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7TH See also: English See also: lieutenant-general, son of the 6th See also: earl of Cardigan (the title dating from 1661), was See also: born at Hambleden, Bucks, on the 16th of See also: October 1797
.
He studied for several terms at Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford; and in 1818 entered parliament
.
He entered the army in 1824 as See also: cornet in the 8th Hussars, and was promoted within eight years, by See also: purchase, to be lieutenant-colonel in the 15th Hussars
.
With this regiment he made himself one of the most unpopular of commanding See also: officers
.
He gave the reins to his natural overbearing and quarrelsome temper, treating his men with excessive rigour and indulging in unscrupulous licentiousness
.
Within two years he held 105 courts-See also: martial, and made more than 700 arrests, although the actual strength of his regiment was only 350 men
.
In consequence of one of his numerous See also: personal quarrels, he See also: left the regiment in 1834; but two years later, at the urgent entreaty of his See also: father, he was appointed to the command of the 11th Hussars
.
He played the same See also: part as before, and was censured for it; but he was allowed to retain his See also: post, and the discipline and equipment of his regiment, in which he took See also: great See also: pride, and on which he spent large sums of See also: money, received high See also: commendation from the duke of Wellington
.
He succeeded to the See also: peerage on the See also: death of his father in See also: August 1837
.
In See also: September 1840 See also: Lord Cardigan fought a duel, on See also: Wimbledon See also: common, with one of his own
officers
.
The latter was wounded, and Lord Cardigan was tried before the See also: House of Lords on a See also: charge of feloniously See also: shooting his adversary
.
But the trial was a See also: mere sham, and on a trivial technical ground he was acquitted
.
In 1854, at the outbreak of the See also: Crimean War, he was appointed to the command of the See also: light cavalry brigade, with the See also: rank of major-general, and he spent a very large sum in the purchase of horses and on the equipment of his regiment
.
He took a prominent part in the early actions of the See also: campaign, and displayed throughout the greatest personal courage and the greatest recklessness in exposing his men
.
In the charge of the light brigade at See also: Balaklava (q.v.) he was the first See also: man to reach the See also: line of the See also: Russian guns; and Cardigan and his men alike have been credited by the bitterest critics of the charge with splendid daring and unquestioning obedience to orders
.
At the close of the war he was created K.C.B., and was appointed inspector-general of cavalry, and this post he held till 1860
.
In 1863 he engaged without success in legal proceedings against an officer who had published an account of Balaklava which the earl held to contain a reflection on his military character
.
He attained the rank of lieutenant-general in 1861
.
He was twice married, in 1826 and 1858, but had no See also: children
.
On his death, which took place on the 28th of See also: March 1868, the
See also: family titles (including the English See also: barony of Brudenell, cr
.
1628) passed to his relative, the second See also: marquess of Ailesbury
.
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I understand that the Earl had an illegitimate son named George Brudenell. Not the distant cousin who later became the 8th Earl. This son was an in the infantry and also may have fought in the Crimean War. Any comments please... He is buried in Burnard Castle,Durham.
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