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  1. Colonel Henry Luttrell (c. 1655 – 22 October 1717) was an Irish soldier known for his service in the Jacobite cause. A career soldier, Luttrell served James II in England until his overthrow in 1688. In Ireland he continued to fight for James, reaching the rank of General in the Irish Army.

    • Assassinated (Shot)
    • Thomas Luttrell
    • Robert Luttrell, Simon Luttrell
    • Irish
  2. 3 de may. de 2024 · Henry Luttrell (born c. 1765—died Dec. 19, 1851, London, Eng.) was an English poet of light verse and a London society wit. Luttrell was an illegitimate son of Henry Lawes Luttrell, 2nd earl of Carhampton, who in 1798 used his influence in securing his son a seat in the Irish Parliament and a post in the Irish government, which the ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Henry Luttrell (c. 1655 - 22 de octubre de 1717) fue un soldado irlandés conocido por su servicio en la causa jacobita . Luttrell, soldado de carrera, sirvió a James II en Inglaterra hasta su derrocamiento en 1688. En Irlanda continuó luchando para James, alcanzando el rango de general en el ejército irlandés .

  4. General Henry Lawes Luttrell, 2nd Earl of Carhampton PC (7 August 1743 – 25 April 1821) was an Anglo-Irish politician and soldier, who both in public and private life attracted scandal. He was spurned by colleagues in the British House of Commons who believed that in the election of 1769 he had played an underhand role in denying his seat to ...

  5. Luttrell, Henry. Luttrell, Henry ( c. 1655–1717), Jacobite soldier, was born in Luttrellstown, Co. Dublin, second among four sons of Thomas Luttrell and his wife Barbara, daughter of Henry Segrave (qv). Thomas's estate was confiscated by Cromwell (qv) and bestowed upon Col. John Hewson, the ‘one-eyed cobbler’, Cromwellian governor of Dublin.

  6. Henry' Luttrell then became involved in supplying soldiers to fight abroad for the Venetian Republic and was later a major-general in the Dutch army. The fact that he prevented his sister-in-law, Simon's widow, from gaining her rightful inheritance, together with his notorious debauchery, caused him to be universally detested.

  7. He was so hated that he sold Luttrellstown Castle in 1800, but in a revenge attack, the grave of his grandfather Colonel Henry Luttrell (died 1717) was opened and the skull smashed. His 'popularity' in Ireland is encapsulated by an incident in which the Dublin Post of 2 May 1811 reported his death.