William Tate (soldier)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/William_Tate_(soldier) an entity of type: Thing

William Tate est un colonel et un aventurier américain au service de la France qui, le 22 février 1797 (bataille de Fishguard), avec quatre navires et une bande de mercenaires et de patriotes déserteurs (la Légion noire), composés de Français, d'Espagnols et d’Irlandais, débarquèrent sur les côtes anglaises au large de la pointe de près de , hameau de l’ouest du pays de Galles, proche de la ville de Fishguard, pour envahir la Grande-Bretagne. rdf:langString
Chef de brigade William Tate was the Irish-born American commander of a French invasion force known as La Légion Noire ("The Black Legion") which invaded Britain in 1797, resulting in the Battle of Fishguard. Tate reportedly held a grudge against the British because his family had been killed by pro-British Native Americans in the American War of Independence, and he advocated Irish republicanism. Many historians, following E. H. Stuart Jones, the author of The Last Invasion of Britain (1950), have suggested that William Tate was about 70 years old in 1797; he was in fact 44. rdf:langString
rdf:langString William Tate
rdf:langString William Tate (soldier)
rdf:langString William Tate
rdf:langString William Tate
rdf:langString Unknown
xsd:integer 4418764
xsd:integer 1088914653
xsd:integer 1797
rdf:langString French Revolutionary Wars *Battle of Fishguard
xsd:integer 1744
rdf:langString French Army
rdf:langString The Battle of Fishguard, where Tate surrendered
rdf:langString Unknown
xsd:integer 300
rdf:langString William Tate est un colonel et un aventurier américain au service de la France qui, le 22 février 1797 (bataille de Fishguard), avec quatre navires et une bande de mercenaires et de patriotes déserteurs (la Légion noire), composés de Français, d'Espagnols et d’Irlandais, débarquèrent sur les côtes anglaises au large de la pointe de près de , hameau de l’ouest du pays de Galles, proche de la ville de Fishguard, pour envahir la Grande-Bretagne.
rdf:langString Chef de brigade William Tate was the Irish-born American commander of a French invasion force known as La Légion Noire ("The Black Legion") which invaded Britain in 1797, resulting in the Battle of Fishguard. In 1793, French Consul Michel Ange Bernard Mangourit wanted to capture Florida from Spain. He commissioned William Tate as a French Colonel to raise and lead a force of Americans. Tate was instructed to recruit from outside the United States, but he recruited from the region of the Carolinas, especially rural settlers. In February 1794, Jean Antoine Joseph Fauchet, arrived in Philadelphia as the new French ambassador, and rescinded Tate's commission. South Carolina threatened to arrest Tate for treason, and he fled to France in 1795, where he was given command of the Légion Noire during the 1797 invasion of Britain. The 1,200 to 1,400-strong Légion Noire landed at Carregwastad Point, near the Welsh port of Fishguard, on February 22 but surrendered three days later at the Battle of Fishguard. After brief imprisonment, Tate was returned to France in a prisoner exchange in 1798, along with most of his invasion force. This was the last invasion of the British mainland by foreign forces. Tate reportedly held a grudge against the British because his family had been killed by pro-British Native Americans in the American War of Independence, and he advocated Irish republicanism. Many historians, following E. H. Stuart Jones, the author of The Last Invasion of Britain (1950), have suggested that William Tate was about 70 years old in 1797; he was in fact 44.
xsd:gYear 1797
xsd:gYear 1797
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4794
xsd:string Légion Noire

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