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Régiment de Dillon
Rég de Dillon 1739
Regimental flag of the regiment until 1791.
Active 1688–1793
Country Royal Standard of the King of France Kingdom of France
France Kingdom of France (1791–2)
Flag of France First French Republic
Allegiance King of France
French Nation
Branch Kingdom of France La Marine Royale
France French Royal Army
France French Army
Type Line Infantry
Size 2 Battalions
Nickname(s) Dillon's Regiment
Motto(s) In hoc signo vinces (In this sign you will conquer)
Colors red, black facing
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders

Theobald Dillon, 7th Viscount Dillon
Dillon Colonels of the Regiment in France
(1) 1690-1728: Arthur Dillon, ’’Comte de Dillon’’
(2) 1728-1741: Charles, 10th Viscount
(3) 1741-1743: Henry Dillon, 11th Viscount Dillon,
(4) 1743-1745: James, killed at the Battle of Fontenoy
(5) 1745-1747: Edward, killed at the Battle of Lauffeld
hiatus 1747-1767
(6) 1767-1792: Arthur Dillon (1750–1794)

Dillon's Regiment (French: Régiment de Dillon) was first raised in Ireland in 1688 by Theobald, 7th Viscount Dillon, for the Jacobite side in the Williamite War. He was then killed at the Battle of Aughrim in 1691.

Williamite War

Dillon inf 1786

Uniform of the Dillon Regiment in 1786

Dillon's Regiment was first raised as part of the Irish Army in 1688 by Theobald, 7th Viscount Dillon. During the Williamite War the regiment went to France in April 1690 as part of Lord Mountcashel's Irish Brigade, in exchange for some French regiments amounting to 6,000 troops.[1] After the Treaty of Limerick in 1691, the regiment remained in the service of the kings of France under its present name.[2] It was next commanded in France by Theobald's younger son, Colonel Arthur Dillon, until 1733.[3]

Shadow formations

(Henry) Dillon's Regiment: Émigré elements of the French regiment passed into William Pitt's British Catholic Irish Brigade in 1794. These elements comprised the greater part of the officers who had emigrated from France, and new recruits raised on the Dillon lands in Ireland. Henry Dillon, a brother of Arthur Dillon was given command of the regiment. However, on campaign in Jamaica and Haiti, it had such losses, mainly due to the unhealthy climate, that it was disbanded in 1798. The flags and ensigns were returned to Charles, Lord Dillon, head of the Dillon family in Ireland.[4]

(Edward) Dillon's Regiment: (Edward) Dillon's Regiment of Foot was raised in northern Italy in 1795, by Col. Edward Dillon, formerly of the Irish Brigade in France, to fight for the English in the Mediterranean.[5]

See also

References

  1. McGarry, Stephen. Irish Brigades Abroad p. 8
  2. Flag of the régiment de Dillon Regimental flag
  3. Burke's Peerage (2003) p.1148, on the Dillon family.
  4. La Marquise de La Tour du Pin, Recollections of the Revolution and the Empire. London: Jonathan Cape, (1921) pp.420-422, on the Dillon Regiment.
  5. René Chartrand, Patrice Courcelle Émigré & foreign troops in British service (1), 1793-1802 (Men at Arms Series). Osprey Publishing, (1999), pp12-13.

Further reading

  • McGarry, Stephen. Irish Brigades Abroad. (2013)
All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Régiment de Dillon (France) and the edit history here.
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