Report: Individuals with associated notes
Description:
Matches 401 to 800 of 1478 » All Reports
# | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
401 | I7303 | Cripon | Osbern | Abt 1000 | 1040 | 0 | Through his wife Emma, he inherited a large property in central Normand y , i n c l uding the honours of Pacy, Jouy, and Cocherel on the Eure, lands d e p e n d ant on Breteuil and centred on Ivry, the earliest demesne of the N o r m a n ' dukes' (D . C. Douglas, William the Conqueror, pp. 89-90, 1964). T h e s e l a nds included the fief of Freschenes. Guardian to the young Duke William (later known as William the Conquero r ) , h e w a s a nephew of Duchess Gunnora. A number of Norman barons would n o t a c c e pt an illegitimate son as their leader and in 1040 an attempt wa s m a d e t o k ill William (the Conqueror). The plot failed but they did ki ll t h e g u a rdians, one of whom was Osbern. He was murdered by William d e M o n g o mery. |
1 |
402 | I405 | Crosby | Ebenezer | 6 Mar 1745 | 27 Sep 1807 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-141455 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A212167 Birth: 06 Mar 1744 Yarmouth / Barnstable / MA Death: 27 Sep 1807 Hawley / Franklin / MA Qualifying Service Description: Private, Capt Micah Chapman's co., Colonel Nathaniel Freeman's regt., service, 13 days on an alarm at Dartmouth and Falmouth, Sept. 1778; also, same company and regiment, service, 2 days guarding prisoners belonging to the British ship "Somerset" cast ashore on Cape Cod, Nov. 1778 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Yarmouth, MA Town Records, Volume 3, pg 101 Yarmouth, MA Vital Records, Book 4, pg 65 MA Soldiers and Sailors in the War of the Revolution, Vol 4, pg 147 Muster/Payrolls of the Rev War (MA & RI) Volume 35, pg 237; Volume 55, pg N.92 Spouse: Mary Crosby Children: Samuel; Sarah; Judah; Theophilus; Abigail; Ebenezer; Betty; Polly; Joshua; Hannah; |
1 |
403 | I25303 | Crump | Thomas | 30 Mar 1597 | Mar 1655 | 0 | Thomas Crampe/Crompe emigrated to Virginia Colony before 1624. As of the census of 16 February 1623/24 he was living on the Eastern Shore. By the Muster of 24 January 1624/25 he was sharing a home with John West on James Island. Thomas Crampe (Crump) served as Burgess for James City at the Assembly of 1631/32, representing The Neck of Land in 1632 and 1632/3-1633. Since Thomas is not on record owning land prior to 1633, it is likely he and Elizabeth lived on the late Rev. Richard Buck's property in the eastern end of Jamestown Island, acreage in which Elizabeth had a legal interest. |
1 |
404 | I45225 | Curle | Anne | 1589 | Abt 1650 | 0 | Anne was living as late as 1646 when mentioned in the will of her brother, Walter Curle, Bishop of Bath and Wells. . Walter Curll, by his will of 15 March 1646–7, left legacies to his sister Mrs. Manningham and her son and his godson Walter. Anne was dead before 1656, when her eldest son Richard sold the property at Bradbourne to Thomas Twysden, serjeant-at-law. Anne Curles’s parents were Frances (b. 1540) and Sir William Curle who was born on 16 Apr 1539 in Hatfield, Hertfordshire and died on 16 Apr 1617. |
1 |
405 | I8254 | Cutler | Ebenezer | Abt 1740 | Mar 1831 | 0 | Note from Pamela Miller regarding this Ebenezer. ... Ebenezer was long thought to be the son of Ebenezer Cutler and Mary Stockwell. However, I have a letter written by a grandson of Sarah Cutler Hill, daughter of Capt. Ebenezer Cutler and Anna Whitney telling that family legend was that Sarah had a brother, Ebenezer, who was a Loyalist and went to Nova Scotia. I later found Ebenezer's Loyalist claim. In it, he names his brothers, Zaccheus, Jonas and Elisha "the oldest". Then I found this baptism record: Town of Weston births deaths and marriages 1707- 1850 15 Jan 1748/9 Weston, Mass Church records, page 457. "Janry 15, 1748-9 Elisha, Jonas Anna, Mary, v.p.10 Sarah, Millecent, Ebenezer, Zaccheus, Eliakim - Children of Ebenezer & Anna Cutler." Listed with other Baptisms. More recently, Ebenezer is profiled in "Embattled Farmers" by Richard C. Wiggin. ----------------------------- From "The Loyalists of Massachusetts and The Other Side of the American Revolution" By James Star, 1910 Page 470: After a few years Ebenezer Cutler went to England on a visit and there married Mary, daughter of Colonel Hicks, of the 70th Regiment. Two Children were born in England and four in Nova Scotia. He was Protonotary of the County of Annapolis, and was a zealous Episcoalian. He died there in 1831, quite aged. Mary, his widow, died at the same place in 1839. He was proscribed and banished in 1779. August 3rd, the judge appointed a commission to settle his estate. His first wife, Miriam, died at Northboro, Mass., and her estate was inventoried Sept. 10, 1784, amounting to 100 Pounds. He had by her eight children. Ebenezer Cutler, son of the aforesaid, was born at Oxford, Mass., August 27th, 1765. He was a student at Harvard at the commencement of hostilities, when he was obliged to leave. Opposite his name in the College archives, is the name “Traitor” which means just the opposite, that he was a Loyalist. He went to Nova Scotia with his father. He was an expert accountant, and crown land surveyor. |
1 |
406 | I93 | Cutler | Susanna Ford | Between 1791 and 1792 | 3 Dec 1880 | 0 | Found on headstone near St. Peters Bay (Midgell) PEI; Peter McCallum Died April 22, 1868 aged 68. Also his wife Susanna Ford Cutler Died Dec. 3, 1880 aged 83 Peace perfect peace. Erected by their daughter Miriam L. McCallum |
1 |
407 | I7692 | D'Anjou | Fulk | 1095 | 13 Nov 1144 | 0 | He married Ermengarde of Maine, cementing Angevin control over the Coun t y o f M a i ne. He was originally an opponent of King Henry I of England a n d a s u p p orter of King Louis VI of France, but in 1118 or 1119 he had a l lie d w i t h Henry when Henry arranged for his son and heir William Adeli n t o m a r r y Fulk's daughter Matilda. Fulk went on crusade in 1119 or 1120, and became attached to the Knight s T e m p l ar. (Orderic Vitalis) He returned, late in 1121, after which he b e g a n t o s ubsidize the Templars, maintaining two knights in the Holy Lan d f o r a y e a r. |
1 |
408 | I5426 | D'Anjou | Geoffroy | 11 Nov 938 | 21 Jul 987 | 0 | Geoffroy succeeded his father Foulques II as count of Anjou sometime be t w e e n S eptember 958, when Foulques was still alive, and September 960, w h e n a c o u nt Gausfredus signed a donation to the monastery of Saint-Flor e n t d e S a umur by a certain �remburge. Or as Bachrach put it, he succeed e d h i s f a ther as Count of Anjou about 960, at the age of 20. He cultivated the loyal support of a group of magnates, some of whom he i n h e r i ted from his father, others whom he recruited; men such as Alberic o f V i h i e rs, Cadilo of Blaison, Roger I (le "vieux") of Loudon, Joscelin o f R e n n e s, castellan of Baug??, Suhard I of Craon, Tobert of Buzen�ais a nd m e m b e rs of the Bouchard clan, and encouraged them to see their own d yna s t i c i nterests as tied to the success of the Angevin count. |
1 |
409 | I24 | D'Aquitaine | Eleonore | 1123 | 1 Apr 1204 | 0 | Duchess of Aquitaine - She succeeded to the Duchy of Aquitaine followin g t h e d e a th of her father in 1137. Her guardian, Louis VI, King of Fran ce , q u i c kly married her to his son, the future Louis VII, in order to b r in g t h e d uchy to the direct control of the kings of France. Queen consort of France - Following the death of Louis VI, she and her h u s b a n d were crowned King and Queen of the Franks on Christmas Day 1137. S h e h e l d t his title until her marriage was annulled in 1152. Her second husband, Henry II of England, succeeded to the throne of Eng l a n d o n 2 5 October 1152. He and Eleanor were crowned King and Queen of E n g l a n d on 19 December 1154. Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine was one of the most powerful and fascinati n g p e r s onalities of feudal Europe. At age 15 she married LouisVII, King o f F r a n c e, bringing into the union her vast possessions fromthe River Lo ir e t o t h e P yrenees. Only a few years later, at age 19, she knelt in th e c a t h e dral of VAelay before the celebrated Abby Bernard of Clairvaux o ff e r i n g him thousands of her vassals for the Second Crusade. It was sai d t h a t Q u een Eleanor appeared at VAelay dressed like an Amazon gallopin g t h r o u gh the crowds on a white horse, urging them to join the crusades . W h i l e t he church may have been pleased to receive her thousand fighti ng v a s s a ls, they were less happy when they learned that Eleanor, attend edb y 3 0 0 o f h er ladies, also planned to go to help "tend the wounded." T h e p r e s ence of Eleanor, her ladies and wagons of female servants, was c r i t i c ized by commentators throughout her adventure. Dressed in armor an d c a r r y ing lances, the women never fought. And when they reached the ci ty o f A n t i och, Eleanor found herself deep in a renewed friendship with R ay mo n d , h er uncle, who had been appointed prince of the city. Raymond, o n l y a f e w y ears older than Eleanor, was far more interesting and handso m e t h a n E leanor's husband, Louis. When Raymond decided that the best st r a t e g ic objective of the Crusade would be to recapture Edessa, thus pro t e c t i ng the Western presence in the Holy Land, Eleanor sided with his v i e w . L o u is, however, was fixated on reaching Jerusalem ,a less sound g o a l. L o u is demanded that Eleanor follow him to Jerusalem. Eleanor, fu r i ou s , a nnounced to one and all that their marriage was not valid in th e e y e s o f G od, for they were related through some family connections to a n e x t e n t prohibited by the Church. |
