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 garrison of Antwerp. He was then offered a company in the regiment raised by Archibald Campbell, seventh earl of Argyll, and distinguished himself in its command at the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom (1622) and Breda (1624). The reduction of the English regiments in Spanish service after the fall of Breda, and the outbreak of war between England and Spain, obliged him in the following year to return to England (ib. p. 3). Gage devoted his enforced leisure to the study of the theory of war, which was throughout his life his favourite pursuit (ib. p. 27). During this period he also translated Hermannus Hugo's account of the siege of Breda from Latin into English, and Vincent's ‘Heraldry’ from English into French (ib. p. 3). In 1630 Sir Edward Parham offered Gage the post of captain-commandant in an English regiment which was being raised for the service of Spain, and he spent the next twelve years in the war in the Netherlands. He obtained a commission to raise a regiment himself, levied nine hundred men, and, on the death of Sir William Tresham, ‘had his regiment completed by the addition of the old unto it, which his highness the prince-cardinal bestowed upon him’ (ib. p. 5). Gage's chief service during this period was the defence of Saint-Omer in 1638. In 1639 he suggested to the English government to offer the privilege of recruiting the English and Irish regiments in Spanish service to the number of ten thousand men, in return for 4,400 Spanish veterans to be used in Scotland. Secretary Windebanke authorised negotiations, but the Spanish government refused to hear of the proposed exchange (Clarendon State Papers, ii. 19–30, 50). Gage was also unsuccessfully employed in 1639 to negotiate a loan of 150,000l. from Spain as the price of protecting the Spanish fleet from the Dutch (Cal. Clarendon Papers, i. 185, 197). When the civil war broke out, Gage used his influence to intercept the parliament's supplies from Flanders, and is said to have ‘deprived the rebels of thirty thousand arms, and afforded his majesty eight thousand of those that were intended to be borne against him’ (, p. 9). He returned to England about the spring of 1644 to enter the king's service. When the king left Oxford he named Gage one of the military council appointed to assist the governor (3 June 1644;, Historical Discourses, p. 19). In spite of the opposition of the governor, he speedily infused a new spirit into the defence of Oxford (, Rebellion, ed. Macray, viii. 122). On 11 June he captured Borstall House, on 11 Sept. relieved Basing House, and on 25 Oct. helped to raise the siege of Banbury (, pp. 26, 90, 109). The relief of Basing was one of the most remarkable exploits of the whole war; Gage's own account is given at length by Walker, and copied, with some additional particulars, by Clarendon (ib. pp. 90–5;, ed. Macray, viii. 123). On 19 Nov. Gage was again despatched to relieve Basing, but the besiegers retreated at his approach (, p. 119). As a reward for these services Gage was knighted on 1 Nov. 1644 (, Diary, p. 74), and on the dismissal of Sir Arthur Aston [q. v.] on 25 Dec. 1644 made governor of Oxford in his place (ib. p. 76;, Rebellion, viii. 165). ‘It is incredible,’ writes his biographer, ‘what a general contentment all men took in his promotion and how few repined at his advancement’ (, p. 19). On 10 Jan. 1645 an expedition was sent out from Oxford to break down Culham bridge, and in a skirmish with the garrison of Abingdon Gage was mortally wounded on 11 Jan. (Accounts of this fight from the parliamentary side are given in, Burning Bush, p. 93, and in a published letter by Colonel Richard Browne; for royalist accounts see , p. 21; and Mercurius Aulicus, p. 1332.)

Gage was buried in Christ Church Cathedral on 13 Jan. 1645. His epitaph is printed by Wood (Colleges and Halls, ed. Gutch, p. 479), and by Le Neve (Monumenta Anglicana, i. 217). Elegies on him are to be found in Walsingham's ‘Life’ (p. 23), and in ‘Mercurius Belgicus,’ 1685. Clarendon observes: ‘The king sustained a wonderful loss in his death, he being a man of great wisdom and temper, and amongst the very few soldiers who made himself to be universally loved and esteemed’ (Rebellion, viii. 166). Gage married, between 1625 and 1630, Mary Daniel, and left two sons and four daughters (, p. 4).

[Edward Walsingham's Alter Britanniæ Heros, or the Life and Death of the most honourable knight Sir Henry Gage, late governor of Oxford, epitomised, Oxford, 1645; Clarendon's Hist. of the Rebellion, ed. Macray, 1888; Clarendon State Papers; Sir Edward Walker's Historical Discourses, 1707; Manning and Bray's History of Surrey, ii. 542.]  GAGE, JOHN (1479–1556), statesman and military commander, was the only son of William Gage of Firle Place, Sussex, by Agnes, daughter of Benjamin Boleney of Bolney, Sussex, and a cousin of William of Wykeham, bishop of Winchester (History of Hengrave, pp. 227–31). Being under age at his father's death (1496) he was put under the guardianship of Stafford, duke of Buckingham, and 'educated for court and 