (Coke) to quash all actions at law against the strangers, the matter being under investigation by the Privy Council. (The documents described in this and the preceding paragraph are printed in S/rype's Annals of Elizabeth, vol. iv., pp. 352-3). Strype gives a ([uotation from Lambani's Perambulation of Kent, denouncing " the inveterate fierceness and cankered malice of the English nation against foreigners and strangers." Lam- bard begins by recalling " what great tragedies have been stirred in this realm by this our natural inhospitality and disdain of strangers, both in the time of King John, Henry his son. King Edward H., King Henry VL, and in the days of later memory." He then declares his ho])e, " whatsoever note of infamy we have heretofore contracted among foreign writers by this our ferocity against aliens, that now at the last, having the light of the Gospel before our eyes, and the persecuted parts [meinbers ?] of the afflicted church as guests and strangers in our country, we shall so behave ourselves towards thein as we may utterly rub out the old blemish." Died on the 24th March 1603 (n.s.). Queen Elizabeth, who, having at her coming to the crown, promised to maintain the truth of God and to deface superstition, with this beginning with uniformity continued, yielding her land, as a sanctuary to all the world groaning for liberty of their religion, flourishing in wealth, honour, estimation every way (I borrow the language of iVrchbishop Abbot, quoted in Strype's Annals, vol. iv., jjage 359). {Page 1 1.) This section concludes with a short reference to King James I. Professor Weiss gives a sentence of his friendly letter to the London French Church. The King obtained an equivalent in 1606 from some F'rench ministers, who wrote a letter of remonstrance to the imprisoned Presb)'terian ministers in Scotland. The signatures in the Latin language were Robertus Masso Fontanus, Aaron Cappel, Nathanael Marius. — \Burns History supplies the undisguised names, Robert Le Maron, styled De la Fontaine; Aaron Cappel; Nathaniel Marie.] 14 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. NOTES. Besides the letter to the French Church, King James wrote another French letter, which I quote from Strype {Annals, vol. iv., page 386). It was addressed to the Dutch Refugee Church : — Messieurs, — Encore que vous me n'ayez vu jusqu'il present, si est-ce que je ne vous suis point etranger ni inconnu. Vous savez quant a ma religion quel je suis, non seulement par le bruit que vous avez pu entendre de moi, mais aussi par mes Merits en lesquels j'ai veritable- ment exprimo quel est I'affection de mon ame. C'est pourquoi je n'ai besoin d'user de beaucoup (le paroles pour vous representer ma bonne volont6 envers vous, qui etes ici refugi^s pour la religion. " Je reconnois que deux choses ont rendu la Reine, ma Sceur d^funte, renommee par tout le monde. L'une est le d6sir, qu 'elle a toujours eu, d'entretenir et fomenter le Service de Dieu en ce royaume. Et I'autre est son hospitalite envers les etrangers — a la louange de la- quelle je veux heriter. " Je sais bien, par le temoignage des Seigneurs de ce royaume (comme vous m'avez dit), que vous avez toujours pri6 Dieu pour elle, et que vous n'avez outrepass^ votre devoir. Je sais aussi, que vous avez enrichi ce royaume de plusieurs artifices, manufactures, et sciences politiques. " Si I'occasion se fut presentee lorsque j'etois encore (Sloigne comme en un coin du monde, je vous eusse fait paroitre ma bonne affection. Mais comme je n'ai jamais tache ni voulu em- pi(jter sur le bien d'aucun Prince, aussi, puisque maintenant il a plu a Dieu me faire Roi de ce pays, je vous jure que si quelqu'un vous moleste en vos Eglises, vous vous adressant;'i moi, je vous vengerai. Et encore, quoique vous ne soyez pas de mes propres Sujets, si est-ce que je vous maintiendrai et fomenterai, autant que Prince qui soit au monde." We now lose the assistance of Strype, but a valuable auxiliary succeeds him. The Cam- den Society volume entitled " Lists of Foreign Protestants and Aliens resident in England 1618-1688, edited by Wm. Durrant Cooper, F.S.A., (1862)" is prefaced with useful informa- tion by the editor. Lord Treasurer Buckhurst now appears in his new title of Earl of Dorset, and Secretary Sir Robert Cecil has been raised to the peerage as Earl of Salisbury. The London Companies of weavers, cutlers, goldsmiths, &c., so much esteemed for their feasts and funds, seem to have prevailed on those statesmen to listen to them, and at least to make a show of busying themselves for their protection against alien industry. It was complained on 22d July 1605 " that the English merchants were injured because foreigners were allowed to export baize and other goods without paying double custom." In July 161 5 the Weaver's Company urged that "the strangers employed more workmen than were allowed by statute, and then concealed them when search was made — -that they lived more cheaply and therefore sold more cheaply than the English — that they imported silk lace contrary to law," &c. In 162 1 a longer plaint survives [the original spelling may be seen in Durrant Cooper's Introduction, page v.] : — " Their chiefest cause of entertainment here of late was in charity to shroud them from persecution for religion ; and, being here, their necessity became the mother of their ingenuity in devising many trades, before to us unknown. The State, noting their diligence, and yet preventing ihe future inconvenience, enacted two special laws, THAT THEV SHOULD ENTERTAIN ENGLISH APPRENTICES AND SERVANTS TO LEARN THESE TRADES — the neglect vvhereof giveth them advantage to keep their mysteries to themselves, which hath made them bold of late to devise engines for working of tape, lace, ribbon, and such, wherein one man doth more among them than seven Englishmen can do ; so as their cheap sale of those commodities beggareth all our English artificers of that trade and enricheth them. Since the making of the last statute they arc thought to be increased ten for one, so as no tenement is left to an English artificer to inhabit in tlivers parts of the city and suburbs, but they take them over their heads at a great rate. So their numbers causeth the enhancing of the price of victuals and house rents, and nuah fintheretli the late disorderly AiXA/.yS/S OF VOLLWJI: FIRST. 15 new buildings which is so I'lirtfoiioiis to llie subject that His Majesty hath not any work to perform for the good of liis commons (especially in cities and towns) than by the taking of the benefit of tiie law upon them, a thing which is done against his own subjects by common informers. ISut their daily (locking hither without sucii remedy is like to grow scarce tolerable." In 1606 " double custom" was imposed upon baize as upon cloth exi)orted. Lord Dorset seems to have been inclined to discourage further innnigration, on the plea that foreign perse- cutions had ceased. That noble Lord died in 160S, and Salisbury, who succeeded him as Lord High Treasurer, died in 1612. The complaints made against refugees in 1615 and 1621 were each resjjonded to by the taking of a census, one in 1618 and another in 162 i. The lists collected in 1618 are printed in the a[)pen(lix to the Camden Society volume, and the lists of 1 62 1 in the body of the volume, pp. i to 26. These lists rather injured the case of the complainants by revealing that they had exaggerated the number of foreigners and over- stated the proportion between foreign and native tradesmen. On the 30th July 162 i a Board of Royal Commissioners was ajjpointed to consider the laws affecting aliens, and to propound regulations for the liberty of their w'holesale merchants and for enforcing the restrictions upon retailers. On 7th September 1622 (says Mr Cooper) " the Commissioners ordered that, as the retailing of English goods by strangers was hurtful to home trade, all strangers selling to strangers English goods should pay half the duty on such commodities as would be jxiid for custom on export, &c., &:c. But little further took jjlace. Any restrictions upon the refugees were unpo|)ular with the mass of the people, however desirable they might ajjpear to the chartered companies." — (Introduction, page x.) Section Third (extending from p. 12 to p. 21) is entitled T/ic Coniiection of French Protestants icut/i Fn^/'s/i Politics in the times of Charles I. and Cromwell. Charles, who ascended the British throne on March 24th 1625, was, as ^jure Divino prelatist and jjotentate, rather unfriendly to Foreign I'rotestants. The ambition of his father and himself had led them to court princes of the Romanist creed, with a view to a matrimonial alliance ; and, on the ist. May after his accession, our King Charles by his marriage with Henrietta Maria became a brother-in-law of Louis XIII. As a man he was averse to befriend the Huguenots, while as an English King he could not deliberately change the national friendship for them ; hence his procedure was fickle. He pleased them, however, in November 1626, by an official recognition of the existing immunities of the Foreign Protestants and their children, basing his order ujjon a sense of gratitude for the honourable reception and substantial bounties accorded to British subjects and their children beyond the seas. {Page 13). In 1633 the elevation of Laud to the rank of Archbishop of Canterbury was the seed of serious division between Charles and the Huguenots. Laud was forward to declare the tioie brotherhood of the Church of Rome, and to change the official language of the English nation which had called the Protestant religion " the true religion." He issued injunctions to French refugee churches requiring English natives to be removed to the Eng- lish i)arish churches (the children of refugees being included by him among born Englishmen), and commanding that the English Liturgy (translated) should be used by the refugee churches, (the French translation, then existent, is described in my vol. i., p. 67). I have jirinted the remonstrance and petition of the Norwich congregations, and an extract from Laud's pcr- emjitory reply, as given by Prynne, also Prynne's reference to a book about those proceedings by the pastor, John Bulteel of Canterbury, entitled, "A Relation of the Troubles of the Three Forraigne Churches in Kent." {Page 15). 'Fhe king having provoked a civil war, the English Pariiament, enacted the abolition of Episcopacy, the measure to become law on the sth November 1643. The Lords and Commons, with a view to the establishment of a British Church, summoned the West- minster Assembly of Divines which rnet in Henry VII. 's chapel on ist July 1643 and held eleven hundred aiid sixty three meetings. The Rev. John de la ALarch of Guernsey acted as spokesman for the French ministers and their people. On 22nd November the Pariiament t6 FRENCH PROTESTANT exiles. ordered that a Latin letter be addressed by the Assembly to the reformed churches abroad ; — the letter was signed on 19-29 January 1644, one copy being addressed to the pastors and elders of the church of Paris. {Page 16). On the 13th March, Mr De la March reported, that the letter to Paris had been handed unopened to the Deputy-General of the Protestant Churches of France, and could not be opened because of the royal prohibition of correspondence with England relative to existent disputes. By order of Parliament, therefore, the letter was printed. NOTE. Mr Grosart, in his interesting memoir of Herbert Palmer, B.D., calls attention to the fact that that loveable and able divine drafted the Westminster Assembly's Letter. As to Palmer, Samuel Clark says, that he was born at Wingham, about six miles from Canterbury, in 1601 ; " he learned the French tongue almost as soon as he could speak English ; even so soon, as that he hath often affirmed he did not remember his learning of it. And he did afterwards attain so great exactness of speaking and preaching in that language, together with a perfect knowledge of the state of affairs of that kingdom (especially of the Protestant Churches amongst them) that he was often by strangers thought to be a native Frenchman, and did not doubt but to entertain discourse with any person of that nation for some hours together, who should not be able by his discourse to ilistinguish him from a native Frenchman, but judge him to be born and bred in France; so well was he furnished with an exact knowledge, both of the propriety and due pronunciation of that language, and of the persons, places, and affairs of that kingdom and the churches therein ; a thing not often seen in one who had never been out of England." Before his death in 1647 he testified the affections of his heart by praying aloud for himself and others ; one of the petitions was, " Lord ! do good to Scot- land and the churches of France ; bless New England and foreign plantations." Principal Baillie in one of his famous " Letters" (vol. ii. p. in) writes, " The Parliament became the other day sensible of their too long neglect of writing to the churches abroad of their condition ; so it was the matter of our great committee to draw up letters in tlie name of the Assembly for the Protestant Churches. The drawing of them was committed to Mr Palmer, who yet is upon them" (7th December 1643). The inscriptions were many, but it was one and the same letter that was transcribed and sent to the various churches. There was no continuous exchange of correspondence ; so Baillie has occasion to say, when a cor- respondent desired that a favourable letter sent in return from the " Zeland" church should be answered by the [Westminster] Assembly; " as for returning an answer, they have no power to write one line to any soul but as the Parliament directs ; neither may they importune the Parliament for warrants to keep foreign correspondence. With what art and diligence that general one to all the churches was gotten, I know. You know this is no proper Assembly, but a meeting called by the Parliament to advise them in what things they are asked." Baillie hoped that some of the Huguenot Divines would help them by private letters. He said in 1644 (Letters, vol. ii.,p. 180); " There is a golden occasion in hand, if improved, to get England conform in worship and government to the rest of the reformed. If nothing dare i)e written in |)ublic by any of the French, see if they will write their mind for our encouragement, to any private friend here or in Holland." He was rather out of humour with the Parisian Divines : — However (he writes) the French Divines dare not keep public correspondence, and I hear that the chief of them are so much courtiers that they 7cnll not [say] the lialf they dare and might ; policy and [jrudence so far keejjs down their charity and zeal, &c., &c." (Letters, vol. ii., p. 170). However, in the end of 1644 he was better pleased (see his vol. ii., p. 253) antl writes, " It were good that our friends at I'aris were made to understand our hearty and very kind resentment of their demonstration of zeal and affcct'on towards the common cause of all the reformed churches now in our poor weak hands." ANALY'SIS Of VOLUME FIRST. 17 (/'(/(.v 16). The execution of King Charles I. on the scaffold greatly lessened the sympathy between the Hu};ucnots and the English people. The most celebrated writers against lliat deed were French Protestants. (/(;!,r 17). Claudius .Salniasius was Claude Saumaise. Petrus Molinxnis was Peter l)u Moulin, D.D. Of him and of lircvint I sliall speak in llie suppicmcntar)- section of memoirs. Only I must here warn my readers against the Rev. John Durcl, as beiny neither a Huguenot nor an impartial looker-on. {Pag,c 18). The sentiments entertained by individual Huguenots regarding the English broils varied, each individual de])cnding for his information ujjon different English friends or correspondents. l)u loose's biographer thought that all Huguenots were on the side of the titular Charles H., and of his brother the Duke of York — while the Duke of York himself thought they were all on the side of Cromwell, as Bishop Burnet informs us. The fact was, that as Charles I. had damaged his influence by leaning on a Roman Catholic Archbishop, so Cromwell rose in estimation through his beneficence to ])Oor Protestant people. The Republican Protector was courted by Cardinal Ma/.arin, and on the other sitle by the Prince of Conde who proposed to join him in a .Spanish Alliance. Crom- well sent Jean Baptist Stouppe, one of the pasteurs of the City of London French Church, into France to consult the Huguenot jiopulation, and it was ascertained that the Protestants disapproved of Conde's projects. England therefore accepted the I">ench Alliance. {Page 1 9). Here I give the two memorable interventions of Cromwell with I\razarin in behalf of persecuted Protestants, and conclude by giving Anthony a-Wood's account of F'rench Protestants incorporated into Oxford University during the period embraced in this section. These shall be transferred into the supplementary section. NOTE. I have said of Pasteur Stouppe " he was a native of the Orisons, and at heart more a lay- man than a pastor, as he ultimately proved, by becoming a Brigadier in the French army." I wisli to note what can be said in extenuation of his conduct. F'rom information lately obtained, I must acquit him of the sus]Mcion of having abjured Protestantism in order to be qualified for the army. At the restoration of Charles H. he could not stay in London, the royalists being furious against him for having acted as a diplomatist under Cromwell. He hoped to preach in Canterbury unmolested, but was followed to that retreat. Among the records of the French Church of Canterbury Mr Burn found a document thus described : — " 28th .\ugust 1 66 1. The king's letter requiring the church not to admit or use Mr Stoupe as minister, but give him to understand he is not to return to this kingdom, he being a known agent and a common intelligencer of the late usurpers." During the early campaigns of the A\illiamite war in F"landers, he was colonel of a regiment of Swiss Au.xiliaries in the French service. Soon after his death a number of his men went over to our king. " Brigadier Stouppe," says D'.\uvergne, " died of the wounds he received at the battle of Steenkirk. That Stoujipe was a Protestant and had been a minister. But I was told that Colonel Monim, who had the regiment after him, was a Roman Catholic, and had turned out the minister that belonged to the regiment, and jjut a priest in his place, w-hich so disgusted his soldiers that it occasioned a general desertion in his regiment." (D'Auvergne's History of the Campagne in the Spanish Netherlands, a.d. 1694, -/V,j,r 24). Section IV. (pp. 21, 22, 23) is entitled T/ie Correspondence of the French Protestants 'a'ith England in the time of Charles II. There were two occasions on w'hich some of the Huguenot Pasteurs complied with the request of English friends to fortify them with letters. {Page 22). The first occasion was the restoration of the younger Charles as King Charles IL If Cromwell had accepted the Spanish Alliance, the brothers Charles and James would have fraternized with the French Protestants, and might perhaps have led them into England in c 1 8 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. order to renew tlie civil war. But Cardinal l\[azarin, having won the Protector to a French Alliance, had dismissed the brothers from France, and the Huguenots approved of peace with England. It was therefore now the brothers' i)olicy to encourage an Anti-Protestant league against Cromwell, and it was reported that Charles had secretly converted himself to Popery. In 165S he denied this accusation in a letter to Rev. Thomas Cawton. But in 1660 more de- cisive evidence of his Protestantism was desired. Letters in the king's favour were accordingly written by the Pasteurs Daille, Drelincourt, Caches, and De I'Angle. Drelincourt's letter was to Stouppe; that from Caches was addressed to Richard Baxter at the request of their mutual friend, Anna Mackenzie, Countess of Balcarres. Many letters, hostile to the nonconformists, having been despatched from England into France, an Apology for the Puritans of England was published in the French language at Geneva in 1663; the author was Rev. Thomas Hall, B.D. {Tcige 23). The second occasion was when Stillingfleet was printing a prelatical book en- titled "The Unreasonableness of Separation." A few formal questions were put in circula- tion abroad, and answers received from Messieurs Le Moyne, De FAngle, and Claude (all dated in 1680) were printed. NOTE. With regard to the letters of 1680, I make the following extract from " An Historical Ac- count of my own Life, 1671-1731, by Edmund Calamy, D.D.," imprinted and edited by John Towill Rutt in 1829, 2 vols. In Calamy's ist vol., p. 173, he says, " Dr Frederick Spanheim, (bom 1632, died 1701), the son of Frederick, is acknowledged to have written as well and to as good a purpose, upon Ecclesiastical History, as any one that has appeared in the Protestant Churches. . . . This Dr Spanheim was one of those divines to whom the Bishop of Lon- don [Compton] wrote, for his sentiments about the Established Church of England and Con- formity to it, at the very same time that he wrote to Monsieur Le Moyne and Monsieur de I'Angle upon the same subject ; whose letters are printed by Dr Stillingfleet at the end of his Mischief of Separation. Spanheim's answer was not printed among the rest, not being thought enough in favour of the Church of England. . . . Le Moyne was a great and learned man. ... I cannot help upon this occasion recollecting a passage of a worthy English Divine, who was speaking of a letter of this Monsieur le Moyne, relating to our contests here in England, of which he had made much use. He says that he had certain knowkdi^c that M. Ic Moyne had hotli with his toni^nc and pen declared, that Mr £)urell had inucit abused him, in leaving out sundry passages in his letter, wherein he did nwderate and regulate the episcopal power, which if they had been inserted, the letter 7vould not at all have fitted his design. (Bonasus Vapu- lans, or some Castigations given to Mr John Durell, &c., p. 80)." Section V. (which extends from page 24 to page 29) is entitled The Reception of the French Refugees in England in 1681. This was the first year of the Dragonnades. Our ambassador at Paris, Hon. Henry Savile, corresponded with his brother Lord Halifax and with Secretary Sir Leoline Jenkins and secured a hospitable reception for Refugees in England. I give an abstract from those letters contained in a Camden Society Volume, entitled Savile Correspond- ence, edited by Mr William Durrant Cooper. (J'age 25). Savile writes on sth July, " Old Monsieur De Ruvigny has given a memorial to the king concerning the edict coming forth about the children of the Huguenots. The king said he would consider of it. But these poor people are in such fear that they hurry their children out of France in shoals." Savile's final appeal was dated, Paris, 22d July 1681, and was successful. {Page 26). Mr Secretary Jenkins wrote to Savile on 7th August, that a collection would be ordered to be made in the churches. On the same date (28th July old style) the order in Council was issued for the Naturalization of foreign Protestants. I print this, with the names of Privy Councillors present. [The Clerk of Council signed himself I'm. Llovd. The A:\.lLySIS OF VOLUME FIRSr. 19 •locumciU in llic original spelling will he fouiul in the Canulen .Sui icty \oliiiiic ul l.isis of Foreign I'rotestants, IntroJiution, page xviii.] (Pat^i: 27.) Rev. George Mickes, I).l)., ])rinted his sermon preached in behalf of the «ollection. I give copious extracts from it. [This collection is usually said to have been made in 16S1 ; and so it was, according to the old style — see my Note at page 244.] Seciion VI. (which extends from page 29 to page 36) is entitled The VaricgaUd J'o/itv of James II. and William ami Mary s frinnisliip towards t/w Rc-/iii;trs. (y'/i,v 30.) James was unable to reverse the hospitable regulations of the nation, but Henry Saviie saw into his antipathy to them, and expressed a fear that he would repeal them. Chancellor Jeffries had a chaplain of French I'rotestant descendent. Rev. Luke de Ikaulieu. After the French Kdict of Revocation in October (16S5), the Manjuis de ]5onrci)aus came on a diplomatic mission to Fngland, and sought to induce refugees to go back ; he reported that the King of Fngland regarded the refugees as enemies. In May 1686 Harillon, the resident French Ambassador, reijuested that Claude's Pamphlet " Les Plaintes des Protestants," should be publicly burnt, which was granted. (/(/i'f 31.) The king's ])rinter issued a translation of Bishop Bossuet's Pastoral Letter regarding the "Pretended Persecution." I give long extracts from replies by I)r William \\'ake (afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury). (Page- 34.) The regard for refugees on the part of the Earl of Bedford, Rachel Lady Russell ami Sir William Coventry is recorded. In 1687, as a step to Popish ascendancy, the king issued his Declaration for Liberty of Conscience — so that he showed no open enmity against the refugees as long as he filled the throne. NOTES. The Pasteur Claude (formerly of Charenton, and a refugee in Holland), published anony- mously the pamphlet entitled, " Les Plaintes dcs Protcstans Crucllement Oprimcs dans le Royaume de France." The title-page of the English translation was, " An Account of the Persecutions and Ojjpressions of the Protestants in France. Printed in the year 1686 ;" this was a Cjuarto pamphlet, which was reprinted in a tract of a pocket size at Edinburgh, entitled, " An Account of the Persecutions and Ojipressions of the French Protestants, to which is added. The Edict of the French King prohibiting all publick exercise of the Pretended Re- formed Religion in his kingdom, wherein he recalls and totally annuls the perpetual and irre- vocable Edict of King Henry the IV., his grandfather, given at Nantes, full of most gracious concessions to Protestants. With the Fonii of Abjuration the revolting Protestants are to subscribe and swear to. Printed by G. M., Anno Dom. 1686." [The printer was George Mosman, or Mossman.] A new translation appeared in 1707 ; it was a pocket volume en- titled, "A Short Account of the Complaints and Cruel Persecutions of the Protestants in the Kingdom of France. London: Printed by \V. Redmayne, 1707." There is a long Preface, which informs us regarding the former translation, " The translator for some regard he had to those times, when the enemies of our holy religion were in great credit, ditl designedly omit several matters of fact, and them the most important to the cause of the refugees ; insomuch, that above the fourth part of it was cut off in the translation ; though the translator fared ne'er the becter for it." I have compared the two translations, and I find that the pamphlet of 16S6 was (luite a faithful abridgement, there being only two omissions of any length, viz., ( ist), an Account of the original Edict of Nantes, showing the internal evidence for its perpetual obligation, and (2d) the detailed protest at the end, fitted to impress sovereigns and states- men — otherwise, the abridgement is not material, as will appear from the following extract in parallel columns : — Page 34, (1686). There are three things Page 144, (1707). There are tlnce things very remarkable in this whole affair. The remarkable in the conduct of this whole affair. FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. first is, that as long as they have been only on the way, the true authors of the Persecu- tion have not concealed themselves, but the king, as much as they could. 'Tis true, the Decrees, Edicts, and Declarations, and other things, went under the name of His Majesty, but at the request of the agents and factors for the clergy. And whilst they were busied in these matters, the king declared openly his intention of maintaining the Edicts, and 'twas abuses which he designed to correct. Thesecond is.thatwhen they came tothe last extremities, and to open force, then they have concealed themselves as much as they could, set forth the king at his full length. There was nothing heard but these kind of discourses. T/te A-h/jy- 7k'ill have it so, the king has taken it in hand, the kino proceeds fm ther than the clergy desires. By these two means they have had the address to be only charged with the lesser part of the cruelties, and to lay the most violent and odious part at the king's door. The third thing which we should remark is, that the better to obtain their ends, they have made it their business to persuade the king, that this work would crown him with glory — which is a horrid abuse of his credulity, an abuse so much the greater, by how much' they would not have themselves thought the authors of this council. And when any particular person of them are asked this day, what they think of it, there are few of them but condemn it In effect, what more false an idea could they give to His Majesty of glory, than to make it consist in surprising a poor people, dispersed over all his kingdom, and hvmg securely under his wings, and the remains of the Edict of Nants, and who could not im- agine there were any intentions of depriving them of the liberty of their consciences, of surprising and overwhelming them in an in- stant, with a numerous army, to whose discre- tion they are delivered, and who tell them that they must, either by fair means or foul, become Roman Catholicks, this beingtheking's will and |>leasure. The first is, that as long as they were only on the way, the true authors of the Persecution did not conceal themselves, but alway studied to conceal the king as much as they could. 'Tis true, the Decrees, Edicts, and Declara- tions, and such other things, went still under the name of His Majesty, but on the request of the agents or Syndics of the clergy. And whilst they were busied in these matters, the king declared openly his intention of main- taining the Edict itself, and that 'twas only the abuses and contraventions of it, which he designed to correct. The second is, that when they came to the last extremities, and to open force, then they concealed themselves as much as they could, but made the king appear at his full length. There was nothing heard but these kind of speeches. The king will have it so, the king has taken the matter in his oivn hand, the king carries it further than the clergy could have wished. By these two means they have had the address to be only charged with the lesser and milder part of the Persecution, and to lay the more violent and odious at the king's door. The third thing which we are to remark is, that the better to obtain their ends, they have made it their business to persuade the king, that this work would crown him with the highest glory, which is a most horrid abuse of his credulity, and an abuse so much the greater, by how much they would screen themselves from being thought the authors of this council. Hence, if any of them in par- ticular be asked at this day what they think of it, there are few of them but will readily condemn it. Now, what falser idea of glory could they give than making consist in surprising a poor people defenceless and helpless, dispersed over all his kingdom, and living securely un- der his wings, and untler the protection of the remains of the Edict of Nantes ? And who could ever imagine there were any intentions of depriving them of the established lilierty of their consciences, of surjirising and overwhelm- ing them in an instant with a numerous army to whose discretion they are delivered uj), and who tell them roundly that they must, either by fair means or by foul, become Roman Catholics, for that such is the king's will and pleasure ? ANALYSIS or VOLUME FIRST. What a falser notion of glory could ihcy offer him, tli;in the putting; him ii» the place of Cioil, making the faith and religion of men to depend upon his authority, and that hence- forward it must he saiil in his kingdom, 1 dott't bflia't, because I am persiiatkd of it, but I be- lia'e, because the kiiit; would have me do it, which, to speak properly, is that I believe nothing, and that I'll be a Turk or a Jew or whatever the king pleases ? What falser idea of glory, than to force from men's mouths, by violence and a long series of tomients, a ])rofession which the heart abhors, and for which one sighs night and day, crying continually to God for mercy! What glory is there in inventing new ways of persecutions, unknown to former ages, which indeed do not bring death along with them, but keep men alive to suffer, that they may overcome their patience and constancy by cruelties, which are above human strength to undergo? What glory is there in not contenting thorn- selves to force those who remain in Ij's king- dom, but to forbid them to leave it, and keep them under a double servitude, viz., both of soul and body ? What glory is there in keeping his prisons full of innocent persons who are charged with no other fault than serving God according to the best of then knowledge, and for this to be exposed to the rage of dragoons, or condemned to the gallies and executions on body and goods i" Will these cruelties render His >.iajesty's name lovely in his history to the Catholick or Protestant world ? What falser notion of glory couhl they ever offer him, than the |>ulting him thus in the place of God, nay even alwvetJod, in making the faith and religion of his subjects depend on his sole authority, and that henceforward it must be said in his kingdom, / beiie7'e not because I am pefsuaded, but J bcliax because the kirix will have me, let God say what he will, which, to si)eak jjroperiy, is that I believe nothing, anti that I'll be a Turk, a Jew, an Atheist, or whatever the king pleases ? What falser idea of glory, than to force from men's mouths, by violence and a long series of torments, a confession which the heart abhors, and for which they afterward sigh night and day, crying continually to God for mercy ! What glory is there in inventing new ways of persecution, unknown to fonner ages, per- secutions which indeed do not bring death along with them, but keep men alive to suffer, that their patience and constancy may be overcome by cruelties, which are above human strength to undergo ! What glory is there in not contenting him- self to force those who remain in his kingdom, but to prohibit also their leaving it, and so keej) tlieni under a double servitude both of soul and body ? What glory is there in stuffing his prisons full of innocent persons who are charged with no other crime than the serving God according to the best of their knowledge, and for this to be exposed either to the rage of the dragoons, or be condemned to the gallies, and suffer exe- cution on body and goods ? What falser idea of glory for the king than to make it consist in the abuse of his |)ower, and to violate without so much as a shadow of reason his own word and royal faith, which he had so solemnly given and so often reite- rated ; and this, only because he can do it with impunity, and has to deal with a flock of innocent sheep that are under his jiaw and cannot escape him ? And yet 'tis this wliich the clergy of France, by the mouth of the Bishop of Valence, calls a greatness and a glory that raises Louis XIV. above all other kings, above all his predecessors, and above time itself, and consecrates him for eternity ? 'Tis what Mon- sieur Varillas calls " Labours greater and more incredible, without comjiarison, than those 22 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. of Hercules !" 'Tis wliat Mr Maimhourg calls an heroic action — " the heroical action (says lie) that the king has just now done in forbid ding, by his new Edict of October, the public exercise of the false religion of the Calvinists, and ordering that all their churches be forth- with demolished!" Base unwortliy flatterers ! Must people suffer themselves to be blinded by the fumes of your incense? The concluding paragraph of the translation of 1686 is much abridged — it runs thus : — " However, 'twill be no offence to God or good men to leave this writing to the world, as a protestation made before him and them against these violences, more especially against the Edict of 1685, containing the Revocation of that of Nants, it being in its own nature in- violable, irrevocable, and unalterable. We may, I say, complain, amongst other things, against the worse than inhumane cruelties exercised on dead bodies, when they are dragged along the streets at the horse-tails, and digged out, and denied sepulchres. We cannot but complain of the cruel orders to part with our children, and suffer them to be baiitized and brought up by our enemies. But, above all, against the impious and detestable practice, now in vogue, of making religion to depend on the king's pleasure, on the will of a mortal prince— and of treating perseverance in the faith with the odious name of rebellion. This is to make a God of man, and to run back into the heathenish pride and flattery among the Romans, or an authorising of atheism or gross idolatry. In fine, we commit our complaints and all our inte- rests into the hands of that Providence which brings good out of evil, and which is above the understanding of mortals whose houses are in the dust." The jieroration of the original contained more details, and the protestation was ambassa- dorial both in form and in tone, thus : — " But in the meanwhile, and till it shall please God in his mercy to bring that happy event to pass, lest we should be wanting to the justice of our cause, we desire that this Account, which contains our yint Cowplaints, may serve for a Protestation before heaven and earth against all the violences we have suffered in the Kingdom of France. Against all the arrests, declarations, edicts, regulations, and all other ordinances of what nature soever, which our enemies have caused to be published to the prejudice of the Edict of Nantes. Against all sort of Acts, signatures, or verbal declarations expressing an abjuration of our — and tlie j^rofession of the Romish — religion, which fear, torture, and a superior power have extorted from us or from our brethren. Against the plunder that has been already, or shall hereafter be, committed of our goods, houses, effects, debts, trusts, rents, lands, inheritances, and revenues, common or private, either by way of confiscation or by any other way whatsoever, as unjust, treacherous, and violent, committed only by a superior power in full peace, contrary both to reason and the laws of nature and the rights of all society, and injurious to all mankind. But especially we pro- test against the edict of the iSth of October, 1685, containing the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, as a manifest abuse of the King's justice, authority, and royal power, since the Edict of Nantes was in itself inviolable and irrevocable, above the reach of any human power, designed for a standing agreement and concordat between the Roman Catholics and us, and a fundamental law of the realm, which no authority on earth has power to infringe or annul. We protest likewise against all the conseijuenccs whicii may follow sucli a revocation, against the extinction of the exercise of our religion throughout the whole Kingdom of France, against all the ignominies and cruelties committed u]3on dead bodies by depriving them of Christian burial and exposing them in the fields to be devoured by ravenous beasts, or dragging them igno- niiniously through the streets upon hurdles — against the taking away children by force, and the orders given to fathers and mothers to cause them to be baptised and educated by Komish priests. Hut above all, we protest against that impious and abominable jiosition, which is now- .l.y.lLys/S OF VOLCME FIRST. 23 adays made the general rule in P'rance, by which religion is made to ilcpend on the iili.;i.sure and desjiolir power of a mortal prince, and ])erseverance in the faith brandeil with the names of Reliellion and Treason — wliicli is to make of a man a god, and tends to the introducing and authorising of Atheism and Idolatry. We protest moreover against all manner of violent and inhuman iletaining of our brethren in France whether in |)risons, gallies or monasteries, or any other confinements, to hinder them from leaving the kingdom, and going to fee in foreign countries that liberty of conscience tliey cannot enjoy in their own — which is the utmost pitch of brutish cruelty and hellish inicpiity. Lastly, we protest against whatsoever we may of right [irotest against, and tleclare that such is our meaning that things not expressed be coni- ]irehended under those that are here expressed. We most humbly supplicate all Kings, I'rinces, Sovereign Lords, States ami Nations, and generally all persons of what condition soever, to be graciously pleased that these our lawful and indispensable |>rotestations, which in the simjjlicity and sincerity of our hearts we are obliged to make and do make accordingly, may serve, be- fore God and before them, as a stamling testimony for us and our posterity, for the preserva- tion of our rights and for the discharge of our consciences." Cotem|>orary news and reflections concerning this book are worth quoting. John Evelyn wrote as to 5th May 16S6, — ''This day was burnt in the Old Exchange, by the common hang- man, a translation of a book written by the famous Monsieur Claude, relating only matters of fact concerning the horrid massacres and barbarous proceedings of the French King against his Protestant subjects, without any refutation of any fiicts therein ; so mighty a power and ascendant here had the French Ambassador, who was doubtless in great indignation at the pious and tnily generous charity of all the nation for the relief of those miserable sufferers who came over for shelter." Sir John Hramston (in his Autobiogra[)hy, Camden Society im- print, page 228), writes : — "The French King, having taken away all the edicts of his jirede- cessors giving liberty to those subjects of difi'erent religion (called commonly //ui^oiicts), re- quired all to conform to the Roman Catholic religion by a certain day, and having pulled down their churches, enforcing many to mass, banishing the ministers and compelling the laity to conform, many got away, leaving behind them their estates. At first he let some go on those terms, which afterwards he refused ; and if he took them flying, he sent them to the gallies, and used unheard-of cruelties, so that thousands got away into Switzerland, the Low Countries, and into England. Some having escaped thus, a narrative or history of the persecution was writ and printed, both in French and English, which the French Ambassador complained of to the King and Council and obtained a order for burning a copy both of the French and English, which was done on Friday the Sth of May 1686, at the Exchange in London, by the hangman ; yet had his Majesty granted a Brief and great collections made for relief of such French Protestants as fled hither (for religion) for protection." Sir John Bramston added, " But this book, it seems (for I have not yet seen it) had in it expressions scandalous, as the Ambassador said, to his Majesty the King of France ; and in- deed, if so, it was fitly burned, for all kings ought to be careful of the honour and dignity of kings and princes." To this, his editor, the late Lord Hraybrooke (1845), rejjlies, "This remark might have been spared, as it is obvious that the King in this proceeding lost sight of the honour and dignity due to himself." The British people were tortured with apprehensions of impending religious tyranny and persecution during the three years and a half of King James' regime. Their alanns were strengthened by their observation of events in France, consccjuent on the bloody fanaticism of Louis XIV., and viewed with evident satisfaction by James. Their thoughts found fit ex- pression in the " Memorial from the English Protestants for their Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Orange." I quote the paragraphs which exhibit a parallel between France and England as to evil designs upon the Protestant people : — " We need not remember your Highnesses, that these attempts and endeavours to subvert our libert)'. in our religion and government, is a part of that general design that was formed and concluded on, many years since, in the most secret councils of the Po|)ish Princes, chiefly 2 4 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. managed by the Jesuits, to root out of all Europe the profession of the Protestant Reformed Religion and the" Peoples' liberties. We will not mention the notorious actual prosecutions ot tiiat Popish Resolution in several kingdoms and dominions, * nor the treacherous falseness of those ]5rinces in their treaties, agreements, and oaths, nor the oppressions and bloodshed and all kinds of unrighteousness that have been practised by them in order to that general great design. The instance alone of the French King is enough to be named instead of all, be- cause he hath owned and published to the whole world his part in that design, and by com- paring the violences, banishments, and murders done upon the protestants at the same time by other Pojjish Princes (as they were able) with his public confessions of his longdaid design, we may make a true judgment of the whole. "The French King by his Edict of 1685 hath declared that he entered into that design from his coming to his crown ; and it appears by his Edict f tlien prepared and agreed by his council of conscience, that all his renewed Edicts in the Protestants' favour, his acknowledg- ing and registering in Parliament their great services for him, and his advancement of many of them to the highest dignities, military and civil, in his kingdom, were done to flatter and deceive them. He calls God to be witness of his designs and resolutions at that time to abolish their religion by degrees, and that he only attended his fit opportunity for that great work, as it's called by our King and by that Edict. " In that interim of his seeming kindness to the Protestants, and solemn professions to them and [toj some of the Protestant princes, for the observing faithfully the Law and Edict of Nantes, that was like the French Protestants' great* barter, — there were all possible secret contrivances and practices to prepare for that great work, especially in England that hath long been the head of the Reformed Religion and the chief terror of the French King and [of] tlie Popish world. He shewed his fear of the people of England when he barbarously ban- ished his now Majesty and the late king in their distress rather than displease Cromwell. He therefore applied his principal councils and endeavours to distract and weaken the Protestants of England, and to persuade and assist the late king covertly to increase and strengthen the Popish party " It hath also been manifest to the world, that all kinds of devices and artifices that the Jesuits' councils could invent were, about the same years, used to pervert the faith and religion of the United Provinces, or to betray them into the French King's power, or at least a depen- dance upon him. " 'Tis now notorious to the world, that an agreement was made, between the French King and his late Majesty of England, to subdue and divide those Provinces, that they might no more be either a support or refuge for the Protestants " Our late King and his ministers and counsellors concurred in all the secret practices and con- trivances to vv-eaken the power of the Protestants, and to suff'er the greatness, glory, and terror of the French King to be advanced ; but he durst never openly and avowedly join with him in the great work against the Protestant religion, for fear of his Protestant subjects, he having deluded tliem with so many solemn protestations of his faithfulness to tlieir religion and their liberty. The French King found, by experience, that the Parliament had prevailed with our King to break all the measures they had taken togetlier for the destruction of the United Provinces, by obliging him to a separate peace with them, which had forced him to let f;ill his then spreading plumes, and in crafty ways to seek and solicit a truce. And therefore lie durst not, during our King's life, put in execution his great work that he declares Iiad been so long in his heart, by torments, murders, and all sort of barbarous cruelties to su])|)ress the professors and ])rofession of the Reformed Religion, and entirely to raze and expunge the memory of it, as his edicts and practices now declare to be his intentions. * "Thai is, in France, the Dukcilom of .S.ivoy, the Kingdom of Poland, and many ollicrs." t " 'Tis fit lo see in tliat Edict, preparcil as it's pnhlislicd, tlie ojiiniim they have of Prolaliints, that they are deemed uncapable of having any liylil lo claim tlie benefit of the liealies, promises, or oaths, made lo tlien\ by Papists." ANALYSIS OF VOLUME FIRST. 25 " The French King durst not throw off his disguise, and shew himself to hu like a raven- ing wolf to his Protestant subjects, until our now King had publicly esjwused tiie I'ojjish design, which he had togetiier with him long prosecuted in the dark ; and until he had begun to invatle the I'roteslant liberties and securities, putting the military jjower in Popish hands ; and to demand the Parliament's consent to a law (which they refused) to authorise him to make his Pajjists the guardians of the Protestants' religion and lives. "The Krencli King then knew that the Peojile of England were in no capacity to inter- pose in behalf of his Protestant subjects ; and (as his Edict says) being by the truce without fear of disturbance he entirely applied himself to the great design ; he sent his dragoons to destroy the poor Protestants' goods, and to torment their bodies with more cruelty and inhu- manity than was ever practised since the Creation. He resolved kor hisglukv (as his clergy told him) to slum.' himself tlu Jli st and most illustrious of the Church's children, and the Extirpa- tor of the Protestant Ileray, which (they tokl him) was a more solid and immortal title than he acquired by all his triumphs. " He then prosecuted that work of extirpation, as Saul did, to strange countries, breathing out threatenings and slaughter. He sent to the Duke of Savoy and (as that court comjilains) persuaded anil frighted that prince into a most unchristian and bloody decree, to comjiel the most ancient Protestants in the \'alleys of I'iedmont to become Papists forthwith ; and they being faithful to their religion, that edict was pursued by the help of his dr.igoons, and the hannless I'rotestants tormented and murdered more cruelly than the worst of vermin or ser- pents, until they were utterly destroyed anil their country given to the Pa|)ists. That Court of Savoy seems still ashamed of that horrid wickedness, and says for their excuse, That the French Kiii}^ declared he li'oulu root out those Protestants by his 07vn force, and possess thecountty, if the Duke would not have assisted therein. " The suppression of the Protestants of England hath been always esteemed the princij)al part of the Popish design to extirpate the Protestant religion. And therefore all the Romisii councils, i)olicies, and industries, their conspiracies, poisoning, and massacres, have been long employed about it, and have perfectly gained our now King to serve their designs. They have united him with the French King, that their conjoined councils, treasures and strength may finisli their work of bringing luigland to the obedience of their Cluirch. It's, many ways, evident that both the Kings are under the like conduct ; and our King jiroceeds in the same methods against us, wherein the French King hath been successful to destroy the Pro- testants of his kingdom. His first attempt is to subvert our civil government and laws, and the freedom and being of our parliaments, just as the French King first invaded the supreme legal authority of France, which was vested in the .Assembly of Estates, from whom alone he now derives his crown. Our King, in imitation of his brother of France, strives to bring all the offices and magistracy of the kingdom, that were legally of the people's choice, to be solely and immediately depending on his absolute will for their being, whether they arise by our common law, or be instituted by statutes or charters. He endeavours, by various artifices, to bring the disposal of all the projierties and estates of the people and their lives and liber- ties to be at his mere will, by a perversion of the instituted course of our Juries, and by Judges and a Chancellor fit for that purpose and every moment dei)endent on his will. He seeks to make his Proclamations and Declarations to have as much power over our laws as the French King's Edicts. And after his example he establisheth a mercenary army to master and subdue the people to his will. " If he can prevail in these things to overturn the civil government, then the liberty of the Protestant profession and of conscience in all forms, however seemingly settled by liim, will be precarious. And he may as easily destroy it as the French King hath abolished the irre- vocable edicts, treaties or laws of his kingdom, confirmed by his oath, which were as good security to those Protestant as any A/aj^na Charta that our King can make for us, or any Act of a Convention (with the name of a Parliament) whicli is possible for him to hold in the state unto whi( h he hath reduced the kingdom. Our King hath the same French copy by n 26 FREA'Cn PROTESTANl EXILES. which he writ assuring the Protestants of grace and clemency, giving them promises of equal liberty of conscience with his Papists in preferring unto offices and employments those whom he resolves to suppress and ruin. * * * * " These matters of fact are self-evidences, and cleariy show that our grievous oppressions by our king are the effects of the united councils of the Popish interest, whereof the French King is the Chief — that the conspiracy against true religion and liberties, that now appears in England, comprises all the Protestant Princes and States in Europe. England is only first attacked as the principal fortress of the Protestant profession. If the three kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Ireland, can be reduced into the pattern of the French King in government and religion, and the strength of them be united against any single Protestant State or Prince they shall think fit to assault, (if they can by artifices keep the rest divided, w^hich will not be hard for them), there is little hope of any long defence of such a State. " The French King seems not unwilling to have it known that the Popish design is general against all profession of the Protestant religion, though especially against England. He hath allowed the Bishop of Cosnaes' speech to him at Versailles in 1685 to be published, who was authorized to be the mouth of the clergy of that kingdom ; he magnifies the King for sup- pressing the Protestants of his own kingdom, and asks, what they may not yet expect. Eng- land (saith he) is just offering to your Majesty one of the most glorious occasions that you can de- sire; the King of England, by the lurd johich he loill have of succour and of the support of your arms to maintain him in the Catholic Faith, will 7nake you quickly find occasion to give a protec- tion worthy of yourself. We knew very well, before the French clergy declared it by that bishop, that the same head that contrived the perversion or destruction of so many millions of the Protestants in that kingdom, designed the ruin of the English religion and liberty. But it surprised us to see that speech published by the French King's authority, and that our King should suffer the translation of it to pass freely in England and through the world. We thought it beneath the majesty of a King of England to be content that his subjects should be told that he was to come under the protection of a King of France, over whose kings and kingdom his ancestors had so often triumphed. But it seems nothing is to be esteemed inglorious that may serve the general Popish design of extirpating the Protestant profession. " We need not put your Highnesses in mind, that the same speech acknowledges that the Popish councils and conspiracy against England intend the like ruin to the religion and free- dom of the United Provinces. That bishop tells the king that he hath undertook the con- quest of new countries, there to re-establish the prelacy, the religious worship and the altars — that Holland and Germany have been the theatre of his victories, only that Christ might triumph there (that is, that the Papists might trample upon the Protestants and their religion) — and this he speaks (as he says) in the very spirit of the Church, and signifies their hopes of success against the poor Protestants to be unbounded, saying, What may we not yet expect^" (Page 35.) This page begins with a translation of J. Michelet, the French historian's, esti- mate of the serviceableness of the Huguenot officers and soldiers in William's army. Next is the Order in Council encouraging the French Protestants to take refuge in Britain, being a declaration by the King and Queen. Among the Privy Councillors the name of the Duke of Schomberg occurs. Queen Mary, an eminent sympathizer with the persecuted, died in 1694. {Page 36). Daniel l3e Foe's testimony to the fidelity of the foreign refugees to King Wil- liam, ending with the statement *'That foreigners have faithfully ohey'd him, AikI none but Englishmen have e'er betray 'd him, " is given at full length, and also the Prayer on behalf of " The Reformed Churches abroad," used on i6th April 1696. Section VII. extends from page 36 to page 58. As one great purpose of this volume is to supply accurate lists of the names of naturalized French Protestants from i6Si to tlic ANALYSIS OF lOLUME F/JiST. 27 end of the reigii of King William III., and as I have laboriously re-examined the Grants on the I'atcnt-Rolls in tlie I'uhlic Record ollicc, I witiidraw the Section as it appears in vol. i., and substitute for it the following Nicw euiudn. Section a33I- NATURALIZATION ali.vs DENIZATION WITH LISTS OF NATURALIZED DENIZENS- There was a reluctance on the part of our country to pass a general Act of Parliament for the naturalization of Protestant strangers. Charles II. undertook to suggest the step to Parliament in 1681, but legislators were deaf to the hint for a ([uarter of a century. Any Englishman proposing such an act, was upbraideti as an Esau, guilty of flinging away prcc ious means of provision for himself and his family, the restrictions for foreigners being jirovidenlial blessings for iMiglishmcn. Any Bill to give foreigners a share of tlie Englishman's right was unjjopular with the City of London, and with all boroughs and corporations. The dei)ates of 1694 ended in the House of Commons allowing a Pill of that sort to fall aside before the necessary number of readings had been permitted. And so Naturalization had to bj doled out to inilividuals by letters-patent from the King, and by private .Acts of Parliament. The only jsroviso expressed in i68i was in these terms: — " Provided they live and continue with their families (such as have any) in this our kingdom of F^ngland, or elsewhere within our dominions." Yet a certificate, " that they have received the Holy Communion" crept into the warrants of denization, — and, at a later date, a command " to take the oaths of allegiance and supremacy at some Quarter-Sessions within a year after the date hereof" James II. not only specified " the Holy Communion," but used the more stringent definition, "the .Sacrament of the Lord's Supper according to the usage of the C!hurch of England." But after his Declaration for Liberty of Conscience, he withdrew the clauses, both as to the oaths and as to the Sacrament. In order to naturalization, the King's Letter was addressed to the Attorney-General or to the Solicitor-General containing the name (or names) of the person in whose favour the Clrant of Naturalization was to be drawn out. The Grant, which was recorded on a Patent-Roll, was in the Latin language. Its contents may be described as a repetition of the privileges already expressed in His Majesty's name in the English language, and therefore I copy one of the King's letters from the Camden Society Volume of Lists : — " Ch.\rles, R. — In pursuance of our Order of Council, made the 28th day of July last past [16S1], in fiivour and for the relief and supi)ort of ])0ore distressed protestants, who by reason of the rigours and severities which are used towards them upon the account of their Religion shall be forced to (juitt their native country and shall desire to shelter themselves under our Royall protection and free exercise of their religion, of whom Peter de Laine Est]., French Tutor to our dearest brother James Duke of York his children, is one, as a])i)ears by sufficient certificate produced to one of our principall Secretarys of State, and that he hath received the Holy Communion. Our will and pleasure is that you prepare a Bill for our royall signature, to pass our Create Scale, containing our grant for the making him the sayd Peter de Laino, being an Alien borne, a free denizen of this oure kingdome of England, and that he have and enjoy all rights, priviledges and immunities as other free Denizens do. Pro- vided he, the said Peter de Laine, live and continue with his family in this our kingdome of England, or elsewhere within our Dominions ; the said denization to be forthwith jiast under our great Scale without any fees or other charges whatsoever to be paid by him. For which this shall be your warrant. Dated at Whitehall, the 14th day of October, 16S1. By his Ma''=* Command, " To our Attorney or SoUicitor Generall." L. Jenkin.s. 2 8 FRENCH PROTF.STA NT EXILES. Most of tlie refugees were naturalized in groups, a number being together in one grant. Some of the individual grants I have united in a list, for the sake of reference hereafter. LIST CONTAINING NAMES OF PERSONS BORN "IN PARTIBUS TRANSMARINIS,' NATURALIZED BY ROYAL LETTERS-PATENT, WESTMINSTER. \.—l\si Jan., \bth Mar., and lol/i May, 33 Car. II. (1681). Nicholas Taphorse. John Joachim Becher. Henry JoUis. Henry Tenderman. Henr. Gette, and Henry Losvveres. Note. — The name of Becher appears among inventors — see my vol. ii., page 137. Peter Falaiseau, gent. John De Gaschon, gaif. Joshua Le Feure apothecary, Henrietta wife. Peter Du Gua, Mary ivifc. II.— 15M A'<)7'., 33 Car. II. (1681). John Maximilian de 1' Angle minister, Genovele 7vife. Uranie de I'Orme gentlewoman. Susan Dainhett, Catherine sister. Notes. — Falaiseau is memorialized in my vol. ii., pages 78 and 315. De I'Angle was the Lrotlier of Dean De I'Angle, and long survived him — see my vol. ii., page 221. \\\.—2\st March, 34 Car. II. (1682). Stephen Bouchet, Judith tcv/c, Catherine, Mary, Elizabeth, James, Stephen, Peter, Francis, and Isabella children. Daniel Garin. Honors Polerin James Ranaule, Anne 7oife, James, Honor6 and Judith children, Anne Bouchett niece, Peter Pinandeau and Judith Fait servants. Isaac Blondett. Mary wife of John Martin. Catherine Du P'us wife of Francis Du P'us. John Baudry, Joanna wife, Joanna and Frances daughters. James Bouchett. Joanna Bouchett. Mathurin Boygard, Jeanne luife, Jeanne and Maturin children. Andrew Chaperon. Peter Boirou. John Boucquct, Mary 7uife, John son. John Estive. James Caudaine, Louisa wife, Eliza and Hen- rietta daughters. Francis Gautie, Joanna wife, Isabella, Joanna, and Francis children, Joanna Gautie fiicce. John Bouchet, Eliza wife. John Pellisonneau, Anne wife, Louis and Mar- garet children. John Vignault, Eliza wife, Anne and Eliza children. Peter Tillon, Anne wife, Susan, Francis and John, children, Magdalen Bouquet cousin. Stephen Luzman, Martha wife. Francis Bridon, Jane-Susan 7oife, Francis son, Elias Valet servant. Elias Du P'us, Mary 7i'ife, Elias, John, Mary and Susan children. Anthony Le Roy, Eliza wife, John De P'us brother-in-law. John Boudin, Esther luife. James Angelier, Joanna wife. Anne Baurru. Elias Mauze, Eliza wife, Margaret and Elias children. Peter Videau. Francis Vincent, Anne wife, Anne and Francis children. John Hain. James Targett. Peter Monier. John Gerbrier. Matelin Alart. The next list seems to have fatigued and astounded the official numerator, as the Index informs us that at the date thereof the king has granted " cjuod Petrus Albiii el niillo fi^vi" -i"' sint Indigena;." AyALYS/S ur VOLUMF. FIRST. 3') IV.— 8//; Afan/i, Peter Albin. Jolin Augnicr, Muthurin Allat, Isabella wi/e. Marcy Angelicr. Michael Angelier. John Angoise, Mary ic>i/(e, John and Judith chiUlirn. Jacob Angelier. Daniel Aniory. Charles Auduroy. Josias Auduroy. Charles Autain. Peter Annaut. Nicholas Aubry. Louis Auduroy. John Annaut. Peter Aubert Peter Audeburg, Mary ~ii>ifi-, Peter and Stephen children. Andrew Amoult. Abraham Amoult. Mary Anes. John Astory, Isabella and Mary children. James Baudry. Paul Baudry. Paul Begre. James Benet. Peter Bourgnignon and Susan wife. James Baquer. John Bibbant, Margaret wife. Louis Burchere, Susan wife. Thomas Benoist, Judith toife, Elizabeth, James and Catherine children. John Boullay. John Dubois. Paul Dubois. James Beau-lande. Isaac Bernard, Magdalen, wife, Magdalen, Isaac, Louis, and Peter, children. Peter Barbule, Eliza wife, Elizabeth daughter. Louis Belliard. Philip Barel. Isaac Blanchard. Vincent Bcitoult. Peter Bruino. James Boissonet, Mary, Susan, Louis, Mari- anne, and 01ymi)ia children. Stephen Dubare, John son. Isaac Buteux, Judicq wife, Judicq daughter. James Boche. 34 Car. II. (1682). Christopher Bodvin. James Barle. Francis Bridon, Jeanne ivife, John and Susan children. Peter Baume, Mary Magdalen wife, Peter and Nicholas children. Margaret Baume, sister of the former Peter Baume. Simon Beranger. James Biet. Anthony Biet. James Bumet. Vement Bouni, Jeanne wife, Mary and Eliza- beth children. Jeanne Guery, daughter of said Jeanne Bourn. James BrehuL Peter Panderau David Bessin. Isaac Bonouvrier. Stephen Bon-amy. John Benoist. Abraham Basille. James Bonnel. Mark-Antony Briet, Susan wife, Mark-Antony and Claude children. Gabriel Bontefoy. Daniel Brusson, Mary 7i' and Stephen children. Abraham Caron. Daniel Cailleau. Charles Casset, Judicq, Peter and Elizabeth children. James Carron. John Cardon. John Carpentier, Judicq daughter. Louis Cassel. Paul Cellery. David Cene, Annah daughter. Gideon Charle. Paul Chappell. Stephen Chartier, John-Francis son. John Cheval, Elizabeth 7oifr, Margaret and Mary children. Samuel Cheval. Abraham Vincent Chartier, James brother. Jeanne Carlier. Annah wife of J ohn Carlier. John Combe. John Chaboussan, I^Lary, Jane, Louisa, and John children. Erancis Chesneau. Isabella Chatain. John Chapet, Hester wife. Daniel Chcseau. Samuel Challe. Matthew Chabrol. Francis Chouy. Laurence Chemonon. Stephen Camberland, Mary sister. Mary Chovet. Andrew Cigournai, Charlotte laife, Susan, Peter, Charlotte, and Andrew children, Ale.Kander Cigournai ne/>hetcK Michael Clement, Mary zcife, Mary, John, Charles, Michael, and Abraham children. James Courtois, Martha wife, Mary, James and PhilijJ children. James Collier, Judicq 7cife. Jacques Gorion. Renatus GouUe. Francis Gabelle. John Gorion. Jeremy Gourdin, Jeremy, James, Magdalen, Mary, Charlotte and Louisa children. John Gobert. John Gouffe. Jeanne widow of Henry Gobs. Louis Groleau. Peter Grossin. Adam Gruider, John, Peter, Mary, and Anna, children. Paul Grimault. James Gravelle, Mary Magdalen and Mary Jane children. Claude Grunpet and three children. Nicholas Grunpet. Justin Grunpet. Austin Grunpet, Sarah wife. Mary widow of James Gribelin, Sarali, Mary, and Jeanne children. Simon Gribelin. Augustus Grasset. Mary Grassett. Elizabeth Griet. John Guilleaume. Joseph Guillon. Paul Guillard. Stephen Guillard. Simeon Guerin. William Ghiselin, Margaret 7C'ifc. John Ghiselin, Mary ivife. Nicholas Ghiselin, Peter Hcsne, Annah icdfe, Peter, Rachel, Marianne and Mary children. William Heron, Catherine wife. Peter Hubert, Rachel wife, Mary, Marianne and Judicci dt7i/gh/ers. Stej^hen 1 Icl)ert. John Ilaniniel, Mary 7i'/7t'. John Ilibon, Mary wife, Mark and John sons. A XA LYSIS OF VOLUME FIRST. 33 Henry Hesse, Mary loife. Solomon Hesse. Nicholas Hcuiie, Laurans and Francis sons. James Hoiircau. Tcter Hervot. Peter Hellot. John Henault. Noel Iloussay, Mary w/J/i-, Noel son. Daniel Huet, Mary wi/c, Mary daughter. Matthew Huet. Abraham Huet. Daniel Iluger, Jeanne iuife. Isaac Hayes. Peter Horioh, John his brother. Samuel Janse, Samuel, Mary and Isaac children. Judicq Janse. Hester Janse. James Janse. John Jerseau. Touslaine Jegn, Mary loife, Isaac and Mary children. John Ilamber, Elizabeth tvife, Eli;.abelh daughter. Jerosme Jouvenel, Francisca wi/c. John Jacques. Ciiarlcs Le Chevalier. Daniel Le Tellier. Gabriel Le Quien, Catherine 7iii/c. John Lesclure. Nicholas Le Febure, Nicholas and Mary child/ en. Francis Le Blon, Mary wife, Jeanne and Peter children. Isaac Le Vade. John Leger, ALary ici/e. James Lombard. Elias Ledeu.x, Martha 7cife. John Laurens, Anne wife, Annah atul Susan daughters. Michael Le Hueur. Abraham Le Royer. John Le Roy. Peter Le Maistre. James Le Moine. Isaac Le Dou.x, Mary wife, James, Louis and Magdalen children. Isaac Le Doux. Peter Le Castiile. Marino Lefubure, Mary wife, Peter and Mark- Antony sons. John Le Vieux, Jeanne 7ciife. Ephraim Le Caron. Francis Lebert. Henry Limousin. Daniel Lucas, Mary, Augustus, James antl Peter children. Louis Le Conte, Louis son. Joiin Le Cartier, Marianne and Anne children. John Lambert. James Liege. Peter Le Anglois, Mary 7(1/1; Martha, David, Peter and Mary children. John Lestrille de la Clide. John Lewis Le Jeune. Peter Le Clere, Elizabeth 7ci/fe, Mary-Eliza- beth, ALarianne and Anne children. Peter Legrand. Nicholas Le Grou. James Larcher. .Michael Liegg, ^L^gdalene icufe, John, Francis, and James sons. .\nthony Lesneur. Elizabeth widow of Peter Legrand, David, Mary and Peter children. John Lavannotte, Susan 7i'ife, ALiry and Isaac children. Margaret widow of Peter Ledou.x. Marv Le Mer. E 34 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Sarah Lespine. Hester Lame. Isabella Faucon. Magdalen wife of David Lailleau. Annah widow of Richard Legrand. Annah I-a Postre. Susan widow of Peter Lefabure, Susan daughter. Francis Le Porte, Annah icn/c. Abraham Huyas. Paul Le Creu. Matthew Le Creu. Elizabeth wife of Anthony Le Roy. John Le Page, Renatus son. Anthony Le Page. Isaac Michon, Rahomi wife, Mary, James and Jacob children. Louis Merignan, Hester wife, Louis son. Nicholas Masly, Susan wife, Abraham, Nicho- las, James and Anne children. Anthony Marinville. John Meroist. Peter Moisau. James Morion, Catherine wife. Vincent Maillard, Anne ivife. Philip Mery. Stephen Maillet. Renatus Melun. Job James Marmot, John-Maximilien and John- James sons. John MuUett, Susan wife. James Montier. Matthew Montallier. John Maurin. Michael Metaire, Michael son. Henry Massienne. Gentien Mariet. Paul Maigne. Daniel Mahaut. Gabriel Morand. Francis Manvillain. James Montagu, Louisa ivife. James Maunier, Mary itnfe, Mary daughter. Peter Maintry. Abraham Michael. John Marot. James Moreau. Denis Melinet, Mary-Magdalen his tvifc, Anne Mary-Magdalen their daughter. John Martin. Peter Malpoil. James Moisau, Rachel wife. John Marandcl. Bartholomew Morin, Jeremy, Henry, Bartho- lomew and Susan, children. James Menanteau. Ezekiel Marseille. Jansie Mariot. Oliver Martinet. John Maurice, Margaret daughter. Bernard Maudre. Paul Martin. Andrew Martinet, Hester tvife. Daniel Marchant, Daniel, Joseph, Mary, Mag- dalen, Hester, Mary-Magdalen, Claude, Leah and Susan children. Susan Matte. Judicq, wife of John Monnerat. widow of Isaiah Marchett, Mary and Isaac children. Joanna widow of Peter Mathe, Susan daughter. Antoinette Martin. Hester Moreau. Peter Mougine. Elias Naudin, Arnauld, Mary and Elias children. Peter Nau. John Nourtier. Andrew Nyort. Claud Nourcy. Peter Normand. James Normanide. Anna widow of Isaac Normanide, Mary and Elizabeth children. Elizeah Obert, Mary icife, James, Abraham and Judith children. Germaine Oufrie, Annah 7i.nfe. Louis Ouranneau, Mary wife. John Ouranneau. Elye Pere, Elye and Austin sons. Daniel Poulveret. Elizabeth Mary Pavet. Paul Puech. Bernard Puxen. Arnould Pron. Peter Pron. James Poignet, Anna wife, Marianne daughter. Charles Poupe, Annah wife. Peter Porch, Frances wife, Mary, Judicq, James, Noel, John and Francis children. Francis Pousset. Margaret widow of John Pousset. Anthony Poitevin, Gabrielle wife, Anne, An- thony and Peter children. Charles Piqueret, Isaac son. ANALYSIS OF \01.LMI: FIRST. 35 Francis Pontitre. John Piquet, John son. Anne Pi(iuet. Isaac Pincjue, Catherine wife. Louis Pelhsonneau. John Pellotier. Andrew Pellotier. James Petitoiel. Andrew Puisancour, Charlotte 7iv/c, Peter and An nail children. Stephen Pesche. John Pesche. James Pelet. Jeanne Petitoiel. Anthony Penault. Thomas Percey, Susan 7vife, Susan daughter. Andrew Pension Abraham Perrault, Magdalen tci/e, Martha, Hester, Peter, Laurens, Charles, Berllemy, Annah, and Tiieodore children. Daniel Pilon. Esaiah Panthin. Esaiah Panthin. Abraham Panthin. Peter Paysant. John Paysant. John Pantrier. Peter Papavogn. John Baptist Paravienne. John Pau. James Pagnis. ^Liry Pele. Jeanne widow of Andrew Perdereau. Anne Perdereau. Jeanne Pierrand. iSIary wife of Paul Pigro. widow of Egidius Pauret, Elizabeth and Mary children. Philip Pinandeau, Jeanne 'icife. Charles Pilon. Francois Quern. Daniel Quintard, Louisa wife, Mary daughter. Stephen Quinault, ^L-^gdalen wife, Stephen and Claud sons. James Renault. Daniel Ravart. Louis Regnier. Daniel Regnier. John Ruel. David Rollin, Hester wife, Martha, Peter and Anthony children. Peter Reberole. Hester Rollin. John Robert, Annah wife, Anne and Mary children. Peter Roussellet. David Ranel. John Raimond. Elizabeth widow of Peter Raine, Elizabeth daughter. Isaac Rainel. John Resse alias Du Chouquet. Francis Rousseau. Jacob Rousseau. John Rousseau. John Roule. James Roger, Julia wife, Anthony son. James Rondart. James Roger. Jeanne widow of Gen'ais Ravel. John Robert, Catherine 7i'/7<', Susan, Catherine- Mary, and Philip children. David Sarasin. James Sarasin. John Saint-Aman, and Vtne-Magdalen daugh- ter of the said John Saint-Aman. James Saint-Aman, Margaret wife, Magdalen daughter. Matthew Saint-Aman, Mary 7vife, Mary, Ju- dith, Rachel, Hester, Abraham, and Matthew children. Francis Soureau, Frances wife, Francis, Peter, and Abraham sons. Magdalen Shipeau, Magdalen dai/ohter. Luke Sene, Judith nife, John, Mary, James, and Elizabeth children. Peter Segouret. John Sieurin. Renatus Simonneau. Peter Sibron. Leonard Souberan. Noel Solon. Jeanne Solon. Samuel Targier, Jeanne 7i'ife. Peter TouUion. James Taumur. John Taumur. John Tavernier. James Target, Isabella daughter. Peter Tellier. John Tillon. Philip Thcrcot. Isaac Thuret. Peter Toutaine, Judith ic'ife. 36 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Peter Totin. James Torquet. Peter Touchart, Catlierine 7i'ifc, Magelin, Elizabeth, Peter, and Margaret children. Michael Tourneur, Mary icifc, John-Peter, John, and Mary children. Michael Tourneur. Jacob Trigau, Margaret luife. John Trillet, Elizabeth 7vife, Mary-Magdalen daughter. John Vermallete, Anne luifc. Hector Vattemare. Joel Vautille. Samuel Vattelet. James Vare, Mary 7iife. Gabriel and Peter Boulanger. George Boyd. Aaman Bounin. Peter Billon. Nicholas Bockquet. James Augustus Blondell. Mary Bibal. Samuel Bousar. Francis Brinquemand. John Bernard. Peter Bernardcau. John Bruquier. James Bruquier. Isaac Bonmot, Daniel children. Frederic Blancart. Henry Bustin. Matthew Bustin. Joseph Bailhou. Esther Bernou, Gabriel, Mary, Esther and James her children. i\, James and Benignus 46 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. James Barbot. Peter Bourdet. John Bourdet. Stephen Barachin. Louis Barachin. Isaac BeauHeu. Samuel Brusseau. John Beaufills. David Bosanquet. Theophilus Bellanaer. EUsha Badnett. George Basmenil (clerk) and Mary wife. Peter Boycoult, Catherine ivifc, Catherine and Magdalene children. Abraham Binet, Magdalene wife, Judith daugliter. John Peter Boy. John Boisdeschesne. Abraham Chrestien, Mary wife, Martha and Magdalene cliildrcn. Peter Chrestien. Bernard Coudert, Bernard, Benjamin and Jane children. David Chasles. Isaac Couvers and Anne wife. John Colom, Anne wife, Anthony, John, Martha and Mary children. James Callivau.x, Jane wife, Charlotte, daughter. Arnaud Cazautnech and Jane 'wife. Daniel Chevalier, Susanna wife, Daniel and James sons. Tohn Baptist Chovard. Peter-Qia?peau. Samuel Cooke. Thomas Chauvin, Charlotte 7i.iife, Thomas, Francis and Catherine children. John Courtris. James Crochon. Peter Sarah and Esther Chefd'hotel. Peter Caron. Peter Chaseloup. Paul Charron and Anne 7vife. Marquie Calmels. George Chabot. Paul De Brissac. Samuel De la Couldre, Mary wife, Judith and Margarette children. Jane De Varennes, Peter and Jane //(/■ children. Daniel DuCoudray, Magdalene zc//i', Daniel J'fW. Paul De Pront. Gabriel De Pont. * Supposed to James Dioze. Abraham and Daniel De Moasre.* Isaac de Hogbet, Rachel wife, Charles and Isaac sons. Josius Du Val. Peter Du Fau. Francis Dese, Mary ivife, Reynard and Peter sons. John Mendez De Costa. John De la Haye, John, Thomas, Charles, Moses, Adrian and Peter sons. James Doublet, Martha 7i'ifc, David, James and Mary children. Peter Daude. Isaac Delamer. John Deconuiq, Catherine and Martha children. Isaac and Mary De Mountmayour. John De la Place and Louise wife. John De Bearlin. James De Bordet and Mary icnfe. James Gideon De Sicqueville (clerk). Henry le Gay De Bussy. Philip De la Loe (clerk). Abraham Dueno Henriquez. Abraham Duplex, Susan wife, James, Gideon, George and Susan child/ en. Peter Greve. Francis Francia. Mary De la Fuye, Catherine, Elizabeth, Mag- dalene, Mary, Margaret and Anne children. Moses De Pommare, Magdalene ivifc, Moses and Sunan ^.'li/^dren John Droilhet. John De Casaliz. Peter Dumas. Abraham Dugard and Elizabeth 7cife. Gerard De Wicke. Daniel Delmaitre. Solomon Eyme. Denys Felles. John Fennvill. Andrew Fanevie. Arnaud Frances, Anne zoife, Arnaud son. Renatus Fleury. Peter Fontaine (clerk) Susan wife, James, Louis, Benignus, Anne, Susan and Esther children. John Fargeon. Isaac Early. Peter Flurisson. John Fallon. Andrew and John Fraigneau. be Dc Moivie. A.XA/.YSJS or VOLUME FIRST. 47 Daniel Flurian. Francis Guerin, Magdalene ici/e, Francis and Anne children. Nicholas Guerin. Louis Galdy. I'aul Gravisset (clerk). Samuel Georges. Klias Ckiinard. Henry Guichenet. Louis Galland and Rachel wife. Joseph Guicheret. Claud Groteste (clerk). James Garon. Isaac Garinoz. William Guillen. Daniel Goisin. John Gurzelier. .Andrew Gurzelier. Peter Goilard. James Martel Gouland. William Govy. John Gravelot and Catherine wife. Matthew Gelien. Isaac H anion. John Harache. John Ilebert, Elizabeth li'ife., John, Samuel, Eliza and Mary diildreii. Mary and Susan Hardossin. Moses Herviett, Esther toife, John and Mat- thew sous. Anthony Hulen. Anthony Julien, Jane n'ife, Anne, Susan, Mary and Esther cliildien. Henry Jourdin. Louis Jyott, Esther wife, Esther and Mary children. Charlotte Justel. Andrew Jansen. Anthony Juliot, Anthony and Abraham sous. James Jousset Mary Joly. John La vie. Anthony L'heureu.\. Simon- Peter and Mark Laurent. James Le Blond. James Lovis and Abraham his sou. Esaias Le Bourgeois. Henry Le Conte. John and Robert Le Plastrier. Helen Le Franc de Mazieres. John Lombard (clerk), Francisca wife, Daniel and Philip sons. Daniel Lo Febure. Adrian Lcnnoult. Peter Le ISas. John Le Plaistrier, Charlotte wife, Abraham and Jane children. Francis l^icam (clerk). Gabriel Le Boytevy. Benjamin Le Ilommedieu. Samuel Le 'I'ondu, Anne 7vife, Magdalene daiii;hler. Francis Le Sombre. Michael Le Tondu, Anne wife, Thomas, Mat- thew and John sous. James Garnt Louzada. John Lenglache, ^iaxy wife, Mary and Martha children. John Peter Laserre. F'erdinand Mendez. Samuel Metayer (clerk). Philip Martines. Susan Metayer, Loui.s, Mary, .Anne and Rachel her children. John Marin (clerk), Elizabeth wife, Martha and Susan children. Peter Moreau, Francisca icife, Daniel, Eliza- beth, Mary Anne, and Mary children. Charles Moreau, Mary Anne wife, Daniel and Henrietta children. Jonas Marchais, Judith wife and Isaac son. Ambrose and Lsaac Minet. Nicholas Montelz and Magdalen wife. Patrick Marion. Solomon Monnerian. Judith and Frances Moret. Peter Montelz. Michael Mauze, Michael, John, Peter, and Isabel his children. Stephen Mignan. Isaac Martin. Peter and Mary Moreau. F'rancis Maymal. Daniel Muss'ard. Peter Monhallier de la Salle. Daniel Mogin and Margaret wife. Rotito Mire. James Maupetit and Susan udfe. Mary Minuel. Peter Mercier, Susan -wife, Peter, Jane, Susan and Anne children. Lewise Marchet and John son. Abraham Baruch Henriquez John NoUeau. 48 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Elias Nezereau, Judith TivJ/;-, Esther, Judith, and Helen children. John Oriot. Solomon Pages (clerk). Daniel Payen. Peter Phellipeau. John Papin. Francis Papin. Aaron Pereira. Peter Pain and Margaret TcZ/i'. David Papin, Anne viifi, David and Susan children. James Pelisson. Adrian Perreat. Simon Pautuis. John Prou. Peter Prat. Abraham Page. William Portail, Margaret wife, William, Fran- cis, Hector, Mary and Gabrielle children. James Pineau. James Paisible. Daniel Paillet. Moses Palot and Martha itnfe. Stephin Peloquin. Alphonzo Rodriguez. John la Roche. John and Peter Renie. James Roussell. Peter Esprit Raddisson. Stephen Ribouleau. Peter Roy, Susan wife, Elias, John, Daniel and Susan children. Gabriel Ramoudon. Paul Rapillart. Adam Roumie, Anne li'ifc, Adam, James, and Peter sons. Louis Rame. Reymond Rey. Paul Rey. Abraham Renaud. Anthony Rousseau, Elizabeth, Francis and Onorey his children. Francis Robert. Samuel Sasportas. Peter Sanseau. Peter Seguin and Peter son. Charles Sonegat. Stephen Setirin. Matthew Simon, Rachel ivife, Matthew son. Alexander Siegler. Francis Saureau, Francisca nnfe, Abraham, Daniel, Peter and James sons. John Saulnier. Matthew Savary. Stephen Savary, Luke and Matthew his sons. Joshua Soulart and Elizabeth wife. Paul Senat. Mary Toulchard. David Thibault. Margaret Ternac, Francis and Anne her chil- dren. John Thierry. Peter Thauvet. Abraham Tourtelot, James-Thomas, James- Moses and John his children. John Thomas. Aaron Testas (clerk). Peter Tousaint. Peter Vatable. Francis Vrigneauet and Jane wife. Mark Vernous (clerk). Anthony Vareilles. John Van Levsteran. Gabriel Verigny. Francis Vaurigand. Francis Williamme. Mary Yvonnet, John, Samson and Mary her children. Mary Lerpiniere. James Mougin. Heude. Francis De Beauheu. Susan De Beauheu, Henry and Henrietta children. 