1 |
410 | I1749 | D'Arundelle | Elizabeth | 1366 | 8 Jul 1425 | 0 | There is a confluence of family lines with Richard FitzAlan and Elizab e t h B o h u n 's children. 12 generations down the line, the line from Eliz abet h F i t z Alan marries back into the line of Alice FitzAlan. For simpli cit y, t h i s g eneology will only follow the line of Alice FitzAlan. |
1 |
411 | I1290 | D'Aubigny | Isabel | 1224 | 15 Jun 1301 | 0 | Isabel was born about 1233 (age 53 in 1285). She was the daughter and s o l e h e i ress of Sir William de Aubeney of Belvoir, son of the Magna Cart a S u r e t y. Isabel died on 15 June 1301. The name of her burial place was the Prio r y o f N e w stead by Stamford - at the River Wass between Uffington and St a m fo r d , Lincolnshire. The priory appears to have been demolished in the 1 6 t h - c entury Dissolution of the Monasteries. |
1 |
412 | I7556 | D'Avesnes | Jean | 11 Sep 1247 | 22 Aug 1304 | 0 | Jean D'avesnes II, Count of Hainault, Holland, and Zeeland, lord of Fri e s l a n d, son and heir, born about 1247. He married about 1270 Philippa o f L u x e m bourg, daughter of Henri V, Count o f Luxembourg and La Roche, M ar q u i s o f Arlon, by Marguerite, daughter of Henri II, Count of Bar-Le-D u c . He became Count of Holland in 1299 with the death of John I, Count of H o l l a n d, through his mother Adelaide of Holland, heiress and regent of t h i s c o u nty. His descendants maintained this personal union between the c o u n t i es. |
1 |
413 | I7521 | Dammartin | Jeanne | 1216 | 15 Mar 1279 | 0 | Jeanne, also known as Joan, would be a very wealthy woman, for her inhe r i t a n ce of Pontheiu from her mother and Aumale from her father's family . |
1 |
414 | I32850 | Davis | Thomas | 1744 | Oct 1815 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-145021 State of Service: Qualifying Service: Birth: 1744 Death: 1815 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 |
1 |
415 | I2147 | De Abernethy | William | 1251 | 1319 | 0 | Sir William de Abernethy, 2nd Baron of Saltoun was a 13th-14th century S c o t tish baron and noble. William was the son of William Abernethy, 1st Baron of Saltoun. He swor e f e a lty to King Edward I of England at Birgham in 1290 and again at Be rw i c k in 1296. He was a signatory of the Declaration of Arbroath in 132 0 . |
1 |
416 | I7767 | De Aragon | Jaime | 2 Feb 1208 | 27 Jul 1276 | 0 | King James I of Aragon called 'The Conqueror' was the son of King Pedro I I a n d b o r n in Montpellier, France on Feb 1 1207 . He succeeded his fat he r a s k i n g in 1213 at age six. Sixteen years later James began his co n qu es t o f t he Balearic Islands, gaining full control in 1235. After a t h r e e - y ear campaign, he captured the Moorish controlled city of Valenci a . H e c o n cluded a code of laws in 1247 and ended the territorial dispu t es b e t w een Aragon and France with the treaty of Corbeil with King Loui s I X i n 1 2 5 8 . He spent the rest of his life dedicated to expelling th e m oors f r o m t he Spanish peninsula . Upon his death he divided his king do m bet w e e n his two sons, which ul timately led to conflict. |
1 |
417 | I535 | De Arundel | John Fitzalan | 1348 | 15 Dec 1379 | 0 | This begins a split of family lines. JOHN FITZALAN DE ARUNDEL and ELEA N O R D E M A LTRAVERS begin the HICKS/RICKETTS Family line to BETTYJEAN OTT |
1 |
418 | I1673 | De Ashton | John | Abt 1368 | 3 Sep 1428 | 0 | Also Known As:<_AKA> John de /Assheton/ Sir John de Assheton, KB (1 3 9 9 ) ; S eneschal of Bayeux 1412; Governor ofHa dupais and Bailiff of Cou t a n c e s 1419, MP Lancs 1411 and 1413,commanded t roops at Battle of Agin c o u r t 1 415; married 1st Jane,daughter of Sir Joh n Savile, of Tankersle i g h , a n d had issue (includingSir Thomas Assheton , alchemist, ancestor o f t h e e x t inct Asshetons ofAshton-under-Lyne, Assh etons of Chadderton, a n d A s h t ones of Shepley);married 2nd Margaret, daug hter of Sir John Byr o n , o f C l ayton, and died3 Sep 1428. [Burke's Peerag e] |
1 |
419 | I5656 | De Ashton | Thomas | Abt 1264 | Bef 1320 | 0 | 1284 - won a 10-year lawsuit with John de Kirkby over right to the Manor of Ashton. |
1 |
420 | I6538 | De Assheton | John | Abt 1225 | Abt 1300 | 0 | Also Known As:<_AKA> John /Ashton/ John is not identified in Burke' s P e e r a ge'slineage of the Ashton/Assheton family. However, there are c er t a i n ly large spans between generationsi n Burke's account which would l e a d o n e t o speculate about missinggenerat ions. John is identified as f a t h e r o f Robert by several sourceson Worl d Connect. |
1 |
421 | I6855 | De Assheton | Thomas | Abt 1195 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Also Known As:<_AKA> Thomas /Ashton/ Thomas de Assheton; granted la n d s t o R i chard de Byron; had, with another son William. [Burke's Peera g e ] |
1 |
422 | I7806 | De Audley | Henry | 1175 | 19 Nov 1246 | 0 | The Audleys, of Anglo-Saxon ancestry, took their name from their Staffo r d s h i re manor of Audley, or Heleigh (Aldith elegh and many variants), g r a n t e d to Henry's great-grandfather by Nicholas de Verdon in Stephen's r e i g n . H enry's elder brother Adam was the constable of Hugh de Lacy, ear l o f U l s t er (d. 1242), and Henry may also have served the earl since bo th b r o t h ers received lands in Ulsster . Audley had succeeded both his f ath e r a n d h is brother by 1212, and in 1217 he married Bertred, daughter o f R a l p h M ainwaring, county justice of Chester. During the civil war of 1 2 1 5 ? 1 7 he served the powerful royalist Ranulf (III), earl of Chester (d . 1 2 3 2 ) , who granted him lands in Cheshire and Staffordshire. Between 1 21 7 a n d 1 2 20 Audley was sheriff of Shropshire and Staffordshire as the e a r l ' s d eputy. |
1 |
423 | I876 | De Audley | James | 1225 | 11 Jun 1272 | 0 | Audley almost certainly went on pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in 1 2 6 8 , a n d as a crusader he received a judicial protection on 10 July 127 0 t o a c c o mpany the Lord Edward to the Holy Land. But he never went, as h e w a s a p p ointed Edward's justiciar for Ireland on or before 8 August. H e h e l d t h e post until his death in Ireland, which resulted from a broke n n e c k , o n or about 11 June 1272. He was succeeded by his son James, wh o d i d h o m age on 29 July 1272." |
1 |
424 | I7520 | De Badlesmere | Bartholomew | 18 Aug 1275 | 14 Apr 1322 | 0 | He fought in the English army both in France and Scotland during the la t e r y e a rs of the reign of Edward I. In 1307 he became governor of Brist o l C a s t le, and afterwards Edward II appointed him steward of his househ o l d ; b u t these marks of favor did not prevent him from making a compact w i t h s o m e other noblemen to gain supreme influence in the royal council. A l t h o u gh very hostile to Earl Thomas of Lancaster, Badlesmere helped to m a k e p e a ce between the king and the earl in 1318, and was a member of th e m i d d l e party which detested alike Edwards minions, like the Despenser s, a n d h i s v iolent enemies like Lancaster. The kings conduct, however, d re w h i m t o t he side of the earl, and he had already joined Edwards enem i es w h e n , in October 1321, his wife, Margaret de Clare, refused to admi t Q u e e n I sabella to her husbands castle at Leeds in Kent. The king cap tu r e d t h e castle, seized and imprisoned Lady Badlesmere, and civil war b e g a n . A fter the defeat of Lancaster at Boroughbridge, Badlesmere was ta k e n a n d h anged at Canterbury on the 14th of April 1322. |
1 |
425 | I7511 | de Bayeux | Poppa | Abt 872 | 11 Aug 930 | 0 | Poppa of Bayeux was the Christian wife or mistress. Rollo repudiated P o p p a i n o rder to marry his third wife, Gisela, but after her death, her r e m a r r ied Poppa after 912. Guillaume of Jumi�ges records that Rollo mar r i e d " r epudiatam Poppa" again after the death of his wife [Gisela] |
1 |
426 | I7553 | De Beauchamp | Guy | 1272 | 12 Aug 1315 | 0 | Guy had already distinguished himself in the Scottish Wars and was one o f t h e O r d ainers, who sought to restrict the powers of the King. Guy wa s o n e o f t h e chief adversaries of Piers Gaveston, King Edward' s favour it e , w h o o ften referred to Guy as "The Mad Hound", due to the Earl's ha b i t o f f o aming at the mouth when angry. In 1312, Guy de B eauchamp ca p t u r e d Gaveston and took him to his principal residence, Warwick Castle , w h e r e G aveston was held prisoner and afterwards murdered. |
1 |
427 | I1323 | De Beauchamp | John | 1304 | 4 Oct 1343 | 0 | John de Beauchamp, 2nd Baron Beauchamp of Somerset (4 October 1304 - 19 M a y 1 3 4 3 ) was an English peer and was feudal baron of Hatch Beauchamp in S o m e r s et. He married Margaret St John, the daughter of John St John, 1st Baron St J o h n o f B a sing, Hampshire and his wife Isabel Courtenay. |
