Page:Protestant Exiles from France Agnew (1st ed. vol 3).djvu/221

 (20.) Monsieur Labat was a Norman refugee in the army of William III., and is represented by the Rev. Edward Labat, rector of Kilcar, County Donegal. — (Smiles’s Huguenots.)

(21.) Monsieur Francois Gualy was an officer in our army, son of a noble refugee, Pierre, Sieur de la Gineste, anil brother of the major-general and Colonel of dragoons, who has been named in the chapter on French regiments. He settled in Dublin, where he is still represented — (Smiles.)

(22.) The Messieurs Giberne (p. 317), sons of a French Protestant gentleman who apostatised, adhered to their faith. They are said to have come to England as military officers with William of Orange. The surname is now indigenous in England, and has lately come into prominent notice by the publication of “Aimée, a Tale of the Days of James II.,” by Agnes Giberne; in the preface the author represents herself as “certain that my own collateral, if not my immediate, ancestors were among the number of the old Languedoc noblesse who suffered persecution and forfeited rank, wealth, and country, for the sake of their religion, not long after my tale.” By the same author are the following:— (1.) The Day-star, or the Gospel Story for the Little Ones. (2.) The Curate’s Home, a Tale, 2d edition. (3.) Detained in France, a Tale of the French Empire. (4.) Mignonette, a Tale, 2d edition. (5.) Among the Mountains, or the Harcourts at Montreux. (6.) Mabel and Cora, a Tale.

''Group Third. Clergy'' (pp. 236-238.)

(1.) Rev. James Hierome, or Jerome, D.D. (p. 236). He held several benefices in Ireland, as to which I gave extracts from the Irish Patent Rolls. [In Cotton’s Fasti Ecclesiae Hibernicae, the following dates are given: 1666, precentor of Waterford and treasurer of Lismore; 1671, prebendary of St Patrick’s, Dublin.]

(2.) Rev. James Le Frez, D.D. (p. 236), was formerly a professor in the University of Saumur.

(3.) Rev. James D’Allemagne, D.D. (p. 236). [In the Camden Society volume of Lists of Foreign Protestants, a line was accidentally omitted in the process of copying, so that this divine’s name was mixed up with another surname whose Christian name had dropped out; and he accordingly appears in the index to that volume as “D’Allemagne Demay.” Of course this is a mistake; see my List XIII.]

(4.) Rev. Antoine Pérès (p. 236), was a professor at Montauban.

(5.) Rev. Caesar Pégorier (p. 237), was a refugee pasteur and author.

(6.) Rev. James Sartre (p. 237), was a prebendary of Westminster; he married Dorothy Addison, sister of “the Spectator.”

(6.) Rev. Daniel Amiand (p. 237), was rector of Holdenby, and canon of Peterborough.

(8.) Rev. Antlioine Ligonier de Bonneval (p. 237). His sister was the wife of Jacques Louis de Vignoles.

(9.) Rev. Henry Pujolas (p. 237).

(10.) Rev. Daniel Lombard, D.D. (p. 237), wrote a “History of Persecutions;” he was a son of Rev. John Lombard. (Naturalizations, List XIV.)

(11.) Rev. Ezechiel Barbauld (pp. 237, 238.)

(12.) Rev. Stephen Abel Laval (p. 238), was the author of The History of the Reformed Church of France, in 6 vols., with appendix. He was connected by marriage with the families of Barbot and Drelincourt.

(13.) The Messieurs Roussel (p. 317), were refugee pastors in Ireland.

(14.) John Defray (pp. 317, 318), was M.A. of Saumur and of Oxford.

(15.) Rev. P. F. De la Rivière (p. 318), was a minister of the French church in the Savoy, London.

(16.) Rev. Stephen Lyon, or Lion, was born in Rouen in 1674. His monument states that “he left Rouen under the guardianship of his mother, for tlie Protestant religion there persecuted.” He matriculated at Oxford from Oriel College, 14th June 1692, aged 18, as “pleb.