26th February. Esther De la Tour, wife of Henry Lord Eland. Notes. — Until the last few names, this list is alphabetical. As to the great Dr Alli.x and the families descended from him, see my vol. ii., pages 208 and 241. Apparently the names of three sons are given, but probably there were two only ; the elder son is said to have been named John-Peter. The Bosanquet fiimily and several members of it are menioriaHsed in my vol. ii., pages 244, 291, 292, and 300. I find the surname Yvonet, in the Gentleman's Magazine, which announces the marriage, on 13 Sept. 1752, of Mr Rushworth of Doctors' Commons, to Miss Yvonet, daughter of John I'aul Yvonet, Esq., of Isleworth. It appears from the ANALYSIS or VOLUME FIRST. 49 Historical Register and Reatson's Imiex, that this Mr Yvonet was a Commissioner of Appeal in the Excise from 1725 to 1766. In this hst are some names of noble sound, such as Le Gay de Bussy, Claud Groteste (probably De la Mothc), Hamon, J^e I'Vanc de Mazieres, Monhallier de la Salle, and Phellipeau. Several foreign names, which are not French, also occur. As to the Baroness lilanJ, see my Vol. II., page 227. And see page 237 for the Reverend Lombards. XV.— 2IJ-/ Miinh, 4 /a. II. (1688 N.s.) Paul Colomiez (clerk). James Amail, Mary ^i-ii/e. Peter .-\melot. Magdalin Ardouin. Frances Alotte. Peter Asselin. Louis Bennet, Martha, wife, Catherine daugh- ter. David Boulanger. James Borie. F.lias Brevet (clerk). Isaac Bonneval. James Brunei. Denis Barquenon. Clement Boehm. Gideon Benoist. Samuel Ban([uier. Daniel Bellet. Andrew Bcrnon. Michael Brunei, Mary ^ijife, Mary and Cather- ine daug/itcTs. Mark Barbat (clerk). Samuel Barbat. Catherine Barbat. Anne Bourdon. Elizabeth Barachin, Peter, Daniel, and John //cv- s', James, Francis, and Louis children. Isaac Le Blond. John Reyners. Gabriel Vanderhumeken, Peter Dove. Benjamin 15arbaud. Francis Fo.\. Francis Girard, .Mary wife. Gerard Baudertin. Paul Labelle. Daniel Bobin. Benjamin Dariette. Renatus Rezeau, Rcnatus, .Vbraharn,- and Peter sons. Anthony Puitard. John Hastier. James Croze. Eiias Polran. Joiin Peltrau. James La Bachelle, Judith li'ife, Peter, John, and Henry sons. Paul Girard. Mark Huguetan. Christiana Holl. John Ermenduiger. John Matthews. Louis Guetet. Benjamin Boulommer. Peter De Boiville, Elizabeth wife, Renatus, Anne, and Elizabeth children. Peter Triquet. Daniel Collet. Elias Rondeau. Elias Derit. John Beneche. John Le Clerk. Richard Regnauld. Guidon Babault. Alexander Mariette, Magdalen wife. William Bichot, Mary wife, James, William, Peter, David and Mary children. ^L^ry (iilbert. Tliomasset Catherine Gilbert. Anne Girardot Du Perron. Samuel Van Huls. William Van Huls. Anthony Meure. Isaac Francis Petit. Nicholas Lougvigny. Peter Du Souley. Isaac Beranger. Elizabeth Chalvet. Martin Eele. Mary .\nnc Dornaut. 58 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Mary Gontier. Francis Du Plessis. James Chevalier Knight. Francis Foulrede. John De La Tour. Elizabeth Beranger. Elias Foissin. John Bourgeon. Peter, David, and Thomas Carre. Adam Beaune. Adam Willaume. John Petineau, Judith 7oifc: Humphrey and Paul Toiquet. Stephen Rougeart. Austin Courtaud. Daniel Guesnaud. Charles Gabrier. Peter Le Conte, Peter, Josias, and Michael sons. Daniel Sandrin. James Malide. Joachim Bashfeild. Andrew Thauvet. Note. — As to the surname, " Brocas," see my Vol. II., page 274. XXII. Peter Bouhereau.* Isaac Pinot. Jacob Du Four. Paul Quenis. Abraham Monfort. John Anthony Rocher. Peter Amiot. John de Bounionville. Peter Bouchet. Isaac Bouchet. Daniel Heury. James Vassall. Louis Martin. Peter Le Ficaut. Michael Brunant. John Alvant. Rock Belon, Peter de Nipeville. John Aubourg. John Ceaumont. Daniel Le Sueur. John Merit. Peter Baudovin, Peter sons. Peter Thiboust. Michael Caillon. John Boudier. Dionysius Quesnel. John Tonard. Andrew de I'Espine. James Marche. Gasi)ard Pillot. Paul Rotier. Jacob Aubri. David Quache. John de Charines, Elizabeth ici/e. * At the beginning of this Grant, the the names are repeated. Magdalen, wi/i', John and &th May, <)th Will. III. (1697). Louis Perand. Francis Francillon. Francis Jeay. Anne le Clere d'Argent. Isaac Roger, Esther 7i'ifi'. Henry Cotigno. Abraham Thesmaler. Stephen Albert, Judith ivifc, Stephen and Catherine children. John Albert. Michael Giraux. Isaac Guiday. Daniel Bellemart. Susan Martinaux Ferrant. Louis Martinaux. Nicholas Martinaux. James Martinaux. Susan Martinaux. Ephraim Fouquet. Peter Fouquet. John Pertuson. Peter Richer, Mary i^'ifc, Peter son. Solomon Gilles. Baptist Dupre. John Yoult, Jane wife, Peter son. John Perigal. James Perigal. Robert Auber. James Digard. Scipio Dalbias, Louisa wife. John Quesnel. Abraham Quesnel. Theophilus de Bemonville. Peter Gilbert. John Quille. Isaac Tonard, John son. spelling of this name is wrong ; but it is rectified at tl\e end, where all ANALYSIS or VOLUME FIRST. 59 Peter Hemard. James Bcschefcr. Peter Plate). Claiuline Platel. John Chartier. Louis Cuny. John Maillard. Peter Maillard. James I.e Maitton. Michael Couvelle. Isaac Joly. Peter Dufour. John Chenevie. Louis Cart. Peter Gerdaut. Radegonde Carre Bragnier. Simon Dubois. ■ Henry ^\'ag^.•nar. Augustin Christian Bozuman. Olympia Favin. Thomasset Mar)- Ann Boulier de Beauregard. Catherine Siegler. Ursula Siegler. Isaac Martin, Mary 7i'ifi\ Isaac, James, and Louis sous. Margaret du Gucmier du CIoux. Matthew Perrandin. Abraham Perrandin. John Cheradaine. Peter Maudct. Frederick Keller. Louis Crude. Daniel Montil. Peter Pelerin. Peter Culston. Charles de la Tour. Rachel Maynard. Anthony Monteyro, Anthony son. Bemard Laurans. Ruben Cailland. Daniel Bretelliere. Robert Caille. Luke Dondart Trevigar. Mar)' Rapillard. Solomon de Guerin, Anne '^5 Andrew Gaydan. Michael Ruiny. John (icntilet. John Dumas. Matthew Dinard. Francis Dumolin. John Gorin. Stephen Gronguet (clerk). Francis Vigot Gronguet (clerk). Jolin La Conibe. Peter Lombard. Isaac Bernard. Francis Courtois. John Coutois. Albert Derignee, Peter and Matthew sons. John Furon. James ^L-lrc. Jacob Margas. Peter Jastrain. Henry De la Faville. David Lesturgeon. Abraham Barian. Anthony Bartalot. Israel Daignebere. John Claverie. Peter Benouad. James Chaille. Stephen Bourian. Francis Bouchet. Andrew Leger. Matthew Boigard. Peter Ramier. James Valet. Abraham Moncousiet. John Louis Loubier. John Gastaing. James Sanson. Peter Blanchard. Michael Chaille. John Greene a/Zas Vert. James Dire. Julian Bire. John Fougeron. John Madder. Daniel Beluteau. John Mayer. Jacob Poitier. Louisa Dujiort. Mary Duport. Michael Roux. Frances Gautier. Peter Le Cheaube. Daniel Tirand, ALiry ii'v/r-, Daniel, David, Joseph, John, Stejjhcn, Mary Magdalen, ALnrgaret, Mary Anne, and Eliza, children. Isaac Barbier, Jane 'wift, Lsaac and James sous. Gabriel Dugua, Anne ',oift\ Thomas Crispeau, Mary wife. Isaac Chapellier, Anne tci/e. John Chalianei. Paul Galabin. James Dargent. Ayme Gamault. Josias Le Comte. John Baptist Galabin. Alexander Le Rouz. Daniel Simon, Martha wife. Simon Le Plastrier, Anne wife, Simon and Anne children. Samuel La Fertie. David Le Court, Mary Anne wife, David, Taneguy and Catherine children. Benjamin Le Court, Rachel wife. Anthony Clerenbault. Gideon Batailhey. John Caussat, I^Iagdalene 'wife. Peter Malegne. Peter Souhier. John Souhier. Daviil Le 'I'ellier. John Lecjuesne. 1 )avid Lcciuesne. Paul Godard, Eliza wife. David Doublet, jun. Henry Beaumont. Jolin Rachan. John Russiat Daniel Cannieres (clerk). Peter Ardesoif. James Neau. Anthony Dalbis. Samuel Coignand. Victor Coignand. Samuel Perreau. Stephen Chevalier. Henry More. David Gausscn. Peter Bossairan (clerk), Catherine wife, Mary and Anne children. Anthony Aufrere. Israel Anthony Aufrere (clerk). Jacob Juibert. John Chabot. David Chabot. James Montier, Mary wife. 66 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Notes. — As to the surname, Cabibel, I have often thought that the important modern name, Cabbel, was derived from it. As a beginning of changing French names into Enghsh equivalents, observe the entry " John Greene alias Vert." Here we have several surnames afterwards noticed in Memoirs, as Rouquet, Garnault, Lequesne, Gaussen, and Aufrt?re. Anthony Aufrt>re is the wealthy and admirable father, and the Rev. Israel Anthony Aufrere, the no less excellent and most deservedly influential son. XXV.— 3^z'/«/)', 13/// Will. 777.(1701). Abel Langelier, Mary 7oife, Abel, John, Louis and Mary children. Elias Tovillett. Elias Brossard. John Gaudy, John, Isaac, and Francis children. Isaac La Font, Rachel wife, Jane and Honoree children. John Lafont. Abraham Lafont. Isaiah Deveryt. Isaac Lusson, and Mary ivife. Daniel Poletier. James Soutflet. Laurence Payen. Abraham Courtin. Henry Cocker. John Maynard. Abraham Allais, Catherine wife, Stephen, Mary, and Catherine children. Arthur Le Conte. James Chabaud. James Peraud. Abraham Outand. William Drovett. Peter Doruss. Peter Guioneau. John Guerin. Elias Vouliart. Noah Vuclas. David Espinet. Peter Jambelin. John Cornet. Vincent Tillon. James Cromer. James Guion. Charles Couilland. James Mercie, and Anne 'wife. Stephen Gendreu. John Ageron. Henry Berslaer. Adam Paetts. Daniel Bemardeau. Isaac Prestrau. Samuel Guibald. John Tartarin. Francis Gourdon. James Massiot. John Savouret. John Hester, Susan, Marianne, and Mary children. William Heurtin, and Elizabeth wife. Andrew Malie. Benjamin de Charrieu. Nicolas L'Advocat, Elizabeth 7L' ^. ^. JACOBI BONNELII, ARMIGERI, Cujus e.xuvia; una cum Patris et duorum filionmi Alberti et Samuelis ju.xta sitne sunt. Regibus Carolo \\^° Jacobo \\^°- et Gulielmo 111'°- Erat a rationibus generaUbus, in Hibernia, temporibus licet incertis, fidus — ab omni factione immunis, nemini suspectus, omnibus charus. Natus est Novembris 14°- 1653. Patre Samuele, qui, propter suppetias Regiae Familiae exulanli largiter exhibitas, Officio Computatoris-Generalis Fisci Hibernici, An" Dom. 1661 una cum filio remuneratus est — Avo Daniele — Proavo Thoma qui sub Duce Albano, Religionis ergo, Flandriii patria sua exul, Norvicum in Anglia profugit, ubi mox civis, et demiim prastor. Pietate avita et pene congenita, im6 primseva et Apostolica, Erudilione, prudentia, probitate, comitate, et morum simplicitate conspicuus — Mansuetudine, patientia, et (super omnia) charitate insignis — Urbem hanc, exemplo et prsceptis meliorem, morte ma^stam, reliquit. Obiit Aprilis 28, 1699. Monimentum hoc ingentis doloris publici, proesertim sui, exiguum pro meritis, posuit conjux mcestissinia Jana e Coninghamorum gente. Another eminent refugee from Ypres was Francis La Motte, son of Baldwin La Motte. Francis La Motte and Mary his wife fled from " the great persecution in the Low Countries under the bloody and cruel Duke of Alva." They had hesitated whether their place of refuge should be Frankendale in the Palatinate or England, and providentially choosing the latter country they, in the fourth year of our Queen Elizabeth, settled at Colchester, having made " piety their chiefesl and greatest interest, and the free exercise of religion their best purchase." This phraseology I copy from the life of their son, John, included in Clark's Lives of sundry eminent persons in this later age (London 1683), a life abridged from a separate memoir. To * His funeral sermon was preachetl Ijy IJisliop Wclcnliall. The Bonnell motto w.is Tents rcrrpiims d Hospes. THE RADXOR GROIP. 8i old Samuel Clark I am indebted also for all the facts, except several dates and the contents of the will, which an obliging correspondent has furnished. John Laniot, or Lamoit, or I-amotte, or I.a Motte, was born at Colchester on ist May 1577, but when a young man he removed with his fatlicr to London. His (lither, who had been " very forward and industrious in setting up and promoting the great and useful manufacture of making Sayes anil liayes," died in London. John Lamotte had, before his father's death, begun business on his own account as a merchant. He is entered in the List of 16 18, as an inhabitant of Hroad Street, "John Lamot, born in Colchester, nsdiij^ iih-nhaiidizdu", free of the company of Weavers in Lonilon." His parish was the parish of St. Bartholomew the Little, near the Royal Exchange. He served the public in various offices, and rose to be an alderman. His first wife was Ann Tivelin, widow of Daviil King, and a daughter of refugee parents settled at Canterbury ; he had two sons and eight ilaughters, but Hester and Elizabeth wx're the only ciiildrcn who grew up. His wife died in January 1626 (new style) ; she was buried in St. Bartholomew by the E.xchangc on the 3otli. John Lamotte, Esq., married again in 1627, Elizabeth, widow of Levinus Munck, Esq.,* " one of the six clerks ;" by her he had no children, and he was again a widower in 1644, Mrs I.amotte being buried on 22d October. He was for nearly thirty years an ekler in the Dutch Church in London. " Every year, ujjon the 17th of November, which was the day when Queen Elizabeth came to the crown, that ])Ut an end to the Maryan Persecution, he made a feast ;" and woukl stand uj) before his guests and make a good speech on the light of the gospel and the national enjoyment of liberty " for so many years, the number whereof he would alwayes tell them what it was." He devoted much of his income to benevolent donations, giving a share (as he himself put on record), to " the commonwealth, the service of God, the ministers, and the poor members of Christ." " In that cruel and bar- barous massacre in Fiemont not long before his death, when a general collection was made for those poor creatures who survived that storm, the minister and some other of the parish wherein he lived (St. Bartholomew's Exchange) going to his house to see what he would con- tribute, and sending uj) word to him what was the occasion of their coming, he came to them and told them that they had had a collection in the Dutch Church for them where he had contributed twenty pound ; and (saith he) the Devil hath tempted me to jnit you off with this answer, but he shall not prevail, and therefore here is ten pounii for you more on this occa- sion." His daughter Hester was married, first, on January 2Sih, 1623 (new style), to John Mannyng, Esq., merchant, and second, to Sir Thomas Honeywood, knight, " of Maiks-hal" in Essex. Her three children by her first husband died young, and of the seven children by her second husband there survived Elizabeth, Thomas and John-I-aniotte Honeywood. The other daughter Elizabeth was married on 19th July 1632 to Maurice Abbott, daughter of Sir Maurice, and niece of Archbishop Abbott ; her married life was brief; she left a son, Maurice. John Lamotte, Esq., died on 13th July 1655, aged 78, and his will, dated May 23rd. w-as proved on 8th August by Mr James Houblon of London, merchant, and by the testator's grandson, Maurice Abbott. It is unnecessary to mention the domestic portion of the will, except that it contains a legacy to his stepson. Rev. Hezekias King. His charitable bequests were;^5 to the poor of the parish of St. Bartholomew, and ^20 for a weekly lecture on Sunday afternoon j;^ 100 to the Dutch Church in London, and another;^ 100 for maintaining their minister, also to the French Churcli in London, to churches in Colchester and other places, to the poor in hospitals, prisons, i*tc., many bequests. He also left a letter to his daughter, and to his four grandchildren, containing benedictions and exhortations, and conclud- ing, " I would have every one of you to be zealous for the service ofCiod — heartily aftectionaie to thtpoor members of Christ — and to give with the relief a comfortable word when occasion pc ^s." There is a very fine and rare engraved portrait of Mr Lamotte by Faithorne. •e Calendars of Wills proved in London from 1568 to 1598 contain no refugee surnames sh< *j.yjr Munck was a refugee from Bribant, and is entered in the list of 1618 as an inhabitant of Lime Street War Vhere he is styled a gentleman, and stated to have becii naturalized by .\ct of Parliament in the first year of I- *'-'^- nes ; it is added, " hee is clark of his \Ia*>'' signet." 82 IXTRODUCTORY .\rEMOIRS. ot note, and I had not sufficient lime to examine many of the wills, where the names seemed to betoken refugee testators. The first likely name was Paschall de Lasperon, of Wells, (will dated 13th January, 1570), but he proved to be an Englishman, as also did John Delehaye of King's Lynn, yeoman, nth Dec. 1576. My first successful search brought up an affidavit of the testament made by word of mouth, by Thierry de la Courte, of Sommers Kaye, London, merchant, native of Valenchiennes, "then using his five senses, remembrance, and under- standing," viz., on 28th July, 1573 ; the affidavit was made before Parole Tipoote, public notary, by Mr James Tovillett called Des Roches, minister of God's Word in the French church, in the City of London, (aged 52), Nicholas Leonarde Tayler, native of Vireng, deacon of the said church, (aged 55), and James Jeffrey, merchant, native of Valenchiennes, (aged 37) ; the e.xecutors were Anthonie de la Courte, native of Quesnoy-Ie-Conte, merchant, (brother of Thierry), James Rime his brother-in-law, and John Tullier, merchant, native of Tournay ; the witnesses were Denis Le Blanc, and Andrew Van Lander. Translated out of French is a will dated 24th Sei)t., proved 22nd Oct., 1582 ; the testator is Anthony Du Poncel, a native of Sastin, in the county of St. Paul, in Artois ; he leaves to our parish of St. Dunstan, 6s. 8d., to our French church, 5s. 8d., and to the Dutch church 6s. 8d. ; the executors are named, viz., John Lodowicke, my wife's brother, and Peter Le Cat, husband of Jone Du Poncel my niece, assisted by Messrs. Anthony Coquel and Vincent de la Barre ; the witnesses are .Anthony Berku alias Dolin, and Peter Chastelin, " my gossopp." On 6th June, 1583, the will of Godfrey de Sagnoule, /nerchatit stranger o{ London, parish of great Saint Oldy, as declared before his decease, is sworn to by his widow, Mary de Sagnoule, alias Bongenier, before Dennis Le Blancq, notary public — namely, that after payment of the testator's debts, and of =£10 as a marriage gift to his nephew Daniel de Sagnoule, his wife shall have the residue. Witnesses, ALargaret Selyn, alias Fontaine, (aged 45 or there- abouts) widow of Nicholas Selyn, Margaret Joret, alias Bongenier, (aged 40), wife of Anthony loret of London, merchant stranger, Erasme De la Fontaine, alias Wicart, (aged 27), and Peter Houblon, (aged 26), merchant strangers. The will of Alexander De Melley, merchant, born at Houtain, near Nivelle, Brabant, is dated 14th Aug., 1583 ; he leaves 40s. to the poor of the French church, London — the half of the residue to his wife, Catherine Maignon, and the other half to the children, John, ^Lary, Leah, and Rachel, of whom she shall take charge, " causing them to learn to read and write." If his wife should remarry, the trustees for his children were to be his brother-in-law, John Maignon and Michael Lart, shoemaker. Witnesses, Martin Maignon, Nicholas Leuart, James Garrett the younger, Adrien Mulay. There are three wills of the family of De la Haye, " translated out of French," with which I close my Elizabethan researches. \\\ the year 1579 Henry ]-)e la Haye, merchant, London, native of Tournay, having been "visited w-ith a long and grievous sickness," makes his will — " first, giving thanks unto God for his infinite benefits, and namely, for the knowledge of salvation and eternal life which he did reveal unto him through his gos]iel, that he doth bestow of his goodness and mercy, in all hope for to obtain pardon of his sins, commending his soul unto God, and his body to be buried until the resurrection to come ;'' he names his wife, Laurence Carlier, and their children, Paul and Anne ; his wife to be executrix with Lewis Save, also a native of Tournay, and Robert Le Mason [^La(,'on], minister of the French church ; he leaves £14 sterling to the deacons to be distributed to the poor of the ]'"rench church, and other 40s. to be given to them that shall have most need, without any diminishing of their ordinary alms, and £5 to the elders for to be bestowed about the neces- saries of the divine service and of the church. Then there is the will of the above-n."'-'??,,' son, Paul De la Haye, merchant in London, native of Tournay, dated 6th Aug. ; prTiiJi'^f \h Aug. 1582, who leaves the charge of his goods to his uncle, Anthony Carlier, me'i'yj^ .t in Antwcr]) ; he bequeaths .£1,100 sterling, besides "patrimony, goods, situate at Tou^r and places thereabout," to his sister Anne, wife of Fabian Nijihius, allowing Vfx^ the fu^^ ji|""rent of the whole," on condition that she and her husband approve the i " -'^"it 01 ' 'ate Till: R.mXOk CIWLP. R^ mother, within fifteen days after tliat this present testament shall have been signified inito them" — the i; 1,100 in the meantime to he in the hands of Nicholas Malaparte, widow of the late Henry Moncjeau, and John Kamas-the interest, in the event of the repudiation of his mother's will, to be shared during the minority of the chililren, between Mrs. Monceau, Anthony Carlier. {iisbreciit Carlier, and tlie widow of John Flanien Noell du I'aye, unless the said sister and her husband "change of advice." His legacies are to my cousin, Peter Moreau I'loo /•laiiisli, to Johanna Alorean .£30 Flemish, with a carpet wliich belonged to my grandmother, widow of James de Catteye. to iMaister Charles l)e Nielle .£25 Flemish, with two silver holies, to my uncle Anthony Carlier .£50 sterling, to the poor of the French church of London, i.'5o stn-liii;^, for the entertaining of the minister ILio st(rlin«, for the entertaining of the scholars of the said church .£10 sterlini^ — also 3 percent, to his executors for recovering his debts, and selling of his merchandize, who shall give additional £30 to the poor of the French church, if funds be realized. The will of I .awrence Carlier, widow of Henr\' l)e la Haye, was not jiroved till 20th Oct. 1582, (though dated .Xinil 10) — executors, Lewis .Says, merchant, born at Tournay, and .Mexandcr De Melley, merchant, born at Houtaine, near Nivelle, in Brabant. Her legacies are £16 to the poor and £4 to the funds of the French church. Although the testators, whom I have just discovered and described, are not notables, several persons whom they claim as friends bear respected names. To the Government loan of 1588 the strangers subscribed .£4900. Mr Burn (History, page ii) prints the subscrii)tion list, from which it appears that Lewis Sayes contributed £100, Vincent de la Bar £100. and John Hublone .£100. Strype, in his Annals, vol. iii., page 517, records the preparations for encountering the Spanish Armada, and says " The Queen took up great sums of money of her city of London, which they lent her readily, each merchant and citizen according to his ability. Anti so did the strangers also, both merchants and tradesmen, that came to inhabit here for their business or liberty of the Protestant religion, in all to the sum of .£4900. Whereof among the strangers, John Houblon was one, of whose pedigree (no question) is the present worsliipful s[)reading family of that name." Peter Houblon, styled by Burnet "a confessor," because a sufferer in the cause of religion, was one of the refugees from the Duke of Alva's fury. We have already met a Peter Houblon as a witness to a testamentary declaration i^roved in 1583, where he is styled a merchant- stranger, aged 26; if this be the founder of the English family, he was only eleven years of age when he was expatriated. We may therefore suppose that he took refuge in England along with his parents, and that John Hublone or Houblon was his father. Peter's son, James Houblon, was bom on 2d July 1592, and was baptized in the City of London French Church, where in after-life he was an ancicii. In November 1620 he married Marie Du Quesne, a daughter in a refugee family represented by the modern house of Du Cane, and had ten sons and two daughters. A daughter or daughter-in law is praised by Pepys in 1665 in these terms, "a fine gentlewoman," and "she do sing very well." On 5th Feb. 1666 he extols "the five brothers Houblon." — "mighty fine gentlemen they are all." Again Pep/s writes, 14th Feb. 1688, " It was a mighty pretty sight to see old Mr Houblon (whom I never saw before) and all his sons about him — all good merchants ;" and on ist January 1669, he mentions ■• the Houblons — gentlemen whom I honour mightily.' 'I'iie venerable Mr James Houblon died in 16S2 in his 90th year, and Pepys commemorated him in the form of an epitaph, thus : — • JACOBUS HOUBLON, LONDINAS, Petri filius ob fidem Flandriil exulantis. Ex centum nepotibus habuit septuaginta superslites, filios quinque videns mercatores florcntissimos, ipse Londinensis BursM pater. Piissime obi it nonagenarius, a.d. 1682. Bishop Burnet printed a funeral sermon containing much information. He records his surviving to such a great age, although in his 43d year he with some comrades received severe injuries from a gunpowder explosion which occurred at a militia drill near Moorfields. 84 IXTR OD [ -CTOR V MEMOIRS. I quete two sentences : — " This good man had a great deal of tliat hundred-fold which our Saviour-promised even in this life to those who forsook their houses, lands and families for His sake. This entail descended on him from his father." "He looked on the Reformed Churches, by reason of the unreformed lives of the members of them, with great regret.' The Bishop dedicated the sermon " To Peter, James, John, Jacob, Isaac, Abraham, Jeremiah, sons of James Houblon.'' With regard to Peter Houblon, the following advertisement appeared in the London Gaz- ette, nth Aug. 1747, "The creditors and legatees of Peter Houblon of the parish of St Peter, Cheap : London, merchant, (who died upwards of forty years ago), whose debts and legacies remain unsatisfied, are desired forthwith to send an account of their respective demands to Henry Coulthurst, perfumer in Fleet Street near .St Dunstan's church, London, in order to receive satisfaction for such demands." The second son of James was Sir James Houblon, M.P. for London in 1698. He was an intimate friend of Samuel Pepys, the diarist (Jboni 1663, died 1703), who has recorded that " James Houblon told me I was the only happy man of the Navy, of whom (he says) during all this freedom the people hath taken to speaking treason, he hath not heard one bad word of me." He wrote a letter in behalf of his friend (dated London, Aug. 8, 1683) : " Mr Richard Gough. This goes by my deare friend, Mr Pepys, who is embarfjued on board the Grafton Man-of-warr commanded by our Lord Dartmouth who is Admiral of the King's fleet for this expedition If his occasions require any money, you will furnish him what he desires, placing it to my account. I am your loving friend, James Huublon." Sir James had two sons Wynne and James, to whom Pepys' e.xecutors presented their father's, mother's and grandfather's portraits. The third son of the eUler James was Sir John Houblon, first Governor of the Bank of England, Lord Mayor of London in 1695, and a Lord of the Admiralty, M.P. for Bodmyn. He was the father of Rev. Jacob Houblon, Rector of Moreton. The present Houblon family descends from Jacob, the fourth son of the elder James and Mary Du Cane his wife. Deferring our notice of him, we state on the authority of an authentic manuscript pedigree, that there were originally ten brothers ; and when we collate the names with those prefixed to the Funeral Sermon, we conclude that, in the lifetime of the elder James, three died, viz., Daniel (the 7th), Benjamin (the 8th), and Samuel (the 9th). Jeremiah was the tenth ; of him as well as of Isaac (the 5th) I have no account. The sixth son of the. elder James was Abraham Houblon, Esq., of Langley in Middlesex who died on nth May 1722 in his 83d year. He was the fither of Sir Richard, and of Anne, wife of Henry Temple, first Viscount Palmerston. 'J'he Political State of Great Britain contains the following notice : — " Died, 13 Oct. 1724, Sir Richard Houblon, who left the bulk of his estate to his sister Lady Palmerston, and to Mrs Jacob Houblon.' [On 2d Dec. 1723 "Samuel Houblon, Esq." died suddenly.] Returning to Jacob, the fourth son of the elder James, we identify him as the Rev. Jacob Houblon, Rector of Bobbingworth, who had three daughters Anne, Elizabeth and Hannah, and two sons, of whom Jacob died without issue. Charles, the survivor, married Mary Bale, and was father of Jacob Houblon, Esq., who married Mary daughter of Sir John Hynde Cotton, Bart., grandfather of Jacob, who married Susannah, heiress of John Archer, Esq., and great-grandfather of John Archer Houblon, Esq., of Hallingbury and \\'elford, M.P. for Essex. The last-named gentleman died on ist June 1832, and is represented by his eldest son and namesake John Archer Houblon, Esq., of Hallingbury and Culverthorpe, and by his second son, Charles Eyre, Esq., of ^Velford (Berks). The latter has a son and heir, George Bramston Eyre, Esq. The English houses of Du Cane spring from a good refugee named Du Quesne. Jean Du Quesne fled to England from the Duke of Alva's [lersecution ; he had a son and grandson, each named Jean Du (Quesne; the latter was born 31st January 1600, and married Esther daughter of Samuel de la Place, ''ministre de la parole de Dieu." The sister of this third THE RADNOR GROUP. R5 Jean Du Quesne was Marie (born 17th Oct. 1602), who became in 1620 the wife of James Iloublon ; another sister Sara (/'('/// 1608, ditd 1653) was married in 1636 to Isaac, son of Abraham Le Quesne, of Rouen. There were several brotliers of the tliiril Jean Du Quesne ; we single out I'ierre, whom we may call Peter, because he founded the English family. Peter l>u Quesne {born nth July 1609), married at Canterbury, 7th July 1636, Jeanne (or Jane) daughter of Elias Maurois of Iloplire, in the Netherlands, by Elizabeth, daughter of Laurent Des Bouveries. Their seventh son VaKcx {born 17th March 1645) founded the family which has anglicized the spelling of its name. The proper name Quesne is a corruption of the noun cliesne or (lihie, signifying an oak ; and ch being often pronounced like k, this noun to an Englishman would have the sound of cane; hence arose tiie name, Du Cane. The above- named I'eter Du Cane at the age of 30, /.<•., in 1675, took to wife Jane, daughter of Alderman Richard Booth, and was the father of Richard Du Cane {born 13th Oct. 16S1, died 3d Oct. 1744), M.P. for Colchester in the first parliament of George I., and a Director of the Bank of England. He married I'riscilla daughter and heiress of Nehemiah Lyde, and granddaughter maternally of Colonel Thomas Reade, a famous parliamentarian soldier. The heir of Richard and Priscilla was Peter Du Cane of Braxted Park, Essex {born 22d April 1 7 13, died 28th March 1803), a Director of the East India Company and of the Bank of England, High Sheriff of Essex in 1744-5; he married, 27th May 1733, Mary, daughter of Henry Norris of Hackney, and was at his death represented by tw^o sons having issue, namely, Peter, his successor (born in 1741), and Henry (born in 1748). The last-named Peter Du Cane, who died in 1S22, aged 81, was, by his wife Phebe Philips, daughter of Edwartl Tredeugh, Esq., of Horsham (whom he had married in 1769), the father of another Peter. This Peter Du Cane of Braxted Park {born 19th August 1778, died May 1841), M.P. for Steyning, left no heirs, and the representation of the family devolved upon the descendants of his deceased uncle, Henry. Henry Du Cane had dietl in 18 10, having married Louisa, daughter of J. C. Desmadryll, Esq., and granddaughter maternally of General Dcsborough. His three sons were — (i.) The Rev. Henry Du Cane of the Grove, Witham {born 1786, died 1855). (2.) Major Richard Du Cane of the 20th Light Dragoons {born 1788, died 1832). (3.) Captain Charles Du Cane, R.N. {born 1789, died 1850). The estate of Braxted Park is now in the possession of the heir of the third of these sons. But, following the order of birth, we may note Percy Charles Du Cane, Esq., as the heir of the first line; his sister Charlotte (born in 1835) was married in 1858 to Captain William Luard, R.N., of the Lodge, ^\'itham. The second line is represented by (i.) Richard Du Cane, Esq., (born in 1821), who married in 1859 Charlotte Marie, daughter of Sir John (niest, Bart, and Lady Charlotte Guest. (2.) Major Edmund Erederick Du Cane (born in 1830), Inspector-General of Military Prisons. To this line belonged Rev. Arthur Du Cane {born 1825, died 1865), Minor Canon of Wells Cathedral. The third line is represented by Charles Du Cane, Esq., of Braxted Park (born in 1825), formerly M.P. for North Essex and a Lord of the Admiralty, now Governor of the Colony of Tasmania; he married in 1863 Hon. Georgiana Susan Copley, third daughter of Lord Lyndhurst. Connected with the above was the refugee family of Le Thieullier, which had been cradled in Valenciennes. John Le Thieullier, merchant, died at Lewishan. in 1690, aged 88, having married Jane, daughter of John de la Fortrie, merchant in London, by whom he had two sons, Sir John Le Thieullier, knight and aklernian, who married Anne, daughter of Alder- man Sir William Hooker; and Sir Christopher Le Thieullier, knight, alderman, and Turkey merchant, who married Jane, daughter of Peter Du Quesne. One of the children of the latter was Christopher Le Thieullier of Belmont, Midtllesex, whose daughter Sarah was married to Sir Matthew Fetherstonhaugh, ]5art., and was the mother of Sir Henry Fetherstonhaugh, his successor in the baronetcy. There is a privately printed volume (tifty copies) which T/u ./^(j.'/.f/i;- attributes to Brigadier- 86 INTRODUCTORY MEMOIRS. General John Henry Lefroy, of the Royal Artillery, F.R.S., it is entitled, "Notes and Documents relating to the Family of Loffroy, of Cambray, jirior to 1587, and of Canterbury 1587-1779, now chietly represented by the families of Lefroy of Carriglass, co. Longford, Ireland, and of Itchell (Hants), with branches in Australia and Canada. Being a contribution to the History of French Protestant Refugees. By a Cadet. Woolwich : printed at the Press of the Royal Artillery histitution, 1868." Some of my readers may be so fortunate as to have an oi)portunity to read this book (it has not been my good fortune). For the benefit of others I compile the following account from the Register, Smiles, Burke, &c. The refugee from Cambray was Antoine Lofifroy. After the lapse of some generations he was represented by Thomas Lefroy of Canterbury {b. 1680, d. 1723), a silk-dyer, to whose memory a tablet was erected in Potham Church, Kent, with this inscription : — Sacred to Thomas Lefroy of Canterbury, who died 3d Nov. 1723, aged 43, of a Cambresian Family that preferred Religion and Liberty to their Country and Property in the time of Duke Alva's Persecution. Anthony, son of Thomas, settled at Leghorn as a merchant : he was a learned and en- thusiastic antiquary, his special researches were devoted to coins, of which his collection amounted to upwards of 6600 specimens. This collection was celebrated for its quality as well as its c|uantity, and there is a Cataloi:,iis Ntiinisiiiat'uiis Miisci Lcfroyiini ; he died in 1779, leaving two sons, viz., Lieut.-Colonel Anthony Lefroy, of the 9th Dragoons, who died at Limerick in 1819 ; and Rev. Isaac Peter George Lefroy, Fellow of All Souls' College, O.vford, Rector of Ash and Compton, who died in 1806. The eldest son of the former was the Right Hon. Thomas Langlois I,efroy, LL.D., of Carrickglass, late Lord Chief-Justice of Ireland. The eldest son of the latter was Rev. John Henry George Lefroy, Rector of Ash and Comp- ton, and proprietor of Evvshott House, Hampshire, father of Charles Edward Lefroy, Esq., of Ewshott. From both the Irish and English boughs of the Walloon stem, there are numerous branches adorned by worthy scions, including the following clergymen, Rev. Henry Lefroy, Rector of Santry, the Chief-Justice's brother ; Rev. Jeffry Lefroy, Rector of Aghaderg, the Chief-Justice's son; Rev. Benjamin Lefroy, Rector of Ash from 1823 to 1829; and Rev. Anthony Cottrell Lefroy, incumbent of Crookham, Surrey ; the two last being uncle and brother of the squire of Ewshott There is a very creditable book, entitled : — " Are these things so? or some quotations and remarks in defence of what the world calls Md/iodisiii, by Christopher Edward Lefroy, of Chapel Street, Bedford Row. London, 1S09." The Chief-Justice was one of the great lawyers of his time ; he was born on 8th January 1776, the eldest son of Lieut.-Colonel Lefroy and Anne Gardiner, his wife; he was a brilliant student of Trinity College, Dublin ; B.A. in 1796 ; called to the bar in 1797 ; King's Counsel in 1816 ; Sergeant-at-law in 1818; M.P. for Dublin University from 1830 to 1841 ; Baron of the Irish E.\chequer in 1841 ; Lord Chief-Justice of the Irish Queen's Bench in 1852. When he was approaching his 90th year, it was understood that he was willing to retire from public life, when he could resign "gracefully" — namely, whenever his own political friends should return to power. This change of government did not occur immediately, and some animad- versions having been made, he had the advantage of receiving and reading numerous monu- mental eulogies on himself. Such panegyrics were just ; they are well summed up by a sentence in the Ilhislrati-d Lcndpii News : " Calm, dignified, learned and courteous, a profound lawyer and Christian gentleman, Chief-Justice Lefroy will long be remembered as one of the greatest lawyers who have adorned the Irish Bench during the last half century." T/ir Ri\i^/s/iT states, " He conlinuetl to take his seat on the bench and to hear causes until his 90th year, when the return of Lord Derby to place gave him the opportunity of gracefully resigning his post in the month of May 1866." He died at Bray, near Dublin, on 4th May 1869, aged 93, " the oldest member of the legal profession in the three kingdoms." He had married in I 799, Mary, sole heiress of Jefiry Paul, Esq., of Silver Spring (Wexford), and left four sons and three daughters. His heir Anthony Lefroy of Carrickglass {/>orn 1800), late M.P. for Dulilin University, married in 1824, Hon. Jane King Harman, daughter of Viscount Lorton ; his THE KADXOR GROUP. 87 cliilviren are Mrs Carritk Huchanan of DrumpcUior, and Honourable Mrs William Talljot. From the next brother, Thomas Paul Lefroy. l''.s(|., Q.C., who married in 1835 Hon. Klizabeth Jane Sarah Anne Massy, daughter of Lord Massy, descends Tiiomas Langlois I.cfroy, the presumptive heir-male of the Lefroys. Kev. Jeffry Lefroy married in 1S44 Helena, cousin of Lord Ashtown, and daughter of Rev. Frederic Stewart French. Ahitthew l)e la I'ryme was a refugee from Vpres about 1568, and settled in the Level of LLitfield Chace. From him descended Abraham de la Pryme, a cotemiiorary of Sir Isaac Newton ; he left a valuable manuscrijjt journal, entitled " Ephemeris." His lineal descendant was Christopher Pryme, Esq., of Cottinghani (Vorkshire), who married Alice, daughter of deorge Dinsilale, Es(i., of Nappa Hall, and had a son George Pryme, of Wistow, in Hunt- ingdonshire, Es<|., Professor of Political Economy in Cambridge University from 1828 to 1863, and ^LP. for the burgh of Cambridge from 1S32 to 1S41. Professor Pryme was a man of learning and great natural powers, a successful barrister, a competent professor, and a clever though rather unprolific author. He was born in 1781, was P. A. of Cambridge in 1806, having been sixth wrangler ; he was called to the bar by the Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn in 1806, and at tlie time of his death at the age of 87 (on 2d December 1868), he was the senior member. He married in 1S13 Jane 'Pownley, daughter of Thomas Thackeray, Esq., and had a son Charles De la Pryme, Esq., of the Inner Temple, M.A. of Cambridge. The following verses appeared in print about twenty years ago : — I saw her first in beauty's pride. As from my gaze she turned aside ; I marked her brightly beaming eye. As in the dance she gUded by; I heard her voice's genial sound That shed a joy on all around. Nor thought, till then, there was on earth A heart so full of love and mirth. Again I saw her beauteous face, Hut gone was all its cheerful grace ; And there was sorrow in her eye. And more than sadness in her sigh. She smiled less sweetly than before, For a sister's sombre veil she wore ; And in a convent's dreary cell Had bid the world and hope farewell. And once again I met her gaze. There was no smile of fonner days ; No sombre convent-veil was there To mock the maniac's vacant stare. And on that priest I heard her call. Who lured her fmm her father's hall. And that bright happy English home. Before her thoughts had strayed to Rome. Cambridge. Cii.\ri,es De i.a Prv.me. The Baron de Heez was a victim of the Duke of Alva's atrocities in the Netherlands, and suffered death by the hands of the public executioner. His youngest son, Theodore Janssen de Heez, became a refugee in France, and founded a Huguenot family. In the reign of Charles II. his grandson, Theodore Janssen, was one of the Huguenots who took refuge in England. He was naturalised on 2d July 16S4 (see List IX.), and was knighted by King William HI. Sir Theodore Janssen having successfully taken part in the commercial arrange- ments of the Utrecht Treaty, was (on nth March 1714) created a Baronet by Queen Anne, on the special recjuest of the Elector of Hanover. He was both a prosperous and public-spirited man, and having invested money in South Sea stock, he was made a Director of the Company — an honour which cost him dear. His reverses, however, did not shorten his life. It was on the S8 lynWD UCTOR ] ' MEMOIRS. 22d September 1748, that he died at Wimbledon, in Surrey, aged above ninety years. He had married Williamse, daughter of Sir Robert Henley of the Grange in Hampshire, and had five sons and three daughters, who survived him. Tta Gcntkmaiis Mai:;azinc says, " He left France several years before the persecution of the Protestants, and settling here as a merchant, improved a fortune of ^"20,000, given him by his father, to above ;:/^3oo,ooo, which he pos- sessed till the year 1720, when (so far from being in any secret), he lost above _;^ 50,000 by that year's transactions. Yet, as he was unfortunately a director of the South Sea Company, the Parliament was pleased to take from him above ^^220, 000 (nearly one half being real estate), by a law made ex post facto, which was given for the relief of the proprietors of that company, though they had gained several millions by the scheme, and though it appeared, when his allowance came to be settled in the House of Commons, that he had done many signal services to this nation." Three sons of the first baronet succeeded to the title in their turn. Sir Abraham died on 19th Nov. 1765, and Sir Henry on 21st Feb. 1766. Sir Stephen Theophilus Janssen, Chamberlain of the City of London, was the last baronet, and died 8th April 1777. Their sister, Barbara, was married to Thomas Bladen, M.P. ; another sister, Mary, who married, 20th July 1730, Charles Calvert, si.xth Lord Baltimore, w-as the mother of Frederick, seventh Lord Baltimore. In 1619 Elie Darande, or D'Arande, appears as minister of the Walloon Church (or God's house), Southampton. The name being often spelt D'Aranda, it is supposed that he was of Spanish ancestry, and that his parents had fled from Flanders from the Duke of Alva's perse- cution. His tongue was French, and he died at Southampton, 13th May 1683. He had married Elizabeth Bonhomme, and left a son, Elie Paul D'Arande, or (as Calamy styles him), Rev. Elias Paul D'Aranda, who was educated at O.xford, and took the degree of M.A. This reverend gentleman {born 9 January 1625, died 1669), intended to live in the service of the Church of England, and served successively as a curate in Petvvorth, Patcham, and Mayfield. But his sympathy with the Nonconformists drove him from such employments in the year 1662, and in 1664 he became minister of the French Church at Canterbury. Calamy says of him, " He was a man of considerable accomplishments, a valuable preacher, and of an agree- able conversation." He was the father of Paul D'Aranda (Ivrn 1652, died 1712), and grand- father of Paul DWranda (born 1686, died 1732), both Turkey merchants in London. The name has died out, the family being represented collaterally only. Philijipe Delm6 was minister of the French Church of Canterbury. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Elie Muntois, and died 22d April 1653. His son was Peter Delme, merchant, London, father of Sir Peter Delm6, knight, who was Lord Mayor of London in 1724, and died 4th Sept. 1728. Sir Peter's daughter, Anne, married Sir Henry Liddell, Bart., afterwards raised to the peerage as Lord Ravensworth ; her only child, Anne, was married in 1756 to Augustus Henry, third Duke of Grafton, and is ancestress of the succeeding line of dukes. The Duchess of Grafton's second son was General, Lord Charles Fitzroy, father of Vice- Admiral the Hon. Robert Fitzroy, M.P., the chief of the meteorological department of the Board of Trade. Sir Peter Delm6's son and heir was Peter [boi-n 1710, died 1770), ALP. for Southampton, whose son and heir w-as Peter [honi 1748, died 1789), M.P. for Morpeth. The latter married, in 1759, Lady Elizabeth Howard, daughter of the fifth Earl of Carlisle, and founded two fomilies. His eldest son was John FJelmc', Esq., of Cams Hall {bor>i 1772, died ), who married Frances, daughter of George Garnicr, Estp, and was the fother of Henry Peter Delmi'', I'^sq., of Cams Hall, and of Captain George Delmo, R.N. The younger son of Mr and Lady Elizabeth Delm6 became in 1832 (in right of his wife, n6e Anne IVIilicent Clarke, representative of the Radclififes), Emilius Henry Delme Radclifle, Esq., of Hitchin Priory {born 1774, died 1832). He was succeeded by his eldest son I''rederick Peter DcImi.' Radcliffc, JEsq., born in 1804; the third son, Rev. Charles Delme Ratlcliffe is the father of Lieutenant- Colonel Emilius Charles Delme Radcliffe of the 8Sth Regiment. Among the ministers of God's house, Southampton, Mr Burn names Philippe De la Molte, THE CLANCAR7Y CROLI'. 89 admitlcd in 1586. In the same year he married Juditli Des Maistres, and died on 6ih May 1617. His decease is recorded in his Church register: — "1617. Phihppe Ue La Motte, niinistre de La Parole du Dieu de faMeuse memoire, mourut Ic 6' de May, et fust enterni le 8' jour a Comjiaigne de tour le Magistra " (de tous les niagistrats ?). His descendants are numerous ; they write their name " Delamotte." Mr Smiles gives the following interesting details concerning "Joseiih Delamotte" (probably Philip). He was born at Tournay, of Roman Catholic parents, and was ajjprenticed to a silkman in his native town. His master was a Protestant. Delamotte became a convert to his religion, and on the outbreak of the Duke of .Mva's ])ersecution, the young man removed to Geneva. In that academic retreat he studied theology, and was ordained to the ministry. He returned to Tournay, ostensibly as his old master's journeyman, but also as minister to the Protestants, who had to worship secretly. A family manuscript, quoted by Mr Smiles, contains the following narrative :— "An information having been given against him to the Inciuisiiion, they sent their officers in the night to apprehend him ; they knocked at the door, and told his master (who answered them) that they wanted his man. He, judging who they were, called Joseph ; and he immediately put on his clothes, and made his escape over the garden wall with his Bible, and travelled away directly into France to St Malo. They, believing him to be gone the nearest way to the sea coast, ])ursued towards Ostend, and missed him. From St Malo he got over to Guernsey and from thence to Southampton, where, his money being all gone, he applied himself to the members of the French Church there, making his condition known to them. Their minister being just dead, they desired he would preach to them the next Sabbath day, wliich accord- ingly he did, and they chose him for their minister." II.— THE CLANCARTY GROUP. I begin this section with some appropriate and glowing words written by the Rev. Dr. Sirr* : — " The noble fiimily of Clancarty, unmindful of a long and illustrious pedigree, appear careful only to preserve the memory of one ancestor — a faithful servant of God, who established himself in Great Britain, and proved himself regardless of his ancient rank antl heritage, so that he might retain the religion of the Bible, and escape at once the allurements and perse- cutions of papal idolatry. Frederic de la Tranche, or Trenche, Seigneur of La Tranche in Poitou, from which sa'xnairit' the family derived its name, was a French Protestant nobleman, who, finding he must renounce either his conscience or his station, voluntarily expatriated himself, left his home, his kindred and his estates, in the troubles which arose about religion in his native land, took refuge in enlightened England, and established himself, A.n. 1574, in the county of Xorthuniberland In about two centuries the posterity of the faithful exile who renounced all for Christ, having persevered in the profession of the same holy truths which caused him to endure suffering, and having met at every step of their course with distinguishing proofs of the providential favour of God, were finally elevated in two distinct branches to the highest rank amongst the noblest in the land of their adoption." In 1576 the refugee seigneur married Margaret, daughter of Thomas Sutton, Esq. His eldest son's name is not recorded. The second son, the Rev. James La Tranche, removed the scene of action to Ireland. He obtained the ecclesiastical benefice of Clongall, acquired estates in County Cavan, and married Margaret daughter of Hugh, Viscount Montgomery of Ards. The refugee's youngest son, Adam Thomas La Tranche, probably resided in England, as he married Catherine, daughter of Richard Brooke, Esq., of I'ontefract. His son Thomas was the male heir of the family, and marrieil his cousin Anne, the only child and sole heiress of the Rev. James La Tranche. Thomas and Anne settled at Garbally in County Gahvay, and left two sons, Frederic (who died in 1669) and John. * A Memoir of the Honour.ible and Most Reverend Power Le Poer Trench, l.-ist .\rchbi-iliop of Tuam. By the Rev. Joseph D'Arcy Sirr, D.D., Vicar of Vo.sford, Suffolk, and late Rector of Kilcoleman, Diocese of Tuam. Dublin, 1S45. M go INTROD UCTOR V MEMOIRS. The grandson and representative of Frederic was Richard Trench, Esq., of Garbally {boni \1\o,dicd 1768), who was a member of the Parliament of Ireland in 1761, representing county Galway. His wife, Miss Frances Power, whom he married in 1732, was the heiress of the wealthy families of Power and Keating, and the blood of the heir of the King of Cork, Mac- Carty-More, Earl of Clancarty, flowed in her veins ; she also represented the Barons of Le Poer. The heir of Richard was William Power Keating Trench, Esq., a popular country gentleman, who represented the county of Galway in the Irish Parliament from 1768 to 1797. At the latter date (on 27th Nov.) he was transferred to the Upper House as Baron Kilconnel of Garbally; and was further promoted in the Peerage of Ireland on 3d January 1801 as Viscount Dunlo, and Earl of Clancarty in the county of Cork. The Earl died on 27th April 1805, having had (by his wife Anne, eldest daughter of Right Hon. Charles Gardiner and sister of Luke, first Viscount Mountjoy) seven sons and seven daughters. His heir, Richard Le Poer Trench the 2d Earl (born 1767, died 1837) was our ambassador at the Hague, and brought to his family the additional honour of peerages of the United Kingdom, and a hereditary seat in the House of Peers — receiving the title of Baron Trench in 1815 and of Viscount Clancarty in 1824; he also was offered and permitted to accept the title of Marquis of Heusden in the Netherlands. He married Henrietta Margaret, daughter of Right Hon. John Staples, and was the father of William Thomas, 3d Earl of Clancarty (born 1803, died 1872) an excellent and influential nobleman, and zealous Protestant, The present and 4th Earl is Richard Somerset Le Poer Trench, Earl of Clancarty, eldest son of the 3d Earl by Lady Sarah Juliana Butler, daughter of Somerset Richard, 3d Earl of Carrick. The present Earl was bom on 13th January 1834, and married in 1866 Lady Adeliza Georgiana Hervey, daughter of Frederick William, 2d Marquis of Bristol ; his heir apparent is William Frederick, Viscount Dunlo, born in 1868. The family motto for Le Poer is " Consilio et prudentia," and for Trench, " Dieu pour la Tranche, qui contre?" The second line of the refugee family of La Tranche begins with the Very Rev. John Trench, Dean of Raphoe, younger son of Thomas and Anne La Tranche. The Dean mar- ned Anne, daughter of Richard Warburton, Esq., and dying in 1725 was succeeded by his eldest son, Frederic (who died in 1758), of Moate, county Galway. He was succeeded by his son Frederic [born 1720, died 1797) of Moate and Woodlawn, who by his wife Catherine, daughter of Francis Sadleir, Esq., of Sopwell Hall, had seven sons and five daugliters. His eldest son Frederic Trench of Woodlawn (born in 1757) represented Portarlington in the Irish Parliament, and on 27th Dec. 1800 was created Baron Ashtown in the Peerage of Ireland, the patent being in favour of himself and his late father's heirs-male. Lord Ashtown died without issue on ist May 1840, aged 83, and the representation of his house devolved upon the family of his next brother Francis Trench of Sopwell Hall {born 1758, died 1829), by his wife, Mary Mason. Frederic Mason Trench, 2d Lord Ashtown (born in 1804) is the present Baron. His apparent heir (by Henrietta, daughter of Thomas Phillips Cosby, Esq.) is the Hon. Frederick Sidney Charles Trench (bom in 1839), who has strengthened his link with Huguenot ancestry by his marriage with Lady Anne Le Poer Trench, daughter of the 3d Earl of Clancarty. and has an heir, Frederick Oliver Trench (born in 1868). The Trench family are best known to fame through having produced two Archbishops — one of the Clancarty family, and the other of the Ashtown line. The second son of the ist Earl of Clancarty was Power Le Poer Trench. This esteemed Divine was born in I )ublin on loth June 1770. His father not having been raised to the jieerage till the end of the cen- tury, he vv'as entered as " filius Gulielmi equitis " in the books of Trinity College (L)ublin) in 1787 ; he was declared to have been "educatus sub ferula majistri Ralph." He had only been ten years a clergyman, when (in 1802) he was elevated to the episcopal bench as Bishop of Waterford. In 1809 he became Bishop of Elphin ; and in 1S19 he was promoted to tlie Archbishopric of Tuam. He is known as " The last Archbishop of Tuam " — because that diocese was reduced to a bishop's see, two of the four archbishoprics of Armagh, Dublin, C"shel, and Tuam having been doomed to abolition as unnecessary. At his death in 1839 he THE CLA.XC.iRTY UROL P. 91 left bcliiiul him tlie rc|)Ul;aion of grc-.U dignity, l)icty, assiduity and beneficence. The followiii:,' is his epitapli in the Cathedral of Tiiani : — A()2.\ KN T + lilOli i-)Ki!. The Chief Shei)lierd, Whom he loved and served, in whom he now sleeps, Called away from the evil to come The Hon. and Most Rev. Power I,e I'oer Trench, D.I)., Lord Archbishop of Tuam, On the 26th of iSlarch 1839. .\ lover of hospitality, a lover of gooii men, sober, just, holy, temperate. Holding fiist the faithful word, With a father's love He presided nineteen years over this province, With unquenchable zeal promoted the spread of true religion. With uncompromising fidelity opposed error, With inflexible integrity obeyed the dictates of an enlightened conscience, With surpassing benevolence relieved want, With mingled meekness and dignity exercised his apostolic olfice. Dearer to him than life itself was the word of the truth of the Gospel, And tenderly did he sympathize with the whole Church In all her joys antl sorrows. To him to live was Christ, To die was gain. His afflicted clergy, deeply mourning their bereavement, yet sustained by the certainty of his bliss, and encouraged by the brightness of his e.\ ample, have erected this record of their grateful love. Besides tlie old diocese of Tuam, the Archbishop's actual diocese included the territories of the supjjressed sees of Ardagh, Killala, and Achonry. The clergy of Ardagli set uj) a monumental slab in Longford Church, and also established an exhibition in the University of Dublin, calletl "The Power-Trench Memorial ;" an annual prize in money to be given to the son of an Ardagh clergyman who shall have distinguished himself in the Divinity class, prior to the commencement in each year. The Archdeacon of Ardagh, a brother of the Archbisliojj, died the same year, and thus the memory of the Trench family was doubly fragrant in tliat quarter. The Honourable and Venerable Charles Le Poer Trench, D.D., Archdeacon of Ardagh, and Vicar-General of Clonfert, died in his 67th year, having been born in December 1772. The following account of him is entirely in the words of Dr Sirr. He was a man of great original genius and rare powers, intellectual and corporeal. His mind was well-stored with various knowledge; his wit was of the first order, and his conversation abounded with such felicitous and amusing anecdotes, illustrative of every subject on which he discoursed, that there never existed a more agreeable companion. He won all hearts — his fascination extended to the cabin as well as to the palace. When, through the grace of God, he was led to reflect more seriously on his ministerial responsibilities than he had in the early part of his ministry, his extraordinary energy of character was all concentrated in jjromoting the jjrogress of divine truth. Schools rose up in every direction. His position, as brother to the noble proprietor of the soil, gave him peculiar facilities in protecting the poor, who had the boldness to send their children to scripture schools in defiance of priestly interdicts. No labour was too great — no service too humble — for his ardent zeal. No engagements — no visitors — were permitted to interfere with his prescribed periods of attendance at remote localities. It mattered not what the season of the year, what the dangers of the way or the darkness of the evening, oft' he marched to instruct the ignorant and poor. Lantern in hand he would wend 9 2 INTR on UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. his appointed way from his house at BalHnasloe, across the wood of Garbally and intervening bog by the shortest cut he could discover, to the village of Derrywillan, where a few peasants waited to receive his pastoral instruction. The Rev. James Anderson, who frequently attended him on such excursions, says he was the best catechist and lecturer he ever knew. Late in life Archdeacon Trench acquired the power of reading the Scriptures in the Irish language, that he might thus be able to communicate the knowledge of divine truth to those who spoke that tongue, in a manner that would commend itself to their attention, and reach botli their hearts and understandings. He carried constantly about him wherever he went, with this view, either the Irish Bible or New Testament. On one occasion, travelling by the mail to Galway, he found himself in company with three Roman Catholic gentlemen going to the assizes. He entertained them at first with general and amusing conversation. His wit soon got them into the most bland and cheerful humour. When their laughter was at the highest he suddenly interrupted them, saying, " I'll venture to say none of you think I can speak Irish." Some doubt was expressed. " Wait till you see," he replied ; and pulling out the Irish Bible from his pocket, he read the Irish version of Psalm cxxx. He then asked them if they knew what it was he read. "Yes," said one of the party, "it is one of the seven penitential psalms; when David fell to the bottom of an old well, he cried out from the depth to God, and as he repeated first one psalm and then another, God raised him up by degrees, and when he finished the seven he found himself safe and sound at the top of the well." This strange interpre- tation enabled the archdeacon to remove the ignorance which occasioned it, and, having exposed the fiibulous character of the supposed miracle, to comment with propriety on the words — " out of the depths have I cried unto Thee," &c., and to direct the minds of his friends to the extent of guilt acknowledged by the Psalmist, the nature of the forgiveness he sought, the trust he had in the word of God, his earnest longing for the presence of the Lord, and the plenteous redemption to which the royal prophet invited the attention of Israel. The Rev. William Le Poer Trench, ID.D., Prebendary of Tuam (born in 1801), son of Rear-Admiral the Hon. William Le Poer Trench,* was chaplain to his uncle, the Archbishop of Tuam, who gave him the Rectory of Killereran in 1825. Of him Dr Sirr says, " He was the intimate and admired friend of all the clergy, who were wont to meet from month to month at the palace. He was a careful and diligent student of the Scriptures — an active and zealous clergyman — one who entered with constitutional warmth into the prosecution of every good work and labour of love, was known to every diocese in Ireland as the originator and joint-secretary of the Church Education Society." That Society was founded in 1838 ; it grew out of tlie Education Society of the Diocese of Tuam. The Archbishop Trench of the present day belongs to the Ashtown line. Frederic, the ist Lord Ashtown, was the eldest of seven brothers ; the sixth of these was Richard Trench Esq. (who died i6th April i860), a barrister, whose wife Melesina, was the heiress of her grandfather, Richard Chenevix, Bishop of Waterford (see my Vol. II., page 272). Richard and Melesina had four sons, of whom the second, Richard Chenevix Trench was born on 9th September 1807. He graduated at Cambridge, and held benefices in England ; he is also D.D. Having earned a brilliant reputation as a scholarly, elegant and learned author, pos- sessed of uncommon and varied information, he was rewarded with the Deanery of Westminster. And when the advisers of the Crown were in search of a worthy successor to the erudite and versatile Archbishop Whately, their choice rested upon Dean Trench, who was accordingly consecrated Archbishop of Dublin on the ist of January 1864. In his early manliood, he first attracted attention as a poet, gleaning beautiful thoughts from romantic and oriental sources. He has issued many interesting publications on the English language viewed from every point. As a .scholar, his distinction rests chiefly on his work on the Greek Synonyms of the New Testament, and on his Hulsean Lectures. In Biblical Literature, his " Notes on the Parable.s," and " Notes on the Miracles" contain a rich apparatus of illustrative materials, *The Archbishop's yoiiiiycst brother was Colonel the Hon. .Sir Robcil I.c Poer Trench, K.C.B., K.T..S. [,ho>n 1782, died 1824). THE CLANCARTY CROUP. 93 compiled chicHy from the l-'atliers of the Christian fliurcli. Most of his works liaving con- tained such materials, with only an occasional summing up and verdict, it was conjectured that he was a nej^ative theologian. But his distinct doctrinal views concerning the way of salvation are to be found in his " Five Sermons preached before the University of Cambridge." In his Kxj)osition of the Epistles to the Seven Churches, the reader will perceive his decitied and increasingly strong sentiments concerning Church-Government. Archbishop 'I'rcncii's private relationships are all Huguenot. A descendant of the oUI Seigneurs de la Tranche, and the best known rejiresentative of Hisho]) Chenevi.x, he is a nei)hew of the first Lord Ash- town, also a cousin, and (tiirough his wife, >iee the Hon. Frances Mary Trench) a brother-in- law of the present Lord Ashtown. The name among the victims of the St Bartholomew massacre, that is remembered with the greatest admiration anil commiseration, is Admiral Coligny. My younger readers should be informed that he was a great military commander (the title of admiral not having been then made over to the Naval Service) ; also that Coligny was his title of nobility, and not his surname. The family name was De Chatillon ; there were three brothers in that generation. The youngest was Fran(jois de Chatillon, Sieur d' Andelot, and usually called Andelot ; he died in 1569. Gaspard de Chatillon, Comte de Coligny, the second brother, was the Admira' of France. The eldest brother demands a memoir among Protestant e.xiles. Odet de Chatillon, commonly called the Cardinal de Chatillon, was born on the lotii July 1517. It must be remembered that this date is antecedent to the Protestant Reformation ; ami that all the brothers, being born during the undisturbed reign of Romanist superstition, were converted to Protestantism. The dignity of Cardinal, with which Odet was invested, was no better than a temporal honour — a decoration or compliment conferred on him on the 7th November 1533, that is to say, when he was only si.xteen years of age, by Pope Clement VII. At the same date he was consecrated as Archbishop of Toulouse. In 1535 he obtained the Bishopric of Beauvais, which, along with am])!e revenues, included the dignity antl privi- leges of a Peer of France. In 1544, being so well endowed as an ecclesiastic, he resigned all his own heritage to his brothers. His tendencies towards Protestantism arose from aspirations after religious life. In 1554, he issued his Constitutions Syntxialc-s, in order to reform ecclesi- astical abuses in his diocese. In 1564 he appeared as a doctrinal reformer. In the month of April of that year, he administered the Lord's Supper according to the rites of the French Protestant Church in his palace at Beauvais. His neighbours raised a riot, in which his own life was threatened, and a schoolmaster as his proteg6 was killed. He then deliberately re- nounced his ecclesiastical dignities, and assumed the title of Comte de Beauvais. The Pope cited him to appear before the Inquisition,- but he took an early opportunity to wear his Cardinal's dress among the King's Councillors, in order to proclaim his defiance of the Papal authority. And on the ist of December he married PLlizabeth, daughter of Samson de Haute- ville (a Norman gentleman) and Marguerite de Lore. As during this year, so afterwards, he ojienly acted as a leading Huguenot negociator. In 1568 he ncgociated the peace of Long- jumeau, avoiding all Bourbon schemes, and confining his demands to tiie free exercise of the Protestant religion. Queen Catherine de Medicis attempted, in violation of the peace, and by a coup d' ittit, to seize the Protestant leaders, who, however, got secret information, and Conde and Coligny retired precipitately within La Rochelle, whither the Queen of Navarre and her son quickly followed them. The Cardinal, in August 1568, hurried from his Chateau of Brel6 (near Beauvais), hotly pursued. Disguised as a sailor, he barely succeeded in em- barking at Sainte-Marie-du-Mont for England. His countess accompanied him, and their voyage was safely accomplished. Queen Elizabeth received him as a Prince, lodged him in Sion House, and gave him audiences on Huguenot aftnirs. Dressed in black flowing gar- ments, and conspicuous with his noble brow and venerable aspect, he was always treated by our Queen with demonstrative affection as one of her intimate friends — so much so, that the Londoners declared that the ambassador from the Prince of Conde was a greater man than the veritable French Ambassador. As he was always styled the Cardinal de Chatillon, the 94 INTM OD UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. English were not certain as to his creed, and cautiously designated him '' a favourer, if not a member, of the Protestant Church." But inquirers knew his decided profession, his Protes- tant chaplain, and his worship in Protestant Churches. In the beginning of 157 i, during the interval of treacherous tranquility in his native country, his friends in France summoned him home. He set out for Hampton Court to report himself to our Queen, but was arrested by sudden death on the 14th February 1571. Though poison was suspected, the criminal who administered the poisoned apple did not confess the deed until more than a year afterwards. Odet de Chatillon lies buried in Canterbury Cathedral — the spot is described in Dart's History of the Cathedral, as being " at the feet of Bishop Courtney, between two of the pillars bending circularly." It is marked by " a plain tomb of bricks, made like a round-lidded chest, or not much unlike a turf grave, but higher, and composed of bricks plastered over and painted with a lead colour." A notable fugitive from the massacre was " the Vidame of Chartres." Before narrating his adventures we should have a description of himself, Jean de Ferrieres, Seigneur de Maligny (such was his name and original title) was of noble descent ; his parents were Francois (or Jean ?) de Ferrieres and Louise de Vendome. Through his maternal ancestry he was cousin and heir of Francois de Vendome, at whose death, on i6th December 1560, he succeeded to the dignity of Vidame of the diocese of Chartres, hence he is known to posterity as he Vidame de Chartres. The designation of his honorary office is said to be derived from " vice-dominus." Boyer defines Vidame to signify " the Judge of a Bishop's temporal jurisdiction — celui qui tient la place de I'Eveque entant que Seigneur temporel." The Vidame de Chartres was renowned for valour and energy, as was his wife Francjoise, widow of Charles Chabot Sieur de Sainte-Fry, daughter of Francois Joubert Sieur de Lanneroy by Perronnelle Carre. He served in all the civil wars under Cond6 and Coligny. He visited England in the year 1562, and again in 1569. In 1562 he was sent as an envoy from the Huguenot leaders, and Queen Elizabeth entered into a treaty, giving them 6000 infantry and 100,000 crowns "to prevent Normandy from falling into the hands of the Guises, lest they should seize its ports and carry their exterminating war against Protestants into England." She had no quarrel with the French King himself, who was a minor ; and she refused his ambassador's request to deliver up the Vidame to him as a traitor. With regard to the Vidame's adventures I quote from Comber's " History of the Parisian Massacre" (p. 207) : — " The escape of a large body of Huguenot nobility from the toils spread around them on this day of St Bartholomew [1572] is so remarkable as to appear plainly to the attentive and judicious observer a providential event. This body, by the advice of the Vidame of Chartres would not lodge near the Admiral's quarters, which they suspected to be dangerous, but preferred as much safer the suburbs of St Germain. However, although they retired to this quarter, expressly out of just diffidence of Charles and his perfidious Court, and from a dread of their treachery and cruelty, yet as soon as ever the confused noise of the massacre in the city arose, they seemed from that moment utterly infatuated and quite unable to guess at its cause. Nay, even when the Viscount Montgomery communicated the news which he had received concerning this tumult to the Vidame of Chartres, and a council of all the nobles was hereupon convened, yet, contrary to all probability, and even to common sense, the result of their consultation was, that tliis insur- rection of tlie Guisian party was not only without, but even against, the King's w'ill, and that it would be a becoming act of loyalty to sally forth in a body and assist their sovereign in defence of his just authority. How little did Charles deserve these generous resolves ! Maurignon, who was appointed to butcher these nobles, was now, in conseciuence of his orders, in the suburbs, and waiting impatiently for succours which Marcel was ordered to send him from the city. And during some hours their execution was (humanly speaking) very easy, nay, almost inevitable. But lo ! the providence of God, which, having suftered these nobles to advance to the very brink of ruin, now snatched them thence by an Almighty hand in a manner, as it were, visible to the eyes of men. Marcel was dilatory in carrying his part of the orders into execution; the designed assassins dispersed to plunder; Maurignon was impatient for the THE CL.WCARTV GROUr. * 95 arrival of liis associates ; al Icngtii the Duke of Guise resolved to head a body of the guards, and himself to perfomi the horrid butchery. He advanced to the gate of the suburbs ; behold, strange mistake ! — wrong keys were brought ; the right keys were to be sought for ; much time was lost : the morning appeared, and discovered to the too loyal Huguenot nobility a detachment of guards crossing the river in boats, the Duke of Guise himself being at their head ; and they heard a firing from the windows of the palace, which was now understood to be, by royal command, against the Huguenots— for, as Guise was commanding the guards, they must be supposed to be acting against his adversaries. These nobles, struck dumb with astonishment, soon recovered the use of their faculties so far as to resolve on instant flight as their only security, and they exerted themselves so effectually as to escape the Duke of Guise's pursuit, sailed to England, and raised their swords in many a future day of fair battle, and obtained victories against a perfidious tyrant who, by firing on his unarmed innocent subjects, in the hour of peace and of generous confidence in his solemn oaths, had forfeited all the rights of sovereignty and even of common humanity." It appears from the Vidame's own statement that the Duke of Guise actually entered his house before he could escape, but that he concealed himself, and at length secretly got access to the King, who gave him a safe-conduct. Instead of being again duped, and going home to be murdered, as the King intended, he used the royal autograph as a passport to the coast of France, and sailed to England, where he landed on the 7th September. He wrote a Latin letter to Lord Burghley (Strype's Parker, Appendix No. 70), of which the following is a translation : — " My most honoured Lord, — I have been delivered from the Parisian executions, and have slipped out of the hands of Guise, who first pursued me into my very house, and after- wards wove every kind of snare around me. At length, when they thought me inveigled by the King's safeguard, and it was reported to them that I was at home, they hasten to assault me with open violence. But God, by His favour, has infatuated their counsel, and brought me to the sea unknown to myself; and having embarked on board ship. He has led me hither to you. Nothing, next to the avenging of this impious crime, is so desired by me as to come into the presence of her Majesty, on whose piety, power, and prudent counsel, evidently depends the only hope of curbing that fury sp openly spreading in the Christian world. How- ever much I may be carried away by my great desire, I have been unwilling to approach the Queen inopportunely and indiscreetly. I shall wait her Majesty's resolution. In the meantime I shall inform my family how happily God has provided for my safety. I shall write to the King (although I shudder intensely at the thought of him) that, if I can, I may soothe his savage heart, that he may not proceed to more cruel measures against my wife on account of what may appear to him my contempt of his promise to me as to my safety — a promise not free from subtlety and remarkable imposture — yet the blame of such contempt I must fling back upon another. May God give counsel, who has already given succour, and has brought me to a safe port. Beyond measure I desire to see and hear for myself how your people are affected by such an unheard-of calamity. Meanwhile I ask your Lordship to recal to her Majesty's memory my most humble devotion to her, of which ihe future shall witness the continuance. You, my Lord, will be the medium of great consolation to me if I may understand from you that her Majesty sympathises with us, and does so abhor such great perfidy that her soul cannot bear an_y outward dissimulation regarding it. Not that I doubt that herself shudders at the mere thought of it. But I fear that by using too mild language concerning it she may contri- bute new life to the butchers, who may aft'ect not to hear the mutterings of neighbouring princes. 'I wish, and I believe it will be realised, that the princes will show themselves to be the persons they ought to be. Not the least punishment that these butchers can feel will be the fear of future vengeance. Do not believe that they can be rendered tractable by smooth oratory ; they will be ever more and more insolent if they are gently dealt with it. I avow that the national sentiment concerning them should be disclosed not by words alone but by 99 INTRODUCTOR Y MEMOIRS. action, that tliey may see that there is not merely an expenditure of words but by an alHance of hearts for impending action. I pray that God give to you, who are in no lack of counsel, that mind that knows how to reap the fruit of consultation, and that He may preserve you, my Lord, long to be the counsellor of your realm. — Your Lordship's most faithful and affectionate. " September 1572." The Queen showed the most marked compassion for her old friend, the Vidame. In the beginning of November several servants of his household landed at Rye. It is said, however, that he hastened to join the remarkable Huguenot rally, and succeeded in entering La Rochelle and placing himself under the command of La Noue. (There is a French memoir of the Vidame de Chartres by the Comte de la Ferri^re-Percy, but I have failed to obtain a copy.) The surname of Papillon is of great antiquity in France, in England under the Norman dynasty, and again in France at the era of the Protestant Reformation. In the London Lists of Strangers in 1618, under the YvtzsXxwg Broad Street, there is this entry: — " David Papillion, born in the city of Paris in France, free denizen, in London 30 years." His great-grandfather was Antoine Papillon {died 1525), an influential Huguenot, a correspondent of Erasmus, and a proteg6 of Marguerite de Valois, sister of Francis I., in whose Court he held an appointment. David's grandfather was also a staunch Protestant, and one of the victims of the St Bartholo- mew massacre, 1572. David's father was Thomas Papillon, gentleman of the bedchamber to Henri IV., and thrice his ambassador to Venice, but voluntarily retired into private life when the King abjured Protestantism; he had married on 12th August 1572 (the time of the festivities that preceded the massacre) Jane Vieue De la Pierre, and died 20th November 1608. David Papillon had a brother Thomas (born in 1578), Counsellor of the Parliament of Paris, and, in 1620, scribe to the Synod of Aries, who had a son, David, described as " a good and learned man who was banished from Paris, and was imprisoned for three years at Avranches in Nor- mandy, as an obstinate Huguenot," and then allowed to retire to England, where he died in 1693 ; he, of course, was the nephew of our David Papillon who founded the English family. David Papillon, of Broad Street \born 1579, died 1659) was also of Lubenham in Leicestershire; at the date of 1 618, when we first met him, he was married to his second wife. His first wife, Mary Castel, to whom he was married in 161 1, had died in 1614 ; her son died in infancy, but a daughter Mary survived, and was afterwards the wife of Peter Fontaine. Mr Papillon married, secondly, on 4th July 16 15, Anne Mary Calandrini ; " she was of a family famous through many generations at Lucca in Italy," being daughter of Jean Calandrini, and granddaughter of Juliano Calandrini (Pope Nicholas V.'s brother), " who adopted the Reformed religion, and had to leave his possessions at Lucca and to take refuge in France." A memorial of this Mr Papillon is Papillon Hall, the house which lie built at Lubenham, and which is now the property of the Earl of Hopetoun. He was also celebrated as a military engineer, having been employed by Cromwell to fortify Northampton, Gloucester, and other towns. He was the author of the following publications: — (i) A Practical Abstract of the Arts of Fortifica- tion and Assailing, containing Foure different Methods of Fortifications, with approved rules to set out in the Field all manner of Superficies, Intrenchments, and Approaches, by the demy Circle, or with Lines and Stake.s. Written for the benefit of such as delight in the Practice of these Noble Arts. By David Papillon, Gent. I have diligently perused this Abstract, and do approve it well worthie of the Publick view. Impriinatiir, lo. IJooker. London : Printed by R. Austin, and are to be sold at the south side of the Exchange and in Pope's head Alley, 1645. [Dedicated " To His E.xcellencie Sir Thomas Fairfax, (ieneralissime of the Forces of the honorable houses of Parlement," signed " your Excellencies most humble and devoted servant, David Papillon, ^tatis sux 65," and dated "London, January ist, 1645."] (2) " The Vanity of the Lives and Passions of Men. Written by D. Papillon, Gent. : — Eccles. i. 2. Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities, all is vanity. April 9, 1651, Imprimatur, ^oXm Downame. London, Printed by Robert White, 1651." [Dedicated "To my beloved sister, THi: CLA.\CAKTY GROUP. 97 Mrs Chamberlan, the widow ;" ilatL-cI " From London, June i, 1651." Tlie episile concludes thus : — " 1 comuiend you to the Lord's protection, desiring to remain, dear sister, your lo\ ini{ brother, David riipillon'.'