1 |
428 | I7917 | De Beauchamp | Thomas | 14 Feb 1313 | 13 Nov 1369 | 0 | Founder Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1348. He was an English nobleman and a military leader during the Hundred Yea r s ' W a r . He was one of the commanders at the great English victories at C r e c y a n d Poiters. He fought in all the French wars of King Edward III a n d w a s g u ardian of the sixteen-year-old Black Prince. He is responsible f o r t h e r e building of the Collegiate Church of Saint Mary,in Warwick], w h i c h w a s funded from the ransom of a French Archbishop. |
1 |
429 | I7842 | De Beauchamp | Walter | 1195 | 12 Apr 1236 | 0 | Walter de Beauchamp (1192/3 - 1236)[1] was the second son and eventual h e i r o f W i lliam (II) de Beauchamp, who was lord of Elmley Castle in Worc e s t e r shire, and hereditary castellan of Worcester and sheriff of the co u n t y . A t William's death in 1197, his heir was his eldest son William, a m i n o r w h o died before Michaelmas 1211, when Walter was in the custody of R o g e r M o rtimer (d. 1214) and his wife, Isabel. Walter married their daug h t e r J o hanna in 1212 (she died in 1225), and was in possession of his b a r o n y b y 1214. He obtained his shrievalty on 19 August 1215, but lost i t w h e n , w ith nineteen of his knights, he deserted to the rebels in May 1 2 1 6 . H e r eturned to his allegiance to King John in August 1216, however , w h e n h e w as reinstated in his lands. Beauchamp witnessed the reissue of Magna Carta on 11 November 1216, and i n M a r c h 1 217 he was restored to his shrievalty and castellanship, and b ec a m e k e eper of the royal forests in Worcestershire. He also witnessed t h e f u r t her reissue of Magna Carta on 11 February 1225. In 1225 or later , h e m a r r ied his second wife, Angaret, who died between 1280 and 1283. |
1 |
430 | I7549 | De Beauchamp | William | Abt 1225 | 7 Jan 1268 | 0 | William (III) de Beauchamp (c. 1215 - 1269[1]) was an English baron and h e r e d i tary sheriff. He was born and lived in Elmley Castle in Worcestershire, the eldest so n o f W a l t er de Beauchamp and his wife Johanna de Mortimer, daughter of R o ge r M o r timer of Wigmore. On the death of his father in 1236 he became hereditary Sheriff of Worc e s t e r shire, which title he held until his own death. He also gained the t i t l e o f B aron of Elmley (a feudal barony). |
1 |
431 | I6968 | De Beaumont | Robert | Abt 1046 | 5 Jun 1118 | 0 | Seigneur (Lord) of Beaumont, Pont-Audemer, Brionne, and Vatteville. The s e w e r e c ritically important castles in Normandy. From 1081 he was Com t e ( C o u nt) of Meulan also, which an inheritance through his mother. In England he became the first Anglo-Norman Earl of Leicester (not coun t i n g a n y earls before 1066). His very significant English lands were ce n t r e d t here and in neighbouring Warwickshire. He was at the battle of H a s t i n gs. |
1 |
432 | I862 | De Berkeley | Thomas | 8 Jan 1293 | 27 Oct 1361 | 0 | He fought at the Battle of Boroughbridge 16 March 1321 /2, and was take n p r i s o ner. He was released from imprisonment in Pevensey Castle 16 Oc t. 1 3 2 6 . I n April 1327 he and his brother-in-law, John Mautravers, rec eiv e d c h a rge of the deposed king, Edward II, and took him to Berkeley C as t l e , w here, it is said, the King was murdered. He was in the expedit i o n o f K i ng Edward III against the Scots in 1328 . He was summoned to P a r l i a ment from 14 June 1329 to 20 Nov. 1360. In 1330 he purchased the c a s t l e a nd manor of Beverstone, Gloucestershire and the manors of Over, G l o u c e stershire, Barrow Gurney, Somerset, and Monewden, Suffolk from Tho m a s a p A d am, Knt. In 1330/1 he was tried by a jury of twelve knights a s a n a c c e ssory to the murder of the deposed King Edward II, but was acq ui tt e d . H e was Marshal of the English army in France in 1340 and Capta i n o f t h e S cottish Marches in 1342. |
1 |
433 | I7246 | De Bohun | Humphrey | Abt 1143 | 1182 | 0 | Humphrey attested several of Henry II's charters as constable, an offic e p r e v i ously held by Miles of Gloucester, and distinguished himself on t h e k i n g 's side in the war of 1173-4. He was in the royal army at Breteu i l i n A u g ust 1173, and with the justiciar Richard de Lucy later sacked B e r w i c k and led troops into Lothian against William the Lion, king of Sc o t s , b e fore having to return south to deal with rebellion in England. I n O c t o b er 1173 he featured prominently in the defeat and capture of the e a r l o f L e icester and others at Fornham near Bury St Edmunds. He witness e d t h e t r eaty of Falaise between Henry II and the king of Scots at the c l o s e o f 1 174. |
1 |
434 | I7765 | De Bohun | Humphrey | Abt 1176 | 1 Jun 1220 | 0 | An English Norman nobleman and a Magna Carta surety. |
1 |
435 | I6840 | De Bouillon | Godfrey | 1065 | 18 Jul 1100 | 0 | Godfrey of Bouillon (French: Godefroy, Dutch: Godfried, German: Gottfri e d , L a t in: Godefridus Bullionensis; 1060 - 18 July 1100) was a preemine n t l e a d er of the First Crusade, and the first ruler of the Kingdom of J e r u s a lem from 1099 to 1100. Although initially reluctant to take the ti t l e o f k i ng, he agreed to rule as prince (princeps) under the title Adv o c a t u s Sancti Sepulchri, or Advocate of the Holy Sepulchre. He was the second son of Eustace II, Count of Boulogne in France. He re c e i v e d an inheritance from his mother's family in 1076 when he became L o r d o f B o uillon, which is now in Belgium. In 1087 Emperor Henry IV also c o n f i r med him as Duke of Lower Lorraine, in reward for his support durin g t h e G r e at Saxon Revolt. Along with his brothers Eustace III and Baldwin of Boulogne, Godfrey jo i n e d t h e First Crusade in 1096. He took part in actions at Nicaea, Dory l a e u m , and Antioch, before playing a key role during the capture of Jer u s a l e m in 1099. When Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse declined the offer t o b e c o m e ruler of the new kingdom, Godfrey accepted the role and secure d h i s k i n gdom by defeating the Fatimids at Ascalon a month later, bring in g t h e F i rst Crusade to an end. He died in July 1100 and was succeeded b y h i s b r o ther Baldwin as King of Jerusalem. Early life Godfrey of Bouillon was born around 1060, second son of Eustace II, Cou n t o f B o u logne and Ida, daughter of the Lotharingian duke Godfrey the B e a rd e d a nd his first wife, Doda.[4] He was probably born in Boulogne-su r - M e r , although one 13th-century chronicler cites Baisy, a town in what i s n o w W a l loon Brabant, Belgium.[5] As second son, he had fewer opportun it i e s t h an his older brother. However his maternal uncle, Godfrey the H u n c h b ack, died childless and named his nephew, Godfrey of Bouillon, as h i s h e i r a nd next in line to his Duchy of Lower Lorraine.[6] This duchy w a s a n i m p ortant one at the time, serving as a buffer between the French k i n g d o m and the German lands. In fact, Lower Lorraine was so important to the Holy Roman Empire that i n 1 0 7 6 H e nry IV (reigned 1056-1105), then King of the Romans and future e m p e r o r, decided to place it in the hands of his own son and give Godfre y o n l y B o uillon and the Margraviate of Antwerp, allegedly as a test of h i s l o y a lty. Godfrey supported Henry even during his struggle with Pope G r e g o r y VII during the Investiture Controversy. Godfrey fought alongside H e n r y a n d his forces against Rudolf of Swabia and in Italy when Henry ca p t u r e d Rome itself. A major test of Godfrey's leadership skills was shown in his battles to d e f e n d h is inheritance against a significant array of enemies. In 1076 h e h a d s u c ceeded as designated heir to the Lotharingian lands of his unc le , G o d f rey the Hunchback, and Godfrey was struggling to maintain contr o l o v e r t he lands that Henry IV had not taken away from him. Claims wer e r a i s e d by his aunt Margravine Matilda of Tuscany, cousin Count Albert I I I o f N a m ur, and Count Theoderic of Veluwe. This coalition was joined b y B i s h o p Theoderic of Verdun, and two minor counts attempting to share i n t h e s p o ils, Waleran I of Limburg and Arnold I of Chiny. |
1 |
436 | I9702 | De Boulogne | Eustace | Abt 1004 | 1049 | 0 | Eustace I, Count of Boulogne, was a nobleman and founder of the Boulogn e b r a n c h of the House of Flanders. He held the county of Boulogne from 1 0 2 4 u n t il his death in 1047. Eustace was the elder son of Count Baldwin II of Boulogne and Adelina o f H o l l a nd. He succeeded his father as count of Boulogne in 1024. Eustac e w a s a l s o the count of Lens.[2] In 1028 Eustace confirmed the foundati on o f a c o l l ege of canons in his castle at Lens and despite accounts of L e ns p a s s ing to Baldwin V of Flanders circa 1036 it was still held by Eu s ta c e a n d was passed to his son Lambert at his death. |
1 |
