Rodolphus de Salis
General Rodolph John Leslie Hibernicus De Salis,[1] (St. George, Dublin 9 May 1811; 27 Ashley Place, Westminster, 13 March 1880, buried Harlington, Middlesex), CB, OBE (1861), Légion d'honneur, and Order of Medjidie; of Dawley/Harlington, Middlesex; Dunleer, co. Louth; and Brackagh, Co. Armagh; Colonel of the 8th Hussars.[2]
Second son of Jerome, 4th Count de Salis-Soglio, he was educated at Eton College, Heidelberg University and Oriel College, Oxford.[3]
Career
Cornet, 17 December 1830; Lieutenant, 28 June 1833; Captain, 13 July 1838; Major, 19 February 1847; Brevet Lt. Colonel, 28 November 1854; Lt. Colonel, 2 October 1856; Colonel, 20 March 1858.[4]
He fought at Alma, Inkerman, Balaclava, Tchernaya, Kertch, Sebastopol, Central India (& Rajpootana), Kotah ki Serai, Sindwaho, Delhi, Koondrye, Chundaree, Gwalior, and Boordah.[5]
Marriage
He married in Paris, 8 November 1875, Augusta Letitia Robinson, of 10 Marble Arch, London, (Manchester, 1839– Westminster, 21 or 24 February 1929), (widow of General Adolfus Derville, (1801–1874), Indian Army.[6] She died leaving effects worth £86,728.[7]
- Rokeby Hall, near Dunleer, his parents leased this during his youth.
- Rodolph J. H. L. De Salis.
- M. le Colonel de Salis' photopass or CARTE DE SEMAINE, for the Exposition Universelle de 1867 A PARIS valable jusqu'au AVRIL 23.[8][9] Photograph probably by Camille Silvy.
- Lt. General Rodolph. Photographed c.1870.
- General Rodolph.
- Rodolph in his sister-in-law's album.
- Rodolph's Order of the Medjidie.
- One of Rodolph's Crimean War medals.
- De Salis' own Légion d'honneur medal.
- Indian Mutiny Medal with Central India clasp belonging to General De Salis.
- List of battles De Salis fought in, as seen on a monumental inscription in a Middlesex church.
- His widow, Augusta (d. 1929).
References and Notes
- Forgotten Heroes: The Charge of the Light Brigade, by Roy Dutton, 2007.
- His Baptismal names were: Rodolphus Johannes Leslie Hibernicus
- De Salis Family : English Branch, by Rachel Fane De Salis, Henley-on-Thames, 1934.
- Burke's Landed Gentry, edited by Peter Townend, eighteenth edition, volume one, London, Burke's Peerage, 1965, (pages 251–253).
- The Annual Army List, 1865, edited by Colonel H. G. Hart, published by John Murray, London.
- The Annual Army List, 1865, edited by Colonel H. G. Hart, published by John Murray, London.
- They married in 1863 (info from Geni).
- Info from Family Division, Holborn
- He stayed at the Hotel de normandie, rue Saint-Honoré.
- He was there to visit his brother, William's stand for the Australian State of Victoria.