Frederick Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg
The Duke of Schomberg | |
---|---|
Master-General of the Ordnance | |
In office 1689–1690 | |
Monarch | William III |
Preceded by | The Lord Dartmouth |
Succeeded by | The Earl of Romney |
Personal details | |
Born | Friedrich Hermann von Schönberg 6 December 1615 Heidelberg, Palatinate |
Died | 1 July 1690 Oldbridge, County Meath | (aged 74)
Spouse | Johanna Elizabeth (m. 1638) |
Children | 6, including Charles and Meinhardt |
Parent(s) | Hans Meinhard von Schönberg Anne Sutton |
Frederick Herman de Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg KG PC (6 December 1615 – 1 July 1690) was a German-born army officer who served as the English Master-General of the Ordnance from 1689 to 1690. Having fought in the French, Portuguese, Dutch and English armies, he was killed in action fighting on the Williamite side at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.
Early career
[edit]Descended from an old family of the Electorate of the Palatinate, he was born at Heidelberg, the son of Count Hans Meinhard von Schönberg (1582–1616) and Anne, a daughter of Edward Sutton, 5th Baron Dudley, and Theodosia Harington. An orphan within a few months of his birth, he was educated by various family friends, among whom was Frederick V, Elector Palatine, in whose service his father had been. He began his military career under Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, and in 1634 passed into the service of Sweden, entering that of France in 1635. His family, and the allied house of the Saxon Schönbergs, had already attained eminence in France with Henri de Schomberg and Charles de Schomberg, both marshals of France.[1]
After a time he retired to his family estate at Geisenheim on the Rhine, but in 1639 he re-entered the Dutch States Army, in which, apparently, apart from a few intervals at Geisenheim, he remained until about 1650. He then rejoined the French army as a general officer (maréchal de camp), served under Turenne in the campaigns against Condé, and became a lieutenant-general in 1665, receiving this rapid promotion perhaps partly owing to his relationship with Charles de Schomberg, duc d'Halluin.[1]
After the peace of the Pyrenees (1659), the independence of Portugal was threatened by Spain, and Schomberg was sent as military adviser to Lisbon with the secret approval of Charles II of England. Louis XIV of France, in order not to infringe the treaty just made with Spain, deprived Schomberg of his French officers. Schomberg thus took command of the English brigade which consisted of three regiments in total 3,000 men. Many of these were ex Royalist and New Model Army troops from the Civil War.[2] After many difficulties in the three first campaigns resulting from the opposition of Portuguese officers, the Portuguese commander António Luís de Meneses, 1st Marquis of Marialva, together with Schomberg won the victory of Montes Claros on 17 June 1665 over the Spaniards under Luis de Benavides Carrillo, Marquis of Caracena.[1]
After participating with his army in the revolution which deposed the reigning king Afonso VI of Portugal in favour of his brother Dom Pedro, and ending the war with Spain, Schomberg returned to France, became a naturalised Frenchman and bought the lordship of Coubert near Paris. He had been rewarded by the king of Portugal, in 1663, with the rank of Grandee, the title of count of Mértola and a pension of f 5000 a year. In 1673 he was brought by Charles II to England to take command of the newly formed Blackheath Army, which was planned to take part in an invasion of the Dutch Republic during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. However the army did not go into action before the Treaty of Westminster established peace, and was disbanded by the King following Parliamentary pressure.
He therefore again entered the service of France. His first operations in Catalonia were unsuccessful owing to the disobedience of subordinates and the rawness of his troops. On 19 June 1674, he was dealt a defeat at the Battle of Maureillas by Francisco de Tutavilla y del Rufo,[3] but he retrieved the failure by retaking Fort de Bellegarde in 1675. For this he was made a marshal, being included in the promotion that followed the death of Turenne. The tide had now turned against the Huguenots, and Schomberg's merits had been long ignored on account of his adherence to the Protestant religion. The revocation of the Edict of Nantes (1685) forced him to leave his adopted country.[1]
Ultimately he became general-in-chief of the forces of the Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg, and at Berlin he was the acknowledged leader of the thousands of Huguenot refugees there. Soon afterwards, with the Electors consent, he joined the Prince of Orange on his expedition to England in 1688, the Glorious Revolution, as second in command to the prince. The following year he was made a Knight of the Garter,[4] was appointed Master-General of the Ordnance, was created Duke of Schomberg,[5] and received from the House of Commons a vote of £100,000 to compensate him for the loss of his French estates, of which Louis had deprived him.[1]
Ireland
[edit]In July 1689, William appointed him commander-in-chief of the expedition that he undertook to drive James II out of Ireland. Before departing to Ireland, Schomberg took his leave from parliament on 16 July 1689.[6] On 20 July Schomberg arrived at Chester where the expedition's troops were gathering. Sailing with a fleet from Hoylake, he landed on 13 August 1689 at Ballyholme Bay near Bangor. He made the passage on the royal yacht Cleveland. He then marched over Bangor and Belfast to Carrickfergus, which had a Jacobite garrison. He began the siege of Carrickfergus on 20 August. The town surrendered on 28 August.[7] Thereafter he marched unopposed through a country desolated before him to Dundalk, but, as the bulk of his forces were raw and undisciplined as well as inferior in numbers to the enemy Irish Army, he deemed it imprudent to risk a battle, and entrenching himself at Dundalk declined to be drawn beyond the circle of his defences. Shortly afterwards pestilence broke out, and when he retired to winter quarters in Ulster his forces were more shattered than if they had sustained a severe defeat.[1]
His conduct was criticized in ill-informed quarters, but the facts justified his inactivity, and he gave what was said at the time to be a "striking example of his generous spirit" in placing at William of Orange's disposal for military purposes the £100,000 recently granted to him. In the spring he began the campaign with the capture of Charlemont, but no advance southward was made until William arrived with reinforcements. At the Battle of the Boyne (1 July 1690 O.S.), Schomberg gave his opinion against the determination of William to cross the river in face of the opposing army. After riding through the river to rally his men, he was wounded twice in the head by sabre cuts, and was shot in the neck by Cahir O'Toole of Ballyhubbock and instantly killed.[8]
Family
[edit]His eldest son Charles Schomberg, the second duke in the English peerage, died in the year 1693 of wounds received at the Battle of Marsaglia.[1] His other son was Meinhardt Schomberg, 3rd Duke of Schomberg.