437 | I6930 | De Boulogne | Eustace | 1015 | 1087 | 0 | Eustace II, (c. 1015 - c. 1087), also known as Eustace aux Grenons ("Eu s t a c e w ith long moustaches"),[1][2][3] was Count of Boulogne from 1049 t o 1 0 8 7 . H e fought on the Norman side at the Battle of Hastings, and aft er w a r d s received large grants of land forming an honour in England. He i s o n e o f t h e few proven companions of William the Conqueror. It has bee n s u g g e sted that Eustace was the patron of the Bayeux Tapestry.[4] |
1 |
438 | I7278 | De Bourbon | Archambaud | 1207 | 15 Jan 1249 | 0 | He died in Cyprus on 15 January 1249 during the Seventh Crusade. |
1 |
439 | I8544 | De Bourbon | Henrietta Maria | 25 Nov 1609 | 10 Sep 1669 | 0 | She had impeccable etiquette and a royal face to match. She had pale, m i l k y s k in that her dark hair set off even further, and one courtier des c r i b e d her “pretty eyes, nose, and… good complexion.” Her worst featur e w a s s h e h ad terrible teeth whic |
1 |
440 | I7529 | De Brabant | Marie | 13 May 1254 | 12 Jan 1322 | 0 | Philip was under the strong influence of his mother, Margaret of Proven c e , a n d h is minion, surgeon and chamberlain (Chambellan) Pierre de La B r o c e . N ot being French, Marie stood out at the French court. In 1276, M a r i e ' s stepson Louis died under suspicious circumstances. Marie was sus p e c t e d of ordering him to be poisoned. La Brosse, who was also suspecte d , w a s i m prisoned and later executed for the murder. Together with Joan I of Navarre and Blanche of Artois, she negotiated p e a c e i n 1 294 between England and France with Edmund Crouchback, the you n g e r b r other of Edward I of England. |
1 |
441 | I7761 | De Braine de Baudement | Agnès | 1130 | 11 Jul 1218 | 0 | Agnes de Longueville Countess of Braine-sur-Vesle, Dame de Fere-en-Tar d e n o i s , de Pontarcis, de Nestle, de Loungueville, and de Quincy. She married Milon III, Comte de Bar-sur-Seine, son of Guy II de Brienn e , C o m t e d e Bar-sur-Seine and Petronille de Chacenay.4 Agnes de Longue v il l e w a s b orn circa 1130 at France |
1 |
442 | I7515 | De Braose | Philip | 1070 | 1134 | 0 | Took th e Welsh lordships of Radnor and Builth before the end of the 11 t h c e n t ury; Philip also acquired a claim to the baronies of Totnes and B a r n s t a ple, Devon, through his marriage to Aenor, daughter of Juhel of T o t n e s . |
1 |
443 | I7930 | De Braose | William | Abt 1197 | 2 May 1230 | 0 | William de Braose was hanged by Llywel y nap Iorwerth in 1230. The stat e d r e a s on for the hanging was the accus ation that William had dallied w i t h L l y welyna's wife Joan, bastard of King John. This does not withstan d c l o s e s crutiny, and William was in all probability hung for the crime s o f h i s g r andfather, William deBraose lord of Bramber and Abergavenny, a g a i n s t the Welsh. |
1 |
444 | I9411 | de Bretagne | Judith | 21 Mar 982 | 16 Jun 1017 | 0 | Baldwin places Judith's marriage within the time period when Richard II a n d J u d i th's brother Geoffrey of Brittany were both ruling, thus after 9 9 6 ( t h e d ate of Richard I's death) and before 1008 (the date of Geoffre y ' s d e a th). Baldwin states that she married Richard II, duke of Norma n d y , w h o died d. 23 August 1026, duke of Normandy. |
1 |
445 | I7387 | De Brienne | Jean | 1 Jun 1158 | 21 Mar 1237 | 0 | By election of the Barons, Jean became King of Jerusalem in right of hi s w i f e , M ary. Mary died within a short time, leaving a daughter, in wh os e r i g h t Jean reigned. He returned to Europe after his daughter's mar r ia g e . |
1 |
446 | I7532 | De Burgh | Elizabeth | 1289 | 26 Oct 1327 | 0 | Elizabeth was taken prisoner by the English, along with her daughter an d t w o o f R o bert Bruce's sisters, on Nov. 7, 1306. Because her father Ri ch a r d, e a rl of Ulster, was a faithful supporter of King Edward, she was n o t k e p t i n a cage as the other women related to the Bruce were. Instead s h e w a s s e nt to the royal manor at Burstwick in Holderness, where detail e d i n s t ructions were given as to the terms of her confinement: she was p e r m i t ted one maid and one woman for her chamber, who must be "of a good a g e a n d n o t cheerful" and she was to be watched closely at all times by s e r v a n ts loyal to King Edward. As her husband's army grew stronger, the king found it prudent to move Q u e e n E l izabeth further from the Scottish border than Holderness. In 130 8 s h e w a s t ransferred under heavy guard to the abbey of Biddlesdon in B uc k i n g hamshire; to Windsor castle in 1312; to Shaftesbury and to the co n v e n t o f Barking in Essex (both) in 1313; and to Rochester castle in 13 1 4 . S h e w as not released from captivity until October 1314, when she w a s f i n a lly exchanged for several English noblemen who had been taken pr i s o n e r by the Bruce at Bannockburn. |
1 |
447 | I7530 | De Burgh | Richard Mor | 1194 | 17 Feb 1242 | 0 | Richard Mór de Burgh, 1st Lord of Connacht (English: /dˈbɜːr/; d’-BER; c . 1 1 9 4 -1242, or 1243), was an Anglo-Norman aristocrat who was Seneschal o f M u n s t er and Justiciar of Ireland (1228-32). He was the eldest son and heir of William de Burgh and his wife (daught e r o f D o m nall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond). Richard's principal esta t e w a s i n t he barony of Loughrea where he built a castle in 1236 and a t o w n w a s f ounded. He also founded Galway town and Ballinasloe. The islan d s o n L o u gh Mask and Lough Orben were also part of his demesne. From the death of his father (1206) until he reached his majority and r e c e i v ed his inheritance (1214), Richard was a ward of the crown of Engl a n d . I n 1 215 he briefly served in the household of his uncle, Hubert de B u r g h , E arl of Kent. In 1223 (and again in 1225) he was appointed Senesc h a l o f M u nster and keeper of Limerick Castle. |
1 |
448 | I7651 | De Castile | Berenguela Alfosez | 1180 | 8 Nov 1246 | 0 | Berenguela of Castile (1180-1246) was one of the most powerful women in E u r o p e . As queen-consort of Alfonso IX of Leon, she acquired the trouble d b o u n d ary lands between the kingdoms of Castile and Leon and forged al li a n c e s with powerful nobles on both sides. Even after her marriage was d i s s o l ved, she continued to strengthen these connections as a member of h e r f a t h er's court. On her brother's death, she inherited the Castilian t h r o n e o utright-and then, remarkably, elevated her son to kingship at th e s a m e t i me. Using her assiduously cultivated alliances, Berenguela rul ed a l o n g side Fernando and set into motion the strategy that in 1230 wou ld r e s u l t in his acquisition of the crown o f Leon and the permanent un ion o f C a s t ile and Leon. |
1 |
449 | I7051 | De Castilla | Sancho | 1134 | 31 Aug 1158 | 0 | Sancho III of Castile (1134 - 31 August 1158) King of Castile and Toled o f r o m 1 1 57 -1158. ... called el Deseado (the Desired ) due to his pos it i o n a s t he first child of his parents, born after ei ght years of chi l d l e s s marriage. ... Sancho III of Castile (1134 - 31 August 1158) King of Castile and Toled o f r o m 1 1 57 -1158. ... called el Deseado (the Desired ) due to his pos it i o n a s t he first child of his parents, born after ei ght years of chi l d l e s s marriage. ... |
1 |
450 | I7920 | De Chaworth | Maud | 2 Feb 1282 | Bef 3 Dec 1322 | 0 | Maud de Chaworth (2 Aug 1282-3 Dec 1322) was an English noblewoman and w e a l t h y heiress. Maud was only a year old when her father died, and his d e a t h l e ft her a wealthy heiress. However, because she was an infant, sh e b e c a m e a ward of Eleanor of Castile, Queen consort of King Edward I o f E n g l a nd. Upon Queen Eleanor's death in 1290, her husband, King Edwar d I , g r a n ted Maud's marriage to his brother Edmund, Earl of Lancaster o n 3 0 D e c e mber 1292. |
1 |
451 | I806 | De Clare | Gilbert | 2 Sep 1243 | 7 Dec 1295 | 0 | "Red" Gilbert de Clare or "The Red Earl", probably because of his hair colour or fiery temper in battle. He held the Lordship of Glamorgan which was one of the most powerful and wealthy of the Welsh Marcher Lordships as well as over 200 English manors. |
1 |
452 | I7923 | De Clare | Isabel | Apr 1171 | 11 Mar 1220 | 0 | Isabel de Clare, was a Cambro-Norman-Irish noblewoman and one of the gr e a t e s t heiresses in Wales and Ireland. Isabel was described as pleasant, gentle, and extremely attractive. Aft e r h e r b r other Gilbert's death in 1185, she became one of the wealthies t h e i r e sses in the kingdom, owning besides the suo jure titles of Pembr ok e a n d S t riguil much land in Wales and Ireland. She inherited the nume r ou s c a s tles on the inlet of Milford Haven, guarding the South Channel, i n c l u d ing Pembroke Castle. She was a ward of King Henry II. |
1 |
453 | I7534 | De Clare | Richard | 4 Aug 1222 | 15 Jul 1262 | 0 | The wardship of this young nobleman was granted to the famous Hubert de B u r g h , E arl of Kent, Justiciary of England, whose daughter,Margaret, to t h e g r e a t displeasure of King Henry III., he afterwards(1243 ) clandesti n e l y m a rried, but from whom he was probably divorced.She died in Novemb e r , 1 2 3 7. We find the king marrying him tm the next year, on or before J a n u a r y 25, 1237/8 to Maude Lacy, daughter of the Surety John de Lacy, E a r l o f L i n coln, in consideration whereof the said John paid to the cro w n 5 ,0 0 0 m arks, and remitted a debt of 2,000 more. |