\ Mr I'apillon (hed in 1659 in his eightieth year, leaving, witli other children, his heir Thomas Papiilon, Ksi]., of I'apillon Hall and Acrise, {born 1623, Jiid 1702). Mr 'I'homas I'apillon CDrresjjondcd with his excellent cousin, David I*a|)illon of I'aris (already mentioned), and welcomed him to Kngland after liis release from imprisonment. The follow- ing is an extract of a letter to Thomas from L)a\id, dated I'aris, February S, 16S1 : — " Nous vous remercions aussi des tenioignages ([u'il vous i)lait nous donner de votre afTection singuliere, particulic'remcnt de la forte et sainte exhortation ipie vous nous faites de demeurer fermes en la foi et en la profession de la vraie religion. C'est une chose que nous ne ])Ouvons esjjerer de nos propres forces, mais que nous devions demander et devions attendre de Celui en qui et par ijui nous pouvons toutes choses. II a conserve ce precieux don en la ])ersonne de notre pire Thomas, de notre aieul commun Thomas, et de notre bis- aieul sur lequel il a premi^rement fait relever la clairti5 de sa face et de son evangile, et lui meme fait I'honneur d'etre du nombre de ceux qui lui present^rent leur vie et leur sang dans cette journee celebre de IWnnee 1572, marchant par cette voie douloureuse sur les pas de son Sauveur et marquant a ses descendants par son exemple ([ue ni mort, ni vie, ni principaute, ni ])uissance, ni hauteur, ni profondeur, ni chose presente, ni chose a venir, ne les doit separer de I'affection cjue Dieu leur a temoigne en son Fils. Vous savez cela aussi bieu que moi, mais il me semble que ces exem])les domestiques ne doivent point etre oublies ; or, comme il est important de les imiter il est tres utile de les repasser souvent en la memoire et la pensee. " Comme je ne prends point de part dans I'administration des choses publiques, et ne m'en mele que par les pri^res que Dieu me commande de faire pour la paix de I'F.tat et de I'Eglise, je vous avoue que je vois bien (jue le dessein des ennemis de notre religion est de I'extirper, ainsi que vous m'avez marque par votre lettre [de 17 Mars 1680] ; mais je n'ai pas assez de veux pour penetrer dans les evenements. Je sais que la reformation de la religion est un oeuvre de Dieu ; peut-etre il ne voudra pas la detruire. Sa colere n'est pas ;\ toujours et ses misericordes sont eternelles. Quoi(iu'il soit, nous ne pouvons mieux faire (jue de le prier de nous preserver, et lie lui demander qu'il ait pitie de son Heritage, qu'il ne nous abandonne point, et (ju'il nous donne la grace de demeurer fermes dans sa maison et dans sa service." Thomas Papillon, Fsq., bought the manor of Acrise in Kent, in i666, and lived in the mansion, as did the next four generations of his family. He was M.P. for Dover 1679 to Si, and 90, and for London 1695 to 9y Sir Isaac Newton, the master of the mint." The fourtli son of Wiiham Wood was Charles Wood (who dietl in 1799), assay-master in Jamaica for thirty years, a man remarkahle for energy and ability, and of sucli high moral and religious princijiles that, notwithstanding the notorious corruption of the age, he never took a peniuisite. On his return home, he married and built I.owmill Iron-works near Whitehaven ; and removing from Cumberland iiito South Wales, he erected the Cyfarthfa Iron-works at Merthyr 'I'ydvil. At Jamaica he signalized himself by a discovery (substances and products, although known to the inhabitants of uncultivated regions, are always said to be undiscovered until made known to the scientific world), as to which Knight, in his Cyclopedia of Industry, says, " Platina or 1'latinu.m, is an important metal which was first made known in Europe by Mr Wood, assa)- master in Jamaica, who met with its ore in 1741." I give an abridgement of the statements contained in the " Philosophical Transactions." On 13th December 1750, William Brownrigg, M.I)., F.R.S., (through \\'illiam Watson, F.R.S.) presented to the Royal Society the following specimens : — 1. Platina, in dust, or minute masses, mixed with black sand and other impurities, as brought from the S]ianish West Indies. 2. Native Platina, separated from the above-mentioned impurities. 3. Platina that has been fu.sed. 4. Another piece of Platina that was part of the ijumnicl of a suortl. Mr Watson read several jwpers " concerning a new semi-metal called Platina" one of which was the Memoir by I)r Brownrigg. who says : — " This semi-metal was first jiresented to me about nine years ago, by Mr Charles \Vood, a skilful and inciuisitive metallurgist, who met with it in Jamaica, whither it had been brought from Carthagena, in New Spain. And the same gentleman hath since gratified my curiosity, by making further inc|uiries concerning this body. It is found in considerable quantities in the Spanish West Indies (in what part I could not learn), and is there known by the name of Platina di Pinto. The Sjjaniards probably call it Platina, from the resemblance in colour that it bears to silver. It is bright and shining, and of a uniform te.\ture ; it takes a fine jjolish, and is not subject to tarnish or rust ; it is ex- tremely hard and compact ; but, like bath-metal or cast-iron, brittle, and cannot be extended under the hammer When exjiosed by itself to the fire, either in grains or in larger pieces, it is of extreme difficult fusion ; and hath been kept for two hours in an air furnace, in a heat that would run down cast-iron in fifteen minutes : which great heat it hath endured without being melted or wasted ; neither could it be brought to fuse in this heat, by adding to it Borax and other saline fluxes. But the Spaniards have a way of melting it down, either alone or by means of some flux; and cast it into sword hilts, buckles, snuff-boxes, and other utensils." I)r Brownrigg's paper gave the details of many experiments ; as to these he wrote from White- haven, Februar\- 13, 1751, (n.s.) : — "The gentleman, whose ex[)eriments on Platina I men- tioned to the Royal Society, was Mr Charles Wood, who permitted me to make what use of them I pleased ; and I did not pretend to have made any new discovery, nor to know so much of that body, as hath long been known to the Spaniards. I might indeed have made use of his authority ; but he was not ambitious of apjiearing in print." One of Charles Wood's living representatives is his grand daughter, Mrs Mary Howitt (//(V Botham), a picturesque i)oetical authoress, sometimes publishing works entirely her own, and sometimes in partnership with her husband, Mr William Howitt. She herself has long had an honourable place in the literature of her country, her guiding sentiments being (as she her- self avows), " the love of Christ, of the poor, and of little children." A Norman family of twenty-two sons and one daughter, whose father was Comte de Tan- kerville, became known in England through the escape hitlier, from the St Bartholomew mas- sacre, of William Chamberlaine, a younger son, one of a race of "cajjtains and great commanders." The refugee's wife was " Jeneveva Vignon of Fnmce (see " The \'isitation of I oo INTR OD L/C TOR 1 ' MEMOIRS. London," 1634.) Each of his two sons was named Peter, of whom the elder left a daughter, wife of Cargill of Aberdeenshire. The younger son was Peter Chamberlaine of London, practitioner in physic, who married Sarah, daughter of William de Laune, doctor in physic. He had many children, of whom the eldest was Dr Peter Chamberlaine, physician to King Charles L and to King Charles IL, who married Jane, daughter of .Sir Hugh Middleton, Bart. His son seems to have slightly altered his surname, which in 1664 he signed thus: — " Hugh Chamberlen ;" he also was of London, and a doctor of physic : his wife was Dorothy, daughter of John Brett, Esq., of in Kent. His son and successor was Hugh Chamberlain (or Chamberlen), M.D., of Cambridge, {born 1664, died 1728) ; he was three times married, and had by his first wife one daughter, and by his second wife two daughters. He was a fashion- able physician and accoucheur, and a highly successful general practitioner in London, and left a large fortune. He brought Mauriceau's (the French Physician) Treatise, and his inven- tion of the obstetrical forceps, into notice and use. His monument was provided by Edmund, Duke of Buckingham, and his epitaph by Bishop Atterbury. Mr George Lewis Smith says, that this monument which is in Westminster Abbey, is executed in marble of different colours by P. A. Scheemakers and Laur. Delvaux, and is " of striking effect ;" the recumbent statue of the author, and the figures of Health, Longevity, and Fame are all gracefully and success- fully designed and executed. , The following is the epitaph : — HUGO CHAMBERLEN, Hugonis ac Petri utriusque Medici filius ac nepos, Medicinam ipse excoluit feliciter et egregi6 honestavit : ad summam quippe artis suae peritiam summam etiam in dictis et factis fidem, insignem mentis candorem, morumque suavitatem, adjunxit, ut an languentibus an sanis acceptior, an medicus an vir melior esset certatum sit inter eos qui in utroque laudis genere Primarium fuisse uno ore consentiunt. Nullam ille medendi rationem non assecutus, depellendis tamen Puerperarum periculis, et avertendis Infantium morbis, operam prascipue impendit, eaque multoties cavit ne illustribus familiis eriperentur hceredes unici, ne patriae charissimje cives egregii. Universis certo prodesse (quam potuit) voluit, adeoque, distracta in Partes republica. Cum iis, a quorum sententia discessit, amicitiam nihilominus sancte coluit, artisque suae prtesidia lubens communicavit. Fuit ille tantii vitae elegantia et nitore, animo tam forti tamque excelso, indole tam propensa ad munificentiam, specie ipsa tam ingenua atque liberal!, ut faciK' crederes prosapis ejus nobilem aliquem exstitisse auctorem, utcumque ex praeclara stirpe veterum Comitum de Tankerville jam a quadringentis Ilium annis ortum nescires. In diversa quam expertus fortunae sorte. Quod suum erat — quod decuit — semper tenuit ; cum Magnis vivens baud demiss6 se gessit, HIE CLANCART\ GROUP. \o\ cum Minimis non asi)eri'', non inliumatK'-, utrosque eoilem bene merendi studio complexus, utriscjue idem, xqui^ utilis ac charus. Filius — erat mini in patrem pietate ; Pater — filiarum amantissimus quas quidem tres habuit, unam e primS conjuge, duas ex altera, castas, bonas, matribus simillimas ; cum iis omnibus usque ad mortem conjunctissimi vixit. Tertiam Uxorem sibi superstitem reliquit. Ad humaniores illas ac domosticas virtutes tanquam cumulus accessit Rerum Divinarum amor non fictus, suinma Numinis Ijisius reverentia, quil)us inibula mens, exuvias jam corporis depositura, ad Superiora se erexit, morbi diutini languoribus infracta pcrmansit, et vitam tandem banc minime vitalem— non dissolutii, non infructuos6 actam — morte vere Christiana claudens, ad patriam ccelestem migravit. Obiit 17° Junii, A.D. 1728, annis sexaginta quatuor exjjletis, provectiori aetate san6 dignus, cujus ope effectum est ut multi, non inter prinios pene vagitus extincti, ad extremam nunc senectutem possint pervenire. Viro Integerrimo, Amicissimo ob servatam in partu vitam, ob restitutam sa:pius et confirmatam tandem valetudinem, Alonumentum hoc Sepulchrale ejus Kffigie insignitum posuit EDMUNDUS DUX BUCKINGHAMENSIS, appositis inde statuis ad exemplum marmoris antiqui expressis, quae quid ab illo proestitum sit, et quid illi (redditus licet) adhuc debetur, posteris testatum faciant. In the Proceedings of the Society of Atitiquaries of Scotland, Vol. VI. (1866-67), pages 284 to 310, there are printed : — "Notes relating to Mrs Esther (Langlois, or) Inglis, the cele- brated calligraphist, with an enumeration of Manuscript Volumes written by her between the years 1586 and 1624. By David Laing, Esq., Sec. F.S.A., Scot." I am permitted to present my readers with an abridgment of Mr Laing's Paper. Nicholas Langlois and Marie Preset, his wife, fled to this country from the St Bartholomew Massacre ; their infant daughter, Esther, born (probably in Dieppe) in 157 1, was a refugee with them. They immediately, or soon after their flight, settled in Edinburgh. The rudiments of the art of calligraphy, which Esther brought to such perfection, she learned from her mother. On the anniversary of St Bartho- lomew in 1574, "9 Calend. Septemb. 1574 quo die multa Christianorum millia, duos abhinc annos in Galliis trucidatione perfidiosa, e vivis fuerunt sublata," Nicholas Langlois wrote a Latin letter to Mr David Lyndsay, Minister of Leith, acknowledging his obligations. The letter is followed by a copy of some sets of verses, in which his wife exhibits her beautiful writing in various styles of penmanship. This artistic portion of the still existing manuscript is introduced by the announcement, "' Uxor mea vario caracteris genere ilia pro viribus in sequenti pagina, me suasore, descripsit ;" and it is signed thus : — Marie Preset Francoise escrivoit a Edimbourg le 24 d' Aoust, 1574." The City Treasurer's accounts bear evidence of the kindness shown to this refugee family, and prove that he was enabled to open a French school : — I02 INTRODUCTORY MEMOIRS. 1578-9, March Item to Nicholas Langloys Francheman, and Marie Prisott, his spous, for tliair heljiand releif of sum debt contractit be thame in the zeir of God 1578, . £70 o o 1580, July. Item to Nicholas Langloys Francheman, and Marie Prisott his spouse, . 80 o o 15S1, July. Item to Nicholas Langloys Francheman, Master of the French scole, conforme to his Ma''" precept, . . . . . 80 o o He also received his pension of Fifty Pounds Scots at Whitsunday term in the years 1582, 1583, 1584, and 1585. A little MS. in the British Museum entitled : — " Livret contenant diverses sortes de lettres escrit a Lislebourg, par Esther Langlois, Franc^'oise, 1586" is probably little Esther's advanced exercise-book under her mother's tuition. Esther was married in 1596, to Bartholomew Kello ; but in her manuscripts she continued to call herself by her maiden name. These manuscripts, beautifully illuminated, and sometimes further adorned with her own portrait, entirely with her own hand, were e.xecuted for presentation to her patrons and patronesses, some of whom were exalted personages, and from whom she received gratuities in return. A French Psalter, dated 27 Mars 1599, and presented to Queen Elizabeth, bears her .signature as Esther Anglcis. In 1600 she adopts the signature Esther liiglis. Her husband and her- self lived in Edinburgh for several years after their marriage. He had received a learned education, and was honoured by the notice of King James, who employed him as a messenger to the Netherlands in January 1600. He probably followed his royal patron to London ; there are extant signatures of himself and spouse, dated " at London, 8th August 1604," and one of her manuscripts is dated, "London, this first day of January 1608," but before this date, her husband had taken holy orders : the Rev. Bartholomew Kello was collated to the rectory of WiUingale Spain, near Chelmsford, 21st Dec. 1607, the King being patron. The manuscript just alluded to, is written in imitation of print, and contains the following brochure : — " A treatise of Preparation to the Holy Supper of our only Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ. Proper for all those who would worthily approach to the Holy Table of our Lord. Moreover, a Dialogue contenand the Principal poynts which they who wold communicat should knowe and understand. Translated out of French in Inglishe for the benefite of all who truely love the Lord Jesus. By Bartholomew Kello, Parson of WiUingale Spayne in the Countye of Essex." This MS., as well as many others, is in Mr Laing's possession ; it is No. 16 of the Twenty-Eight manuscripts described in his Paper. Her father died on the loth August, 161 1 at Edinburgh; in his Will, he mentions another daughter, Marie Inglis. In 1612, Esther is styled by an admirer of her talent, " L'unique et souvcraine Dame de la plume." Her husband and herself seem to have returned to Edinburgh in 1615 ; a MS. of that year on La Vaiiiti et Iiieonstance dii Monde \i in the possession of James Douglas, Esq., of Cavers (No. 23 in Mr Laing's list). Their only son, Samuel, comes to view as an Edin- burgh student in 16 17, and he took the degree of M.A. in 16 18. A letter from his mother to the king is extant, petitioning for his admission to an English university ; it is tlated Eden- brugh the XX of luin 1620. He was admitted to Christ Church, Oxford, and became (it is said) minister of Speakshall or Spexall in Suffolk. " Mrs Esther Inglis, spouse of Barthilmo Kello, indweller in Leith," died on 30th August 1624, aged 53. The admirable Scottish Divine, Robert Boyd of Trochrig, alludes to her in his diary thus: — " Ce moys de Juillet 1625, estant a Edin., j' appris la mort d' Esther Angloys, femme de Bart, de Kello ; damoy- selle done de pleusieurs beaux dons ; et entre autres excellent escrivain par dessus toutes las femmes de son siecle, dont j'ay quekjues beaux monuments de sa main et son amitie enverse ma femme et moy." Her husband survived until 15th March 1638; at the time of his death, he was styled, " I5arthilmo Kello, minister of God's word, and indweller in Edinburgh." Be- sides her son, two daughters, Elizabeth and Marie, also surviveil her. Her [)ortrait, painted in 159s, is in Mr Laing's possession, and has been engraved under his superintendence. THE CLANCARTV GROLI'. 103 Oeorgc Jeunc, or Le Jeune, was a dcsccnclant of a gootl family of Moiupclicr (formerly of La Marche), Sieurs de Chambeson. Mr Smiles, to wiioin the family petligree was communi- cated, informs us that he took refuge in Jersey and was settled there, in the jiarish of St Hrelade, in 1570, in which year he married Marie Hubert. The Register for 1869 mentions his lineal descendant, the late Francis Jeune, Esq., of Jersey, an\xc^\ {born 1491, died 1551), and Peter Martyr Vermiglio, {born 1500, died 1562). .Mexandre's colleague in the pastorate was Nicholas des Gallars, called De Saules, perhaps he was the person whose name in Latin was Galasius. The Pastors in the reign of Edward VL, having tied from the fires of Queen Mary's reign, did not return to Threadneedle-street. Our old historians give their latin names ; Kir Burn gives us their French names and the following memoranda. They were two in number. The first was Fran9ois Perucel, called La Riviere ; before the Reformation he had been a cordelier or Franciscan friar, and he appears in 1542 as one of the celebrated preachers of that order; he was pasteur in London in 1550, and during the Marian dispersion, he returned to France ; he was one of the twelve ministers on the Protestant side at the disputation held at Poissy, in 1561 ; he fled to the protection of our ambassador, Throgmorton, after the battle of Dreux, in 1562. La Riviere's colleague was Richard Vauville alias Fran9ois ; he had become an Augustin monk in 1533, and aftenvards as a Huguenot pasteur, he had done eminent service at Bourges ; he accompanied the English exiles to Frankfort, and after the dispersion of their congregation he became the French minister of Frankfort, and died in harness after a lengthened pastorate. In the year 1562 Jean Cousin became pasteur. He was an able and influential man. In 1568 he appears to have presided at consistories held about the case of Corranus (see my Vol. I., page 92), who honoured him with his disapprobation and denunciations. Cousin would not adopt the idea that instead of making provision for the instruction of the people in definite truths, the church should provide [lerches, provender and dormitories for " enquirers ;" for to give to a blundering enquirer the salary intended for a teacher would be an abandonment of the souls of the peoijle to perish for lack of knowledge. In the same year the trade of the refugees received a shock through a proceeding of the Duke of Alva. The Spanish government had attempted to get possession of some cargoes in English ports, but the Queen having * This surname was imported into England before the Reformation. Under the year 1503, Anthony Wood notes in his Fasti of Oxford University, " This year Andrew Alexander, Dr. of Physic of Montpellier, was incorporated." 1 1 o INTR OD UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. ascertained that these cargoes were private property, took them under her guardianship. Accordingly the Duke seized all English cargoes in Spanish ports ; the Queen retaliated by seizing Dutch cargoes in her ports. This arrestment suspended the business of many refugees of all the foreign churches. Pasteur Cousin laid their case before the Bishop of London (Grindal) ; and after an interview, he wrote the following pithy letter to Bishop Grindal : — Honor6 Seigneur, Suyvant I'advertisement je vous ay donne touchant les Complaintes de nos Marchans, pour les incommodites qui leur surviennent bien grandes et journellement en leurs trafifiques, je vous supplie d'avoir souvenance, es lettres que vous ferez pour la Cour, de points suivans. Premiferement, Leurs Debiteurs font refus de les payer. Secondement, Leurs Crediteurs ne les veulent supporter, ains* les pressent par impor- tunity pour avoir payement. Tiercement, Quant aux Lettres de Change, ils tombent en reproche et prejudice de leur credit. Votre humble serviteur, Jean Cousin. The government undertook to except the cargoes belonging to Protestant refugees. And with this view, lists of names were called for. All church members born in Flanders, and in other places under the dominion of the King of Spain, were included in the lists. The French list, dated January 1569, was signed by Jean Cousin, Antoine de Pouchel and Pierre Chastelain,/fl'.f/'t7/;-j-, and by Michel Chaudron, Gerard de Lobel and others, ancicns. (Strype's Life of Grindal, Book L, chap. 13). A French minister, Mr Cossyn, is in the lists of strangers for 1568; whether this is an Anglicized form of the surname Cousin, I cannot decide. Peter Bignon, a French Protestant, had assisted Professor Wakefield in conducting his Hebrew class in Cambridge. The chair becoming vacant, he obtained a public certificate of his eminent diligence and ability, dated loth November, 1574, signed by Drs. Perne and Norgate, and other University men. This certificate he presented to the Chancellor of the University, Lord Burghley ; and his lordship supported him with much zeal, writing in his favour to the Vice-chancellor and Heads of Colleges, and also promoting a subscription to augment the stipend ; in the latter movement he enlisted the energies of Archbishop Parker. The reply of the University authorities was that they were bound to elect a Master of Arts to the vacant lectureship, and to give a preference to a Fellow of Trinity College ; that, therefore, Mr Bignon was not eligible, and to suspend the statute in his favour would be a discourage- ment to their own graduates. They undertook, however, to shew kindness to him, if he would continue to reside with them. Strype adds, " what they did for him I find not ; probably they allowed him to be a private reader and instructor of scholars in that kind of learning, and might allow him an honorary stipend." (Life of Parker, folio, page 470). The first mention of the refugees in the Atheuce Oxonieiiscs is under the date, 4th July 1576. " Peter Regius [Le Roy? — ] a Frenchman, M.A. of twelve years' standing in the LIniversity of Paris, now an exile for religion, and a catechistical lecturer in this university, supplicated that he might be admitted Bachelor of Divinity, and that the exercise to be performed for it might be deferred till Michaelmas Term following, because he shortly after designed to return to his native country. But the regents, upon mature consideration, returned this answer, that he might take the said degree when he pleased, conditionally that he perform all exercises requisite by the statute before he take it. On the same day, Giles Gualter, M.A., of eight years' standing in the University of Caen, (another exile, as it seems), did supplicate under the same form ; but whether either of them was admitted, it appears not." • This word must have been in use as a synonym for "mais." Boyer said of the word (in his Royal Dic- tionary), " il est vieux et ne se dit qu'cn raillant. " UNIVERSITY GROUP. iit In the same year, July 1 1, a Cambridge D.D. was incorporated at Oxford, under the name of Peter Baro. In Haa\:^ we find his true name, Pierre Baron. He was a native of Estampes, and tlierefore designated by the adjective Stoiipanus. He had been incori)orated in Canibriilge on jrtl Feb. 1575, on jjresenting his French diploma as Licentiate of Civil Law of the College of Bourges. He had been hospitably received by Dr. Andrew Perne, Vice- chancellor, and was made Lady .NLirgaret's Professor of Divinity in Cambridge. He drew his first stipend in the year 1576 ; but probably he had been elected in 1574, for in a letter to Lord Hurghley, dated 1580, he speaks of his si.x years' labours. He wrote many volumes and tractates, and unhappily signalized himself by combating the received opinions concerning divine grace in tiie salvation of men, and in suggesting propositions for a verbal and apparent harmonizing of Romish and Protestant doctrines on tiiat subject and on kindred iioints. The Lambeth Articles defining and elucidating the Reformation doctrines were sent down to Cambridge to promote peace, and commanded to be held as statutory at least to the extent, " that notiiing should be publicly taught to the contrary." The only rebel was Dr. Baro, who, on 1 2th January 1595. preached a sermon to tiie clergy (Concio ad Clerum), re-asserting his own theorems. Queen Elizabeth had heard of the Doctor's former irregularities, and com- municated her warm displeasure to Archbisbop Whitgift, her Majesty being pleased to observe that " Dr. Baro, being an alien, ought to have carried himself cjuietly and peaceably in a country where he was so humanely iiarboured and enfranchised, both himself and his family." Dr. Baro was touched by tiiis appeal, and also by the Archbishop's moderation ; to the latter he wrote a letter dated 13th Dec. 1595, expressing his adherence to his own published doctrines, making this promise — " I will keep peace as long as I shall be here"; as to the Queen he said, " I wish it may be known at length to the Queen's Majesty what my piety and reverence is toward her ; indeed for her, and for the defence of the state of this church which she defends, I would shed my blood, if need were, with as willing and ready a mind as her own faithful subjects ought to do, and as she would have me do, since she has been willing to make me free of her kingdom, and my wife and children, and to confirm it with her seal." The death of Dr. \\'hitaker had just hajjpened, (viz., on 4th Dec), and Dr. Baro had desired to be promoted to the Regius Professorship of Divinity thus left vacant. For the sake of peace, however, he refrained from making any application for that chair ; and in 1596 he withdrew from Cambridge, having resigned his Lady Margaret professorship. He settled in London, living for many years in Crutched Fryers : there he died, he was buried in the parish church of St. Olave in Hart Street. The city clergy attended his funeral (by order of the Bishop of London), and six Doctors of Divinity were his pall-bearers. Strype informs us that he left a large posterity behind him, and tliat his eldest son, Samuel Baro, was a physician, and lived and died in Lynn-Regis, in Norfolk. Anthony Wood says, "The Baro's, or Barons (as they are by some called), who do now, or did lately, live at Boston, in Lincolnshire, and at King's Lynn in Norfolk, are descended from him." But neither of these great antiquaries are able to give the date of his death. Pasteur Jean Castol, of the City of London French Church, was a zealous minister and an influential man at Court. In 15S3 the learned Scottisli Divine, Andrew Melville, had re- course to him to contradict false reports and insinuations regarding the Presbyterians ; Melville's Letter to Castol is still jireserved ; Dr. M'Crie informs us that it is in the Cotton MSS., Calig. C. IX., 59. Strype frequently mentions Castol, and calls him " a discreet and learned man," — " a knowing person, who had considerable intelligence from abroad, and especially from France." I have already given the substance of his letter to the Lord Treasurer in 1591, representing that the more w^ealthy members of his congregation had gone to the army of Henri IV. at their own expense, and that the poorer men, if able-bodied, had been provided with the means of joining that royal army ; thus he demonstrated that no contribution could be sent for the equipment of the English auxiliary forces destined to fight under the same standard. The letter, so piously and judiciously expressed," is jirinted at full length in the original Latin in Strype's Life of Whitgift, Book IV., Appendix No. XIII. It concludes thus : — 1 1 2 IXTROD UCTOR 1 ' MEMOJRS. " Ista sunt, amplissime Doniine, qu« mihi de nostro coetu nimis, et magno cum dulore nieo, comperta sunt, et de quibus Dignitatem tuam ad vitandam omnem offensionem certiorem factam velim. Ut finem dicendi faciam, magni beneficii loco repono quud tantum et tarn prc'estantem monitorem habemus qui nos ad Christianas charitatis obsequ'ium provocare dignetur ; sed quoniam summa est tenuitas, et opes non suppetunt, ajquitatem ac modera- tionem tuam e nostro nomine omnem sordium et tenacitatis labem abstersurani spero. Vale, Honoratissime Vir. Deus te, superstite augustissima Regina, diu incolumem servet et omni benedictionum genere locuplelet. Datum, Londini, ig December, 1591. " Amplitudini et Dignitati tua; addictissimus Joannes Castollus." The writer had declared his belief that King Henri's contest was "pro Dei Ecclesia." This view had also been endorsed by our government. A prayer for the good success of the French King was printed in 1590, with this title: — "A Prayer used in the Queen's Majesties House and Chapel for the prosperity of the French King and his Nobility, assailed by a Multitude of notorious Rebells that are supported and waged by great Forces of Foreigners, August 21, 1590." I copy it from Strype (Annals, Vol. IV., page 41) : — " O most mighty God, the only protector of all kings and kingdoms, we thy humble servants do here with one heart and one voice call upon thy heavenly grace, for the prosper- ous state of all faithful Christian Princes, and namely, at this time, that it would please thee of thy merciful goodness to protect by thy favour, and arm with thine own strength, the Most Christian King, the French King, against the rebellious conspirations of his rebellious sub- jects, and against the mighty violence of such foreign forces as do join themselves with these rebels with intention to deprive him most unjustly of his kingdom, but finally to exercise their tyranny against our Sovereign Lady and her kingdom and peoj>le, and against all others that do profess the Gospel of thy only Son our Lord Jesus Christ. Now, O Lord, is the time when thou mayest shew forth thy goodness and make known thy power. For now are these rebels risen up against him, and have fortified themselves with strange forces that are known to be mortal enemies both to him and us. Now do they all conspire and combine themselves against thee, O Lord, and against thy Anointed. Wherefore, now, O Lord, aid and maintain thy just cause ; save and deliver him and his army of faithful Subjects from the malicious, cruel, bloody men ; send him help from thy holy sanctuary and strengthen him out of Zion. O Lord, convert the hearts of his disloyal subjects. Bring them to the truth and due obedi- ence of Jesus Christ. Command thy enemies not to touch him, being thy Anointed, pro- fessing thy holy Gospel, and putting his trust only in thee. Break asunder their bands that conspire thus wickedly against him. For his hope is in thee. Let his help be by thee. Be unto him, as thou wast unto King David whom thy right hand had exalted, the God of his salvation, a strong castle, a sure bulwark, a shield of defence, and place of refuge. Be unto him counsel and courage, policy and power, strength and victory. Defend his head in the day of battle. Comfort his army, his true faithful noblemen, the Princes of his Blood, and all other his faithful subjects. Strengthen them to join their hearts and hands with him. Associate unto him such as may aid him to maintain his right, and be zealous of thy glory. Let thy holy angels walk in circuit about his realm, about his loyal people ; that the enemies thereof, though they be multiplied in numbers, though they exalt themselves with horses and horsemen, though they trust to their numbers, to their shields, and glory in strength, yet they may see with Elizeus the unresistable army of angels which thou canst send for the defence of thy inheritance ; and that thy enemies may know and confess that thy power standeth not in multitude, nor thy might in strong men ; but thou, O Lord, art the help of the humble, the defender of the weak, the protector of them that are forsaken, and the Saviour of all those who put their trust in thee. O merciful Father, we acknowledge thy gracious goodness in our own former deliverance from the like kind of eneniies and rebels against thy Anointed, our Sovereign Lady and Queen professing thy Gospel. So will we do in this, and be as joyful of ( W/ 1 •/•A'.SV TV OA'Ol r. 1 1 ; it, aiul no Ions th.inkful for it, ami make the snme to be for ever an occasion unto us ol' more faithlul subjection to our own dread -Sovereif^n — whom. Lord, we beseech, now and evermore most mercifully bless, with healiii of body, jjcace of country, purity of religion, jjrosperity of estate, and all inward and outward hapijiness, and heavenly felicity. This grant, merciful Father, for the glory of thine own name, and for Christ Jesus' sake, our Mediator and only Saviour. Aiiicn." Another Latin letter by Castol is e.xtant (Strype's Whitgift, Book IV., Appendi.x No. 32). It was addressed to the .Archbishop of Canterbury, who forwarded it to the Lord Treasurer. The date was 2^tli July. 1596; the contents were news from abrcad. Henri IV. is called Gixlliis, and I'hilip of .Spain llispaniis ; and peace between them is deprecated, as threatening combined hostilities against the Dutch. Our Queen's friendshij), he hints, will not be much affected by either potentate, except as events may render it convenient ; (credo augustissimae Reginre amicitiani, non factis sed eventis tantiim, ab ejusmodi sociis ponderari). From Mr Hum's lists it ajijjcars that Monsieur Castol was inducted to the City of London Church in 1582. He was colleague of Robert Le Ma^on, called l)c la Fontaine, who had been inducted in 1574, and whom we meet again in 1604, the year of the promotion of Bishop Vaughan to the See of London. On that year Mr de la Fontaine made a Latin sjjeech to the former Bishop (Bancroft) who had received his appointment to Canterbury, and another to the new bishop. The latter speech is interesting as narrating the fact that on the accession of Elizabeth, the office of supe'intendent of Foreign Churches, which had been held by John a Lasco, was given to John Utenhove, who held it till his death. ["The widow of LUenhove, with three children, boarders with her," is included in the Lists of Strangers in 156S.] It was after that event that Bishop C.rindal was retiuested to become Patron and Super- intendent, and he having accepted the charge with the Queen's ])ermission, it devolved by custom on the Bishop of London, ex officio. Bishop Vaughan, in reply, eulogized John a Lasco as vir pnestantissimus, ornatus miiltis dotibus aiiiini et ing^i'iiii, and acknowleilged the good services to religion and to the state, rendered by the Foreign Churches, with which he had been acquainted for a quarter of a century. He expressed regret at the internal dissen- sions in the Church of England, and concluded by apologizing for his latinity, his .speech being ex tempore. Mr. De la F'ontaine replied briefly (in Latin), that as refugees they could not interfere in English ecclesiastical atfairs, but that they would entertain any suggestion for the promotion of peace in the Church, an end for which they would even lay down their lives. We are now in the reign of King James. 'i"he greatest Frenchman who took up his resi- dence in England in this reign was Isaac Casaubon.* He was a Protestant, and his judgment and conscience adhered to his creed ; but his ])iety was somewhat undermined in the court of Henri IV. On the death of that king he came to England, and was induced to prolong his stay until he finally settled among us. It may be questioned, however, if we should give a place among Protestant Refugees to one concerning whom Du Moulin wrote, " By all means detain Casaubon in England, for if he returns to France there is every reason to fear that he will recant. ' His parents fled from Bordeaux in (lascogne in the reign of Henri II. ; his father was the Pasteur .\rnauld Casaubon ; his mother's maiden name was Jeanne Rousseau. Isaac was born at Geneva on 8th Feb. 1559 (o.s.). He became Creek Professor at Geneva in 1583, and hekl his chair till 1597, when he removed to the Greek Chair in the College of Montpellier. The chief sources of information concerning him are the collection of his letters (Casauboni Epistolae), and his Diary, begun at Montpellier, which was composed in the Latin language, and which was printed in tlie same learned tongue by the University of Oxford in the present century. In the beginning of the seventeenth century he came under royal ])atronage and was brought to Paris, and honoured with office and salary as Reader to the King and Keeper of the Royal Library. His favourite friends and correspondents were Protestants; Henry Stephens (Ilenricus Stephanus) was his father-in-law; Theodore Beza * For my account of Casaubon I am much indebted to an article in Hou^t'hold Words, \'ol. \I., page id. Tlif writer, however, has overlorikcd the dift'crence between Boiiieniix and Pounli-aux. P 1 1 4 INTROD UCTOR Y MKMOIKS. «;is his idol ; he also greatly admired Andrew Melville. I quote a part of his first letter to Melville, dated at Paris, 1601, (M'Crie's translation) : — "The present epistle, learned Melville, is dictated by the purest and most sincere affection. Your piety and erudition are universally known, and have endeared your name to every good man and lover of letters I have always admired the saying of the ancients, that all good men are linked together by a sacred friendship, although often separated by many a mountain and many a toivn Permit me to make a complaint, which is common to me with all the lovers of learning who are acquainted with your rare erudition. We are satisfied that you have beside you a number of writings, especially on subjects connected with sacred literature, which, if communicated to the studious, would be of the greatest benefit to the Church of God. Why do you suppress them, and deny us the fruits of your wakeful hours ? There are already too many, you will say, who burn with a desire to appear before the public. True, my learned Sir, we have many authors, but we have few or no Melvilles. Let me entreat you to make your appearance, and to act the part which Providence has assigned you in such a manner as that we also may share the benefit of your labours. Farewell, learned Melville, and henceforward reckon me in the number of your friendsj' In 1603 Casaubon visited Geneva and was overjoyed to find Beza still alive to welcome him — "Theodore Beza ! what a man I what piety! what learning ! O truly great man ! " (these are his expressions in his diary). The assassination of Henri IV. happened in 1610 (May 14); and it was during the consternation and perplexities incident on such a tragic and sudden catastrophe, that Casaubon accepted King James' invita- tion, and arrived in London. He was made a Prebendary both of Canterbury and West- minster, and was allowed to hold those prebends without taking holy orders, and his mainten- ance was further provided for by a pension. As to the pension there is extant His Majesty's Memorandum : — " Chancelor of my Excheker, I will have Mr Casaubon paid before me, my wife, and my barnes (23d Sept. 1612)." His friend, Andrew Melville, for resisting the intro- duction of Episcopacy into Scotland, was undergoing a four years' imprisonment. Dr M'Crie says, " The warm approbation of the constitution of the Church of England, which Casaubon expressed, and the countenance which he gave to the consecration of the Scottish prelates at Lambeth, were by no means agreeable to Melville. But notwithstanding this he received frequent visits from him in the Tower ; and on these occasions they entertained and instructed one another with critical remarks on ancient authors, and esjjecially on the Scrip- tures." Casaubon has recorded his delight with an improved ])unctuation of i Tim. iii. 15, 16, of which Melville informed him: — "These things write I unto thee — that thou mayesl know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the house of God, which is the Church of the Living God. The pillar and ground of the truth, and great without controversy, is the mystery of godliness, God was manifest in the flesh," &c. It is said that such society was Casaubon's relief from the literary tasks set him by the king. " He (says M'Crie) who had devoted his life to the cultivation of Grecian and Oriental literature, and who had edited and illustrated Strabo, Athenaeus, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Poly^mus, and Polybius, was now condemned to drudge in replying to the Jesuit Fronto le Due, correcting His Majesty's answer to Cardinal Du Perron, refuting the annals of Cardinal Baronius, and writing letters to induce his illustrious friend De Thou to substitute King James's narrative of the troubles of Scotland in the room of that which he had already jiublished on the authority of Buchanan." Under the year 161 3 Anthony Wood notes : — " The most learned Isaac Casaubon was entered a student in Bodley's Library as a member of Christ-Church in the month of May, but died soon after to the great loss of learning; he was a great linguist, a singular Grecian, and an excellent philologer." The date of his death was ist July 1614. He had married in 15S7 at Geneva the daughter of Henry Stejihanus, by whom he had twenty children. His son, Florence Etienne Meric Casaubon, known as Rev. Meric Casaubon, was born in Geneva, 14th Aug. 1599, and was educated at Sedan and Oxford. He became a student of Ciirist- Church, M..\. in 1621, B.U. in 1628, and D.D. in 1636 ; he was Rector of Ickham and Pre- bendary of Canterbury ; during the Commonwealth he was dcprixcd, and refused all offers of r.\7l7:A'S//\- CROl J'. MS kiiulnoss from Cromwell; ;it liic Restoration lie was reinstated and survived till 14th July 1671 ; he diet! at Canterluiry, and was buried within the Cathedral. He was the father of John Casaubon, Surgeon in Canterbury, whose son, Meric, died young. Another son of Isaac Casaubon was James, M..\. of Oxforil in 1641, who studied Divinity under l)r Prideaux. There is a tablet to the memory of Isaac Casaubon in Westminster Abbey (opposite Dryden's monument) with this inscription : — ISAAC: C.VSAUBON (O Doctiorum quidquid est, assurgite Huic tarn rolendo nomini) Quern Gallia rei[)ublic;\; literaria; bono peperit Henricus IV. l-'rancorum Rex invictissimus Lutetiam literis suis evocatuni Hibliothecai sua: pracfcLit Charumque deinceps, duiii vixit, habuit, Eo(jue terris erejjto, Jacobus Magn. Hrit. iMonarcha, Regum doctissinius, Doctis indulgeniissinius, in Angliam accivit, Munific^ fovit, Posteritasque ob doctrinam reterniini mirabitur. H. S. E. Invidia major. Obiit ffiternam in Christo vitam anhelans Kal. Jul. MDCXIV'. ret. LV. Qui nosse vult Casaubonum Non saxa, sed chartas legat Superfuturas niarmori Et jjrofuturas posteris. The epitaph to Meric Casaubon in Canterbury Cathedral (where he lies buried " in the south part of the first cross aisle joining southward to Christ-Church Cathedral,") contains the following encomium : — Sta et venerare, viator ! Hie mortales immortalis spiritus exuvias deposuit Meric Casaubon Magni Nominis ) , Eruditi.iue Generis / P^*" ^^^^^ f. Patrem Isaacuni Qasaubonum j quippe qui < Avum Henricum Stephanum ,■ habuit ( Pro-avum Robertum Stephanum j Heu quos viros ! qua; literarum luniina ! quK oevi sui decora ! ipse eruditionem per tot erudita capita traduce excepit, excoluit, et ad pietatis (quse in ejus pectore regina sedebat) omamentum et incremcntum feliciter consecravit, rempublicamque lilerariam multiplici rerum et linguarum supellectile locupletavit — Vir, incertuni doctior an melior — in paupL-rcs liberalitate, in amicos utilitate, in omnes humanitate, in acutissimis longissimi morbi tormentis Christian^ patientiA,, insignissimus. Another eminent French Protestant was our King James's physician. Louis de Mayerne Baron d'Aubon, was a French author who with his lady fled from Paris to Geneva, narrowly escaping the St Bartholomew Massacre. It is with their son that we are now concerned, viz., Theodore Turquette de Mayerne, who was born in Geneva. He took the degree of Doctor of Physic at Montpellier. and rose to be a Councillor, as to matters of physic, to the 1 1 6 IXTRODICTOK 1 ' MEMOIRS. King of F" ranee. He came to England and was incorporated as M.D. of Oxford, ■' with more than ordinary solemnity," 8th April, i6o6. He was chief Physician to King James, and afterwards to Charles I. He was sent on a diplomatic mission to France in i6i8, but was ordered by the French Government to depart. On 14th July 1624, he was knighted at Theobald's. Sir Theodore was an author on medical subjects. He worshipped in the Presbyterian Church of Kensington. His mother resided in England, and was buried in the chancel of St. Martin's-in-the-Fields ; where also five of his children were buried, and beside them he himself was laid on 30th March, 1655. His Funeral Sermon was preached by Rev. Thomas Hodges of Kensington. He was twice married, and his second wife, Isabella, survived as his widow. Two daughters were married to cadets of the ducal house of Caumont de La Force. Elizabeth, Marquise de Cugnac, died in her father's lifetime (see my Vol. H., p. 203, note). Adrienne, Baroness D'Aubon, became the wife of her sister's husband's brother, Armand de Caumont, Marquis de Mompouillan ; the marriage proclamation is dated i8th January 1656-7 (Register of St. Paul's, Covent Garden), but the marriage, as registered at Chelsea, bears the singularly remote date of 21st July 1659. Sir Theodore's epitaph, alluded to by i^nthony AVood, was probably the same as the following tribute inscribed below his engraved Portrait : — Theo : Turquet : De Mayerne, Eques Auratus, Patria Gallus, Religione Reforniatus, Dignitate Baro :, Professione alter Hippocrates, ac trium regum (exemplo rarissimo) Archiater, Eruditione incomparabilis, experientia nulli secundus, et, quod ex his omnibus resultat, fama late vagante perillustris. Anno aetat : 82. His works were (i) Medicinal Counsels and Advices. (2) A Treatise on the Gout. Both were in French, but were translated into Latin by Theoph. Bonet, Doctor of Physic. (3) Excellent and well approved receipts and experiments in Cookery, with the best way of preserving. i2mo., printed in 1658. (4) Praxeos in morbis internis, jira^cipue gravioribus et chronicis. Syntagma. London, 1690, 8vo., with his picture before it, aged 82, published by his godson, Theodore de Vaux, which Sir Theodore de Vaux, being Fellow of the Royal Society at London, communicated to them (a.d. 1687) Sir Theodore de Mayerne's Account of the Diseases of Dogs, and several receipts for the Cure of their Madness and of those bitten by them, which was published in the Fhilosophiciil Transactions, No. 191, i687. . . From the experiences also of the said Sir Theodore de Mayerne, and from those of Dr. Chamberlain and others, was written a book entitled " The Compleat Midwife's Practice," printed several times in octavo. Before he came into England he wrote Apo'ogia, &c., Rupel. [La Roclielle] 1603, 8vo. Quercitan and several famous men of France and Germany did make honourable mention of him nearly sixty years before his death. Nicholas Vionier, M.A. of Saumur, was incorporated as M.A. at Oxford on 14th Oct. 1623, and took the Degree of B.D. in 1624. This date brings us to the end of the reign of King James. In the next reign the first French graduate is memorialized among Oxford AA'riters by Anthony Wood : — " John Verneuil was born in the city of Bordeaux in France, educated in the University of Montauban till he was M.A., flew from his country for religion's sake, being a Protestant, and went into England where he had his wants supjiHed for a time by Sir Thomas Leigh. He retired to O-xford in 1608, and on 4th November, aged 25, he was matriculated in the University as a member of Magdalen College, from which House, as from others, he received relief. In 1625 (December 13) lie was incorporated M..\., being the Second Keeper of Bodley's Library, where he performed good service for that place, and wrote for the use of students tliere these things following : — (i) Catalogus Interprctuin ( X/l l.KSl'lY GROUP. 117 S. ScriiHurx juxta nunierorum onlinem ijui extant in Bibliotheci'i Hodlciana, 410.. ^d. edit., Oxford, 1635. (2) Klenclius autlioruni tarn rccentium quam antiquorum, (|ui in quatuor libros Sententiarum et Tlioma: Aquinatis Summas— item in Evangelia Dominicalia totiiis anni \the cxtnulsfrom the (Jospt'/s (i/iy//ix the Prayer-Book Collecls\ et de Casibus Conscientix, necnon in Orationem Dominican, Symholum Apostolorum et Decaloguni, scripserunt. Printed with Catologus Interpretum, 1635. (3) Noiiienclator of sucii Tracts and Sermons as have been printed and translated into Knglisli, upon any place or book of the Holy Scripture, now to be had in Bodley's Library, ramo., Oxford, [637-42. (4) He translated from French into English, a Tract of the Sovereign Judge of Controversies m matters of religion, by John Cameron, D.D., of Saumur, Divinity Professor in the University of Montauban, afterwards Princijial of Glasgow, 4to., Oxford, 1628. (5) He translated from English into Latin a book entitled, Of the deceitfulness of man's heart, by Daniel Dyke of Cambridge, Geneva, t634. The said John Vcrneuil died in his house within and near the East-gate of the city of Ox- ford, and was buried on 30th September, 1647. in the church of St. Peter-in-the-East, at which time our public library lost an honest and useful servant, and his children a good father" — [aged 64]. 1625-6. Thomas Levet (of York diocese). Licentiate of Civil Law of the University of Orleans, was incorporated at Oxford as Bachelor of Law. [In 1680 William Levet was D.D. of Oxford; in 1681, Principal of i^Lagdalen Hall; and, on loth January, 1685, Dean of Bristol. The Dean's brother was Sir Richard Levet, Lord Mayor of London in 1699]. Nicholas Lamie, having spent seven years in the study of medicine in the University of Caen in Normandy, entered Pembroke College, Oxford, and took the Degree of Bachelor of Physic in 1631. Another Frenchman, William ^Lanouvrier, styled Dominus de Pratis, was admitted to practise surgery. This is the last entry under the reign of Charles L During the Commonwealth we observe several eminent medical men asking and obtaining incorporation in Oxford University. 1648-9. ALirch 8. Abraham Huard, alias Lompri, sometime of the University of Caen, in Normandy, was created Doctor of Physic by virtue of the Chancellor's [Earl of Pembroke's] letters, which say that " his affections to the cause of the parliament have exposed him to sufferings He is a Protestant of France, and his quality and sufferings have been made known to me by persons of honour, gentlemen of quality, and physicians of this kingdom, as also by one Mr John Despaigne, one of the French Ministers of London, &c." 1655. Dec. 13. LoDovic de Lambermont of Sedan, a young man of great hopes and learning, son of John Lambermont of the same place, and Doctor of Physic of the University of Valence. His diploma for the taking of that degree at Valence bears date 8th March, 1651. Under the name of Lambermoiitius is extant Atit/wlogia Grcec. Lat. Lond. 1654. Query if by him ? 1656-7. ^Larch 10. The most famous and learned Theophilus de Garexcieres, of Paris, made Doctor of Physic at Caen in Normandy twenty years before this time, was incor- porated here in the same degree, not only upon sight of his testimonial letters (which abundantly speak his worth), subscribed by the King of France's Ambassador in England (to whom he was domestic physician), but upon sufficient knowledge had of his great merits, his late relinquishing the Roman Church, and zeal for that of the Reformed. This person, who was one of the College of Physicians of London, hath written (i) Ang/ice F/af^ellum, seu Tabes Angliae. Lond., 1647. [A medical book on the Plague.] (2) The admirable virtues and wonderful effects of the true and genuine Tincture of Coral in Physic, grounded by reason, established by experience, and confirmed by authentical authors in all ages. Lond., 1676. He also translated into English " The true prophecies or prognostications of Michael Nostradamus, Physician to K. Henry H., Fran. H., and Cha. IX., Kings of France, &c." Lond., 1672, folio. He died poor, and in an obscure condition, in Covent Garden, within the Liberty of Westminster, occasioned by the unworthy dealings of a certain knight, which, ii8 /A'J'JiODUCrORV An:MO/RS. in a manner, broke his heart.* It appears that the Pasteur D'Espagne was instrumental in his conversion to Protestant faith. That he left a son and heir to continue his name may be conjectured from the title-page of a volume that now lies before me : — " General Instructions, Divine, Moral, Historical, Figurative, (S:c., shewing the Progress of Religion from the Crea- tion to this time, and to the End of the World, and tending to confirm the Truth of the Christian Religion. By Theophilus Garencieres, Vicar of Scarbrough, and Chaplain to his Grace Peregrine, Duke of Ancaster." York, 1728. 1656. April 10. Peter Vasson was created Bachelor of Physic by virtue of the Chan- cellor's (Oliver Cromwell's) letters, dated 25th March, which say that he, the said Chancellor, had received very good satisfaction from several hands touching Mr Vasson, as to his suffering for his religion in his own nation, his service in the late wars to the Commonwealth, his skill in the faculty he professeth, and success (through the blessing of God) in the practice of it, together with the unblameableness of his conversation," &c. [In 1659 Peter Vasson or Vashon became M.D.] To these may be added the incorporation on 17th Nov. 1662 (temp. Chas. II.) of Peter Richier of Maremne in Saintonge, who had taken the degree of Doctor of Physic in Bordeaux in 1634. Among Huguenot theologians, incorporated at O.xford, is the following : — 1656-7. Jan. 29. Abraham Conyard, of Rouen, in Normandy, who had studied divinity several years in academies in France and Switzerland, was created Bachelor of Divinity by the decree of the Members of Convocation, who were well satisfied with his letters-testi- monial under the hands of the pastors of the Reformed Church of Rouen, written in his behalf The most celebrated name, however, is Du Moulin, of which there were distinguished representatives during three generations. Going back to 15S6, we find that King James gave his royal licence to French Protestants and their ministers to live in Scotland ; and the General Assembly of the Scottish Church of that year instructed Andrew Melville to write a letter in their name, assuring the refugees that every effort would be made to render their situation agreeable. One of the first who came over was Joachim Du Moulin, Pasteur of Orleans. The Town Council of Edinburgh voted stipends to the ministers of the refugees (11 May 1586), and allowed them to meet for public worship in the common hall of the College. A general collection was made throughout the parish churches in 1587. Dr Lorimert gives an interesting extract from the Minute Book of the General Kirk-Session of Glasgow, May 23, 1588, "the which day the Session ordains Mr Patrick Sharp, Principal of the College of Glasgow, and Mr John Cowper, one of the ministers there, to go to the [Town] Council on Saturday next, and to propound to them the necessities of the poor brethren of France banished to England for religion's cause, and to crave of them their support to the said poor brethren." The Presbytery of Haddington took a special interest in Monsieur Du Moulin himself, on October 18, 15S9, when they had before them "the warrant from the Synodal for the ingadering of the support to Mr Mwling banest out of France." It is perhaps of him that this anecdote is told, " Du Moulin, an eminent French Protestant divine, fled from his persecutors during the dreadful massacre of St Bartholomew's Day. It will be remembered that the destruction of the Protestants was persevered in on this occa- sion for three successive days. Du Moulin took refuge in an oven, over which, providentially, a spider wove her web. His pursuers actually came to the spot, but, perceiving the cobweb, they did not examine the interior, and the fugitive's life was saved." It might apply to Joachim's illustrious son, Pierre du Moulin, who was then four years of age, having been born * Whether he belonged to the same family as Charles Uu Moulin, the learned jurist, who is memorialised in Collier's Dictionaiy, I am not aware. According to that account the Du Moulin family was noble, and descended from the Seigneurs de P'ontenay, to whom our Queen Elizabeth's maternal ancestor, Thomas Boleyn, or Bulloigne, Vicomte de Rochefort, was related. t Historical Sketch of the Protestant Church of France, by Rev. John Gordon Lorimer, page 75. UNIVEKSJTV CKOri'. i,,; in 1568. Pierre was educated at the universities of Sedan and Cambridge (at tlie latter university lie s|)ent four years). He became Professor of Philosophy at l.eyden in 15V5, and from 1599 to 1620 Pasteur of Charenton. In 161 1 he had an opportunity of returning the hosijitality enjoyed in Scotland by his fiithcr. Andrew Melville had been banished to France, and Du Moulin welcomed him to his house and society. Dr Du Moulin visited London in 1615, and was the guest of King James. The last thirty-eight years of his life he spent at Sedan as Professor of Theology, and died in 1658. He was an eloquent and lucid preacher, and a very vigorous and learned author and disputant. His writings on Protestantism and against the Jesuits were almost innumerable. His " Anatomy of the Mass" is well-known and highly prized in its English dress. His epitaph was written by his son and namesake : — Qui sub isto marmore quiescit olim fuit PKTRUS MOLINCEUS. Hoc sat, viator ! Reliqua nosti, quisquis es Qui nomen inclytum legis. Laudes, Beati gloria baud desiderat, Aut sustinet modestia. Obiit Scdani, ad 6 Non : Mart : 1658, ajt. 90. The younger Peter Du Moulin was born in 1600, he was U.D. of Leyden, afterwards incorporated in Cambridge, and on loth October 1656 at O.xford. As a refugee he first appears in Ireland, where during some years of the Commonwealth he was under the patronage of Richard, Karl of Cork. Ne.xt he acted as tutor in Oxford to Charles Viscount Dungarvan and Hon. Richard Boyle. He had taken orders in tiie Church of England, and constantly preached at O.xford in the church of St Peter-in-the-East. He became famous through his contact with the great name of Milton, whom he violently assailed in his Regii Sanguinis Clamor ad cceluni adversus parricidas Anglicanos ; the little book was anonymous, but was acknowledged by the author in course of time. In 1657 he trafficked in calm waters, and published a long treatise On Peace and ConUntmcut of Mind, which reached a third edition. At the Restoration he was made a Royal Chaplain ; and being installed as Prebendary of Canterbury, he resided in that city till his death, at the age of 84, in October 1684. His sermons and other writings were admired in their day, and he was an honour to his name. Another son* of the great Du Moulin was Louis Du Moulin, born in 1603. He was a Doctor of Physic of Leyden, and incorporated in the same degree at Cambridge (1634) and at Oxford (r649). Under the Parliamentarian Commissioners he was made Camden Pro- fessor of History in the University of Cambridge. But the royalist commissioners turned him out soon after 1660, and he retired to Westminster. He had adopted the Independent theory of church government, and he worshipped with the Nonconformists. He is described as of a hot and hasty temper, no doubt aggravated by the intolerance with which he was treated by the ruling powers in Church and State, and even (it is said) by his own l)rother, the Prebendary. Otherwise he was a sociable and agreeable member of society, especially of literary society. In 1678 Rou met him in London, and describes him as a" tin caracth-e tout singulier ; he said that he had translated Rou's Chronological Tables into English, and that a nobleman would be at the e.xpense of engraving and publishing them, if Rou con- sented. That consent was refused (very unwisely, for afterwards they were pirated and appeared as the production of a Dr Tallents.) At a much earlier date Louis Du Moulin got into controversy with Richard Baxter, publi.shing under the pseudonym of Ludiomajus Colvinus, instead of his Latinised name, Ludovicus Molinajus. Baxter concludes his account of these contests by declaring, '• all these things were so far from alienating the esteem and affection of the Doctor, that he is now at this day one of those friends who are injurious to * There were three sons; the other was Cynis Du Moulin, who married Marie de Marbais, and died in Holland before 1680 ; his daughter was married in 1684 to Jacques Basnage. 1 2 o INTR OD UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. the honour of their own understandings by overvakiing me, and would fain have spent his time in translating some of my books into the French tongue." Again, in 167 1, Baxter writes, " Ur Ludov: Molineus was so vehemently set upon the crying down of the Papal and Prelatical Government, that he thought it was that he was sent into the world for, to convince princes that all government was in themselves, and that no proper government (but only persuasion) belonged to the churches. I'o which end he wrote his Parmnesis contra adifi- catores imperii in iinperio, and his Papa Ultrajcctiniis, and other tractates, and thrust them on me to make me of his mind, and at last wrote his Jiigulum Causa: with no less than seventy epistles directed to princes and men of interest, among which lie was pleased to put one to me. The good man meant rightly in the main, but had not a head sufficiently accurate for such a controversy, and so could not perceive that anything could be called proj)erly Govern- ment, that was, in no way, co-active [co-ercive] by corporal penalties. To turn him from the Erastian extreme and to end that controversy by a reconciliation, I published An Hundred Propositions conciliatory, on the difference between the magistrate's power and the pastor's." Ur Du Moulin had some angry paper warfare with three Deans — Stillingfleet, Durell, and Patrick, and with his kinsman, Canon De 1' Angle ; and before his death he wrote for publica- tion a retractation of all the mere personalities which he had printed. What most offended those dignitaries was that in the last year of his life he published these two pamphlets — (i.) The conformity of the discipline and government of those who are commonly called Independents to that of the ancient Primitive Christians. (2.) A short and true account of the several advances the Church of England hath made towards Rome. His comparatively young relative De L'Angle, besides using an unbecoming magisterial tone, had brought Prebendary Du Moulin's name into the dispute. Louis Du Moulin, in reply, hoped that his brother would discover where the Church's true distemper lay, and thereafter what was the remedy for it. His concluding paragraph I quote as a specimen of his style : — " In a word, I hope from my brother that being reconciled to the people of God and to me, he will make my peace with Monsieur de 1' Angle, which he may easily do ; for often- times some seem to be in great wrath and indignation, who would fain notwithstanding be made friends again, when they find they are angry without cause and to no purpose. I attribute that bitterness of his towards me, not to his natural temper which is meek and humble and full of benignity, but to that great distance which he fancies to be between his fortune and mine, and to that high place of preferment wherein he now is. So that I say of him what the fable reports of the Lamb and the Wolf — that the Lamb seeing from the top of the house, where he was, the Wolf passing by, gave him very railing and injurious language ; but the Wolf answered him mildly, ' I do not concern myself much at thy sharp and scornful words, for I am sure thy nature is quite contrary to it, but I attribute it to the highness of the place to which thou are exalted, which makes thee to forget thy usual and ordinary sweetness of temper.'" Dr Du Moulin died on the 20th October 16S0, and was buried in St Paul's, Covent Garden. He was aged 77. The most able Divine of the Refugee Churches in England was Jean D'Espagne, called by the English John Despagne (or, Despaigne). He was a native of DauphimS born in 1 59 1, and ordained to the pastorate at the age of nineteen.* It is said that he came to England soon thereafter, perhaps after the assassination of Henri IV. His name does not appear until the era of the Westminster Assembly and the Long Parliament. The City of London French Church claimed the charge of all the French Protestants in London, and re- sisted the formation of a congregation in Westminster. About 1641 the Due de Sonbise, being physically unable to go to the City Church, provided service in a room in his house, which he opened for public worship. Perhaps Monsieur D Esjiagne was the preacher to this * See a useful book, entitled, " Sound Doctrine, extracted from the writings of the most eminent Refornud Divines chiefly of the Krench I'rotestant Church. Translated from tlie French. Bath, 1801." The French Original was published at I'.asle with the following "Approbation"; IMPRIMATT'K, Johan. Halthasnr Burcardus, S.S. Th. D. cl. I'ruf. ; I'acul. 'Iheologica.- in .XcademiA Hasiliens. h. a. Decanus, D. 29 Scptembr. 1768. UNIVERSITY GROUP. 121 courtly congregation ; at all events, we fnul him established under the ])atronage of the Par- liament when (as above stated) his name first appears. That he had long resided in Kngland appears from his Dedication of his book on " Popular Errors " to King Charles I. in 1648, to whom he says, " The deceased king, father of your Majesty, was pleased to command the im])rcssion [/>., to order the printing and publication] of a manuscript which was the first-fruit;-. of my pen." In 1647 Mr D'Kspagne's congregation met in the house of the Karl of Pembroke . and many of his published pieces were originally sermons preached before that auditory. He obtained celebrity among the nobility and gentry. The conseiiucnce was that during the Commonwealth when I'resbyterian and Congregationalist worshij) prevailed, and when the liturgy of the Anglican Church was under interdict, the fact that such an aristocratic congrega- tion and such attractive preaching was under the protection of the men in power was the occasion of a large accession of members to Mr D'Kspagne's church. 'I'hey found more ample accommodation in Durham House in the Strand. And on the ])ulling tlown of that mansion, Parliament, on 5th Ai>ril 1653, ga\e them the use of the Chapel of Somerset House.* I'asteur D'Kspagne dedicated a tractate to Oliver Cromwell, probably in 1652 — for the Knglish translation issued in 1655 has the following addition: — "An Advertisement to the Reader, who is to understand that this book in tiie originall made its addresses to his Highness the Lord Protector at that time when he was onely Generall of the Armies of the Commotiwealth." The original Dedication began thus : — " A Son Kxcellence, Messire Olivier Cromwell, General des Armees de la Republitiue d'Angleterre. Monseigneur, Ni le temps ni aucun changement ne me rendront jamais ingrat envers nies bien-fiiicteurs. Mon troujjeau et nioy demeurons eternellement redevables a tous ceu.xc[ui ont estti membres du dernier Parlement, specialement an Seigneur Comte de Pembroke, au Seigneur Whitlock I'un des Commissaires du Grand- Sceau, et :i un grand nombre d'autres personnes honorables. Nous sommes aussi grandemcnt obligez au tr^s-honorable Conseil d'Ktat ([ui est i present, et, entre tous, au Noble Chevalier Gilbert Pickering et a Monsieur Stricland. Mais sur tout nous devons a Votre Excellence un remerciement jjarticulier et perpetuel," &c. Mr D'Kspagne did not survive till the Restoration, and thus was spared from sharing in the liturgical disputes inaugurated by the jovial king; he died 25th \\>r\\ 1659, aged 68. As already stated, Dr De (iarenci^res was one of his converts ; he wrote an epitaph for his spiritual father in the following terms : — JOHANNES DP:SPAGNE, Sti. Evangelii Minister, Doctrina Singulari, Studio indefesso, Morum suavitate, Adversorum tolerantiA, inclytus, Post exantlatos in Dei vinea; cultura per annos 42 labores Meritus orbis admirationem Quotquot bononim recordationem, Fama, non solum legibus, sed etiam calumniatorum ore confitente et chirographo, integra, Et (quod caput est) Ecclesia Gallo-Westmonasteriensi (in cujus sinu corpus ejus conditur) ausi)iciis suis et ductu, Hispanis frustra reluctantibus, fundata. Senio confectus, sensibus integer, mori se sentiens placide ultiniimi dormivit, Anno 1659, Aprilis 25, .luatis 68. Theojjhilus de Garcncieres, D. Med., ejus proselyta, posuit. • John Evelyn writes on 3cl August, 1656, " In tlio afternoon I went to the French Church in the .S.ivoy, when I heard Monsieur D'Kspagne catechize." Q INTRODUCTORY MEMOIRS. Or De Garencicres ]ircfixed three sets of verses, one in French, one in Latin, and the third in Greek, to his pasteur's last and posthumous pubHcation. The French ode begins thus : — r.clle lumiere cles Pasteurs, Oniement du Siecle ou nous sommes, Qui trouves des admirateurs Partout ou il y a des hommes — Guide fameux de nos esprits. Dent les discours et les cscrits Cliarment avec tant de puissance. His books being litde known, I give a hst of them. Where the title is deficient, the reader will understand that I have not seen the work. Two of the French titles are copies from reprints, and thus I am unable to give the dates of their first publication. They were translated into English ; so I give the English titles in a parallel column. La RLanducation du Corps de Christ con- sideree en ses principes, . • 1640 [Dedicated to Frederic Henry, Prince of Orange.] Nouvelles Observations sur le Symbole de la Foy, ou, PremiLTe des quatres parties de la Doctrine Chrestienne preschees sur le Cate- chisme des Eglises Fran9oises, . 1647 L' Usage de 1' Oraison Dominicale main- tenu centre les objections des Innovateurs de ce temps. Les Erreurs Populaires ('■s poincts gener- au.x qui concernent 1' intelligence de la Reli- gion, rapportes a leurs causes et compris en diverses observations. Abbreg6 d' un Sermon, presch(5e le^ 12 de Septembre 1648, sur la Traitti'' qui alloit com- mcncer entre le Roy et le Parlement. Sermon funebre de 1' Auteur sur la mort de sa Fenime. Abbrcg6 de deux Sermons qui ont precede 1' Ordination d' un Pasteur en 1' P:glise Fran- 5oise de Cantovbery. The Eating of the Body of Christ, con- sidered in its principles. Translated out of French into English, by John Rivers of Cha- ford, in Sussex, Esquire, . .1652 New Observations upon the Creed, or the first of the four parts of the Doctrine of Chris- tianity, preached upon the Catechism of the French Churches. Translated out of French into English, . . . 1647 The Use of the Lord's Prayer, maintained against the objections of the Innovators of these times. Englished by C. M. D. M., 1647 [A new translation, flavoured with Scotch Episcopal bitterness, was produced and printed at Edinburgh, by Mr Andrew Symson in 1702.] Popular Errors, in generall poynts con- cerning the knowledge of Religion, having relation to their causes, and reduced into divers observations, . . . 1648 The Abridgement of a Sermon, preached on the Fast-day, appointed to be held for the good successe of the Treatie that was shortly to ensue between the King and the Parlia- ment, September 12, 1648. Faithfully tran- slated into English, by Umfreville, gent, 1648 A Funerall Sermon of the Author on the death of his wife. [This, I think, was not translated into Englisli.] An abridgement of two Sermons which pre- ceded the Ordination of a Pastor in the Frencli Church of Canterbury. [This, 1 think, was not translated into English.] rxivERS/rv group. '-•3 Considerations sur 1' Fxl>'pse de Solcil, ad- vcniic Ic 29 do Mars 1652. Nouvclles Observations sur le Decalogue. Advertissement sur la fraction et distribu- tion du pain au Sacremcnt de la Cene, obmises en plusicurs I'.ylises Ortliodoxes. 1^1 Charit6 de Parlement d' Angleterre envers 1' Eglise Fran^oise receuillic en la Chappelle de 1' Hostel de Sommerset. Shibb(51eth, ou reformation de quelques pas- sages I'S versions Frangoise et Angloise de la ]{ible. Correction de diverses opinions com- munes, peintures historiques, et qutres ma- tieres. Considerations on the Eclips of the Sun, Marcli 29, tlie yeer 1652. New Observations upon the Decalogue, or the second of the four parts of Cliristian Doc- trine ])reachcd upon the Catechism, . 1652 An Advertisement on the Breaking and dis- tributing of tlie Hread in the Sacrament of tlie Supper, omitted in many Orthodox Churches. [Tiiis was a controversy among the refugees, and the tract probably was not translated into Knglish.] The Charity of the Parliament of England to the French Church, gathered in the Cliapell at Somerset House. Shibboleth, or the reformation of several places in the translations of the French and of the F^nglish Bibles. The Corrections of divers common opinions, History, and other matters. Faithfully translated into English, by Rob. Codrington, Master of Arts, . 1655 Sermon funebre sur Comte de Pembroke. la mort de Philij)pe A Funerall Sermon on tlie Earl of Pembroke. [The Earl died in 1655.] (Icnlh of Philip, Appended to " Shibboleth " is a copy of a speech entitled, " The thanks returned to the Lord Generall in the name of the French Church, Gathered in the Chapell at Somerset house, by John Despayne, Pastor of the said church, August 8, 1653." The following note is ap- pended : — " His Excellence most graliously did answer us ; and having declared that our thankfulness were due more unto the State than to his person, he did assure us aUvaies to im- ploy his power to protect us, but most remarkably pronounced these words, which we never shall forget : I loi'c strcuif^ers, but principally those 70/10 arc 0/ our religion." After the Author's death, there was published " An Essay on the Wonders of God in the Harmony of the times, generations and most illustrious events therein enclosed, from the original of ages to the close of the New Testament. — ^\■ritten in French by John D'Espagne, Minister of the Holy Gospel. Both parts i>ublished in English by his Executor, London, 1662. [Another publisher re-issued this book with a new title page, dated 16S2, in which it is designated. The Harmony of the Old an<' New Testament] The executor signs his name, Henry Browne, and describes him- self as an English Churchman, who, " during these late times of horror and confusion, both in our Church and State," found a refuge in the French Church at Durham House, along with "many of the Xobilityand the best of the Gentry who rendered botli to Ciod and Ca;sar their due." I cannot pass from Monsieur D'Espagne without giving a specimen of his style. The fol- lowing is a translation of two paragraphs in his Observations on the Creed : — " When our Lord was going to display his divine power by a miracle, it was frequently preceded by some sign of human weakness. Previous to his rebuking the wind and the sea, he was asleep. Before he cured the deaf man he looked up to heaven and sighed. Being pressed by hunger, he caused the fig-tree to wither. When he was going to raise Lazarus from the dead, he first groaned in the spirit and was troubled. Finally, when he caused the earth to quake, the 1 2 4 INTR OD UCTUR V MEMOIRS. rocks to rend, and tlie graves to open, it was after he had given up the ghost. Amidst the most glorious demonstrations of his eternal power and godhead, and even before he displayed them, he was pleased first to give a proof that he was a real man." '• When wine was wanted for others, Jesus Clirist turned the water into wine ; but when He himself was thirsty He asked water of a Samaritan woman. When others were hungry, He fed some thousands with a few loaves, but when He hungered and .saw a fig-tree in the way, on which He found nothing but leaves, He did not make it produce fruit for His own use, as He might have done by a single word. When wearied with a journey. He might have commanded angels to bear Him up in their hands, or caused Himself to be carried by the Spirit, as Philip afterwards was. But He never wrought miracles for His own use or convenience ; as He came into the world for the benefit of others, so for others His miracles were reserved." One more specimen from his " Popular Errors" : — " To represent religion as a mere doc- trine of morality is an enormous error. The doctrine of religion consists of two parts — the former shows what God has done for man ; the latter teaches what man ought to do for God. That first part is the genuine and essential characteristic which distinguishes the Christian religion from all others ; for there is no false religion which does not teach good works. But to teach what God has done for us in the work of redemption is a doctrine to be found in the Christian religion only. The real essence of Christianity lies in this first part, for all other religions teach salvation by the works of man toward God, but our religion exhibits salvation as the work of God toward man. Salvation is grounded upon the good which God bestows upon us, not upon the good that we do. Hence it follows that morality is not the fundamental doctrine of Christianity. On the contrary, that part of it which we call morality is built upon the grace of God. And therefore it is a very rash assertion that the doctrine which treats of morals is the most excellent part of the Christian religion, and that to be a good Christian it is sufficient to be a good moralist. Without the doctrine of salvation, which is the first part, all our morality is dark and heathenish. All Christian virtues are effects of sanctification, which is a work of God. It is a prejudice natural to man, in speaking of the method of obtaining salvation, to think immediately of works as the real efficient cause of it. The Jews, taking this for granted, asked our Saviour about the nature of works alone (John vi. 28). All men, except Christians, ground their hopes upon works, not being able to conceive of another merit as the means of salvation. This principle was engraven on the heart of man from his creation, namely, that he should obtain eternal life by his works, which was true in the state of innocence, because works then would have produced this result if man had not lost his strength. And he still clings to that principle, having retained an impression of it ; though the Fall, having deprived him of strength, demonstrates so plainly the vanity of his pretensions." Among the City of London pasteurs there occurs the names of Ezechiel Marmet (1631), author of "Meditations on the Text, 'I know that my Redeemer liveth,'" and Louis Herault (1643). Herault was a pastor from Normandy, who made England his adopted country. He mixed himself so much with the contests of the times that he made himself obnoxious to the Commonwealth men. Alarmed for his liberty, he fled the country, and did not return till 1660, when he was re-instated in the pastorate. The restored rulers of Church and State rewarded him with a Canonry at Canterbury, and with the degree of D.D. of Oxford. The latter honour he received on 20th December 1670. Anthony Wood calls him "Lew. Herald." Several pasteurs' names occur in the Lists of Strangers in 1568 (Strype's Annals, vol. iv., Supplement), in 1618 (Camden Society List, Appendix), and in 1621 (Camden Society List, page i). 1568. Mmhters, Strangers, London. — In the parish of St Pxlmund's, Anthonie Rodulphs, Professor of the Gospel in the house of Mr Shcrington ; and these did acljoyn themselves with hira when he came first to the said house, viz., Vincent Bassens, Frenchman, minister of the (Jospel, and by that name put in exile by commandment of the French King. Laur Bourghinomus, minister of the Gospel, of the household of Cardinal Castilion ; James Mache- villens, minister of the Gospel, and put in exile ; .'Vntonius Lixens, of the same profession A MISCELLANEOUS GROUP. 1-5 and John A 1 lines of the Churcli of Bolloyne, exiled willi others of the Gosiiel. [Strangers that go to the Knglish Church: Mr Anthonie, preacher, of the city of Jeane.] Ste[)hen IJc Grasse, an old French preacher, and his wife, go to the French Church. St OlyfTe and Al- hallows Staining: James Deroche, preacher, Frenchman, and Mary, his wife. liastcheap : Peter Hayes, born in Rone [Rouen], goes to the French Church, and dwelleth with his son, tile minister of St Buttolph. Tower Ward in St Dunstan's Parish in the Fast: John Vouche, John Marny, John Bowthand, and Robert Philip, all ministers, being Frenchmen ; Stephen M.irvey, minister, and his wife. St Olyfi" and Alhallows Staining : James De Rachi', preacher, and Mar)', his wife. Hlackfriars : Mr Cossyn, Frenchman, minister, and Preugen, his wife, come for religion, with three boys, with two wenches, which go to school, and are of the I'Vench Church. In St Martin's-le-Grand : Peter Banks and Ursin, ministers of the I'rench Church. And Olyver Rowland and Bustein, ministers of the French Church. And Nove Banet, Frenchman, minister. 