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  1. Charles Chalmot de Saint-Ruhe [needs IPA] (c. 1650 – 12 July 1691) was a French cavalry officer, serving in the armies of Louis XIV. Despite a long career, Saint-Ruhe is remembered largely for his brief service in Ireland during the Williamite War , in which France provided military support to the Jacobite forces of James II .

  2. Charles Chalmont de Saint-Ruth. Charles Chalmont, marquis de Saint-Ruth, fut un général français, commandant des troupes de Louis XIV, qui se battit en Irlande aux côtés des Jacobites durant la Rébellion jacobite . Dragonnades. En 1686, il participe aux dragonnades organisées par Louis XIV.

    • Baron de Tirconnell
    • marquis de Saint-Ruth
    • Baron de Lucan
  3. Murtagh, Harman. Saint-Ruth (Saint-Ruhe), Charles Chalmont ( c. 1650–91), marquis of Saint-Ruth , commander of the Irish Jacobite army in 1691, was a French aristocrat of modest means who had made his career as an officer in Louis XIV's army. He commanded a regiment in the 1672 invasion of Holland and took part in a number of engagements ...

  4. Charles Chalmont Marquis of St Ruth [1] (circa 1650 – 12 July 1691) was a French general. Early in his military career, he fought against Protestants in France. Later, he fought in Ireland on the Jacobite side in the Williamite wars, where he was killed at the Battle of Aughrim. Edict of Nantes.

    • Marie Coëffier
    • July 12, 1691
  5. Charles Chalmont, Marquis de St. Ruth - Irish Biography. Alfred Webb. A Compendium of Irish Biography. 1878. St. Ruth, a French general, sent over by Louis XIV. to command the Irish army, in May 1691. He had already led some regiments of the Irish brigade in Savoy, where he acted with the greatest barbarity towards the Protestants.

  6. www.historyireland.com › the-battle-of-aughrimHistory Ireland

    The Battle of Aughrim. Godard De Ginkel, first Earl of Athlone by Sir Godfrey. Aughrim need never have been fought. That it happened was due to the Frenchman Charles Chalmont, Marquis de Saint-Ruhe, generally referred to as Saint Ruth who assumed the post of Marshal-General of Ireland, in May 1691.

  7. Charles Chalmont, marquis de Saint Ruhe or St Ruth took command of the Irish army early in 1691. As a colonel of dragoons, he had made his name leading troops in the infamous dragonnades and in 1690 he led detachments of two or three battalions (most of them Irish) in