1 |
454 | I1368 | De Clifford | Roger | Abt 1242 | 6 Nov 1282 | 0 | Justice of the Forests south of Trent. He fought in Wales in 1277. He i r a p p a rent of his father, but died ''vp,'' drowned while crossing a br i d g e o f b oats near the Menai Strait in Wales. :''vp'' - Latin abbreviation, translates to "father's lifetime" |
1 |
455 | I5576 | De Conteville | Harlevin | 1001 | 1066 | 0 | He established Grestain monastery (c. 1050), according to an account no w l o s t , a s a result of a vision that promised to cure his leprosy in re tu r n f o r t he foundation. Prayers for him (and for his son Robert and Robert's first wife, Matild a ) w e r e r equested by the abbey on its entries in the mortuary rolls for M a t i l d a, daughter of the Conqueror, and for Vital de Savigny. |
1 |
456 | I8420 | De Falaise | Herleve | Abt 1003 | Abt 1050 | 0 | According to one legend, still recounted by tour guides at Falaise, it a l l s t a r ted when, the young Duke of Normandy saw Herleva from the roof o f h i s c a s tle tower. The walkway on the roof still looks down on the dye in g t r e n ches cut into stone in the courtyard below, which can be seen t o t h i s d a y from the tower ramparts above. The traditional way of dyeing l e a t h e r or garments was for individuals to trample barefoot on the garme n t s w h i ch were awash in the dyeing liquid in these trenches. Herleva, l e g e n d g oes, seeing the Duke on his ramparts above, raised her skirts pe r h a p s a b it more than necessary in order to attract the Duke's eye. The l a t t e r w as immediately smitten and ordered her brought in (as was custom a r y f o r a ny woman that caught the Duke's eye) through the back door. He r l e v a r efused, saying she would only enter the Duke's castle on horseba c k t h r o ugh the front gate, and not as an ordinary commoner. The Duke, f i l l e d w ith lust, could only agree. In a few days, Herleva, dressed in t h e f i n e st her father could provide, and sitting on a white horse, rode p r o u d l y through the front gate, her head held high. This gave Herleva a s e m i - o fficial status as the Duke's mistress. |
1 |
457 | I45316 | de Haes | Maddelena | 7 Oct 1660 | 10 Apr 1729 | 0 | Schenck Family Burying Ground Event Description: Schenck Family Burying Ground |
1 |
458 | I7640 | De Harcourt Of Bosworth | Robert | 1152 | 1202 | 0 | ROBERT de Harcourt witnessed the charter dated to [1152/67] under which t h e m o n k s of Leicester abbey authorised the establishment of the church o f S t M a r y t he Less, Leicester. The Red Book of the Exchequer, listing scutage payments in [1194/95] , r e c o r d s "de his qui non habent capitales onores.Roberto de Haroucourt" p a y i n g " de dimidia marca" in Oxfordshire. |
1 |
459 | I9705 | De Holland | Adele | 982 | 20 Nov 1052 | 0 | Adelina of Holland (c. 990 - c. 1045) was the daughter of Arnulf, Count o f H o l l a nd, and Lutgardis of Luxemburg. She married firstly Baldwin II, C o u n t o f B oulogne (with whom she had Eustace I of Boulogne), and secondl y E n g u e rrand I of Ponthieu. |
1 |
460 | I8078 | De Holland | Robert | 1270 | 7 Oct 1328 | 0 | He (Robert de Holand) subsequently became chief councillor of Earl Thom a s , a n d t hus grew in importance and wealth. In 1310 he founded a colleg e o f p r i e sts in the Chapel of St . Thomas at Upholland, later altered t o a P r i o r y of Benedictine monks. He took sides with Earl Thomas in var ious c o n t e ntions with the king, being pardoned in 13 for his complicity i n t h e d e a th of Sir Peter de Gavaston, Earl of Cornwall. He was summone d t o P a r l iament from 29 July 1314 to 15 May 1321, whereby he is held to h a v e b e c ome Lord Holand (Holland). |
1 |
461 | I7542 | De Hollande | Adelaide | 1230 | 9 Apr 1283 | 0 | On 9 October 1246, Adelaide married John I of Avesnes, Count of Hainaut . L i k e h e r mother, she was a patron of religious houses. Her religious i n t e r e st is reflected in that three of her sons became bishops, and her o n e d a u g hter became an abbess. She also insisted on a bilingual educatio n f o r t h e m. Between 1258 and 1263, Adelaide was regent of Holland in the name of he r n e p h e w Floris V. She called herself Guardian of Holland and Zeeland ( Tu t r i x d e Hollandie et Zeelandie). After he came of age, she continued t o a d v i s e him. She died in 1284 at Valenciennes, but in 1299, with the d ea t h o f F l oris' son John I, it was her own son John II who inherited Ho l l a nd t h rough her. |
1 |
462 | I1714 | De Kingsley | Richard | Abt 1200 | Aft 1241 | 0 | He was a descendant of one of the Normans who came to England with Will i a m t h e C onqueror and who had been given land, etc in Cheshire County. |
1 |
463 | I37734 | De La Motte | Jacques | 8 Dec 1650 | 2 Jan 1735 | 0 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; The Mottes had led a checkered existence since Grandfather Jacques de la Motte, the Marquis, had changed to the new religion and left France in 1685 after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. |
1 |
464 | I321 | De la Motte | John Abraham | 1675 | 8 Aug 1711 | 0 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; The Marquis' son, John Abram, who bore the angelized name of Motte, was Dutch Consul at Dublin for a while, later chose to become a British subject. He was an adventurous person and soon sailed away to Antiqua in the West Indies, hoping to bring over his family later when he as established. Not progressing as he wished in Antiqua, he agreed, in true pioneer spirit, to go on to Carolina Province in 1704 and take up settlement for a very wealthy investor by the name of John Perrie, to remain there for ten years as manager of this estate and as compensation to receive half of the annual profits. Motte arrived on a vessel bearing the cheerful name of "Success": and secured the plantation "Youghal" in Christ Church Parish, as well as another estate of eight hundred acres near the site of Georgetown. John Abram Motte sent to Dublin in 1709 for his wife, nine year old son Jacob and his two small daughters Sarah and Anna. The energetic John Abram Motte wore himself out in pioneer activities and died two years after the family joined him in Charles Town. |
1 |
465 | I7390 | De Lacy | Ilbert | 1045 | 1093 | 0 | The Lacy (or Lacie) family starts with Ilbert de Lacy of the time of Wi l l i a m t he Conqueror. He received from the Conqueror large possessions i n C o u n t y York, West Riding, (Pontefract). According to the "histor of P o n t e f ract," p. 69, he had a son Robert who had two sons, Ilbert, died w i t h o u t issue, and Henry who married Aubrey and had a son Robert.. "At h i s ( H e n ry de Lacy's) death in the latter part of Henry II's reign he wa s s u c c e eded by his son and heir, Robert de Lacy. Robert died without i ss u e i n 1 1 93 and the estate descended to Aubrey de Lisours, She was h i s s i s t er by the mother's side, who was the daughter of Eudo de Lisours b y A u b r e y his wife who as the widow of his father Henry. |
1 |
466 | I7697 | De Lacy | John | 1192 | 22 Jul 1240 | 0 | John de Lacy, the constable of Chester, was a member of one of the olde s t , w e a lthiest and most important baronial families of twelfth- and thi r t e e n th-century England, with territorial interests distributed widely a c r o s s t he counties of the north Midlands and north. He wa s a minor at the time of his father's death and did not enter int o p o s s e ssion of his lands until September 1213. Like a number of the re be l s , h e w as a young man at the time that he became involved in the rev o l t . A l t hough a natural royalism is suggested by his decision to join J o h n o n h i s expedition to Poitou in 1214, he nurtured a sense of grievan c e a g a i nst the king owing to the terms on which he was granted possessi o n o f h i s f ather's estates. The de Lacy inheritance was a highly valuab l e o n e , c omprising more than a hundred knights' fees, together with the b a r o n i es of Pontefract (Yorks.), and Clitheroe, Penwortham, Widnes and H a l t o n ( Lancs.). John, when he permitted the young heir to enter, theref o r e e x a cted his price. He insisted that the latter offer a massive fine o f 7 0 0 0 m a rks repayable over three years, in the meantime handing over t o a r o y a l k eeper his chief castles of Pontefract (Yorks. ) and Castle D onin g t o n ( Leics.), to be garrisoned by the king at Lacy' s expense on p ain o f c o n f iscation should the latter rebel. |
1 |