1618. Bishopgate Ward : Abraham Aurelius, minister of the Fr. congreg. in London, b. in London. Charles Lebon, preacher, /'. in Sandwich. 1621. Dovor : Mr Moyses Cartanet [Castanet?], minister and preacher of Godes word. Mr Aaron Blondell, minister and preacher of the word of God. IV.— A MISCELLANEOUS GROUP. Genealogists have succeeded in individualising the far-famed Peter Waldo, and have put on record that he died in Bohemia in 11 79 — that he was unmarried — but that he had a married brother, Thomas Waldo,* whose children retired from their native town, Lyons, and settled in the Netherlands, where they were represented in the reign of our Queen Elizabeth. One of their name fled from the Duke of Alva's persecutions in 1568, and founded families in Eng- land ; among them the tradition is that his name was Peter ; at all events he was a Waldo, was twice married, and had eight children, of whom Lawrence and Robert left descendants. Robert Waldo founded a fiimily at Deptford. The noteworthy i)ersons of the Waldo stock descended from Lawrence Waldo, citizen and grocer, of the parish of AUhallows, Bread Street, London, who died in 1602. He had fifteen children, of whom the twelfth was Uaniel \Valdo (born 1600, ditd 1661), citizen and cloth-worker. From him and Anne Claxton, his wife, the persons of whom I have to speak, sprang. This second son was Sir Edward Waldo {born 1632, died 1 707) ; he had a splendid town mansion, which, on occasions of public pomp and civic pageantry, was the resort of members of the Royal family, and where he received the honour of knighthood from Charles II. on 29th October 1677. Sir Edward was married three times, and is represented in the female line through the descendants of his first wife (Elizabeth Potter, an heiress) by Calmady Polle.xfen Hamlyn, Esq., and Vincent Pollexfen Calmady, Esq. By his third wife he had one daughter, Grace, whose first husband was Sir Nicholas Wolsten- holme, Bart., and who was married secondly to the eighth Lord Hunsdon. Sir Edward's maternal grandfather was a proprietor in Harrow-on-the Hill, and thus the Waldos took root in that classical region. In Harrow Church a marble monument stands with this inscription : — Here lyeth y body of S" EDWARD WALDO, knight, a kind and faithful husband, a tender and provident father, a constant and hearty friend, a regular and sincere Christian, eminently distinguished by an uninterrupt'd course of charity and humility, * I .im enabled to give this memoir of the Waldo family through the kindness of Morris Charles Jones, Esq., who gave me copies of his privately-printed pamphlets concerning that family. 126 INTROD UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. and not less so by an inviolable fidelity in keeping sacred his word. Universally esteem'd when alive and lamented when dead. To his pious Memory Elizabeth, daughter of S'. R"*. Shuckburgh, of Shuckburgh in \Varwickshire, his third wife. out of a dutiful affection erected this Marble Table. He died the 4th of Feb. mdccvii — Aged lxxv. The Rev. Peter Waldo, D.D. (who died in 1746), Rector of Aston Clinton, in Bucking- hamshire, was a son of Daniel Waldo of Gray's Inn, elder brother of Sir Edward ; Dr Waldo was lineally represented in Harrow till 1790. Peter Waldo, who signed the merchants' loyal manifesto in 1744, was a son of Samuel (died 169S) a younger brother of Sir Edward ; this Peter \\'aklo {horn 1689, died 1762), was an author in defence of the Athanasian Creed, and was the father of another Peter Waldo (born 1723, died 1804), author of a Commentary on the Liturgy of the Church of England ; this branch resided at Mitcham in Surrey, and pos- sessed some ancient oak carving, in which is cut out the name "Peter Waldo, 1575" [or, 3 ?] Sir Timothy Waldo {died 17S6), who was knighted 12th April 1769, and was styled " of Clapham, and of Hever Castle, Kent," was the grandson of Timothy, a brother of Sir Edward ; Jane, daughter of Sir Timothy Waldo, and widow of George Medley, Esq., M.P., died without issue on 14th Dec. 1829, in her 92d year; her property was sworn under £180,000. Although there are American Waldos with English descendants, the name of Waldo in connection with the Protestant refugee is preserved by the Sibthorp family only. Isaac Waldo, of London, brother of the first Peter, of Mitcham, had a daughter, Sarah, wife of Humphrey Sibthorp, M.A., M.D,, Fellow of Magdalene College, Oxford, and Sherardian Professor of Botany, to whom she was married on 20th September 1 740, and who was succeeded in 1769 by his son Humphrey, who, like his sons, received military rank as an officer in the RoyaLSouth Lincolnshire Militia. Colonel Humphrey Sibthorp {born ii4^,died 1815), M.P. for Boston, and afterwards for Lincoln, assumed in 1804 the surname and arms of ^Valdo in grateful remembrance of his kinsman, the second Peter Waldo of Mitcham. His sons were Coningsby Waldo Waldo Sibthorp, Esq. (died 1822), M.P. for Lincoln, and Colonel Charles De Laet Waldo-Sibthorp, " a favourite of the House of Commons for his humour and eccentricities," * who was M.P. for Lincoln for nearly thirty years ; the latter was succeeded by his son, Major Gervaise Tottenham Waldo Sibthorp, who died in 186 r. A brother of Colonel Charles came into the possession of the AValdo mansion at Mitcham, the Rev. Humphrey Waldo Sibthorp. If we have been reminded of the Waldensian Church, some refugees carry our thoughts back to the Albigensian. The Portal family is memorialised in my volume second. The Howies in Scotland claim the same antiquity. Their tradition is, that three brothers fled from persecution in France more than six hundred years ago : one settled in Mearns parish, another in Craigie parish, and the third in the parisli of Fenwick, and the secluded f;irmhouse of Loch- goin. Many generations of the refugee's descendants have occupied that firrm, and its farm-house, which has become celebrated through the courage and piety of its inmates. The tenant in 1684 was James Howie, a godly and persecuted Covenanter. The preface to the first edition of " The Scots Worthies " (that prized book of good Presbyterian memoirs) was dated at Lochgoin, July 21, 1775; the conscientious and patriotic author was John Howie {born 1736, died 1793). The eldest son of that excellent writer died a few days before him ; another son, Thomas Howie, died in Lochgoin in 1863, aged 86. To the same stock belonged the Rev. Thomas Howie {born 1678, died 1753). There is a tombstone in Annan Old Church- yard (a horizontal slab on supports) which commemorates him and some of his house : — * Sec Tlii Ihrald anti Genealogist ^01 March 1864. A MISCELLAXJ.OUS GROUP. 1-7 Here lyes the corps of the Revrd. Mr Thomas Howie late Minister of the Gospel at Annan, where he exercised his office upwards of 50 yrs., during all which time he was faithful and dilij;cnt in his Lord and Master's service, and his principal care was to seek to save his own soul and those of oyrs. and in hopes of having the ai)probation of Well done, good and fiiithf id Sent., enter into the joy oj thy Lord. He departed this life May 23d 1753, ^Setl 75- Here lyes the corps of Klizabetli Davidson late spouse to Mr Tho. Howie Min' of the Gospel at Annan. She was a pious and resigned Christian, and alTectionat wife and indulgent moy', and in hopes of a blessed resurrection departed this life Sei)t' 23d 1751, aged 80. Here lye Margaret and Christiana Howies, daughters to Mr Thomas Howy minister of the Gospel at Annan and Elizabeth Davidson his s[)Ouse, who both departed this life in May 1722. Marg. aged 9 years and a half, Christiana, three. Isa. LXV. 20. The child shall die an hundred years old. Dear children, ye were most sprightly and fair. Of grace, love, and smartnes instances rare ; But in health these deaths thou Peggie foretold. And Heaven much longd for who then coud withhold ? qu. A D T D P OS gn'llos ivus risti ulcedine avit. Here lies Thomas Johnstone, Esq. of Gutterbraes, late Provost of Annan, Grandson of the late Rev. Thomas Howie, who died 2d Sejjt. 1S15, aged 85. Monsieur Marchant de Saint-Micliel was High-Sheriff of Anjou, in the reign of Louis XHI. He was a man of wealth, as was his brother, a Reverend Canon. The latter being, of course, a celibate, the son of the former, as the heir of both, was a youth of " great e.xpec- tations." Young St Michel entered the German military service, and at the age of twenty- one, became a convert to Protestantism, for which reason he was disinherited by his father and also by his uncle. He then found a home in England, as gentleman carver to Queen Henri- etta ^Iaria. But a friar thought fit to rebuke him for not going to mass. St Michel struck the friar, and lost his appointment. Nevertheless, he married a daughter of Sir Francis Kings- mill, the widow of an Irish esquire, and settled at Bideford in Devonshire, where he had chil- dren, of whom a son and a daughter are identified. St Michel was persuaded to return to France and to take a house in Paris for himself and his family. He served in the French army ; and once on returning home, lie was distracted to find that his wife and two children liad been in- veigled into the convent of the Ursulines. One of these children was the lovely Elizabeth (born in [640), then twelve or thirteen years of age, and " extreme handsome." He succeeded in rescuing his family, unperverted by Romanism, and again betook himself to England, apparently settling in London. At the age of fifteen, Elizabeth was married to Samuel Pepys, gentleman, now known to fame as the " diarist." She is called, in the register of St Margaret's, " Elizabeth Marchant de Saint Mitchell, of Martins-in-the-fTeilds, spinster ; " the date of her marriage is ist December 1655. Her brother, Balthazar St Michel, thus became a protege of her husband, the really able naval administrator. His debflt in naval warfare delighted Pepys : he w-rites, June 8, 1666, " To my very great joy, I find Baity come home without any hurt after the utmost imaginable danger he hath igone through in t/ie Hcnery, being upon the quarter-deck with I larman all the time I am miglitily pleased in him, and have great content in, and hopes of his doing well." — Again, 21st November 1669, "Sir Philip Howard expressed all kindness to Baity when I told him how sicke he was. He says that before he comes to be mustered again, he must bring a certificate of his swearing the oaths of allegiance and supremacy, and having taken the sacrament according to the rites of the Church of England. This, I perceive, is imposed on all." Balthazar was made Muster-Master in 166S, and in this office he was allowed to employ a deputy in 1666, and to accept an appointment in the Admiralty. The latter year was the date of the lamented Mrs Pepys' death, whose epitaph, written by her hu.sband, is on a monument in the Church of St Olave, Hart Street : — 1 2 8 INTR OD UCTOR Y MEMOIRS. ■ H. S. E. cui Cunas dedit SOMERSETIA, Octob. 23d 1640 Patreni e prreclara familia Matrem e nobili stiri)e de St Michel Cliflbdorum ANDEGAVIA CUMBRIA ELIZABETHA PEPYS Samuelis Pepys (Classi Regias ab Actis) Uxor Quce in Ccenobio primum, Aula dein educata Gallic^, Utriusque una claruit virtutibus Forma, Artibus, Linguis, cultissima. Prolem enixa, quia parem non potuit, nullam. Hinc demiim placide cum valedixerat (Confecto per amieniora fen'; Europe itinera) Potiorem abiit redux lustratura mundum Obiit 10 Novembris i ^tatis 29. Anno < Conjugii 15. ( Domini 1669. Her father and mother seem to have survived her; for in 1672 Balthazar alludes to his mother as but recently a widow. I quote from his letter to Pepys, dated, " Deale, August 14th, 1672." — " Hond. Sir, you dayly and howerly soe comble me with, not only expressions, but alisoe deeds of your worthyness and goodness, as well to myselfe as the rest of your most devoted humble creaturs heare, that I am as well as my poor drooping mother whoose con- tinuall illness since the death of my father gives me but litell hopes shee will survive him long, &c Litell Samuel, whoe speakes now very pretely, desiers to have his most humble duty presented to his most honrd. Uncle and Godfather which please to accept from your most humble litell disiple." In 1686 Balthazar St Michel became Resident Commissioner of the Navy at Deptford and Woolwich with ^500 per annum. He was married, but that his wife was the person whom Pepys called his wife's brother's lady, " my lady Kingston " (15th March, t66i), is not probable : (there were other brothers). He appears among the relatives at Pepys' funeral in 1703 as Captain St Michel; his son, Samuel St Michel, and his dauHiter, Mary, are mentioned. Perhaps he had been promoted to the rank of Post- Captain in 1702, as on that year a successor took his post of Commissioner.* The surname of Le Keux flourished among the refugees at Canterbury. Jacques Le Keux of Canterbury had a son, Philippe Le Keux, Pasteur of the French Church at Dover, who was ordained in 1646, the Pasteur Philippe Delme (who died in 1653) being Moderator; he afterwards removed to Canterbury, where Monsieur Pierre Le Keux was also pasteur (1645). On 25th Dec. 1645, John Le Keux was married in the French Protestant Church of Canter- bury to Anthoinette Le Quien, and left two sons, John and Peter. As the male line of John's family failed, I begin with Peter; he was baptized at Canterbury on 6th Dec. 1649, and married Mary Maresco on 7th Aug. 1681, in the City of London French Church, having established himself in London; his son Peter, born in 1682, died in 1685. The line was carried on by his surviving son, William. In the Political State of Great Britain I find tlie following announcement : — "2d April 1723, Died, Colonel Peter Le Keux, at his house in Spittlcfields, after a lingering illness, at an advanced age [73] ; he was one of the Justices of * Except for the dates connected with the Commissioneiship, my sole .lulhority for the above Memoir is Pepys' Diary, and accompanying materials. The ancestry of .St Michel and liis sister is descril)ed in Balthazar's Letter to Pepys, dated 8th Feb. 1673-4, and summarized in the I'.dilor's Life of I'epys. Why that letter is not given there, verbatim and at full length, I do not understand. It seems to have been jirinted along with one edition of the Diary, for the late Mr Burn gives this quotation from it (Balthazar is alluding to his father), " lie for some time, upon tliat little lie had, settled himself in Devonshire, at a place called Bideford, where and thereabouts my sister and we all were born." .-/ MISCELLANEOUS GROUP. 129 the Peace for the Tower Liberty, one of the Commissioners of Sewers, one of the Dc|>uty- l.ieiitenants for the Royal Hamlets, and Lieutenant-Colonel of the first regiment therein, and one of the Commissioners of the Land Tax for Middlesex ; he married one of the daughters and coheiresses of rich old Mr ALuisco.'' Mis son William (born 1697, died 17.S1) was styleil " of Hayes, Middlesex," as heir of his mother ; his wife was Eli;.abeth Shewin of Last Grinstead. NV'illiam's son and heir, Peter Le Keux (A'/v/ 1757, died 1836), married Ann Dyer at Shorediteh in 1776, His sons were the distinguishetl engravers, Jolin anil Henry. John Le Keux {born 4th June, 1783, died 2d A[)ril, 1846) married Sarah Sophia Lingard, and was the f;xther of John Henry Le Keux of personal and hereditary celebrity in the same field. Henry Le Keux {born 1787, died 1868) was a much admired architectural and historical engraver ; for his large plate of Venice (after Prout) he received 700 guineas ; for plates in the beautiful Annuals, with which our boyhood was (livoured, he received large prices ranging from 100 to iSo guineas. For these facts concerning him I am indebted to T/ie Ke^^isier for 1869 (Vol. L, p. 132) ; and on the same authority 1 note, that " more than thirty years ago he gave up engraving, and retired to Hocking in Essex, being engaged by the firm of Samuel Courtauld and Co., crape-manufacturers, for the chemical and scientific department, and he continued in that employment until the age of 81, his health failing a short time before his death." He died nth October, 1868. We return to the elder son of old John Le Keux of Canterbury, who also was named John ; he was baptized at Canterbury on 19th Dec. 1647, and married in the City of London French Church, on 6th June 1672, to Susanna Didier. He had a son Peter, and a daughter Jeanne. The son Captain Peter Le Keux, of Steward Street, Spitalfields, Weaver, was baptized in the City of London French Church, 17th Feb. 1683-4, and married at St Dun- stan's, Stejiney, 29th July 1712, to Sarah Bloodworth, of the Artillery Ground, London ; he died 20th June 1743, aged 60. His son and heir John Le Keux {born 1721, died 1764) married, in 1746, Hester Williams of East Greenwich, and left an only son, Richard Le Keux (born i2th Oct. 1755) who was buried at Christ Church nth April 1840, aged 84, leaving no heirs of his body. The head of the branch of the family, descended from William Le Keux and ^Liry Maresco, took possession of the considerable estate which Richard left, this claimant believing himself to be the true heir, and ])robably confounding one Peter Le Keux of the old time with another. The late Mr Southertlen Burn made practical use of his know- ledge of French Refugee families by dispossessing him in the interest of tlie granddaughter and heiress of Jeanne Le Keux, which Jeanne was the sister of Peter (born in 1683-4) men- tioned above. Mr Burn informed Mr Le Keux that he possessed documentary proof of the rights of this heiress ; but an erroneous pedigree was relied upon by Le Keux ; and an action of ejectment was resorted to. It was proved that Jeanne Le Keux (baptized in the City of London French Church, 24th March 1677) was married at St Dunstan's, Stepney, to Francois ^L^rriette, Merchant, of St James's, Westminster. Her son was James ALarriette (born 1708, ^//dVi' 1759) who married Alice Jones in 1753. He left one child, Mary Anne Marriett, {Ani;/ici' Merrit) baptized at St Dunstan's, West, on 31st I^Lirch 1754, and married at St .Anne's, Westminster, on 31st ^L^y 1778 to Isaac Wheildon. Mr Burn put .Mrs Wheildon in possession of the Le Keux inheritance in 1846, she having then attained the age of 92. Some surnames that were resjiectably prominent during the Long Parliament and the Commonwealth epoch are said to be of Huguenot origin, (i.) The Venerable John Conant, D.D., Archdeacon of Norwich and Prebendary of Worcester (born 1608, died 1693) is said to have been a son of Norman refugees. His great-grandson was Sir Nathaniel Conant, km., ■who is represented by a grandson, Edward Conant, Esq., of Lyndon in Rutlandshire. (2.) Thomas De Laune, author of the famous and learned " Plea for the Non-Conformists," is also reported to be of Norman Huguenot ancestry. The name, Peter de Lawne, occurs in 1618, in the Norwich list of French ministers; Mr Burn appends this note: — " Dr De Lawne having been presented with a benefice in the Church of England, the congregation elected Monsieur D'Assigny in his stead ; this gave rise to a contention of long duration which was K 130 IN TROD UCTOR V MEMOIRS. referred to the Colloquy, the doctor contending he could hold both appointments ; his son, Nathaniel, was sent from Norwich School to Bennet College, Cambridge, as a Norwich scholar." (3.) A respectable tradesman in Walbrook, London, surnamed Calamy, was a native of Guernsey. His son was the Rev. Edmund Calamy, B.D. (died 1666), a leading Presbyterian Divine, who, at the King's Restoration, refused a bishopric, author of " The Godly Man's Ark," &c. This reverend gentleman (who contributed the letters E C to the name oi Smcdy/iiniius) had four sons, viz., the Rev. Edmund Calamy, M.A., of Cambridge, a non-conformist, {died 1685), Rev. Benjamin Calamy, D.D., a celebrated Anglican clergyman, (tutor to James IBonnell, Esq.), the Rev. James Calamy, M.A. of Cambridge, Prebendary of Exeter ((//drf 1714). and [Rev. ?] John. Only the first of these left an heir, viz., Edmund. This was the most distinguished Edmund Calamy, D.D. {born 1671, died 1731) a very volumin- ous author on Church History, Non-Conformity, the French Prophets, and Practical Divinity. His interesting manuscript, entitled " An Historical Account of my own Life," was printed in 1829, and in it he writes, " I have been informed by some of the oldest of my relations . . . that my grandfather, applying to the Herald Office about his coat-of-arms, was there certified that there was an old town and castle that bore his name on the Norman coast, which belonged to his ancestors." For some of the facts in the above paragraph I am indebted to Mr. Smiles, to whom I owe all my knowledge of Briot. Nicholas Briot was a gentleman of Lorraine, the reputed inventor of the coining-press, and graver of the mint to Louis XIH. But unable to submit to serious religious disabilities as a Huguenot, he withdrew, as a voluntary e.\ile, into England, and in 1626 became chief-engraver to the London Mint, through the patronage of King Charles L In 1633 he received an appointment in Edinburgh, and in 1635 succeeded Sir John Foulis as Master of the Mint in Scotland, hi 1637 his daughter Esther was married to Sir John Falconer, and this son-in-law was conjoined with Nicholas Briot in his office. Briot, however, returned to England on the out-break of the civil war ; he secured for the king's service all the coining apparatus of the nation, and finally is said to have died of grief on his royal patron's death. Sir John Falconer was of the Halkerstoun family and ancestor of the Falconers of Phesdo.* Mr Smiles enumerates several fine medals executed by Briot, who " possessed the genius of a true artist." Thomas D'Urfey,t dramatic and song writer, (better known as Tom D'Urfey), was of Huguenot descent. At a much earlier date than the revocation, his parents came from La Rochelle to Exeter, where he was born in 1653. Addison says in the Guardian No. 67, 28th May 1713 : — " I myself remember King Charles H. leaning on Tom D'Urfey's shoulder more than once and humming over a song with him. It is certain that that monarch was not a little supported by 'Joy to Great Ca^'sar,' which gave the Whigs such a blow as they were not able to recover that whole reign. My friend afterwards attacked Popery with the same success, having exposed jBellarmine and Porto-Carrero more than once in short satirical compositions which have been in everybody's mouth. He has made use of Italian tunes and sonatas to promote the Protestant interest, and turned a considerable part of Pope's music against himself" He also satirized the Harley-Bolingbroke ministry, for he took the true refugee view of the Peace of Utrecht, as a bad bargain for Britain and for the Protestant interest ; " A ballad to their merit may Most justly then belong. For, why ! they've given all (I say) To Louis for a song." The zeal of Dryden for Romanism may be regarded as partly explaining the severity of his criticism upon D'Urfey. I allude to the following recorded dialogue: — " A gentleman returning from one of D'Urfey's plays the first night it was acted, said to * Anderson's .Scottish Nation. t The original spelling was, perhaps, D'Urfe, or D'Uify. A MISCELLANEOUS GROUP. 131 Drytlcn, ' Was there ever such stuff? I could not have imagined that even this author could have written so ill.' ' O sir,' said Dryden, ' you don't know my friend Tom as well as I do ; I'll answer for him he will write worse yet.'" What D'Urfey professed was rather to sing than to write. His comedies, like others ot that age, or even like its still admired social and satirical essays, contained much that ought never to have been written. The words of his songs were simply arrangements of syllables and rhymes, done to measure, for music. But that in his characteristic vocation he was destitute of merit, no competent critic will assert. A good word is spoken for iiim, in Notes and Qiurics (3rd Series, Vol. X., page 465), by a great autliority in music. Dr. Rimbault, who says of " jioor old Tom D'Urfey :" — " His works — including many that have entirely escaped the notice of bibliographers — occupy a conspicuous place on my bookshcl\cs, and my note- books are ricii in materials of Tom and his doings. He existed, or rather, I might say, flourished for forty-six years and more, living chiefly on the bounty of his patrons. He was always a welcome guest wherever he went, and even though stuttering was one of his failings, he could sing a song right well, and greatly to the satisfaction of the merry monarch. His publications are numerous, but Tom (it may be surmised) did not make mucli by his copy. The chance profits on benefit nights brought more into his pockets than the sale of his plays to the booksellers." He died at the age of 70. His memorial-stone, on the soutii wall of St. James's Church, Piccadilly, gives as the date of his death 26th Feb. 1723. Le Neve, in his MS. diary quoted by Rimbault, says " D'Urfey, Thomas, the poet, ingenious for witty madrigals, buried Tuesday, 26th day of February, 1722-23, in St. James's Cluircii, Middlesex, at the charge of the Duke of Dorset." The following sonnet is not unworthy of preservation. "To my dear mother, Mrs. Frances D'Urfey, a Hymn on Piety, written at CuUacombe, September, 1698. " O sacred piety, thou morning star, That shew'st our day of life serene and fair ; Tliou milky way to everlasting bliss, That feed'st the soul with fruits of paradise ; Unvalued gem, which all the wise admire, Tliou well canst bear the test of time and fire. By thee the jars of life all end in peace, And unoffended conscience sits at ease. Thy influence can human ills assuage. Quell the worst anguish of misfortune's rage, I'angs of distemper, and the griefs of age. Since thou — the mind's celestial ease and mirth — The greatest happiness we have on earth — By hcav'n art fi,\ed in her that gave me birth ; My life's dear author, may your virtuous soul Pursue the glorious race, and win the goal. Thus may your true desert be dignified. To age example, and to youth a guide. Lastly, (to wish myself all joys in one,) Still may your blessing — when your life is done, As well as now — descend upon your son. " ANALYSIS OF VOLUME FIRST, WITH NOTES AND DOCUMENTS. ( Continued). CHAPTER I., pp. 82 to 121. THE THREE DUKES OF SCHOMBERG. Chapter I. § i. (pp. 82 to 107). The First Duke of ScJwmberg w^i. Frederic Armand de Schomberg, Comte de Schomberg, in the Palatinate. He became Due de Schomberg in France. And on becoming a Protestant refugee in England, he was created Duke of Schom- berg by William and Mary. It was erroneously supposed that he was eighty years of age in 1688, and hence the date of his birth has been misstated. "The Letters of George Lord Carew (16 15-17)," printed by the Camden Society, prove that our hero's father, John Main- hardt, Comte de Schomberg, married in 1615, Anne (daughter of Lord Dudley), who in December of the same year died in childbed, having given birth to Frederic Armand. Lord Carew writes in August 16 16, " Monsier Schomberge, husband to my wife [a term of endear- ment] Anne Dudleye is dead." Thus Frederic was left an orphan ; and thus he became a proteg6 of the Elector and Electress, through whom he came under the fostering care of the Prince of Orange. On the death of William II., the Prince of Orange, he settled in France and was transferred into the French army. In 1660 he was allowed to enter the army of the Queen Regent of Portugal, and took the leading part in defeating the Spanish Invasion, the decisive action being the Battle of Montesclaros in 1665. Peace, however, was not finally ratified till 1668, in which year he returned to France. He had married in Holland his cousin Johanna Elizabetha de Schomberg, by whom he had five sons, of whom the eldest settled in Germany ; two died before the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes ; the other two were refugees, viz., Mainhardt and Charles. Having been for many years a widower, he married, secondly, in 1669, at Charenton, Susanne D'Aumale, daughter of Le Sieur d'Hau- court. In 1673 he was invited to England to take the command of our army ; he came over, but did not remain. In 1674 he again served in the French army, and was made a Marshal of France on 30th July, 1675. Page 93. — His active service in the French army terminated with the Peace of Nimeguen in 1679. pie now resided in Paris. In 1683 Bishop Burnet was there introduced to him by the Marquis de Ruvigny, uncle to Rachael, Lady Russell. In 1684 Schomberg received the command of 25,000 men to fight in Germany, but war was averted. In the summer of 1685 he was foreboding the desolations of the Church. NOTES. The true dates of his mother's and father's deaths ex])ose the wrong habit of historians of old in concocting history out of conjectures and probabilities. The received opinion was that Anne, Countess of Schomberg, accom])anieil the Elector and Electress into Holland as a ANALYSIS OF VOLUME FlKsi: 133 widow, anii that her husband had just been killed at the Battle of Prague, the only fight that the Klector iiiailc for tlie tlirone of liohemia. This opinion is demolished by the facts, and along with it the fine sentence written by Miss Benger (Memoirs of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, Vol. II., page 93. London, 1825): — "Of the ladies, Elizabeth alone retained self-possession ; her bosom friend Anne Dudley was overwhelmed with the fate of her husband who had fallen in the fatal conflict I the Battle of Prague."] In the summer of 1685 he was m his sarntidh year ; this must be remembered throughout the remaining years of his life as the key to a series oi corrigenda. Analysis (continued.) Page 93. — His correspondence with Pasteur Du Bosc exhibits Schomberg as he was, and as he felt, at the Revocation Period. The Pasteur being about to retire as a refugee, Schom- berg. in a letter dated i9lh July, 1685, recommended liim to settle in Copenhagen rather than in Rotterdam; he concluded thus:— "The court being resident at Copenhagen, and the Queen being of Zi? J^c/igion, you will find better support and more rational conversation, even among the Lutherans. To the latter (and this is a point more wortliy of consideration), through the grace of God, and the understanding which he has given you, you can supjdy e.xplanations, which will make them less bigoted in their religion, and will inspire them with gentleness towards ours. This is an important service w-hich you might render to such a persecuted religion as ours is in France. But you are better able to judge than I am— so I conclude by assuring you, Sir, that no one can honour you more perfectly, and be more truly yours than I am." On the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in October, Schomberg " steadfastly refused to purchase the royal fiivour by apostacy." " The man," .says RLacaulay, " whose genius and valour had saved the Portuguese monarchy at the field of Montesclaros, earned a still higher glory by resigning the truncheon of a ^L^rshal of France for the sake of his religion." Lady Russell wrofe on the 15th January 1686, " Marshal Schomberg and his wife are commanded to be prisoners in their house, in some remote part of France appointed them." Louis XIV. had rejected his request for permission to retire to Germany, but at last allowed him to seek a refuge in Portugal. Page ()4. — He sailed for Lisbon in the spring of 1866, accompanied by his wife (who, according to French usage, had the title of La Markhalle), and with a few attendants. His departure was generally regretted. All lovers of their country esteemed him as one of their best generals. Sourches says, " There was great regret throughout France, because they lost in him the best and most experienced of the generals." Another authority * assures us " that the Grand Condi placed Schomberg on the same level as Turenne, and perceived in him rather more liveliness, presence of mind, and promptitude than in Turenne, when it was necessary to prepare for action on very short notice." The Sieur L^'Ablancourt enumerates as his charac- teristics " indefatigable diligence, presence of mind in fight, moderation in victory, and sweet and obliging carriage to every one." " On his voyage to Lisbon," says Luzancy, "a storm raged for two days and two nights. He knew well whence the blow came, and how to apply himself to divert it. He caused continual prayers in the ship to be made to Him who commands the waves to be still. And so all in the ship were preserved." " All the favour he could obtain," writes Burnet, " was leave to go to Portugal. And so cruel is the spirit of Popery that, though he had preserved that kingdom from falling under the yoke of Castile, yet now that he came thither for refuge, the Inquisition represented the matter of giving harbour to a heretic so odiously to the King, that he was forced to send him away." • Erm.in and Reclam's Memoirs of the Refugees in I'.randenburg. Vol. IX., p. 268. This interesting work is in the French language. Readers need not be repelled by its Nine Volumes, as they are in large type, and of a portable diudainw size. 134 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. A letter from Schomberg to Uu Bosc (who had fixed his residence at Rotterdam) shows that his brief stay in Portugal was trying to his feelings. " Lisbon, 13/"// May 1686. " I do myself a great pleasure, Sir, in being able to give you the news of my safe arrival in this country, and it will also be a pleasure to be able to write to you as occasion requires, with more liberty. Madame de Schomberg sends you her compliments. She has borne her journey by sea better than one could have expected. But here one is equally unserviceable to oneself and to friends. It is my part to commit myself to Divine Providence, hoping that one day He will guide us to a place where we can worship Him with more liberty. The Ambassador labours here with great officiousness to oblige five or six Protestant merchants to become Romanists. He has found a disposition in the King of Portugal to withdraw from them his protection, pretending that it is due to himself that he should be even more zealous than the King of France. There are some recantations. 1 beg you, Sir, to believe me ever and entirely yours, " Schomberg." The Marshal left the ungrateful Pedro and set out for Holland : Professor Weiss * informs us that " on his way from Portugal, Schomberg coasted England to observe the ports and places most favourable for the landing of an army ; he also opened communications with the chiefs of the English aristocracy, who were weary of James H.'s government, and desired a revolution." Burnet says that he " took England in his way ;" and Luttrell notes concerning him that he paid a visit to King James in the beginning of 1687, and was kindly received. A correspondent of John Ellis wrote from London, January 1686-7, "Arrived last night from Holland, Marshal Schomberg with his weather-beaten spouse, from Portsmouth by land, the wind being cross by sea." t Page 95. — On his arrival in Holland, he waited on the most renowned Prince of Orange, and was at once treated as a friend and counsellor. It would not have accorded with the secrecy of William's projects to engage the services of the great Marshal at that time. He was, therefore, encouraged to accept from the Elector of Brandenburg a commission to be his commander-in-chief; and he removed to Berlin. About this time his wife died. He con- tinued to reside in Prussia. Here his honours and employments were multifarious. He was governor-general, minister of State, a member of the Privy Council (whose other members were of grand ducal blood), and also generalissimo of all the troops. A number of the mousque- taires or horseguards of the King of France, being refugees in Brandenburg, and all of them gentlemen by birth, were formed into two companies of grands mousquctaires, each mousque- taire having the rank of a lieutenant in the army. The Elector assumed the colonelcy of the first company, which was quartered at Prentzlau, and Schomberg was the colonel of the second, quartered at Furstenwald. It was for him that the Elector built the mansion in Berlin, which afterwards became the Palace of the Crown Prince. NOTE. In Sawle's Transactions of last Summers Campaign in Flanders, (London 1691), there is the following account of the Elector of Brandenburg and his escort : — " The Duke [also called, the elector] of Brandenburgh, with his Duchess, and two brothers, with the great officers and ladies of his court, were with the army. He is very short and crooked as to his person ; he is about the age of thirty; his face, indeed, is fine and comely. His brothers, prince Charles and prince Philip are both tall and well shap'd gentlemen. His court was exceeding splendid. Besides his guards, he hath an hundred French Gentlemen Refugees, all well mounted and * Histoire des Refugies Protestants de France — par M. Ch. Weiss, Professeiir d'llistoire au Lycce Bonaparte — 2 vols. Paris 1853 ; (translated by Frederick Hardnian, in one vol. Edinburgli, 1854.) t The Ellis Correspondence. Letters to John Ellis, Esq., .Secretary at Dublin to the Commissioners for the Revenue of Ireland. Two volumes. Edited by Lord Dover. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME FIRST. ,35 clad in scarlet, with a broad gold lace on the seams, every one looking like a captain ; they are called his Grand Muscjueteers, and always attend his person." Analysis {continued.) The storm which arose upon the interference of France with the affairs of Cologne brought Schomberg again into the front of events. He was ai)|)ointcd to command the imperial forces, sent in 168S to tlefend that electorate and to garrison the city of Cologne. Acconling to Luttrell, he garrisoned Cologne in September with 2600 foot and some horse. The French were thus blocked up on the German side ; while the revolt of Amstertlam from Frencli counsels obstructed the interference of Louis XIV. in an opposite direction. France having her hanils so full on the Continent — the Pope himself not escaping her armed visitations — the Prince of Orange hastened his projected descent upon England. He himself took the chief command. Burnet says that letters from England to the Prince pressed him very earnestly to bring Marshal Schomberg, " both because of the great reputation he was in, and because they tiiought it was a security to the Prince's person, and to the whole design, to have with him another general to whom all would submit in case of any dismal accident." The Prince was most happy jto send for Schomberg, who accepted the second command with alacrity. At last we find them at anchor at Torbay, and the Prince of Orange and Marshal Schom- berg mounted on horses furnished by the villagers of Bro.xholme, and marking out an encamp- ment for the soldiers. This was on Monday the 5th of November 1688, a day set apart in the country for thanksgiving on account of our ancient deliverance from a Popish plot ; and strikingly appropriate for the public thanksgiving which the troops of the great champion of Protestantism ottered up for tlieir safe landing on our shore. Schomberg again rode by the side of William at the famous entry into Exeter on the Friday following. The feelings of the patriots of England are described in the rhymes of Daniel Defoe ; and the following quotation from his "True-Born Englishman" is appropriate here: — " Schomberg, the ablest soldier of his age, With great Nassau, did in our cause engage ; Both join (1 for England's rescue and defence. The greatest Captain and the greatest Prince. With what applause his stories did we tell ! Stories which Europe's Volumes largely swell ! We counted him an Amiy in our aid. Where /u- commanded, no man was afraid. His actions with a constant conquest shine, From Villa-Viciosa* to the Rhine." One of these lines seems to have been borrowed from De Luzancy's more poetical prose : — " The name of Schomberg alone was an army." At Exeter the surrounding peasantry offered to take up arms, and many regiments might have been enrolled. But Schomberg said that he thought little of soldiers fresh from the plough, and that if the expedition did not succeed without such help it would not succeed at all. William concurred. They had brought a respectable army. And Lord Cornbury, eldest son of the Earl of Clarendon, set an example, which was followed by numbers, of leaving King James, and joining the ranks of the Prince of Orange. On the 19th of November the former was at Salisbury, while the latter was at Exeter. William earnestly desired that there sliould be no blooilshed, that no Englishmen might resent his coming as the cause of mourning in their families. That was one reason why James wished an engagement to be brought about. Schomberg was told that the enemy were advancing, and were determined to fight ; the old camjiaigner re]ilicd, " That will be just as we may choose." As some skirmishing seemed in- evitable, William put the British regiments in front, for which they felt pride and gratitude. Thus James's army presented more of the appearance of foreign intruders, its van being Irish. * The Battle of iMontesclaros was also know n as the Battle of Villa-Viciosa. 136 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. " The Marshal de Schomberg threatened to bring most of them to their night caps without striking a blow," says a writer in the " Ellis Correspondence." No real battle took place. Hearing a rumour that the Ducal Marshal was approaching, James fled from Salisbury. The final result was, that the army of England declared that they would defend the person of the king, but would not fight against the Prince of Orange. We pass on to the iSth of December, when William, having Scliomberg beside him, drove to St James' Palace, and took up his quarters there. On the iith of February 1689, the Princess Mary arrived ; and on the 13th, the crown was accepted from the Estates of the Realm by King William III., and Queen Mary. The year, according to the style then in use, was still 168S ; and it was not till the 25th of March that the year 1689 began. The descend- ants of the French refugees, in arranging chronological notes concerning their ancestors, must remember that the summer, which followed February 1688 (old style), was not 1688 but 16S9, and also that there were only three campaigns in Ireland namely, those of 1689, 1690, and 1691. Page 97. — On the 3rd of April 1689, Schomberg was made a Knight of the Garter, and was installed on the nth, along with the Earl of Devonshire. On the i8th of April, "Frederic, Comte de Schomberg, Due et Marechal de France," was made Master-General of the Ordnance.* The duties of the Master-Generalship were to be discharged either personally or by deputy: and the office was to be held (habendum, tenendum, gaudendum, occupandum et e.xercendum) in the same manner as it had been by his predecessor George, Lord Dartmouth. He was naturalized by Act of Parliament, and was made General of all their Majesties' forces, and a Privy Councillor. He was also elevated to the English Peerage, and received the titles of Baron of Teyes, Earl of Brentford, Marquis of Harwich, and Duke of Schomberg. Bishop Burnet told him of his plan to leave behind him a history of his own times. " Let me advise you," said the old soldier, "never to meddle w-ith the relation of military details. Some literary men affect to tell their story in all the terms of war, and commit great errors that expose them to the scorn of all officers, who must despise narratives having blunders in every part of them, and yet pretending to minute accuracy." The Right Reverend listener remembered the advice, and followed it. Contemporariesf preserved the following reminiscences of Schomberg, applicable to this date : — " He was of a middle stature, well proportioned, fair complexioned, a very sound hardy man of his age, and sat a horse the best of any man. As he loved always to be neat in his clothes, so he was ever pleasant in his conversation, of which this repartee is an instance. He was walking in St James's Park amidst crowds of the young and gay, and being asked what a man of his age had to do with such company, he replied, ' A good general makes his retreat as late as he can.'" Page 98. — The Duke was Colonel of the First or Royal Regiment of Foot. But he raised a cavalry regiment composed of French Refugee gentlemen, which was peculiarly his regiment. The aged Marquis de Ruvigny co-operated with him, and also raised three infantry regiments of Huguenot refugees for the campaign in Ireland. Leinster, Munster, and Connaught, still acknowledged James as their king. Ulster was for William and Mary, but was unable to contend with the other provinces, who introduced Popish garrisons into many of its fortresses. Derry shut its gates against the Jacobites, and became the Thermopylae of the North of Ireland. One of the first acts of Schomberg as Commander-in-chief was to send to that glorious town relief under tiie command of Major- General Kirke. At length Schomberg himself was appointed to take the command in Ireland. And about the 15th of July (1689) he paid a memorable visit to the English House of Commons. Page 102. — Burnet says :^" Schomberg had not the supplies from England that were promised him. Much treachery or ravenousness appeared in many who were employed. And *The first compiler of the list of M.isters- Gencr.il must have written "Due de Schomberg" indistiiutly. Hence the name appears in some lists as " Davit] Schomberg." t lioycr's History of William HI. ; Story's Wars of Ireland. .-/ A V/ L } 'SIS OF I V/. L MI: FIRS T. 137 he, fimling his nunibers so une(|iial to the Irish, resolved to he on the defensive If he had pushed m.ntters .md had met with a misfortune, his whole army and tonse(|uently all Ireland would have been lost ; for he could not have made a regular retreat. The sure game was to preserve his army ; and that would save Ulster, and keep matters entire for another year. This was censured by some. Better jutlges thought the managing this campaign as he did was one of the greatest i>arts of his life." " He obliged the enemy," says I larris, " to quit the province of Ulster. The North of Ireland was thus secured for winter quarters." " Hy skilful temporizing," says I'rofessor \Veiss, " he contrived in some sort to create an Orange territory, and so to |)repare the great victory of the following year." \\'hatever praise is due as to this camjjaign, Schomberg earned it all. The officers of the army had l)een demoralized under the Stewarts' unpatriotic rule, and so had tlie officials of tlie commissariat. Peculation and embezzlement were the business and object of their lives, which some of the officers but partially atoned for by flashes of bellicose im|)etuosity and English pluck. Soldiers and anuniinition were sacrificed to the thoughtlessness and laziness of officers who did not look after them ; anil those who ought to have been the Duke of Schomberg's coadjutors were l)ractically spies and enemies in his camp. Abundance of criticism as the slow growth of afterthought was often forthcoming at his side, or behind his back, but he was favoured with no suggestive counsel as the ri|)e fruit of ex])erienced forethought and military education. "Hitherto," he says in his despatch from Carrickfergus, 27th Aug. 1689,* "I have been obliged to take ui)on myself all the burden of the provisions, the vessels, the artillery, tiie cavalry, all the payments, and all the tietails of the siege." And although he found officers to accept rank and pay, the work was done as before. Mr Story testifies, " He had the whole shock of aflairs upon himself, which was the occasion that he scarce ever went to bed until it was very late, and then had his candle, with book and pencil, by him. This would have confounded any other man." The ringleader of intestine traitors was Sir Henry Shales, the Purveyor-General. \V'hen his villanies came to light, intelligent Englishmen ceased to find fault with Schomberg. /';;r 104. — The Jacobite army was the first to go into winter quarters. Schomberg followed their example, sending the sick by sea, and taking the body of his army by land to Lisburn as headquarters, and to the surrounding towns and villages. He had still to defend himself against unfavourable criticism. He wrote to his sovereign from Lisburn, 27th Dec. 1689, "I have made many reflections on what your Majesty had the goodness to write to me on the 20th, and witiiout tiring you with the state of my indisposition, I can assure you that my desire to go to England arises only from that cause, and the physicians' opinion that the air and the hot waters will cure me of the ailment which my son informed you of. There are people in England who believe that I make use of this ailment as a pretence ; that is not true. I confess. Sir, tliai, without the profound submission which I have for your Majesty's will, I would prefer the honour of being permitted to be near your person to the command of an army in Ireland, composed as that of last campaign was. If I had risked a battle, I might have lost all that you have in this kingdom, not to speak of the consequences which would have followed in Scotland, and even in England. . . . ^Vhat most repels me from the service here is that I see by the past it would be difficult for the future to content the parliament and the peo|)le, who are i)rei)ossessed with the notion that any English soldier, even a recruit [qu 'un soldat quoy que nouvellement levi'], can beat above six of the enemy." \ Paf^e 105. — The campaign of 1690 began with the taking of Charlemont, the last fortress in Jacobite hands in Ulster. The carrying of war into the south was delayed till June, when William himself came over to take the chief command. On the 24th of June, the march southward commenced. The king, who by letter had twice prcsseil Schomberg to fight the enemy during the last campaign, was determined to give battle without delay, and in a way that should astound the natives, and create a sensation among all the newsmongers of the three kingdoms. Rut it must be remembered that His Majesty was at the head of a finer army, superior both in numbers and discipline, a large jioriioii of whom -had been entirely trained by * Despalcli. Ni>. .5. + Dcspatcb, Ni'. 13. s 'J 8 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. the Duke of Schomberg and kept together by that Duke's money. This brilliant army set out from Loughbrickkind. Page io6. — When on the 30th of June they came in sight of the valley of the Boyne, the army halted. The enemy were on the opposite side of the stream. William resolved to make Oldbridge, on the banks of the river, his centre, and to charge straight forward through the water upon the enemy, and to do so the very next day. At first the Duke of .Schomberg, at a council held at nine o'clock at night, opposed such precipitation ; but, submitting to the king's wishes, he made this suggestion : " .Send part of the army, both horse and foot, this very night towards Slane Bridge, and so get between the enemy and the Pass of Duleek." The suggestion was favourably received, but was rejected by a majority of votes, whereupon the Duke retired to his tent. The order of battle was sent to him soon afterwards, and, with some tokens of vexation, he remarked : " This is the first time an order of battle was sent to me." The next morning, however, he entered upon his command, as second to the king, with great vivacity, and conspicuously displaying his blue ribbon of the Order of the Garter. It might, however, have been guessed, that if he could only see his master victorious, he would choose to die in the battle, suspecting, as he did, that some of his comrades were bent on destroying his influ- ence with his prince. Schomberg gave the word of command. The cavalry plunged into the water. To the left the Marquis de Ruvigny's younger son, Lord de la Caillemotte, led on the Huguenot infantry. It was some time before the enemy could face the English and Dutch cavalry. When at last the Irish cavalry charged, they made their strongest effort against the Huguenot line, which had not been provided with defensive weapons of sufficient length. The gallant La Caille- motte was carried off mortally wounded, and, at the same time, encouraging his men who were wading through water that reached to their breasts. And now (to borrow Lord ALacaulay's description) " Schomberg who had remained on the northern bank, and who had watched the progress of his troops with the eye of a general, thought that the emergency required from him the personal exertion of a soldier. Those who stood about him besought him in vain to put on his cuirass. Without defensive armour he rode through the river, and rallied the refugees whom the fall of Caillemotte had dismayed. ' Come on,' he said in French, pointing to the Popish squadrons ; ' come on, gendemen, there are your persecutors.' [Allons, messieurs, voila vos persecuteurs.] These were his last words, As he spoke, a band of Irish horse rushed upon him, and encircled him for a moment. When they retired he was on the ground. His friends raised him, but he was already a corpse. Two sabre wounds were on his head, and a bullet from a carbine was lodged in his neck." The body of Schomberg was embalmed and put in a leaden coffin. The preparations for embalming were equivalent to ^ post mortem examination, and they proved him to be in perfect health and soundness, like a man in his bodily prime. It was announced that he would be buried in Westminster Abbey ; but after the victory of the Boyne, Dublin, having been evacuated by James and receiving William peaceably and loyally, had the honour of enshrining the hero's ashes. He was buried beneath the altar in St Patrick's Cathedral. NOTES. In " Relics of Literature, by Stephen Collet, A.M.," we are informed that in the Lansdown Library there is a copy of " Burnet's History of his own Times," filled with remarks on the margin in the handwriting of Swift. We are concerned with the following instance : — Dean Swift's Note. Burnet's Paragraph. Very foolish advice, for I will not enter farther into the military part ; for I remember soldiers cannot write. an advice of Marshal Schomberg, never to meddle in military matters. His observation was : " Some affected to relate those afiairs in all the terms of war, in which they committed great errors, that exposed them to the scorn of all commanders, who must despise relations that pretend to exactness when there were blunders in every part of them.'' .■IX.i/.].S7S Oh l-QIAMI: lIKSr. '3> As to S( homberg's last words at llic Battle ofllic Boyiie, Colonel Barrti, in a si)eech in the House of C'oniinons, (luoleil tiiein thus : — " Aii drroir, nus enfants ; voi/a tos eniicmis ! " Although K.ing William's system of clash and risk seemed to eclipse Schomberg's strategy, yet the few weeks that followed the victory of the Boyne vindicated Schomberg. In the debate whether the Irish were such contem|>til)le foes, that victory over them might be obtained by one impetuous rush, the best illustration that the Marshal was right and the King wrong, was the King's rush upon Limerick, and his summoning the town before the royal siege train of artillery had come up. The gallant Irishman, Sarsfield, defended Limerick successfullv. Schomberg had not been believed when he reportetl the King's otiicers as being chiefly intent upon plunder ; but what hap|)ened before Limerick ? An officer was warned that Sars- field had succeeded in smuggling out of Limerick a detachment, sent to intercept the King's siege train : the officer was engrossed with securing some cattle as booty, and did not attend to the warning ; the detachment met the siege-train and destroyed it. Schomberg's most favoured ri\ al was the Dutch general, Count Solmes ; Schomberg thought him unfit for the command of a division ; in 1692, the Battle of Steenkerk justified Schomberg's estimate of him. A correspondent sends me some of the stanzas of the song named " Boyne Water" (the old version) : — " Both horse and foot prepared to cross, Inlcnding the foe to batter ; l!ul brave Duke Schoml>erg he was shot, While venturing over the water. When that King William he perceived The brave Duke Schomberg falling. He reined his horse witli a heavy heart. To the Enniskillcncrs calling : — ' What will ye do for me brave boys ? .See yonder men retreating ; Our enemies encouraged arc ; But English Drums are beating.' He said : ' Be not in such dismay For the loss of one commander ; For (lod must be our King this day, And I'll be General under.' The Church's foes shall pine away With churlish-hearted Nabal ; I'or our Deliverer came this day Like v.aliant Zcnibbabel. " During his life and after his death Frederic, Duke of Schomberg, received cordial panegyrics. I collect here the names of the admiring speakers and writers, with references to the pages in my volume first, where their words are tjuoted. Lord Macaulay, pp. 95, 98, 104. Sir Robert Howard, Mr Garroway, Sir John Guise, Mr Harbord, Sir Thomas Lee, p. 97. Sir Christopher Musgrave, Sir Henry Goodricke, Mr Hampden, jun., Sir Henry Capel, Mr Henry Powell (Speaker of the House of Comiiions), p. 98. Rev. George Story, pp. 96, 102, 107. Bisliop Burnet, pp. 90, 102. Thomas Trenchard, p. 90. John Dunlop, the historian, p. 88. De Luzancy, \)\>. 89, 94, 96, 107. Sir John Dalrymple, Lord Blayney, Sir John Magill, Dean MacNeal, Dean 'Wilkins, Francis Hill, Esq., John Hawkins, Esq., Charles Stewart, Esq., Robert Donnelson, Esq., James Hamilton of Tullymor, Esq., Daniel MacNeal, Esq., Randal Brice, Esq., p. 105, Pasteur Du Bosc, pp. 91, 106. Professor Weiss, pp. 102, 107. Harris, the biographical historian, p. 102. Maximilian Misson, p. 107. Dean Swift, p. 107. ANALYSIS {continued). Ch.\pter I. section 2d (pp. loS to 112). The Second Duke of Schomberg was Charles de Schomberg, youngest son of the first duke. He was his lather's heir in England, according to the patent of nobility, because at the date of that patent he was the only naturalized Englishman of the three surviving sons. I conjecture that he was born about 1645. He served in Portugal with his father, and was in 1668 incor[)orated in the Frencii army w'ith the rank of lieutenant-colonel. He, as a refugee officer, was incorporated in our army in 16S9, I40 FRENCH PR07i:STANT EXILES. probably witli the rank of major-general. He succeeded his father as Duke of Scliombcrg in 1690. Page 1 10. — In 1 69 1 he was sent as lieutenant-general in command of English auxiliaries to the Duke of Savoy. Page III. — In 1692, by the Duke of Savoy's orders, and accompanied by that Royal Highness, he made an irruption into the south of France, and issued a manifesto to the French people. The expedition returned to Piedmont in the winter. Page 112. — Charles, Duke of Schomberg, was mortally wounded at the Battle of Marsiglia on ist October 1693, made his Will on the 14th, and died on the i6th of that month. His chaplain, Rev. John Du Bourdieu, brought his heart to London, and buried it within the French Church in the Savoy. NOTES. The proclamation issued in France by the Duke was written for him by his chaplain. Rev. John Du Bourdieu, who gave a copy of it to Boyer, the author of the history of King William III., in three volumes. It is printed in that history. Vol. II., appendix, page 71. It is interesting, as showing the political sentiments of Huguenot refugees with reference to the country of their birth, and therefore I present my readers with a copy of it. La Declaration du Due de Schomberg aux Habitans du Dauphine au nom du Roi de la Grande Bretagne, Guillaume III. Comme les Violences, que la France a exercees sur tons ses voisins, doivent faire craindre a ses Sujets que, si les Allies entrent dans ses Etats, ils n'en tirent une vengeance proportionnee a ce qu'ils en ont souffert, Nous croyons les devoir informer des intentions du Roi notre Maitre. Toute la terre sait qu'on I'a force a prendre les armes. Ses Etats de la Bourgogne etoient injustement saisis. Sa Principaute d'Orange etoit saccagee, et tous ses Sujets opprimes. Les injustices qu'on lui faisoit 6toient accompagnees de manirres laches et indignes ; et ses ennemis, portant leur fureur jusques dans lavenir, travailloient a lui oter ce que la naissance et la succession devoient un jour lui donner. Ce n'est done que pour conserver son bien et ses droits qu'il a ete constraint de recourir a la voie des armes, et aussi ne pretend-il les employer que pour conserver tout le monde dans ses biens et dans ses droits. C'est pourquoi, s'il me fait entrer en France, son intention est de retablir la Noblesse, les Parlemens, et le Peuple dans leur ancien lustre, et les Provinces dans leurs privileges. II sait (jue la Noblesse est foulue aux pieds, que les Parlemens sont sans autorite, et que le Peuple est accable par les impots. Mais si aujourd'hui la Noblesse, les Parlemens, et le Peuple n'abandonnent pas leurs interets et ne negligent pas une occasion (qu'ils ne retrouveront pas peutetre jamais), ils verront leurs Etats Generaux qui conserveront les Gentilshommes dans les privileges de leur naissance, qui renderont aux Parlemens leur eclat et leur autoritt^, et qui deliveront le Peuple des taxes qui les devorent. Le Roi mon Maitre n'ayant done pris les armes que pour maintenir les droits d'autrui et les siens, c'est sans fondement que les ennemis veulent faire passer cette guerre pour une Guerre de Religion. C'est un artifice pour allumer le faux zi'le des peuples, et un piege tendu a leur crcdulile, afin qu' ils se laissent saigner jusques a la derniere goute. Messiers du Clerge sont irop habiles i)our donner dans un piege si grossier, les causes et les veritables auteurs de cette guerre ne leur etant pas inconnus. Quoi qu'il en soil, je Declare a tous les Ecclesiastitiues, en quelque dignite qu' ils soient, que le Roi mon Maitre les prend tous en sa protection, ([ue leurs iminunitc''S, leurs jjrivileges et leurs biens leur seront exactement conserves, (]ue Ton chatiera exemplairement ceux qui leur feront le moindre outrage, et qu'il ne sera apiJOrte aucun changement ii I'l'gard de la Religion Roinaiiie. .■/.\.-//).S7.S Ol- VOLUME FIRST. 1.41 Cepcndant, Ics Rois il'Anj^lctcrrc iHant (Iiiarans dc 1 Kdit dc Xante's par la Paix dc Montpcllicr et plusieurs autrcs traitcs, Ic Roi mon Mailre croit ("•tre obligi- de mainlcnir ccttc guarantic ct dc fairc retablir I'Edit. Tous Ics bons Kran(,'ois le doivent aider, puis(|uc cct Edit est Ic grand oiivrage de la sagesse de Henri IV., dont la memoire leiir est si cliere. Les L"atholit|ues Romains, qui ont eu la generositi^ de voir avec compassion les souftVanccs des Reformi's, verront sans doute avec ])laisir leur rt'tablissement. On espirc nn'me <|ue Messieurs du Clerge, ayant fait la-dessus de plus scrieuscs reflections, scront bicn aises de temoigner aujourd' hui, ])ar une conduite sage et Chrrtienne, qu'ils n'ont eu aucune i)art a la Violation de I'edit et a toutes les cruautes ([ui I'ont suivie. D'ailleurs, ceux (jui nous viendront jointlre auront les recompenses et les marques de distinction que leurs services meritcront et ([ue nous serons en etat de leur donner. Mais, au contraire, ceux, (jui bien loin de nous aider se joindront aux oppresseurs de leur patrie, doivent s' attendre i toute la rigueur des executions militaires. Et nous Declarons k ceux qui voudront vivre en repos cliez eux, qu'il ne leur sera fait aucun mal, ni en leurs biens ni en leurs personnes. A Ambrun, le 29 d' Aoust 1692. Erom the date it appears that this declaration was issued from tlie fortified town of Embrun, celebrated for its antiquity and lofty site. I now give a copy of 1 )uke Charles' Will, " translated out of French." In the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. The Will of the High and Mighty Lord Charles Duke de Schonberg,* Lieutenant-Generall of the armies of his Majesty of Great Britaine in the year one thousand six hundred ninety-three (first indiction) and the fourteenth of October, at Turin in the jjalace of the Count Duquene in the parish of St Cusebines, the lodging of the after-named Lord Duke the testator, before me Notary Duc:ill Royall and Collegiate Proctor of the Sovereayne Senate of Piemont.and in presence of the Lord Cornelius Count de Nassau D'averqucr(iue,a Hollander, Mr John Du Bordieu, minister of the said Lord Duke de Schonberg, Abraham Beneset Du Teron, secretary of the same lord, Phillip Loyd, physitian, Paul Artand, chyrurgion, Paul Sancerre, allso ch>Turgion, David Castres, chief of the kitchen to the said lord, and John Jaubert, witnesses called, holding each in his hand a lighted wax candle, it being late at night. Whereas there is nothing in the world more certain than death, nor anything more uncertain than the hour of its coming, and that therefore every prudent person ought to dispose of the estate which it hath pleased God to give him in this world, whilst he hath the full disposition of his senccs, for to avoid all manner of contestation amongst his heires — which the High and Mighty Lord Charles Duke de Schonberg, ALarquis of Harwich, Earl of Brentford and Baron de Teys, Count of the Holy Empire, Lieutenant-Generall of His Majesty of Great Brittaine, CoUonell of the first regiment of the English Guards, and Chief Generall of his troops in Piemont, ])rudcntly considering, now in this city, sound (through the grace of God) of his sences, sight, memory, and understanding, nevertheless seized with infirmity by reason of his wounds recieved in the army, hath resolved to make his last and valid Testament and disposition of last Will, nuncupative without being write through, reduced in manner following. And in the first place he hath most humbly begged pardon to the Soveraiyne God his Creator for all his sinns and trespasses, most humbly beseeching Him to grant him remission thereof by the meritts of the death and passion of our Lord Jesus Christ his Saviour. He hath bequeathed and doth bequeath to the Poor of the Reformed Religion wliich are now in this city the summe of Five hundred livres (money of PVance) for to be distributed to them presently after his death by the persons to whom such pious Legacyes doth belong. Moreover he hath bequeathed and doth bequeath to the poor of the said Religion of the City of London * SciiONBKRG is the German form of the name, and therefore the correct form adhered to 1)y the family. SCHOMBLKG is the French form of the name, and the form used Ijy historians. The latter form I have followed, it not l)eing my duty to condemn it, because it was their connection with France and with the Frencli that brought the three dukes into my memorial pages. 1 42 FRENCH PR O TESTA NT EXILES. the like sum of Five hundred livres (French money), payable three months after his decease, and which shall be distributed unto the said poor by the Committy of the said City. Moreover he hath bequeathed and doth bequeath to the High and Mighty Lord Frederick Count de Schonberg, his Brother, the summe of a thousand Crowns, which he will to be paid unto him by his Heire, hereafter named, within six months after his decease, and that in consideration of that summe he shall not, nor may not, pretend or demand any other thing upon his goods and estate by him left. Being askt by me underwritten Notary if he will bequeath any thing to the Poor of the Hospitall of the Lords Knights of St Maurice and Lazarus, and to the Poor Orphan ^Laidens of this City, he answered that he doth bequeath to each of the said bodyes tenn Crowns for each, payable after his decease ; reserving to himself, if he hath time, by way of Codicill, to make such other bequests as he shall think fitt. \\\ all and every other his estate, actions, names, or titles, rights, and pretensions, in whatsoever they doe or may consist, my said Lord Duke de Schonberg, testator, hath named, and doth name, with his own mouth, for his heire universall, the High and Mighty Lord Menard De Schonberg, Duke of Leinster, Grandee of Portingall, and General of the Forces of England and Scotland, his brother, by whom he will that what he hath above ordered be fully executed. And what is above my said Lord Duke de Schonberg hath declared to be, and that he doth will the same to be, his last Testament and Disposition of last Will nuncupative without writing, which he willeth shall availe by way of testament, codicill, gift by reason of death, and by all other the best means, [by] which it may or can be valid and subsist — revoking, annulling, and making void all other Testaments and Dispositions of Last Will which he might have heretofore made, willing that this present shall take place of all others, ordering me Notary underwritten to draw this present in the manner as above done, and pronounced in the place as above, and in the presence of the above said witnesses who after my said Lord have signed. SCHONBERG. John De Bordieu, Witriesse. Cornelius De Nassau D'averquerque, Wiinesse. Du Teron, Witncsse. Paul Sancerre, Witnesse. Loyd, Witncsse. David Castres, Witnesse. Paul Artand, Witnesse. John Jaubert, Witncsse. The above said Will was by me James Paschalis, Notary Ducall Royall and Proctor Collegiate of the Soveraign Senate of Piemont, faithfully passed, caused to be extracted of its Originall, with which I have duly compared the same, and entred it in the tenth book of this present year, in folio, and paid the fees of the entring as by acquittance of the said Register to me. In Testimony whereof I have here notarially subscribed (Paschalis, Not^. Substantialiter translatum per me Joh^^Jacobum Benard No"""" Pub<:"™- Proved by Menard, Duke of Schonberg and Leinster, at London, 13th November 1693. Chapter I., Section 3, (pp. 112 to 121) The Third Dulic of Sc/iomhcri; was INLainhardt, second son of the first duke. He married in 1683 Caroline Elizabeth, Countess Rangrafif Palatin. On becoming a refugee in Prussia, he was made a General of Cavalry. He came to England with his wife, his only son, and his three daughters in 1690, and " Mainhardt Count de Schonburg (so he spelt the name) and Charles his son " were naturalized. He was created Duke of Leinster in the Peerage of Ireland, was enrolled as a General in our army, and in 1692 he obtained the chief command of our home troops. In 1693 he suc- ceeded his brother as Duke of Schomberg, and adopted the signature of " Schonburg and Leinster." In 1695 he was made a Privy Councillor. In 1696 his Duchess died. In 1698 Schomberg House was built for him. In 1703 he was made a Knight of the Garter. In I 7 10 his daughter Lady Carolina died of small-pox, aged 23. His only son Charles, Marquis of Harwich, died in 1713, and was buried in King Henry VII. 's Chapel on Oct. 14, beside his mother and sister. Tlie heirs of the Duke of Schomberg were his two surviving daughters Frederica, Counters of Holdernesse, and by a second marriage. Countess Fitzwalter (she died in 1 751), and Mary, Countess de Degenfeldt. The former is representetl i)y the Duke of Leeds and the Marquis of Lothian. A.YALYSJS 01- VOLUME J-IRST. ,43 NOTKS. Extract from Miuky — " Mcinliardt Sconbergh, Duke of Sconbcrgh and I.inster is of a. good German family, son to that Sconbcrgh who was Mareschal of France, afterwards Stadt- holder of Prussia, who came over at the Revolution with King William, and was killed at the IJattle of the Koyne in Ireland. This gentleman was created Duke of Linster by King William, and, after his brother's death, who was killed in Savoy, was a Peer in England by the title of Duke of Sconbergh. He never was in action all King William's reign, but left by that Prince C.eneral of all the forces in England when his Majesty went abroad. [lie fought with great valour at the Battle of the lioyne.] When the jjresent Queen [.Anne] concluded the Treaty with Portugal, this gentleman was chosen to command the forces there, and had the tiarter; but not knowing how to keep measures with the Kings of Spain and Portugal, was recalled. He is one of the hottest fiery men in England, which was the reason King William would never give him any command where there was action. He is brave, but capricious ; of a fair com])lexion, and fifty years old." Eroin tin U'istminster Abbey Kt-g,ister. — " Maynhard, Dukeof Schonburg and Leinster, Marquiss of Har\vich and Coubert, Earl of Brentford and Bangor, Baron of Theys and Tara, Count of the Holy Empire and Mertola, Grandee of Portugal, one of His Majesties Most Hon'''" Privy Council, Knight of the Most Noble Order of the (larter, Born at Cologne the 30th of June 1641, dyed at Hillingdon in the County of Middlesex, on Sunday the 5th of July 1719, in the 79th year of his age, and was buryed in the east end of King Henry the jtli's Chappell the 4th of August 1719. ' Ercm Annals of King George, 1719.— "On Tuesday night (4th Aug.) his Grace the Duke of Schonberg lay in state in the Jerusalem Chamber in the greatest magnificence, and from thence was carried, with all his trophies of honour, and interred in the Duke of Ormond's vault in King Henry the Seventh's chapel. The funeral service was performeil by the Bishop of Rochester, his pall supported by his Grace the Duke of Kent, Duke of Ro.\burgh, Earl of Pembroke, Earl of Portmore, Lord Abergeveny, and Lord Howard of Effingham ; the Earl of Holdemess and Count Dagenfeldt were the chief mourners." Chapter II. (//. 122 to 144) is entitled. The First Marquis de Ruvigny and his English Relations. The connection of the De Ruvigny family with the W'riothesleys, and through them with the Russells, was highly favourable to the interests of future Huguenot refugees in Britain. On the 3d of . August 1634 Thomas Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, married Rachel, (born 1603, died 1637), daughter of Llauid de Massue, Seigneur de Ruvigny. Their children were Lady Elizabeth (wife of Edward Noel, afterwards Earl of Gainsborough) and Lady Rachel (wife, first of Francis, Lord Vaughan ; 2d, of William, Lord Russell). The only brother of Rachel, Countess of Southampton, was Henri de Massue Marquis De Ruvigny {born about 1600, died 1689). The Marquis's career fills my Chapter Second. He served in the French army, and retired in 1653 with the rank of Lieutenant-General. He then was settled at court as Deputy-General of the Reformed Churches of France ; his commission was issued in 1653, and was approved by the National Synod of Loudun in Anjou in 1659. Page 130. — In the autumn of 1660 Ruvigny was the ambassador from Louis XIV. to our Charles II. In i656 he was at Lisbon on a special embassy (page 131). He was again in England in 1667 and 1668; and again on his most celebrated embassy in 1674-5-6 (p. 134). In 1681 he made his celebrated oration to Louis XIV. (p. 13S) to which the monarch made his too famous reply, ending with the words: — " I consider myself so indispensably bound to attempt the conversion of all my subjects, and the extirpation of heresy, that if the doing of it require that with one of my hands I must cut off the other, I shall not draw back." On the 14th July 1683, when Lord Russell was under sentence of death, Ruvigny wrote to his niece offering to come over and intercede with our king for the life of her husband. But a brutal remark of Charles II. (jrevented the visit. On the accession of James II. he arrived, and had an audience with King James as to removing the attainder ot his niece's children. 144 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. The Marquis De Ruvigny had married in 1647 (page 124) Marie, daughter of Pierre Tallemant and Marie de Rambouillet ; they had two surviving sons, Henri and Pierre (page 136) ; and when these sons had left home for military service, a niece, Mademoiselle de Cirt5, was adopted as a daughter in the family. This young lady accompanied the Marquis and Marijuise to England on the last-mentioned visit, but she died of small-pox in London. On his departure homeward in September 1685 Lady Russell thought she had bid a final farewell to her aged uncle, but he soon returned as a refugee. NOTES. The Marquis de Ruvigny, being a Protestant, did not make use of the Chapel of the French Embassy in London ; his place of worship was the French Church in the Savoy. This Church obtained the sanction of King Charles II. on resolving to adopt a translation of the Anglican Liturgy, and was formally opened on the 14th July 1661. Among the auditory were the Countess-Dowager of Derby and the Countess of Atholl. That Lady Derby was by birth a French Protestant. She was Charlotte de la Tr^moille (born 1601, died 1664), daughter of Claude, Due de la Tr^moille by Lady Charlotte Brabantine de Nassau, daughter of William the Silent, Prince of Orange, and Charlotte de Bourbon Montpensier, the Prince's third wife. The Countess of Derby, who became a widow in 165 1, had a son, the eighth Earl of Derby, and three daughters, the youngest of whom was Amelia Sophia, Countess (afterwards Mar- chioness) of Athole. On the Restoration of Charles II., Charlotte, Countess Dowager of Derby, wrote to her cousin and sister-in-law, the Duchess de la Tremoille (ALarie de la Tour d'Auvergne, daughter of the Due de Bouillon by Elizabeth de Nassau, and granddaughter of Wiiliam the Silent by his fourth wife, Louise de Coligny). In her letter dated London, 13th August, 1660, she says, " I shall be very glad if M. De Ruvigny comes ; I was acquainted with him before, but I did not know he was so much attached to you, and I will do as you wish." On 2 2d September she wrote, " M. de Ruvigny has been twice to see me." She hoped for prefer- ment at court; but, as her biographer observes, (page 293), " Lady Derby hoped in vain, for though the Chancellor was favourable, and the King had given his promise to make her governess to his children, these children still remained unborn." See The Lady of Latham, being the Life and Original Letters of Charlotte de la Tremoille, Countess of Derby. By Madame Guizot De Witt. London, 1869. Copy of Ruvigny's Commission as Deputy-General : — " This third day of August, in the year of our Lord one thousand six hundred and fifty three, the King residing then in Paris, and being to provide a Deputy-General for his subjects of the Pretended Reformed Religion — that office being lately vacant through the death of the Lord Marquis d'Arzilliers ; — After that his Majesty had cast his eyes upon many of his subjects, he judged that he could not better fill it up than with the person of the Marquis De Ruvigny, Lieutenant-General of his armies, who is a professor of the said Pretended Reformed Religion, and endowed with many good and laudable qualities, and who has given signal testimonies of his fidelity and affection on divers occasions, and of his abilities and capacity for his Majesty's service; And his Majesty condescending to the humble petition of his said subjects of the Pretended Reformed Religion, he has chosen and appointed the said Lord De Ruvigny to be the Deputy-General of those of the said Pretended Reformed Religion, and is well pleased that he reside near his person, and follow his court in the said quality, and to present to his Majesty their petitions, narrations, and most humble complaints, that he may take such course therein as he shall judge convenient for the benefit of his service and for the relief and satisfac- tion of his said subjects of the Pretended Reformed Religion. In testimony whereof his said Majesty has commanded me to expedite this present writ to the said Lord De Ruvigny, which he was pleased to sign with his own hands, and caused to be countersigned by me his Coun- cillor and Secretary of State, and of his commandments. " (Signe.l) LOUIS. " (Counlersignc.l) I'll KIA'PK.MIX." AX.ILVS/S OF I'OLUME J'JRST. MS 1. 1ST OF Lords DepiiiksC;knkrai, ♦ oi- niii Proikstant Churches of France, who iiavk ki.sidku AT THE Courts oi- Hknri IV., Loins XIIL, and Louis XIV. Rcigti of Henri IV. Remarks. ( I^lected in 1601, at S.iiiilcl'oy, by a political assfinbly. < Tlicy were re-elected in 1603, by the National Synod of I Gap. j Probably elected in 1605, at Cliatellerault, l)y a political ( assembly. \ Nominated by the iSth National .Synod (called the third ) Synod of La Koclielle), in 1607, the king having de- 1 dared his resolution to refuse his royal licence to a ' political assembly. Na.mes. 1. Lord de St. Germains. 2. Josias Mercier, Lord dcs Hordes. 1. Odet La None, Lord de la None. 2. Lord Uu Crois. 1. Je.in de Jaucourt, Lord de Villarnoul. 2. Jean Uontemps, Lord de Mirande. Jaccjues Elected in 161 1, at Saumur, by a political assembly. f Elected in 1614, at Grenoble, by a political assembly. !In office in 1620, having been elected by a political assembly at Loudun. , In oflice in 1623 ; these Deputies-General arc named in ' the diplomatic i>a])ers concerning La Kochclle, and were probably elected by the political assembly that met in that city in 1621. Henri de Clermont d'.Vmboise, Marquis de Gal- lerandc, commonly called the Marquis de Cler- mont. Lord Bazin. Marquis de Clermont. | Lieutenant-General, Lord Galland, eldest son of'J the Lord Commissioner. 1. Marquis de Clermont. 2. Lord .Marbaud. 