Burial and inscription
[edit]He was buried in St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, where there is a monument to him, erected in 1731. On the monument is a Latin inscription by Jonathan Swift,[1] which reads:
Hic infra situm est corpus Frederici Ducis de Schonberg, ad Bubindam occisi, A.D. 1690. Decanus et Capitulum maximopere etiam atque etiam petierunt, ut haeredes Ducis monumentum in memoriam parentis erigendum curarent. Sed postquam per epistolas, per amicos, diu ac saepe orando nil profecere; hunc demum lapidem statuerunt; saltem ut scias, hospes, ubinam terrarum SCHONBERGENSIS cineres delitescunt. Plus potuit fama virtutis apud alienos quam sanguinis proximitas apud suos. A.D. 1731
The English translation:
Here below is placed the body of Frederick, Duke of Schomberg, killed at the Boyne, A.D. 1690. The dean and the chapter fervently sought, again and again, that the heirs of the Duke see to the erection of a monument in memory of (their) parent. But, after asking for a long time and often, through letters, through friends, they accomplished nothing; finally they set up this stone; so that at least, visitor, you might know where in the world the ashes of Schomberg are concealed. The fame of his valor had more influence among strangers than the relationships of blood did among his own (family). A.D. 1731
Additionally, the Boyne Obelisk (which was erected on the north bank of the River Boyne in 1736, to commemorate the Williamite victory at the Battle of the Boyne, and later destroyed in 1923) contained an inscription to him on its south side base, reading:
Marshal the Duke of Schomberg in passing this river died bravely fighting in defence of liberty
The village of Schomberg, Ontario is named after him.[9]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Schomberg, Friedrich Hermann". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 357–358. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
- ^ Paul, Hardacre (1960). The English Contingent in Portugal, 1662–1668, Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, volume 38. pp. 112–125.
- ^ Lynn, John A.: The Wars of Louis XIV 1667-1714. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2013, ISBN 1317899512, p. 135.
- ^ "No. 2441". The London Gazette. 3 April 1689. p. 2.
This afternoon a Chapter being held of the most Noble Order of the Garter, Duke Frederick Mareschal de Schomberg, General of His Majesties Forces and Master-General of the Ordinance and ... were Elected Knights Companion of that order.
- ^ "No. 2454". The London Gazette. 16 May 1689. p. 2.
His Majesty has Graciously pleased to Create Frederick Count de Schomberg, General of His Majesties Forces, Master of the Ordnance, and one of the Lords of His Privy Council, a Baron, Earl, Marquis and Duke of this Kingdom by the Name and Title of Baron Teys, Earl of Brentford, Marquis of Harwich, and Duke of Schomberg.
- ^ "Duke de Schomberg takes leave of the house". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. 16 July 1698.
- ^ Kazner, Johann Friedrich August (1789). Leben Fredrichs von Schomberg oder Schoenberg. Heidelberg: Schwan & Goetz. p. 302.
Er berannte also den 20ten Carikfergus, und den 28ten befand sich der Ort in seinen Händen.
- ^ Dunlop, Robert; Murtagh, Harman (2011) [2004]. "Schomberg, Frederick Herman de, first duke of Schomberg (1615–1690)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24822. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ "Schomberg". Rural Routes. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
References
[edit]- Glozier, Matthew. Marshal Schomberg, 1615–1690: the ablest soldier of his age: international soldiering and the formation of state armies in seventeenth–century Europe. Brighton, 2005.
- Le Fanu, T.P. Huguenots "Huguenots Veterans in Dublin" (72). Antiquaries of Ireland: 64–70.
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(help) - Kazner, Johann Friedrich August (1789). Leben Friedrichs von Schomberg oder Schoenberg. Mannheim: Schwan & Goetz.
External links
[edit]- 1615 births
- 1690 deaths
- Nobility from Heidelberg
- 17th-century French nobility
- Counts in Germany
- Counts of Mértola
- Marshals of France
- Prussian Army personnel
- Dukes of Schomberg
- Peers of England created by William III
- Garter Knights appointed by William III
- Burials at St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin
- English generals
- English military personnel killed in action in the Nine Years' War
- Emigrants from the Holy Roman Empire
- Royal Scots officers
- Williamite military personnel of the Williamite War in Ireland
- Military personnel from Heidelberg
- Dutch military personnel of the Nine Years' War
- People of the Glorious Revolution
- Immigrants to England