467 | I7383 | De Lacy | Roger | 1171 | 1211 | 0 | Roger was one of King John's messengers sent with letters patent of saf e c o n d u ct, to summon the King of Scotland to do homage to the King of E ng l a n d a t Lincoln, and he was also one of the witnesses to the act of h o m a g e , being named first among the barons by Roger Hoveden, a contempor a r y a n d n eighbouring historian. He continued to be a trusty and honoure d s e r v a nt, and in May 1201, on the recommencement of hostilities, was s en t b y t h e k ing with a hundred knights to defend Normandy against the m e n o f P o i tou. The murder of the unhappy prince Arthur followed shortly, and led to an a l m o s t g eneral insurrection in John's Norman provinces. Castle after cas t l e f e l l; but Roger de Lacy who had been made governor of the strong fo r t r e s s of Chateau Gaillardd, also called Buttevant, which the late King R i c h a r d had built in 1198 on an island at the mouth of the Seine, defend e d h i m s elf stoutly and stood there a very obstinate and famous siege, o n l y g i v ing way when short of food, and deserted by his king, whose lett e r p r a c tically giving the garrison permission to surrender if reduced t o e x t r e mities is preserved in Duchesne (1059). |
1 |
468 | I3184 | De Laon | Roger | 892 | 942 | 0 | He was Count of Laon at the beginning of the 10th century. We do not k n o w o n w h at date he received the county of Laon, perhaps from the execu t i o n o f C ount Gautier de Laon, in 892, whose widow he had perhaps marri e d . In 922, the Robertian Marquis Robert I revolted against King Charles II I t h e S i m ple and proclaimed himself king. In the spring of 922, the cit y o f L a o n w as besieged and taken. It is mentioned in 923 , when Count H e rb e r t I I of Vermandois occupied Rï ¿ ½ mois. Worried about this rising p o w e r , t he local barons, including Roger, called on King Raoul to help t h e m . R a oul put a temporary end to Herbert's ambitions, but gave him the c i t y o f P ï ¿ ½ r onne , because the latter kept King Charles III the Simp l e i n h i s j ails, who could thus arouse an opponent to Raoul at any time . R o g e r d ied three years later. |
1 |
469 | I2702 | de Lens | Judith | May 1054 | 1088 | 0 | The fact that she was such an important Norman heiress, shows that King W i l l i a m wanted the services of the man who she was given to in marriage, t h e A n g l o-Saxon earl Waltheof. His family had been Earls in Bamburgh, an d e v e n u n der the Normans they held a large fief which largely in Northa mp t o n s hire, Huntingdonshire and Leicestershire in the midlands, extendi n g e a s t i nto Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and south into Bedfordshire. ''Complete Peerage'' notes in a footnote that there is a tradition that t h e K i n g h ad first assigned the Countess Judith to him as wife to Simon S t L i z , l a ter her daughter's husband, "and on her refusal (on account of S i m o n ' s lameness) gave him ]udith's counties. ]udith fled for hiding to t h e E l y m a rches, taking her daughters with her. |
1 |
470 | I7545 | De Luxembourg | Jacquetta | Abt 1416 | 30 May 1472 | 0 | One of the Ladies for whom robes of the Order of the Garter were provid e d |
1 |
471 | I9579 | de Maine | Gerberge | Abt 913 | 952 | 0 | The pedigree of "Gerberge, Countess d'Anjou," is highly uncertain. She w a s t h e f i rst wife of Foulk II the "Good," Count d'Anjou, who is known t o h a v e r u led this French province in the Loire-Centre region from 942 t o 9 8 7 C E . H e made peace with the Normans and was a scholar, diplomat a nd s t a t e sman. He helped found the Angevin dynasty from which many of E uro p e ' s r oyal houses descend. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CENTRAL%20FRANCE.htm#GerbergeMFoulques I I A n j ou Medieval Lands: Central France - Anjou: Gerberge] |
1 |
472 | I45529 | de Mandeville | Yellis Jansen | Jun 1626 | 22 May 1701 | 0 | Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery |
1 |
473 | I45529 | de Mandeville | Yellis Jansen | Jun 1626 | 22 May 1701 | 0 | Yellis Jansen de Mandeville of Garderen, Holland, and Greenwich Village on Manhatten Island. Yellis is the founder of the family in this country and is traced as early as 1657, at Voorthuizen, a village near Garderen in Holland. His father's name was Jan, perhaps that Jan Jansen who in 1627, was candidate at the Reformed Church at Koolwyck, also near Garderen, and died at the latter place in 1657. The Garderen marriage and baptismal regesters before 1664, are lost, but there is a tombstone in the ancient church there, to a younger son of the de Mandeville family who died 14, October 165_. Yellis de Mandeville came to America on the De Trouw (Faith), 12 February, 1659, with his "wife and four children of 1 1/4, 5, 6 and 9 years." Yellis is called Gilles Jansen van Garder. (Garderen in the Veluwe, Guelderland, Holland.) He paid f50 for the passage of his wife and himself, and f10 for each child, or 90 guilders in all. Gillis's name was on the list of the vessel Moesman, in April, 1659, indicates that he was not a passenger, but a debtor to the Dutch West India Company, for a small sum advanced by them. Yellis probably lived for a time somewhere on Long Island. Two of his children were from New Amersfoot (Flatlands. Gilles Jansen Mandiviel and his wife Elsje Hendrick were members of the New York Dutch Church, 31 May, 1677, and Jillis, Elsje and Grietie Mandeviel were living above the ancient pond Kalch-Hock in 1686. The Mandeville estate extended from below 14th street to 21st street, though not parallel to either, and from the Hudson River to Warren Road. |
1 |
474 | I7630 | De Maurienne Savoy | Adelaide | 18 Nov 1092 | 18 Nov 1154 | 0 | She was the second Queen consort of Louis VI of France. She was the ni e c e o f P o pe Callixtus II, who once visited her court in France. Her fat h e r d i e d in 1103, and her mother married Renier I of Montferrat as a se c o n d h u sband. She became the second wife of Louis VI of France (1081-1 1 3 7 ) , w hom she married on 3 August 1115. They had eight children, the s e c o n d o f whom became Louis VII of France. Adelaide was one of the most p o l i t i cally active of all France's medieval queens consort. Her name app e a r s o n 4 5 royal charters from the reign of Louis VI. During her tenur e a s q u e e n, royal charters were dated with both her regnal year and tha t o f t h e k i ng. Among many other religious benefactions, she and Louis f o un d e d t he monastery of St Peter's (Ste Pierre) at Montmartre, in the n o r t h e rn suburbs of Paris. She was reputed to be "ugly," but attentive a n d p i o u s. |
1 |
475 | I8076 | De Monfort | Simon | Abt 1123 | Abt 12 Mar 1181 | 0 | Being a vassal both of the King of France and of the King of England (a s D u k e o f N ormandy), his postion was embarrassing when his two suzerain s w e r e a t w ar in 1159. He adhered to England and handed over his castle s a t R o c h efort, Montfort, and Epernon to Henry II, which forced Louis t o m a k e a t r uce by cutting his communications between Paris, Orleans, an d E t a m p es. In 1173 Simon joined the revolt of the "young King", but was c a p t u r ed when the Count of Flanders took the castle of Aumale. In 1177 h e a t t e s ted the treaty of Ivry, and was with Henry II at Verneuil. He m. M a u d , w h ose parentage is unknown. He d. 12 or 13 Mar 1180 /1 , and was b u r i e d i n Evreux Cathedral. |
1 |
476 | I7580 | De Montagu | Simon | 1250 | 1316 | 0 | Simon was descended from Drogo de Montagu, a Norman who came to England w i t h W i l liam the Conqueror. Simon was the son of William de Montagu, a S o m e r s et landowner, and his wife, Berthe. He was under age at his father ' s d e a t h, in 1270, but fought in Edward I's wars in Wales in 1277 and 1 2 8 2 , a n d in 1283 was summoned to parliament at Shrewsbury. In 1290 he s u r r e n dered his lands in Dorset, Devon, Bucki nghamshire, and Oxfordshir e t o t h e k i ng, and was then regranted them with remainders to his sons W i ll i a m a nd Simon. He was summoned to fight in Gascony in 1294, where he s e r v e d a s marshal at Blaye. In 1296 he succeeded in breaking the French s i e g e o f B ourg-sur-Mer, taking a ship loaded with victuals through the l i n e o f F r ench galleys. He returned to Gascony with John Hastings on roy a l s e r v ice in 1302. It was in Scotland, however, that Montagu served th e c r o w n m ost. In 1298 he attended the parliament at York at which the S co t t i s h war was discussed, and may have been present on the Falkirk cam p a i g n l ater that year. He certainly took part in the Caerlaverock exped i t i o n o f 1300; the poet who described the army placed him at the rear o f t h e 3 r d d ivision. Montagu's particular contribution to the wars lay i n n a v a l w arfare in the Irish Sea and around the Western Isles. In 1300 h e p r o v i ded two substantial ships for the Scottish war, a galley and a b ar g e , m a nned by 100 men between them. In 1307 he was captain and govern o r o f t h e E nglish fl eet, and admiral in 1310. He continued to be summo n e d t o c a mpaign against the Scots until his death." |
1 |