'The Synod of Castrcs, in 1626, yielded to the royal demand, that six names should l)e sent, from which the king might select two Deputies-General. The other names were — (HI.) Claude, liaronde Gabrias et de Heaufort, (IV.) Louis de Champagne, Comte de Suze, (V.) and (VI.) were from the liers-etat. This Synod, by the king's conim.T.nrrso)is of quolily and unJcrslauiiing 'vlio might Iw ttiOr his Majesty, to acquaint him with the tiue state of our Churches ; and that he might also reciprocally communicate unto the Churches all matters of importance tending to their welfare and preservation. This assemlily is of opinion that all the Churches be exhorted effectually to comply with his Majesty's demands, and in order thereunto, to name one or two deputies to be despatched unto him in the name of the Churches, and this to lie done out of hand ; and the Province of the Isle of France is to see it done without del.iy." T 146 FREXCH PROTKSTANT EXILES. The Revocation-Edict was registered on the 22d October 1685. Tlie same day the King declared to the Deputy-General that he revoked his office, and prohibited his speaking to him on the afHiirs of the Reformed for the future. (Benoist's Hist, de I'Edit de Nantes, Vol. V., Corrections et Additions.) Page 141. The Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, falsified Lady Russell's belief that she had taken her last leave of her uncle in September. She writes, 15th January 1686, " My uncle and his wife are permitted to come out of France." Their safe arrival is inferred from her letter of 23d March. " I was at Greenwich yesterday to see my old uncle Ruvigny." He was probably in his 86th year. At Greenwich for more than three years Le Alarquis and La Marquise enjoyed the happiest kind of celebrity as benefactors of their refugee countrymen who continually flocked into England. Ruvigny's worldly circumstances were such that there was no opportunity for his receiving any panegyric in the English parliament. His panegyric came from his old master. Louis XIV. did not confiscate any portion of liis great property. He offered liberty of worship to him and his household, and assured him of continued favour as a great nobleman at the court of Versailles. But the warm-hearted old man could not bear to be an eye-witness of the ruin of his brethren — a feeling at which Louis did not take oflence. He was therefore allowed to retire to England with his family, and to retain his wealth, taking with him whatever he pleased, and leaving investments, deposits, and stewards in Erance, ad libitum. The absence of speeches in our Parliamentary history is compensated by the eulogium of Lord Macaulay, who from St. Simon, Dumont de Bostaquet and other authorities, has collected facts and framed a conscientious verdict. The historian represents Ruvigny as quitting a splendid court for a modest dwelling at Greenwich. " That dwelling," says Macaulay, " was the resort of all that was most distinguished among his fellow exiles. His abilities, his experience, and his munificent kindness, made him the undoubted chief of the refugees." His English relations and other admirers were also frequent visitors. His neighbour, the accomplished John Evelyn, became an intimate friend. Evelyn's diary contains the following entries :^—" 1 685, August 8. I went to visit the Marquess Ruvigny, now my neighbour at Greenwich, retired from the persecution in France. He was the Deputy of all the Protestants in that kingdom [to the French king], and several times ambassador at this and other courts — a person of great learning and experience." " 1687, 24th April. At Greenwich at the close of the Church Service there was a French Sermon preached, after the use of the English liturgy translated into French, to a congregation of about a hundred French refugees, of whom Mon- sieur Ruvigny was chief, and had obtained the use of the church after the parish service was ended. " The Diarist gives us also a glimpse of the fine old gentleman's bearing in general society, in a letter to Pepys, dated 4th October, i68g, "The late Earl of St. Albans took extraordinary care at Paris that his nephew should learn by heart all the forms of encounter and court addresses, as upon occasion of giving or taking the wall, sitting down, entering in, or going out of the door, taking leave at parting, I'entretien dc la ruelle, a la cavaliere among the ladies, &c. — in all which never was person more adroit than my late neighbour, the Mar- quis de Ruvigny." Bishop Burnet was an old friend ; and probably at this date they had some of the conversa- tions of which Burnet has made use in the History of His own Time. Dumont de ISostaquet, a French officer who came with King \\'illiam, gives us some itlea of the last months of the veteran refugee, who seems to have been always shewing hosjjitalit)-, hastening on errands of mercy, and scattering his w-ealth among the other refugees. He was admitted to the presence of a king, on whom he might lavish his instinctive devotion to monarchy. If not a regular Privy Councillor, he was nevertheless taken into King William's intimate counsels. War in Europe and also in Ireland being inevitable, though he was too old to receive a general's commission, he took the chief responsibility of enrolling the refugees in regiments. " Four regiments," .says Macaulay, " one of cavalry and three of infantry, were formed out of the French refugees, many of whom had borne arms with credit. No jjcrson did more to promote the raising of these regiments than the Marquis of Ruvigny." AXA/.YS/S OF VOLUME FIRST. 147 He livcil till July, 1681;. On the last day of his life he was apparently in ex* client health ; but at midnight he was attacked by a violent fit of colic which proved fatal in four hours. BURIALS IN 11 l.\, 16S9. 28 I Marquis of Ruvignie. The above is a true F.xtract from the Register of Burials belong- ing to the Parish Church of Greenwich, in the County of Kent, taken this 20th day of July, 1863, By me, F. E. Lloyd Joxes, Curate. NOTES. In the course of Chapter II., panegyrics on Ruvigny are often quoted. The panegyrists are Rachel, Lady Russell (p. 122), ISLirshal Turenne (p. 124), St Evremond (pp. 124, 129), Bishop Burnet (p. 134), Lord Clarendon (p. 124), Benoist, the historian of the Edict (pp. 125, 135, 142), Lord de ^L^gdeIaine (p. 129), Pasteur Daille (p. 130), the Due de St Simon (p. 131), Coleman (p. 134), Madame de ALiintenon (p. 137), Pasteur du Bosc (p. 142). The following names, connected with refugee biography, occur in this Chapter : — Marquis de la Foret and Pasteur De L'Angle (p. 128), Frederic Due de Schomberg (pp. 131, 139), Pastors Allix and Menard (p. 133), Rev. Richard Du Maresq (p. 135), Jean Rou (p. 135), Mademoiselle de Cire (p. 136), Messieurs Le Coq and De Romaignac (p. 142). CH.4PTER HI. (pp. 144 to 219). Henri De RuvigJiy, Earl of Galway {born i(ii,Z, dial 1720), was the elder son of the Marquis De Ruvigny, and first cousin of Rachel, Lady Russell. He was an officer in the French army, and also, like his father, an ambassador and a deputy-general. In 16S5 he became a refugee in England. He succeeded to his father's French title and estates in 1689, and was advised to live as a private gentleman and public benefactor, in which case Louis XIV. would not have confiscated his property. But, in 1691, he insisted on joining the English army, and served in Ireland with great distinction, as Major- General the Marquis de Ruvigny, and Colonel of Ruvigny s Horse (formerly Schomberg s). In 1792 he was enrolled in the Irish Peerage as Viscount Galway and Baron Portarlington ; and in 1697 he was created Earl of Galway. He was a Lord-Justice and Acting Chief-Governor of Ireland from 1697 to 1701. He was General and Commander-in-chief of the Fnglish trooi)s in Portugal and Spain from 1704 to 1707, and Ambassador at Lisbon from 170810 17 10. He was again a Lord-Justice and Acting Chief(}overnor of Ireland in 1715-16. My memoir of this gallant and excellent nobleman is ilivided into seventeen sections : — 1. His career as a Frenchman, p. 144. 2. His refugee life before enrolment in our army, p. 149. 3. The Irish Campaign of 1691, ]). 149. 4. His services as Major-General the Viscount Galway, p. 151. 5. His services as Lieutenant-General and Ambassador in Piedmont, p. 155. 6. His appointment as one of the Lords Justices of Ireland, and his elevation to the Earldom of Galway, p. 162. 7. The Earl of Galway anil Irish Presbyterians, p. 166. 8. The Earl of Galway's government of Ireland, from 1697 to 1701, p. 168. 148 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. 9. Tlie Earl of Galway's semi-official life, from tlie death of King Charles II. of S])ain to the death of our King William III., p. 179. 10. The Earl of Galway's private life, during the beginning of Queen Anne's reign, p. 181. IX. The Earl of Galway's command in Portugal, and the subsequent advent of the Earl of Peterborough into the field, p. 1S2. 12. From July 1705 to Eord Galway's march to Madrid in 1706, p. 186. 13. Lord Galway's misfortunes in Spain, p. igo. 14. The Earl of Galway's later residence in Portugal, and his return home (i 708- 17 10), p. 202. 1 5. Debates and votes of the House of Lords on the proposal to censure Galway, Tyrawley, and Stanhope, p. 206. 16. The Earl of Galway again in retirement, p. 212. 17. The Earl of Galway again a Lord-Justice of Ireland, also his final retirement and death, p. 214. NOTES. The following is the original of the letter which I have translated in Section Fifth, p. 158 : — - Viscount Galway to Mr Blathwayt. Monsieur, — Je suis revenu ici. Je ne sais si le courrier, que vous m'avez envoys, a (5t6 depeche. J'aprehende que le mauvais etat de la sainte de S. A. R. n'ait retarde son depart. On m'a mande que ses acces de tierce ont continut^. J'ai envoy(5 des courriers a nos Consuls de Venise, Genes, et Ligourne pour leur donner part de la bonne nouvelle de la prise de la ville de Namur. J'en ai ^crit aussi a I'Amiral ijui etoit a Barcelone selon les derniers avis le 2 Aout (n. st.) Je I'ai fait aussi savoir que selon tous les avis de France les ennemis ne s'attendent plus a une entreprise de sa part, et que s'il juge bk propos de revenir sur leurs costes, je crois qu'il les surprenda. J'attens de jour en jour les nouvelles du parti que le Roi aura pris aprcs la reddition de la ville. Notre demolition va lentement. Tous les soldats domestiques, et mfeme officiers, tombent malade. Je n'en ai cjue deux dans ma famille qui ni I'aient pas encore iXk. Vous croyez bien que je voudrois bien etre hors d'ici. J'espere que le Roi me fait la justice de ne croire pas que j'ai envie d'aller en Angleterre par inquietude. Je preft^e son service a mes propres affaires, et elles iront toujours bien quand je serai assez heureu.x pour le servir et qu'il sera content de moi. Je suis de tout mon creur, Monsieur, Votre trt's-humble et tres-obeissant serviteur, Gallway. Page 156. With regard to the Waldenses, the following information is contained in a Parliamentary Return, headed " Vaudois," ordered by the House of Commons to be printed, 15 th May 1832 : — The Duke of Savoy's persecuting edict (extorted from him by Louis XIV.) was dated 31st January 1686. That edict was revoked by the Secret Article of 20th October 1690, which restored to the AValdenses their property, civil rights, usages, and privileges, including the exercise of their religion. What Lord Galway obtained was the public Edict to the same effect, dated 20th May 1694. A treaty between Great Britain and Savoy, in 1704, confirmed the Secret Article of 1690, and recognised the Edict of 1694. (See my memoir of Charles, Duke of Schomberg, p. 109.) Page 203. A fuller account of Lord Galway's representation to tlie Portuguese King, with regard to British trade, will be found in my Voliiiiie Second, p. 162. Pages 181 and 217. Evidence of Lord Galway's residence in Hampshire is found among the baptisms registered in the French Church of SouthamjHon. During the years from 1708 to 17 17, he was godfather in person to Henry Charles Boileau, Henrietta Pojjc, and Henriette De Cosne ; and, by proxy, to Rachel Henriette De Cosne, Ruvigny de Cosne, and Judith Henriette Mocquet. A. X A LYSIS OF I'OI.UMr. FIRST. 149 There is the following entry in the Kast Straiten Register of Burials in Micheldever Church- yard, Hampshire : — • IIknkv, Kaki. ok (; \L\\ AV Died Sei)t. 3rd, Was buried Sept. 6, 172 0. John Curate Imber, of Stratton. I have quoted many laudations of Lord (lalway. The encomiasts are Pasteur Du Dose (p. 147), Henoist (p. 14S), Dumont de Bostaquet (p. 149), General Ghinkel (p. 150), Professor Weiss (]). 151), Sir John l)alr)mple (p. 154), Ryan (p. 154), Archdeacon Coxe (i)p. 154, 184, 205), MaximiUen Misson (p. 162), King William III. (pp. 173, 174, 177), John Evelyn (p. 178), John Macky (p. 182), Duke of Marlborough (pp. 183, 187, 189, 200, 210), Bishop Burnet ([j. 189), Rev. Robert Fleming (p. 190), Sir Charles Hedges (p. 191), Karl of Sunder- land (|)p. 194, 200), Sir Thomas De Veil (pp. 198, 203), Earl of Godolphin (p. 200), Rev. Mr Withers, of Exeter (p. 211), Rachel Lady Russell, (pp. 214, 218), Bishop Hough (p. 218). Dean Swift differs in his estimate (pp. 175, 204). The following refugee names occur in the memoir — viz., Sir Joh Chardin and Monsieur Le Coij (p. 149), Lieut.-Colonel de Montault (p. 152), Monsieur de Mirmand (p. 153), Monsieur de Sailly (p. 154), Monsieur de Virasel (p. 154), Pasteur Durant (p. 156), Colonel Aubussargnes (p. 156), Colonel Daniel Le Grand Du I'etit Bosc (p. i66), Rev. James Fontaine (pp. 167, 217), Monsieur Du Pin (p. 169), the 3d Duke of Schomberg (pp. 172, 173, 182, 183), I-arue (p. 175), Lieut.-Colonel Rieutort (p. 184), Marquis de Montandre (p. 194), Rev. Monsieur De la Mothe (p. 214), Rev. Daniel Cfesar Pegorier (p. 219). The Appendix to Volume First contains — (ist.) Extracts /torn Captain-General, the Duke of Schomberg^ s Despatches (pp. 221 to 230). The following names are mentioned: — Monsieur Goulon, Colonel Cambon, Brigadier De la Melonniere (p. 221), Monsieur Goulon (p. 225), Captain St Saveur (p. 227), Colonel Cambon (p. 229). (2nd.) Daille's Dedicatory Epistle to the old Marquis De Ruvigny (p. 232). (3rd..) Lady Russell's Letter to Dr Fitzwilliam, containing her first allusion to young Ruvigny (afterwards Earl of Galway), p. 231. (4th.) Dedications of Books to Lord Galway. Dedicator)' Epistle prefixed to the Life of Pasteur Du Bosc, 1693, p. 232. Dedicatory Epistle, prefixed to Bouhereau's French Translation of Origen's Reply to Celsus, 1700, p. 233. Dedicatory Epistle prefixed to Sermons by the late Rev. Henri De Rocheblave, 1710, p. 233-4- (5th.) Tiie Karl of Galway s Two Papers for the House of Lords, January 171 1. The Earl of Galway 's Narrative, read by the Clerk at the Table of the House of Lords, 9th January 17 ir, p. 234. The Earl of Gahvay's Reply, or Observations upon the Earl of Peterborow's Answers to the five questions proposed to his lordship by the Lords, p. 237. (6th.) The Earl of Gahvay's Last \\\\\ and Testament, and Trust-Deed, p. 241. The following names occur in the Will : — Pa^e 242. Rachel Lady Russell, Forcade, Vial, Guillot, Briot, Duke of Devonshire, Duke of Rutland, John Charlton of Totteridge, Richard Vaughan of Dorwith. Page 243. Bruneval, Marmaude, Chavernay, VignoUes, Pyniot de la Larg^re, Cong, De Cosne, Cramahe, .\niproux, Darasus, Nicliolas. Jordan, Denis. Mi'iiard. Sir John Norris. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. WITH NOTES AND DOCUMENTS. CHAPTER IV. (pp. I to 4). (1.) Le Sicur dc La Caillemotfc {J)p. i, 2.) — Pierre de Massue de Ruvigny. second son of the Marquis de Ruvigny, and younger brother of the Earl of Galway was born at Paris, 4th January 1653, and was killed at the Battle of the Boyne, 12th July 1690. (2.) La Marquise de Ruvigny {page 2). — The widow of the old Marquis de Ruvigny made her will, 14th May 1698. Rachel Lady Russell, in 1699, made overtures to the King of France through our ambassador as her heiress ; and at the same time applications for estates in France were forwarded on behalf of Sir William Douglas, Monsieur Le Bas, and Mrs Mary Cardins {page 3). See Cole's State Papers. (3.) Colonel Ruvigny Dc Cosne {page 3 zxiApage 314). — Aim^e Le Venier de la Grossetiere, niece of the Marquise De Ruvigny, was married to Pierre De Cosne (probably a scion of the house of Cosne-Chavernay) a refugee gentleman at Southampton. The children of this couple, registered at Southampton, were Rachel Henriette (Iwrn 1708), Louise {born 1709), Charles {born 1710), Henriette (iJw« 1714), Antoine {born 1715), Ruvigny {born 1717). See Lord Galway 's Will. CHAPTER V. (pp. 4-10). Isaac Dnmont dc Bostaquct, tlie heir of an ancient Norman family, was born in 1632. He was a cornet of cavalry, but retired on his marriage in 1657, and lived as a country-gentleman till 1687, when he became a refugee in Holland, and was enrolled in the Dutch army as a captain of cavalry. Madame de Bostaquet (his third wife, Marie de Brossard, daughter of the Chevalier de Grosraenil) and his surviving children, settled with him at the Hague on 2 2d March 1688. Page 7. The expedition of the Prince of Orange into England soon interrupted this domestic life. De Bostaquet joined it as a cavalry officer. The Huguenot cavalry were provisionally enrolled in two regiments of blue and red dragoons. The officers of " the Blues" [/cj- bleus'] were Colonel V^tVA, Captains Desmoulins, Petit, Maricourt, D'Escury, Montroy, Neufville, Vesansay, Montaut, and Bernaste ; Lieutenants Quirant, Louvigny, Moncornet, Tournier, Le Blanc, D'Ours, Fontanes, Bernard, Senoche, Serre, and Ruvigny ; Cornets Martel, Dupuy, Darouviere, De Lamy, Lassaut, Salomon, Larouviere,__La Bastide, De Bojeu, De Gaume, and Constantin. The officers of " the Reds" \les rougcs'\ were CMwr/ Louvigny; Captains Bostaquet, La Grangerie, Passy, D'Olon, Vivens, Varenques, and La Guiminicre,- Lieutenants Boismolet, Mailleray, Ciairvaux, Vilmisson, La Caterie, D'Ornan, and Rochebrunc ; Cornets Vasselot, Maille, Maille (brother), D'Olon, jun., Du Chesoy, Montpinson, and Ricard. It appears from the above list that De Bostaquet, who had then nearly com])leted his 57th year, was Senior Captain of Louvigny's red dragoons. He gives a lively account of the em- barkation and voyage to our coast, then of the disembarkation. .I.V.I/.WS/.S (.)/■ lOLUME SECOXD. 151 /"(/!,'£• 8. The Hiiyucnot cavalry were conspicuous in the Prince's army, anil also 2250 foot- soldiers of the same communion. 'I'he French historian, J. Michelet, estimates the number of French officers at 736, some of them making their debut in the service of the liberator of Britain as privates. Observing tliat this steadfast and considerable portion of the troops is not alluded to in Lord Macaulay's \vordi)icture of the march from Kxeter, Miciielet complains rather bitterly in words like these : — " In the Homeric enumeration which tliat historian gives of William's comrades, he counts (as one who would omit nothing) Knglisii, Germans, Dutch, Swedes, Swiss, yes, down to the three hundred negroes, with turbans and white plumes, in attendance on as many rich Knglish or Dutch officers. Hut he has not an eye for our soldiers. Is it that our band of exiles are clad in costumes incongruous with William's grandeur? The uniform of many of tiiem must be that of the impoverished refugee — dusty, threadbare, torn." De Bostaquet, as a subaltern in De Molicns' Company of .Schomberg's Regiment of Horse, and with the rank of captain in the army, marched from London on the zSth August. He arrived in Ireland after the taking of Carrickfergus. Having weathered out that fatal autumn, he made application at Lisburn for leave of absence to visit his family. The Duke of Schom- berg was obliged to answer in the negative, condescendingly adding, " You made such efforts to be in my regiment, and now you desire to quit it ; do you wish to leave me here by myself? Wait for King James's leave, and we will go to England together." On Christmas-eve he was attacked with a fever which raged for weeks ; this circumstance obtained for him his furlough. The Marquis De Ruvigny had secured that he should retire on full pay; but he determined to serve in the camjiaign of 1690, when it was announced that King ^Villiam was to join the anny. Having served with distinction he returned to London. Our refugee family's final resting-place was Portarlington. There the veteran captain obtained a lease of ground, built his house and garden-wall, brought up his younger children, served as an elder in the French Church, and enjoyed his pension of 6s. 3d. per diem, till his death in 1709, at the age of 77. The following is the registration of his burial in the Register of St. Paul's, Portarlington : — "Sepulture du lundi, 15 Aoust 1709. Le dimanche, 14° dernier i\ 3 heur du matin. Est mort en la foi du Seigneur et dans I'esp^rance de la glorieuse resurrec- tion Isaac Dumond, escuyer, Sieur Du Bostaquet, Capitaine a la pension de S.M.B., dont I'Ame etant allee a Dieu, son corps a eti' enterrti cejourd'hui dans le cemetiiire de ce lieu par Mr De Bonneval, ministre de cette Eglise." /(?(,r 10. Here we may give his list of officers to whom settlements were granted in Ireland with half-pay, commencing from ist January 1692 : Officers of Cavalry. — Coloiid de Romaignac. Captains De Bostaquet, Desmoulins, Questrebrune, D'Antragues, Dolon, De Passy, D'Eppe, De L'Isle, De Vivens, Fontanii-, De La Boissonade, Du Vivier, Dupont-BiTault, Pascal, Ferment, Seve, L'Escours, La Boulaye, La Boulaye (brother), La Brosse-Fortin, Lantillac, Vilmisson, Mercier, De Causse and La Caterie. Cornets De Rivery, La BastideBarbu, Goulain, L'Amy, Lemery, and La Serre. Officers of Infantry. — Lieut.-Coloncls Du Petitbosc and Du Borda. Captains La Rami^re, La Glide, Bethencour de Bure, Saint-Garmain, D'Ortou.x, Champtleury, Loteron, Sainte-Maison, La Sautier, La Brousse, Barbaut, Serment, Millery, Du Pare, D'Anroche, L'Estrille, Courteil, De L'Ortle, D'.Vulnix, Charrier, Tiberne, Pressac, Verdier, La Roche- monroy, Champlaurier, Harne, Prou, Liger, Verdelle, Dantilly, Ponthieu, Sally, Vignoles. Linoux, La Rochegua, Vebron, Bernardon, Revole, Chabrole and La Guarde. Lieutenants Baise, Sailly, Boyer, Pruer, De Mestre, I.'Ille du Gua, Saint-Sauveur, La Maupi're, Saint- Aignan, Belonn, Saint-Faste, Lungay, Mercier, Bignon, Boisbeleau, Petit, Laini?, Saure, Pegat, Bourdin, Massac, Damboy, Bellet, De Loches, La Motte, Loux, Bemccour, Vialla, Delon, Lanteau, Londe, Aldebert, Mercier (brother), F'ortanier, Saint-Yorc, La Risole-Falantin, Le Brun and La RousseliiTe. Ensii^ns I.anfant, La Hauteville, Castelfranc, Saint-Paul, Laval, Saint-Etienne, Guillermin, Quinson and Champlaurier (brother) [Additional names. Bourdiquet du Rosel, Bemiires.] Of these some died before him (dates not mentioned), Captains Queste- 152 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. brune, De I'lsle, De Vivens, Dupont-Berault, La RamiiTe, Champfleury, Verdier and La Rochegua. Lieutenants Pruer, Massac, and Lanteau. Captain Des Moulins died in 1696. Captain Bethencourde Bure, and Lieutenants Ferment andSaint-Yorc died in 1697. Lieutenant Du Vivier and Cornet Lemery did not remain. NOTE. The following names are mentioned in this Chapter : — Pasteur De L'Angle (p. 5), the old Marquis De Ruvigny, (pp. 5, 8), the second ^Larquis De Ruvigny, Lord Gahvay (p. 9), Pasteur M6nard (p. 6), Charles, Duke of Schomberg (p. 9), Mainhardt, Duke of Leinster (p. 9), De la Blachiere (p. 9), De la Coutiere (p. 9). Ch.^pter VI. (pp. 10-16, 155, 314). Maximilian Misson (bom about 1650, died 1722), a Judge of the Chamber of the Edict in Paris, was a son of Jacques Misson, pasteur of Niort. The pasteur and all his family became refugees in London, and were naturalized in 1687 (see List XIII.) He was travelling tutor to Lord Charles Butler, afterwards Earl of Arran, to whom he dedicated his Nouveau Voyage d' Italic, on ist January 1691. NOTE. Misson's writings prove him to have been a man of taste, and a connoisseur as to the fine arts. Benoist, speaking of the desolations committed upon lovely mansions and pleasure- grounds by the dragoons and the Popish mobs, adds, that the beautiful mansion in the environs of the city, belonging to Misson, one of the councillors of the Parliament of Paris, and its garden with its tasteful decorations, were no exceptions to the rule, but were totally laid waste. I give the full titles, both of the originals and of the translations, of Misson's celebrated works, best editions : Memoires et Observations faites par un Voyageur en .\ngleterre, sur ce qu'il y a trouv6 de plus remarquable, tant h, I'egard de la Religion que de la Politique, des mojurs, des curiositez naturelles, et quantity de Faites historiques. Avec un description particuliere de ce quil y a de plus curieux dans Londres. Le tout enrichi de Figures. Lege sed Elige. A la Haye. Chez Henri Van Bulderen, Marchand Libraire, dans le Pooten, a I'en- seigne de Mezeray. 1698. Voyage DTtalie. Par Maximilien Mis- son. Edition augment6e de remarques nou- velles et interessantes. [4 tomes.] A Amster- dam ; et se vend a Paris ( Clousier, \ Chez, I'aine, ;• Rue Saint Jacques. David, 1 cwii^, , Durand ) Damonneville, Quay des Augustines. 1743. [The fourth edition, published at the Hague in 1702, was in three volumes, and entitled, " Nouveau Voyage d'ltalie." There had been extant since 1670 the work of an older writer, R. Lassels, entitled, " The Voyage of Italy."] His account of the miracles and prophecies of the French Prophets was entitled, "Theatre Sacro des Cevennes, ou Recit des prodiges arrivees dans cette partie du Languedoc." Lond. : 1707. M. Misson's Memoirs and Observations in his Travels over England. With some account of Scotland and Ireland. Disposed in alphabetical order. Written originally in French, and translated by Mr Ozell. London. Printed for D. Browne, A. Bell, J. Darby, A. Bettesworth, J. Pemberton, C. Rivington, J. Hooke, R. Cruttenden, T. Cox, J. Batley, F. Clay, and E. Symon. 17 19. (Price 5s.) A New Voyage to Italy, with curious observations on several other countries, as Germany, Switzerland, Savoy, Geneva, Flan- ders, and Holland, together with useful in- structions to those who shall travel thither. [4 vols.] By Mr Misson. The fifth edition, with large additions throughout the whole, and adorned with several new figures. London. Printed for J. & J. Bonwick, C. Rivington, S. Birt, T. Osborne, E. Comyns, E. M'icksteed, C. Ward & R. Chandler, and J. & R. Tonson. 1739. AA'/IAiS/.S OF VOLUME SECOND. 153 The following names occur in this Cliaptcr ; MailLird (jj. 15). Do l.aulan (|). 15), Dcs Maizeaux (p. 15). Chapter VII. (pp. 16-32). (i). R(^\ Janus Fontaine, ALA. ^^ J. P. (pp. 16 to 26), was horn in 1658, and completed his Journal in 1722 ; his wife (///7/ 1 745, tiitki 1829), was his grandson, the eighth of ten children. Elias Boudinol {I'oni 1 740, tiicti 1 821) was the other President. Chapter IX. (i)p. 42 66). (i.) Lf Marquis De Mireiiwnt (pp. 42-54, 314). The refugee nobleman who bore this courtesy-title, was Armand de Bourbon, second son of a Marquis de Malauze, and brother of Guy Henri, 3d Marquis de Malauze. Miremont's elder brother ajjostatized, and his sister Henriette was forcibly detained in France. His other sister, Charlotte, was a refugee with him, as was his brother, Louis, Marciuis de la Case, who was killed at the ]5attle of the Boyne. He was a nephew of General, the Earl of Feversham, and distantly related to the Prince of Orange. He rose to the rank of Lieut. -General, and died in 1732. He zealously seconded the beneficent and successful labours of the Marquis de Rochegude on behalf of Huguenots in the French galleys (pp. 47 to 53). NOTE. My correspondent. Colonel Chester, supplied me with authentic dates regarding Miremont, for which I provided space at p. 314; but I made matters worse by allowing a niisjirint to remain in that addendum. Hero, at last, I give the facts, from the \\'estminster Abbey Register, correctly : — Armand de Bourbon, Marquis de Miremont, ne au Chatteau de la Cate en Languedoc le 12 Juillet 1656, decedii en Angleterre le 12 Fevrier 1732. (2.) Major-General John Qna/itr (pp. 54.66) was the far-famed Jean Cavallier, the famous Camisard chief. On escaping from France in 1794, he halted at I^usanne, and there he received an invitation from the Duke of Savoy, which he accepted. On arriving at tiie camp, he obtained the special protection of our Ambassador, the Right Hon. Richard Hill. I accidentally omitted in its proper place Mr Hill's principal attestation as to Cavalier's abilities and character. This I had to insert at p. 315. I reproduce it here : — Afr Hill to Mr Secretary Hedges. " Turin, 5th Nov. 1704. I am glad the Queen was pleased to approve of what I did for M. Cavallier I should say nothing of him now, if I were not amazed so oft as I see him. A very little fellow, son of a peasant, bred to be a baker, at 20 years of age, with 18 men like himself, began to make war upon the King of France. He kept the field for eighteen nionths against a Mareschal of France and an army of 10,000 men, and made an honourable capitulation at last with the mighty Monarch. It is certain, that he and his followers were animated with such a spirit of zeal for their religion which is the true enthusi;ism. I fear they may lose that temper of mind in the commerce of the world, though they are very devout and very regular. I therefore will do all I can to get them back into France, where one Camisard is worth 100 refugees." No irruption into France was efl'ected. In 1706, Holland and England gave him a com- mission of Colonel to raise a volunteer regiment. At the head of this regiment he fought at the Battle of .\lmanza, and was severely wounded, and his men cut to pieces. In 1707 he retired as an I^nglish Colonel; and, being a young man, he received no promotion till 1735, when he became a Brigadier. In 173S he was promoted to the rank of Major-General. He died in 1740, in his 60th year, and was buried in Chelsea Churchyard. Between 1707 and 1727 he spent many years at Portarlington. There he employed himself in writing for the press, and in making arrangements for publishing a book, entitled '' Memoirs of the Wars in the Cevennes under Colonel Cavallier, in defence of the Protestants persecuted in that country, 156 FJ^f.XCH PROTESTANT EXILES. and of the Peace concluded between him and the Mareschal Duke of Villars. Written in French by Colonel Cavallier, and translated into English" (Dublin, 1726). Dedicated to Lord Carteret, Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. In 1727 a second edition was published. The main facts are confirmed by documentary evidence. But Huguenot antiquaries complain of many inaccuracies of detail, while they make allowances for an unpractised author writing from memory. The following names occur in this chapter : — Dean Swift (p. 43), St Evremond (p. 44 — see also Vol. L, pp. 154, 182, 212), Roland (pp. 46, 55, 59, 64), Belcastel (pp. 46, 47), Flotard (p. 46), Portales (p. 46), La Billiere (p. 46), Temple (p. 46), Duke of Marlborough (pp. 47, 49, 62, 64), Brousson (p. 54), Mr John M. Kemble (pp. 57, 58, 64), Calamy (p. 57), Ravenal (pp. 55, 59), Earl of Galway (p. 63), Ponthieu (p. 64), Champagne (p. 64), Sir Erasmus Borrowes (p. 64), Primate Boulter (p. 65), Right Honourable Richard Hill, (pp. 59, 62). Chapter X., (pp. 66-83, 3iS)- (i). Baron HHcrvart (pp. 66-70). Philibert Hervart, Baron de Huninghen, commonly called Baron D' Hervart, son of Bartholomew Hervart and Esther Vimart, (Aw/ 1645, ///tv/ 1 721), was a distinguished refugee, and for some years our ambassador in Switzerland. His wife was a Swiss lady of good estate, Jedide Azube de Graffenried. (2). Right Hon. John Rokthon, (pp. 70-78), was a son of Jean Robeton, or Robethon, Advocate in the Parliament of Paris, by Anne, sister of the Rev. Claude Groteste De la Mothe. He also was an Advocate, and being a Huguenot refugee in Holland, he came to England with the Prince of Orange, and remained as the king's private secretary. On his royal master's death, he was engaged by the Court of Hanover, where he became a Privy Councillor, and a useful public servant. On the accession of George L, he returned to London, and was settled there until his death in 1722. (3). Flier Falaiscau, Esq. (pp. 78-80, 315), was the son of Messire Jacques Falaiseau, ecuyer, and Dame Anne Louard. Becoming a refugee, he was naturalized at Westminster, in 1 68 1 (see List II). After this he spent his active life in the service of Prussia, as an Ambassador. He spent many years of retirement in England, generally esteemed, and died in 1726. (4). Abel Tassin Fy AUonne, Esq. (pp. 80-83), ^^^s the only son of Monsieur and Madame Tassin (his mother's maiden surname was Silver-Crona). See his \\'ill, which I give in full. He was Private Secretary to the Princess of Orange, and continued with her while Queen of England, in the same capacity ; at her death he was made a private secretary to the king, who granted to him the Castle and Manor of Pickering in [697. On the king's death he returned to Holland where he died in 1723. NOTES. D'Allonne, on retiring to Holland, aspired to employment as a Foreign Ambassador. But Rapin de Thoyras' biographer, informs us that he received the office of Secretary of State for War, and that Rapin was much indebted to him for access to valuable books bearing on English History. I do not believe the scandal, alluded to by that biographer, that D'Allonne was an illegitimate half-brother of William HI. The following names occur in this chapter: — Aufrcre (p. 69), Vignoles (p. 70), St Leger (p. 70), Leibnitz (p. 70— see also pp. 57, 58), Macpherson (pp. 71, 72), Vernon (p. 72), Eari of Portland (p. 72), Addison (pp. 72, 76), Lord Halifax (pp. 72, 73), Falaiseau (p. 72), Duke of Marlborough (p. 74), Hervart (pp. 74, 75), De la Mothe (pp. 74, 77), Sir Rowland Gwynne (p. 75), Dean Swift (p. 75), Earl of Stair (p. 76), Ma.vwell (p. 77), Cowper (p. 77), Gouvernet (p. 77), Des Maizeaux (p. 77), Rebenac (p. 78), Mouginet (p. 79), Blair (p. 82), Bray (p. 82), De la Davi^re (p. 82), Henry Viscount Palmcrston (p. 83). ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SEC O XL). 157 Chapter XL, (pp. 83, 96). Fellows of the Royal Society. (i). Denis Papin (p. 83), after leaving France, lived for some time in London, and was made F.R.S., in 1681. (2). Abraham De Moirre (pp. 83-87), was born at Vitry in 1667, and was completing a first-rate academic education in 16S5, when the Revocation Kdict came out, and he was imprisoned in a monastery. He was set at liberty in r688, and came to London as an exile. He began his refugee life as a teacher of mathematics, but he soon rose to be a chosen associate of Halley and Sir Isaac Newton, and was made F.R.S. in 1697. He is the author of " The Doctrine of Chances," and similar works, upon which modern Life Assurance Tables of Rates have been founded. He died in 1754, in his 8Sth year. NOTE. The complete title of his " Miscellanea Analytica," is as follows : — Miscellanea Analytica de Seriebus et Quadraturis — accessere varia: considerationes de methodis comparationum, combinationum et dift'erentiarum, solutiones difficiliorum aliquot problematum ad sortem spectantium, itcmque constructiones faciles orbium planetarum, una cum determinatione ma.ximarum et minimarum mutationum qua; in motibus corporum ccelestium occurrunt. Londini, Excudebant J. Tonson et J. Watts, 1730. The Dedication, which is " spectatissimo viro Martino Folkes armigero," mentions that the princijial contents of the book had been submitted to, and approved by Newton (14th January 1723), Professor D. Sanderson and Rev. D. Colson ; and that the theorem concerning the section of an angle had been read to the Royal Society, 15th Nov. 1722. Analysis (continued). (3). J?iT. David Durand (pp. 87, 88), son of Pasteur Jean Durand of Sommiferes, was a refugee in Holland till 1711, when he removed to London. A valued associate of learned men, and an industrious and succesful author, David Durand was made a Fellow of the Royal Society. He occupied himself much with Pliny's Natural History, editing and annotating selected portions on painting, and on gold and silver, as well as the Preface to that curious and voluminous work, which Pliny addressed to the Emperor Titus. The Philosophical Writings of Cicero were his next study in the classical field, as appears from Haag's list of his publications. He gave to the world an elaborate History of the Sixteenth Century, and two volumes in continuation of Rapin's History of England. He also published biographical works on Mahomet, Lucilio Vanini, and the French Pastor Ostervald. To simplify the acquisition of the F'rench and English languages by learners, was an object to which he devoted much attention ; but to give the names of the books which he wrote for that end is unnecessary. He lived to an honourable old age ; he died in 1763, aged 83. (4.) Ri~\ John Thivphilus Desnguliers (pp. 89-94), son of Pasteur Jean Desaguliers, by Marguerite Thomas La Chapelle (born 1683, died 1744), was a celebrated lecturer on natural philosophy, having kings, ambassadors, nobles, and senators among his pupils. His third son, Lieut.-General Thomas Desaguliers, left a daughter, Anne, wife of Robert Shuttleworth. Anne left sons, of whom the second was Robert Siiuttleworth of Gawthorpe, whose heiress, Janet, is the wife of Sir J. P. Kay Shuttleworth, Bart. I should have mentioned above that Desagu- liers became F.R.S. in 1714, and D.C.L. of Oxford in 1718. (5.) Pierre Des ALaizeaiix {pp. 94-96), son of Pasteur Louis Des Maizeaux and ^Ladelaine Dumonteil, was educated in Switzerland, where his parents were refugees, and on completing his course at the Academy of Geneva, came to London in 1699. He was tutor to several young men of rank. Through recommending himself to St Evremond, he obtained a general 158 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. recognition of his learned acquirements, and became F.R.S. He had a host of distinguislied correspondents, and his ten voUunes of manuscript (eight of which are filled with their letters) are in the British Museum. He was born in 1673, and died in 1745. The following names occur in this Chapter : — De Monmort (p. 85), Robartes (p. 85), Simpson (p. 86), Baily (p. 86;, Francis (p. 86), Earl of Macclesfield (p. 86), Sir John Leslie (p. 87), Rapin (p. 88), Troussaye (p. 89), Lembrasieres (p. 89), Duke of Chandos (p. 91), Newton (p. 91), Baron de Bielfeld (p. 92). Page 95. Sylvestre, Des Brisac, Morel, Gervais, Girardot de Sillieux, Blagny, Joseph Addi- son, David Hume, Dr William Warburton, and the Earl of Macclesfield. Chapter XH. (pp. 96-118). Refugee Clergy. — Group First, (i.) Jacques Ahhailie (pp. 96-102) of Nay, in Beam, in the kingdom of Navarre, was born in 1654, and died Dean of Killaloe, in 1727. He was celebrated for his eloquence, and for many invaluable works, such as, " The Truth of the Christian Religion," " The Art of Know- ing Oneself," " Defense de la Nation Britannique," " A Panegyric on our late Sovereign Lady Mary, Queen of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland," &c., &c. NOTES. Abbadie's first preceptor was La Placete, the moralist, whose treatise on conscience, entitled "The Christian Casuist," was translated into English by Kennett in 1705. The translator differed from some sentiments in the chapter Of Ecclesiastical Ordinances, and there- fore he subjoined a statement of the difference between the Anglican and French churches as to the obligation to submission to such ordinances, specially on the ground of their receiving a concurrent sanction from the Christian sovereign of the country. The difference appears in interpretations of the text in Luke xxii., " The kings of the Gentiles exercise lordship over them . . . but ye shall not be so" [or as Matt. xx. 26, has it, "but it shall not be so among you."] Kennett informs us, " As to the disputed text, the generality of French divines of the Protestant Communion agree with our Dissenters in maintaining that it utterly prohibits the conjunction of civil antl ecclesiastical power in the same person." The opposite opinion is expressed by Hooker, who says, that our Lord's complete statement amounts to this, that the servants of the kings of nations may hope to receive from them large and ample secular preferments ; but not so the servants of Christ ; they are not to expect such gifts from him : " Ye are not to look for such preferments at my hands ; your reward is in heaven ; submission, humility, meekness, are things fitter here for you, whose chiefest honour must be to sufler for righteousness sake." Bayle's offensive book, to which Abbadie replied, was printed at Paris, with a licence from Louis XIV., it was entitled, "Avis Important aux Refugiez sur leur prochain Retour en France, donn6 pour etrennes a I'un d'eux en 1690. Par Monsieur, C. L. A. A. P. D. P. A Paris. Chez la Veuve de Gabriel Martin, rue S. Jacques, au soleil d'or. 1692. Avec Privilege du Roy." Abbadie's reply (as already said) gradually slid into a defence of the rival monarch, William III., though he had many fine passages on his proper subject. For instance, in some keen and powerful sentences, he ridiculed Bayle's insinuation that the refugees on their return home might be dangerous to public tranquillity, because men who had shed so much ink in exposing the horrible cruelty of the recent persecutions, would probably take advantage of a tempting opportunity to shed the blood of their former persecutors. Anotiier answer was undertaken by Monsieur De Larrey, a refugee in Holland, and was published with the title, " Reponse a I'Avis aux Refugiez. Par. M. D. L. R. A Rotterdam, Chez Reinier Leers. 1709." KX page 2 this author says : " I am well aware that a better ])en than mine has already produced a refutation, and long ago. But that able author (.\baddie) devoted himself less to the vindication of the refugees than to the defence of the British nation. I shall take another course. I shall speak of the English Revolution only when I must, that is, when I meet that ANALYSIS OF I GLUME SKCOXD. 159 great event in my progress. My dissertation shall principally, almost entirely, revolve around the justification of the Reformed, anil particularly of the refugees unjustly assailed — to whom, under jiretence of giving them chaiilabU aiivia; the author falsely imputes all that can render themselves odious, and their persecutors excusable." h.ti\iMS\s— {continued.) (2.) Thf Pasteurs Bertheau, father and son {y\). 102, 103). The father was Rent'- Rertheau, of Montpellier, D.l). of O.xford. The son was Rev. Charles Bertheau {born 1660, dud 1732), minister of the City of London French Church. His sister Martha (daughter of the D.D.) was married to Lieutenant Claude Mercier, and left a son. (3.) Re-c. James Cappel (pp. 103-105), third son of Professor Louis Cappel of Saumur, taught the Oriental Languages in I^ondon, and was latterly a Professor in the Dissenters' College, called Hoxton Square Academy. Bom 1639, died 1722. (4.) Ka\ Benjamin Daillon, or, De Daillon (pp. 105-108), and Pauline Nicolas, his wife, were refugees in London in 1688. He was F"rench Minister of Portarlington from 1698 to 1702 ; the remainder of his days were spent at Carlow. Born 1630, died 1709. A relative, James Daillon, Comte Du Lude, bom in 1634, was alive in London in 1694. (5). Ra'. James Pineton De Chambrun (pp. 108, iii), and Louisa Dc Chavanon Perrot his wife, were refugees in Holland, and came over witii William and Mary to England. He died in 1689, a Canon of Windsor, aged 52. His thrilling adventures are abridged from his book entitled, Zfti- Zieutenant of the Chasseurs of my Lord the Duke of Orleans, uncle. Louise Groteste, widow of the Sieur Naudin, physician, aunt. Mr. Daniel Chardon, advocate in the Parliament, for ^L^rie Caillard, his wife ; Louise Naudin, wife of Le Sieur Guide, doctor of medicine ; Miss Anne Caillard ; Mr. Roche- bonot, Sieur De Launay, advocate in the Parliament, and Philotti'-e Naudin, his wife ; Dame Caterine Le Monon, wife of Monsieur De Monginot, Sieur De la Salle ; Cezard Caze, escuyer, cousins. Charles Aubeson, Sieur De la Durferie, a friend of the said Sieur De la Mothe. There 7i'ere present on the part of the said J/iss AParie Berthe : — Jean Auguste Berthe; Jacques Conrart, escuyer, advocate in the Parliament, and Suzanne Berthe, his wife ; Anne and Elizabeth Berthe, brothers and sisters. Samuel Bedt?, escuyer, Sieur De Loisilli^re ; Ben- jamin Bede, escuyer, Sieur De Longcourt ; Mr. Phillippes Auguste Perraux, procurator in the i6o FREXCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Parliament ; Dame Olimpe Bed6, w-idow- of Hardy, escuyer ; Seigneur De la Fosse, cousins. Jacques Conrart, escuyer, councillor, secretary of the King, and Dame Susan Reg- nard, his nife ; Conrart, escuyer, Sieur De Roupambert, friends of both families. I give in the Memoir a translation of Lord Gahvay s Letter to De la Mothe concerning French Protestants released from the galleys. The following is the original : — The Earl of Galway to Mr De la Mothe. Straton le 13= Juillet. Je vous suis infiniment oblige. Monsieur, de la peine que vous avez prise de me faire savoir ce qui se passe par rapport a nos Confesseurs par votre lettre du i9<= Juin. J'ai eu le soin de renvo)'er a Mile. Caillard comme vous le souhaitiez. J'ai vue depuis ce tems la copie de celle qui a ete ecrite de Marseille du 17= Juin, par laquelle je vois qu'on a fait embarquer une partie de nos pauvres fr^res (apparament pour leur faire trouver plus de difficultes dans leur voyage), et qu'ils esperent qu'on mettra aussi la reste en liberte. Je vois par la meme lettre qu ils croyent que ces Pau\Tes Confesseurs auront grand besoin de secours en arrivant a Geneve ; c'est de quoi je n'ai pas doute. Si vous prenez le parti de leur envoyer, je vous prie de me le faire savoir a temps, et ce que vous avez besoin, et je vous ferai donner ce que vous me demanderez jusqu'a Cent Li\Tes Sterlings ; mais il est bon que je le sache le plutot qu'il se pourra, afin de les tenir pretes. Nous attendons My Lady Colladon tous les jours, je lui parlerai sur ce sujet, mais je dependerai absolument de ce que vous aurez la bonte de m'ecrire. Je vous prie d'etre persuade. Monsieur, que je suis toujours avec beaucoup d'estirae et de sincerite Votre tres-humble Serviteur, G.^llway. (7). Rev. John Graverol (pp. ri4, ri6), was an excellent refugee pastor, author and controversialist. Bom, 1647. Died, 1718. (8). TJie Messieurs Mesnard (p. 116). Through inadvertence I have described these pasteurs as " father and son." They were, in fact, brothers. John Menard, Mesnard or Mesnart, D.D., died in 1727. Philippe Menard, died in 1737- See Haag's La France Protestante. (9). Re't'. Peter Mussard (pp. ir6, 117), was a refugee pasteur in London in 1678. He was a good scholar and theologian ; his book on the Conformity of modern Romish ceremonies with the rituals of the ancient heathen is celebrated, and has been twice translated into English ; one translation is entitled, Roma Antiqua et Recens. (10). Rtf. Henri De Rocheblave (pp. 117, 118), was a refugee pasteur who ultimately settled in Dublin, (born 1655, died 1709). His widow dedicated a volume of his sermons to the Earl of Gahvay in 1710 (see my Vol I., pp. 165, 233). The following names occur in this chapter : — Hamersley (p. 96), Schomberg (p. 98), Primate Boulter (p. toi), Des MaizeaiLX (p. 103), Diserote (p. 105. Page 106. Malide, Mettayer, Canole, Gen-ais, Baignou.x, Souchet, Bardon, Forent, Balaguier, Nicolas, Posquet, Grosvenor and the Earl of Galway. Ligonier de Bonneval (p. 107), Convenent (pp. 109, m), De Montanegnes (p. 109), Turretin (p. no), Robethon (pp. 113, 114), Earl of Galway (p. 113), Lady Colladon (p. 113), Caillard (p. 113). Page 114. Shute, Caillard, Guide, Dubuisson, Naudin, De la Buffierre, Bardin, Duncan, Re)"naud, Delamotte. Laval (p. 115), Misson (p. 116), .^ufrere (p. 116), Le Grand (p. 116), Crespe (p. 116), Sermand (p. 117), Chouet (p. 117), Du Pre (p. ri7). Chapter XIII., (pp. 118-128). (i). Frederic Charles De Roye De la Rochefoucauld {]}-p. 11 8-1 20), was the son of Francois, Comte De Roucy by Julienne Catherine De la Tour de Bouillon, grandson of Charles, Comte De Roucy, and great-grandson of that Comte De la Rochefoucauld, who was killed in the St. AN.U.YSIS OF VOLUME SECOXll i6i Rartlioloniew Massacre. He married his cousin, sister of the Earl of Feversham. He was first a refugee in Denmark, and after 1687, in Kngland. He died in 1690, aged 57, and was buried at Hath. His daughter Henrietta, was the second wife of the 2nd Karl of . Strafford. (2). Frederick William, Coiiite tic Mtirhni, Earl of Lifford dip. 120-122), was the fourlli son of the Comte De Roye. Horn 16O6. Died 1749. (3). Francois Dc la Rochefoucauld, Manjuis de Montatidre (pp. 122-125), ^^'^s a nol)le refugee, who first appears as l.ieut.-Colonel in Marlon's regiment. He served as a Brigadier untler the Karl of Oalway. He married Mary Ann, daughter of Baron dg S|)anheim. He became a l-'ield-Marslial in our army, Master-General of the Irish Ordnance, and Governor of Guernsey. Born 1672. Died 1739. (4). The Chnalier De Champagiii (pp. 125-128). The refugees and their descendants appear in the following Table : — • Josi,-is IJc Robillard, Chevalier de CliampagnO, ) Marie De la Kochefmicaulil. died 1689. /""died at I'orlarlingtoii, 1730. Francis Casimir. Josias, known as Major Clianipagne, (born 1673, ondeiice, containing the originals of letters received by him and drafts of his replies. The French Church and its ministers being scattered at the date of his ele\ation to the see of Canterbury, their congratulations had to j)roceed from Switzerland — one address received by him was signed by Benedict Pictet of Geneva (17 15) — another by J oh. Frid. Ostervald of Neufchatel (1716). 1 66 FRENCH PROTESTAXT EXILES. ^,1 (9). Alichad De la Roche (pp. 151-154), was celtbrated for his penodical jjiiblications. The ist volume of his Memoirs of Literature was in folio, 1710-11. Vols. 2, 3, and 4, followed at various intervals from 17 12 to September 17 14, and these were quartos. He then transferred his publications to Holland, where he issued from 17 14 to 1725, the Bibliotheque Angloise ou Histoire Literaire de la Grande Bretagne, in 5 vols. i2mo, and a continuation entitled Memoires Literaire de la Grande Bretagne, in 8 vols. i2mo. He published by subscription in 1722 at London, a second edition of his former Memoirs of Literature, 350 copies, in 8 vols, octavo ; to the new preface he signed his name, Michael de la Roche ; the only apparent Huguenot names among tire subscribers are Isaac Diserote, Rev. Dr. La Croze, Bernard Lintot, Charles de Maxwel, Esq., and James Rondeau. Next he brought out "New Memoirs of Literature," from 1725 to 1727 in 6 volumes. And finally, "A Literary Journal, or a Continuation of the Memoirs of Literature by the same author," — this lasted during 1730 and 1731, and extended to three volumes. The third volume (which is the most interesting and contains the author's own miscellaneous observations) begins in January, 1731 ; in the opening advertisement he says, " If my readers knew the history of this lournal and what crosses and disappointments it has met with, they would pity me." The concluding advertisement, June 1731, is in these words : — " My readers know that I print this Literary Journal upon my own account. I give them notice that it will be discontinued, till I have sold a certain number of my copies ; and then I shall go on with it." In his last volume, page 290, he writes — " I was very young when I took refuge in P^ngland, so that most of the little learning I have got is of an English growth. I might compare myself to a foreign plant early removed into the English soil, where it would have improved more than it has done under a benign influence. As I had imbibed no prejudices in France against the Church of England and Episcopacy, I immediately joined with that excellent church, and have been a hearty member of it ever since. I was not frighted in the least, neither by a sur[)lice, nor by church music, nor by the litany, nor by anything else. I did not cry out, This is popery. I cannot say that I have learned in England to be a moderate man in matters of religion, for I never approved any sort of persecution one moment of my life. But 'tis in this country that I have learned to have a right notion of religion — an advantage that can never be too much valued. Being a studious man, it was very natural for me to write some books, which I have done, partly in English and partly in French, for the space of twenty years. The only advantage I have got by them is that they have not been unacceptable, and I hope I liave done no dishonour to the English nation by those French books jirinted beyond sea, in which I undertook to make our English learning better known to foreigners than it was before. I have said just now that I took refuge in England. When I consider the continual fear I was in, for a whole year, of being discovered and imprisoned to force me to abjure the Protestant religion, and the great difficulties I met w-ith to make my escape, I wonder I have not been a stupid man ever since." (Dated April, RLiy, June, 1731)- (10). Michaei Maittaire {\>\}. 154-158), came to England with his father in 1 681, aged 13. He finished his education at Westminster School and Oxford University. He had a great rejjutation as a learned author and an editor of the classics. In the controversy with AVhiston he also took a prominent share on the orthodox side. Born, 1668. Died, 1747. Errata — Page 154, line 43 — for " (^uinetilian," read " Quinctilian." " 155, " 8 — for " colloqui il," " "colloquial." (11). Peter Anthony Mottctix (pj). 156-157), produced the best translations into English of Don Quixote and Rabelais. Born, 1650. Died, 1718. (12). Paul Rapin, Seij^ni //r i/e Thoyras (pp. 157-161), belonged to a junior branch of a noble family, being a son of Jacques, Seigneur de Thoyras and Jeanne de Pelisson ; he was thus a nephew of the infamous Abbe Pelisson, who laboured in vain to pervert him. He was a refugee officer, and served brilliantly in Ireland in 1689 and 1690. But he was removed from the army to become tutor to \'iscount Woodstock, son of the Earl of Portland. AiV.tl.YS/S OF VOLUME SECOND. 167 On being relieved of his tulorsliip, he seltleil in Holland. Here he wrote his History of Kngland, l)y wliich lie is still so houourably remembered. He also published a " IJisscrta- tion sur les Whigs et les 'I'orys,' 1717. Horn, 1661. Died, 1725. There is a sjilendid Memoir of " Rapin Thoyras sa famille, sa vie et ses a-uvres," by Raoid de Cazenove, published in 1.S66, of which I gave a summary in my Volume II. Uut I must have failed to read the I'roof carefully, for I have to apologize for the following ^/-/-<7A7 : — Piv^f 157, Hue 13, and in many other places — for Chandane read Chaudane. I'lige 157, //'/£■ J3 — for correir reati corrier. ■P'K'' '57."'"''' — 'or slendid read splendid. J\<'' '57. ""/'■ — f'J'' f^iiiilie read famille. /■(/(.v 157, tiote — for Rasul read Raoul. /•(/•r 158, lirnr 51 — for Maria de Richard read Marie de Pichard. Pti};e 159, //>/<• 5 — for Helcastle read IJelcistel. /*(/!,'£• 159, liiid 30 — for, he became, read, to become. Page 259, /ine 48 — for Mounsieur read Monsieur. NOTES. The following sentences, translated from Rapin's History, well express his just abhorrence of persecution. (He treats of the reign of Elizabeth) : — "This is not the only time, nor England the only state, where disobedience in point of religion has been confounded with rebellion against the sovereign. There is scarcely a Chris- tian state, where the prevailing sect will sufter the least division, or the least swerving from the established opinions — no, not even in jirivate. Shall I venture to say that it is the clergy chiefly, who supijort this strange princiijle of non-toleration, so. little agreeable to Christian charity ? The severity, which from this time began to be exercised upon the non-conformists in England, produce.\/>. ,f„, NOTE. Sinrc the publication of my volumes, I have been 'ortunate in obtaining, as a correspon- dent, the rejjrescnlative of Vicomtede Laval. He informs me that the full name and desig- nation of the noble refugee was Henri d'Albret tl'Ully, Chevalier, .Seigneur Vicomte de Laval. The refugee Vicomte's son, David, went back to France, where lie retained the title of nobility, and resided in the chateau of his ancient family. 15y his wife, daughter of Colonel I'aravicini, he had several sons and three daughters. In 1751, on the rising of fresh troubles in France, he brought his daughters over to I'ortarlington, and left them with an aunt. He was again in France in 1755, but returned to Ireland, and spent his last days in Portar- lington. The last Vicomte, Robert, died unmarried. One of Vicomte David's daughters was not married. Frances was married to a gentleman of good family, and had two daughters, one of whom was Mrs Willis, wife of the Rev. Thomas Willis, D.D. The eldest daughter of David, Vicomte de Laval, was Mary Louisa Charlotte, wife of Gilbert Tarleton, I'^sq., of Port- arlington. Her children were Harriette, wife of Monsieur Castelfranc ; Kilward Tarleton, Esq. of Dublin (born 20th Feb. 1764), and Captain Henry Tarleton, a military officer, killed in action. The heir of F^dwartl Tarleton, Esq., is the Rev. John Rotheram Tarleton, rector of Tyholland, county of Monaghan, the representative of Vicomte de Laval. The chief relic, an heirloom, surviving from the refugee era, is an antique silver seal, having three faces engraved with — (ist) the arms of Vicomte de Laval ; (2d) his monogram on a shield, surmounted by a French Vicomte's coronet; and (3(1) his wife's jiortrait engraved on his heart, and surrounded with the sentimental motto, ii- v rester.v tant que je vivray. Mr Tarleton cherishes the memory of his doubly illustrious French ancestry; one of his sons is Captain luhvard De Laval Tarleton, of the Royal Artillery. (S) Auriol (pp. 171-173). This was a noble French family, containing many eminent members. The refugees in England were James and Peter. I. — James Aunol, 1 ,,• -r, n . ru- If .T-1 >- =Miss Russell, spent most of his life at Lisbon, j J.-imes Peter Auriol, Esq. General Charles Auriol. Rev. Kdivard Auriol, Prebendary of St Paul's, and Rector of St Dunstan's in-the-Wcst, London. II. — Peter Auriol, merchant of London, died in 1754 (p. 316). Henrietta = Honble. Robert Drummond, .Archbishop of York. (l) Robert Auriol, (2) Thom.TS. (3) Peter. (4) John. (5) Kdward. (6) George. gth Earl of Kinnoull. ' . ' All named " Auriol-Hay-Drummond." Abigail Drummond, whose early death is so pathetically memorialised by the poet Mason, was the daughter and eldest child of the Archbishop. [The epitaph by Mason is in the Church of Brodsworth, Yorkshire.] Thus, from Dame Henrietta Auriol, or Drummond, there have descended three principal families :— rst. The Earls of Kinnoull. zd. The Drummonds of Cromlix and Innerpeffray. 3d. Her fifth son was Rev. Edward Auriol-Hay-Drummond, D.D. (born 1758, died 1829), father of Edward William Auriol-Drummor.d-Hay, Consul-General for yioiozco (born 1785, died 1845), from whom descends the well-represented line of Hay-Drummond-Hay. Y 1 70 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. NOTES. The "Scots Magazine," Vol. 35, contains the following luscription on Miss DrummontTs Momiment : — To Abigail Drummond, daughter of Robert, Archbishop of York, who lived, alas! only sixteeen year.s this last duty is paid by her afflicted parents : Here sleeps what once was beauty, once was grace, Grace that with tenderness and sense combin'd To form that hamiony of soul and face. Where beauty shines, the mirror of the mind. Such was the maid who in the bloom of youth. In virgin innocence, in nature's pride, Bless'd with each art that owes its charm to truth. Sank in her father's fond embrace — and died. He weeps ! O venerate the holy tear; Faith lends her aid to bear affliction's load ; The fatl^er mourns his child upon her bier. The Christian yields an angel to his God. How soon, alas, their bosoms bleed again ! See Charlotte in the dawn of life expire ! Another daughter lost renews their pain, Another angel joins the heavenly choir. With softest smiles of tenderness and love She late could soothe a father's manly breast, And all a mother's tender softness move ; Then smil'd a fond farewell ! and dropp'd to rest. Escap'd from present ills, from future care. And many a pang that meets us here below. She's called thus early to yon brighter sphere — With native sweetness smiles a cherub now. A corresponrlent obligingly informs me that I was not correct in my conjecture as to the motive of James Auriol's choice of Lisbon for his residence. It is probable he went there to join the house of Pratviel. The Pratviels were French Protestant exiles, said to have taken refuge on an i.'iland in the Mediterranean, but residing in Lisbon in 1727, the first year of the publication of the Factory Register. David Pratviel in his will, dated at Lisbon in 1742, and proved in London in 1759, names as his executor " my cousin and partner Mr Peter Auriol, merchant, at present in London." Sarah Pratviel (daughter of David, who visited London in 1755) was married to Sir Charles Asgill, Bart., and was the mother of General Sir Charles Asgill, Bart., at whose death, in 1823, that baronetcy expired. Her daughter Amelia was the wife of Robert Colvile, Esq., whose eldest son. Sir Charles Henry Colvile, was tiie father of Charles Robert Colvile, Esq. of Lullington, late M.P. for South Derbyshire. (6.) Montolicu de Sai?itc-Hippoliie {\)\i. 173-176). This old family of Huguenot soldiers and martyrs was represented among British refugees by General David Montolieu, Baron de Saint-Hippolite. He served in our army, and was sent by Queen Anne's government to serve under the Dtike of Savoy in Piedmont. He returned among us at the Peace, rose to the rank of General, and died, aged 93. He is represented in the female line. ANALYSJS OF VOLUME SECOND. lieu, 1 ippolilc, y= '. ■1761. ) I David Montulicu, Baron Ie, n?i(l would not rsc at the instif,'ation of any foreigner ; that there was no danger cxcejit Ironi driving tiKrii to des])eration liy fanatical and persecuting edicts ; and that before his visit they had packed off the ("ardinars emissaries. Uesides the officers of French regiments there were many others enrolled in the other corps of tlie Hritish army. Some notice of these olllcers 1 shall insert in another ciiapter. Skelton said truly concerning the French Protestant refugees, " They have shown themselves brave and faithful in the army, just and impartial in the magistracy. For the truth of the former assertion, the noble carri.age of Sir John i.igonier is a sufficient voucher; and for that of the latter the mayoralty of Alderman Porter." NOTES. HaNnng been very comprehensively digested before, Chapter XVII. was capable of but little abridgement, and is re-edited in this volume, almost at full length. With regard to Ruvi%^iys (formerly Schomberg's) Horse, I now add that it was a very effective regiment in ajipearance as well as in action. Luttrell notes, under date 23d June 1692, "Yesterday Monsieur Ruvigny's regiment (now Viscount Galway) of horse of F'rench Protestants, drew u|) in Hyde Park, bravely accoutred, having tents by their horses' side, and sixty horses carrying their equipage, and after marched through the city and are gone for Fssex." "July 5, yester- day Major-CJeneral Ruvigny's regiment of horse embarked for Flanders." The fact of their actual sailing is noted on the 19th. A correspondent at the seat of war mentions their arrival at King William's camp on the 2d August. The regiments of La Meloriniere, Cambou, and Bdcastd were, after the pacification of Ireland, transferred to foreign service in the Duke of Leinster's expedition of 1692. By the help of Captain Robert Parker's Military Memoirs (London, 1747), and D'Auvergne's Campaigne in the Spanish Netherlands, a.d. 1692 (London, 1693), we can follow the track of that expedition more accurately than other authors have done. " In the month of May 1692 (says Parker), Lord Galway embarked at Waterford with 23 regiments of foot, of which ours was one. W'e landed at Bristol, from whence we marched to Southampton, and there embarked, in order to make a descent into France under the command of the Duke of Leinster, second son to the old Duke Schomberg. We had the grand Fleet of England and Holland to attend us ; but as the famous sea-fight of La Hogue, in whicii the naval force of France was in a great measure destroyed, had been fought but three weeks before, the French Court expected a descent, and had drawn a great number of the regular troops and militia to the sea-coast; and we found it so strongly guarded at all parts, that in a council of war, which was held on that occasion, neither Admirals nor Generals were for landing the troops. So when we had sailed along the shore as far as Ushant, we returned and came to an anchor in the Downs. The King was then with the army in Flanders ; here then we waited until the return of an Express, which the Queen had sent to know His Majesty's pleasure with respect to the troops on board. . . . Upon the return of the Express we sailed to Ostend, where the troops landed, and marched from thence to Fumess, and Dixmuyde, the enemy having quitted them on our approach. We continued there until we had fortified them and put them in a state of defence, leaving garrisons in them." D'Auvergne informs us that on the 1st of September (x.s.) the Duke of Leinster arrived at Ostend, bringing fifteen regiments, including La M,/oniiieri's, In/c-asUfs, and Cambons ; and in a few days he was joined by a detachment under the command of Lieut.-General Talmash, consisting of six regiments sent by King William from headquarters. The re-fortification of Furnes and Dixnniydc (the French having, before retreating, demolished the former fortifications), was conducted by Colonel Cambon. An adventure happened in a ditch at the bastion by Ypres port in Dix- muyde : — " The ordinary detaciimcnts of the Earl of Bath's Regiment and the Fusiliers, being at work in enlarging the ditch, found an old hidden treasure, which ([uickly stoijjied the 2 .\ i86 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. soldiers working, who fell all a scrambling in a heap one upon another, some bringing off a very good booty, some gold and some silver, several Jacobus's and sovereigns being found by the soldiers, and a great many old pieces of silver of Henri II., Charles IX., Henri HI., Henri IV's. coin, which are now hardly to be found in France. The people of the town suppose that this money belonged to one Elfort, a gentleman dead many years ago, who buried his treasure (when the Mareschal de Rantzau took the town) in tlie Bernardine Nuns' garden (this ground where the money was found having been formerly in that garden), which Count de Monterey caused to be demolished ; and they think that tliere raiglit have been about 900 Pounds Groot, which makes the value of 450 guineas (English). This Elfort left it by Will to his children, and the marks where to find it, but his children could never discover it." The Huguenot infantry regiments remained in winter quarters, and served till the Peace of Ryswick in all the campaigns, as did Galway's Horse and Miremont's Dragoons. So that Sir John Knight's malicious assertion that the naturalized foreigners were quartered in England, while Englishmen were sent to fight and fall in Flanders, had no foundation as far as the Huguenot refugees were concerned. Page 1 88. The best account of the granting and withdrawing of Lord Peterborough's com- mission to command an expedition to the West Indies may be found in John Locke's Corres- pondence. My authority for stating that Huguenot refugee soldiers offered their services to his lordship, is the following paragraj^h in a pamphlet, entitled, " The Lawfulness, Glory, and Advantage of giving immediate and effectual relief to the Protestants in the Cevennes " : — " If Her Majesty can spare none of her Enghsh Forces, there are above 300 French Pro- testant officers, near half of which are natives of Languedoc, in Her Majesty's half-pay upon tlie Irish establishment, who are weary of being idle whilst others are employed abroad in the service of Her Majesty and the nation ; and who, if they were encouraged, would undertake to raise 6000 Frenchmen, in a month's time, for the relief of the Cevennes. This I know from the mouth of several of them ; and (to persuade such as might question it) I need but mention with what alacrity, diligence, and success, two French Captains in half-pay raised above 100 French dragoons to serve under the Earl of Peterborough in his (then) intended expedition to the West Indies ; for the truth of which I appeal to that noble and illustrious Peer." Colonel La Boucheti^re seems to have had some naturalized British soldiers in his regi- ment, on the reduction of which he and they had to retire on British half-pay. Some of these men were called out for active service, and ordered to join the Marquis De Montandre's regi- ment of English infantry, in June 17 18. They rose in mutiny, and a reward of .£20 was offered for the apinehcnsion of the six ringleaders. I offer this statement as correct, though the Ilisiorica! R»« 17 1 1), Dean of Canterbury from 1760 to 1766. Will. Translated out of French. Tliis Munday Twelfth June 1693 I have ordered my Second Sonn to write that my desire is that my plate be soiild and of wliat shall be foimd in money and medalls there be given out of it to my eldest daughter seaventy-seven pounds for to repay to her sisters and to her younger brother the money she hath borrowed of them. Lett a hundred pounds be laid out upon the Kxcise .Vet, the ])rincij)all to be lost for tiiat of my other Three Daughters who shall not be maintained by her brothers for to enjoy it during her life — and as mucli upon that of my third sonn for to enjoy it allso during his life — anil Tenn pounds to my second sonn besides the seaven which I have already lent him and my watch. I will allsoe that my Library be given to my eldest son, Upon Condition that if my young sonn doth study Divinity he shall give him part of them ; and if not, he shall have it all wholly to himself. And I desire allsoe that the Will wliich shall l)e found amongst my papers be declaretl null. 1 desire allso that my Diamond ring be given to my daughter Jany, and my Chagrin Psalmes with golden clasps. And to my daughter Nanny my deare wife's Neckclesse of Pearles. I desire allso that Tenn Pounds be given to my eldest daughter besides the above said Seaventy seaven pounds. And that all my moveables be sold, and what shall accrue from them be equally shared between my two daughters who shall have no share [claim ?] to the hundred pounds nor to the Seaventy seaven jjounds above said. And that if above Two hundred ])Ounds be made of them there shall be given Thirty pounds thereout to my second sonn. And in case above Two hundred and thirty pounds be made of them that the surplusage be equally shared between all my daughters. I give my surplices and my other cloaths to my eldest sonn. And as for my linnen and my other cloaths my will is that they be equally distributed between my two eklest sonns. And if anything be gott of the I-aw Suite which I have against Mr Lewson, and of my Estate in France, my will is that it be equally distributed between all my children. I name my eldest sonn Executor of this my Will and order him thet if anything remaines it be equally shared between all my chiUlren, except what arrearages are due to me for my Prebend of Westm''- whicii I give wholly to my said eldest sonn. In witnesse whereof I do signe this Tuesday the thirteenth . My Dear Father hath allso told us that if ever any thing comes to him of what is due to him of the Coronation, his Will is it be equally distributed between all his children. DE L'ANGLE. Substantialiter tiauslaiiim per me — Joh'^'" Jacobum Benard, No. Pub. 2<^'> Jtiiiii 1693. Which day appeared personally Peter De L' Angle the naturall and lawfull sonn of Samuel De L' Angle late one of the Prebendaries of Westm''- dec'='', who being sworn upon the Holy Evangelists to depose the truth did dejjose as followeth. That upon the Twelfth day of June instant the said dec"' being sick of the sicknesse of which he dyed at his Prebends house in Westm ■■■ , he this deponent, partly from instructions received from him the said deceased and partly from instructions brought him out of the deceased's chamber by the deceased's brother John Maximilian De L'Angle into the room where this deponent was, wrote the first and second sides of the Will contained in this sheet of paper ; and the next day, being the Thirteenth day of the said month of June instant, this Deponent, by instruc- tions received by John Maximilian De L'Angle sonn of tlie said deceased who came from him, wrote the four lines and haJf, contained and wrote at the top of this side of paper. And 3 B 194 FREI^CH PROTESTANT EXILES. the said deceased was, at the severall times and premisses prodeposed, of perfect mind and memory, and spake sensibly and well. PET^- DE L'ANGLE. Eodcm Die. — Which day appeared personally Mary De L' Angle and Anne De L' Angle, spinsters, the naturall and lawfuU daughters of the said Samuel De L' Angle, deceased, who being sworn upon the holy Evangelists to depose the truth, did depose as follovveth,towitt, — The said Mary De L' Angle deposeth that she was present on the Twelfth of June instant with the said deC^J at his house in Westminster, at which time he did in this deponent's presence and hearing give instnictions in part to this depon''^ brother Peter De L' Angle to make his Will ; and while the said Peter was in writing the said Will in another room, the said deceased gave instructions in the deponent's hearing to Dr John Maximilian De L'Angle his the said deceased's brother for other part of the said Will, and he went out of the dec'^'*'^ chamber to the said Peter De L'Angle to acquaint him therewith. And the next day the said dec'^'' did in the hearing of this deponent Mary De L'Angle give instructions to his sonn John Maximilian De L'Angle for the remaining part of his Will wrote at the top of the last side of the within-written will. And the said dec"=d was, at the severall times aforesaid, of perfect mind and memory, and discoursed rationally and well. And they these deponents Mary and Anne De L'Angle do depose that, upon or about the fourteenth day of the said month of June instant, the Will exhibited was brought to the said deceased by Susanna Benzolin his sister, and she asked him whether he would be pleased to sign his Will, and he said Yes, and he then subscribed his name thereto in their presence in manner as now appeareth. And the said deceased was then likewise of perfect mind and memory. MARY DE L'ANGLE. ANNE DE L'ANGLE. (Proved by John Maximilian De L'Angle, son and executor, London, 3 July 1693.) Canon John Maximilian De L'Angle = Genevova, or Genovele. Theophilus De L'Angle Esq.=Elizabeth, dau. of Rev. Merrick Head, D. D. Rev. Theophilus De L'Angle. Captain Merrick De L'Angle, William De L'Angle. I Royal Navy. / ^ 1 Rev. John Maximilian De L'Angle, Rector of Danbury. Died 1783. In the name of God Amen. I John Maximilian De L'Angle D.D. Canon of Christ's Church Canterbury do make my last Will and Testament as followeth revoking all others. First, I commend my soul to Him who redeemed it with His most precious Bloud. Item, I give to my dear wife Genevova De L'Angle all and every sume and sumes of money profitts and perquisites as may be due to me at the time of my death from my prebend of Canterbury and Rectory of Chartham, and also all such interest increase and dividends and profitts as may be due to me at my decease out of or for all and every of my effects remaining in the hands or under the management of my nephew Peter De L'Angle. And I also give to my said wife all such interest profitts and emoluments as shall during her life be made of or become due for all my said effects remaining in the hands or under the care and management of my said nephew Peter De L'Angle. Also I bequeath to my said wife all my household goods furniture silver plate and Jewells with all my stores for housekeeping. Item, I give to my son Theophilus De L'Angle all those my two tenements with their appurten'^'^^ situate in Milton by Gravesend, the one called the Dolphin and the other the Salutation, to hold to my said son his executors administrators and assignees . Item, I give and devise to my saiil son all that my house with the lands and ajipurten"* thereto belonging situate in Chartham in the county of Kent, to hold to my said son during the terme of his natural life, he committing no waste therein ; and from and after his decease I devise my said house and lands in Chartham to Elizabeth his now ivife, if she be then living, to hold to the said Elizabeth during the terme ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 195 of her natural life if she shall so long continue a widow and unmarried, and from and after her decease or marriage which shall first liappen I give and devise my said house and lands in Chartham to my grandson Theophilus De L'Angle, clerk, and to his heires and assignes for ever. Item, 1 will that out of such money as shall be due to me from my said patronage of Chartham at my decease the sume of five i)ounds shall be distributed among poor house- keepers there at the tliscretion of my said grandson 'rheo])hilus. Item, in case my said son shall survive my said wife, then I give him the sum of one thousand pounds out of my effects remaining in the hands of my said nephew Peter De L'Angle ; but in case my said son should happen to die in the lifetime of my said wife, then I will that the said one thousand |)ounds shall be equally ilivided amongst such of my three grandsons as shall survive my said wife or sliall die before her anil leave wife or chiUlren. Item, out of my eflects under the care of my saiil nephew after the decease of my said wife I give lo my three grandsons as followeth, viz., To my said grandson Theopliilus the sum of one thousand pounds, and to my grandson Meric six hundred pounds, and to my grandson William four hundred pounds, if they shall respectively survive my said wife ; but in case any of my said grandsons shall die in the lifetime of my said wife, and shall leave wife and children, then I give all and every the legacy or legacies, intended hereinbefore for him or them so dying, to his or their executors or administrators for the use of such wife and children. And in case any of my said three grandsons shall die before my said wife and leave neither wife or child, then I give all and every the legacy or legacies, above intended for him or them so dying, to such of them as shall survive my said wife, or shall die before her and leave wife or children. Item, I give to my said nephew Peter De L'Angle and his daughter out of my effects under his care after my said wife's decease the sume of fifty pounds apiece. Item, I give all the residue of my estate to my said grandson Theophilus De L'Angle whom I appoint sole executor of this my last \\"ill and Testament. And I desire my said nephew Peter De L'Angle to assist my said Kxecutor in the management of my effects remaining under his care as aforesaid." [The remainder of the Will is purely formal. It is signed J. Max de L'Langle and dated 10 Dec. 1722. A codicil gives the House and lands in Chartham to his wife, and after her to his grandson, Theophilus; date of codicil, 10 March 1724 (N.S.) Proved by Rev. Theophilus De L'Angle at London, 13 March 1724.] (6.) Dean Drcliucoiirt (pp. 221, 222) cost me considerable research, and his life is com- ])iled from the contributions of correspondents as well as from Haag, also from the Wills of himself and of his daughter and only child Anne, Viscountess Primrose, which I brought to light. 1 found the date of his death in the contemporary " Historical Register." Erratum. — Page 221, line 38. For "renounced" read " renowned." NOTE. I was honoured by the correspondence of the Rev. Dr Reeves of Armagh, and I now give his communication entire : — Peter Drelincourt, sixth son of Charles Drelincourt, born in Paris, July 22, 1644. Came to Ireland as chaplain to the Duke of Ormond. His employment by the Duke may have been due to the services of his brother, Charles, the physician to King William III. 168 1. Spring commencement — graduated M.A. in the L^niversity of Dublin. 1681. Aug. 18. Appointed Precentor of Christ-Church Cathedral, Dublin, which office he held till death. 1683. Oct. 17. Presented by the Crown to the Rectories of Powerstown and of Shankhill, in the diocese of Leighlin. 1683. Oct. 31. Collated .-Archdeacon of I.eighlin, and instituted Nov. 11. Resigned this preferment in Feb. 1691, on his appointment to the Deanery of Armagh. 1690-1. Dean of Armagh by patent dated Feb. 18, and installed March 14; at which time he also became Rector of Armagh. 196 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. 1691. Spring commencement. He graduated LL.D. in the University of Dublin. He published a pamphlet with the following title : — " A Speech made to his Grace the Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and to the Lords of his Majesties most Honor- able Privy Council. To return the humble thanks of the French Protestants lately arriv'd in this kingdom and graciously reliev'd by them. By P. Drelincourt, Domestic Chaplain to his Grace the Duke of Ormond, and Chantor of Christ-Church. Published by Special Command. 4to. Dublin 1682, pp. 8." Inscription on the mural tablet over his monument in Armagh Cathedral against North Wall of the Nave : — En tibi, Lector, effigies Petri Drelincourtii, LL.D. e Drelincurtionmi gente Parisiense liberali et erudita, in qua pater claruit Carolus cui, quod Fides Reformata latius effulgeat debent populares quod mortem non extimescant. Christiani universi hunc habent studiorum pariter et morum exemplar. Patriam reliquit adolescens Ecclesise Anglicanre desiderio, non suse infortunio ; habuitque Angliam non Asylum sed Patriam, ubi visus est Jacobo Ormondia; Ducis, dignus qui sibi esset a sacris domesticis, nepoti O.xonije literis operam danti, tam studiorum quam consiliorum moderatori ; quibus muneribus fideliter functus ad hujus ecclesiffi decanatum ultra votum et ambitum evectus est. Hoc marmor mortuo dicavit Uxor pietate superflii, cui nempe hcec ecclesia quam decenter ornata et tantum non extructa ! cui ecclesia Sancti Dulaci* non tantum extructa sed et sacra supellectili pretiosa instructa, etiam Pastore redornata ! cui Hospitium puerorum inopum apud Dublinienses ampla munificentiil ditatum — Monumenta exstant Perennia. Tu, lector, adstrue tibi vivo monumentum. Cippum apponant aut etiam non apponant posteri. On the east panel of the sarcophagus is engraved : — " Doctor Peter Drelincourt was born in Paris, July 2 2d 1644. Died March 7th 1720. Aged 76 years." * The small parish of -St Dulough's in the County of Dublin is an appendant on and in the gift of the pre- centor of Christ Church Calliedral, to which, I presume, Dr Drelincourt presented himself in virtue of his Precentorship.