The Sultan
Moulay Ismail of
Morocco had made an unsuccessful attempt to seize the town of
Tangier in 1679, but ended up
imposing a crippling blockade.
The King's Own Royal Regiment was formed on 13 July 1680 as the 2nd Tangier, or Earl of Plymouth's Regiment of Foot, with Charles as the founding Colonel. Charles died of
dysentery without issue on 17 October 1680, aged 23, and the English were ultimately forced to withdraw, ending their
presence in Tangier. The title of Earl of Plymouth became extinct, but it was recreated two years later for
Thomas Hickman-Windsor, 7th Baron Windsor (1627–1687). Plymouth's body was returned to
England and he was buried on 18 January 1681 in
Westminster Abbey. His wife, the Countess, remarried in 1706,
Philip Bisse,
Bishop of Hereford, and she died on 9 May 1718. Bridget left the Bishop a widower and he erected a handsome tablet in her honour in
Hereford Cathedral. ==References==