477 | I7741 | De Montfort | Amauri | 22 May 1070 | 18 Apr 1137 | 0 | In 1098 he aided William II against his brother's castles of Montfort a n d E p e r non. After the death of William de Breteuil in 1103, Amaury sup p o r t e d the claim of William's Burgundian nephew, Renaud de Grancei, to s u c c e e d to his estates against that of his Breton nephew, William de Gae l . O n t h e d eath sp. in 1118 of his maternal uncle, William, Count of E v re ux , A m aury claimed the comte, and when Henry I denied him the inheri t a n c e , he led a widespread revolt, and obtained possession of Evreux. I n t h e f o l lowing year, Henry besieged Evreux, but his nephew Theobald, C ou n t o f C h ampagne, reconciled him and Amaury, who surrendered the castl e t o t h e K i ng and thereupon received his uncle's comte. In 1123 Amaury j o i n e d t he revolt of Waleran, Count of Meulan (subsequently husband of h i s d a u g hter Agnes), against Henry. The next year Amaury fought at Bour g h t e r oulde and was captured when fleeing from the field by William de G r a n d c ourt who, rather than hand over his prisoner to captivity, went in t o e x i l e with him, but before the end of the year Amaury made his peace w i t h t h e K ing and seems to have maintained friendly relations with him d u r i n g t he rest of his reign |
1 |
478 | I7737 | De Montfort | Simon | 1025 | 25 Sep 1087 | 0 | He took a leading part in 1063 in persuading Duke William to recall Ral p h d e T o s ny and Hugh de Grandmesnil from exile. He was at Fecamp with W i l li a m i n Apr 1066 and in the same year, at Meulan, Simon and his wife c o n f i r med a gift by Richard FittFittz Herluin of certain lands to the Ab b e y o f C o ulombs, said lands being part of the inheritance of Simon's wi f e . I n 1 0 67, in Paris, he witnessed a charter of Philip I, and in 1072, w i t h h i s s on Amauri, attested another charter of the same King. |
1 |
479 | I16931 | de Moravia | Egidia Murray | 1345 | 1395 | 0 | Egidia (Murray) de Moravia of Culbin is a member of Clan Murray. Egidia was born about 1390, the only child of Walter de Moravia de Culbin. She was the heiress of Culbin and part of Naughton and married Thomas Kinnaird about 1410. They had three sons, Adam, Thomas, and John, and a daughter, Mariot. |
1 |
480 | I7833 | De Mortimer | Roger | 1158 | 24 Jun 1214 | 0 | Roger de Mortimer (before 1153-before 8 July 1214) was a medieval march e r l o r d , residing at Wigmore Castle in the English county of Herefords h i r e . H e was the son of Hugh de Mortimer (d. 26 February 1181) and Mat i l d a L e M eschin. Roger would appear to have been of age in 1174 when he fought for King H e n r y I I a gainst the rebellion of his son, Henry. In 1179 Roger was inst r u m e n tal in the killing of Cadwallon ap Madog, the prince of Maelienyd d a n d E l f ael, both of which Mortimer coveted. He was imprisoned until J u n e 1 1 8 2 at Winchester for this killing. He had married Isabel (d. before 29 April 1252), the daughter of Walche l i n d e F e rriers of Oakham Castle in Rutland before 1196. Lord of Maelienydd In 1195 Roger, with the backing of troops sent by Ki n g R i c h ard I invaded Maelienydd and rebuilt Cymaron Castle. In 1196 he j o i n e d f orces with Hugh de Say of Richards Castle and fought and lost th e b a t t l e of New Radnor against Rhys ap Gruffydd, allegedly losing some f o r t y k n ights and an innumerable number of foot in the fight. By 1200 he h a d c o n q uered Maelienydd and issued a new charter of rights to Cwmhir Ab b e y . I n t he summer of 1214 he became gravely ill and bought the right f o r h i s s o n to inherit his lands while he still lived from King John. He d i e d b e f ore 8 July 1214. |
1 |
481 | I15084 | De Mortimer | Roger | 25 Apr 1287 | 29 Nov 1330 | 0 | Roger was a Marcher Lord. Roger was the first of several members of his f a m i l y t o a ttempt to seize the throne of England. He led the baronial opposition to Edward II' s favorites (1320-22) and w a s i m p r isoned before fleeing to France. There he became the lover of Ed w a r d s Q ueen Isabella with whom he secured Edward's deposition and murde r i n 1 3 2 7 . He then ruled England in the name of Edward's son, Edward I II , u n t i l the latter caused him to be executed. |
1 |
482 | I1284 | De Morville | Hugh | Abt 1138 | 1202 | 0 | Hugh de Morville, d. 1204, one of the murderers of St. Thomas of Canter b u r y . F rom the beginning of the reign of Henry II he was attached to t h e c o u r t, and is constantly mentioned as witnessing charters . His name o c c u r s a lso as a witness to the Constitutions of Clarendon . |
1 |
483 | I9410 | de Normandie | Richard | 28 Aug 932 | 20 Nov 996 | 0 | Richard I (28 August 932 - 20 November 996), also known as Richard the F e a r l e ss (French: Richard Sans-Peur; Old Norse: Jarl Rikard), was the co u n t o f R o uen from 942 to 996. Dudo of Saint-Quentin, whom Richard comm i s s i o ned to write the "De moribu s et actis primorum Normanniae ducum" ( L a t i n , "On the Customs and Deeds of the First Dukes of Normandy"), call e d h i m a d u x. However, this use of the word may have been in the contex t o f R i c h ard's renowned leadership in war, and not as a referenc e to a t i t l e o f n obility. Richard either introduced feudalism into Normandy or h e g r e a t ly expanded it. By the end of his reign, the most important Norm an l a n d h olders held their lands in feudal tenure. |
1 |
484 | I7395 | de Normandie | Richard | 1001 | 6 Aug 1027 | 0 | Richard III (997 - 1027) was the eldest son of Richard II, who died in 1 0 2 7 . B e fore succeeding his father, perhaps about 1020, he had been sent b y h i s f a t her in command of a large army, to attack bishop/count Hugh of C h a l o n i n order to rescue his brother-in-law, Reginald, later Count of B u r g u n dy, who the count/bishop had captured and imprisoned. He was betro t h e d t o A dela, countess of Corbie (1009-June 5, 1063), second daughter o f R o b e r t II of France and Constance of Arles, but they never married. A ft e r h i s f ather's death, he ruled the Duchy of Normandy only briefly, d i e i n g m ysteriously, perhaps by poison, soon after his father. The duchy p a s s e d t o his younger brother Robert I. Adela later married Baldwin V, C o u n t o f F landers. By unknown women, he had two known children: Alice/Al i x o f N o r mandy who married Ranulf, Viscount of Bayeux. Nicolas, the Lay A b b o t o f R ouen (b? - d. 27 Feb 1092). He helped his cousin, Duke William I I t h e C o n queror with the contribution of 15 ships and 100 soldiers for t h e i n v a sion of England in 1066. |
1 |
485 | I9693 | de Normandie | Rollo | Between 844 and 853 | 931 | 0 | Rollo (Norman: Rou, Rolloun; Old Norse: Hrólfr; French: Rollon; died in 9 3 3 ) w a s a V iking who, as Count of Rouen, became the first ruler of Norm a n d y , a r egion in today's northern France. He emerged as a leading warr i o r f i g ure among the Norsemen who had secured a permanent foothold on F r a n k i sh soil in the valley of the lower Seine after the Siege of Chartr e s i n 9 1 1 . Charles the Simple, king of West Francia, granted them lands b e t w e e n the mouth of the Seine and what is now Rouen in exchange for Rol l o a g r e eing to end his brigandage, swearing allegiance to him, religiou s c o n v e rsion and a pledge to defend the Seine's estuary from other Viki ng r a i d e rs. The name Rollo is first recorded in a charter written in 918 as the lea d e r o f a g r oup of Viking settlers, and he reigned over the region of No r m a ndy u n til at least 928. He was succeeded by his son William Longswor d i n t h e D u chy of Normandy that he had founded. The offspring of Rollo a n d h i s f o llowers, through their intermingling with the indigenous Frank i s h a n d G allo-Roman population of the lands they settled, became known a s t h e " N o rmans". After the Norman conquest of England and their conques t o f s o u t hern Italy and Sicily over the following two centuries, their d e sc e n d ants came to rule England, much of Ireland, Sicily and Antioch fr o m t h e 1 1 th to 13th centuries, leaving behind an enduring legacy in the h i s t o r ies of Europe and the Near East. |
1 |
486 | I7707 | De Orléans | Eudes | Abt 790 | Jun 834 | 0 | According to the Vita Hludowici, in 827, he was named to replace the de p o s e d M atfrid as Comes Aurelianensium. Odo, along with Heribert, a rel a t i v e , possibly his cousin, were exiled in April 830 by Lothair I and O r l e a n s confiscated. Matfrid was reinstated. He belonged to the Udalriching family. |
1 |
487 | I1303 | De Peshale | John | Abt 1150 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Robert de Peshale was the first to use the name which came from his man o r . H e w a s married to Ormunda,daughter of Osbert de Lumley, (County Dur h a m ) , d e Stafford and de Swinnerton in Staffordshire. Ormunda deLumley d e S t a f f ord was descended from and of the blood of all the Bernician Nor th u m b r ian kings (as wasPoppa, Rognvald's wife and Rollo's mother). Robert de Peshale was the first to use the name which came from his ma nor. He was married to Ormunda,daughter of Osbert de Lumley, (County D u r h a m ) , de Stafford and de Swinnerton in Staffordshire. Ormunda deLuml e y d e S t a f ford was descended from and of the blood of all the Bernicia n N o r t h u mbrian kings (as wasPoppa, Rognvald's wife and Rollo's mother) . |
1 |