— W. R. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 197 In front panel of sarcophagus is engraved the following : — Such was the scconci Dreiincourt, a name Victorious over death and dear to fame ; The Christian's praise, by ditlerent measures won, Successive graced the father and the son ; To sacred service, one his wealth consign'd. And one, the living treasure of his mind ; 'Twere rash to say whose talent did excel, Each was so rich, and each improved so well. Nor was his charity delayed till death, He chose to give what others but bequeath. Much though he gave and oft, yet more he meant Had life proportion'd to his will been lent. But to compleat a sclieme, so well design'd, Belongs to her wlio sliar'd his bed and mind, Whose pious sorrows thus to future days Transmit his image and extend his praise. The edge of the cushion has the inscription, M. Rvsbrack Fecit. " This monument was erected by his widow, Mrs Mary Dreiincourt, before 1731. This elegant piece of sculpture was e.xecuted by the famous M. Ruysbrack, and is a noble specimen of his talents. The Dean is represented as recumbent. His attitude is graceful and dignified ; and the several parts of the figure harmoniously combine in producing a pleasing unity of effect. The drapery is simply disposed, and so arranged as to excite in the mind of the spectator the idea of a perfect symmetry of form, slightly veiled beneath its flowing folds. The features are strongly expressive of intelligence, mildness, and benevolence, and were peculiarly admired by Dr Dreiincourt 's contemporaries for the strong resemblance which they bore to the original." (Stuart's Historical Memoirs of the City of Armagh; Newry, 1819; p. 518.) In 1732 Mrs Mary Dreiincourt founded and endowed a school, called the Dreiincourt Charity, in Armagh, which still subsists under this name. In Wales there is a charity founded by her called Birse-Drelincourt. His death is given on his monument as at 7th March 1720 ; yet his preferments were not filled up till April 27, 1722 (Precentorsliip), and June 28, 1722 (Deanery). So that I suspect there is a mistake somewhere. Cotton in his Fasti, Vol. V., corrects the date 1720 and gives 1722 instead. (6). Six Ra'crend Du Bourdiais (pp. 222-226). There was a seventh Rev. Du Bourdieu who founded a good family in Ireland, as to whom see Chapter XXII. The six here memorialized consist of a grandfather, a son, three grandsons, and a great-grandson. The son " John " and the grandson "John Armand " have hitherto been confused in memoirs and in catalogues of authors. Rev. Isaac Du Bourdieu of Montpellier died in London, aged above 95. Kev. Jolin Du Bourdieu =Margaret. Chaplain to the three Dukes Schomberg, and Minister in London at the Savoy Died 1720. Rev. Peter Du Bourdieu ReV. Armand Du Bourdieu^Elizabeth. Rev. John Armand Du Bourdieu=Esther. Rector of KirbyOver-Carr Vicar of Sawbridgeworth | Rector of .Sawtrey-Moyncs Died 1733. Chaplain to Duke of Devonshire Minister in London at the Savoy Died 1726. Rev. John Du Bourdieu Jacob, Isaac, Armand, Peter, Charles, Elizabeth, Emma. Vicar of Sawbridgewort h (afterwards Vicar of Layton?) 198 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Page 224, line 42. — For Ditboundieu read Dubourdieu. NOTE. I have just met with a French satirical epigram concerning " Jean Armand Dubourdieu, Ministre de I'Eglise Fran(,'oise de la Savoie,' and "Jean Dubordieu, son oncle, Ministre de le meme eglise." The epigram is worthless ; but the heading shows that " John Armand ', was not the son of John (as I believed), but the nephew. This, however, establishes one fact, which I have maintained against bibliographers, namely, that " John " and "John Armand " were different individuals. Comparing therefore the list of that family of Dubourdieu naturalized in January 1685 (see List X), with the descendants of Rev. John Dubourdieu named in his Will (which I have quoted in my Ak^e to List X), I remark as to the Rev. Peter, and the Rev. Armand, in the Will, that they are the same persons as " Peter and " Armand " in the List, if I may adhere to my foniier conjecture that the designation " clerk " was accidentally omitted after the father's_ name. We cannot suppose, even if that father " John " was a layman, that " John Armand " the minister was that layman's son ; for that minister's uncle was named " John," and surely his father could not have been a " John." Neither is it likely that the " John Armand " of the Naturalization-List could have been the " John Armand " who founded the Irish family of Dubourdieu ; because the head of that family seems to have been an only son. At the same time it may be asked, Who was the "John Armand " of whom Peter and Armand were brothers ? Dubourdieu seems to have been the surname of (what Scottish Highlanders would call) a clan. The same baptismal names must have been repeated in many families of the clanj; and one of these names was the double name " Jean- Armand." The father, therefore, of John Armand Dubourdieu of the London French Church of the Savoy has not yet been identified. The following names occur in this chapter : — Wodrow (pp. 208, 209), Claude (p. 208), King James IL (p. 209), Evelyn (p. 209), King William IIL (p. 210), Queen Mary (p. 210), Bishop Burnet (p. 210), Rev. Stephen Nye (p. 211), Whiston (p. 211), Dr Payne (p. 211), Le Clerc de Virly (p. 213), De Boyville (p. 213), Sir Charles Wager (p. 213), Macetier (p. 213), Le Clerc (p. 213), Prevot (p. 213), Gervaise (p. 213), Amsincq (p. 214), Basnage (p. 214), Robethon (p. 215), De Gastine (p. 216), Du Val (p. 216), Regis (p. 216), Potter (p. 217). Pa^^e 217. Tronchin, Pegorier, Lions, Contet, Vercheres, Lombard, Gravisset, Blanc, Testas, Bourdeaus. Page 2\Z. Contet, Lombard, Coulan, Rival, Lamothe, De Malacare, Crommelin, Testas, Lions, Huet. Porter, or La Roche (p. 219), Rev. Peter Lancaster (p. 220), Du Moulin (p. 221), Sir Richard Head (p. 221), Alderman Memck (p. 221). Page 222. Rev. Marius D'Assigny, Hugh Viscount Primrose, Lord Dartrey, Hon. Richard Dawson, Right Hon. Edward Sexton Perry, Viscount Pery, Countess of Ranfurly, Mrs Nichol- son Calvert, De Laval, Archbishop Drummond, Mrs Dorothy Johnson. Henry Savile (p. 223), Dr Isaac Watts (p. 223), Duke of Schomberg (pp. 222, 223), Mrs Pujolas (225), Quantiteau (p. 226). Chapter XXI. (pp. 227-241). Groups of Refugees. (Additions and corrections were supplied at pp. 317, 318.) Group First. Ladies (pp. 227-232). This group, besides unprotected female refugees, con- tains refugee families, which ended in heiresses. (i.) and (2.) Esther Savile («e Heucourt {\^\i. 230, 231). ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECO.XD. 205 (12.) A French ^cntlnK'omafi (p. 231), memorialized by Rev. Philip Skclton. (13.) EUonore D' Esmias, Marquise if Olbrcuse (p. 231), <^'reat-great-great-grarKlmol)icr of her Majesty, Queen Victoria. (14.) Refugee .-Xncesiresses of Hritish families (p. 231). From Halicourt descended Long. Delamere „ Kaynes. From Havee descended Dixon, Bale, & Walker. Geoflfrey „ Drummond & Harvey. (15.) Louise Barbot (pp. 231, 232), was married to Antoine Leserre, and died in 1785 ; of her two sons, James and John, the latter is collaterally represented by Thomas Barbot Beale, Fsq. of Brettcnham Park, Suffolk. [James Barbot and ^lary Jourdaine, his wife, the I)arents of Louise, seem to have been related to John Part^, naturalized in 16S7 (see List xiii.), anil who tlied at Plymouth a few months thereafter (23d July 1687). Among the Barbot papers there is a cU)cumcnt as to the division of Pare's property signed by the three children named in the List, the witnesses being Marolles, Journard, and J. Castanet.] ADDITIONS TO GROUP FIRST. (16.) Suzanne De L'Orme* aged twelve, daughter of Pierre and ^Lldelaine, and their eldest child, was decoyed into the convent of St Anne, which was not far from their ancestral home near Saumur. It was the year 1685. Monsieur De L'Orme had already been com- pelled by impending perils to arrange for the secret removal of the family to Fngland, and after a persevering but fruitless search for the lost child, he fled with them to the sea coast. As soon as they set sail, his wife obtained his sacred promise, that when they had secured a settlement in luigland, he would return to resume the search for Suzanne. The manager of the kidnapping plot was Father Anselmo, a bitter persecutor, resolved (as was his habit in such cases) to succeed in the perversion of the little Huguenot, however violent the needful methods might be. He found the superieure of St Anne's too mild and indulgent, although she supported him in urging the child, who had been ignorant of her father's intention to emi- grate, startling her by the news of the disajjpearance of the whole family, and advising her to cease to be bound by her parents' religion, as she would never see them again. At the end of a few weeks, Father Anselmo removed Suzanne to a convent in Paris, where he left her for two months, a victim to pitiless tortures. His rage was tremendous, when he found her firm in her faith, after all. He brought her back to the neighbourhood of Saurnur, and gave her away in slavery to two ruffians, a father and son, brickmakers living in a remote and filthy hut. His plan was that she should be worn out by hard labour and cruel chastisement ; and that having her near his own headquarters, he might watch his o])portunity for extorting her abjuration in return for his promise of release. The miserable little girl's business now was to carry loads of bricks on a barrow, along with the son, a strong young man, six feet in height, who, if she fell beneath the load, struck her savagely and repeatedly, the priest having hinted that if cruelty ended accidentally in murder, the outrage would be winked at by the government. The old brickmaker, all of whose children, except that son, were settled else- where, gave out that she was his granddaughter, a penniless orphan who must work for her scanty food and her beggardike clothes antl the bed of straw in the outhouse. Weeks and months passed away ; winter came to an end, and spring next. During this long durance, the stedfast Suzanne's woes were periodically aggravated by visits from Father Anselmo, who terrified her with all kinds of menaces and maledictions. And at last, having discovered that the brickmaker's broken-spirited wife alleviated the beastly little heretic's lot by her pity, he declared that his ne.xt errand would be to remove Suzanne to worse quarters. And what had become of her father's promise ? A refugee in England, he was a poor man. He had to work incessantly to feed his family and to save a little money, and to make friends in his * See "Suzanne De L'Omie, a story of I'rancc in Huguenot times," by H. G. Edinburgh, Johnstone, Hunter, & Co., 1872 (pp. 272). The accomplished author certifies that " the character of Suzanne de I'Orme, and the sufferings .she went through during the earlier part of her life, are no fiction. " 2o6 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. adoiiled country : it was with his own purse, and with their charitable contributions that, in the month of May following the mournful year of separations, he made his way to France. When, after much suspense, and in the providential absence of her taskmaster, he found his daughter, whom he would not have recognised if he had not have overheard her voice as she prayed to God for deliverance, her state of exhaustion was such, that each hour of her land- journey threatened to be her last, and the sea air imparted no considerable benefit. On her arrival at home, after kissing her mother, she fainted away, and being carried to bed she lay in a most precarious state for many weeks. When she rose, it was found that her spine was hope- lessly distorted. Health, however, was restored to her ; and she lived till she had all but completed her hundredth year. She was the companion and counsellor of her brothers and sisters, especially of Jean l)e L'Orme, who lived unmarried in memory of his deceased affiancee, Adele de la Chesnaye. (17.) Hekna Lcfo-Tewa^, in i 7S9, the heiress of a Huguenot refugee family. Her ancestors appear to have been a different family from Magdalen Lefebvre. From the history of the latter, we learn that her father, Isaac Lefebvre, died of fatigue, cold, and grief, on his return home after having seen her embarked for Jersey ; he was, however, represented in modern times by the Duke of Dantzic, one of Napoleon's Marshals. In \\"addington's Protcstaiitisme en, N'onnandic, p. 14, an Isaac Lefebvre is mentioned, who was imprisoned in a convent of the Cordeliers ; this may be the Isaac who died in one of the French Galleys in 1702, after eighteen years' captivity. Helena's father was John Lefevre, Esq. of Heckfield Place, in Hampshire, son of Isaac. Isaac's elder brother, Lieut-Colonel John Lefevre, served in our army under Marlborough. John and Isaac were sons of Pierre, and grandsons of Isaac of Rouen, who suffered deeply in the French Persecutions, Pierre Lefevre having been kept in prison for thirty years, and thereafter put to death. Helena was married to Charles Shaw, F.sq. M.P. for Reading, barrister-at-law, and he in honour of this good alliance assumed the addi- tional surname of Lefevre in 1789 ; her father died in iSoo ; Mr Shaw Lefevre died in 1823, and his sons have made the double surname eminent. The head of the family is the Right Hon. Charles Shaw Lefevre, Viscount Eversley (so created in 1857, on his retirement from the dignified office of Speaker of the House of Commons). His ne.xt brother is no less distin- guished, namely, Right Hon. Sir John George Shaw Lefevre, father of George John Shaw Lefevre, Esq., M.P. for Reading, the apparent male heir of the family. Sir John (born in 1797) was senior Wrangler at Cambridge in 1818, and Fellow of Trinity College ; he is K.C.B., D.C.L., and F.R.S. ; he has been M.P., and in various offices, and is now Clerk of the Parliaments. (18.) Madame France died at Dublin in 1734; Monsieur France, her husband, had died in Carolina in 1689, the year after the death of his brother, Jacob France. F'ighteen years of her widowhood were solaced by her son, Aveneau France, who died in 1706. (Payne's Witnesses in Sackcloth, p. 224). Group Second. Oflicers (pp. 232-236). At the beginning of this section, there is a quota- tion from Schomberg's Desiiatches. The ne.\t paragraph begins the names. (i.) Jean De la Borde (p. 232), was married to Anne La Motte Graindor ; he had a son, Jean ; his daughter, Anne, was married to Isaac Cassel, and her son, Abel Cassel, was repre- sented until recently. (2.) Captain Raii- De la Fausille {\). 232), was represented by Major-General Lafausille, his son, who died in 1763, leaving one child, .Anne, Mrs Torriano. (3.) Major Jssac Cuissy Mollicn (p. 232) died in 1698. C4.) Captain Louis Gcneste (pp. 232-3), Sieur de Pelras de Cajare, was well represented. [The Rev. Hugh A. Stowell informs me that it is a mistake to credit the Stowells with Geneste blood, though they have repeatedly been in affinity with members and connections of the Geneste family. My re\erend correspondent's eminent father was the late Rev. Hugh Stowell, Canon of ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 207 Chester, whose father, the Rev. Hugh Stowell, Rector of Ballaugh, in the Isle of Man, publislicci a Memoir of Francis de la Pryme (jcneste. That lamented youth, who died in 1826, aged twenty-one, was ihe fourth son of Lewis Geneste, Esq., by Catherine De la I'ryme : the other sons were, Lewis, Charles, and (Rev.) ^Ll.>{imilian. Commander Lewis Geneste, R.N. , was the son of Charles, anil marrietl Mary, a daughter of Ma.ximilian.] (5.) Afajor Abel J'elissier{\>. 2,^3), son of .\bel Pelissier and .Anne Nicholas, married Marie, daughter of Caesar de Choisy by Alarie Gilbert de Chefboutonne. (6.) Colonel I'eter Petit (p. 233), married Madame Du Quesne, «\i. 234-5), Huguenot Engineers. (15.) General Peter Carle (p. 235) died in 1730; his daughter was married to .'\dmiral, the Hon. George Clinton, C.B., M.P. (16.) Captain Samuel, Comte de la Musse {\t. 235). Quick also names, with respect, the Marquis de ki Musse. [In connection with this Marquis, Benoist, in his vol. v. p. looo, mentions a singu- lar finale to their durance in France, which was accorded to some Huguenots. There was a large number of noblemen and gentlemen, not only patient and stedfast in prisons and galleys, but also glorying in their lot. Their cases were knowTi to many of the public, and their death would have evoked sympathy for their religion, and indignation against their persecutors. Many other noblemen and gentlemen, who had made a formal abjuration, had openly resumed the Protestant profession, and notwithstanding the sanguinary law against relapsed heretics, they were determined that they would not abjure a second lime. The Government were not jire- pared to crowd their galleys and cells with these conspicuous witnesses to the truth. These persons were marched off under the escort of archers. An awful silence was maintained as to their destination. F'atiguing marches by land were continued from day to day, or they were put on board of some ship, the same mystery enshrouiling the future. This ordeal in a few cases proved too severe, and prisoners who had braved some years of severity succumbed under it, and abjured the faith. They succumbed on the eve of deliverance. For the orders were to march them, perhaps from one end of FVance to the other, to the frontier, either of Holland, or of Germany, or of Switzerland, and there to set them at liberty, with a small sum of money for their journey to the nearest town. Or if they were sent off by sea, the captain of the ship was to land them on a foreign shore, having given them the money, and to obtain a certificate of their disembarkation from the nearest magistrate. In either case the exile was formally debarred from returning to France. The Marquis de la Musse, a young gentleman of solid piety, whose stedfastness during two years' imi^risonment had been admirable, was 2o8 IRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. treated thus. He was embarked in a foreign vessel, and by no sign could he discover that there was anything but what was dark in his prospects. It was not until he was in full sail for England, that the captain dared to inform him of the fact. Benoist adds, that the most of those thus exiled by sea were sent to England, where, at the date of 1688, the probability of the establishment of Popery in England was so great, that it seemed they were only to exchange one scene of persecution for another.] (18.) Pp. 235-6. Major Achilles La Colombine, died in Carlow in 1752. In 16S9, died at Dundalk, Monsieur Bonel, son of Fresne-Cantbrun of Caen by his wife, a daughter of Secretary Cognart. In 1690, at the siege of Limerick, the first sortie was repulsed, but it left the Marquis de Cagny mortally wounded ; his name was Gedeon-Mesnage, and he was the son of Louis, Sieur de Cagny, and Marie de Barberie de Saint-Contest; he had married a daughter of a distinguished physician, Francois de Mouginot, and had been with his father- in-law, imprisoned for two years in the Bastile and in the Castle of Angers. At the last assault on Limerick in i6go, Monsieur Martel, grandson of the Baron de Saint-Just, was killed just as he had entered the breach and was shouting Vilk gagidc ; at the same time were wounded Colonel Belcastel, and Messrs Bruneval and La Motte Fremontier : the French infantry officers were in the van and commanded by the Sieur de la Barbe; the English Grena- diers were commanded by Le Bourgay, who was taken prisoner. At the same siege was killed Lieutenant Maurice de VignoUes of Edcastcl's, a grandson of Vignolles de Montredon and Claude de Belcastel, his wife. In 1704, at the batde of Schellenberg, were wounded Ensign Denys Pujolas of the Foot- guards, Ensign Bezier of Webb's, Ensign Pensant oiHamilton's, Lieutenant Jeverau oi Ingo/dsbys, Lieutenant TettefoUe of the Cavalry. At the battle of Blenheim, Major Chenevix, of Windham'' s Horse, was killed, and the following were wounded. Captain La Coude of MarlboroJigKs, Captain Pennetiere oi Hamilton's, Captain Villebonne oi Hm's, Lieutenant Boyblanc oi N^orth and Grcfs, Lieutenant Beiser of JVebb's, Comet Creuseau of Schomberg and Leinstcr's Horse. In 1707, at the battle of Almanza, Captain Justeniere of SoiithwelPs, Captain Cramer and Lieutenant Doland of Hill's, Captain Digoine and Ensign Ferrer of Wade's and Lieut.-Colonel Deloches ol Pierce's, were killed; and the following were made prisoners, Lieut.-Colonel Magny of Nassau's Captain Saubergue of the Guards, Lieutenants Morin and Champfleury of Mor- daunfs. Captain Bemiere of Gorge's, Captains Latour and Hauteclair, and Ensign Lamilliere of JVade's, Lieutenant Labastide of Montjoy's, Lieutenant Gedouin of Brittons. (Colonel Armand de la Bastide was Governor of Carisbrook Castle in 1742.) In the Ulster Journal, vol. iv., the admirable article on French settlers in Waterford (by Rev. Thomas Gimlette), notes the following officers : — Major Sautelle (whose heiress was Mary), Quartermaster Peter Chelar, Captains Louis du Chesne, Abraham Franquefort, John Vaury, and Louis Belafaye; Lieutenants Emmanuel Toupelin Belize and Besard de Laniaindre. A similar article on Youghal notes the deaths of Cornet Daniel Coluon (173S), Captain James Dezieres (1747), Lieutenant Pierre Maziere (1746), Ensign John Roviere (1736); a site in Youghal is still called " Roviere's Holdings." Some of the names, extracted from lists of killed and wounded, are of Huguenot sound, and were inserted without any absolute proof of their right to appear. Suliject to the same remark, the following are added — Lieutenant-Colonel De Labene, Lieutenant-Governor of Tynemouth Castle, died in 1722 ; Major De Ladle, died in 1739. Additions to Group Second. (19 ) Colonel La Fabreque, who signalised himself at the battle of ."Mmanza, was not at the head of (iuiscard's dragoons, as stated in Tindal's continuation of Rapin, unless his own regi- ment had recendy been under Guiscard's colonelcy, and had continued to be ignorantly so named by some. It appears from the lists published in the State of Great Britain for 1707, that Guiscard had no regiment in British pay ; but among colonels of IJiglish dragoons the name " La Fabrique " occurs. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 209 (20.) Monsieur Labat was a Norman refugee in the army of William III., and is represented by the Rev. Edward l.abat, rector of Kilcar, County Donegal. — (Smiles's Huguenots.) (21.) Monsieur Francois Gualy was an officer in our army, son of a noble refugee, Pierre, Sieur de la Clineste, anil brother of the major-general and (olonel of dragoons, who has been named in the chapter on French regiments. He settled in Dublin, where he is still represented — (Smiles.) (22.) The Messieurs Giberne (p. 317), sons of a French Protestant gentleman who apos- tatised, adhered to their faith. They are said to have come to England as military officers with William of Orange. The surname is now indigenous in England, and has lately come into prominent notice by the publication of " Aimi'e, a Tale of the Days of James H.," by Agnes Giberne ; in the preface the author rei)rcsents herself as " certain that my own collateral, if not my inmiediate, ancestors were among the number of the old Languedoc noblesse who suffered persecution and forfeited rank, wealth, and country, for the sake of their religion, not long afta- my tale." 15y the same author are the following : — (i.) The Day-star, or the Gospel Story for the Little Ones. (2.) The Curate's Home, a Tale, 2d edition. (3.) Detained in France, a Tale of the French Empire. (4.) Mignonette, a Tale, 2d edition. (5.) Among the Mountains, or the Harcourts at Montreux. (6.) Mabel and Cora, a Tale. Group Third. Clerfiy (pp. 236-238.) (i.) Ra. James Hieromc, or Jerome, D.D. (p. 236). He held several benefices in Ireland, as to which I gave e.xtracts from the Irish Patent Rolls. [In Cotton's Fasti Ecclesias Hiber- nicffi, the following dates are given : 1666, precentor of Waterford and treasurer of Lismore ; 167 1, prebendary of St Patrick's, Dublin.] (2.) He:: James Le Frez, D.D. (p. 236), was formerly a professor in the University of Saumur. (3.) Fez'. James D'AIlemagrie, D.D. (p. 236). [In the Camden Society volume of Lists of Foreign Protestants, a line was accidentally omitted in the process of copying, so that this divine's name was mi.xed up with another surname whose Christian name had dropped out ; and he accordingly appears in the inde.x to that volume as " D'AUemagne Demay." Of course this is a mistake ; see my List XIII.] (4.) Fa: Antoitu Firh (p. 236), was a professor at Montauban. (5.) Fn: Cccsar Fi'gorier (p. 237), was a refugee pasteur and author. (6.) Fa: James Sartre (p. 237), was a prebendary of Westminster; he married Dorothy Addison, sister of " the Spectator." (6.) Fei>. Daniel A miand {j>. 237), was rector of Holdenby, and canon of Peterborough. (8.) Fez: Antlioine Ligonier de Bonneval (p. 237). His sister was the wife of Jacques Louis de Vignoles. (9.) Fez: Henry Fujolas (p. 237). (10.) Fez: Daniel Lombard, D.D. (p. 237), wrote a " History of Persecutions ;" he was a son of Rev. John Lombard. (Naturalizations, List XIV.) (11.) Fa: Ezechiel Barbauld (\i^. 237, 238.) (12.) Fa: SU/>hen Abel Laval (p. 238), was the author of The History of the Reformed Church of France, in 6 vols., with appendix. He was connected by marriage with the families of Barbot and Drelincourt. (13.) T/i^ ALessieurs Foussel (p. 317), were refugee pastors in Ireland. (14.) John Defray (pp. 317, 318), was M.A. of Saumur and of O.xford. (15.) Fa: P. F. De la Firiirejp. 318), was a minister of the French churdi in the Savoy, London. Additions to Group Third. (16.) Fa: Stephen Lyon, or Lion, was bom in Rouen in 1674. His monument states that " he left Rouen under the guardianship of his mother, for tlie Protestant religion there perse- cuted." He matriculated at Oxford from Oriel College, 14th June 1692, aged 18, as " pleb. 2 D 2 1 o FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. fil," his father's name being J. Lion. He took his B.A. degree as of All Souls College, 13th Feb. 1695-6 ; M.A., 21st Feb. 1703-4. He was for nearly forty years minister of Spalding in Lincolnshire. There his daughters Mary and Susannah, who died young, were buried ; also his wife, who died i6th April 1747, aged 73, (Grace, daughter of George Lynn, Esq. of South- wick, in Northamptonshire); and the Rev. Stephen Lyon himself, who died 4th Feb. 1748, (N.S.), aged 74. Ezekiel Lion, M.A. of the University of Bordeaux, w'as incorporated at 0-\- ford, i6th May 1704. — (Colonel Chester's MSS.) (r7.) Ra'. Annand Boisbclcau, Sicur Dc la Chapdlc, was a refugee youth, who was ordained by the French Churches in England, and began his ministry in Ireland. He afterwards served in the refugee churches in London, and seems to have finally settled at the Hague. — (Smiles's Huguenots.) (18.) Rev. Henri Chatelain was born in Paris, 22d February 1684. He was the great- grandson of Simon Chatelain (born 1590), the famous Protestant manufacturer of gold and silver lace. This lace was a much-jirized article. It procured for the stedfast Huguenot the toleration of his religion, in which he was zealous from the fifteenth year of his age to the eighty-fifth, which proved to be his last. In 1675 he died, leaving more than eighty descend- ants, who all paid fines for openly attending his funeral. Henri's grandfather was Zacharie Chatelain (born 1622), and was married to Rebecca Bonnel. On old Simon's death, he was harassed with a view to a forced apostasy; but at length, in 1685, he fled to Holland in dis- guise. For this offence he was hanged in effigy, and his house at Villers-le-Bel was razed to its foundation. He died at Amsterdam in 1699, having had five daughters, and an only son. This son, the second Zacharie Chatelain, was married to Catherine Bonnel, and had an infant family before he left France. He was thrown into the Bastile in 1686, and on being set at liberty, removed to Holland with his wife and children. There he Introduced the gold and silver lace. His eldest child, Henri, studied for the ministry at Amsterdam and Leyden ; and having removed to England in 1709, he was ordained by the Bishop of London on the 3d October 17 10. He was pasteur of the Church of St Martin Orgas (St Martin's Lane) from 1711 to 1721, when he removed to the Hague, and in 1727 to Amsterdam, where he died on the 19th May 1743. His sermons were published in six volumes, with his portrait, bearing the motto, " Flexanimo sermone potens." [This was one of the articl^i in my privately printed volume, for which I could not find room in the second edition. The facts are from Haag.] (19.) Rev. Stephen Crespion, M.A., OKon. (l/orn i64g, died ly 11), v/a.s 3. son of"Jerem"(or Germain) Crespion, by Cornelia, eldest daughter of Stephen Nau and Cornelia, his wife. He held the preferments of prebendary of Bristol from 1683, chaunter of Westminster Abbey from 25th July 1683, and confessor to the royal household from 1692. He marned, Jirst, Margaret , scamdly, Mary, ,— (Colonel Chester's MSS.) (20.) There were two French Churches in Dublin, namely, in Lucy Lane and Peter Street, until 1707. At the latter date the congregations united, and met in Peter Street. The names of the ministers were Joseph Lagacherie, 1692 ; Robert Balaguier, 1693 ; John Darassus, 1695 ; John Guillebert, 1701 , Henri De Rochblave, 1703 ; Pons; John De Durand ; Paul de St Ferreol, 1716, Paul de la Douespe, 1717 ; Gaspard Caillard, 1720; Jacob Pallard, 1724; Vinchon Desvceux, 1735 ; Louis Ostervald, 1735; Jacques Pelletreau, 1741 ; Pierre Samuel Hobler, 1742; Isaac Subremont, 1760; Louis Campredon, 1760; Francis Bessonet, 1765; Francis Campredon, 1781. [Two small Episcopal societies united in a congregation which assembled within St Patrick's Cathedral.] (21.) Monsieur H Alone/, pasteur of La Moussaye, became a refugee in England in 16S6. Before he could embark at Dieppe, he was arrested as a fugitive, and imprisoned until it should be proved that he was a pasteur ; and during the process of e.xamination and investigation all his money was lost. Some of the refugees were too infirm to endure the voyage to England ; Monsieur Faget, pasteur of Sauveterre, in Beam, died in the passage ; he was buried in the country which he had sought as a refiige. — (Benoist, tome 5, pp. 934-5-6.) ANAL YSIS OF VOL UAfE SECOND. - 211 Group Fourth. Medical Men (pp. 238-240). (i.) Sir John Coi/iuion (pp. 238 9), and Sir Theodore Colladon, father and son, were royal physicians. The latter died in 1712 ; his widow, 1-ady Colladon, was a great benefactress. (2.) £>r l\-ter Siiiestre {\>. 239) is memorialised in Des Maizeaux's MS.S., an., was a French refugee in Guernsey. He was born in 1682 at Ville Magnc, in Langucdoc ; he married Esther, daughter of Peter Whitehead of Guernsey, and died in St Peter's Port, loth January 1774. — (Camden Society Lists.) (7.) The Camden Society volume iiuotes tlie following admissions into the Royal College of Physicians, London : — 2 April 1683. Philip Guide, M.D., of Montpellier. 26 July 1683. John Peachi, of Caen. 2 October 16S3. Lewis Le Vaseur, of Paris. 12 April 1687. Joshua Le Fleure. I Oct. 1688. John Dufray, M.D,, of ^[ontpellio^. 8 June 1689. Joseph Maucleer, ALD., of iMontpellier. (8.) Nicasius Le Febvre ali^s Nicolas Le Fevre, was employed as a royal chemist and apothecary as early as 15th November 1660, but was not formally installed as the royal apothecary till February 1664. Sebastian Le Fevre, ALD., of Anjou, was admitted a licen- tiate of the College of Physicians, London, 22d December 1684. Group Fifth. Merchants (pp. 240, 241). (i.) Deputations to the Lord Mayor of London. (2.) Mr Banal {\>. 240). See Marteilhe. (3.) Isaac Olier (pp. 240, 241), grandfather of Jeremiah D'Olier, Governor of the Bank ot Ireland. (4.) (P. 241). In the end of February 1744 (new style) the merchants of tlie city of Lon- don presented a loyal address to tjie king in consequence of his majesty's message to the Houses of Parliament regarding designs " in favour of a Popish pretender to disturb the peace and quiet of these your majesty's kingdoms,' and declaring themselves resolved to ha.'.ard their lives and fortunes " in defence of your majesty's sacred person and government, and fur the security of the Protestant succession in your royal family." Among the 542 signatures, the following French names, chiefly Huguenot, occur :— Jacob Albert, Gilbert Allix, William Alvauder, George Amyand, Francis Arbovin, Claude Aubert, George Aufrere, J. Auriol, Na- 2 1 2 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. thaniel Bassnet, Allard Belin, Claude Bennet, James Lewis Bercliere, Herman Berens, John David Billon, John Blaquiere, John Peter Blaquiere, Henry Blommart, John Boittier, Samuel Bosanquet, John Boucher, James Bourdieu, Stephen Cabibel, Peter Callifies, James Caulet, James Chalie, Honorius Combauld, Peter Coussirat, Daniel Crespin, Abraham Dafoncell, Peter Davisme, Gabriel De Limage, Joseph De Ponthieu, Peter Des Champs, C. Desmaretz, Andrew Devesme, Philip Devesme, Isaac Fiput De Gabay, Ph. Jacob De Neufvrille, William Dobree, John Dorrien, Libert Dorrien, Peter Du Cane, Samuel Dufresnay, J. Dulamont, Henry Durell, Charles Duroure, Alexander Eynard, William Fauquier, An. Faure, Abel Fon- nereau, Zac. Phil. Fonnereau, John Furly, Peter Gaussen, Francis Gaussen, James Gaultier, J. Gignoux, James Godins, Benjamin Gualtier, G. T. Guigner, Joseph Guinand, Henry Gui- nand, Stejihen Guion, William Hollier, Isaac Jalabert, John Jamineau, Stephen Theodore Janssen, John Lagiere Lamotte, P. Lefebure, Thomas Le Blanc, Charles Le Blon, Gideon Leglize, Caesar Le Maistre, David Le Quesne, Benjamin Longuet, Samuel Longuet, John Lewis Loubier, Henry Loubier, Charles Loubier, Jo. L. Loubier, J. Ant. Loubier, Peter Luard, William Minet, WiUiam Morin, Pulcrand Mourgrue, Francis Noguier, Peter Nouaille, Francis Perier, Pearson Pettitt, John Pettit, Joseph Pouchon, Philip Rigail, Hugh Ron, Cjq^re Ron- deau, Stephen Teissier, Matth. Testas, Peter Thomas, Thomas Thomas, Thomas Tryon, Ant. Vazeille, Dan. Vernezobre, Dan. Vialers, Thomas Vigne, William Vigor, Peter Waldo. (5.) Simon Eynard {^. 241) ; his sister Louise was married to Gideon Ageron. (6.) William Carbonel of London, merchant, was a brother of John Carbonel, also a refugee, and late one of the secretaries of Louis XIV., and son of Thomas Carbonel, merchant at Caen, in Normandy. His grandfather, Nicolas Carbonel, Vicomte de Constantin, a gentle- man of the parish of Marigni. Arms and pedigree, visitation of London in 16S7, p. 232. — (Camden Society Lists of Foreign Protestants, p. xxi.) The following names occur in this chapter. — Henry Savile (p. 227), Vignoles (pp. 227, 237), Marquis de Monsales (p. 227), Buck (p. 228), Barckstead (p. 228), Sir William Trum- ball (p. 229), De Pas (p. 229), Feuquiere (p. 229), Rev. Sydney Smith (p. 231), Moreau (p. 232), Denandiere (p. 232), Evelyn (p. 233), Duke of Marlborough (p. 234), Baril (p. 238), Berchfere (p. 238), Daubuz (p. 238). Page 239. Dean Wickart, Earl of Galway, Mr De la Mothe, Earl of Lifford, Duke ot Schomberg, Duke of Montagne, St Evremond, Des Maizeaux, Barbesson, Pierre, Jourdan, Finch, Meadows, Parry. Page 240. Ramsey, Denis, Alcock, Pyke, Perry. Chapter XXII. (pp. 241-259). Grand Group of Families founded by the Refugees. Page 241. From Dean Allix, son of the great Allix, two families spring: — (i.) Allix of Willoughby Hall. (2.) AlHx of Swaffham. Page 242. From the admirable Pasteur Aufrere the family of Aufrere of Hovcton and Foulsham Old Hall descends in direct succession. The pasteur's second son, George Rrne Aufrt-re, had one child, Sophia, the ancestress of the Earls of Yarborough. [The following notice appeared in the Scots Magazine: — Died, ist Sept. 1804, Mrs Aufrt'-re, mother-in-law of Lord Yarborough. By the death of this venerable old lady his lordshij) will come into pos- session of_;^5o,ooo ready money, and one of the finest collections of paintings in this country. The late .Sir Joshua Reynolds frequently said that it contained a greater variety of pieces by first masters of the Italian, Dutch, P'rench, and Flemish schools than any other private col- lection in England, and estimated it at ^200,000 value. It is sujjposed that the deceased, in conformity with her promises frequently repeated, has besides left a legacy of ^^ 10,000 to each ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 213 of his lordship's six daughters. His lordship's two sons, it is also supposed, will enjoy ^20,000 each besides the Chelsea estate.] Note. As to page 243. In correction of my mistakes, I here note that Mrs Aufr^re, who died in 1850, was the mother of Cleorge Anthony .\ufri're, Esci. The date of this gentleman's birth was 1794, anil his wife, I rejoice to hear, is alive. Mrs Barclay, sister of Mr Aufrere, died 13th February 1868, and her husband, tleorge Harclay, l^sq., in 1869. Paf^e 243. The family of lioilcau has the most magnificent pedigree of any of the refugee families. Etienne IJoileau. Grand I'revost uf Paris in 1258, is a historical personage; and the pedigree traced up to him is without a flaw or gap. The family was ennobled in 137 1. [I regret that this date is misprinted 1731 in my second vol.] Note. There is a lithographed genealogy of the family of Boileau of Castelnau by Mrs Innes. This lady, //'.sq., M.P., Under Secretary of State, whose name he assumed. Page 246. The Courtauld family has its origin fully detailed in Chapter XIV. [Colonel Chester has carried the pedigree back to another generation. The father of the refugee was the first of the fomily who settled in the Island of Oleron. Peter Courtauld, of St Peter, Isle 214 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. of Oleron, was the principal merchant, and apparently, through his successful industry, the monopolist of the trade and manufactures of the island ; his wife, the refugee's mother, was Judith Gibaud ; besides Augustine there was also another son, Peter, and a daughter, Judith, wife of Gideon Gannet. Before 19th September 16S6 the father had married a second wife, Anne Cagna ; this lady made her will on 19th August i68g, and in it she says : — " First, I recommend my soul to God the Father Almighty, who hears this prayer for the sake of His dear Son my Saviour Jesus Christ, who has shed His precious blood upon the cross for our sins, to have pity and compassion upon it, and at its departure from the body to receive it graciously into His holy paradise in the ranks of the faithful, to the enjoyment of eternal life."] Page 246. From Daubuz, the erudite commentator, spring the family of Daubuz of Leyton, and another family, represented by Rev. John Daubuz, rector of Killiow. Page 247. The family of De la Cherois springs by direct lineal descent from Major Nicholas de la Cherois. (See Chapter XVI.) Page 248. The family of De la Cherois Crommelin springs from Samuel De la Cherois (borti 1744, died 1816), a cadet of the De la Cherois foniily. This gentleman succeeded by will to the estate of his kinsman, Nicholas Crommelin of Carrowdore, and assumed the additional surname of Crommelin. \EiTatiim —Page 148, line 2d from foot, for " S. L. S., senior," read " S. L. C, senior."] Page 249. The family of De la Condamine is of French Protestant descent." [Andr6 de de la Condamine of Nismes, Jeanne Adgierre, his wife, and their children, Pierre and Jeanne, were, on nth August 1719, recognised by the Ecclesiastical Court of Guernsey after having expressed their penitence for having been at Mass in France.] Page 250. The respectable Irish family of Du Bourdieu is descended from a Rev. John Armand Du Bourdieu, chaplain to the Duke of Richmond and Lennox ; he seems to have been alive in 1733, and by his wife, the Countess D'Espuage, he had a son, the Rev. Sau- marez Du Bourdieu. Page 25 1. The family of Dury of Bonsall claims Huguenot ancestry. Page 252. From the Baron ]3'Estaile there descended the families of Esdaile of Cothele- stone and Esdaile of Burley Manor. Page 250. The family of Fonnereau of Christ Church Park descends from Zacharie Fon- nereau, a refugee of noble birth, claiming descent from the Comtes De Poitiers et d'Evreux. Page 2i,\. The family of Gambier descends from Norman Huguenots. The numerous branches spring from James Gambier, barrister-at-law. Director of the French Hos[iital in 1727. The head of the family at the beginning of this century was Samuel Gambier, Esq., whose brother was Admiral, Lord Gambier. Pages 251-2. There is an English family, Gaussen of Brookman's Park, and an Irish family, Gaussen of Lakeview House. They are not related to each other, but both are recognised as Huguenot refugee families. Page 252. The family of Gervais of Cecil, county of Tyrone, is of Huguenot descent Page 252. The Girardot family descends from Protestant refugees from Dijon. See also page 318 of my volume second. Page 252. The Gosset family descends from Norman refugees. Page 253. The family of Harenc, late of Footscray Place, is of Huguenot descent. Page 253. The family of Kenny claims Huguenot ancestry. Page 254. The well-represented and venerated families of La Touche, and Digges La Touche, descend from an eminent refugee, David Digues, Seigneur de la Touche. Page 255. The family of Luard of Blyborough Hall, and other fiimilies of the name, spring from a refugee from Caen. Page 255. The family of Majendie of Hedingham Castle descends from the same refugee ancestry as the late Bishop of Bangor. See p. 373. Page 255. The Montresor family is descended from refugees whose surname was Le Tresor. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 2,5 Pa^e 256. The Olivier family has a distinct Huguenot pedigree, but whether any of its members were refugees, I am not informed. I'a^e 256. The lamily of Tctit sprang from the Norman family of Petit des Etans. Fiij^e 256. Tile Porcher family descended from the Comtes de Richebourg. Page 256. The Portal lamily is of noble Albigensian and Huguenot descent. See Chan- ter XVI. Page 257. The Roumieu family is also of Albigensian and Huguenot descent. The name was originally spelt Romieii. Among the Naturalizations, List XIV., I have copied the name as Roumie : probably I should have decyphered it " Romiue," (the clerk's mistake for " Romieu.") Note. The Rev. John Joseph Roumieu has sent me the following corrections and additional facts. The great Romieu was Romieu de Vilieneuve, and his family became extinct in the third or fourth generation after him; he was Prime Minister to Raymond Berenger, Comte de Provence (not to the Comte de Toulouse, who was at war with the Comte de Provence, until Romieu obtained an honourable and advantageous peace). As to the refugee (whose ances- tor was probably Garcias Romei, or Romieu, 1 1 1 2), he had three sons (names unknown); John, the architect, was a son of one of these, and therefore the refugee's grandson. John Roumieu, architect. Abraham. Isaac. John. Mary. John Thomas. Roliert Lewis Charles. Etlwanl Two daughters. (architect). i (died 1871). Reginald. KaymonJ. Emily. (Rev.) John Joseph. Edward. Frederick. I (died 1S67.) I ^ ^, Edward John (died 1S71). Helen. Page 257. The family of Salmond of Waterfoot claims Huguenot refugee ancestry. [John Samon was naturalized, 3d July 1701, List XXV.] Page 158. The Tahourdin family springs from a refugee of Anjou, who was naturalized in in 1687. See List XIII. Page 258. The refugee family bearing the surname of Vignoles springs from one of the noblesse of Languedoc, Vignoles, Sieur de Prades. In connection with this important group of families, in consequence of their marriages, for many of which I found room, the following names occur : — Page 242. Greene, Amsincq, Regis, (]rove, Du Val, Bate, Pelham, De Gastine, Cutting, Norris, Carthew, Lockhart. Page 243. Wehrtman, Barclay, Rivers, De Montcalm, De Calvit're, De Vignoles. Page 244. Descury, Hardy, Droz, Macleod, Desbrisay (or De Brizu), De Barbut, Thomas, Lucas, Hayes, Melchior, Fonnereau. Page 245. Dunster, Gaussen, Fletcher, Tindal, Franks, Ives, Bevan, De Kantzow, De Boumiquel, De Maffue. Pag3 246. De la Mejanelle, Burnaby, Sewell, Solly. Page 247. Baril, Arundel, Westenra, Baroness Hastings, Earl of Huntingdon, Vanneck, Lord Huntingfield, Corniire, De Lalande, Countess of Mount-.Mexander, Boileau, Grueber. 2 1 6 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Page 248. De Moleyns, Lord Ventry, De Falcon, De Vezenobre, De Chasteuil, Du Rodier de la BrugiiTe, De Montblanc St Martin, Agerre de Pons, Neel, Bowden, Truffet, Belcastel. Page 249. Coutart, Agnew, Carnegie, De la Valade. Page 250. Shelley, De Valliquerville, Vauquelin des Ifs, Benezet, Champion de Crespigny, Williams. Page 251. Mead, Cornish, Middleton, Lady Barham, Noel, Monpessor, Snell, Iremonger, Lady Chatterton, Pitt, Earl of Romney, Matthew. Page 252. Valat, Bosanquet, Fortescue, Fabre, Balaguier, Girard, Close, Tisdall, Andr6, Dashwood, D'AUain, Frankland. Page 253. Durell, Cotton, Berens, Lord Bexley, Courtney. Page 254. Biard, Chevalier. Page 255. Chaigneau, Thwaites, Verbeck, Bouryan, Dalbiac, Ashhurst, Hoghton, Earl of Crawford and Balcarres, Lord Headley. Page 256. Hayes, Serces, Cherigny, Du Pre, Burnaby, Chamier. Page 257. Earl of Minto, Bart, De Forbin, La Touche, Puget, Bosanquet. Page 258. Western, Larpent, Graydon, Berney, Lumley, Earl of Milltown, Le Bas, Hannay, De Baschi, D'Aubais, Rochemore, De Vendargues, Boileau, Du Roure, D'Esperandieu, D'Aiguesfondes, Du Fay, Nicolas, Gignoux, Ligonier de Bonneval. Page 559. Low, Dumont de Bostaquet. Chapter XXIIL (pp. 259-262.) The Romilly Group of Families. This group is named after its most distinguished member. Sir Samuel Romilly (died 1S18), son of Peter, son of Stephen, son of Estienne Romilly of Montpellier, a refugee in 1701. Aime Garnault, senior, a refugee of good family, from Picardy, had two brothers, John, and Michael of Enfield (died 1 745). Aim6's children (those with whom we are concerned) were : — Aime Garnault, jun., Daniel Garnault Margaret Garnault, of Bull's Cross, Enfield, married Mary Sleet, wife of Peter Romiily, married Sarah Arnold. I I Francisca, wife of Peter Ouvry. Elizabeth, Thomas (Sir) Samuel. wife of Isaac Vautier. The Garnault family was thus a bond of union among the group of the families of Gar- nault, Ouvry, Vautier, and Romilly. The com])lete group appears in the will of Mr Philip Delahaize, who was connected with the Garnault family by some link not yet recovered. Notes. Under the heading La Haize, the Messieurs Haag have an article on a Jean de la Hai'ze, appended to which there is this sentence : — " A Norman family of the same name also pro- fessed Protestantism ; they passed to England at the Revocation." The first of the name on record is in the Register of the Artillerie French Church in London, viz., Moyse Delahaize, and Marie Alavoine, his wife, anno 1715 ; he was the father of Philip Delahaize, Esq., whose will diffused so much happiness, and laid the foundation of so much prosperity. The former Mr Delahaize seems to have had three brothers, Thomas {died 1749), Charles {died 1750), and Peter {died 1768). Of these only Charles was married, and his daughter was Mrs Cook. The name Alavoine appears earlier. In 1692 in the Register of La Patente, Spitalsfields, ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 217 Judicii AKivoiiie is entered as married to Ambrose Pointer (or Pointier). In Artilhrie Regis- ter in 1719 we find Judith Alavoine married to Jaques Godin. Samuel Aiavoine, who died in 1746, had a daughter, Ksther Deheulle, and another daughter, Mary (died 1767, aged 72), wife of John Terron (died 1776, aged 91). Mr Al)raham Deheulle, who died in 1763, was the father of Esther (died 1782), wife of Richard Ualton, Estj. The father of Mrs Moses Delahaizc was Daniel Alavoine (liorn 1662, died ijjg). The surname Ouvry occurs in the registers under the various spellings of Oufrey, Oufry, Ovre, Ouvres. Overy. On 5th June 1708, the Duke of Marlborough writes to the Earl of Pembroke, Lord Eieutenant of Ireland, in fovour of Major Ovray, who, having served the crown for thirty-six years was about to retire from the army in order to settle in Ireland, and " always behaved himself, as his officers inform nie, with honour and reputation." The pur- port of the Duke's request to the Earl is, " Hestow upon him some mark of your favour and goodne.ss. Enable him to support himself and his family with comfort, and in a manner some way suitable to the character he has borne." I could not find room for Mr Delahaize's will in my volume second. I supply the defect now. The following is an e.xact copy, except as to some of the names. I have not thought it necessary to follow the testator in changing Ouvry into Ouvery, or Aime into Amy. In the .name of God, Ahic/i. — I, Philip Delahaize, of Tottenham High Cross, in the county of Middlesex, Esquire, being of sound and disposing mind, memory, and understand- ing, praised be Almighty God for the same, do make and declare this to be my last will and testament, in manner following — that is to say — I will that I may be decently interred, as my relations have hitherto been, in my family vault at Tottenham High Cross aforesaid, and do direct that, as soon as may be after my decease, the present Ledger-Stone over such vault be removed, and in the room thereof a new one be put there, with the same inscriptions thereon as on the present one, together with the names and deaths of such other persons of my family as have been since buried there, and my own name and time of my death, and otherwise as is usual so to do. Item, I give and devise unto Mr Peter Romilly, Mr Walter Dench, and Mr Fenwick Lyddal, and their heirs, executors, and administrators, all and every of my freehold and other my real, and all also my leasehold messuages, lands, tenements, and hereditaments whatsoever and wheresoever, with their and every of their rights, members, and appurtenances, and all other my personal estate whatsoever, in trust nevertheless, to and for such uses, intents, and puqjoses as hereinafter mentioned — that is to say — in trust within eighteen calendar months after my decease, or sooner if convenient so to do, absolutely to sell and dispose of all such freehold and other real and leasehold estates for the best price or prices that can or may be had or gotten for the same, and to convey and assign the same respectively to, and to the use and behoof of, such person or person who shall so purchase the same, his, her, or their heirs, executors, administrators, and assignees, according to my right and interest therein, and to receive the respective consideration moneys to be paid therefor, and all and every part of such moneys, as also the rents and profits of such freehold, real, and leasehold estates till such sales can or may be had and compleated. And all my other personal estate and eft'ects whatsoever I give and dispose of as follows — that is to say — In the first place, I order that all my just debts and funeral expenses be fully paid. Item, I direct that the sum of two thousand pounds of lawful money of Great Britain be laid out in Government Securities, and the interest or dividends thereof paid to Mr Aim^e Garnault of Bull's Cross, in the parish of Enfield in the county of Middlesex during his life, and at his decease the principal to be divided among his three daughters, Francisca, now married to Mr Peter Ouvry, and Ann Garnault and Sarah Garnault, or such of them as shall be then living ; but if they shall then be all dead, I give the same to the executors or administrators of the survivor of them. Item. I give unto Mrs Sarah Garnault, wife of the said Aime'e Garnault, a diamond mourning ring of fifty guineas value. Item, I give unto the said Francisca Ouvry the sum of £2000, and unto the said Ann Garnault the sum of £2000, and unto the said Sarah Garnault, the daughter, the sum of £3000. Item, I give unto Airs Mary Garnault, widow of Daniel Garnault, for her life the dividends to arise from the sum 2 E 2 1 8 FRENCH PRO TESTANT EXILES. of £2000, which I direct to be invested in Government Securities, and at her decease I give the principal thereof to and among all such her children by the said Daniel Garnault as shall be living at the time of her death, equally to be divided among them, except that her eldest son shall have no share thereof. Item, I give unto Samuel Garnault, one of the sons of the said Mary Garnault, the sum of £2000; to Joseph Garnault, one other of her sons, the sum of £2000 ; and to Mary Detail [Detheuil?], one of her daughters, the sum of £1000 ; and to Elizabeth Vautier, one other of her daughters, the sum of £2000 ; and to Aime'e Garnault, the other daughter of the said Mary Garnault, the sum of £2000. Item, I do direct that the sum of £2000 be laid out in Government Securities, and that the dividends thereof be paid to and for the use of the said Peter Romilly and Margaret his wife, for their lives and the life of the survivor of them, and at the decease of the survivor I give the principal thereof among such of their children as shall then be living, equally to be divided among them ; but if they shall all be then dead, then I give the same to the executors or administrators of the sur\-ivor. Item, I give unto Thomas Romilly, one of the children of the said Peter Romilly, the sum of £2000 ; to Samuel Romilly, one other of his children, the sum of £2000 ; and to Catherine Romilly, daughter of the said Peter Romilly, the sum of £3000. Item, I do give unto the said Peter Romilly the further sum of £jooo. Item, I do direct that the sum of £3000 be invested in Government Securities, and that the dividends or interest thereof be paid to Miss Margaret Faniuier for her life, and after her death to the said Peter Romilly and his said wife during their lives and the life of the survivor of them, and after the death of such survivor the money to arise from the sale thereof to be paid to and among such of the children of said Peter Romilly and his said wife as shall then be living, equally to be divided among them ; but if they shall all be then dead, then the same to go to the executors or administrators of the survivor of them. Item, I do direct that the further sum of £7000 be laid out in Govern- ment Securities, and the dividends thereof be paid to Mrs Susanna Cooke, daughter of my late uncle Mr Charles Delahaize, deceased, and now the wife of Mr Cooke, for her life, and the same to be for her sole and separate use, exclusive of her present or any after-taken husband, and for wliose debts and engagements the same shall not be liable, and her receipts alone to be only discharge therefor; and from and after her death I give such the dividends thereof to her said husband for his life ; and from and after the decease of the survi- vor of them I do direct that such dividends be paid to Ann Cooke their daughter for her life ; and from and after her decease that the moneys arising by the sale thereof be paid to and for the use and benefit of such of the children of her the said Ann Cooke, if any [she ?] shall have, in such shares and proportions as she shall, by her last will and testament in writing, or by any other writing to be by her signed in her lifetime in the presence of two or more witnesses, direct or appoint the same, notwithstanding her then coverture in case she shall then be married, and in default of such direction or appointment, then to the use and behoof of all the children of her the said Ann Cooke which she shall leave living at the time of her death, equally to be divided among them ; and if she shall have no such children then living, then the same to go and belong to the next of [kin ?] of her the said Ann Cooke. Item, I do direct that the further sum of £5000 be laid out in Government Securities, and the dividends thereof be paid to the said Ann Cooke for her life, and that she may dispose of the moneys to arise by the sale thereof after her death among such her children aforesaid, or in defiult of her so disposing thereof the same to go equally to and among all such her children which she shall leave living at her death, or, if no such children, the same to go to her then next of kin, in the very same manner as I have directed of and concerning the said other moneys given to her as aforesaid upon the death of the survivor of her said father and mother. Item, I do direct that all such moneys as I have ordered to be laid out in Government Securities as afore- said (except those for the benefits of the said Susanna (^ooke, and her husband and daughter, which I direct to be invested for their benefits within three calendar months next after my death) are to be invested within six calendar months next after my death. And all the other of the above-mentioned Legacys I do order to be paid within twelve calendar months next after my ANALYSIS 01' VOLUME SECOND. 219 death, save as to such of those legatees who shall be under the age of twenty-one years, their said legacies to be paid to them respectively on their attaining that age. Item, I give to Mr Peter Alavoine a Diamond mourning ring of tiie value of 50 guineas. Also, I bequeath unto the respective Governors or Trustees of the several Hospitals in or near London, called St Thomas's Hosjiital, Bartholomew Hospital, and the London Infirmary, ^100 for each Hospital to be resjiectively ajjplied for the respective benefits of the Sick, I^ime, and W'ovmded there, as usual in such cases. And I give to the Governors of the Mag- dalen Hospital ;^ 100 for the use of such Hosjjital. Item, 1 give imto the (Governors or Trus- tees of St Luke's Hos])ital for Incurable Lunatics -^loo for the benefit of such lunatics in such hospital. Item, I give to the Elders and Deacons of the French Church in Threadneedle Street, London, ^100 for the use of the i)oor, and the like sum of^ioo to the Elders and Deacons of the French Church in Artillery Lane, London, for the use of the poor. Item, I give unto the Trustees of the Free Granmiar School at Tottenham High Cross aforesaid j£? 100 for the benefit of such school, and unto the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Parish of Tottenham aforesaid;^ too for the benefit of the poor of that parish, as the minister and churchwardens and overseers of such parish shall think proper. Item, I give unto the churchwardens and overseers of the poor of the parish of Saint Michael Bassishaw, London, ^100 for the use of the poor of that parish. Item, I give to the governors or trustees, or by whatever other name or names they are described, of the French Hospital near St Luke's Church in Old Street, the like sum of j{r 1 00, for the benefit of persons taken into such hosjMtal ; and which legacies, given to such hospitals, churches, parishes, and school, shall be i)aid within one calendar month next after my death. Item, I given unto the Governor, Deputy-Governor, and other the Directors of the Bank of England, each a gold mourning ring of the value of one guinea ; and unto each of the pro- prietors of the New River Company who usually sit at and jiiake a Board, one gold mourning ring of one guinea value. Item, I give unto Mrs Catherine Charon, the wife of Mr Charon, and heretofore Catherine Levillaine, the sum of;^2oo. Item, I give unto Miss Ann Stone and Miss Mary Stone the sum of ;^ 1500 a-piece, to be paid within 3 calendar months next after my death. Item, I give to the said Mr Walter Dench the sum of ^^5000, to Mr Fenwick Lyddall the sum of^iooo, to Mr Nasdale, a weaver, who married the daughter of Rachel Delahaize, the sum of ;^2oo ; to Mr John Heard, cari)enter, the sum of^20o ; to Mr William Case, nephew of the .said A\'alter Dench, ^500; to Mr John Andrew Baumback, and to Mr Henry Metcalfe, each ;^ 100, all of which last-mentioned legacies to be paid within 6 calendar months next after my death. Item, I give unto the said Walter Dench my share of the lease of the house in Basinghall Street, London, wherein he and 1 now dwell, and the fixtures and other things belonging thereto or therein, and such of the household goods and furniture as belongs to me ; but my upright harpsichord in such house I give to Miss Ann Garnault, daughter of the said Mr Ainie Garnault. Item, I give unto the said Susanna Cooke, to buy herself and husband, and her said daughter Ann mourning with, the sum of^^ioo, to be paid her immediately after my death, one-third i)art thereof to be laid out for the said Ann. Item, I give unto Mr Sampson Carser 50 guineas ; to Mrs Alavoine, her two daughters, each a diamond ring of the value of lo guineas ; to Mrs Godin, Mrs Wapshare, wife of Mr William Wapshare of Salisbury, Mrs Mar)- Langton, wife of Mr David Langton, William Willis, Esquire, banker, and Captain Andrew Riddle, each a diamond mourning ring of 20 guineas value ; to the eldest son of the said David Garnault, deceased, a diamond mourning ring of the value of 50 guineas ; to James Townsend, Esquire, of Tottenham, a diamond mourning ring of 20 guineas value : and Mr Jonathan Coulson a diamond mourning ring of the value of 10 guineas ; to Doctor Clarke of Tottenham, my jihysician. Mr Cad {i.e., Cadwallader) Coker, Mr Page of Tottenham ; and Mr Henry Fletcher, Mr Peter Deschamp, Mr John Deschamp, Mr John Rhodolph Bartenschleigh, Mr John Gresley, senior, Mr John Gresley, younger, and his wife, who live at Bristol ; Mr William Laforce, Mr Peter Laforce, and Mr John Hanbury of Buck- lersbury, London ; Mr William Stone of Salisbury, and his wife and three daughters, Mr 2 20 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. William Wapshare and his son Charles, and Mr Henry Bench, each a gold ring of one guinea \-alue. Item, I give a gold ring of one guinea value to each of the above-named legatees who have not rings given to them, and to the two ministers of Tottenham I give each the like mourning ring of one guinea value. Item, I give unto my gardener, coachman, footman, and each of my women servants that shall be living with me at my death, either in London or at Tottenham, ^^lo a-piece, and also ;^5 to each of them for mourning, over and above all charges that may be due from me to them respectively at my death, such legacies to be paid immediately after my death. Item, I do will and direct that such person or persons who shall purchase all or any of my aforesaid estates, shall not be liable to see the application, or be answerable for the non-application, of all or any part of the purchase moneys to be paid by them or any of them therefor. And I do direct that all my said trustees' and executors' costs, charges, and expenses relating to or any- wise concerning the trusts hereby reposed in them, or any of them, shall be fully paid out of the said trust estates, and that the one of them shall not be answerable for the other of them, or for the acts, deeds, receipts, payments, neglects, or defaults, the one of them of the other of them, but each of them only for his own acts, deeds, receipts, payments, neglects, and defaults. Item, I do hereby authorise my said executors, or the survivors or survivor of them, his or their executors or administrators, to compound or agree, settle or adjust, all or any claims or de- mands which shall or may be made on them in respect of me or my estate (if any there shall be), in such manner as he or they may think most proper, and to pay all necessary sums of money for the compounding or satisfying the same out of my estate aforesaid. And I do em- power my said trustees, for the two first years next after my decease, or so long thereof as my said estates shall remain unsold, to pay any sum of money out of my estate not exceeding the yearly sum of ;;{^5o, for managing and taking care of my estates, and receiving the rents thereof, and keeping the books relating thereto. And I do hereby declare, that in case all my estates and effects, by reason of the fall of Government securities or otherwise, shall fall short or de- ficient in paying and satisfying the aforesaid legacies, then I do direct that each my said legatees whose legacies amount to two hundred pounds or upwards, do abate out of their legacies in proportion to such deficiency. Item, as to all the rest residue and remainder of the moneys to arise by sale of or from all or any part of my real and personal estates, I give and bequeath the same and every part to the said Mr Aime Garnault, and to his aforesaid three daughters, and to the aforesaid Samuel Garnault and Josejih Garnault, and the aforesaid three daughters of the said Mary Garnault, and to the aforesaid Peter Romilly and his said two sons and daughter, and to the aforesaid Margaret Farquier, and to the aforesaid Susanna Cooke and her daughter Ann Cooke, and to the said \\'alter Dench and Fenwick Lyddal, equally to be divided amongst them, which I expressly direct to be done within two years next after my death ; but my executors shall not be paid any part thereof, unless they prove this my will, and take upon themselves the execution thereof ; but the share or shares of such executors so refusing shall go and belong to the other and others of my said residuary legatees, equally among them, share and share alike. And I do hereby constitute and appoint the said Peter Romilly, ^Valter Dench, and Fenwick Lyddal joint executors of this my will, and revoke all former wills by me at any time heretofore made. In witness whereof I, the said testator, Philip Delahaize, to this my last will and testament, contained in this and the four jireceding sheets of paper, set my hand and seal, namely, my seal at the top of the first of the said sheets, where all the said sheets are fastened together, and my hand at the bottom of each of the said preceding sheets, and my hand and seal to this last sheet, this 2d day of November, the 10th year of the reign of His Majesty King George the Third, 1769. PHILIP DELAHAIZE. Signed, sealed, published, and declared by the said testator, Philip Delahaize, as and-for his last will and testament, in our presence, who in his jjresence, and at his request, and in the presence of each other, subscribed our names witnesses thereto ; the woxCia fifty gi( in cas in the first sheet, the words give unto the said Pder Romilly the further sum ofjQ 1 000. Item, I do for ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 221 her life in the second sheet, the word out in the third, and the words a diamond mourning ring 0/ thi value of 2o guiiuas in the fourth sheet being first interlined, and the word each in such fourth sheet tirst struck out, and the word such in the first sheet, and the word arise in the second sheet, and the words or names Mr William John in the fourth sheet beinj,' first wrote on erasures. John Archer, Richard Nelson, William Bannister. Before I signed the within will I read the same, and which is according to my direction, as witness my hand this 2 November 1 769. Philip Delahaize. Proved at London, 29 November 1769, by Peter Romilly, Walter Bench, and Fenwick Lyddal, the e.xecutors named in the will. Additional Note as to the Ouvry family. — Francisca Ingram Ouvry, whose beautiful Hugue- not tales I have named in my vol. ii., page 261, has just published (1873) a third, named " Hubert Montreuil, or the Huguenot and the Dragoon." To the tale is prefixed this inscrip- tion : — " To the memory of Louis de MaroUes and Isaac Le FevTe, tnie comrades in the noble band of French martyrs who died for their faith in the reign of Louis XIV., this book is dedi- cated, as a chaplet twined by unskilled but reverent hands, and laid on their nameless graves." Chapter XXIV. (pp. 262-271). The Raboteau Group of Families. Most of the families of this group wore connected with the handsome and heroic Raboteau family, wliicii is now represented in female lines only. (See the Sunday at Home, the volume for 1862.) Page zb"]. The Du Bedat family descends from Matthieu Du Bedat, Advocate in the Par- liament of Paris, an illustrious Huguenot, whose draft-memorial to Louis XIV. in behalf of the Protestants still exists in manuscript, and is among the treasures of the Royal Dublin Society. A translation of this document, with an imprint of the original, is given in my volume second, pp. 263-267. Page 268. The family of Chaigneau descends from Chaigneau de Labelloniere, near St Jean d'Angely. Page 269. The ancestors of the famous Colonel Barre, M.P. and Privy Councillor, came from Pont-Gibaud. Page 2b<). The family of Z- = Mary Anne Fontaineau. Royal Artillery. Chaplain of Urtcnwich killed in action, 1790.) j Hospital. Right Rev. Charles Hughes Terrot, D.D., 1 born at Cuddalore, East Indies, in 1790 ; \ = Sarah Wood. diidM. Edinburgh, 2d April 1S72. ) See "Smiles' Huguenots," p. 390, and the Scottish Guardian, \o\. iii. (Edin. 1872), pp. 181, 247,- 281. A correspondent sends me an epitaph copied from a mural marble tablet within Holy Trinity Church, Ber\vick-upon-Tweed : — To the Memory of Captain Charles Terrot, of the Royal Invalids, who died February the 6th 1794, in the 83d year of his age, many years Commandant of this Garrison, and the oldest officer in His Majesty's Service, Also Elizabeth, his wife, who died December 19th, 1813, aged 78. (15.) David Ft-rro net came to England about 16S0, son of the refugee Pasteur Perronet, who had chosen Switzerland as his adopted country, and ministered to a congregation at Chateau D'Oex. The name obtained celebrity through David's son. Rev. Vincent Perronet, a graduate of Oxford, Vicar of Shoreham (Iwrn 1693, died 1785), author of the celebrated hymn whose several stanzas end with the words, "and crown Him Lord of all ;" the most celebrated verse, however, beginning thus — " O that with yonder sacred throng," was the composition of an editor. In the Countess of Huntingdon's Life and Times, vol. i. p. 387, a.d. 1770, a panegyric of him is given, wltich I abridge : — " Though Vincent Perronet was possessed of 228 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. talents and accomplishments which would have qualified him to fill any station in the church with dignity, and his connections in life were such that he had good reason to expect con- siderable preferment, yet as soon as the glorious light of the gospel visited his mind, he renounced every prospect of temporal advantage. An occasional correspondent of Lady Huntingdon, he till this period had never had a personal interview with her. He was one of the most aged ministers of Christ in the kingdom, and was inferior to none in the fervour of his spirit, in the simplicity of his manners, and in the ancient hosjjitality of the gospel." Mr Perronet was represented collateriy by the late Colonel Thomas Perronet Thompson {born 1783), Fellow of Queen's College, Cambridge, and (in 1802) Seventh Wrangler, author of "A Catechism on the Corn Laws," M.P. for Hull. Chapter XXVL (pp. 280, 281). Offspring of the Refugees in the Army and Navy. (i.) Page 280. Colonel Scipio Duroure {died 1745), and Lieutenant-General Alexander Duroure (born 1700, died 1765), were sons of Captain Francois Du Roure and Catherine de Rieutort. The commission of Alexander as Lieutenant-General was dated 6th December 1760. I regret the errata in the dates concerning him. (2.) Page 281. Lieutenant-General Louis Dejean {died 1764), was evidently of French Pro- testant descent. (3.) Page 282. Sir Thomas De Veille, Justice of the Peace and Colonel of the Westminster Militia, formerly a Captain of Dragoons (/wv; 1684, died 1746), was the son of a refugee pasteur. (4.) Page 2% I. Major John Andrd {born 1751, executed by the enemy 1780), Adjutant- General in the American war, was a native of Lichfield, and descended from a French refugee family of Southampton. Note. At page 282'! gave the epitaph on Major Andrd, inscribed on the monument at the date of its erection. I was not then aware that there is the following addition — The remains of Major John Andre were, on the toth of August 1S21, removed from Tappan by James Buchanan, Esq., His Majesty's Consul at New York, vmder instructions from His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and, with the pennission of the Dean and Chapter, finally deposited in a grave contiguous to this monument, on the 28th of November 1821. [As the monument does not appear in the Parliamentary return of monuments erected at the public expense, we may infer that it was paid for by King George HL out of the Privy Purse.] (5.) Page 282. Major-General Henry Abraham Crommelin de Berniere {born 1762, died 1813), was great-grandson of a military refugee of ancient family. Captain Jean Antoine de Bernibre. (6.) Page 283. Captain Peter Garrick {born 1685, died 1736), was a refugee infant, son of David Garric, also a refugee. The theatrical manager, David Garrick, Esq., was one of the grandsons of Peter. At page 284, I give a document from the Herald.s' College, which ought to have been entitled " Document written by David Garrick's great-grandfather, David Garric." Errata. Page 283. For " the Old Buff's," read " The Old Buffs." 284, 1. 3. Herald's, Heralds'. 285,1. II. Garnic, Garric. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 229 (7.) /reventcd the heavy losses in tlie Defiance and Monarch, and which unhapijjly threw the gallant and good Captain Riou (to whom I had given the command of the frigates and sloops named in the margin,* to assist in the attack of the shijjs at the harbour's mouth) under a ver)- heavy fire ; the conseiiucnce has been the death of Captain Riou, and many brave officers and men in the frigates and sloops.'' The joint-monument to Captains Mosse and Riou was executed by C. Rossi, R.A. The angelic supjiorters are intended to represent Victory and Fame (Smyth's Biogra]>hical Illustra- tions of St Paul's Cathedral, p. 53. The monument cost .£4200 (id. p. 6). (8.) J\ige 286. Admiral of the Fleet, James, Lord Oambier, G.C.B. {boni 1756, diai 1833), was a cadet of the Gambier family. See Chapter XXII., p. 251. Note. I have exposed Lord Dundonald's cniel injustice to Gambier. It may be said that if Gambier was persecuted, so was Dundonald. The suflerings of the latter were of later date ; and Lord Gambier never retaliated upon Dundonald, by joining in the persecution. Gambier always manifested a Christian spirit and dignified demeanour. (9). Page 289. The Montresor fomily was well rejiresented in the Army and Navy, the founder of the English families being Major James Gabriel Le Tresor, a refugee {born 1667, liiai 1723). His son was James Gabriel Montresor, and where I have spoken of "the brothers of the latter," I ought to have said " the brothers of the latter, or second, James Gabriel." (10). jPi/iV 289. The Boileau family has been very largely represented in the Army and Navy. Additional Names. (11). Rear-Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort, KC.B., F.R.S., was the second son of Rev. Daniel Augustus Beaufort, LL.D., Vicar of Collon, county Louth, and formerly Minister of Navan, County Meath, author of " The Civil and Ecclesiastical Map of Ireland, and grandson of .\rchdeacon Beaufort (see chapter xxv.) Francis was born at Navan in 1774, antl entered the Indian Navy as a midshipman in 17S7. He was already a proficient in the sciences, and was appointed the custodier of the valuable instruments of his ship, the Vansittart — a charge to which he was so devoted, that when the ship was wrecked, he saved the instnnnents and abandoned his ow^n property. Both in warfare and in surveying he highly distinguished * Blanche, Alcmeiie, Dart, Arrow, Zephyr, and Otter. 230 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. himself as an officer of the Royal Navy from 1791 to 1800 ; at the latter date he obtained his commission as Captain. His debut as an Author was a beautifully illustrated volume, entided, " Karamania, or a brief description of the South Coast of Asia Minor, and of the Remains of Antiquity, with plans, views, &c., collected during a survey of that coast, under the orders of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, in the years iSii and 18 12 — by Francis Beaufort, F.R.S., Ca])tain of His Majesty's 'S,\<\\i Fredt-rikstcen. London, 18 17." His success as a surveyor and draftsman procured him the appointment of Hydrographer to the Admiralty — an office which he held from 1829 to 1855. Sir Francis Beaufort died on the 17th December 1857, aged 83. Harriet Martineau in her " Biographical Sketches" says of him, " He was short in stature ; but his countenance could nowhere pass without notice," being characterised by " astute intelligence, shining honesty and genial kindliness." He mar?ied, first, in 1812, Alicia Magdalene Wilson* {born 1782, died 1834), daughter of Lestock "Wilson, by Bonne Boileau (fiorn 1740, died i8r8), and granddaughter of Simeon Boileau and Magdalene Desbrisay, and by her he had two sons and three daughters, of whom the youngest is Emily Anne, Viscountess Strangford. He married, secondly, Miss Edgeworth, a sister of Maria Edgeworth, and a connection of his first wife. (12). Page 318. The following additional names are in the Appendix to my vol. ii. (i). Lieutenant Nathan Garrick {died 1788); his wife was a daughter of Sir Egerton Leigh, Bart. (2). Captain Alexander Desclouseaux and Captain Charles Desclouseaux. (3). Admiral Sir John Laforey, Bart., claimed descent from a common ancestor with the INLirquis de La Foret. The Laforey family intermarried with the families of Clayton and Farley. The following names occur in this chapter : — Page 280. Beauvoir, De Dangers. Page 281. Vignoles, Brushell, Earl of Galway. Page 282. Anna Seward. Page 283. Crommelin, Longley, Smart, Clough, Carrington, Hart, Schaw, Protheroe. Page 284. Cock, La Conde, Sarazin, Pigou, Marchand, Perin, Soulhard, Mougnier, Noual, Fermignac, Sablannan, Le Goye, Brithand, Bernard. Page 285. Soullard, Colineau, Basset, Fermignac. Page 286. Bandoin, Middleton. Page 289. De Hauteville, M'Leod, Lines, Beaufort, Bosanquet, Graham. Chapter XXVH. (pp. 289-304). Offspring of the Refugees connected with Science, Law, the Legislature and Literature. (i). Page 289. John Dollond {born 1706, died 1761), " the discoverer of the laws of the dispersion of light, and the inventor of the achromatic telescope," was originally a weaver, son of a Huguenot refugee. (2.) Page 290. Isaac Gosset, Esq. (died 1799), and Rev. Isaac Gosset, D.D., F.R.S., his son (died 181 2.) (3.) Page 290. Gabriel Beranger, an artist, famous for landscape drawings, paintings of flowers and birds, and antiquarian sketches, flourished in Ireland between 1750 and 1780. (4.) Page 291. Medical Men. Benjamin Bosanquet, M.D., F.R.S., Philip Du Val, M.D., father of Rev. Philip Du Val, D.D. John Justamon, F.R.S., surgeon. Charles Edward Bernard, M.D. Charles Nicholas De la Cherois Pardon, M.D. Note. Bum (p. 79) gives the following, from a tombstone in the French Church, Norwich: — * The first Lady Boileaii's youngest sister, Ilenrietta Francis Wilson [liom 1789, died 1855), was married to her kinsman, John Theophilus Desbrisay, and had two sons, George {tied 1840), and Ilcnry De la Cour Desbrisay, married in 1854 to Jane Amelia Marett. ANALYSIS OF VOLUME SECOND. 