Sir William Sackville Explained

Sir William Sackville (c.1570–1592) was an English army officer in the service of Henry IV of France, who knighted him.[1] He was the third son of Thomas Sackville, 1st Earl of Dorset.[2]

In the expedition of Peregrine Bertie, 13th Baron Willoughby de Eresby, Sackvillearrived in France in September 1589, and was knighted shortly. He then served under François de La Noue, near Paris. He was wounded and lost his horse at the Siege of Paris in 1590.[1]

Sackville was killed in the 1592 campaign of Henry IV, in which Spanish forces under the Duke of Parma made a landing in northern France early in the year.[3] He was killed, or taken, in fighting near Bures on 14 February.[4] John Ross of the Inner Temple, as a law student of the early 1590s, wrote a long commemorative poem for Sackville.[5]

Notes and References

  1. 40547. Sackville, Sir William. Richard F.. Hardin.
  2. 24450. Rivkah. Zim. Sackville, Thomas.
  3. Book: Nicola Mary Sutherland. Henry IV of France and the Politics of Religion: The path to Rome. 2002. Intellect Books. 978-1-84150-702-6. 422.
  4. Book: G. B. Harrison. An Elizabethan Journal. 8 October 2013. Routledge. 978-1-136-35529-5. 103.
  5. Richard F. Hardin, Geoffrey among the Lawyers: Britannica (1607) by John Ross of the Inner Temple, The Sixteenth Century JournalVol. 23, No. 2 (Summer, 1992), pp. 235–249, at p. 236. Published by: Sixteenth Century JournalDOI: 10.2307/2541888. Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/2541888