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MARQUIS ABRAHAM DUQUESNE (1610-1688)

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Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 692 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARQUIS ABRAHAM DUQUESNE (1610-1688)  , French
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naval officer, was born at
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Dieppe in 161o . Born in a stirring seaport, the son of a distinguished naval officer, he naturally adopted the profession of a sailor . He spent his youth in the merchant service, and obtained his first distinction in naval warfare by the capture of the island of Lerins from the Spaniards in May 1637 . About the same time his
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father was killed in an engagement with the Spaniards, and the
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news raised his hatred of the
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national enemy to the pitch of a
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personal and bitter animosity . For the next five years he sought every opportunity of inflicting defeat and humiliation on the
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Spanish
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navy, and he distinguished himself by his bravery in the engagement at Guetaria (1638), the expedition to Corunna (1639), and in battles at Tarragona (1641),
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Barcelona (1643), and the Cabo de Gata . The French navy being
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left unemployed during the minority of Louis XIV., Duquesne obtained leave to offer his services to the king of Sweden, who gave him a commission as
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vice-
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admiral in 1643 . In this capacity he defeated the Danish
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fleet near Gothenburg and thus raised the siege of the city . The Danes returned to the struggle with increased forces under the command of King Christian in person, but they were again defeated—their admiral being killed and his
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ship taken . Peace having been concluded between Sweden and Denmark in 1645, Duquesne returned to France . The revolt at
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Bordeaux, supported as it was by material aid from Spain, gave him the opportunity of at once serving his country and gratifying his long-cherished hatred of the Spaniards . In 165o he fitted out at his own expense a
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squadron with which he blockaded the mouth of the
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Gironde, and compelled the city to surrender . For this service he was promoted in rank, and received a gift of the castle and isle of
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Indre, near Nantes .

Peace with Spain was concluded in 1659, and for some years afterwards Duquesne was occupied in endeavours to suppress piracy in the Mediterranean . On the revolt of

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Messina from Spain, he was sent to support the insurgents, and had to encounter the
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united fleets of Spain and Holland under the command of the celebrated Admiral de Ruyter . After several battles, in which the
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advantage was generally on the side of the French, a decisive engagement took place near Catania, on the loth of
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April 1676, when the Dutch fleet was totally routed and de Ruyter mortally wounded . The greater
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part of the defeated fleet was afterwards burned in the harbour of Palermo, where it had taken
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refuge, and the French thus secured the undisputed command of the Mediterranean . For this important service Duquesne received a letter of thanks from Louis XIV., together with the title of
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marquis and the estate of Bouchet . His last achievements were the
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bombardment of Algiers (1682-1683), in order to effect the deliverance of the Christian captives, and the bombardment of Genoa in 1684 . He retired from service in 1684, on the ground of age and
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ill-
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health . It is probable also that he foresaw the revocation of the edict of Nantes, which took place in the following
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year . He died in Paris on the 2nd of
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February 1688 . See Jai, Abraham Duquesne, et la marine de son temps (1873) .

End of Article: MARQUIS ABRAHAM DUQUESNE (1610-1688)
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