231 1784, August 30th. Paul Columbine, Esq., aged 85, descended from an ancient family in the Province of I)au|>hiny in France, from whence his father, a man of |>rol)ity, piety, and learn- ing, withdrew at the Revocation of the I'.dict of Nantes, and haviiii; taken early a degree abroad, practisetl physic in this city. This, his youngest son, by temperance, industry, and moderation, through a long and blameless life, had merited and obtained the best and sweetest of human blessings, health, competence, and content. (5.) Page 291. Right Hon. William Sauriu, M.P., Attorney-General for Ireland (born 1758, died 1839.) (6.) Page 292. Right Hon. Sir John Bernard Bosanquet {born 1773, dud 1847), Justice of the Court of Common Pleas. [Edward Foss, in his Biographical Dictionary of the Judges of England, says of Mr Justice Bosanquet, that he was selected as arbitrator between the Crown and the Duke of .Vthol, to fix the amount of the Duke's unsettled claims on resigning the sovereignty of the Isle of Man. " He |)ublished, without his name, a LetUr of a Layman on the connection of the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse, embodying in a small com- pass, a great amount of research. He was a very considerable linguist, of accurate and various learning, and particularly fond of scientific emiuiries."] (7.) Page 292. Right Hon. I.ouis I'errin, late Justice of the Court of King's Bench, Dublin. [Of the same stock was John I'errin of London, the successful French Teacher and Author, who dedicated his Fablis Amusantes to the Prince of Wales on the 4th May 1774.] (8.) Page 293. Francis Maseres, Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, and (1750) Senior Medallist, F.R.S., F.S.A., Cursitor Baron of Exchequer {horn 1731, died 1824.) (9.) Page 294. Anthony Chamier, Escj., M.P., F.R.S., Under-Secretary of State {born 1725, died \i%o) (10.) Right Hon. Isaac Barre, M.I'., formerly Lieut-Colonel {born 1726, died 1802). Notes. .K pamphlet was published in London in 1777, entitled " Characters, containing an impar- tial review of the ]niblic conduct and abilities of the most eminent Personages in the Parlia- ment of Great Britain, considered as statesmen, senators, and public speakers." A section is devoted to Colonel Barre, and is highly laudatory — but mentions one inconsistency in his public conduct, and his explanation of it, thus : — " The Resolutions in the Committee of the whole House, in the beginning of the spring session 1774, having (we fear) fatally spawned that celebrated law, called The Boston Port Bill, as the firstborn of those measures which have produced the present civil war in America, it met with the Colonel's support, contrary to every anterior and subsequent opinion of his in Parliament. This was matter of surprise at the time ; and there were some w^ho did not hesitate to impute so sudden and unexpected an alteration of sentiment to motives which have since govemed several others who then stood high in the estimation of the public, but who have since flatly belied all their former profes- sions, or have at least learned to be persuaded that they were mistaken or misled. The observation here made was not barely confined to the suspicions or murmurs of peojile without doors ; it has freijuently been objected to him by several of the members of Adminis- tration in debate, when he has arraigned in the most unqualified terms the measures of Government and charged their authors with ignorance, temerity, and injustice. We have heard them more than once retaliate on him in nearly the following words . — ' The Boston Port Bill (no matter whether a wise, an expedient, or an equitable measure) drew the nation into this war. Why did you support it so warmly, with all those powers of oratory and ratio- cination which you so eminently possess ? Everything which has since followed grew out of that measure. If it was a wise measure, why not continue to support it ? if a bad one, why for a minute lend it your countenance ? ' " The Colonel's answer can only be ijroperly decided upon by the monitor residing within his own breast. He has repeatedly said on those occasions, ' diat the minister gave him and his friends, both in and out of Parliament, the most full and specific assurances that 232 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. if the bill were permitted to pass both Houses with an appearance of firmness and unanimity, the East India Company would receive reparation for the tea which had been destroyed the preceding autumn ; that this would produce measures of lenity and conciliation at this side of the water ; that Government meant to relax on certain material points ; and that every dispute subsisting between Great Britain and her Colonies would terminate in the most amicable manner, equally for the advantage and honour of both countries. But (continued the Colonel) when this point was gained, administration feeling themselves stronger than they expected, they jiroceeded to hostilities against the constitutional rights of the Colonies, by following the Boston Port Bill with The Massaclnissdt's Bay Charter Bill, and that for the removal of offenders in America for trial to another Colony or home to Great Britain.' " [Colonel Barr(5 was a shareholder of the East India Company, and he first met Lord Shel- burne at its meetings.] It was in company with Barre that Dunning was thrown from his horse at a military review at Berlin, Frederic the Great having given him not only an invitation but also the use of a spirited charger, in the belief that his title of Solicitor-General was a military one. (ir.) Page 298. Other M.P.'s. — John La Roche (son of Pierre Crothaire), and his son Sir James Laroche, Bart., Joshua Mauger, William Devaynes. (12.) Page 298. Sir Samuel Romilly, M.P. {born \1^1, died i8t8). (13.) Page 2,00. The Bosanquet family has made many good and intelligent contributions to literature. I have enumerated the individual authors, including Mary Bosanquet, wife of Rev. John William Fletcher (or De la Flechere). The treatise on the Lord's Prayer, entitled " How shall I jiray?" is by the Rev. Charles Bosanquet ; (I erroneously attributed it to C. B. P. Bosanquet, Esq.) Note. The veteran author, Samuel Richard Bosanquet, Esq., of Dingestow, continues his labours. I have before me his new book, " The Successive Visions of the Cherubim, distinguished and newly interpreted, showing the progressive revelation through them of the Doctrine of the In- carnation, and of the Gospel of Redemption and Sanctification. London, Hatchards, 1871.'' The Preface opens thus : — " At the conclusion of the second edition of my ' New System of Logic,' I added that my next, and perliaps final work, would be a treatise on Exegesis, or the right method of interpreting Scripture. That treatise will take long time and much labour to complete. In the meantime, therefore, having had occasion to draw out into form my views respecting the cherubim, I think it right to publish them. And I put them forward partly as an example of my method of interpretation." (14.) Page 7,0^. Abraham Portal, a poet, grandson of Rev. Henri Portal. (15.) Page 303. Rev. Edward Mangin, an author in light literature. (16.) Page ^o^. Charles Hastings Collette, Esq., Barrister-at-law, a historical and contro- versial writer on topics suggested by the Protestant controversy and Popish frauds. (17.) Page 304. Charles Blacker Vignoles, Esq., F.R.S., a successful veteran civil engineer. ADDITIONAL NAME.S. (18.) Richard Chena'ix, Esq., F.R.SS.L. & E. ; some of his works have been noticed in Chapter XXV. He died in 1830, and left for publication under the editorship of his friend Thomas Pery Knox,* his most important work, in two volumes 8vo, entitled "An Essay upon National Character, being an incjuiry into some of the principal causes which contribute to form and modify the characters of nations in the state of civilisation." Mr Chcnevix does not treat of the nations separately, but difterent faculties and qualities are brought forward, one by one, in separate cliapters, and in each cha])ter all the nations march past for review. In the Chapter on Morality he finds occasion to remark, " The nation that has retained the largest * Mr Knox (born in 1805)15 the eldest son of the Right Hon. George Knox, r)C.L.,and grandson of Thomas, first Viscount Norlliiand ; he is a first cousin of the late Tlioiiias, first Karl of Ranfurly. ANALYSJS OF VOLUME SECOND. 233 share of ferocity, which once was common among its barbarous ancestors, is that whose vanity is the most active — France. The cruelty of the French (iiffers from everything that has hitherto been related ; or could it be compared to any other, it must be to the cruelty to the Jews. F'rench cruelty llourishes amid the most advanced progress of the social arts. It rages amid great urbanity, much ajiparent amenity, and a thoughtlessness which seems to bid defiance to deep-seated benevolcm e French cruelties have always been committed by one part of the nation upon the other, when both the contending parties were of course equal in civilisa- tion. A humane and civilised nation, struggling with ferot ious barbarians, may be so exasperated as to forget its natural moderation, and to become as cruel as its antagonists ; but when it fights within itself it has no ferocity to excite its vengeance but its own. It is thus, pure and unalloyed by foreign inhumanity, that the cruelty of nations ought to be judged. (Chaji. W.. 190-2)." " It has been asserted that the British nation has shed more blood upon the scafibid than any in modern, or perhaps in ancient history ; but this charge is quite unfounded. . . . The horror which such executions excite is the reason why the historian dwells upon them. . . . Wiien the Duke of Alva boasted at Madrid tiiat, during his administration of the Low Countries, eighteen thousand persons had been executed on the scaftbld by liis order, one sweeping phrase includes the whole transaction, together with thirty thousand more who perished for religion by other means ; but when the reign of Mary is described by English writers, every particular which can excite compassion for the victims and indignation against the murderers is told. . . . The cruelty of the British has, with as much regularity as can accompany human concerns, diminished progressively, and its diminu- tion has kept due pace with the development of social improvement. ... At the Revocation of the F.dict of Nantes, six thousand three hundred French Protestant families were provided for in England. At the Revolution of France, 17S9, more than one hundred thousand French emigrants, most of whom had lent their aid to the independence of the United States, were relieved here more than twenty years, at the expense of near six millions sterling (19.1-7)." In the Chapter on Religion the following paragraph occurs : — " The reign of Louis XIII., accomplished the design of Francis I. ; and Richelieu, while he supported the reformists in (Sermany, completely crushed them at home. One of the most politic measures of that admirable minister of despotism was his severity towards the French Calvinists. Three times during this reign, armies were sent against the Huguenots; and in 1627, the religious wars, which had begun after the massacre of Vassy in 1562, were terminated by the famous Siege of Rochelle. It was most gratuitously then that Louis XIV. revoked the humane edict of the first of the Bourbons ; and, by threats and promises, by immunities to converts and penalties to the refractory, by armies, by dragonnades. extirpated the few remaining sectaries of a religion, which long since had ceased to be alarming to the State. The loss which France sustained by emigration alone was immense ; and while flattering poets sung that the court of Louis was the asylum of kings, his country ceased to be a place of safety for its natives (Chapter V., 1 15)." The last quotation is from A^ofe A. to Vol. I. : — " The most cruel Frenchman of this reign was perhaps the king himself [Louis XIV]. The Revocation of the Edict of Xantes was his work. . . . The sect was no longer of any weight in the kingdom. They lived retired and peacefully among themselves, and in harmony with the Catholics. In no point of view, in no province of France, were they considered as dangerous. Yet the most cruel and contradictory laws were enacted against them. The exercise of their religion— of every branch of industry — was prohibited to them. The sacred tie which unites husband and wife was declared null. The natural authority of parents was not respected ; and children were taken from their Protestant fathers to be educated by Catholics. Protestant temples were destroyed, the dead were dragged on hurdles — without hurdles — to their grave; sometimes by the populace, sometimes accompanied by a Catholic priest and ceremonies. Certificates of marriage were burnt by the common executioner, in presence of the married pair; the husband was sent to the gallies, the wife into seclusion, and their property was confiscated, or given as a bribe of conversion. In every province soldiers were quartered on the families of the 2 in the parish of Kintore. Rough. This and the former are believed to represent the name Roche. Terrot. — See p. 226 of this volume. Tough. — Said to represent La Touche. With regard to Ireland, some additional information occurs in Dr Purdon's lecture on the Huguenots (Belfast, 1869): — The Innishannon settlement was originated for the encouragement of the silk manufac- ture. Thirty families of silk-workers, along with their pastor, Mr Cortez, were settled there. All that now remains are the trunks of a few mulberry trees, that part of the place where they lived being called the Colony, also a book of the pastor's sermons, and his watch, having a dial-plate in raised characters, so as to enable him to tell by touch the hour, when preaching and praying to his flock in France, assembled " in dens and caves of the earth." Belfast was the refuge of French Protestants connected with Schomberg's army. It was known as a refuge before the Revocation era. Monsieur Le Burt had settled there in olden times — ancestor of the late highly respected Dr Byrt. The Le Burts had the armorial bearings of De Penice, a general killed by their ancestor in single combat. In Bandon there was Lieutenant-Colonel Chartres, descended from a Bourbon. His representative in Belfast has the Bourbon crest, but the name is now Charters. In Killeshandra there was Dr Lanauze, who was called " the good physician." The Dundalk settlement was not begun till 1737 by M. de Joncourt ; the settlers manufactured cambric, and a memento of their e.xistence is a locality called Cambric Hill. At Kilkenny, colonised with linen manu- facturers in the Revocation times, a very small bleach-green is shown as their monument. At Tallow, near Cork, there is still a family named Arnauld. The longevity of many of the refugees and their descendants (as my readers must have remarked) was remarkable. With regard to families originally planted in Barnstaple, Mr Burn mentions the surnames Servantes and Roche. With regard to the former, he says, two ladies of this family now (1846) reside in Exeter, the one is upwards of ninety, and the other upwards of eighty. Monnier Roche used to say, " my grandfather was drowned when he was one hundred and eleven, and if he had not been drowned, he might have been alive now." In the Scots Magazine there are two announcements — 13th Dec. 1770, died at Rumsey, in ADnrnoxAi. chapters. 24, Hampshire, aged iio, Mr Cordelon, a native of France; .iiul in llic No. for |,miiary 1772 tlif death is announced, as having occurred at Ruinsey in the previous month, of " Mr Cordelon, a French refugee, aged 107." ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. CHAPTER XXX. Refugees, being Converts from Romanism. (i.) Rev. John Francis I?ion was Iiorn at Dijon, 24th June 166S. He was curate of Ursy, in the ])rovince of Hurgumly, and thereafter ahnoner of tlic convict galley La Superhf. The torments inflicted on tiie Protestants, and the fortitude, patience, and humility of the sufferers led him to in(]uire into their faith. " It was wonderful to see (he writes) with w^hat true Christian patience and constancy they bore their torments, in the extremity of their pain never e.\])ressing any rage, but calling upon Almighty Cod, and imploring His assistance. I visited them day by day .... At last, their wounds, like so many mouths, preached to me, made me sensible of my error, and experimentally taught rr>e the excellency of the Pro- testant religion." On his conversion, in the year 1704, he retired to Ciene\a. Thence he came to London, and for a time he was rector of a school, and minister of a church in Chelsea. He published at London, in 1 708, his Rchitioii dcs toiirmcirs que [on fait soiiffrir aii.x Pivtatain qui Sunt sur les gali:rt'i de Fraihe. And in the same year and place he issued an I'^nglish translation entitled "An Account of the Torments the French Protestants endure aboard the galleys." Ultimately he settled in llolland'as an Fjiglish chaplain. (2.) Rev. Francis Dukant de Brevall was a memba.- of a monastic order, and was one of the preachers to Queen Henrietta JLiria. The exact date of his con\ersion to Pro- testantism I cannot find, but he preached in the London French Church in the Savoy in October 1669. His sermon was generally a])plauded, but on Sunday, i 7th October, the Superior of the Capuchins at Somerset House rudely assailed him, and denounced the sermon as infamous and abominable. It was therefore translated into English, and published with the title " Faith in the Just victorious over the World, a Sermon preached at the Savoy in the F'rench Church, on Sunday, October 10, 1669, by I)r Hievall, heretofore preacher to the Queen Mother; trans- lated into English by I)r I)u Moulin, Canon of Canterbury, London. Printed for Will. Nolt, and are to be sold at the Queen's-Arms in the Pell-Mell, 1670." The text was i John v. 4 ; and the heads of discourse were (i.) Who are those which are born of Clod? (2.) What victory they obtain over the world. (3.) \\'hat this laith is which makes them obtain the victory. In May 1671 he was made a prebendary of Roihester. On i ith February 1672 (n.s.) John F'-velyn notes : — "In the afternoon that famous [iroselyte. Monsieur Prevail, preached at the Abbey in English extremely well, and with much eloquence ; he had been a Capuchin, but much better learned than most of that order." He was made a Prebendary of West- minster, 21st Nov. 1675, and in the same year he was, by royal command created S. T. P. of Cambridge. He dieil 26th J;muary 1 708 (n.s.), and was buried in Westminster Abbey. By Susanna Samoline, his wife (who died 4th July 1719, aged 73), he had three sons, Theophilus, Henry and John Durant, and four daughters, Dorothy, Catherine, Frances, wife of Stephen Monginot Dampierre, and Mary Ann. His youngest son, known as Captain Bieval, was an author of poems, and of several folio volumes of travels, well printed and illustrated ; before entering the army he was M.A. and F'ellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, but was deprived of his fellowshi[) in 1708; the Duke of Marlborough employed him in negotiations, and pro- moted him in the army. Captain John Dur.int Breval died at Paris in January 1739 (n.s.). 2 H 242 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. (3.) Charles Charlot, called D'Argenteuil, was a Romanist curate in France, and on his conversion to Protestantism he took refuge in England. He was pastor in several of the French churches in London. In 1699 he preached in the church called Le Tabernacle. He was also an author. (Smiles' Huguenots). (4.) Three brothers, named Du Veil, natives of Metz, were of Jewish parentage, and were won over to the Roman Catholic Church. In this communion further study and inquiry resulted in their becoming Protestants, two becoming refugees in England, and the third in Holland.* The eldest, Daniel Du Veil, was baptised under royal sponsorship at the palace of Compi^gne, and was thereafter named Louis Compiegne Du Veil. On his professing Protestantism, and retiring to England, Bossuet wrote a letter to him which Rou, in a book entitled La Sedudion eliidte, printed with the title, " Lettre de M. Feveque de Meaux a un savant Juif retire en Angleterre, lequel apres avoir hx.k converti au Christianisme, mais au Christianisnie Romain, avoit enfin quittii cette religion pour embrasser la Protestante, ayant i\.k mieux instruit." He was made librarian to the King of England, and his iaiterpreter for the oriental languages. He published some annotated translations of Rabbinical books, including a "most elegant" Latin translation of Maimonides. The celebrated brother was Charles Marie Du Veil. Having discovered from the Old Testament that Jesus our Lord was the true Messiah, he renounced Judaism. His father, deeply humiliated and greatly enraged, rushed at him with a drawn sword, but some bystanders prevented any murderous violence. His new convictions are ascribed partly to the influence of the celebrated Bishop Bossuet, and, at any rate, it was to the Roman Catliolic Church that Du Veil united himself At his baptism he received the names Charles Marie. Lie became a canon-regular of Sainte Genevieve, and was a popular preacher. The degree of D.D. he received at Angers in the year 1674. He published a commentary on the first two Gospels, in which he took occasion to defend Romish dogmas and superstitions. Being recognised as a suitable opponent to the Huguenots in a public disputation, he set himself to prepare for the meeting by a more minute study of controversial treatises and books of reference. But before the appointed day he had refuted himself Suddenly he fled to Holland, where he abjured Popery. He took refuge in England, probably in 1677. He was ordained a minister of the Church of England, and was received into a noble family as chaplain and tutor. In 1678 he published a new edition of his Com- mentary on Matthew and Mark, retracting all Romish annotations and arguments. He also confessed his former complicity in Romanist misquotation — for he says as to the revised books, " 1W7V, whatever writers I quote I quote truly." He also reprinted his Commentary on ■ the Song of Solomon. Several commentaries followed, all in the Latin language. Readers were, however, honestly warned not to expect all the advantages which we might anticipate from his Jewish birth. He writes, " I for the most part use the ancient Latin version of the Scriptures, as being that which I am best acquainted with ; but I always diligently remark when it differs from the original texts, the Hebrew and Greek." His " Literal Expla- nations" appeared in the following order : — The Minor Prophds in 1680, Eaicsiasks in 1681, and the Acts of the Holy Apostles in 16S4. The last mentioned commentary is memorable as calling attention to a new modification of his religious views. Since the date of his preceding publication, he had abjured the theory and practice of infant baptism, and had become a Baptist minister. From that community he had accepted a small salary, which, along with a small medical practice, constituted his temporal support. His new views, which he had adopted at a pecuniary sacrifice, he introduced very largely into his " Notes on the Acts." The English translation of that exposition, being attributed to himself, is singular and interesting. I may observe that his Baptist ojiinions did not alienate his old I-'rench friends. Pastor Claude wrote to him as to his last commentary, " I have found in it, as in all your other works, the marks of copious reading, abundance of sense, right reason, and a just and exact understanding." The Roman Catholic Cahnet did * Ik- betame I'aslor of Spycli, near (iorcuni. — .See " Ron's Mtmoircs," tome I., p. 128. ADDirWNAI. CHAPIERS. zj^s not miss the opportunity of making a sarcastic reflection ; he says, " Charles Marie Du Veil was a canon-regular, &c. ; afterwards he ahjured the Catholic faith, became an anaba|)tist, and so died in the beginning of the eighteenth century, having gone through all religions without having any." We, however, believe the Baptist historian Crosby, who calls him " such a pious good man, that he brought an honour to the cause in which he was embarked." All his Kpiscoiial friends, except 'i'illotson, forsook him — so that Du Veil characterised "Henry Compton, Lord Bishop of London," as " formerly my greatest and most liberal benefactor." This is in his commentary on the Acts — where are also the following allusions to English cotem])oraries— Dr William Lloyd, Bishoi) of St Asaph's, "a man of excellent jjarts, great erudition, singular piety and benignity, to whom I do (and shall all my lifetime) acknowledge myself extremely bound." The Rev. Richard Baxter, " that indefatigable ])reacher of God's word, famous for knowledge and piety." Also, "that man of a rnost solid judgment, and in defending the princii)les of the orthodox foith against Popery and irreligion, short of none, the most religious and most learned Gilbert Burnet, D.D., to whose large charity to the poor and strangers I profess myself greatly indebted." And, " that equally most religious and eminently lettered divine, lioctor Simon Patrick, Dean of Peterborough, whose signal and sincere charity I have often- experienced." Sir Norton Knatchbull, Knight and Baronet, "most accomi)lished with all manner of learning" and Katherine, Viscountess Pol- lington, " that pattern of an u])right and godly conscience." As an English preacher, Du Veil was unsuccessful, and his congregation in Gracechurch Street was dissolved at his death in 1700. (5.) John Gagnmer was bom at Paris about 1670. He was educated at the College of Navarre, being a Romanist by birth ; and, in due time, he took orders in the Romish Church, and was a canon-regular of St Geneviine. Becoming convinced of his errors, he left France for England, and embraced Protestantism. He was certified to be a fine oriental scholar. Lloyd, Bishop of Worcester, made him one of his chaplains, and in 1715 he was appointed Professor of Oriental Languages in the University of Oxford. His writings were on rabbinical lore, Mahometanism, and other subjects connected with his chair, which he filled with honour. He died 2d March 1740, and left a son, John, of Wadham College, Oxford, B..\. in 1740, and RLA. in 1743, Rector of Stranton, in the diocese of Durham. (6.) HvppoLYTE DU Chastelet, Sieur de Luzancy, was by birth a Roman Catholic, M.A. of the Lhiiversity of Paris, one of the monks of La Trappe, and an eloquent preacher, sometimes itinerating, but regularly officiating at Montdidier in Picardy. In 1675 he fled to England, and in the pulpit of the London French Church in the Savoy he abjured the Romish creed on July nth. A Jesuit named St Germaine having threatened to assassinate him, the King issued a proclamation for the protection of De Luzancy. The Romanists furiously and incessantly attacked his reputation, but he was su])ported by the Bishop of London (Compton). However, one of the Savoy pastors, Rev. Richard Du Maresq, believing the accusations, published a sermon, with a preface, accusing De Luzancy of baseness, lying, and dissimulation. The bishop seized the pamjjhlet, and suspended the author from his pastoral functions. The Marquis de Ruvigny and Dr Durel undertook to act as mediators, and Mr Du Maresq having acknowledged the offence of jjrinting his preface without the bishop's imprimatur, was released from suspension. The bishop sent De Luzancy to Christ Church, O.xford, and the Chancellor (the Duke of Ormond) recommended that he should be created M.A., which was done on 26th January i6j6 (N.S.). William Rogers of Lincoln's Inn, a Romish proselyte, having circulated a pamphlet defaming De Luzancy, was in the August following arraigned before His Majesty in Council and severely reprimanded. In the end of 1679 De Luzancy left Oxford, and was presented by Bishop Compton to the vicarage of Dover-Court, in Essex ; the town and chapel of Harwich were in the parish, and hereafter he is often styled minister of Harwich. Anthony A\'ood sneeringly endorses the accusations against him, but the steady support which he received from his bishop seems to be his complete vindication. In Harwich he married, and lived unmolested. He interested himself in politics. From him Samuel Pepys, an un- , 44 FRE.\'CH ]'R O TES TANT EXILES. successful candidate for the representation of Harwich in the convention Parliament summoned by the Prince of Orange, received the following letter of condolence : — "7/// yaiinary 1689. — Sir, — I have been desired by your friends to send you the enclosed paper, by which you may easily be made sensible how we are overrun with pride, heat, and faction, and unjust to ourselves to that prodigious degree as to deprive ourselves of the greatest honour and advantage which we could ever attain to, in the choice of so great and so good a man as you are. Had reason had the least place amongst us, or any love for ourselves, we had certainly carried it for you. Yet if we are not by this late defection altogether become unworthy of you, I dare almost be confident that an earlier application of the appearing of yourself or Sir Anthony Deane will put the thing out of doubt against the next parliament. A conventicle set up here, since this unhappy Liberty of Conscience, has been the cause of all this. In the meantime my poor endeavours shall not be wanting ; and though my sted- fastness to your interests these ten years has almost ruined me, yet I shall continue as long as I live your most humble and most obedient servant, De Luzancv." During his residence in Oxford he published two works, " Reflections on the Council of Trent," and a " Treatise on Irreligion." He was made a chaplain to the Duke of Schomberg (whose second title was Marquis of Harwich), and also to the second Duke. On the death of the first Duke, he published two obituary brochures — one styled a Panegyric, and the other an Abridgement of his Life {Abrcge de la vie, &c.). He has chronicled very few fitcts regard- ing the illustrious marshal, but he displays his own acknowledged eloquence to considerable advantage. He obtained the degree of B.D., and published in 1696 a volume of " Remarks on several late writings published in English by the Socinians, wherein is shown the insuf- ficiency and weakness of their answers to the texts brought against them by the orthodox, in Four Letters, written at the request of a Socinian gentleman." There is also " A Sermon, preached at the Assizes for the County of Essex, held at Chelmsford, March the 8th, 1710, before the Honourable Mr Justice Powell. By H. De Luzancy, B.D., Vicar of Southweald, in the said County. London, 1711." [17 10 must be according to the old style.] (7.) Michael Malard was a French proselyte from the Romish Church who came to London for liberty of conscience. He was appointed French tutor to the three royal princesses, Anne, Amelia Sophia lileonora, and Elizabeth Carolina. Himself and the other proselytes imported much disputation and irritation among the refugees. Their deliverance from spiritual despotism seems to have surprised them into a boisterous excitability and a petulant impatience as to doctrinal standards. Malard's language was peculiarly unbrotherly and abusive, especially as to the royal bounty, in which he thought that the Huguenots proper shared too largely, and as to which he clamoured that a larger share must be allotted to the proselytes.* The share of the latter was afterwards defined by a royal grant. He did not, however, lapse into any unsoundness in the faith, as we may judge from his book, " The French and Protestant Com- panion," published in 17 19, and dedicated to the King, in which Protestantism is expounded in the English column of each page, and French is taught by a translation of the exposition in the second column. He, however, twice introduces the miserable royal bounty annuities, and recommends, in French and English, that the proselytes' proportion should be distributed by a committee, consisting of the Marquis de Montandre, the Marquis du Quesne, Mr Rival, a French minister, Mr Justice Bealing, Sir John Philipps, Dr Wilcocks, and an ecclesiastic proselyte to be chosen every third year by casting lots (p. 236). (8.) Francis de la Pillonniere was in his youth a Jesuit, but dismissed for his inquisi- tive studiousness and want of blind submission. His father, who lived at Morlaix, in Brittany, and who was opposed to the Jesuit order, welcomed him home, but designed him for priest's orders in the Romish Church. Young Francis, however, pursued his inquiries, and avowed a theoretical Protestantism. His father sent him to a friend's house, intending that he should * The Cami^ard Prophets, their delusions and their punishment, occasioned the first divi.sion of the London refugees into two parties, with reference both to doctrine and to the distribution of the Royal Uounty aiMiuities. ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. 245 ultimately go to Paris, and be placed under orthodox Romish tutelage. Francis, instead of visiting his father's friend, rcmoveil secretly to Holland, where he resided for a time as a Pro- testant. Thereafter he went to Kn^'land, and pursued a quiet course, teaching the French language in academies and private houses, but [)re[)aring for the ministry of the Church of England. He sympathised with the more or less decitled op])onents of clerical subscription to creeds and standards ; and in this way he got into a singular squabble. The Pasteurs Graverol and Gedeon Uelamotte had written well and strongly on the use and necessity of Confessions of Faith ; on the other hand, Pasteur Durette, of Crispin Street French Church (sometime a military chai)lain), wrote on the abuse of Confessions of Faith, and his book was printed in the French language. La Pillonnil-re translated it into English, and printed it in 1 7 18. In the meantime the Bishop of London had been frequently conversing with Mr Durette; the result was that the latter was disposed to withdraw his book, and wrote to La Pillonniere that his mind was not made uj) on the controversy. La Pillonniere, who had Durette's consent to translate the book, was irritated, and published the translation, with a long gossipping appendix as to Durette and the London pasteurs generally. La Pillonniere obtained an accidental celebrity through being eni[)loyed to teach I-rench to the family of Hoadley, Bisho]) of Bangor. The Bishop's oi)[)onents assumed (which was a mistake) that he admitted the French master to personal friendship ; and they endeavoured to account for his Lordship's writings (which seemed to bring the Church of England into danger) by pro- claiming that he had a Jesuit in his house. This, though a mere controversial cry, was seriously urged ; and it was asserted and asseverated that La Pilloniere was a Jesuit emissary and no Protestant. Into his history it is needless to go further. It is sufficient to say that all unpre- judiced men were satisfied with the sincerity of Francis de la Pillonniere's profession of Pro- testant faith, and with the excellence of his moral character. [One of his certificates was from Vincent Perronet of Queen's College, Oxford, 29th Oct. 1717.] (9.) Michael le Vas.sor was born at Orleans about 164S, and died in Northamptonshire in I 71S. He had been a Roman Catholic, and a member of the congregation of the Oratory. In 1695 h'^ embraced Protestantism, and escaped, via Holland, to England. He was patron- ised by the Earl of Portland and by Bishop Burnet ; the bishop obtained a pension for him from \Villiam III. During his sojourn in the Oratory he had published three volumes of Paraphrases on books of the New Testament (Matthew, John, Romans, Galatians, and James). During his refugee life he published a temperate treatise on the study of religious controversies, and a translation of De Vargas's Letters and Memoirs on the Council of Trent; also a vigorous and indignant History of the Reign of Louis XIII., in ten volumes, dedicated to the second Earl of Portland (aftenvards Duke). This great work exposed him to much fierce criticism, which, however, is neutralised by the verdict of Sismondi : Histoire ecrite avec passion, mats generalcmeiit avec la passion de la justice et de la vcrite. He had a benefice in Northampton- shire, according to the Noirvelles Litteraircs de la Ilaye, tome 8. (10.) A correspondent sends me several names of Romanists who formally abjured Romanism, and whose abjuration was registered by La Coiir Eccksiastique of the Island of Guernsey. nth Feb. 1717-18. Louis Bertau of Riou, in Saintonge, abjured in the town church. 7th Dec. 1 7 18. Nicolas Mauger, native of the environs of Cherbourg, in Normandy, having abjured within the Anglican Church of St Pierre du Bois, was received by the Vicar, Rev. Hugues Sacquin. i6th Dec. 1 7 19. Pierre Burreau of Royan, in Fiance, abjured in the church of St Pierre- Port. 1 7th August 1717. Nicolas Le Cordier of the parish of Louvier in the diocese of Bayeux, Normandy. 29th April 1720. Marie du Pain, of Vitry. 14th May 1720. Jacque le Grand, of Villedieu. 13th .\ugust J 720. Jullien Groslet, widow of Mr le Petit of St Malo. 246 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. 2ist March 1722. Rev. Joseph Querray, formerly a curate in France, and canon regular and prior, declared that he had abjured in London, and having produced a certificate to that effect, and also his deacon's and priest's orders, he received a licence from the Very Eev. Jean Bonamy, Dean of Guernsey, having at the same time taken the oaths and signed the three articles of the thirty-sixth canon. [He was made vicar of the parish of St Pierre du Bois.] Same day. Rev. Pierre Garcelon, formerly priest in the diocese of Clermont. 6th May 1722. Thomas Dacher, native of St Martin in Normandy, abjured in the church of St Martin, Guernsey. ist March 1724-5. Claude Coquerel, from France. 1 6th April 1725. Jacques Drouet, from Normandy. i8th December 1725. Jean Le Sevestre, native of Paris. 22d February 1725-6. Le Sieur Jean La Serre, native of Billmagne in Languedoc. [On the next day he married a Guernsey lady, and is still represented in the island.] i8th November r726. Bernardin Rossignol, native of Quimper in Lower Brittany, for- merly a priest of the Church of Rome, having abjured within the church of St Pierre Port, was received into the communion of the Church of England on the 15th inst. 29th October 1727. Jean Ferdant, from Normandy. Chapter XXXL descendants in britain of huguenots who were refugees in other countries. (i.) Monsieur de Thellusson was a Huguenot of noble birth who took refuge in Geneva. His son, Isaac de Thellusson, was born 14th, and baptized 15th October 1690, at St Gervais in Geneva, and rose to be Ambassador from that Republic to the Court of Louis XV. He died in 1770 ; his wife was Sarah, daughter of Mr Abraham le BouUenger, to whom he was married at Leyden, nth October 1722. Peter Thellusson, son of Isaac, came to London in the middle of last century, and prospered; he purchased the manor of Broadsworth in Yorkshire. One of his sons, George Woodford Thellusson, married Mary Ann, third daughter of Philip Fonnereau, Esq. ; and his youngest daughter, Augusta Charlotte, was married to Thomas Crespigny, Esq. (who died in 1799); his third son was Charles, M.P. for Evesham. Mr Thellusson died on 21st July 1797; his eldest son, Peter Isaac, was made Baron Rendlesham, in the peerage of Ireland, in 1806, but survived only till 1808 ; the second, third, and fourth barons were his sons ; the present, and fifth baron, was the only son of the fourth. The celebrated will of Peter Thellusson, Esq., dated 1796, is matter of history. He left £4500 a year of landed property, and £600,000 of personal property, to trustees for accumulation during the lives of his three sons, and of their sons alive in 1796; the vast fortune expected to have accumulated at the death of the last survivor was left to the testa- tor's eldest male descendant alive at that date. The will was disputed, but was confirmed by the House of Lords on 25th August 1805. Charles Thellusson (por7i 1797), son of Charles, M.P. (who died in 1815), was the last survivor of nine lives ; he died 5th February 1856. Liti- gation was necessary to decide who was the heir intended by Peter Thellusson, and the deci- sion was in favour of Lord. Rendlesham on 9th June 1859. The fortune, however, was com- paratively moderate, vast sums having been swallowed up by the sixty-two years of litigation. One good result of the monstrous will was the Act of Parliament (39-40 Geo. III. c. 98), " which restrains testators from directing the accumulation of property for a longer period than twenty-one years^after death." The unsuccessful litigant was Arthur Thellusson, Esq. {horn 1801, died 1858), sixth son of the first Lord Rendlesham, who reasonably thought that, having been born after his grand- father's death, and being thirty-eight years the senior of his noble kinsman, he was the eldest male descendant. He died before the decision, and left his claims to his only son, the jire- sent Colonel Arthur John Betliell Thellusson, of Thellusson Lodge, Aldeburgh, Suffolk. The Rendlesham estate is near Woodbridge in Suffolk. (Imperial Dictionary of I'niversal Bio- graphy, and other authorities.) ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. 247 (2.) The name of Laboucherf., being of French Protestant descent, and connected with the directorate of the Frcncli Hospital, may be mentioned here, thoiigli, acconhng to the fol- lowing abridgement of Haag's account of it, none of its members were refugees. On i2lh January 1621, Jean (luyon Harrier, Sieur ile Labouchere, married Catherine de la Broue ; he was succeeded by his son Francois, who married Marie de Xaymet on 12th March 1688 (daughter of Naymet and SaintI.eger). The son of the latter was Pierre de I-abouchere, merchant of Orthez ; he married, loth April 170S, Sara, daughter of Jacijues de I'eyrollet de la Bastide ; one of Pierre's ilaughters was kidna])ped in infancy, received the sjiiritual name of Sister Scholastica, and became the laily sujierior of a convent ; one of his sons, Matthieu de La Pouchtire (Iwrn ist September 1721), was sent in his boyhood to England to be edu- cated by Pastor Majendie, who ajjpears to have been a relative. Mattliieu settled at the Hague, where he died in 1796 ; he was twice married, both wives having been of French refugee families, the first a De Courcelles, the second Marie Madeleine Moliere. One of the sons of the second marriage was Pierre Cesar Labouchere {born 1772); in 1790 he was at Nantes, the accredited correspondent of the house of Hope at Amsterdam ; he became a partner of the house in 1794 along with Alexander Paring, whose sister, Dorotiiy, he married in 1796. In 1800 he represented his house in England ; in which country he settled in 1821, on his retirement from business. He died in 1839. His elder son, Right Honourable Henry Labouchere (born 179S), for many years a Cabinet Minister, was raised to the peerage on i8th August 1859, as Lord Taunton, and died in 1869, leaving three daughters. The younger son, John Labouchere, Esq. of Broome Hall, Surrey {born 1799, died 1863), is represented by two sons and four daughters. (3.) The family of Prevost was represented among Huguenot refugees in Geneva at the period of the Revocation Edict. There Augustine Prevost was born about 1695, married Louise, daughter of Cideon Martine, first Syndic of Geneva, and dying in January 1 740, was buried at Besinge. His son, Augustine, removed to England, and entering our army rose to the rank of Major-General. Major-CIeneral Prevost = Anne, daughter of Chevalier George Grand, (died 1 7S6) I of Amsterdam. Sir George Prevost, Bart. Admiral James Prevost. Major-General William Augustus Prevost, C. H. i I Venerable Uear-Admiral Sir George Prevost, Barl., James Prevost, Arch-Deacon of Gloucester, and other issue, born 1804. As to the first baronet I insert the following paragraphs : — IVhilehall, Sept. 3, 1816. — His Royal Highness the Prince Regent, taking into his royal consideration the distinguished conduct and ser\ices of the late Lieutenant-General Sir George Prevost, Bart., during a long period of constant active employment in situations of great trust, both military and civil, in the course of which his gallantry, zeal, and able conduct were parti- cidarly disj)layed at the conquest of the island of St Lucie, in 1803, and of the island of Mar- tinique in 1S09; as also in successfully opposing, with a small garrison, the attack made in 1805, by a numerous French force, upon the island of Dominica, then under his government ; and while Governor-General and Commander-in-Chief of the British Provinces in North America in the defence of Canada against the rejjeated invasions perseveringly attempted by the American forces during the late war ; and His Royal Highness being desirous of evincing in an especird manner the sense which His Royal Highness entertains of these services, by conferring upon his family a lasting memorial of His Majesty's royal favour, hath been pleased, in the name and on the behalf of His Majesty, to ordain that the supporters following may be borne and used by Dame Catharine Anne Prevost, widow of the said late Lieutenant-General Sir George Prevost, during her widowhood, viz., "On either side a grenadier of the 76th (or 248 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. Bedfordshire) regiment of foot, each supporting a banner, that on the dexter side inscribed West Indies, and that on the sinister, Canada," and that the said supporters, together with the motto 'Servatum Cineri,' may also be borne by Sir George Prevost, Bart., son and heir of the said late Lieutenant-General, and by his successors in the said dignity of a Baronet, provided the same be first duly exemplified according to the laws of arms, and recorded in the Herald's Office. And his Royal Highness hath been also pleased to command that the said concession and especial mark of the royal favour be registered in his Majesty's College of Arms." " Sir George Prevost was the eldest son of Major-General Augustine Prevost, who served under General Wolfe, and was severely wounded on the plains of Abraham, and who afterwards so eminently distinguished himself in the first American war, by his defence of Savannah. The surviving brothers of Sir George are both in his Majesty's service, the eldest a post- captain in the Royal Navy, and the other a colonel in the army. Sir George Prevost married in the year 1789, Catharine, daughter of Major-General Phipps, who survives him, together with a son, a minor, who succeeds to the title, and two daughters." — Gaitlcmaiis Magazine, Feb. 1816. (4.) The family oi Dii Boulay were refugees who adopted Holland as their home. Their arms, as they appear on a three-sided silver seal, one of the few relics preserved in their flight, are " argent, a fess wavy gules, ' surmounted by a helmet, full faced, with open vizor of five bars, and a plume of three feathers. The tradition is so established in the family of its descent from a French nobleman with a marquis' title now extinct, that it is probably founded on fact. Benjamin Franijois Houssemayne du Boulay, after studying theology in Holland, was elected in 1 75 1 to the fifth place among the ministers of the French Church in Threadneedle Street. M. Du Boulay insisted on receiving ordination at the hands of Thomas Sherlock, Bishop of London. He married in 1756 Louise, daughter of Jean Lagier Lamotte, and his wife, Louise Dalbiac. A niece of Mrs Du Boulay, grand-daughter of Jean Lagier Lamotte, married, in 1795, Charles Abbott, first Lord Tenterden. The pasteur died, and was buried at South- ampton in 1765. A sermon preached by M. Durand, on the occasion of installing his suc- cessor, says of him — "II avait cette eloquence vive qui va au coeur, parcequ'elle en vient," and again, " la seule fa^on de nous le faire oublier sera de nous en faire souvenir sans cesse." He left one son and four daughters, of whom three died unmarried, the fourth was married to James Cazenove, Esq., the English representative of a Huguenot branch of the noble family of De Cazenove de Pradines, still existing at Marmaude, in Guienne, and was mother of a large family, one of whom, Mr Philip Cazenove, is widely known for the large-hearted and substantial liberality with which he supports every good and charitable undertaking. The only son, Fran9ois Jacques Houssemayne Du Boulay, married Elizabeth, daughter of John Paris, Esq. ; he lived at Walthamstow, and became wealthy by business during the war with France. His name stood for some years first on the list at the Bank of England as holder of the largest amount at that time of government stock. He died in 1828, leaving eight children, all of whom married and have had families. The three daughters were married to Isaac Solly, Esq., and the Rev. Messieurs John and William Blennerhassett. The eldest son, the Rev. James Thomas Houssemayne Du Boulay, rector of Heddington, Wilts, is now represented by his son, Francis Houssemayne Du Boulay, also rector (and patron) of the same living ; and the youngest son, John, who married Mary Farr, daughter of the Rev. Harry Farr Yeatman of Stock House, Dorsetshire, became in 185 i the owner of Donhead Hall, Wiltshire, once the residence of Sir Godfrey Kneller. This family is at present largely represented in the Church, and is established in several of the southern counties. It exemplifies the manner in which the French colony clung together, though perhaps it is only a coincidence, that by the marriage of the widow of the Rev J. T. H. Du Boulay of Heddington, with the Rev. G. J. Majendie, son of the Bishop of Bangor, the Rev. Henry William Majendie, at present the representative of the Majendies, is half brother to the present head of the Du Boulays. ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. 249 (5.) From the north of France noMe refugees bearing the surname of Foiirdrinier first settled in Holland. A descendant settled in London during last century, and obtained a good position as a papermaker and wholesale stationer. His son, Henry, horn in Lombard Street, on nth F\'bruary 1766, was the inventor of the paper-making machine in conjunction with his brother. Although patentees, they were the victims of piratical ap|)ropriation jjerpe- trated both in Russia and in Kngland. From the former nation no compensation could be obtained, but the English Parliament in May 1840 voted ,£7000 as compensation to Messrs Fourdrinier. Their e.xpcnditure on the invention itself, and in the defence of their rights, had mined their business as stationers, and had entailed upon them loss, instead of i)rofit, as inventors. They had invented a paper-cutting machine also. The compensation was avowedly inadequate, and in November 1853 the pajjcr trade took steps for providing for Henry Four- drinier, the surviving patentee, and his two daughters, by annuities. Henry Fourdrinier died on 3d Sei)teml)er 1S54, in his Sglh year. On the completion of his eighty sixth year, Irs daughter Harriet had indited this tribute to his worth : — His form is spare, his hair is white, he has passed that age of fourscore years which the I'salmist so touchingly described ; but at present, we rejoice to say, his strength is not labour and sorrow. His walk is active, his eye is bright, his health is good, his spirits buoyant, and his piety firm. He is the delight of his children and his children's children, the latter of whom, to the number of some twenty-four, make him their friend or their companion. He will talk with the elders or romp with the young ones — drive his daughters out in the carriage or take long walks with his sons — run races with the boys, or dance with the girls — shows hospitality to his friends, does his duty as a master, is a loyal and devoted subject, and makes a capital churchwarden. Many worldly troubles still oppress him, but he bears the yoke as knowing by whom it is laid on. (6.) The Pasteur Miitthii-u Afathy, of Beaufort in Provence, became a refugee in Holland, along with his son, Paul {born 1681). Paul Mathy, who became teacher of Saurin's school at the Hague, turned his attention to the study of medicine and removed to England. Paul's son, Matthieu Mathy (born 171S), was a Ph.D. of Leyden and ISLD. He came to England in 1740, and his Anglicised name was Matthevi' Maty. Dr Maty, being a learned and energetic man, was hospitably received ; he was honoured by the friendship of Abraham De Moivre, whose Memoirc he compiled and published — a publication, of which all subsequent biographies of the famous mathematician are abridgements. He had previously published an Ode stir la Rebellion en Ecosse (1746), and \\\^ Journal Britanniqiic {\-]'^o to 1755). He was appointed Sub-Librarian of the British Museum in 1753, became F.R.S. in 1758, Secretary to the Royal Society in 1765, and Principal Librarian of the British Museum in 1772 ; and dying in 1776 he was succeeded in his honours and employments by his son Rev. Paul Henrj' Maty. That reverend savant had lately (in 1775) been ajipointed chaplain to the British Embassy at Versailles; he was born in London in 1745, and died i6th January 17S7. (7.) The Aubertin family descend from refugees from Metz, who went to Neufchatel. Paul Aubertin (born 1650) = Judith Figuier (living in 1718). a son, I Peter .\ubertin, of London, mercli.int, born at Neufchatel 1725, died at Banstead, = Ann [born 1730, died 1825). Surrey, in 1S08. Rev. Peter .Vubertin, vicar of Chipstead (born 17SO1 difd iSCi). — Camden Soeiely l'A:ime 2 I 250 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. (8.) To this chapter there might be added Rev. Jean Jacques Claude (grandson of the great pasteur of Charenton), and Rev. Cccsar De Missy. (9.) A correspondent sends me the following names of French Protestants, refugees in Guernsey, the preservation of whose names has resulted from their submission to ecclesiastical discipline for the offence of going to Mass. The list is in the form of extracts from the Acts of La Cour Ecdcsiasfique de I'lle de Guer/iesey. The first date is x. Avril 1686 : — Sur I'instante requeste h. nous presente'e par Dame Marie Anne du Vivier de Bayeux en Normandie, par Adrien Viel de la ville de Caen et par Jean Pichon d'Alengon en Normandie, pour estre receus a la paix de I'Eglise apres avoir malheureusem' renonce h. la Reformation de la purete de I'Evangile, pour eviter la persecuon que Ton feit en France aux fideles Protestans: Nous etans assemblez extraordinairement pour cet effet, II a ete trouve Apropos, pour satisfaire k leur desir, & pour contribuer cl leur consolation, qu'ils se presenteront Dimanche prochain onzifeme jour de ce present mois, dans le temple de la ville : ou, apres avoir temoigne leur deplaisir, & le regret qu'ils ont en leurs ames du peche' qu'ils ont comis & donne' des marques de leur repentance, ils seront receus h. la paix de I'Eglise ; & pour cet eftet ils repetront apr^s le Pasteur mot a mot ce qui s'ensuit, eux etans a genoux : Nous Marie Anne du Vivier, Adrien Viel & Jean Pichon : reconoissons icy en la presence de Dieu & de cette sainte Assemble'e : que nous avons peche tres-grievem' & d'une fagon extraordinaire : d'avoir ete k la Messe ; et par ce moyen en renongant k la Reformation : et h. la purete de I'Evangile : Ce dont nous sommes tres-sensiblement touchez : & marris d'avoir comis un tell peche : au grand deshoneur du Dieu Tout-puissant : & au danger & perill de nos ames : & au mauvais exemple que nous avons donne aux Fidfeles : C'est pourquoy nous pro- testons icy devant Dieu : & devant cette Assemble'e : que nous sommes marris de tout notre cceur : & affligez en nos ames : d'avoir comis cet horrible peche' : Nous supplions trl-s-humble- ment le Dieu de toutes misericordes : de nous pardoner ce grand & cet enorme peche ; & tons les autres que nous avons comis : promettans solennellem' de ne I'offenser jamais de telle sorte : Et nous vous prions tres-instamment : vous tous qui etes icy presens : de nous assister continu- ellem' de vos prieres : & de vous joindre plus particulierement avec nous: dans 1 humble & cordiale Prlfere que nous adressons au Dieu Tout-puissant : en disant, Notre Pere cjui es aux Cieux, &c. Les susdittes Personnes firent leur reconnoissance publique dans I'Eglise de la Ville le Dimanche xj Avril immediatem' avant le sermon de la relevee, conformement a ce que dessus. 20 Aout 1 686. Demoiselles Jeanne de Gennes, Charlotte de Moucheron, Elisabeth du Bordieu, Susanne le Moyne et Elisabeth du Mont. Item, Benjamin & Pierre Gaillardin [un de nos frbres]. 29 Sepf= 1686— Demoiselles Charlotte & Judith Moisan, de Bretagne. 30 Sepf= 1 686. Moyse Bossis, de Royan. 28 Ocf^^ 1686. Messire Jacques Mauclerc, chevalier, Seigneur de St Philibert-Muzanch^re ; Messire Jean-Louis Mauclerc, Chev'' S"' de la Clartiere ; Messire Benjamin Mauclerc, Chev. S"" de la Forestrie; D"=^ Marie et Susanne Mauclerc et D"= Frangoise-Marie Pyniot, de la province de Poitou, diocfese de Lusson ; et Messire Andre' le Geay, CheV S'' de la Greli^re & j)me Frangoise de la Chenaye, sa femme et D"^ Marianne le Geay, leur fiUe, de I'e'vech^ de Nantes 25 Nov''^. Sieur Andre Goyon de S' Just en Xaintonge en France ; Marie Horry, sa femme ; Louyse & Jeanne Horry, ses belles-sceurs ; Jean I'Amoureux, pere et fils ; Marie Langlade and Ester Massd, leurs femmes, aussi de S' Just ; et Daniel le Marchez et Isaac Fournier de Mornac en Xaintonge. 12 Avril 1687. Maitre Jacques Ruffiat de Royan. 4 Fev^ 1687-8. Sieurs Gabriel Adrien, Pierre Guivd, Raymond Poittevin, Isaac Adrien, Samuel Adrien, Estienne Gendron, Jean Aubel, Pierre Aubin, Daniel Caillau, Jean Baudry, Jean Hercontaud, Jacques Adrien, Jean Hartus et Elisabeth Roy, Marie, Marguerite et Eliza- beth Adrien et Jeanne Hercontaud de Saint Sarcinien de la Province de Xaintonge. ADDITIOXAI. CllAl'TERS. J51 19 FeV. 1687-8. Isaac Eliard du Pays d'Augc en Normandie, 4 Mars 1687-8. Mons' Pierre Courtaud ; D"" Anne du Chemin, Anne Urudeau el Pliilis Germen de Quintin on Bretagne. 2 Janv. 1688-9. Messire Isaac Goayquet, Seigneur de S" Eloy de I'Evfich^ de St Brieux en Bretagne. 27 Juin 1699. Caterine de Jamac, native de Bordeaux. 7 Juillet 1699. Pierre Seigle et Anne ie Cornu, sa femme, et Anne I'Orfelin, tous trois de la ville de Caen ; conime aussi Marie Charpentier, native d'Alen^on ; Renee Menel, veuve de Marc Colet, Louyse de Grenier, fille, native de Domfront, Marie Colet, fiUe; Jacob ie Conite ; Paul Desnoes Granger, tils d'Israel Granger, Sieur Dcsnocs, natif d'AIen(^on, Andrt^ Touchar d'Alen(;on. 22 Juin 1689. D"<= Jeanne joussclin, de la Rochcllc ; David Pinccau de Mouchant et Ren<^ Hersand. 8 Fev" 1669. D""^ Caterine Rochclle, de la Paroisse de Ploerney, Evechd de S' Brieuc. 18 Avril 1700. Fran(jOis Bertonneau, du Bourg de Boulogne en Poitou; Paul Pinceau de Rochetrejou.\ en Bourbon ; Jeanne Seigle de la ville dc Caen. 13 Aoust 1718. Nicolas Priou, de la paroisse de S' Louvier proche deCaen en Normandie, issu d'un pl-re Protestant nomme Hcrbelin Priou, a fait sa reconnaissance publique, &c., &c. 30 Ocf= 1718. Jean Ie Marchaiid, natif de la paroisse de Rondfougere proche de Falaize en Normandie, protestant d'origine, nouvellement orty de France, ayant este quelquefois k la Messe, a fait reconnoissance, iv:c. 28 DeC^ 1 7 19. Pierre Burrcau de Ro)'an en France, cy-devant de I'Eglise de Rome, a renoncti au.x Erreurs, &c., &c., dans I'Eglize de la paroisse de St Pierre- Pont Ie 16 du dit niois et Lydie Emerelle sa femme, native de Mechee, protestante de naissance, a eu meme temps fait sa reconnoissance, &c., &c., et ensuitte ils ont este receus k la Pai.\ de I'Eglize, et ont receu !e Sacrem' de la S"= Cene dans Ie ditte Eglize de St Pierre Port Ie 27 du dit mois et an. 28 Dec' 17 '9- D"" Jeanne de Barisont, de Bourg de Marene en France, veuve du S' Pierre Chapelier, ncfe Protestante et de Parens Protestans, a fait sa reconnoissance, &c. 21 Avril 1720. Jacques Gain, Philippe Siche et Leon Sichtf tous trois de Jonsac en Sain- tonge, ne'z de Peres en Fils de Parents Protestants (comme ils ont dit) ont este receus come tels dans I'Eglize de la Paroisse de S' Pierre Port en cette Isle, Ie xx de ce present mois et an, sans faire reconnoissance, parcequ'ils ont protest^ n'avoir jamais fait ny proniis de faire aucun acte de la religion Romaine. Les trois actes suivans out estd obmis k Icur datte. 29 Dec"= 1 7 18. Monsr Salomon Lauga,* de Clerac Agenois, Protestant de naissance et de Parens Protestans, a fait sa reconnoissance, &c., &c., et a receu Ie Sacrem', &c. 11 Auoust 1 7 19. Mr Andre Condomine et Jeanne Adgierre, sa femme, tous deux de Nismes, ne'z Protestants et de Parents Protestants, et Pierre Condomine et Jeanne Condomine leurs fils et fille, ont les quatre foit leur reconnoissance, &c. 12 Oct"^' 1719- D"^ Jeanne Chaudrec, de Clerac Agenois, feme de Mr Salomon Lauga, n^e Protestante, &c., &c. 27 Avril 1720. Rene'e du Gat, nee Protestante, native de la paroisse d'Espargne en Sain- tonge, a fait reconnoissance, &c. 23 May 1720. Mr Jacques Anges Arnaud, de Blois, et D'="' Marie Anne des Marets, de Paris, sa femme, tous deux nez Protestans et de Parents Protestants, k ce qu'ils ont dit, ont fait leur recognoissance dans I'Eglize de S' Pierre Port en cette Isle Ie jour sus dit pour avoir este k la Messe, et particulierenii Ie jour de leur mariage, et ayant promis solemnellem' de perseverer constamment dans la profession de nostre sainte religion jusques k la mort, ils ont este' receus k la Paix de I'Eglize. 10 Oct'' 1720. -NP Pierre Gaultier et D™'= Ann Ribault, sa femme estans de la Province du * A few of liis descendants arc still in cxislcnce. 25a FRENCH PROTESTAyr EXILES. Berry, et de la Ville de S' Savan, k Louden en Poitou, tons deux nez Protestans et de parens protestans, ont fait leur recognoissance, &c. _ 22 NoV^ 1720. Dame Marie de Blanchet, native de Croix, veuve de Noble Homme, Paul Martin, a fait sa recognoissance, &c. 22 DeC"^ 1720. Jacques Brouard et Jacques Tendrouneau, tous deux de Poitou, de la ville de Poitou, de la ville de Pouzeau, nez Protestans, &c. (10.) The family of Diirand, in the island of Guernsey bear the arms of Brueyx in addition to Durand, on account of their descent from a gallant and reverend refugee who married a Brueyx heiress. Francois Guillaume Durand, son of Jean Durand, a Protestant gentleman of Montpellier, was born nth Sept. 1649. Having studied at Geneva, he became pasteur of Genouillac about 1673. In 1689 he married the heiress of Baron Brueyx de Fontcouverte, a nobleman of the diocese of Usez. At the date of the revocation he became a refugee at Schaffhausen, his family remaining in France. His zeal for religious liberty led him to join the army of the allies in Piedmont, and in 1691 he was appointed chaplain of Aubussargues' regiment, under the name of Monsieur Durand de Fontcouverte. He had previously been successful in recruiting the regiments of Loches and Baltasar, and had even accepted a com- mission as captain in Balthasar's Dragoons, but he returned to his spiritual office by the advice of the pasteurs of Geneva. After the peace of Ryswick he settled at Nimeguen. His son Francois appears at Nimeguen in 1722. Francois Durand was educated a Romanist ; in 1700 he began to practice as an advocate at Montpellier, and in 1701 he married Marguerite d'Audifut. In July 1705 he obtained a passport without difficulty ; but in Holland he adopted the religion of his ancestors. He' was living in 1750, aged probably about 66. He had a son, Francois Guillaume Esaie Durand, who was admitted as a Proposant in May 1738 by the Synod of Breda, but settled in England in 1743 as minister of the Dutch Church at Nor- wich. He married Marthe Marie Goutelles. Leaving Norwich he became pasteur of the French Church in Canterbury, besides holding the living of the united parishes of St Sampson and the Vale in Guernsey; he died in 17S9. His son was Rev. Daniel Francis Durand, rector of St Peter Port and Dean of Guernsey, born 1745, died 1832. — (See the Guernsey Magazine for 1873). As to the refugee, see my Volume Frst, p. 156. CHAPTER XXXII. Additional Facts and Notes. (2.) 77/1? De Scliirac Manuscript. — This MS. is preserved by the Rigaud family. The ink has faded very much, and in a few places the words are nearly obliterated. The late Professor Rigaud made a fair copy of it. He also composed the following abstract of its contents : — " In consequence of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and the orders of the French court for all the Protestant clergy to leave the kingdom in a fortnight, M. de Schirac went to Bordeaux. He lodged in the house of a friend, who desired him to read prayers, and he con- sidered it to be contrary to his duty to refuse. A female servant, who had been permitted' to attend, betrayed him (as he was told) to the jurats of the city ; he was seized and sent to prison. They visited him there four or five times every day, and pressed him to abjure his faith, as the evidence was so strong, and the king's orders so precise, that they could not otherwise avoid condemning him to the galleys. He resisted ; but the magistrates importuned him at least to comijly with the outward ceremony of going over to the Roman Catholic foith. To this he was at last induced to submit, by the fear of the utter ruin which otherwise hung over his family. He resolutely refused, however, to go to church, or to do more than sign an abjuration either in prison or in a private room. This was contrary to the directions of the Church ; but when the archbishop was consulted, and assured that more could not be obtained, he consented to dispense with his own orders in this respect. Having regained his liberty, M. de Shirac endeavoured to send his family out of the country. The ship in which his wife embarked was burnt, and the report was that none on board had escaped but a few .■>ailors. Notwithstanding this, he sent his two eldest daughters, who could not embark with ADDITIONAL CHAPTERS. m their mother, on board another vessel. [These had a difficulty in escaping, and one of them was obliged to be concealed, when the vessel was searched, in a coil of roijcs.] About this time the Jurats of Hordeaux, having had information of his intention to escape with his family out of the kingdom, were about to seize him, when he lied to Paris, thinking it might be more easy from thence to put his intentions into execution. He remained there a month, but to no purpose. He then went into Normandy, and, returning through Paris, went to Brittany, and after visiting several seaports, he went to Rochelle, but the watchfulness of the government was so great that he found no means of getting away. He then came to Bordeau.x. But the rigour there was greater than ever, and left him no hoi)e of escape ; but he learned that his wife was s;ife in London, and that his two daughters were with her. He was unable to stay more than two hours in Bordeaux, and from thence he went to St Foy. A friend, whom he found by the way, gave him hoi>es that it would be jjossible for him to embark at Bordeaux, and that something might be done if he returned there in a fortnight ; liut this required money. The travelling, which he had now had for three months, had exhausted his purse. He employed six weeks to raise money ; but now M. de Bonfleur, having heard that he did not go to mass, and that he was sujjposed to encourage others to resist the Roman Catholics, issued orders to seize him. He nevertheless continued for three weeks longer in the useless endeavour to raise some money, and at last escajjed the search which was made for him. [Here there is a digression on the sin of apostacy, and the necessity of taking refuge in a Protestant country, in order to exercise the duties and privileges of true religion.] " Notwithstanding he had still the tie of a part of his fiimily whom he must leave behind him, he at last determined on trying to get ofi" from France, per Bordeaux, but being too well known to think of venturing to go there himself, he api)lied to a friend for his assistance in negotiating the business for himself and his son. His friend could not go ; but at his house there was a young relation, who was about to set out immediately with a jjarty of recruits (une recreue) for the frontier of Switzerland. Amongst these the young man hoped to escape. M. de Shirac and his son were suffered to join the party, which consisted chiefly of persons who thought with him, and the commander happened to be an acquaintance. This was for- tunate, as M. de Shirac could not well have passed for a common soldier ; and he was permitted to lead the rest, while his son acted as his servant. In forty-five days they reached Zurich, where they were received with Christian charity by the Swiss, who likewise furnished them with the means of getting to Holland. After remaining at Zurich only five or six days, they set out in the end of June, and in about a month after, they reached England, where M. De Shirac became minister of the French Church at Bristol." [" He died in his pulpit at Bristol ; he had had a lap-dog with him at the time, which eould not be driven from his corpse. His daughter married M. Triboudet Demainbray, — himself a refugee from France in consequence of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes — and their grand-daughter was my mother. S. P. Rigaud."] From Burn, p. 124, we learn that M. De Schirac came to Bristol in 16S7, and that the date of his death was June 1703; (the name is misprinted Z'c'Xiaz/ac). The register is attested by the Pasteur J eremie Tinell, formerly of the Reformed Church of Villeneufve de Puycheyn in Guienne (who died 5th July 171 1), and by his colleague, Mr Alexander Des- cairac (De Schirac?), formerly of the Reformed Church of Bergeral in Guienne. (2.) The Siots Maj^azine, vol. l.xxi. p. 367, states that the following epitaph is on a tomb- stone at Green Bay, adjoining the Apostles' Battery, Port Royal, Jamaica : — DIEU SUR TOUT. Here lies the body of Lewis Galdy, Esq., who departed this life at Port Royal, the 22d December 1736, aged eighty. He was born at Montpellier in France, but left that country for his religion, and came to settle in this island, where he was swallowed up in the great earthquake in the year 1692, and by the providence of God was by another shock thrown into 254 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. the sea, and miraculously saved by swimming until a boat took him up. He lived many years after, in great reputation, beloved by all who knew him, and much lamented at his death. (3.) Monsieur La Trobe, a Huguenot gentleman of Languedoc, took refuge in Britain in 1685, and ultimately settled in Dublin. His grandson, Rev. Benjamin La Trobe {born 1725, died 17S5), educated in the University of Glasgow, formed an Independent Congregation in Dublin, which united itself to the Moravian Church. After serving the Moravian Church at Fulwich, in Yorkshire, Mr La Trobe removed to London as superintendent of the English congregations. The Moravian missions, so justly admired, were under the chief management of himself, then of his son. Rev. Christian Ignatius La Trobe (whose name is identified with the rich and pathetic church music of the Moravians), and ne.xt of his grandson, Rev. Peter La Trobe (died 1863). The latter declined the office of bishop, that he might continue to hold the secretaryship of the LTnited Brethren's Society for the furtherance of the Gospel. (4.) The good family of Heurteleu, of the Province of Brittany, was represented among the refugees by Charles Abel Heurteleu, who came from Rennes or its neighbourhood in or about ti[e year 1700. His adopted home was in London, in Red Lion Square, and he was living in 1728. His son, Abel Heurtley became an officer in our army, and was in active service in the Rebellion of 1745. He is represented by Rev. C. A. Heurtley, D.D., Canon of Christ Church, 0.\ford. (5.) At a village in Champagne (says Mr Smiles), during a dreadful day of persecution, when blood was streaming in the streets, two soldiers entered the house of a Protestant, and after killing some of the inmates, one of them, seeing an infant in a cradle, rushed at it with his drawn sword and stabbed it, but not fatally. The child was snatched up and saved by a bystander, who exclaimed, " At least the babe is not a Protestant." The child proved to be a boy, and was given to a Protestant woman to nurse, who had a male child of her own at the breast. The boys, Daniel Morell and Stephen Conte, grew up together. \\'hen old enough they emigrated into Holland together, entered the army of the Prince of Orange, accompanied him to England, and fought in Ireland together. There they settled and married, and Morell's son married Conte''s daughter. Such were the ancestors of the Morell family, which has produced so many distinguished ministers of religion and men of science in England. (6.) The refugee family of Savary bear a surname which was a territorial title or designa- tion. The lands of Savary were in Perigord, in the south of France. Their patronymic was Tanzia, according to Mr Smiles, to whom one of the English representatives writes, " There are many interesting anecdotes and legends in the family — of a buried Bible, afterwards recovered, and patched on every leaf— of a beautiful cloak made by a refugee, and given to my great-great-grandfather as a token of gratitude for help given by him in time of need," &c. Notes. P. 19. Another sermon was printed on this occasion, entitled "A Sermon against Perse- cution, preached March 26, 1682, being the fourth Sunday in Lent (on Gal. iv. 29, part of the epistle for that day), and the time when the Brief for the Persecuted Protestants in France was read in the Parish Church of Shapwicke. And now published to the considera- tion of violent and headstrong mjsn, as well as to put a stop to false reports. By Sa. Bolde, Vicar of Shapwicke in Dorcetshire. London, printed for A. Churchill, at the Black Swan, near Amen Corner, 16S2." P. 33, &c., Le Febure. John Le Febure, settled in county NVicklow, = Miss Fo.x of county Wicklow. acquired a small landed property. | William Caldevele Le Febure, = Miss Ilanser Miller, daughter of an officer in the Wicklow Militia. I Rev. Joseph Miller. Joseph Le Febure, William Le F'ebure, Danser, an officer in the Wicklow Militia. Travelling Agent of the Sunday wife of Rev. Frederick Thompson, School .Society for Ireland. Tiebcndary of Ederminc. ADDITIOXAL C/IAPTERS. 255 The Mirni.iy Si hool Society for Ireland has published " A Tribute of Regard to the Memory of the late Mr William Le Febure." He died at Edennine Rectory on tlie 3i.st May 1873, aged seventy-one. Having paid annual visits throughout the United Kingdom for many years, he was well known and universally beloved. The evidence of his Huguenot descent, besides tradition, consists of three French seals, two of which have armorial bearings which may be described thus: — (i.) On a cartouche (or oval escutcheon) a cross patt<5e fitch& within an orle of nine stars (or mullets); crest (on a helmet with mantling, surmounted by a coronet) a pheon, or arrow-head. (2.) Crest and coronet, as in number i. Dr Purdon also recognises the descent in his pamphlet on "The Huguenots," p. 13, " Wicklow received several families as settlers, among whom I cite the name of Le Feburey whose descendant is now well known to some of us." Pp. 37, 49. Lernoult. — The following advertisement appeared in the London Gazette oi No\ ember 29, 1S06: — "If the next of kin of the late Rev. I-'rancis Lernoult, late of Newington, in the county of O.xford, but since of Kensington, in the county of Middlesex, clerk, deceased, will apply to Messrs Strong, Still, and Strong, Lincoln's Inn, New Square, they will hear of something to their advantage." P. 40. Among the children of Louis Gaston, for Tenney-Guy read Tenne-Guy. This is another form of " Taneguy," which occurs as a baptismal name in the family of Le Court, p. 65. P. 49. ESPINASSE. Gtiillaume de I'Espinassc m. 1st, Mar)- Gunning (no issue), a gentleman of Langiicdoc, refugee in Dublin. ni. 2d, Isabella, daughter of Isaac Ward, Barristerat law. Isaac £spina.s.se of Kill. Richard, Isaac, cf Henry Willi.im, William, Susanna Robert, = Emily, daughter of of Kill Ilextable House, Kent, Lieut. -Colonel. ofDublin,'" Magdaline, of Hon. George Abbey. Bencherof Gray's Inn. m. 1799, daughter of Gray's William Pelre. I Lt.-Col. Inn. I Henry Mangin. James lispinasse, Barrister-at-law. Another refugee, Paul de I'F.spinasse, who settled in Dublin in 1689, had a son John Espinasse, Sheriff of the city of Dublin in 1745, unmarried. Jean I'Espinasse de Fonvive was elected a Director of the French Hospital in 1721. P. 50. Bourgeois, pp. 47, 53. Le Bourgeois. — The pedigree of a refugee family, repre- senting one or other of these surnames, is on record, beginning with Edward, burgess of St Alphage, Canterbury', living in 1729, and Elizabeth his wife. P. 54. For Cahatu read Cahu.^c. — The surname Cahusac occurs in England. P. 66. Allais. — There was proved at London, in 17 17, the will of Nicolas Allais, of the city ot Rohan [Rouen] in Normandy, who, in order to leave all his property to his wife, names each' of his sons and other relatives, assigning to each the legacy of one shilling, and to all others, who pretend to have a claim on his remembrance, one shilling each. His wife's name was Mary Saint- Fresne ; his sons, Nicholas, Peter, and Michael; and his relatives bore the surnames of Allais, Moustier, and Plastier. P. 74. Teulon. — The refugees Pierre and Antoine Tholon or Teulon, fled from Nismes to Greenwich; they were descended from Marc Tholon, Sieur de Guiral, and their family were of Nismes, where representatives still reside. Antoine remained at Greenwich, and left descendants by his wife, Marie de la Roche ; he is represented by Seymour Teulon, Esq. of Limpsfield, Surrey, and by Samuel Saunders Teulon and \\'illiam Milford Teulon, architects. Pierre Teulon removed to Cork ; from him descended Lieutenant-Colonels George, Charles, 256 FRENCH PROTESTANT EXILES. and Peter Teulon ; Charles was a Captain of the 28th Regiment at the battle of Waterloo, and brought the regiment out of action. Pierre is represented by G. B. Teulon, Esq. of Bandon, Major Thomas Teulon, and Charles Peter Teulon, Barrister-at-law. The surname Teulon is, or was indigenous in Scotland ; Melchior Seymour Teulon of Greenock, John Hall Teulon his son, and Captain James Teulon, are names on record. — Smiles' Huguenots. P. 75. Abauzit Rev. Theophilus Abauzit was probably descended from a younger brother of the talented Firmin Abauzit, a refugee in Geneva (Iwrn at Usez, in Languedoc, nth Nov. 1679, died 20th March 1767). That brother died in London in 1717. Their father died in 1681. By the Edict of 12th July 1685 the children of a deceased Protestant father were to be removed from the charge of the widowed mother, and an Edict of January i5S6 provided as to all children of Protestants, that at the age of five they were to be transferred to Romish tutelage. Madame Abauzit (whose maiden name was Ann De Ville) sent her children to Orange, thence to a village near Die. The elder brother was forcibly brought back to Usez, entered by the Romanists in the books of their college in that place ; and it was ordered that he should be boarded with a Romanist householder. His mother carried him off; the boy was hunted from place to place among the mountains of the Cevennes ; he was nearly captured in one house, but the besiegers allowed an ass with paniers to pass out, and in one of the paniers Firmin was hidden. At last he was safely lodged in Geneva, two years before his mother. As to the younger son, we are told that " he experienced the same persecutions." Madame Abauzit suffered a rigorous imprisonment in the castle of Sommieres. She fell into a slow fever ; and the Bishop of Usez sternly refused the physician's request for her release from her dungeon. " Here she would have ended her life (says a biographer), if a happy incident had not called the commander of the fort to Paris. His brother, who took his place, was as intelligent and humane as the other was ignorant and brutal, he was penetrated with the signal merit of his prisoner, and warmly interested himself in her fortune. You wish her to die licre (so he told the bishop in a letter), but I toill not he her executioner. He ^vrote to the court, and obtained her enlargement until her health should be re-established. Madame Abauzit, after .surmounting a thousand perils, arrived at Geneva, two years after her son." She had a nephew, M. de Ville, whose only child was married to Monsieur de Lisle Roy of St Quintin. William IH. made handsome offers to Firmin Abauzit, through Michael le Vassor, for his settlement in England ; but he prefeiTed Geneva. — (See Abauzifs Works, translated by Harwood, London, 1774.) Here I may quote a sentence regarding the Prophecies of Holy Scripture, contained in a letter from F. Abauzit to William Burnet, (Governor of New York : " I have often been wit- ness to the happy effects they have produced in the minds of sensible persons who, though once surrounded with all the felicities of their native soil, have in the indigence of a foreign refuge preserved great cheerfulness of soul. They acknowledged that they lived on the pro- phecies, so powerfully were they supported by the soothing hope of a speedy re-establishment." In his Discourse on the Apocalypse, he says : " The English find here the revolutions of Great Britain ; the Lutherans, the troubles of Germany ; and the French refugees, what happened to them in France There is only the [Roman] Catholic Church which hath circum- scribed it within the limits of the first three centuries, during which it maintains that every- thing was accomplished, as if it were afraid lest, descending lower, it should see Antichrist in the person of its Metropolitan." P. 86. Lf.frov. — Mr Thomas Lefroy, M.A.,Q.C., in his memoir of his father, Chief Justice Lefroy, gives the following memorandum from an old paper which was written in 161 1, and which is preserved in Ewshott House, Hampshire : " Antoine Lefroy came from Flanders about the year 1569, in the time of the Duke of Alva's persecution. He brought with him a considerable sum of money and jewels; but his estate shared the same fote with that of many other refugees who left France on account of their religion, being confiscated, and ail the family writings, papers, &c., destroyed. His wife was a Flanderine lady of the first quality, and very rich, of the family of the Du Hoorns. He had two sons, Isaiah, born in Flanders, ADDiriOXAL CIIAPTFA'S. 257 and David, liom after his arrival in England. He, finding a number of refugees in Canter- bury, and iniluced by the con\ enience of the French church, resolved to lix there." P. 1 1 8. The correct account of Pierre Uu Moulin's escape from the massacre may be found in Bates's Vi/ie. The following is from Geeves' Status Ealesiie Gallicance : — " In the year 16 15 King James sent by Sir Theodore Mayerne to invite Du Moulin into Kngland, to confer with him about a method of uniting all the reformed churches of Ciiristen- dom, to which he had been often solicited by Monsieur Du Plessis. The issue of which voy- age was, that King James resolved to send letters to all Protestant princes to invite them to union, and desired the French churches to frame a confession, gathered out of all those of other reformed churches, in the which unnecessary i)oints might be left out, as the means of begetting discord and dissension. Two months before Du Moulin's coming into England, Du Perron had made an oration in the States assembled at Blois, where he had used the king very ill, and had m.iint.iined that the Pope had power to depose kings ; and having ]jublished it in print, he sent it to his Majesty. To answer that oration. King James made use of Du Moulin's sen-ice for the French language ; and it was printed the first time in French, while Du Moulin was in England, in that year 161 5, before it was jtrinted in English. The king, going to Cambridge, carried Du Moulin along with him, and made him take the degree of Doctor." P. 125. Waldo, line 30, For " this second son," read " their second son." Elizabeth, eighth child of Daniel Waldo, a sister of Sir Edward, is represented by Rear- Admiral Sir William Saltonshall Wiseman, 8th Bart, and K.C.B. Her husband was Sir Ed- ward Wiseman, knight, younger brother of the second baronet, but her great-grandson became the sixth baronet, on the failure of the senior line. Waldo on the Littiri^ was introduced with an Epistle Dedicatory, dated 9th March 1772, to Charles Jenkinson, Esq., one of the Lords Commissioners of His Majesty's Treasury. Sir Timothy Waldo, a kinsman of the author, left an only child, Jane, wife (from 1762 to 1797), of George Medley, M.P., in whose hands wealth accumulated to the amount of ^^180,000 ; she died in 1829. There was an affinity between the families of Medley and Jenkinson (E;irl of Liverpool), and Mrs Medley's large property was inherited by the late Earl's daughters. P. 117. Howie. — The Latin motto on the Howie gravestone being (as ajipears by the copy which I received) unfinished, I read it conjecturally. The result was a blunder. I have since learned that it is an old jingle, copied from an epitaph in St Olave's, Hart Street, London : — Qu A D T D P OS nguis inis risti ulcedine avit H Sa M Ch M L — i^Scots Magazine, vol. 71, p. 728.) P. 147. Earl of Galwav, § 2. The following evidence of his lordship's residence in Greenwich, after his father's death, is in the Parish Register. 