Duke of Schomberg

Translation of the monument’s text, written by Jonathan Swift:

Beneath this stone lies the body of Frederick, Duke of Schomberg, who was killed at the Boyne AD 1690. The Dean and Chapter earnestly and repeatedly requested the Duke’s heirs to undertake the erection of a monument in memory of their father. Long and often they pressed the request by letter and through friends. It was of no avail. At long last, they set up this stone that at least you may know, stranger, where the ashes of Schomberg be buried. The renown of his valour had greater power among strangers than had the ties of blood among his kith and kin.

 

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Frederick Herman de Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg, was born in 1615. Although originally a native of Heidelberg, Germany, his long and storied military career would lead him to serve for a number of countries, including the Dutch, Swedish, Portuguese, English, and French armies.

By 1675 he had settled in France, having been made a Marshal. However, in 1685 the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes by King Louis IV led to the expulsion of Protestants from France. Schomberg, himself married to a Huguenot, also fled the country. He joined the army of William of Orange, who had begun his campaign to depose the Catholic James II from the English throne.

In 1689 Schomberg was appointed the commander-in-chief of the Williamite army, in pursuit of James, who had retreated to Ireland with his supporters. In 1690 the Williamite and Jacobite armies clashed just north of Dublin at the Battle of the Boyne. William’s decisive victory here is often credited as paving the way for Protestant ascendancy in Ireland.

This battle is also how Schomberg met his end. During the fight, he was shot by a bullet in the neck, potentially accidentally by one of his men. Afterwards he was interred in the north choir aisle of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral. This memorial plaque was later added to his tomb, the epitaph written by Jonathan Swift.

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