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MARQUIS DE HENRI DE MASSUE RUVIGNY

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 946 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARQUIS DE
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HENRI DE MASSUE RUVIGNY
  , afterwards
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EARL OF
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GALWAY (1648-1720), was born at Paris on the 9th of
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April 1648, and was the son of the 1st
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Marquis de Ruvigny, a distinguished French diplomatist, and a relative of Rachel, the wife of Lord William Russell . He saw service under Turenne, who thought very highly of him . Probably on account of his
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English connexions he was selected in 1678 by Louis XIV. to carry out the secret negotiations for a compact with Charles II., a difficult
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mission which he executed with
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great skill . Succeeding his
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father as " general of the
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Huguenots," he refused Louis's offer, at the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, to retain him in that office, and in 169o, having gone into exile with his
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fellow Huguenots, he entered the service of William III. of England as a major-general, forfeiting thereby his French estates . In
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July 1691 he distinguished himself at the
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battle of Aughrim, and in 1692 he was for a time
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commander-in-chief in Ireland . In November of that
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year he was created Viscount Galway and Baron
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Portarlington, and received a large grant of forfeited estates in Ireland . In 1693 he fought at
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Neerwinden and was wounded, and in 1694, with the rank of
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lieutenant-general, he was sent to command a force in English pay which was to assist the duke of Savoy against the French, and at the same time to relieve the distressed Vaudois . But in 1695 the duke changed sides, the
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Italian peninsula was neutralized, and Galway's force was withdrawn to the
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Netherlands . From 1697 to 1701, a critical period of Irish
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history, the Earl of Galway (he was advanced to that rank in 1697) was practically in control of Irish affairs as lord justice of Ireland . After some years spent in retirement, he was appointed in 1704 to command the allied forces in
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Portugal, a
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post which he sustained with honour and success until the battle of Almanza in 1707, in which Galway, in spite of care and skill on his own
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part, wasdecisively defeated . But he scraped together a fresh army, and, although infirm, was reappointed to his command by the home government . After taking part in one more
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campaign, and distinguishing himself by his
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personal bravery in
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action, he retired from active
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life .

His last service was rendered in 1715, when he was sent as one of the lords justices to Ireland during the Jacobite insurrection . As most of his

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property in Ireland had been restored to its former owners, and all his French estates had long before been forfeited, parliament voted him
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pensions amounting to £1500 a year . He died unmarried on the 3rd of September 1720 .

End of Article: MARQUIS DE HENRI DE MASSUE RUVIGNY
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