1690-1, March 18. Henrietta Maria, daughter of John De Stalleurrt/w Dequestebrune,Esq., and Magdalena, his wife, born the i6th, and baptised i8th Mch. in the French Congregation, by Mr John Severin, minister. Mons. Le Marquess De Rovigny, godfather, and M"' Dorvall, godmother. (Col. Chester's MSS.) P. 156. RoBETHON. — The full title of the pam]>hlet mentioned at the close of Robethon's life was, " An Argument proving that the design of employing and enobling foreigners is a treasonable conspiracy against the Constitution, dangerous to the kingdom, an affront to the nobility of Scotland in particular, and dishonourable to the Peerage of Britain in general. With an Appendix, wherein an insolent pamphlet intituled. The .Vnatomy of Great Britain, is anatomized, and its design and authors detected and exposed. The Third Edition. London : Printed for the Booksellers of London and Westminster, 1717." P. 157. De Moivre. — Sir Isaac Newton often said to De Moivre, that if he were not so 2 K 2 5 8 FRENCH PR TESTA NT EXILES. old, lie would like to have another pull at the moon. Maty's Mcmoire sur la vie et sitr les Eci its de Mr Abraham De Moivre, p. 30. See my Volume II., p. 85. P. 157. DuRAND. — Rev. David Durand wrote to M. Francois Durand, Docteur en Droit, Advocate at Leyden, supposed to be a relative, that at that date, January 1740, he could not assist his son in obtaining a pastoral charge in England ; he speaks of the gradual falling off of the refugee congregations, and the difficulty of keeping them up. (See the Guernsey Mag- azine for 1873.) P. 160. DuBUissoN. Refugees of this family prospered in Britain, and are still represented. One representative is among Walford's County Families. " William Du Buisson, Esq., eldest son of the late William Du Buisson, Esq. of Glynhir, by Caroline, daughter of James Henckeil, Esq. of Wandsworth, Surrey. Bom, 18 18. Succeeded, 1828. Married, 1863, Mary, daughter of John Lawford, Esq. of Tottenham, Middlesex. Educated at Winchester and Oriel Coll. Ox- ford ; is a J. P. and Deputy-Lieutenant for Carmarthenshire. Seat, Glinhyr, Llandilo." P. 164. CoLOMiES. — A copy of the Will of Colomies is printed in iVotes and Queries, second series, Vol. I., page 5 ; from it the following additional particulars are derived. He was Rector of Einsford in Kent, and left five guineas to the poor of that parish ; but he lived in London. During his last illness, which was of six weeks' duration, he sold his library. His executor and residuary legatee was Pierre Hamelot, son of his deceased cousin-german, Jerome Hamelot ; other relatives were Elie Hamelot and the refugee pasteur, Rene Cheneau, cousins ; also Marie Bouquet. His friends were, Pasteur Charles de Seines, and Jacques Arnaud or Arnau- din, surgeon, his medical attendant and host. The witnesses to his Will, which is dated 2d Jan. 1691-2, were Messrs Braguier and Paul Vaillant. His property seems to have amounted to about £100 sterling. None of the scepticism with which he has been charged appears in this last deed. On the contrary, this is his preamble : — " Moy Paul Colomi6s, Rector d' Einsford en la Province de Kent, demeurant dans la ville de Londres, paroisse de S. Martin-in-the Fields, sain d'esprit par la grace de Dieu, declare icy ^ tous mes frires que je meurs dans la foy de J. Chr. mon Sauveur qui m'a aime et s'est donne soi-mesme pour moy, et dans I'esperance que Dieu me fera misericorde, recevant mon ame dans son Paradis, et ressuscitant mon corps au dernier jour pour me faire jouir de la feli- city etemelle que mon Sauveur J. Chr. m' a promise de sa part." P. 173. DuTRV. Denis Dutry of London was created a baronet, iSth May 17 16. — Histo- rical Register. P. 181. One of the officers in the service of Britain, killed at Piedmont, was Monsieur Brutel de la Riviere, son of Noble Gedeon Brutel de la Riviere, and Demoiselle D' Audeniar, his wife, residents in Montpeliier (the father became a refugee in Lausanne), and brother ol the Pasteur Jean Brutel de la Rivifere, refugee in Holland. P. 209. Barbauld. — Z' ^(?««fl'<' Cr/w/«c/ was written by Fenouillot de Falbaire. The fact, on which it is founded, is the filial devotion of Jean Fabre (born at Nismes 1729). Although the self-devoted substitute of his father, he was awarded no mild sentence, but was sent to tiie galleys for life on March 11, 1756. M. de Mirepoix, minister of marine, obtained his release on May 22, 1762, after six years' servitude. See Frt-ville's Beaux Exemples, Paris, 181 7. P. 212. Trvon. — This family ought to have been included in The Radnor Group. The fol- lowing is from Smiles : — " Peter Tryon, a wealthy refugee from Flanders, driven out by tlie persecutions of the Duke of Alva, succeeded in bringing with him into England as large a sum as £60,000. The family made many alliances with EngHsh families of importance. The son of the refugee, Samuel, of Lower Marney in Essex, was in 1621 made a baronet. The baronetcy expired in 1724." In Chapter XXVII. the following names occur : — P. 290. Waddington. P. 292. Porteus, Button, De Moivre. P. 293. Whitaker, Cobbett, Donisemount, Pooler, Webster, Polhiil, Glover, Martin. P. 294. Fellowes, Frend, Earl of Sandwich, Lord Barrington, D'Oyley, Sir Philiii Francis, Taylor, Wilson, Uradshaw, Dr Samuel Johnson, Goldsmith, Junius. ADDITIOXAI. CII.\rjl:RS. 159 P. 395. Wolfe. P. 296. W'alpolc, Vjxx\ of Shclburni-, hlarl of Chatham. P. 297. Dunning, Pitt, drcatrakcs, Junius, Urition. 1'. 298. I'hipps, Rose, Dunning, Cuiiinghaine, Monigomery, Bcrcsford, Roberts. P. 299. Davison, Prouyham, Ikirncs, Montgomery, Crabbe, Bedford. P. 293. For Siriptures read Siripiores. Final Notes regarding Surnames. A name reseniMin); the British surname of Maxwell, but spelt De Maxuei,, was a good Huguenot name. I tind in Rev. Mr 1 )()uglas's Album, the name of Messire Jacpies iJe Maxuei, chevalier. Seigneur de Champs, Du Haniier, Despine, &c., en Xormandie, Huguenot Refugee at Berlin, Councillor of Legation to the lilector of Brandenburg, i .\ov. 1687 ; also the name of Etienne De .\l.ixuel [his son ?J ei|uerry of Prince George William, Duke of Brunswick ami l.uneburg, at /.ell, 14 July 1687. [This Note is presented to my readers in France, whom I may refer also to an article in the Siv/s A/ii^'uzine, vol. 72, ]). 326, for a memoir of Monsieur Bitaubr, a descendant of a refugee family of Konigsberg.] 20 February, 2 William and Mary. — The King grants to Pierre Guenon de Beaubinson the office of Gentleman of the Bows. Fee X5S, 5s. a-year. Joseph F'rancis I^iutour of Devonshire Place, Marylebone, late of Fort George in the Elast Indies, Free Merchant, descended from a respectable family of the city of Strasburg in Alsace, was living in 1807. Maria Frances Geslip, his second daughter, was married in 1809 to Robert 'lownsend Fanjuhar, Ksq., created a baronet in 1821, and was the mother of the second and third baronets. Geurgiana, his third daughter, was married, in 1808, to Edward Marjoribanks, Esq., and was the mother of Sir Dudley Coutts Marjoribanks, Bart. The following refugees from Normandy arc named in \Vaddington's Protestantisme en Normandie: — M. de Monceau of the parish of M^houdin in the election of F'alaise. M. F'rancois Bunel de Boiscarr6 of the election of Pont-Audemer. Suzanne 15eloncle, wife of a protestant condenmed to the galleys, named Daniel Caron, of Bolbec, became a member of the City of London French Church, 5 March 1687. At the same time, Jacques Bourdon, Jean Renaud, Jaques Salingue, Suzanne Bourdon, of Bolbec, were admitted. Daniel Caron himself was admitted on 2 May 1693, when he declared that having unhai)i)ily signed an abjuration, he had attempted to escape from F'rance, and for that attempt, he had been sentenced ; but that in course of time he was set at liberty through the influence of his friends. There were refugees from Havre, having the names of Lunel, Reaut^, Godin, and Mouchel. ^L Waddington says (p. 1 7) — " A Mutual Aid Society, called La Societe Norwande, was founded in London in 1703, and still subsists (in 1855). We observe in its last report the names of Gosselin, Ferry, Levasseur, Mousset, de Boos, Le Bmment, Frigont, Geaussent, Durand, Levesque, Rondeau, Hautot, Lesage." The following advertisement was in The Times, 13 Sept. 1856: — "Important Estates (£40,000) of refugees from France — Wanted, relatives of Jean and Abraham Bunell, bom 1736 ; Jean Delauney or Dclaune ; of Jonas Cognard, or Cougnard ; Jean, Marc, Job, and Abraham Cognard ; Benjamin Petit and Aim(?e Petit ; Marie Simon ; Jonas, Adam Simon ; Marie Sortemboc. Apply by letter to Edward Manifere, Esq., Solicitor, 31 Bedford Row." Information will be thankfully received by Mr E. Belleroche of Milton Cottage, Plaistow, London, E., about a member of the Corraro family of Venice, who became a jtrotestant and settled in F'rance as Corraro de Belleroche. His descendant was living at Stutgard in 1718. 'I'here is a Chateau and village of Belleroche in the Beaujolais, and another in Le Forcz. AI.rilAHETICAL TABLKS. I. Refugees ok Earliest Dates, II. Refugees during the Reign ok Louis XIV'., III. Naturalizations, &c., ... 1\'. Miscellaneous Names, ... 261 262 269 281 If the m.iin portion of a surname be not found under its initial letter, refer to the letters I) or L for the prefi.xes l)e, Uu, De la, Des, La, or Les. The pages are those of this Inde.x Volume. TABLE I. refugees of earliest dates and their descendants. Alexandre, 109. Alix, 107, Anthonie, 125. Ashtown, Lord, 90. Aubries, 125. Aurelius, 125. Ranet, 125. Banks, 125. Baptiste, 107. Baro, or Baron, 1 1 1. Bassens, 124. Baudoin, 107, loS. Beaufort, 103. Bennet, 78. Beny, 107. Berku alias Dolin, 82. Brtram, 107. Bignon, 1 10. Bisson, 107. Blondell, 125. Bovey, 78. Boeespoir, 106, 107. Bongenier, 82. Bonhomme, 88, 107. Bonnell, 78, 79. Botham, 99. Bouillon, 107. Bourghinomus, 124. Bouverie, 76. Bowthand, 125. Brevin, 106, 107. Brevint, 106. Briot, 130. Buchanan, 87. Bulteel, 98. Bustein, 125. Byrt, 240. Calamy, 130. Calmady, 125. Cappel, 13. Cargill, too. Carlier, 82. Cartanet, 125. Casaubon, 1 13, 175. Castanet, 125. Castol, III. Caumont de la Force, 116, 188. Caveler, 108. Chamberlaine, 99. Chappelain, loS. Chartres, Vidame of, 9, 94. Chastelain, 1 10. Chastelin, 82. Chaudron, 1 10. Chestes, 107. Chevalier, 108. Chrestien Bonespoir, 107. Clancarty, Earl of, 90. Conant, 129. Conyard, 1 1 8. Coquel, 82. Cossyn, 1 10, 125. Courtenay, Viscount, 78. Cousin, 109. Crawley-Boevey, 78. Daigneux, 107. D'Ambrun, 103. Dangy, 106. D'Arande, or D'Aranda, 88. D'Assigny, 129, 198. D'Aubon, 116. De Beauvais, 93, 107. De Cafour, 103. De Carteret, 106. De Catteye, S3. De Chambeson, 103. De Chatillon, Cardinal, 93, 107, 124. De Cherpont, 107. De Coulosse, 107. De Cugnac, 116, 188. De Ferricres de Ma- lign)', 94- De Freidernc, 106. DeGarencitres, 117, 121. De Grasse, 125. De Gronevillc, 107. De Haleville, 106. De la Barre, 82. De la Branche, 107. De la Courte. 82. De la Fontaine, 13, 1 13, De la Fontaine alias Wicart, 82. De la Fortrie, 85. De la Haye, 82. De la Melloniire, 107. De la Motto, 88. De la Place, 84, 108. De la Pryme, 87, 207. IJe la Ripandine, 106. De la Vallde, 108. De Lasaux, 103. De Laune, 129. De Liage, 107. Delmd Radcliffe, 88. De Lobel, 1 10, De Marsilliers, 109. De Mayerne, 1 15, 188, 257. De Melley, 82. De Mompouillan, 116, 188. De Montfossey, 107. De Montgomery, 107. De Montmorial, 107. De Moyneville, 107. De Nielle, 83. De NouleviUe, 98. De Pouchel, 110. De Rachd, 125. Deroche, 125. De Sagnoule, 82. De St Voist, 107. De Salvert, 98. D'Espagne, 120. D'Espard, 104. Des IJouveries, 76, 85. Des Colombiers. 107. DesGallesdeSaules,io9. Des Granges, 107. Des Moulins, 107. Des Serfs, 106. Des Travaux, 106. De Vendome, 94. Dobree, 105, 212. Dolbel, 107, 108. Dombrain, 103. Dubois, 98. Du Cane, 83, 84, 212. Du Faye, 83. Du Moulin, 118, 198, 241, 257. Du Perron, 106. Du Poncel, 82. Du Quesnel, 107. D'Urfey, 130. Du Val, 106, 107. -- Ellice, 78. Emeris, 103. Eyre, 84. Falconer, 130. Fainas, 83. Fitzroy, 88. F"oIkestone, Viscount. 77. Fontaine, 82, 96. 262 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Gamier, 88. Garrett, 82. Garth, 78. Gerin, 107. Girard, 107. Grafton, Duke of, 8S. Greville, 105. Groslot de I'lsle, 105 . Gualter, 1 10. Guerin, 107. Guyneau, 108. Hamlyn, 125. Hayes, 125. Henice, 106. Herault, 107, 124. Houblon, 81, 82, 83. Howie, 126, 257. Hovvitt, 99. Huard alias LoinprC, 117. Hunsdon, Lord, 1 2 J. Inglis, loi. Janssen, 88, 212. Janssen de Heez, 87. Jeffrey, 82. Jeune, 103. Johanna, 107. Johnstone, 127. Joret, 82. Kello, 102. La Grande, 103. Laignaux, 107. Laniie, 1 17. La Motte, or Lamott, 80. Langlois, 101. Lart, 82. La Tranche, 89. Le Blanc, 82. Le Blancq, 82. Lebon, 125. Le Bouvier, 107. Le Burt, 240. Le Cat, 82. Le Chevaher, 108. Le Churel, 107. Le Due, 107. Lefroy, 86, 238, 256. Le Grimecieux, loS. Le Gyt, 103. Le Jeune, 103. Le Keux, 128, 162. Le Magon, 13, 82, 1 13. Le Pine, 103. Le Quien, 128. Le Roy Bouillon, 107. Le ThieuUier, 85. Leuart, 82. Level, 117. Lixens, 124. Lodovvicke, 82. Longford, Lord, 77. Loulmeau, 108. Loulmeau du Gravier, 107. Machevillens, 124. Machon, 107. Maignon, 82. Malaparte, 83. Malet, 222. Marchant, 107. Marchant de St Michel, 127. Maret, 107. Marie, 13. Marmet, 124. Marny, 125. Marriette, 129. Martin, 107. Marvey, 125. Matelyne, 98. Maurois, 85. Maxwell, 77. Medley, 126, 257. Merlin, 107. Merrit, 129. Mesnier, 107. Millet, 108. Monange, 107. Mongeau, 83. Monier, 98. Moreau, 83. Moulinos, 106. Mulay, 82. Muntois, 88. Niphius, 82. Paget, 103. Painsec, 108. Palmerston, Viscount- ess, 84. Papillon, 96. Parent, 106. Penzance, Lady, 78. Pepys, 127. Perruquet de la Mel- lonifere, 107. Perugel la Riviere, 107. Philip, 125. Pingon, 106. Ponsonby, 77. Portal, 126. Presot, loi. Pryme, 87. Pusey, 77. Radnor, Earl of, 76. Ratcliffe, 78. Regius, 1 10. Riche, 107. Richier, 118, Rime, 82. Rodulphs, 124. Rosslyn, Countess of, 77. RouU^es, 107. Rowland, 125. St Michel, 127. Saye, 82. Sayes, 83. Selyn, 82. Sibthorp, 126. Sicard, 108. Strype, 79. Talbot, 87. Tayler, 82. Tovilett des Roches, 82. Treffroy, 107. Trench, 87, 90, 226. Tryon, 212, 258. TuUier, 82. Ursin, 125. Valpy, 108. Van Lander, 82. Vashon, 118. Vasson, 1 18. Vauville alias Francois, 109. Verneuil, 116. Vignier, 1 16. Vignon, 99. Vincent, 77. Vouche, 125. Waldo, 98, 125, 212, 257. Walke, 107. Wheildon, 129. Wiseman, 257. Wolstenholme, 125. Wood, 98. Wybone, 107. TABLE 11. REFUGEES DURING THE REIGN OF LOUIS XIV., AND THEIR DESCENDANTS. Abauzit, 256. Abbadie, 158. Abbott, 248. Abelin, 154. Addde, 177, 180. Adrien, 250. Ageron, 212. Alavoine, 216. Albert, 211. Aldebert, 151. AUais, 255. Allix, 147, 191, 211, 212, 239- Alvauder, 211. Amiand, or Amyand, 209, 211, 238. Amiot, 174. Amonnet, 162. Amproux, 149, Ancaster, Duchess of, 189. Andrd, 216, 228. Anglesey, Marquis of, 169. Arabin de Barcelle, 1 76. Arbovin, 211. Ardouin, 154. Arnaud, 251. Arnauld, 153, 154, 240. Artand, 141. AsgiU, 170. Assere, 173. Atimont, or Atimo, 239. Aubel, 250. Aubert, 211. Aubertin, 249. Aubin, 179, 250. Aubussargues, 149, 252. Aufrfere, 156, i6o, 172, 192,21 1, 212, 213,226. Augeard, 176. Auriol, 169, 211, 238. Aveline, 162. Baignoux, 160. Baise, 151. Balaguier, 160, 210, 216. Balaire, 189. Bale, 205. Balicourt, 205. Banal, 2 u . Bancelin, 176. Bancous, 183. Barbauld, 209, 25S. Barberie de Saint-Con- test, 208. Barbesson, 211. Barbet, 204. Barbot, 205, 209. Barclay, 213, 215. Bardin, 160. Bardon, 160. Barham, Lady, 216. Baril, 212, 215. Barr^, 221, 231. AI.PIIABF. TICAI. TAIiLES;. Barrier, 247. liasset, 230. Hassnct, 212. IJaudoin, 230. IJaudry, 250. ISaulier, 162. Hayley, 238. Haynes, 205. lieale, 205. Beaiitils, 23S. Beaufort, 183, 223, 229, 230. Beaujeu, 176. I5eaurcpere, 174. Beauvois, 230. Becher, 162. Beiser, 208. Belafaye, 208. Belcastel, 162, 180, 208, 216. Belin, 212. Belleroche, 259. Bellet, 151. Beloncle, 259. Belorm, 151. Bemecoiir, 151. Benard, 142. Beneset du Tcron, 141. Benezet, 154, 216, 234. Bcnnet, 212. Benzolin, 194. Beranger, 230. Beraud du Pont, 176. Berchere, 212. Berens, 212. Bcringhen, 188, 190. Bernard, 150, 174. 176, 230. Bernardon, 151. Bernaste, 150, 175. Berney, 216. Bernicrc, 208. Bernicrcs, 151. Bertau, 245. Berthe, 159. Bertheau, 159. Bertie, 239. Bertonneau, 251. Bessonet, 210, 226. Bethencour de Bine, IS'- Beuzeville, 204. Bezier, 208. Biard, 216. Bignon, 151. Billon, 212. Bino, 239. Bion, 241. Blagny, 158. Blanc, 198. Hlanchard, 162. Blanzac, 176. Blaquicrc, 212. Blenncrhassctt, 248. Bleteau, 174. Blommart, 212. Blondcll, 162. Boileau, 148, 213, 215, 222, 229, 230, 238, 239- Boisbcleau, 151. Boisbeleau de la Cha- pelle, 210. Boismolct, 150, 176. Boisragon, 176, 189. Boisribeau, 176. Boisrond, 226. Boisrond de St Lcgcr, 239- Boittier, 212. Boncour, 175. Bondou, 175. Boncl, 20S. Bonhomme, 162. Bonnel, 210. Bonnet, 154. Borough, 163, 238. Borrowes, 156, 161. Bosanquet, 212, 213, 216, 230, 231, 232. Bossis, 250. Boucher, 212. Boudet, 168. Boudinot, 154, 176. Boudrie, 162. Bouet, 190. Bouhereaii, 163. Boulay, 154. Bouquet, 153. Bourdeaus, 198. Bourdieu, 212. Bourdillon. 224. Bourdin, 151. Bourdiquet du Rosel, 151. Bourdon, 259. Bourgeois, 255. Boursiquot, 153. Bouryan, 216. Bousquet, 239. Bowden, 216. Boyblanc, 20S. Boyer, 136, 140, 151, 163. Braglet, 176. Brasselay, 175, 184. Breval, 241. Briot, 149. Brithand, 230. Brocas, 223. Brodeau, 251. Brouard, 352. Brugi^rcs, 175. Brule, 180. Bruncval, 149, 208. Brunier, 163. Brusse, 183. Brutel de la Riviere, 258. Buhner, 204. Bunel, 259. lUinell, 239. Burges, 171. Burke, Lady, 226. Burrcau, 245, 251. Byles, 204. Cabibel, 212. Cabrol, 179. Caillard, 160, 210. Caillau, 250. CailletiJ:re, 176. Caillon, 1 54. Cain, 162. Caldevele, 254. Callard, 239. Callifies, 212. Cambes, 176. Cambon, 149, 178. Campredon, 210. Canole, 160. Cantier, 174. Cappel, 159. Carbonel, 212. Cardins, 150. Carle, 207. Carnegie, 216. Caron, 259. Cams Wilson, 223. Cassel, 176, 206. Castanet, 205. Castelfranc, 151, 168. Castin, 222. Castres, 141. Cauderc, 174. Caulet, 2 1 2. Cavalier, 155, 161. Cesteau, 154. ChabriOires, 176. Chabrole, 151. Chaigneau, 216, 221, 222. Chaillon, 153. Chalie, 212. Chamcau,239. Chaniier, 16S, 192, 213, 216, 231. Champagni?, 156, 161, 175- Champion, 162. 263 Champion dc Crcspigny, 2 1 6, 239. Chaniplleury, 151, 208. Chaniplaiiricr, 151. Chaniploriers, 161. Chapclier, 251. Chapcllc, 176. Chardin^Sir J., 149, 163. Chariot d' Argenlcuil, 242. Charon, 219. Charpentier, 251. Charrier, 151. Charters, 240. Chartres, 240. Chastelain d'F.ppe, 175 Chateauneuf, 176. Chatelain, 210. Chatterton, Lady, 216. Chaudrec, 251. Chavcrnay, 149, 150. Chelar, 208. Chenevix, 208, 222,232. Chenevix d'Eply, 226. Chevalier, 216. Chevalleau de Boisra- gon, 189. Clagett, 167. Clalrvaux, 150. Claude, 250. Clervaux, 176. Clinton, 207. Cloquet, or Cloakie, 239. Cognart, 208. Colet, 251. Colineau, 230. Colladon, 160, 161, 311. CoUette, 232. Colomi(5s, 164, 258. Columbine, 231. Coluon, 208. Colvile, 170. Colville, 222. Combauld, 212. Compan, 183. Cong. 149. Constantin, 150, 176. Conte, 254. Contet, 198. Convenent, 160. Cooke, 128. Coquerel, 246. Cordelon, 241. Cornand de la Croze, 164, 166. Cornel de la Brcton- niere, 223. Cornewall, 238. Corniere, 215. 264 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Cornish, 216. Corraro de Belleroche, 259. Cortez, 240. Cotton, 226, 239. Coulon, 198. Coulombieres, 175. Courage, 239. . Courtaud, 251. Courtauld, 129, 162, 213. Courteil, 151. Courtonne, 162. Cousin, 162, 239. Coussirat, 212. Coutart, 216. Couterne, 176. Cramahi£, 149, 168, 175. Cramer, 208. Cranstoun, Lord, 171. Crespigny, 246. Crespin, 212. Crespion, 210. Creuseau, 208. Crommelin, 154, 161, 198, 214, 226, 230. Crothaire, 232. Crozd, 189. Dacher, 246. Dafoncell, 212. Dagenfeldt, or Degen- feldt, 142. D'Aiguesfondes, 216. Daillon, 159. Dalbey, 176. Dalbiac, 175, 216, 238. Dalbis, 179. D'Albon, 183, 184. D'AUain, 216. D'AlIemagne, 209. D'Allonne, 156, 167. Dallons, 175. Dalton, 217. Damboy, 151. Daney, 190. Dantilly, 151. D'Antragues, 151, 175. Darasus, 149, 210. Darby, 226. D'Arcy, 221. Darenes, 175. Dargent, 174, 239. D'Arrabin, 161. Daubussargues, 177. Daubuz, 102, 212, 214. D'Aulnix, 15. D'Aumalc, 132. D'Avene, 175. Davisme, 212. Dawson, 226. De Aernac, 180. De Bancous, 179. De Barbut, 215. De Barisont, 251. De Bees, 239. De Belcastel, 175. De Berniere, 228. De Bernieres, 162. De Bey de Batilly, 24. De Blachon, 178. De Blanchet, 252. De Blaqui^re, 238. De Bodt, 207. De Boisrond, 179. De Boissobre, 180. De Bojeu, 150. De Bonneval, 209. De Boos, 259. De Bourbon, 155. De Bourniquel, 215. De Boyville, 198. De Brevall, 241. De Brusse, 179. De Cagny, 208. De Calvairac, 179. De Cardonels, 162. De Casaubon, 175. De Castelfranc, 168, 169. De Causse, 151. De Cazenove de Pra- dines, 248. De Chabert, 180. De Chamard, iSo. De Chambrun, 159. De Champ, 162. De Champagne, 161. De Chefboutonne, 207. De Cheusse, 191. De Choiseul, 168. De Choisy, 207. De Cirt!, 144, 147. De Combebrune, 179. De Coninck, 162. De Constantin, 211. De Corville, 192. De Cosne, 148, 149, 150. De Course!, 183. De Crespigny, 234, 238. De Crouchy, 162. De Cussy, 175. De Dibon, 204. De Durand, 210. De Falaise, 179. De Faryon, 180. Defifray, 209. De Foissac, 175. De Froment, 175. De Gabay, 212. De Gaschon, 173. DeGastine, 172, 198,215. De Gaume, 150. De Gennes, 250. De Gineste, 180. De Gouvernet, 156, 198, De Graffenried, 156. De Graveron, 179. De Grenier, 251. De Gually, 184. De Gualy, 179. De Guyon de Pampe- lune, 236. De Hague, 239. De Hauteville, 230. Dehays, 239. De Heulle, 217. De Heucourt, 204. De Hogerie, 173. De Hubac, 175. De Jages, 179. De Jarnac, 251. Dejean, 228. De Joncourt, 240. De Joye, 180. De Kantzow, 2 1 5. Delabadie, 162. De la Barbe, 208. De la Barre, 176. De la Bastide, 167, 175, 208. De Labene, 208. De la Billiere, 180. De la Blachiere, 152. De la Boissonade, 151. De la Borde, 206. De la Buffierre, 160. De la Case, 155. De la Chapelle, 210. De la Chasse, 239. De la Chaumettc, 162. De la Chenaye, 250. De la Cherois, 162, 168, 169, 214. De la Cherois Crom- melin, 214. De la Chesnayc, 206. De la Clarti^re, 250. De la Combe de Clu- sell, 167. De la Condamine, 214. De la Coutiere, 152. De la Croix, 154, 165. De Ladle, 208. De la Douespe, 210, 223. De la Fausille, 206. De la Fontan, 175. De la Force, Duchcssc, 188. De la Forestrie, 250. De la Gallc, iSo. De la Grange, 239. De la Greliire, 250. De la Haize, 216. De la Heuze, 168. De I'Aigle, 179. De Lalande, 215. De Lalo, 207. De Lamaindre, 208. De la Mejanelle, 215. De la Melonniere, 149, 177, 237- Delamcre, 205. De la Misegle, iSo. De la Mothe, 149, 159, 212. De la Motte, 179. Delamotte, 160. De la Musse, 207. De Lamy, 150, 176. Delandes, 179. Delandre, 226. De I'Angle, 152, 192. De la Noue, 175. De la Pillonniere, 244. De la Ramiere, 239. De Lardinicre Peign^, .63. De la Riviere, 161, 209, 258. De l^^Roche, 166, 167, 253.— ej^ inlf.2 JW^ 184, 212, 230, 257. Gambler, 214, 229. Garacht', 154. Garcelon, 246. Garnault, 216. Gamier, 167. Garrick, 228. Gastigny, 172, 175. Gaston, 255. Gaubert, 176. Gaultier, 212, 251. Gaussen, 212, 214, 215. Geaussent, 258. Gedouin, 208. Gendron, 250. Geneste, 206. Geoffrey, 205. Germen, 251. Gervais, 158, 160, 214, 223. Gervaise, 174. Ciiberne, 209. C;ibson, 191. Gignons, 183. Gignoux, 212, 216. Gillot, 162. (iimlette, 208. (;irard, 216. (lirardot, 214. Girardotde Sillicux, 158. (Ilanisson, 154. Goayiiuet, 251. (iodin, 162, 217, 219. Godins, 212. (jonyt|Uct, 172. Gosselin, 258. Gosset, 214, 230. (lougeon, 226. Goujon, 162. Goulain, 151. Gimlon, 149, 178. Gourbould, 1 54. Gourdonncl, 176. Goutelles, 253. Goyon, 250. Graham, 230. Grancay, 180. Granger, 251. Gravcrol, 160. Graves, liaroness, 161. Gravissct, 1 98. tiraydon, 216. Grenier, 176. Grogan, 222. Grosart, 240. (iroslet, 245. Grote, 183. Groteste de la Mothe, 159- Grubb, 190. Grueber, 215, 226. Gually, 183. (jualtier, 212. Gualy, 209. Guenon de Beaubinson, 259. Guichery, 174. (juide, 160, 211. Cjuiennot, 153. Guigner, 212. Guill, 204. Guillebcrt, 210. Guillemard, 204. Guillermin, 151. (Uiillot, 149. Guinand, 212. Guion, 212. Guirand, 176. Guisard, 239. Guivd, 250. Guyon, 174. Hager, 162. Haggard, 238 Hall, 162. Haniclot, 258. Hardy, 215. Harenc, 214. Harnc, 151. Harris, 239. Hassard, 222. Hastings, Baroness, 2 1 5. Hautcharmois, 175. Hauteclair, 208. Hautot, 258. Havcc, 205. Hay Drummond, 169, 175. 238- Hayes, 162. I Hcadley, Lord, 216. Henry, 174. Hercontaud, 250. Hersand, 251. Heurteleu, 254. Heurtley, 254. Hewett, 226. Hewlett, 204. Hierome, 209. Hirzel d'Olon, 207. Hobler, 210. Holderncsse, Countess of, 142. H oilier, 212. Holmes, 221. Hubert, 239. Hudel, 224. Huelins, 162. Huet, 198. Hugueton, 172. HuUin de (^istine, 172. Hullin d'Orval, 172. Huntingdon,Earlof,2i5. Ihmtingfield, Lord, 215. Innes, 213, 230. Iremonger, 216. Jalabert, 212. Jamineau, 212. Jarvey, 240. Jaubert, 141. Jaumard, 226. Jay, 154- J card, 179. Jennede, 222. Jerome, 209. Jeverau, 208. Jolit, 204. Joly de Aernac, 180. Jonquiere, 175. Jordan, 149. Jortin, 223. lourdain, 211. Jourdaine. 205. Journard, 205. lousselin, 251. Juliet, 154. Justamon, 230. Justamond, 189. Justel, 165. Justcnier, 208. Kay Shuttlcworth, 157. Kenney, 237. Kenny, 214. Kinnoull, Earl of, 169. La Balanderie, 176. La Barthc, 183. La Basochc, 176. Labastiile, 208. La Bastille, i 50, 183. La Bastide Barbu, 151, 176. // / /"//./ liF TIC A r. TA Hl.ES. 267 Labat, 209. I.ahatie, 183. I.a Batic, 176. I.a Hcsscde, 17^). La Hillicrc, 176. La lioissonnadc, 176. Laboiidicrc, 247. La Hoiirlicticrc, 176, 184. La lioiilayc, 151. 176. La lirossc Korlin, 151, 176. La llroiissc, 151. La liiissade, 179. La Caillcinolte, 137,1 50, 180. Lacan, 181. La Cana, 174. La Castcrie, 176. La Catcrie, 150. 171. La Caiix, 174. La ChapcUe, 174. La Clidc, 151. La Cloche, 176. La C(iloiiil)inc, 208. La Condc, 230. La Coste, 176. La Coiidc, 208. Lacour, 176. La F"abiOquc, 208. Lafausillo, 206. Laforce, 219. Laforcy, 230. Lagachcrie, 210. La Grangcric, 150. La (niarflc, 151. La Guiminicrc. 150. La HauteviUc, 151. Laind, 151. La Landc, 154, 176. Lallonc Diipcnun, 174. La Loubicre, 176. L'Alouel, 210. La Maria, I S3. La .Mal([uiLre, 176. La Maiipcrc, 151. Lamb, 171. Lambert, 238. La Mclonniere, 177. Lameryes, 176. La Meizc, 179. La Milliere, 175. Lamillicre, 208. Lammert, 162. Lamolhc, 198. LamoUe, 212, 2 38, 248. La Motte, 151. La Motte Fremontier, 208. La Motto Graiiidor, 206. L'Amoiireiix, 250. L'Amy, 151. Lanaiuc, 239. Lanfant, 151. Langlade, 250. Langlois, 237. Lanteau, 151. Lantillac, 151. La I'crin, 230. La l'illicfc,"i8o. Li Kamicrc, 151. La Ravaliire, 1S3. La Kinljilicic. 179. La Risole Kalaiuin, 1 51. La Roche, 175, 1S3, 198, 2 '^2. La Rcirhcgiia, 151. La Rochcmoiiroy, 151. La Rociiic, 176. La Rociuicre, 175. La Roussclic-ic, \-,\. La Roiivicre, 176. Larouvi^re, 150. Larpent, 210, 238. Larue, 149. I -a Salle, 179. La Sautier, 151. La Scrre, 151, 176, 211, 246. Laserre, 176. Lassau, 176. Lassaut, 150. La Trobc, 254. Latrobe, 226. La Touche, 2 1 4, 2 1 6, 2 2 2. Latour, 208. Laiiga, 251. Laume, 176. Laurens, 154. Lautour, 259. Laval, 151, 160, 174,198, 209. La Ville Dieu, 180. Lavit, 176. Layard, 189, 238. Lear, 226. Le Barry, 184. Le lias, 150, 216. Le Blanc, 150, 176, 212, 239- Le lilon, 162, 212. Le Hourgay, 208. Le Bourgeois, 255. Le Brumcnt, 258. Le Brun, 151. Le Clerc dc V'irly, 198. Le Conue, 251. Le Coq, 147, 149, 16 r, 190. Le Cordier, 172. 245. Lc Cornu, 251. Lc Court, 255. Leeds, Duke of, 142. Lc Fanu, 221, 222. Lcfcbur, 207. Lcfcbure, 212. Lc Kcbure, 254. Lcfcbvrc, 204, 211. Lcfcvre, 206, 21 1. Lc Klcur, 211. Le r.eay, 250. Leglizc, 212. Lc Goyc, 230. Le CIrand, 245. Leheup, 171. Lc Maistrc, 174, 212. Lc Mann, \U2. Lc Marchand, 251. Le Marchez, 250. Lcmbrasieres, 158. Lcnicry, 151. Lentillac, 176. Le I'etit, 245. Lc I'rez, 209. Le Quesne, 212, 239. Lernoult, 255. Le Rorh, 207. Le Roux, 176. Lesage, 259. L'Kscott, 183. L'Escours, 151. Lescurc, 183. Lc Sevcsirc, 246. I.'lCspinassc, 255. l.'Kstrille, 151. Lcstry, 183. Lctablcrc, 223. Lc V'aseur, 211. Levasseur,2 58. Le \'asseur, 239. Lc Vasseur Cougn(je, 171. Le Vassor, 245, 256. Le Venier de la Gros- setii^re, 150. Lcvesque, 204, 258. Lcvillainc, 2ig. Liflbrd, Karl of, 161, 178, 2 1 2. Liger, 151. Ligonier, 185, 186, 239. Ligonier de lionncval, 160, 209, 216. L'llc dc (Hia, 151. Lindsey, Earl of, 239. Linou.x, 151. Lintot, 166. Lion, 2o> Liscour, 176. Litton, 223. Livcrne, 166. Lizard ii^rc, \^(■<. Lombard, 162, 19'^, 209. I.ondc, I Jl. Londig«y, 176. Long, 205. Longuct, 212. Loquct, 167. L'Orfclin, 251. Lostall, 183. Lotcron, 151. Lothian, Marquisof, 142. Louard, 1 56. Loubicr, 212. Louliii, 176. Louvigni, 161. Louvigny, 150, 175. Loux, 151. Luard, 212, 214, 238. Lubicrcs, 176. Lumlcy, 216. Lumo, 230. Lungay, 151. Lyon, 209. M'Clintock, 226. M'Leod, 213, 215, 230. Madaill(jn, 180. .\Lagny, 183, 184, 208. Maillard, 153. Maill(5, 150. Maillcray, 150. Maillcrays, 176. Maisnnneuvc, 175. Maittaire, 166. Majcndic, 214, 222, 247, 248. Majon, 183. Malard, 244. Malcragucs, 176. Malherbe. 174. Malide, 160. Mangin, 232. .\Lirchais, 179. Marchand, 230. Marcomb, 154. .\Lirgucron, 239. ALaricourt, 1 50. Maricttc, 173. 174. Marjoribanks, 259. Marmaude, 149. MaroUcs, 205. Martcl, 208. Martin, 181, 252. Martineau, 2t 1. 230. Masdrcs, 190, 231. Maseride, 161. Massac, 151. Massd, 250. Mathy, 189, 226, 249. Maturin, 223. Maty, 249. 2 68 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Mauclerc, 250. Maucleer, 21 1. Manger, 232, 245. Maureau, 154. Maury, 153, 154. Maury Despcron, 179. Mausy, 154. Mauzy, 226. Mazeres, 175. Maziere, 208. Mclchior, 215. Menard, 147, 149, 160, 167, 173- Menel, 251. Mcrcier, 151, 159, 176, 222 23Q. Meredith, 204. ■ Merzeau, 162. Mesnage, 208. Mettayer, 160. Michie, 162. Middleton, 216, 230. Miege, 168. Migault, 239. Millery, 151. Milltown, Earl of, 216. Minet, 174, 212. Minto, Countess of, 239. Misson, 139, 149, 152, 160, 167. Mocquet, 148. Moisan, 250. Molenier, 171. Moncal, 176, 207. Monccau, 177. Moncornet, 150. Monnier, 180, 207. Monpas, 175. Monpesson, 216. Montargis, 175. Montault, 175. Montaut, 150. Montolicu de St. Hip- polite, 170. Montpinson, 150. Montrcsor, 214, 229. Montroy, 150. Moreau, 174, 212. Morel, 158. Morell, 254. Morin, 208, 212. Morrcn. 240. Mottcux, 166. Mouginct, 156. Mougnicr, 230. Moun',-Alexander,Coun- tess of, 168, 215. Mourgrue, 212. Moussct, 258. Moustier, 255. Murray, 171. Murray, Lady L., 161. Musgrave, 163. Mussard, 160. Nau, 210. Naudin, 160. Nauranne, 179. Neau, 154. Neufville, 150. Nicolas, 149, 159, 160, 207, 216. Noel, 216. Noel, Lady E., 143. Noguier, 212. Nollett, 183. Nouaille, 212, 239. Noual, 230. Ogier, 162. Olier, 211. Olivier, 215. Osmond, 183. Ostervald, 210. Ouvry, 216, 217, 221. Pain, 239. Palairet, 189. Pallard, 210. Palmer, 226. Pantin, 162. Papin, 157. Pare, 205. Pascal, 151, 176. Passy, 150. Paul, 162. Paulin, 240. Paulin, Comtc, 161. Peachi, 211. Pechell, 161, 238. Peckwell, 183. Pegat, 151. Pegorier, 149, 198, 209. Pegus, 189. Pelham, 215. Pelissier, 207, 222. Pelletreau, 210. Pennetiere, 208. Pensant, 208. Pepin, 179. PeredeFontencIles, 176. Pi^rcs, 209. Perin, 230. Perricr, 207, 212. Perrin, 226, 231. Perronet, 227, 245. Petit, 150, 175,207,215. Pettit, 212. Pettitt, 212. Peuthcrcr, 239. Peyferie, 239. Phipps, 221, 258. Pichon, 250. Pigou, 162, 230. Pierre, 211. Pillet, 239. I'inceau, 251. Pineau, 176. Pineton de Chambrun, 159- Pinsun, 176. Pitcairn, 238. Pitt, 216. Planchc, 236. I'lasticr, 255. Pointier, 217. Poittevin, 250. Pollen, 239. Pons, 210. Ponthieu, 151, 156. Porcher, 215. Portal, 162, 215, 232. Portales, 156. Porter, 185, 198. Posquet, 160. Potier, 162. Potter, 198, 226. Pouchon, 212. Pousset, 162. Poyrand, 175. Pratt, 222. Pratviel, 170. Pravan, 175. Pressac, 151. Prevost, 247. Primrose, Viscountess, 195. Prior, 226. I'riou, 251. Prou, 151. Pruer, 151. Puget, 216. Pujolas, 198, 20S, 209. Pardon, 230, 240. Pyniot, 250. PyniotdelaLargere, 149, 168. Quantiteau, 198. Querray, 246. Ouesteljrune, 151, 175. Quinson, 151. Ouirant, 1 50. Rabainiires, 154. Rabaud, 162. Raboteau, 221. RamlKiuillet, 1S9, 190. Rapin de 'I'hoyras, 156, 158, 162, 166. Rcadc, 184. Regis, 198,215,224. Rcnaud, 258. Rcndlesham, Lord, 246. Rencu, 173. Rcnouard, 222. Rcnue, i 54. Rcvole, 151. Reynaud, 160. Reynette, 211, 226. Rhemy, 240. Ribault, 251. Riboleau, 162. Ribot, 162. Ricard, 150, 176. Richion, 226. Richon, 183. Rieutort, 149, 207, 228. Rigail, 212. Rigaud, 235, 253. Riou, 229. Ripere, 183. Rival, 198. Rivery, 176. Rives, 215. Robethon, 156, 159, 160, 162, 198, 257. Roch, 240. Rocheblave, I S3. Rochebrunc, 1 50, 226. Rochelle, 251. Rochemont, 176. Roches, 240. Roger, 191. Rogue, 183. Romaine, 224, 226. Romieu, 215. Romilly, 216, 232, 238. Romney, Earl of, 216. Ron, 212. Rondeau, 166, 212, 258. Rose, 222, 258. Rosen, 226. Rossignol, 246. Rough, 240. Roumieu, 215, 239. Rouquet, 224. Rouse, 176. Roussel, 204, 209, 239. Rousselet, 174. Roussier, 1 54. Rouviere, 176. Roviere, 208. Roxburghe, Duchess of, 238. "^ Roy, 250. Rozet du Causse, 176. Ruffiat, 250. Rumigny, 150, 176. Russell, Lady C, 238. Russell, Lady Rachel, 143- Ryland, 226. Sabaticr, 239. Sablannan, 230. ALPHABETICAL TABLES. 269 Sailly, 151. S;iint-Ai};naii, 1 ;i. Saint-Lticnnc, 151. Saintc-Maisdii, 151. Saint- Fastc, 151. Saint-darniain, 151. St. Ciriiy, 179. St. Lcjjcr, 156, 161, 191, 226. Si. Marie, 162. St. Maurice, 183. Saint- I'aul, 151. St. I'liy, 179. St. Sauveur, 149, 151, 178. Saint-Tenac, 175. Saint- Yore, 151. Salingue, 258. Sally, 151. Salnioncl, 21 5. Salomon, 1 50. Sanion, 215. Samson, 176. Sanccrre, 141. Sandoz, 226. SantiUie, 183. Sarazin, 230. Sarlande, 184. Saubergne, 204, 20S. Saure, 151. Saurin, 223, 231. Sautclle, 208. Sautrc.ui, 153. Savary, 254. Schombcrg, 132,139,142, 149,160,161, 175. '81, 198, 212,244. Seigle, 251. Scllarics, 183. Senoche, 150. Series, 162. Serment, 151. Serrc, 150. Servantes, 240. Abauzit, 75. Abelain, 57. Abraham, 45. Acque, 38. Adam, 66. Adrien, 59. Agace, 73. Ageron, 66. Aissailly, 45. Alart, 28. Alavoine, 73. Albers, 73. Albert,4i,42, 56, 58,73. Scvc, 151. .Shaw Lcfevrc, 206. Shuttleworlh, 157. Sibourg, I S3. Sichd, 251. Silvester, 2i i. .Silvcstrc, 211. .Simpson, .Sir J. Y., 240. SisoUcs, 176. Smart, 230. Smith, Kev. S., 212. Smythe, 221. Sncll, 216. Solcgre, 176. Solly, 215, 248. Souchet, 160. Soulegre, 175. Soulhard, 230. Souligne, 167. SouUard, 230. Soumain dc Vallicrc, 1 76. Stehelin, 224. Stewart, 226. Slrafibrd, Countess of, 161. Subrcmont, 2 II. Suttie, 238. Sylvcstre, 158. Tabiteau, 226. Tahourdin, 215. Tallemnnt, 144. Tardy, 221, 222. Tarleton, 169. Tassin, 156. Teissier, 212. Tempid, 1 56. Temple, 173. Tendronneau, 252. Tcntcrdcn, Lord, 248. Tcrron, 217. Terrot, 226. Tessonicre, 176. Testard, 162. Testard des .M Lslars, 153. Testart, 162. Testas, 168, 198, 212. TcttefoUe, 208. Teulon, 255. Thcron, 176. Thierry dc Sabonnicrcs, 239. Iholon dc Guiral, 255. Thomas, 154, 176, 212, 215. Thompson, 228, 254. Tibcriie, 151. Tincl, 239. Tincll, 253. Tobie Kossat, 176. Torpie, 222. Torriano, 206. Touchur, 251. Tough, 240. Toupclin, 208. Tournicr, 1 50, 1 76. Trapaud, 183. Tra vernier, 1 54. Traviss, 204. Triboutlet Dcmainbray, 253- Triquet, 174. Tronchin, 198. Troussaye, 158. Truffet, 162, 216. Turner, 238. Turquand, 239. Turrin, 239. Udel, 224. Uxbridge, Countess of, 161. X'alsery, 175. Vanneck, 215. VareiUcs, 226. \'arenques, 150. Vashon, 226. Vasselot, 150. V'aury, 208. \'aulier, 216. TAIJLK in. XA I rKAI.IZAIl()N.S, KTC. Albin, 29. Alden, 53. Alcber, 67. Alexandre, 6, 63. Allaire, 64. Allais, 66. Allard, 45, 66. Allat, 29. Allen, 61. Allix, 45, 48. AUotte, 49. Alvant, 58. Amail, 49. y\melot, 49. Amiand, 50, 60. Amiot, 58, 73. Amonnct, 37. Amory, 29. Amyand, 62, 73. Amyraut, 64. Andart, 51, 54, 59. Andn5, 60, 73. Andrieu, 42, 63. Ancs, 29. Angelier, 28, 29. Angler, 42. Vazcille, 212. \'ebr<>n, 151. Verangjc, 177. Vcrcheres, 198. \'cr(lihamp, 183. V'crdcUe, 151. V'ertlier, 151. Vcrnezobre, 212. X'crny, 176. V'crvillon, 176. X'csanct', 175. \'esansay, 150, 186. Vcsian, 175. \'C5tien, 179. Veymar, 178. Vial, 149. Vialers, 212. Vialla, 151. Vicousc dc la Court, 174- Victoria, Queen, 205. Viel, 250. Vigne, 212. Vignolcs, 149, 151, 183, 184,212,215,232,236. Vigor, 212. Vilas, 181. Villcbonnc, 208. Vilmisson, 150, 151, 175, 176. Vimarc, 178, 183. \'irasel, 226. Vivens, 150, 175. Wadden, 239. Waddington, 258. Walker, 205. Western, 216. Whitaker, 191. Wilks, 238. Willis, 169, 175. Wilson, 230. Wynne, 226, Yarborough, Earl of. Angoise, 29. Annaut, 29. Anviccau, 67. Archbaneau, 52. Arbunot, 59. Ardesoif, 65, 73. Ardesoife, 45. Ardouin, 49. Arnaud, 45, 55, 59, 258. Arnaudin, 42, 258. Arnauld, 42. Arnoult, 29. Articrcs, 73. 270 Artiinot, 45. Assairc, 45. Asselin, 42, 45, 49, 60. Astory, 29. Auber, 58, 63, 73. Aubcrt, 73. Aubertin, 45, 73. Aubin, 66. Aubourg, 5S. Aubii, 58. Aubry, 29, 60. Audebert, 51, 55. Audcburg, 29. Auduroy, 29. Aufrere, 60, 65, 70, 72, 73- Angel, 54. Augibant, 36. Augnier, 29. Aure, 45. Aurez, 64. Auriol, 40, 51, 73. Aurios, 64. Ausmonier, 38. Ausol, 42. Ausonneau, 66. Austin, 52. Autain, 29. Aveline, 41. Aviceau, 41. Ayland, 51. Ayrault, 41. Azire, 40. Babault, 57, 67. Bacalan, 73. Bachan, 65. Bachand, 64. Bachelier, 37. Bacot, 63, 64. Badenhop, 42. Badnett, 46. Bagnoux, 54. Baignoux, 41. Baile, 68. Bailhou, 45. Bailie, 49. Baillcrgeau, 45. Bailly, 42. Baisant, 38. Ballairc, 57. Banquier, 49. Baquer, 29. Barachin, 46, 49. Barat, 56. Barat dc .Salcnavc, 56. Baraylcau, 42. Barbat, 38, 49. Barbaud, 53, 57. Barbc, 29. Barber, 30. ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Rarberis, 45. Barbct, 73. Barbier, 42, 61, 62, 65. Barbot, 41, 46, 57, 69. Barbolin, 29,61. liarbule, 29. Barbut, 52, 64, 73. Bardcau, 61. Bare], 29. Bargeau, 60. Bargignac, 67. Barian, 65. Baril, . Barion, 64. Baric, 29. Barnege, 73. Barnouin, 73. Baronneau, Jt,. Barqucnon, 49. Barraii, 52. Barron, 42. Barset, 54. Barsselaer, 61. Bartalot, 65. Barvand, 38. Bashfeild, 58. Basille, 29. Basmenil, 46. liasset, 54. Bastell, 63. Batailhey, 65. B.attier, 73- Baudertin, 57. Baudevin, 29. Baudoin, 72, 73. Baudouin, 42. Baudovin, 58. Baiidowin, 63. Baudrie, 30. Baudris, 60. Baudry, 28, 29. Bauer, 54. Bauldcvin, 52. Bauldouin, 52. liaiime, 29. Baurru, 28. B.auzan, 29. Bavcr, 54. Bazire, 29. Beauchanip, 56. Baufils, 63. Bcaufills, 46. Bc.uilande, 29. Bcaulicu, 46. Beaumont, 65. ]!eaune, 58. ]5ccher, 28. Bcckler, 59. IJeekman, 54. Bcge, 47- Begre, 29. Hclct, 29. Beliard, 73. Belin, 45, 53. Bellanaer, 46. Bellemarte, 58. Bellet, 49. Belliard, 29. Bcllin, 42. Bellivillc, 68. Bellonclc, 73. Belon, 58. Beluteau, 65. Belvcre, 68. Benech, 62. Beneche, 57. Benet, 29. Bennct, 49, 61, 63. Benoict, 64. Benoist, 29, 42, 49, 60. Benoitt, 30. Benouad, 63, 68. Beranger, 29, 57, 58. Beraud, 52, 67. 15crault, 59. Bercherc, 42, 73. Berionde, 60. Berlemeyer, 54. Bernard,' 29, 30, 37, 42, 45. 53. 57. 65. ]!ernardeau, 45, 66. Bcrnon, 42, 49. Bernou, 45. Berny, 36. Berslaer, 66. Bcrtheau, 42. Bertin, 63. Bcrtran, 40. Bertrand, 51, 64. Beschefer, 59. Besnage, 36. Bessier, 60. Bessin, 39. Bcsson, 53. Bessonet, 64. Best, 55. Betton, 64. Beule, 30. IJeuzelin, 52. Beuzevillc, 73. Bevvkell, 57. Bczenech, 73. Bezin, 64. Biart, 29. Bibal, 45. Biball, 61. Bibbant, 29. Bichot, 57. Bidley, 42. Bieisse, 59. Biel Biet, Big B Bi Bi illc ;illn Bi l!i Bi Bire, Blan Ifcld, 64. :, 29. tot, 52,71. Ion, 45, 71. Uonart, 41. "op, 57- it, 67. y, 60. .nand, 54. met, 46, 73. e, 62, 65. ^^..^nc, 61. Blancard, 53. Blancart, 45. Blanchard, 29, 59, 65. Blaqiiicrc, 73. Blond, 63, 67. Blondeau, 37. Blondell, 29, 45. 151ondet, 63. Blondett, 28. Bobin, 57. Boche, 29. Bockquet, 45. Bocquet, 59. Bodard, 62. Bodvin, 29. Boehm, 49. ]?oigard, 65. Boileau, 73. Boirou, 28. Boisdeschesne, 46. Boisnard, 63, 67. Boisrond dc St Leger, 70. Boisseaux, 42. Boissonet, 29. Boiste, 53. Boitoult, 29. Bonafons, 62. Bonaniy, 29, 36. Bonard, 59. Boncoiron, 71. Boncourt, 63. , Bondvin, 29. Bongrand, 51. 13onhoste, 56. Bonier, 53. Bonin, 38, 41,62. Bonine, 56. JSonmot, 45. Bonneau, 61, 66. Bonnel, 29. lionncU, 51. Bonnelle, 30. Bonnet, 59, 73. Bonneval, 49. Bonomirier, 61. Bonouvricr, 29, 36. Bontefoy, 29. Bonvar, 29. Ai.rit.inr.Tn \n. taiu.hs. 271 Hoolh, 73. Kurchnian, 61. liiirilcric, 42. llorcuu, 67. Horic, 49. Uorncinan, 55. IJos, 30. Hosanqiiet, 46, 73. Hosch, 51. ISosciiictin, 42. Bossairan, 65. Hossis, 52. liosy, 67. Houchc, 29. IJouchcr, 41, 52, 73. llouchct, 28, 30, 37, 58, 65. liouchclt, 28, 30. lioucquct, 28. IJoudier, 58. liuudin, 28. Itoudinot, 41. Uoiuloin, 73. IJouhercau, 42, 58. Uouillicr dc Ucaurcgard, 60. Boulanger, 45, 49. boulicr dc Ucaurcgard, 59- Houllard, 63. liouUay, 29. liouUommer, 57. liounin, 45. ISouciuct, 28, 30, 54, 258. liourdct, 46. Bourdillon, 73. Bourdon, 30, 49, 73. Bourcau, 42, 57. Bourgeois, 50. ' Bourgeon, 58. Bourgcs, 41. Bourgnignon, 29. Bourian, 65. Bourn, 29. Bournack, 71. Bournct, 30. Bournot, 29. Bourreyan, 42. Bousar, 45. Bousart, 42. Boiissac, 42, 67. Bouteiller, 51. Boutet, 52. Boutilier, 52. Boutonnier, 30. Bouverie, 73. Bouvet, 61. Bovey, 55. Boy, 46. Boycoult, 46. "<>> J- 45. 73- Boyc, 45- Boygard, 28. Bozey, 59. ISozuman, 59. Bracquehaye, 63. Braguier, 59, 258. Bragvicr, 54. Bratclier, 42. Brcband, 56. Breda, 51. Bredel, 73. Brehut, 29. Brement, 60, 61. Brcon, 45. Bretellierc, 59. Brevet, 49, 51. Brcvint, 17, 37. Brian, 73. 15rianccau, 42. Briand, 73. Bridon, 28, 29. Brielle, 62. Brict, 29. Brievinck, 55. Brigault, 41. I5rini|ueniand, 45. Brisac, 73. Brissac, 59. Brissau, 59. Brisset, 30. Brisson, 28. Brocas, 58. Brocasdc Uondcsplains, 56. Brochart, 54. Broha, 53. Brossard, 66. Brouard dc la Coussaye, 68. Brouart, 42. Brouchct, 67. Brouino, 29. Brozet, 62. ]5rulon, 64. Brun, 55. Brunant, 58. Brunben, 29. Bruncau, 41, 42. Brunei, 49. Brunier, 30. Bruquier, 45. Brus, 63. Brusseau, 46. Brusson, 29. Bruyer, 52. Bryon, 51. Bucailc, 30. Bucher, 52. Buicarlelct, 67. Buissicrc, 73. Buissieres, 73. Bunict, 29. Buor, 42. Burcar, 45. Bureau, 38, 45, O7, 73. Burctell, 61. Burtel, 42. Buschnian, 54. Bush, 62. Bussat, 59. Busscrcau, 42. Bussierc, 51 Bustin, 45. Butel, 42. Buteux, 29. Cabibel, 51, 62, 08, 73. Cadet, 40. Cadett, 53. Cadroy, 51, 55. Cagrou, 68. Cahuac, 54. Caillabueuf, 40. Cailland, 59. Caillard, 42. Caille, 59. Cailleau, 30. Caillobeuf, 54. Caillon, 58. Caillouc, 40. Callivaux, 46. Cahnels, 46. Camberland, 30. Canibrclan, 30. Cancellor, 61. Cannieres, 65. Caovet, 63. Cappel, 13. Capper, 73. Cardel, 53. Cardes, 41. Cardon, 30, 63. Careiron, 40. Cari, 30. Carlat, 52. Carle, 74. Carles, 62. Carlier, 30. Carnac, 73. Caron, 30, 46, 49, 53. Carpentier, 30. Carre, 42, 49, 53, 58. Carrierc, 64. Carron, 30. Cart, 59. Cartier, 49. Casie, 30. easier, 68. Cashavv, 51. Cassart, 54. Cassaw, $0. Casscl, 30. Casset, 30. Castagnier, 41. Castaing, 40, 51. Castanet, 64. Castrcs, 73. Cauchie, 53. Caudainc, 28. Cauon, 68. Caussat, 65. Causson, 68. Caulin, 68. Cavalier, 38. Cavallie, 54. Cazalet, 73. Caz;ds, 51. Cazaly, 73. Cazautnech, 46. Cazeneusne, 64. Cazenove, 73. Ceauniont, 58. Cellcry, 30. Cenc, 30. Ceyt, 62. Chabanel, 65. Chabaud, 66. Chabet, 55, 65. Chaboissan, 49. Chabossan, 49. Chabosscau, 67. Chabot, 46, 73. Chaboussan, 30. Chabrol, 30, 49. Chadaigne, 55. Chaielcr, 67. Chaigneau, 42, 49. Chaille, 38, 62, 65. Chald, 73. ChalicS 73. Challe, 30. Chalopin, 42. Chalvet, 57. Chameau, 60. Chamicr, 73. Champion, 54, 67. Champion dcCrespigny, 73- Champon, 54. Channett, 61. Chapellier, 65. Chaperon, 28. Chapet, 30. Chapon, 64. Chappcll, 30. Charas, 36. Chardavoinc, 49. Chardin, 36, 42. Chardon, 42. Charier, 55. 272 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Charle, 30. Charles, 42, 49, 61, 71. Charlii5, 73. Charpcnelle, 41. Chanetid, 73. Charrier, 53. Charron, 46, 57. Chartier, 30, 59. Chaseloup, 46. Chasgneau, 46. Chasles, 42, 46. Chassclon, 53. Chasseloup, 59. Chasseieau, 73. Chastagnier de Crama- h<^, 42. Chastelier, 42. Chatain, 30. Chauveau, 53. Chauvet, 36, 37, 64, 73. Chauvin, 41, 46. Chauvit, 37. Chavalier, 55. Chave, 64. Chef d'Hotel, 46. Chemonon, 30. Cheneu, 51. Chenevie, 59. Chenevix, 37, 53. Cheradaine, 59. Cheseau, 30. Chesneau, 30, 258. Cheval, 30. Chevalier, 42, 46, 51,65, 73- Chevallier, 60, 67. Chirot, 42. Chotard, 40. Chouard, 55. Chouy, 30. Chovard, 46. Chovet, 30. Chrestien, 46, 63. Chretien, 57, 63. Chrispin, 64. Christian, 57. Chupin, 57. Cigournai, 30. Clamouse, 71. Clancherie, 71. Clari, 57. Clark, 73. Clarke, 60. Clarmont, 73. Clary, 42. Claude-, 37. Clans, 60. Claveric, 65. Clavier, 62. Clement, 30, 49. Clerembault, 73. Clerenbault, 65. Clerenceau, 63. Cocker, 66. Coderk, 42. Coenen, 60. Cogin, 30. Coignand, 65. Cognard, 38. Cohen, 51. Colebrant, 61. Coliner, 38 Coliveaii, 30. Collet, 57. Collett, 68. Collette, 73. Collier, 30. Collineau, 51. Collon, 40. Colom, 46. Colombii5s, 73. Colomiez, 49. Combe, 30. Combriine, 73. Constantine, 42, 50. Cooke, 46. Coqueau, 73. Corbiere, 62. Cordes, 56. Cormier, 68. Cornet, 66. Correges, 42. Corso, 67. Cossard, 42. Cossart, 30, 67, 73. Cosson, 54. Costat, 42. Coste, 30. Cothoneau, 61. Cothonneau, 42. Cotigno, 58. Cotreau, 67. Cottibi, 30. Cottin, 70, 73. Coudain, 30. Coudert, 46. Couilland, 66. Coupe, 30, 49, 51. Couppe, 63. Courallet, 41. Courand, 42. Courcellcs, 30. Coureau, 68. Courson, 42. Courlaud, 58. Courtut, 30. Courtin, 60. Courlion, 30. Courtis, 42. Courtois, 30, 65. Courtris, 46. Cousin, 54. Cousteil, 64. Coutet, 72. Contois, 65. Couturier, 51. Couvelle, 59. Couvers, 46. Couvreur, 57. Covillart, 30. Coyald, 61. Cozun, 30. Crespigny, 73. Crespin, 30. Cresse, 30. Cretes, 30. Creusd, 73. Crispeau, 65. Crispin, 30. Crocheron, 68. Crochon, 38, 46. Crohare, 61. Cromelin, 42. Cromer, 66. Crommclin, 37. Crouard, 63. Croyard, 62. Croze, 57. Cruger, 51, 57. Crull, 61. Crusins, 56. Cruyger, 67. Culston, 59. Cuny, 59. Curnex, 39. Curoit, 30. U'Abadie, 61. D'Agar, 61. Dagar, 39. Daignebere, 65. Daillon, 36, 37. Dainhett, 28. Dalbiac, 73. Dalbias, 58. Dalbis, 65. Dalgresse, 38. Dallain, 31. D'AlIemagne, 43. Damascene, 37. Daneans, 31. Daney, 53. Dangirard, 51. Daniel, 54. Dansay, 31. Dansays, 49. Darel, 31. Dargent, 65, 73. Dariette, 57. Uarill, 40. Darrac, 61. D'Arreche, 45. Darrigraud, 67. Darticues, 51. Daubuz, 73. Dauche, 51. Daudif, 46. Daure, 31. Daval, 40, 43. Davi, 30. David, 30, 31, 36, 39, 42, 52, 54, 73. Davois, 62, 64. Davy, 54. D'Ayrolle, 56. De Barry, 73. De Bat, 53. De Bearlin, 46. De Beauheu, 48. De Beaulieu, 37. De Bernonville, 58. Debilly, 45. De Blagny, 73. De Boiville, 57. De Bonrepos, 52. De Bordet, 46. Debosc, 64. De Boucxin, 41. De Bourbon, 60. De Bourdeaux, 43. De Bournonville, 58. De Boyville, 73. De Brissac, 42, 46. De Bruse, 73. De Bussy, 46. De Camp, 37. De Carbonnel, 52. De Carron, 37. De Casaliz, 46. De Cautepye, 31. De Caux, 40, 43. De Charines, 58. De Charricu, 66. De Cherville, 37. De Clene, 52. De Cluset, 73. De Comarque, 73. De Conuiq, 46. De Cosne, 73. De Costa, 46. De Courceille, 31. De CourccUes, 31. De Diepe, 63. De Foissac, 73. De Forges, 54. Deffray, 43. De Fout[ucinbergues,52. De Fonvive, 73. De Gaillardy, 73. De Gaschon, 28. De Grandges, 67. ALPHABF.TICAL TABLES. -•73 De Guerin, 59. De Gulhon, 73. Ue Hane, 43. De Hanne, 57. Ue Hausi, 31. De Heule, 31. De Hogbet, 46. De Honibeau, 31. Dejean, 73. De Joux, 51. Delabadie, 45. De la liarre, 43. De la Bastide, 59. Delabatt, 49. De la live, 31. De la Chaumctte, 73. De la Combe, 43. De la Coste, 37. De la Couldre, 46. De la Cour, 31. De la Croze, 52. De la Faville, 65. De la Faye, 39. Delafon, 73. De la Fond, 31. De la Fons, 31. De la Fontaine, 13. De la Foreste, 31. De la Fuyc, 40, 46. De la Garene, 51. Delahaize, 73. De la Haye, 46, 55, 59. Dela Hays, 31, 59. De la Heuse, 49. De LainiJ, 27. De Lainerie, 55. De Laire, 64. De la JaiUe, 59, 64. Delaleu, 66. De la Loe, 46. De la iMarre, 43. De la Maziere, 55. Delamer, 46. Delamere, 66, 73. De Lancey, 41. De Lande, 73. De la Neuveniaison, 73. De la Newfmason, 64. De la Perelle, 49. Delapierre, 37. De la Place, 46, 63. De la Primaudaye, 73. De la Reve, 6S. De la Riverolle, 31. De la Riviere, 6. De la Roche, 31. De la Rue, 73. De la Sabliere, 73. De la Salle, 38. De la Touche, 54. De la Tour, 48, 58, 59, 67. De Lausat, 43. Delavau, 73. De I'Espine, 58. De I'Estang, 60. De Lestrille, 38. Delgardins, 31. Delhomme, 31. De Lhoumeau, 64. Le Lisle, 54. Dclm.iitre, 46. Delnias, 47. De Lommeau, 59. De rOrme, 28. Uelounieau, 66. De Loumeau, 66. De Louvain, 43. Delpeth, 66. De Maimbourg, 53. De Maistre, 31. Demarais, 31. De Marinville, De Marten, 53. De Massanes, 60. Deniay, 31. De Millon, 43. De Missy, 72. De Moasre, 46. De Moivre, 46. De Molien, 66. De Mombray, 57. De Monceau.x de I'Es- tang, 60. Demoney, 67. Demons, 31. IJemonte, 31. De .Monterby, 31. De Montigny, T},. De .Montledier, 73. De Mountmayor, 46. De Neuville, 54. Denin, 31. Ue Nipeville, 58. Denis, 38. Denisc, 36, 53. Dennis, 55. Uenys, 57. Ue Paz, 38. Ue Penna, 49. Ue Perroy, 61. Ue Pierrepont, 54. Ue Pommare, 46. Uepond, 60. De Pont, 46, 57, 60. De Pontereau, 73. De Pront, 46. De Raedt^ 57. De Rambouillet, 73. Derby, 49. 2 iM Dergnoult de Pressin- ville, 54. De Rideau, 51. Uerignifc, 65. Uerit, 57. De Rossieres, 73. De Roure des Bon- neaux, 67. De Rousignac, 62. De Roye, 53. Derricr, 60. Ue Ruvigny, 73. Ue .Sailly, 73. Ue St Colome, 73. Ue St Julien de Mala- care, 60. De St Leu, 73. Des Carrieres, 73. Des Champs, 31, 38. Deschamps, 64, 73. Des Clouseau.x, 61, 72, 73- Dese, 4.6. De Selincourt, 31. De Scne, 43, 258. Ue Senne, 31, 63, 68. Ucseret, 73. Uesessars, 43. Ues Fontaine, 31. De Sicqueville, 46. Des Lands, 43. Des Lauricrs, 62. Desmarets, 54, 73. Desormeaux, 73. Despeiot, 31. Despere, 31. Despomniare, 31. Des Kumeaux, 64. Dcssebues, 31. Dess Essarts, 54. Uestachcs, 31. Ue Surville, 67. Ue Uric, 67. Ue V'allan, 60. Ue X'arennes, 46. Ue Vassalc, 62. Ue V'aux, 47. Uevaux, 73. Devaynes, 73. De Veill, 43. Deveryt, 66. De V'icouse, 73. De Viere, 68. De V'ileltes, 73. Devins. 73. De \'irby, 73. Devisme, 73. Dc Vivaris, 51. Do Wacl, 54. De Walpcrgcn, 51. Dc WIckc, 46. Uherby, 38. U'Mcrby, 43. D'Hcrvarl, 60. : Diband, 41. Didier, 53. Dicn, 61. Die Port, \\. Uigard, 58. Uiharce, 45. Dinard, 65. Uioze, 46. Dobertin, 55. Dolep, S3. Dollond, 73. U'Olon, 73. Donnel, 31. Donut, 43. Dor, 31. Domant, 59. Uornaut, 57. Uoron, Ji. Uoruss, 66. Dosselin, 63. Doubclet, 62. Doublet, 46, 63, 65. Douillere, 62. Doussiner, 31. Dou.xain, 43. Dove, 57. D'Oyon, 68. Droilhet, 46. Urovett, 66. Urovillart, 64. Uroz, 73. Dry, 52. Uubare, 29, 31. Uubarle, 29. Uu Beons, 31. Uubignau, 49. Uubisson, 73. Uu Bisson, 73. Uu Bois, 39. Uubois, 29, 31, 59, 68. Uubosoq, 62. Uu Bourdieu, 38, 39, 43, 72- Uu Bre, 3t. Du Brevie, 31. Uubrois, 55. Uubuer, 67. Uucasse, 42, 43. Uu Charol, 41. Uuchcmein, 54. Du Charruau, 73. Du Chcsne, 31. Duchier, 31. Du Clos, 43. Duclos, 49. Du Clou, 31. 274 Du Cloiix, 38. Du Commun, 61. Du Coudray, 46. Du Couldray, 31. Du Cros, 31. Ducros, 54, 64. Dudesert, 73. Dueno Henriquez, 46. Du Fan, 40. Du Fau, 46. Du Fay, 49. Dufay, 31. Du Four, 38, 49. JS, 73- Dufour, 59. Du Fresnay, 62. Dufresney, 45. Dugard, 46. Dugua, 65. Du Gua, 28. Du Guernier du Cloux, 59- Du Hamel, 31, 43. Du Hurle, 32. Du Jardin, 63. Dulamon, 73. Dulivier, 50. Dulon, 60. Du Maistre, 38. Dumaresq, 73. Dumas, 46, 49, 51, 59, 65,71. Dumolin, 65. Dumons, 31. Du Monte, 31. Du Monthel, 51. Dumontier, 31, 63. Duniore, 32. Du Moulin, 17, 72. Dumoulin, 41, 68. Dumoustier, 73. Duperon, 41, 73. Du Perrior, 31. Du Perron, 57. Du Pin, 38, 43. Du Plessis, 58, 72, 74. Duplessis, 64. Duplessy, 6i. Duplex, 46. Du Pont, 39, 43. Dupont, 55,63,71, 73- Duport, 42, 55, 62, 65. Duprat, 53. Dupre, 58. Du Pu, 32. Du P'us, 28. Du Puy, 32. Dupuy, 42, 51,60, 64. Du (^uesne, 31. Durand, 37, 38, 42, 51, 63, 64, 68, 73. ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Durans, 32. Durant, 31,62. Durie, 49. Duroure, 73. Durrell, 40. Du Rousseau, 55. Du Roy, 62. Du Ru, 31. Durval, 31. Dusoul, 43. Du Souley, 57. Du Soutoy, 31. Du Tens, 31. Dutens, 73. Du Thuille, 31. Du Val, 46. Duval, 67, 73, 74. Edwards, 73. Eele, 57. Eland, Lady, 48, 53. Emery, 43, 53. Eniet, 54. Emly, 73. Endelin, 37. Enoe, 32. Equerie, 32. Ermenduiger, 57. Erraux, 60. Escoffier, 43. Esmont, 63. Espinasse, 49. Espinet, 66. Esquier, 32. Essart, 37. Estienne, 51. Estivall, 40. Estive, 28. Estrange, 67. Eyme, 46. Fache, 73, 75. Faget, 43. Fagett, 51. Faitout, 67. Falaiseau, 28. Falch, 38. Fald, 66. Fallet, 55. Fallon, 46. Fanioux, 59. Fanevie, 46. Fanevil, 43. Farcy, 66. Fargeon, 46. Farinel, 60. Farly, 46, 51. Faron, 62, 63. ' Fasure, 49. Fauccrreau, 32. Faucon, 34. Fauconnier, 41. Faulcon, 40, 49. Fauquier, 49. Faure, 41, 54. Favenc, 73. Favet, 62. Favin, 59. Favre, 41, 43- Feerman, 61. Feilloux, 60. Felles, 46. Felster, 66. Fellowe, 73. Fennvill, 46. Fenoulhet, 57. Fenouilhet, 73. Ferard, 73. Fermend, 55. Ferment, 43. Ferrant, 58. Ferre, 32, 38, 43. Ferret, 32. Feuilleteau, 32. Fevilleteau, 32. Fiesill, 62. Firminial, 43. Fleureau, 43. Fleurisson, 32,49,51,63. Fleury, 32, 43, 46. Flournoys, 37. Flurian, 47. Flurison, 46. Flury, 32. Foissin, 58. Folchier, 53. Fonnereau, 54. Fontaine, 46. Forceville, 38. Foretier, 32. Foriner, 52. Forister, 53. Forit, 49. Forme, 32. Formont, 64, 66. Forrester, 73. Forrestier, 61. Fouace, 73. Fouache, 62, 63. Foubbert, 40. Foucaut, 43. Fouchard, 64. Foucon, 32. Fougeron, 55, 65. Foulouse, 54. Foulrede, 58. Fountaine, 73. Fouquerell, 43, 63. Fouquet, 58, 64. Fourchars, 67. Fourche, 32. Fourgan, 32. Fournier, 53, 73. Fovace, 43. Fox, 57. Fradin, 61, 62. Fraigneau, 46. Frallion, 61. Francia, 46. Francillon, 58. Francis, 46. Francois, 6, 48. Francq, 32. Frau, 32. Fraylle, 68. Frazier, 64. Fremont, 73. Freneau, 32. Fresneau, 43, 68. Fresnot, 51. Fret, 43. Frisquet, 73. Fromenteau, 32. Fruchard, 73. Fruschart, 43. Fumeshau, 43. Furon, 32, 65. Fur)', 56. Gabelle, 32. Gabet, 51. Gabrier, 58. Gaelics, 37, 51. Gaillon, 55. Gaindait, 64. Gaiot, 32. Gairand, 51. Galabin, 62, 65. Galand, 67. Galdy, 43, 47. Galhie, 73. Galineau, 49. Galissard, 56. Galland, 47. Gallais, 41, 63. Galliard, 32. Galway, Earl of, 72. Gambier, 61, 73. Gardien, 40. Gardies, 43. Garin, 28. Garinoz, 47. Gario, 51. Gariot, 67. Garnault, 54, 65, 67, 73. Gamier, 39, 43. Garon, 47, 64. Garrard, 59. Garrie, 41. Gaschere, 43. Gasherie, 43. Gashlie, 67. Gastaing, 65. ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Gastily, 67. Gastigny, 52, 72. Gastine, 73. Gaston, 40. Gauche, 43. Gaude, 32. Caudeneau, 38. Gaudct, 43. Gaudies, 43. Gaudy, 66. GauKain, 32, 43, 73. Gaultier, 32, 73. Gaussen, 62, 65, 73. Gautie, 28. Gautier, 32,43,65. Gaution, 32. Gautron, 32. Gavot, 32. Gayot, 43. Gaydan, 65. Geijcrt, 32. Gelien, 47. Genays, 37. Gendrant, 52. Gendrault, 41, 67. Gendreu, 66, 73, 75. Gendron, 41. Cienhemier, 66. Gcntilet, 65. Georges, 47. Gerbier, 32. Gerbrier, 28. Gerdaut, 59. Germaine, 50. Geruy, 43. Gervais, 49. Gen-aise, 32, 37. Gervaizet, 60. Ghiselin, 32, 61. Gideon, 51. Gignoux, 73. Gilbert, 32, 57, 58. Giles, 93. Gilles, 58, 64. Gillois, 32. Gilman, 73. Ginonneau, 52. Girandeau, 67. Girard, 32, 52, 53, 57, 6', 63, 67, 73- Girardot, 41, 64, 73. Girardot. Giraud, 60, 64, 73, 75. Giraurd, 62. Giraux, 58. Girod, 59. Glenisson, 66. Gloria, 43. Gnede, 61. Gobert. 32. Gobs, 32. Godard, 63, 65. Goddard, 62. Godeau, 32. Godefroy, 32. Godot, 61. Godfrey, 36. Godfroy, 54. Godin, 43, 62, 73. Gohier, 54. Goilard, 47. Goisin, 47. Goldevin, 53. Gomar, 43. Gomart, 40. Gomeon, 52. Gontier, 58. Gorin, 65. Gorion, 32. Goslin, 53. Gosseaume, 63. Gosset, 73. Goubert, 43. Goudron, 67. Gouffe, 32. Gougeon, 67. Gouland, 47. Goulle, 32. Gourbiel, 41. Gourdin, 32. 43. Gourdon, 66. Gouvernet, 53. Gouy, 67. Govin, 63. Govis, 61, 67. Govy, 47. Grangier, 67. Grasvellier, 43. Grasset, 32. Grateste, 51. Gravelot, 47. Gravelle, 32. Gravisset, 47. Grazeillier, 64. Greene alias Vert, 65. Greenwood, 60. Grellier, 73, 75. Greneau, 68. Grenot, 38. Greve, 46. Gribelin, 32. Griel, 63. Griet, 32. Griffin, 73. Grignion, 73. Grignon, 37. Grillet, 56. Grimault, 32, 37, 63. (iroleau, 32. Grolon, 68. Gron, 62. Gronguct, 65. Grossin, 32. Groteste, 47. Gnidc, 57, 59. Grucbcr, 37. Gniider, 32. Grunpet, 32. Grunpet, 32. Gualtier, 45, 49, 51, 66. Guenard, 36. Guenault, 40. Guenon, 53. Guepin, 43. Guerin, 32, 40, 47. Guerineau, 57. Guerrier, 59, 62, 67. Guery, 29. Gueshcr, 56. Guesnard, 43. Guesnaud, 58. Guespin, 63. Guctet, 57, 67. Gueyle, 40. Guibal, 57. Guibald, 66. Guibert, 43. Guichard, 49, 68. Guichardiere, 53. Guichenet, 47. Guicheret, 47. Guichinet, 67. Guiday, 58. Guide, 36. Guidon, 60. Guignier, 43. Guigver, 49. Guilhen, 59. Guill, 38. Guillandeau, 41. Guillard, 32, 67. Guilleaume, 32. Guilleband, 73. Guillemard, 73. Guillct, 60, 6i. Guillien, 61. Guillon, 32, 47. Guilloneau, 73, 75. Guillot, 43. Guimard, 68. Guinand, 72, 73. Guinard, 47, 59, 74. Guion, 66, 71. Guioneau, 66. Guirod, 68. Guitan, 43. Guiton, 60, 64. Guitton, 5? 67. Guizot, 71 = 75 Gullet, 43. Gulry, 52. Gunge, 67. Guoy, 59. Guy, 40. Guyon, ?7, 74. HaDbcrncId, 74. Hain, 28. Haines, 74. 52, Halk', 74. Hanct, 41, 74. Haquinet, 68. Harache, 47, 64. Hardossin, 47. Hardouin, 61. Hardy, 38, 43. Harenc, 74. Hartman, 68. Hasbrouk, 68. Hastier, 57. Hattanville, 43. Hautkwits, 55. Havet, II. Havy, 61. Hayes, 33. Hayrault, 41. Hays, 74. Hebert, 32. 47, 52, 62, 63- Helin, 60. Helot, 40, 54. Hellot, 33. Hellott, 63. Hemard, 59, 64. Hemet, 54. Henault, 33. Herache, 37, 61. Herbert, 43. Herison, 74. Herman, 63. Hervart, 53, 60, 74 Herve, 41,73. 75- Herviett, 47. Hervieu, 43. Her\^ot, 33, 60. Hesdon, 57. Hesne, 32. Hesse, 33, 74. Hester, 66. Heude, 33, 48. Hcurtin, 66. Heur)-, 58. I Heuser, 54. ' Heuze, 61. Hibon, ^2. 276 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Highstreet, 61. Hioll, 61. Hodshon, 60. Hogelot, 52. Hoissard, 57. Holl, 57. Holzafell, 41, 49. Honze, 61. Horion, 33. Horry, 57. Hourcau, 33. Houssay, 33. Houssaye, 59. Hovell, 74. Hubert, 52. Huet, 33. Huger, 33. Hugues, 52. Huguetan, 57. Hulen, 47. Hullin, 38. Huyas, 34. Igon, 51. Ilamber, 33. Jacques, 33. Janiain, 43, 52, 53. Jamart, 38. Juml)elin, 66. Jamct, 42, 74. Jainin, 51, 64. Jamineau, 43. Jammard, 74. Jammeau, 62, 63. J ansa, 33. J arisen, 47. Janssen, 38, 74. Jappie, 66, 67. Jaquand, 52. Jaqueau, 55. Jardeau, 67. Jarsan, 47. Jastrain, 65. Jaudin, 64. Jay, 52,61. Jeay, 58. Jegn, 33. Jerseau, 33. Jesnouy, 54. Johnson, 51. Joiry, 41. Jolin, 54. Jolit, 74. Jolivet, 40. Jollan, 64. JoUis, 28. Joly, 37, 47, 59- Jonneau, 63. Jordis, 60. Jouanne, 62. Jouillot, 74. Jounne, 74. Jourdain, 43, 63, 74. Jourtlan, 54, 74. Jourdin, 47. J curd on, 59. Journeau, 41. Jousset, 57. Jouvenel, 33. Joyay, 43. Joyeux, 64. Juglas, 61. Juibert, 65. J alien, 47. Julien de St Julien, 43. JuUian, 74. Juliet, 47. Justel, 43, 47, 54- jyott, 47. Keller, 59. Kemp, 54. King, 50, 51. Knigg, 55. Knight, 58. Kugelman, ;i. La Bachelle, 57. Labe, 54. Labelle, 57. Laborde, 74. Labouchere, 74. La Boucille, 53. Labourle, 57. La Brosse, 55. Lacani, 47. La Combe, 65. La Coste, 53. Lacoze, 38. L'Advocat, 66. La Fertie, 65. Lafeur, 44. Lagis, 61. Lakeman, 68. Lafite, 41. Latitte, 44. La Font, 66. Lafont, 66. Lailleau, 34. Laisne, 44. La Jaielle, 52. Lalon, 33. Lalone, 54. Lalovclc, 44. Lambert, 39, 41, 44, 60. Lame, 34. Lamouche, 41. Lamp, 60. La Made, 40. Landcs, 49. Landon, 74. Lane, 62. Langelier, 66. Langlois, 74. Langue, 67. Laniere, 37. Lapiere, 74. La Place, 67. La Plaigne, 56. Laporte, 74. La Postre, 34. Larcher, 33. L'Archeveque, 39. Lardeau, 54. Lardien, 67. La Rivie, 54. La Riviere, 74. La Roche, 39, 48, 61. Larpent, 74. Larrat, 62. La Salle, 57. Laserre, 47. Lasson, 33. La Tourtre, 61. Lauber, 68. Lauran, 44. Laurans, 59. Laure, 37. Laureide, 44. Laurens, 33. Laurent, 47, 51, 53, 64. Lauze, 41. Lavaine, 63. Lavanotte, 33. La Vie, 41. Lavie, 47. Lawrance, 74. Lawrence, 74. Layard, 74. Le Anglois, 33. Le Bailli, 57. Le Bas, 40, 47. Lebas, 74. Le Bayeant, 63. Le Bayent, 63. Leber, 64. Le 15erginer, 61. Le Berquier, 63. Lebert, 33. Le Blanc, 71 . Le Blank, 74. Lc Hlaas, 42. Le Blon, 33. Le Blond, 44, 47, 51, 57 63, 64, 74. Le Bon de Bonnevall 50. Le Bourgeois, 47, 53. Lc Hoytevy, 47. Le Breton, 53. Le Caron, 33. Le Carron, 62. Le Castile, 33. Le Cene, 44. Le Cerf, 44. Lechabrun, 62. Le Challeur, 68. Le Cheaubc, 65. Le Chenevix, 37. Le Chevalier, 33. Lechigaray, 74. Le Clercq, 37. Le Clere, 33, 41. Le Clere d'Argent, 58. Le Clercq, 33. Le Clerk, 57. Le Comte, 65. Le Conte, 47, 52, 58, 66, 67. Le Coq, 61. Le Coste, 37 Le Court, 65. Le Cras, 74. Le Creu, 34. Le Croil, 44. Ledeux, 33. Ledoux, 33. Le Doux, 33. Lee, 50, 66. Leeson, 74. Lefabure, 34. Le Faburc, 33. Lefebeure, 33. LeFeburc, 33,47,49, 50. Le Febvre, 44. Le Ferre, 37. Le Feure, 28. Le Ficaut, 58. Le Fort, 38, 40. Le Fourgeon, 51. Le Franc de Mazijres, 47- Lefubure, 33. L'Egare, 36. Leger, 33, 65. Legrand, 33, 34. Le (iron, 33. Leguay, 44. Le'had, 33. Leheup, 74. Le Hommedieu, 47. Le Hucur, 33. Le Jcune, 33. Le Large, 62. Lelarge, 62. Le Lordier, 44. Le Macron, 13. Lcmaitre, 74. Le Maistre, 33. Le Maitton, 59. Le Mann, 74. Lemasle, 62. Le Mer, 33. AI.rilAUR TIC A I. TAliLES. m Le Mesurier, 74. Le Moine, 33. Le Molcux, 41. Le Monnicr, 59. Le IMotcux, 51. Le Moync, 44, 57, 74. Lenglachc, 47. Lc Noble, 37. Le Noir, ^j. Le I'iigc, 34. Lc I'in, 37. Le Plaistrier, 47. Le Plastrier, 44, 47, 65. Le Porte, 34. Le Poulverct, 37. Lequcsne, 65, 74. Le Quien, 33. Leriteau, 33. Lermoult, 47. Lernoult, 37, 49. Lc Roux, 33,41. Le Rouz, 65. Lc Roy, 28, 33, 34, 53. Le Rover, 33. Lerpiniere, 37, 48. Le Sage, 54. Le Saye, 53. Lesclure, 33. Lescure, 74. Le Serruricr, 38. Le Signiour, 49. Le Sire, 60. Lesmere, 68. Lesncur, 33. Le Sombre, 47. Le Souef, 74. Lespine, 34. Lestocart, 57. Lestrille de la Glide, 33. Lesturgeon, 33, 38, 59, 65. Le Sueur, 58. Le Tavernier, 67. Le Tellier, 33, 63, 65. Lc Tondu, 47. Leturgeon, 63. Leufoes, 44. Le Vade, 33. Le V'asseur, 37. Le Vassor, 61. Levesque, 33, 74. Levi, 54. Levielle, 33. Le Vieux, 33. Lewis, 36. Lexpert, 53. L'heureux, 47. L'homedin, 52. Liege, 44. Liegg, 33- Lievrard, 41. Ligcr, 64. Ligonicr, 54, 74. Limousin, 33. Linard, 62. Linart, 49. Liron, 62. Lisns, 44. Lloyd, 74. LolTting, 51. Lortanil, 49. Lombard, 33, 47, 65. Longuet, 44. Longuevil, 41. Lope, 50. Loquin, 44. Lorens, 56. Lormier, 50. Lorrain, 40, 52. Lortie, 38. Loveres, 57. Losweres, 28. Loubier, 65, 74. Lougvigny, 57. Louzada, 47. Levis, 47. Lucadou, 74. Lucas, 33. Lulo, 37. Lunel, 50. Luquet, 54, Lussan, 40. Lusson, 66. Lutra, 51. Luy la Grange, 53. Luzman, 28. Lyon, 67. Lys, 63. Macaire, 44. Machet, 52. M.idder, 65. Magniac, 74, 75. Mahaut, 34. Mahieu, 61. Maigne, 34. Maigre, 74- Maillard, 34, 59. Maillet, 34, 59. Main, 54. Mainard, 67. ALaintru, 44, 61. Maintry, 34. Maion, 39, 51. Maittaire, 36, 59. Majendie, 74. Malacarte, 44. Malegnc, 65. Malet, 63. Malevaire, 38. Malherbe, 37. Malide, 58. Malic, 66. Mallenoc dc la Mcncr- dicre, 51. Mallet, 67. Mallict, 74. Malpoil, 34. Manin, 68. Manvillain, 34, 50. Mar, 54. Marandel, 34. Marbeust, 44. Marbceuf, 53. Marc, 65. Marchais, 47. Marchand, 60. Marchant, 34, 44, 74. Marchay, 59. Marche, 58, Marchcrallier de 13elle- vccve, 55. Marchct, 47. Marchett, 34. Mare, 74. Maret, 44. Margas, 61, 65. Maricq, 50. Marie, 13. Marict, 34. Marictte, 41, 54, 57. Marignac, 60. Marin, 47. Marinville, 34. Marinyon, 54. Marion, 39, 55, 67. Marionneau, 63. Mariot, 34. Marissal, 74. Marmot, 34. Marot, 34. Marplay, 74. Marriet, 74. Marseille, 34. Martel, 74. Martcll, 44. Martin, 28, 34, 40, 44, 45, 47, 58, 59- 61,64, 67. Martinaux, 58. Martineau, 50, 74. Marlines, 47. Martinet, 34, 53. Maryon, 60. Maseres, 74. Masfagnerat, 50. Masly, 34. XLison, 56. Massd, 40, 74. Massey, 39. Massienne, 34, 53. M assiot, 66. Masson, 63, 64. Massoncau, 51,6 Massu, 74, Masters, 74. Matlic, 34. Mathews, 57, 174 Mathias, 51. Matte, 34. Matthews, 74. Matthias, 74 !audet, 59. audon, 36. I auger, 74. iaunier, 34. aupetit, 47, 61. aurice, 55. - -aurin, 34, 62. Mauze, 28, 47. Mayen, 40. Mayer, 65. Maymal, 47. Maynard, 59, 66, 71. Maze, 74. Mazenq, 62. Mazick, 57. Mazicq, 44. M.izieres, 44. Meffre, 74. Mcldron, 63. .Melier. 44. Melinet, 34. Mell, 44, 62. Melun, 34. Menage, 61. Menanteau, 34, 44. Mdnard, 53, 74. Mendez, 47. Menet, 74. Menil, 50. Mercie, 66. Mercier, 41, 47, 54, 75. Mcrigcot, 60. Merignan, 34. Mcrisset, 66. Merit, S8. Merlin, 51. Meroist, 34. Mcrvilleau, 41. Mery, 34. Merzeau, 74. Mesgret, 36. Meslier, 64. Mesmin, 44. Mcsnard, 52. Mesnicr, 67. Messieu, 38. Metaire, 34. Metayer, 47. Metivier, 44. 278 Meure, 44, 57. Meyer, 54. Michael, 34. Michel, 44, 47- 54- Michon, 34, 44. Midy, SI. Mignan, 47. Minet, 47, 74- Minnielle, 61. Minuel, 41, 44, 47. Minvielle, 37. 51. Mirassoz, 53. Mire, 47. Misson, 44, 72. Mobileau, 38, 40. Mogin, 47. Moisau, 34. Moizy, 45. Molet, 57, 61. Molinier, 74. Moller, 52. Monbocvil, 50. Moncousiet, 65. Monet, 50. Monfort, 58. Monhallier de la Salle, 47; Monicat, 60. Monier, 28. Monnerat, 34. Monnerian, 47. Montagu, 34. Montague, 74. Montallier, 34. Montebr, 50. Montelz, 47, 64. Monteyro, 59. Montier, 34, 65. Montil, 59. Montolieu de St Hippo- lite, 74. Montresor, 74. Moore, 74. Morand, 34. More, 38, 65. Moreau, 34, 38, 44, 47, 50, 52, 60, 63, 74. Moret, 47, 67. Morgas, 50. Morgat, 67. Morgue, 67. Morin, 34, 51,60, 74. Morion, 34, 47. Morisseau, 63, 64. Morisset, 62. Mortier, 57. Motet, 50. Moteux, 44. Motte, 50. Mottcux, 55, 74- ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Mouchet, 74. Mougin, 48. Mougine, 34. Mouginot, 52. Moulong, 50. Mounier, 73, 74. Mousnier, 44, 51, 60. Mousset, 59. Moxon, 74. Moyne, 50, 54, 55. Moyon, 55. Moze, 44. MuUett, 34. Mussard, 47. Mutel, 56. Muysson, 74. My re, 67. Narbonne, 74. Nau, 34. Naudin, 34, 59. Neau, 52, 65. Neel, 44. Neusrue, 57. Nezereau, 44, 48. Nezereaux, 41. Nisbet, 44. Noblet, 57. Nobillieau, 44. Noguier, 41, 74. Noiray, 61. NoUeau, 47. Normand, 34. Normanide, 34. Norris, 74. Nouaille, 74. Nourcy, 34. Nouretier, 63. Nourtier, 34. Novel, 51. Novell, 50. Nurse, 74. Nyort, 34. Obbema, 53. Obert, 34. Odry, 54. Offre, 71. Ogelby, 44. Ogier, 74. Ogilby, 57. Oliver, 53. Olivier, 37, 74. Orian, 64. Orion, 62. Oriot, 48. Osmont, 63. Oufrie, 34. Ouranneau, 34. Oursel, 44. Oursell, 53. Outand, 66. Ouvri, 40. Ouvry, 41, 75. Pacquereau, 41. Paetts, 66. Page, 48, 50, 63, 66. Pages, 48, 54. Paget, 44. Pagnis, 35. Paillet, 44, 48, 50. Pain, 48, 60. Paisible, 48. Paissant, 38. Palot, 48. Panderau, 29. Panier, 53. Panthin, 35. Panton, 74. Pantrier, 35. Papavogn, 35. Papin, 48, 'i'i. Paquet, 44, 52, 63. Paravienne, 35. Pard, 44. Parett, 64. Pariolleau, 44, 63. Parmenter, 54. Parquot, 52. Pascal, 44. Pasquereau, 41, 52. Pasquinet, 52. Pastre, 51. Pastureau, 54. Patot, 50. Pau, 35. Paucier, 41. Paul, 67. Paulet, 44. Paulmier, 50. Paulsen, 60. Pauret, 35. Pautins, 48. Paustian, 60. Pavet, 34. Payen, 48, 66. Payrenc, 74. Peau, 44. Pechel, 74. Pechell, 74. Peek, 74. Pegorier, 44. Peinlon, 54. Pele, 35. Pelerin, 38, 59. Pelct, 35. Peletier, 44. Pelissary, 41. Pelisson, 48, 64; Pellisonneau, 28, 35. Pellotier, 35. Peloquin, 48, 64. Pelser, 51, 52. Peltrau, 57. Penault, 35. Peneth, 41. Penigault, 51. Penny, 74. Pensier, 35. Pepin, 44. Peraud, 58, 66. Perblin, 59. Percey, 35. Perchard, 74. Perdereau, 35. Perdreau, 41. Perdriaux, 44, Pere, 34. Pereira, 48. Peres, 50. Peridier, 71. Perigal, 58, 74. Perlier, 62. Perpoint, 57, 64. Perrandin, 59. Perrault, 35. Perreat, 48. Perreau, 44, 65. Pertuison, 51. Pertuson, 58, Pesche, 35. Peschier, 64. Petineau, 58. Petit, 57, 74. Petitot, 37. Petitoiel, 35. Peyret, 67. Peytrignet, 68. Phelippon, 62. Phellipeau, 48. Philbrick, 74. Picaut, 44. Pien, 62. Pierrand, 35. Pierre, 44. Pierresene, 53. Pigou, 38,41,67,74. Pigro, 35. Pillot, 58. Pilon, 35, 74. Pilote, 67. Pillart, 41. Pinandeau, 35. Pineau, 48, 52. Pinot, 58. Pinque, 35. Piozet, 40. Piqueret, 34. Piquet, 35. Piron, 63. Pitan, 61, 67. Pittar, 74. ALPHA HE TlCAl T.t/U.F.S. Planarz, 59. I'lanck, 74. I'lasticr, 41. I'laicl, 59. I'lay, 44- Plison, 38. riuct, 40, 53. Plutnier, 38. Poignct, 34. Poincct, 56. Poitevin, 34. Poitcvoin, 52. Poitier, 63, 65. Poitiers, 51. Polerin, 28. Poletier, 66. Pollock, 74. Polran, 57. Poltais, 51. Pontardant, 66, 67. Pontitre, 35. Poppin, 56. Porch, 34. Portail, 48. Pouchon, 74. Poulverct, 34. PoupcS 34. Pourroy, 59. Pousset, 34, 74- Poussett, 52. Povillon, 68. Prat, 48. Prestraii, 66. Prevenau, 40. Prevereau, 50. Preux, 52. Prevost, 63, 67. Pringel, 44. Prioleau, 44. Prion, 64. Pron, 34. Prou, 38, 48. Poor. 55. Puech, 34. Puisancour, 35. Puitard, 57. Pujolas, 56, 72, 74. Pulley, 74- Pusey, 74. Puxen, 34. Pyron, 61. Quache, 58. yuarante, 40. Quenis, 58. Quern, 35. Quesnel, 44, 50, 58. Quesnell, 61, 63. Quet, 64. QuiUe, 58. Quinault, 35. Quinlard, 35. Kabachc, 50, 64. Kaboteau, 68. Racine, 74. Kaddissun, 48. RadilTo des Romanes, 46. Radnor, Earl of, 73, 74. Raillard, 37. Raimond, 35. Rainbaux, 56. Rainc, 35. Rainel, 35. Ranibaud, 45. Ranie, 48, 66. Ramier, 65. Ranioudon, 48. Ranaule, 28. Rand, 61. Randeau, 38. Rane, 59. Kanel, 35. Raoul, 62. Rapillard, 59. Rapillart, 48, 54. Rappe, 38, 61. Ratier, 59. Ravart, 35. Ravaud, 74. Raveau, 40. Ravel, 35. Ravenel, 41, 74. Raymondon, 40. Raynaud, 64. Raynaut, 59. Reale, 60. Rebecourt, 41. Reberole, 35. Redoutet, 41. Reed, 45. Regard, 36. Rejjnaud, 63. Regnauld, 57. Regnier, 35. Reignicr, 74. Rembert, 59. Remousseaux, 37. Remy, 64, 65. Renaud, 48, 52, 64. Renaudet, 52, 67. Renaudin, 50. Renaudot, 44. Renault, 35. Renaust, 63. Renaut, 41. Reneau, 67. Ren j Yvonnet, 48. I Xinck, 5;. Zurichrea, 61. TABLE IV. MISCELLANEOUS NAMES. Abbot, 8. Abbott, Si. Abergeveny, Lord, 143. Adam, MeJchior, 105. Adams, 192. Addison, 156. 158, 209. Agerre de Fons, 216. Agnew, 216. Aikin, 162. Akenside. 72. A-Lasco, 5, 113. Alcock, 212. Aleyn, 78. Alva, Duke of, 233. Amsincq, 198, 215. Ancaster, Duke of, 118. Anderson, 2, 90. Arnaud, 167. Arran, Earl of, 152. Anindel, 215. Ashhurst, 216. Athole, Countess of, 144. Atkinson, 104. Aubeson de la Durferie, '59- Aubrey, 174. Austen, 191. Aylmer, 97. Baillie, 16. Haily, 158. Balfour, 78. Barillon, 19. Barckstead, 212. Baring, 247. Barnes, 258. Barrington, Lord, 258. Bart, 216. 15artenschleigh, 219. Basnage, 119, 198. Bate, 215. Bauman, 188. Baumback, 219. Ba.xter, 18, 72, 1 19, 243. Bayle, 158. Bazin, 145. Bealing, 247. beard, 219. Beaulieu, 19. Bedford, 258. Bedford, Karl of, 19. Bcdi! de Loissiliere, 159. Bedi.' de Longcourt, 159. Bennett, 222. Benoist, 146, 147, 149, 152, 207, 238. Bcrens, 216. Bercsfor Best, 78. Beuzelin, 239. Bevan, 215. Bexley, Lord, 216. Beza. 6, 113. Biclfeld, 158. Bisset, 239. Bitaubd, 259. Bladen, 88. Blair, 156. Blayney, Lord, 1 39. Bloodworth, 129. Bochart du Menillet, g. 192, 198. Bonrepaus, 19. Bontemps, 145. Booth, 85. Bossuet, 19, 242. Boulter, 156, 160. Boyd, 102, 239. Bradley, 235. Bradshaw, 258. Bramston, 23. Brandenburg, Elector of, '34- Braybrooke, Lord, 23. Brett, 100. Brice, 139. Britton, 258. Brooke, 89. Brougham, 258. Brousson, 156. Browne, 123. Brownrigg, 99. Brushell, 230. Bryan, 222. Bucer, 6, 109. 2 N Buchanan, C, 105. Buck, 212. Burn, 6, 75. Burnabv, 21 ; 16. Burnet, 4, 17, 68, 132, 136, i3«. 139. 149. '98. 243, 245, 256. Burton, 222. Butler, 90. Cadogan, 226. Calilnrd, 159. Calamy, 18. Calandrini, 96. Calmet, 242. Calvert, 88, 19R. Campbell, 238. Cannon, 226. Carew, Lord, 132. Carey, 105. Carr, 226. Carrd, 94. Carrington, 230. Carteret, 106. Carthew, 215. Carver, 191, 219. Case, 219. Cawton, 18. Caze, 159. Cecyl, 6. Chabot, 94. Chandler, 154, Chandos, Duke of, 1 58. i Chardon, 1 59. Charlton, 149. Chatham, Earl of. 258. ! Cherigny, 216. t Chesterfield, Earl of,226. Chesneverd, 145. Chevillard, 234. Chibnall, 226. Chouet, 160. Clancarty, Countess of, 165. Clarendon, Earl of, 147. Clark, 80. Clarke, 77, 88, 167. 219, 239. Clarkson. 154. Claude, 18, 19, 198, 236, 239, 242. CIcland, 240. Close, 216. Clough, 230. Coblx:tt, 162, 2 58. Cock, 230. Codrington, 123. Coker, 219. Coleman, 147, 192. Colignv, 93. Collet,'l38. Colmore, 192. Compton, 243 Conrart, 159, 160, 167. Conrart de Koupambcrl. 160. Conyngham, 80. Cooper, 162. Copley, 85. Coquerel, 184. Cosby. 90. Cotterill, 222. Cotton, 84, 216. Coulson, 219. Courtney, 216. Coventry, 19. Cowpcr, Earl, 156. Coxe, 149. Crabbe, 258. Crawford and Balcarrcs, Earl of, 216. Crespe, 160. Cromwell, 17, 121. I Cuninghame, 258. ; Curtis, 71. Cutting, 215. D'Ablancourt, 1 33. Daeten, 238. Dailld, 18. Dalrymple, 139, 178. I D.angcon, 173. I D'Arzilliers, 145. I Dash wood, 216. D'Aubais, 216. D'.Audeniar. 258. 282 ALFHABE27CAL TABLES. D'AuvergTie, 17, 185. Davidson, 127. Davison, 25S. Dawes, 69. Dawson, 71. De Baschi, 216. De Bertreville, 145. De Bourniquel, 215. De Cahuzac, 239. De Calviere, 215. De Camus, 226. De Caron, 13. De Caul, 175. De Clermont d"Amboise de Gallerande, 145. De Coetlogon, 226. De Courcelles, 247. De Dangers, 230. De Drevon, 207. De Falcon, 216. De Felice, 3. Defoe, 26, 134. De Forbin, 216. De Hauteville, 93. De Jaucourt, 145. Dejorad, 226. De la Broue, 247. De la Davi^re, 156. De la Ferriere Percy, 96. De la March, 16. Delamere, Lord, 168. De la Miletiere, 145. De I'Angle, 18. De Lanneroy, 94. De la Noue, 145. De la Pierre, 96. De Larrey, 158. De Lasperon, 82. De la Tour, 9. De la Tremoille, 144. Delehaye, 82. De risle Roy, 256. Delvaux, 100. De Maff^e, 215. De Magdelaine, 147. De Maintenon, 145. De Maniald, 145. De Marbais, 119. De Maxuel, 258. De Mirande, 145. De Mirepoix, 258. De Moleyns, 215. De Monsales, 212. De Montanegues, i5o. De Montblanc St Mar- tin, 216. De Montcalm, 215. De Monleil, 238. De Montmartyn, 145. De Montmort, 158. Dench, 217. De Pas, 212. De Penice, 239. De Peyrollet de la Bas- tide, 247. De Pichard, 167. Derassus, 239. Derby, Countess of, 144. De Richosse, 173. De Rochegude, 155. De Rodier de la Bru- giere, 216. De Rouvray, 145. De St Germains, 145. De Saint-Sardos, 239. De St Simon, 147. Des Bordes, 145. Desborough, 85. De Schravemor, 176. Des llles Morteault, 174. Desmadryll, 85. Des Maistres, 89. De Valliquerville, 216. De Vaux, 116. De Venezobre, 216. De Villarnoul, 145. De Ville, 256. De Visscher, 79. Devonshire, Duke of, 39, 149. Dinsdale, 87. Dobbin, 222. Doddridge, 187. Donisemount, 258. Donne, 191. Donnelson, 139. Douglas, 102, 226, 236. Dovalle, 174. D'Oyley, 258. Drelincourt, 18. Drummond, 222. Du Bosc, 17, 133, 137, 139, 149, i6i. Du Crois, 145. Dudley, 132. Duesbury, 236. Du Hoorn, 256. Dumare, 173. Du Mas, 145. Duncombe, 167. Dunlop, 139. Dunne, 222. Dunning, 232. Dunster, 215. Du Plessis Mornay, 3. Duquene, 141. Durel, 243. Du Veil, 242. Eaton, 174. Edgeworth, 230. Elfort, 186. Elgar, 36. Elizabeth, Queen, 6, 7, 13, 102. Elliot, 161. Ellis, Sir H., 79. Ellis, John, 134, 136. Erman and Reclam, 133. Evelyn, 4, 71, 121, 146, 149. 167, 212, 241. Eyre, 68. Fabre, 216, 25S. Fagius (Buchlein), 6, 109. Faithorne, 81. Farr, 24S. Fawkenor, 77. Faye, 222. Fellowes, 258. Fenouillot de Falbaire, 25S. Fenwicke, 226. Fetherstonhaugh, 85. Feuquiere, 212. Fevershara, Earl of, 1 55. Figuier, 249. Finch, 212. Fisher, 222. P'leming, 149. Fletcher, 215, 219, 226. Fortescue, 216. Foss, 231. Foulis, 130. Fountainhall, Lord, 72. Fox, 254. Francis, Sir P., 258. Francis, 158. Frankland, 216. Franks, 215. Frend, 258. Freville, 258. Friscobald, 98. Furleigh, 103. Caches, 18. Gale, 68. Galland, 145. Gardiner, 86, 90. Gardner, 238. Gamier, 98. Garroway, 139. Gervaise, 198. Ghinkel, 149. Gilbert, 173. Gilpin, 8. Girardot, 98. Glover, 258. Godolphin, Earl of, 149. Goldsmith, 25S. Goode, 226. Goodricke, 139. Gordon, 104. Gourville, 165. Grand, 247. Grantham, 104, Greatrakes, 258. Green, 104. Greene, 215. Gresley, 219. Grindal, 6, 113. Grosart, 16, 224. Grosvenor, 160. Groteste de la Buffiere, 159. Groteste des Mahis, 1 59, 161. GrotesteduBuisson, 159. Grove, 215. Guarrisson, 239. Guest, 85. Guiscard, 161. Guise, 139. Gwynne, 156. Halifax, Marquis of, iS, 199, 202. Halifax, Earl of, 156. Hall, 5, l8. H alley, 235. Hamersley, 160. Hamilton, 139. Hampden, 139. Hanbury, 219. Hannay, 216. Hanson, 235. Harbord, 139. Harborough, Earl of, 77. Hardy, 145, 160. Harman, 86. Harmer, 167. Harriot, 235. Harris, 137,139- Harrison, 79. Hart, 230. Haweis, 224. Hawkins, 139. Hay, Sir C, 71. Hayes, 215, 216. Head, 194, 198. Heath, 236. Hedges, 149. Helps, 104. Henckell, 258. Henley, 88. Henshaw, 98. Herries, 71. Herring, 167, 226. Hervey, 90. Hesketh, 105. Hibbert, 234. Hickcs, 19, 167. Hill, 139, IS5. '75, 22<5- ALPHABETICAL TABLES. »83 Hoadley, 145. Hobman, 104. Ho(l},'es, 1 16. Hogluon, 216. Honcywood, 81. Hooker, 85. llopctoun. Earl of, 96. Hobkins, 167. Houyh, I ig. Howard, 88, 139. Howard of Kfiingham, 149- Howe, 71. Hubert, 103. Hume, 1 58. Hutton, 258. Ives, 215. Ir\'ing, 105. James I., King, 102, 104. James II., King, 198. Jekyll, 68. Jenkins, 18, 27. Jersey, Earl of, 191. Jewel, 6, 7. Johnson, 198, 236. Johnson, Ur Samuel, 25S. Johnston, 222. JoUiffe, 98. Jones, 125, 175. Jordan, 236. Junius, 258 (bis). Keating, 90. Kemble, 156. Ken, 71. Kennct, 239. Kent, Uukc of, 143, 222. Kent, Marquis of, 168. King, 68, 80, 81, 222. Kirke, 136. Knatchbull, 243. Knellcr, 202, 203, 248. Knight, Sir J., 55. Kno.x, 223, 232. La Urue, 235. Laing, loi. Lake, Viscount, 239. Lambard, 13. Lancaster, 198. Langton, 219. Lanier, 179. La Noue, i. La Placete, 158. Laud, 71. Lawford, 258. Le HouUenger, 246. Le Clerc, 167, 198. Lee, 139. Le Grand, 160. Leibnitz, 156. Lcly, 202. Le Monon, 159. Le Moyne, 18. Le I'oer, 90. Lc (^uesne, 85. Leslie, Sir J., 158. Lewson, 193. Liddell, 88. Lloyd, 18, 141, 243. Locke, 3, 167. Lockhart, 215, 234. Lodington, 192. Longley, 230. Lorimer, 1 18. Louvois, 3. Low, 216. Lowndes, 68. Loyd, 222. Lucas, 215. Lyddal, 217. Lyde, 85. Lyndsay, lOI. Lynn, 210. Lvster, 226. .Macaulay, 133, 138, 139. 146, 151. Maccarty, 167. Macclesfield, Earl of, 158. Macetier, 198. Mackay, General, 239. Mackintosh, 167. Macky, 143, 149- MacNeal, 139. Macpherson, 156. Magill, 139. Mannyng, 81. Marbaud, 145. Marchant, 159. Maresco, 128. Margary, 191. Marlborough, Duke of, 156,177,180,212,241. Marteilhe, 191.' Martin, 258. Martine, 247. Martyn, 222, 235. Martyr, 6, 109. Mary, Queen, 198. Mason, 90, 169. Massy, 87. Matthew, 216. Maxwell, 156, 191. Mazarin, 3, 17, 18. Mead, 216. Meadows, 212. Melville, 114. Mcrcier, 145. Merrick, 198. Meschinet, 222. Mcstcr, 235. .Metcalfe, 219. Michelet, 26, 151, 238. Mildmay, 77. Miller, 71, 254. .Minto, Earl of, 216. .MoliOrre, 247. .Munginot de la Salle, 159. .Mont.igue, 68. .Montague, Uukc of, 212. .Montgomery, 89, 258. .Montgomery, J.imes, 2 58. .Mooyart, 191. .Mosse, 229. .Munck, 81. Murray, Sir P., 71. .Musgrave, 139. .Muskerry, Lord, 167. Napier, Lord, 239. Nappcr, 222. Nasdale, 219. Nassau d'Auverqucrquc, 141. Naudin, 159. Naymet, 247. Necl, 216. Nelson, Lord, 229. NeviU, 268. Newton, Sir Isaac, 158, 257- Norgate, 1 10. Norris, 85, 149, 215. Norton, 192. Nugent, Lord, Nye, 19S. Ogilvy, 184. O.xford, Earl of, 226. O.xenden, 98. Palmer, 16. Palmerston, Viscount, 156. Paravicini, 169. Parker, Abp., 8. Parker, Sir H., 52, 229. Parry, 167,212. Paschalis, 142. Patrick, 243. Paul, 86. Payne, 198. Peel. 235. Pclham, 98. Pembroke, Earl of, 121, 143- Pepys, 83, 84, 243. Perne, 1 10. Perrau.x, 159. Perry, 198, 212. Pery, \'iscount, 198. Peterborough, Earl of, I4«, 154, 183, 18/). Pcyran, j62. I'hihpps, 244. I'hippb, 248. I'ickcrmg, 121. Pitt, 258. Plcydcll, 77. Polhill, 258. PoUington, Vicountcss, 243- Pooler, 258. Pope, 148, 226. Port, 191. Portcus, 258. Portland, Earl of, 154. 156, 167,245. Portmore, Earl of, 143. I'ouget, 174. Powell, 139. Power, 90. I'owlctt, 68. Prevot, 198. Primrose, Viscount, 198. Protheroc, 226. Prowting, 226. Pvkc, 212. Radclyff, 9. Ramsay, 212. Ranfurly, Countess of. 198. Ravenal, 156. Rcade, 85. Rebenac, 156. Reeves, 195. Regnard, 160. Riches, 79. Riddle, 219. Rider, 238. Rivers, 122. Rivers, Earl of, 182. Robartes, 158. Roberts, 258. Robinson, 192. Rochcbonot dc Launay, 159. Rochemore, 216. Rochester, Earl of, 1S2. Roland, 156. Romney, Lord, 77. Rooke, 226. Rou, 119, 147- Rousseau, 1 1 3. Roussel, 174. Routledge, 226. Roux, 207. Roxburgh, Duke of, 143. R. P. R., 2. Rushwonh, 48. Russell, Lady, 4, 19. 284 ALPHABETICAL TABLES. Rutland, Duke of, 149. Ryan, 149. Sadleir, 90. St Evremond, 147, 156, 212. Salmasius, 17. Sancroft, 164. Sandwich, Earl of, 25S. . Savage, 78. Savile, 18, 19, 162, 198, 212. Sawle, 134. Bayer, 79. Schaw, 230. Scheemakers, 100. Serces, 216. Sermand, 160. Seward, 230. Sewell, 215. Shales, 137, 162. Sharp, 154. Shelburne, Earl of, 258. Shelley, 216. Sheridan, 222. Sherington, 124. Shovel, 77, 226. Shute, 160. Simpson, 158. Sirr, 89. Skelton, 185, 215. Sleet, 216. Smiles, 6, 162. Smith, ^^. Spanheim, 18, 161. Spencer, Lord, 167. Spicer, 207. Stair, Earl of, 1 56. Staples, 90. Stennett, 204. Stephens, 113. Stewart, 139. Stillingfleet, 18. Stinton, 226. Stormont, Viscount, 238. Story, 136, 137, 139- Stouppe, 17, 18, 72. Stowell, 206. Stricland, 121. Strype, 6, 83. Sunderland, Earl of, 149. Sutton, 89. Swift, 138, 139, 149, 156. Symson, 122. Tatton, 175. Taylor, 258. Taylor, Rev. Isaac, 71, 162. Thackeray, 87. Thompson, 153. Thoresby, 71. Thornton, 222. Throgmorton, 6. Tindal, 215. Tipoote, 82. Tisdall, 216. Tivelin, 81. Torburne, 71. Tournier, 226. Tredeugh, 85. Tremellius, 108, 109. Trenchard, 139. Trosse, 72. Trumbail, 212. Turenne, 147. Turner, 98. Turretin, 160. Tytler, 167. Umfreville, 122. Urr>', 77. Utenhove, 113. Valat, 216. Vaughan, 149. Vauquelin des Ifs, 216. Ventry, Lord, 216. Verbeck, 216. Vernon, 156. Wade, 184. Wager, 198. Wake, 19, 165, 236. Wakefield, no. Walker, 167. Wallace, 154. Waller, 226. Walpole, 258. Walsingham, 7. Wapshare, 219. Warburton, 90, 158. Ward, 96, 191. Warrington, Earl of, 168. Watkins, 175. Watson, 99. Watts, 198. Weales, 226. Webster, 258. Wehrtman, 215. Weiss, 134, 137, 139, 149, 162. West, 55. Westenra, 215. Wetenhall, 80. Whalley, 226. Whiston, 198. Whitfield, 226. Whitlock, 121. Wickart, 1 67, 212. Wilcocks, 244. Wilkins, 139, 175. William III., King, 134, 135, 149, 198- Williams, 38, 129, 204, 216. Willis, 2ig. Wills, 226. Withers, 149. Wodrow, 198. Wood, 227. Worcester, Earl of, 7. Wren, 167. Wriothesley, 143. Xeres, 192. *** The pages are those of this Index-Volume. Turnhull &~- S/trurs, P) inter!,, Ediiib»rs;h DUE DATE MOM 10 1993 1 MU\/jO!99; QEC0B tm a^'\ OtC'J^ OS"* Aflff J AM 05' 994 201-6503 Printed In USA 0022678140 938.15 Ag6 3 S^^r iii