He was even allowed to be buried without disgrace, though eighty of his descendants paid fines for openly attending his funeral. He subsequently proceeded to Holland, where he exercised the functions of chaplain to an English church. He was also celebrated as a writer on religious subjects. He was an able writer, principally on classical and religious subjects. In the fourth generation, the Dubois changed their name to Wood. Rebow : a refugee of this name, from Flanders, settled at Colchester, from whom Sir Isaac Rebow, knighted by King William (whom he entertained), was descended. Dansays, Francis : a French refugee at Rye in Sussex. On the death of his patron, and after arriving at man�s estate, he married, and settled at High Wycombe, Bucks,�being described, in the registers of his two sons, as �of the Borough of Chepping Wycombe. for Truro; and for several years sergeant-at-arms to the House of Commons: he died in 1848. Chardevenne : a Protestant family belonging to Casteljaloux. Du Boulay : a family descended from the Marquis d�Argencon de Boulay, a Huguenot refugee in Holland in 1658. Several of his descendants have been officers in the English army. The only surviving member of the family is a Surgeon-Major in the British army. He had a daughter who returned to France, and who must have been born between 1684 and 1690. Indeed, he seems to have been indifferent to religion. His son John became an eminent merchant in London, his grandson James being the �father� of the Royal Exchange. Haag gives the titles of fifteen books published by him on different subjects. Kerk was then appointed Governor of Quebec, and he held the office until the conclusion of a peace with France, when it was restored to its former owners. The Rev. After his death, his son Zach-arie was harassed with a view to his forced apostasy; but at length, in 1685, he fled to Holland in disguise. Prelleur, Peter : a musi- cal composer, born in London of a French refugee family. He was employed by Sir Godfrey Kneller to engrave the portraits painted by him, a long list of which, as well as of his other works, is given by Haag. Despite – or perhaps because of – his tender years, Louis-Dreyfus had already attracted a great deal of interest in football circles before his appointment as Sunderland chairman was confirmed this week. He died in London in 1693. Riou, Rieux : an ancient family, whose estates at Vernoux, in Languedoc, were forfeited at the Revocation. He was an officer in the English army, and served against the Pretender in 1745-6. The freedom of the city of Waterford was conferred in perpetuity on the descendants of Henri de Reynet. They settled in Dublin, and prospered. Devaynes, William, M. P.: descended from a Huguenot refugee. Beauvoir, De : the name of one of the most ancient families in Languedoc, several branches of which were Protestant. Paul became established at Lisburn, where he married Madelaine, the daughter of Louis Crommelin. After twenty-seven years of very distinguished and honourable service, Captain Riou�� the gallant good Riou��was killed while commanding the �Amazon� frigate at the battle of Copenhagen, April 2nd, 1801. One of his sons was Dean of Guernsey. He published several works on religions subjects. Returning to Dublin, he settled, and died there in 1729, at the age of 66. He subsequently occupied the chair of theology in the university of Saumur until his death, which occurred in 1658. For notice, see p. 326. His son, Peter-Isaac, was created Baron Rendlesham. Durin, Paul : an eminent paper-manufacturer who established himself in England after the Revocation, and carried on a large paper-mill with great success. Sartori had owned 20 percent of Sunderland since the summer of 2018 and will reportedly retain a stake under the new set-up, as will UK businessman Charlie Methven. He was one of the founders of the Medico- Chirurgical Society, Physician to Guy�s Hospital, and the author of many valuable works on medicine and chemistry. When once asked to sign a petition in favour of Roman Catholic Emancipation, he declined, with the remark that �the Roman Catholics had kicked his family out of France, and he had no wished to be kicked back again.�. Cosse ; an old French family of Brissac, who settled in England at the Revocation. One of his sons was minister of La Nouvelle Patente, London, in 1696. Blondel, Moses : a learned refugee scholar in London about 1621, author of a work on the Apocryphal writings. The place on which it was built (for it has long since been pulled down) is now known as Picardy Place. Palairet, Elie : descended from a refugee family settled at Rotterdam, from whence he passed over into England. He became a wellknown manufacturer at Bow; and afterwards assumed the English name of James. He was a great promoter of the Dublin silk-manufacture, and was presented by the Mason�s Guild with the Freedom in a silver snuff-box, still in the possession of the family. There we find him acting as captain in the service of William III. He afterwards went to Holland, where he died. He afterwards settled at Copet, near Geneva. Mr. Garencieres was the only minor canon who was promoted to a prebendal stall in Chester Cathedral. Mathy, Matthew : a celebrated physician and author. We find one Paul Buissiere governor of the French Hospital in London in 1729, and Jean Buissiere in 1776. He was a highly distinguished divine, and for his valuable services in promoting the arts and manufactures of Ireland, he was presented with the freedom of the city of Dublin in a gold box, accompanied by a suitable address. Henzell : a foreign Protestant who settled at Newcastle-on-Tyne, about the time of the massacre of St. Bartholomew. The Archbishop of York, the Hon. They built a factory and dwelling-house at the head of Leith Walk. He afterwards succeeded in making his escape into England, and eventually settled in Ireland, where his descendants still survive. His son, Sir Richard, left an only daughter, who married Henry Temple, created Lord Palmerston, 1722, from whom the late Lord Palmerston was lineally descended. One of them informs us that �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; besides many others.