- Andrew Rutherford, 1st Earl of Teviot
Andrew Rutherford, 1st Earl of Teviot (died
4 May 1664 ), was the son ofWilliam Rutherford ofQuarrelholes ,Roxburghshire . His education was received inEdinburgh , and he took up the career of soldier of fortune.His services were given to the French government, which maintained regiments of Scottish
mercenaries . On the restoration of Charles II, Rutherford was taken into employment by his own king on the recommendation ofLouis XIV of France . He had held a commission as lieutenant-general in France and had a high reputation for personal courage.Charles II gave him the Scottish title of Lord Rutherford and the governorship of
Dunkirk , which had been acquired by the ProtectorOliver Cromwell . When Charles II sold the town to France in 1662 Rutherford was consoled by the command of theTangier Garrison andThe Tangier Regiment , and was made Earl of Teviot in thepeerage of Scotland .He was sent in 1663 as governor to
Tangier . His tenure of office was very short, for on 4 May 1664 he allowed himself to be trapped in an ambush by theMoors , who carried on incessantirregular warfare against the English garrison, and was killed, together with nineteen officers and nearly five hundred men of his garrison.References
*W. F. Lord, "The Lost Possessions of England" (London, 1896).
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