IRELAND. 
Married.] At Black Castle, county Meth, 
Tho. Rothwell, esq. of Rock-field, in that 
county, to Miss Corry, only daughter of 
James C. esq. of Chantinee, im the Sannty 
Monaghan. 
At Carlow, Joseph Lightburne, esq. of 
Bellewstown, in the county of Meath, ta 
Miss P. Meadows, youngest daughter of the 
late J. Meadows, esq. of Renae in the 
county of Wexford. 
Died.] At ugher, Mrs. Martha Breittan ; 
and the following day, at Auagh, her brother, 
Matthew Breittan, Colonel in the Hon. East 
India Company's service, 50. He went out 
in the year 1781, and rose with reputation 
through the gradual ranks of his profession 
from a Cadet to that of Colonel, and sustained 
many of the toils and difficulties of that 
honorable service. About three years ago 
he returned to his native country in a decli- 
ning state of health, and lived-but a short 
time to enjoy the cbmipetent oree ke had 
laboriously made. 
In Dublin, Mrs. Tyrel, wife ee Edward T. 
esq. of the county of Galway. 
At Mallow, George Newson,. esq.—-Sa- 
muel Young, of Kilco!eman.—W. Limerick, 
esq. 
At Limerick, Edward Sayers, M.D. 76.—— 
Bury Alps, esq. 
At Littleficld, county of Tipperary, Mrs. 
Carroll, wife of Flor. C. esq. 
DEATHS ABROAD, 
At Seville, in the 74th year of his age, L. 
Geronimo De‘ Ustariz .Tovar, Marquis of 
Ustariz, Member of the Supreme Council of 
War, Assistant of Seville, and Intendant in 
Commission of Andalusia. He was em- 
ployed in yarious public situations for fifty 
years with the approbation of his country. 
When Intendant of Estremadura, he intro- 
duced a variety of reforms and improvements, 
the effects of which were socn manifest in 
the increasing prosperity of that province; 
anc he hed the satisfaction of seeing many of 
his agricultural, financial, and judicial regu- | 
Jations, adopted by the royal Cabinet, and 
extended to the whole of Spain. From 
Estremadura he was promoted to the Assis- 
tantship of Seville. But, untvrtunately for 
his country, the reign of favourites, strum- 
pets, pimps, and parasites, had now com- 
menced; and those practices so recently 
detected in ihe appointment of military offi- 
cers in a country which we will not name, 
began to be felt in every branch of the Spa- 
nish government. He was removed from 
Seville, to make way for a cousin of. the 
infamous Godoy. - In rewatd for his public 
labours, he ‘was nominally honoured with a 
seat in the council of war, but wes actually 
hdnished to Teruel; though the disgrace of ' 
this proceeding wa attempted te be disguised 
by appointing him a commissioner of mines 
ia that guarter. 
Montury Mac, No, 196, 
Here he remuined many 
Treland—Deaths Abroad. _ 108 
years; neglected by the conrt, but honoured 
with the attachment, esteem, and confidence, 
of the Arragonese. To his popular conduct, ‘ 
and the general admiration of his civic vire 
tuss, ip chiefly to be ascribed the patriotic 
Stand made by the Arragonese in the present 
contest. This venerable, but proscribed, 
reformer, the instant the proceedings at 
Bayonne were known at Teruel, sallied from 
his retirement, and, with ali the ardour of 
youth, traversed the province in every direc 
tion, to rouse the inhabitants to resistance. 
He recognized, and treated with the utmost 
respect, the new authority of Gen. Palafox, 
and accepted a seat in the Junta of Govern- 
ment. After ten months of indefatigable 
service in Arragon, he received a royal order 
from the Supreme Junta to resume the 
Assistantship of Seville, and his functions as 
Member of the Supreme Council of War. 
His death, though naturally to have been. 
expected from his advanced years and increa- 
sing infirmities, was no doubt accelerated by 
the incessait labours to which he devoted 
himself since the commencement of the con- 
test with France. Before, and after his arrie 
val at Seville, every interval which he could 
snatch from hig official duties was employed 
in digesting a plan of a new constitution for 
Spain. His papers are said to furnish, upon 
this subject, an inestimable treasure of hfsto- 
rical and political knowledge, applied to the 
exigences of his fellow-citizens with all the 
discrimination of a statesman and philosopher, 
Far from verifying the assertions of certain 
persons, that the Spanish people have nothing 
fur her in contemplation in this struggle than 
the expulsion of the French, and the re-esta- 
blishment of the old government, the Mar- 
quis De Ustariz used to take every opportu 
nity of inculcating a contrary sentiment. 
*iWe shall have done nothing,” he frequents 
Ty and emphatically observed; ‘* we shall 
have dune nothing, if, before ve Rah this 
wat, we have not a constitution which shall 
rid us for ever of tyranis.” 
At sea, Captain C. W. Boyes, commander - 
of his Majesty’s ship Statira. When in his 
16th yéar, he lost a leg in the battle of the 
memorable ist of june; and after a constant 
prosecution of the most honourable ees 
he was cut off in the prime life, after a short 
illness, in the prospect of the first. distinctions 
of that profession, which was his pride, and 
the full attainment of every other happiness; 
leaving, to lament their irreparable loss, a 
a most afilicted widow and two, infant chile 
dren. His remains were interred with mili- 
tary honours, at Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the 
25th November. 
At Antigua, in the 23d year of his age, Ma- 
jor George Gordon, of the 8th West India re. 
giment, dephew of Colonel Gordon » Military 
secretary tothe Earl of Harrington. His ca. 
reer was shoit, but brildiant.. He served jpn 
the expedition to Zealand, was aid-de-camp 
2B to 