� The lands of the family in Perigord were afterwards held by Savary, created by Napoleon I. Duc de Ruvigo. De La Cherois, Samuel : scion of a noble Huguenot family of the Gatinais, whose two sons, Nicolas and Bourjouval, officers in the French army, being Protestants, left France at the Revocation, and took service under the Prince of Orange. A second branch of the Olier family in France held the Marquisate of Verneuil, and numbered many illustrious names.�The late Rev. He settled in London, and became a silk-mauufacturer in Spitalfields. The family is now represented by Du Boulay, of Donhead Hall, Wiltshire. Roussell, Isaac : a French Protestant refugee from Quilleboeu, in Normandy, who fled into England in 1699. He is believed to have later pursued a degree focused on sports management and the football industry at the Leeds campus of RIASA (the Richmond International Academic & Soccer Academy) in the north of England. Some members of the family settled in Chester (of which the Rev. Peter de Labilliere was married in London to Margue Francoise Reynaud. of Cambridge, 1721; Canon of Windsor, 1751; Chaplain to the King; Rector of Adisham, Kent; and died 1757. It would have gone against their father’s personality to be like that.”. Molenier, Stephen : a refugee pastor from the isle of Jourdain, who fled into England and became minister of the French church at Stone-house, Plymouth. He died in 1802. Andre fled with his family, travelling by night only,�his two youngest children swung in baskets across a horse or mule. He was a successful merchant; and at his death, he left legacies to the Dutch congregations in London, Norwich, and Haarlem. They became sieurs of Chambson, one of them subsequently officiating as judge-royal of Villeneuve. His learning was great, and his integrity unsullied. The King appointed him prebendary of Canterbury, and the university of Cambridge conferred upon him the degree of D.D. He joined his friend Cavalier in England. He was an officer in Du Cambon�s Foot at the battle of the Boyne, and afterwards in Lifford�s Horse. In the year 1686, he was made a free burgess of the city of Amsterdam. These daughters afterwards succeeded to the family estates, which their descendants still hold. The university of Oxford conferred upon him the degree of D.D. Dury, Paul : an eminent officer of engineers, who entered the service of William III., from which he passed into that of the Elector of Hesse. His son inherited much of his father�s genius. into England. He established himself in business, with his son Peter Bondeau, in Abchurch Lane, and is said to have owed his prosperity to the manufacture of French hoods. On the revival of the persecutions in France, Samuel took refuge in England, was appointed minister of the French church in London in 1591, and afterwards of the Walloon church at Canterbury in 1595. In his nineteenth year Estienne joined the English army in Piedmont under the Duke of Schomberg,�entering the Huguenot regiment of Lord Galway as a cadet, and serving at the siege of Cassale. James II. He was the author of several geographical works. He accepted the invitation of Archbishop Cranmer to settle in England, where he assisted in revising the English liturgy, excluding what savoured of popery, but not going so far as Calvin. Le Courrayer died in London in 1776. Of course the refugee youths were never produced. He was for some time minister of the Glass-house Street French church in London. Majendie : Several refugees from Beam of this name fled into England at the Revocation. His uncle being anxious for his return to Berne, Estienne left the regiment after about two years� service. Renouard : a distinguished Huguenot family from San-cerre, near Orleans. “Kyril’s commitment, acumen and integrity convinced us to accept his proposal,” Donald said in a statement on Thursday. One of them became pastor of the French church at Exeter. Garencieres, Theophilus De : a doctor of medicine, native of Caen, who came over to England as physician to the French ambassador, and embraced Protestantism. He was employed in decorating the palaces at Versailles and Marley, and other important works. His brother Benjamin was also a refugee in England, and held the office of minister in the church of La Patente, which he contributed to found. His daughter married M. Triboudet Demainbray, himself a refugee from France in consequence of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes,�and their granddaughter was my mother.�. Several Blossets fled into Holland and England at the Revocation. Theophilus Brocas dying without issue, this noble family has become extinct in the male line, but survives, through the female line, in the person of Walter Lindesay, Esq., of Glenview, County Wicklow, J.P., who is its present representative. Le Fanu nevertheless had three of them baptized by Protestant ministers. He became captain of grenadiers in the regiment of Caillemotte- Ruvigny, and fought with it at the battle of the Boyne, where he received six severe wounds, which disabled him for life. Yver, John: a refugee pastor, who officiated as minister in several of the churches of the Refuge in London. The present Archbishop of Dublin, Richard Chenevix Trench, is his great-grandson by the mother�s side, being also descended, by the father�s side, from another Huguenot family, the Trenches or De la Tranches, of whom the Earl of Clancarry is the head. Afterwards, in 1763, we find him attending a secret synod in France, as deputy of Saintonge; but at length, in 1771, he fled into England. Amand , or Amyand : a Huguenot refugee of this name settled in London in the beginning of last century. See also notice at p. 174. 169) two British regiments, the 11th and 91st, came up and turned the tide of battle, which, until then, had gone in favour of the French. : a native of Nay, in Bearn, where he was born in 1654. One of his brothers, Antoine, was a major in the English army; and another, who was raised to the rank of brigadier, was mortally wounded at the battle of Falkirk. They have also won the FA Cup twice, the last time being in 1973. See also pp. D� Espard: Philip D� Espard escaped to England from the massacre of St. Bartholomew, abandoning his title and estate rather than abjure Protestantism.
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