488 | I1377 | De Peshale | Robert | Abt 1130 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | He was the first of our family to win the manor of Peshale. He married i n t o o n e o f the families who formed thecolony of emigrants from Northumb e r l a n d and who settled near Stone Priory in Staffordshire."At this time S t a f f o rdshire was almost an unbroken forest with only here and there cle a r i n g s which had been made by the English prior to the Conquest. Among t h e s e c l ear and cultivated spots in the forest was that of Peshale which h a d b e e n f orfeited from its English owner and which was now included in t h e h o l d ings of Robert de Toesni, de Stafford. The deed of confirmation d i s c l o ses that his manor was purchased by Gilbert de Corbeil for his son R o b e r t F itz Gilbert de Corbeil. There the young man journeyed with his b r i d e t o b egin life in a country as undeveloped as was the great forest o f N e w Y o r k and Pennsylvania at the close of the Revolutionary War. It i s k n o w n i n English History as a wilderness, and the whole country teeme d w i t h w i ld life from the great wild ox of Brittany and the terrible fo re s t w o l f to the smallest varmint, and there was game in abundance of a l l k i n d s for food for the successful hunter. Instead of the Indians of t h e A m e r ican forest, there was the Welshman,who although a white man of g o o d a n c estry, had been forced to become a lurking savage." |
1 |
489 | I1221 | De Peshale | William | Abt 1170 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | He was married to a daughter of Robert Fitz Alan of Swynnerton. The dee d n a m i n g him as the heir of his father Robert is in the British Museum ( C o l l e ctanea Genealogica ex Cartiis Antiques, collected by R. Holmes,Har l e i a n M ss. No. 1985) The purpose of this bequest was to give him standi n g a s t h e h usband of the heiress to Swynnerton and a member of the Fitz A l a n f a m ily. The manor of Lumley passed to the husbands of later descend a n t s . T he family was still among those considered "Scots" as they had c o m e s o u th from Northumbria. These families were not dispossessed by the a d v e n t o f their cousin William the Conqueror. On his deathbed the Conque r o r c o n fessed that he never trusted any of the family of those whom he h a d i n j u red. So perhaps it was a lucky incident in our family history th a t o u r a n cestor was located way out of the Conqueror's sight in the mid s t o f t h e g reat woods of Staffordshire and near the Welsh border. Out o f s i g h t a nd out of mind, perhaps he could survive until the great destr oy e r h a d p assed away. The records of this and succeeding generations we r e k e p t i n large locked boxes called chartularies. Other than court rec o r d s o f t heir wills and courtcases, few records exist. It was considere d w i s e t o a void the attention of the monarch. |
1 |
490 | I1559 | De Peshall | Adam | Abt 1237 | 1345 | 0 | He first appeared in court records in 1280. He owned a part of the orig i n a l m a nor of Peshale and had a house on it. He had a tenant who lived t h e r e a n d farmed it. |
1 |
491 | I1732 | De Peshall | Adam | 1300 | 1341 | 0 | Sampson Eardswicke says this Adam married one of the daughters and heir s o f J o h n C averswall and had the manor of Bishop's Offley as a result. A t t h a t t i me, his father Adam gave him Horsley to better his standing fo r t h i s a d vantageous marriage. Another source says it was that marriage t o J o a n d e E yerton, heiress to the de Cresswalls which was the advantage ou s m a t c h. This marked the return of the family to Staffordshire. He wa s S h e r r iff of Staffordshire and Shropshire in 1341. He had a manor and f l o c k s o f sheep at Himley near Eccleshall. He was killed by enemies Jan. 8 , 1 3 4 6 . T hey justified the murder by claiming falsely that he had been o u t l a w ed and that his property was forfeit to the King.The widow had to f i g h t t h e King's claim in court. This battle continued for many years. |
1 |
492 | I1396 | De Peshall | Richard | Abt 1320 | Abt 1387 | 0 | Sir Richard de Peshall was sheriff 1374-1376 and was made a knight in 1 3 7 6 . |
1 |
493 | I1056 | De Peshall | Thomas | 1343 | 0 | A large estate owner and knight, he was a supporter of Lancaster and Ar u n d e l i n the local wars. |
1 | |
494 | I1067 | De Peshall | Walter | Abt 1190 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | He was a tenant of the Barons of Wemme in Shropshire and may have been a m i l i t a ry consultant to him. |
1 |
495 | I1066 | De Peshall | Walter | Abt 1210 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Walter de Peshale resided in Shropshire and was very closely associated w i t h t h e f amily of Fitz Alan (ancestors of the Stuarts). He is mentioned i n t h e w i l l of Fitz Alan, Lord of Arundel as Master Walter de Peshale, i nd i c a t ingat that time that he was a doctor of medicine. |
1 |
496 | I1222 | De Ros | Robert | Abt 1170 | 23 Dec 1226 | 0 | Sir Robert de Roos , Chief Justice of the King's Bench Robert de Roos, Magna Carta Surety, 4th Baron Hamlake, Sheriff of Cumb e r l a n d w as born between 1170 and 1172 at of Helmsley & Hunsingore, Yor k s h i r e , England; Age 13 in 1185, but of age in 1191. He married Isabel, illegitimate daughter of William I 'the Lion', King o f S c o t l and, Earl of Northumberland and Isabel de Avernal, circa Februar y 1 1 9 1 a t H addington, East Lothian, Scotland. |
1 |
497 | I853 | De Ros | William | Abt 1192 | Between 1258 and 1264 | 0 | He was born before 1200, and was old enough to be in arms with his fath e r a g a i nst the King. He was taken prisoner at the battle of Lincoln on 2 0 M a y 1 2 1 7, but released on finding sureties on 26 Oct. 1217. He fough t i n B r i t tany 1230, Gascony 1242, and Wales 1258 . He seems to have ta ke n n o p a r t in the Barons War, and was reputed to be loyal. He went on p i l g r i mage to Santiago in Spain in 1252. He was a benefactor of the mon a s t e r ies of Kirkham, Rievaulx and Meaux , and of the Templars. |
1 |
498 | I9679 | de Roucy | Ermentrude | 951 | 5 May 1005 | 0 | Ermentrude de Roucy (c. 951 - 5 May 1005) (Irmtrude) was a Countess and D u c h e s s of Burgundy. She was a daughter of Renaud of Roucy and his wife , A l b e r ade of Lorraine, daughter of Gilbert, Duke of Lorraine. By 971, Ermentrude married Aubry II of Mâcon and thus became a countess o f M â c o n . She secondly married Otto-William, Count of Burgundy. They had children : Guy I of Mâcon Matilda, married Landri of Nevers Gerberga, married William II of Provence Reginald I, Count of Burgundy Agnes of Burgundy, Duchess of Aquitaine |
1 |
499 | I7370 | De Rouerge | Gilbert David | Abt 750 | Abt 820 | 0 | There were Counts of Rouerge from 790 to 1119, and Gilbert was the firs t . H e i s s o metimes called the Count of Rouergue and founder of that dy n as ty o f c o unts which ruled Toulouse and often all of Gothia for the ne x t f o u r c enturies. In 837 , he was appointed missus dominicus along wit h R a g a m bald in the pago Rutenico seu Nemausense. |
1 |
500 | I7660 | De Savoie | Humbert | 1062 | 17 Oct 1103 | 0 | Humbert II, surnamed the Fat, was Count of Savoy from 1080 until his de a t h i n 1 1 03. |
1 |
501 | I7691 | De Savoie | Humbert | 1 Aug 1136 | 4 Mar 1189 | 0 | Humbert III (b. 1135 - d. 1189), surnamed the Blessed, was Count of Sav o y f r o m 1 148 to 1189. According to Cope, "Humbert III, who reigned from 1 1 4 9 t o 1 1 89...was a man of irresolute spirit who was disconsolate at b e i n g b o rn a prince and preferred the seclusion of a monestery. He only r e n o u n ced his chosen state of celibacy so as to give his land an heir." H i s f i r s t wife died young; his second marriage ended in divorce. Humbert g a v e u p a n d became a Carthusian monk. However, the nobles and common peo p l e o f S a voy begged him to marry yet again, which he reluctantly did. T h i s t h i rd wife gave him two more daughters, and Humbert attempted to re t u r n t o t he monastic life yet again. Finally he was prevailed upon to m a r r y f o r a fourth time, and this wife, Beatrice, produced the son who w o u l d u l timately succeed him. |
1 |
502 | I7046 | De Savoie | Thomas | Abt 20 Mar 1175 | Abt 20 Jan 1233 | 0 | Thomas I or Tommaso I (1178 - March 1, 1233) was Count of Savoy from 11 8 9 - 1 2 3 3 . He was the son of Humbert III of Savoy and Beatrice of Vienn o is . H i s b i rth was seen as miraculous; his monkish father had despaire d o f h a v i ng a male heir after three wives. Count Humbert sought counsel f r o m S t . A n thelm, who blessed Humbert three times, and it was seen as a p r o p h e cy come true when Thomas was born shortly after Anthelm himself di e d o n J u n e 2 6, 1178. He was named in honor of St. Thomas Becket. Thoma s p o s s es sed the martial abilities, energy, and brilliance that his fath er l a c k e d, and Savoy enjoyed a golden age under his leadership. He had t ak e n o v e r effective rule of Savoy by August 1191, and despite his youth h e b e g a n t he push north-west into new territories. He conquerored Vaud, B u g e y , a nd Carignano. He supported the Hohenstaufens, and was known as " T h o m a s the Ghibelline" due to his career as Imperial Vicar of Lombardy. I n 1 1 9 5 h e a mbushed the party of Count William I of Geneva, which was es co r t i n g the count's daughter, Marguerite, to France for her intended we d d i n g t o King Philip II of France. Thomas carried off Marguerite and ma r r i e d h er himself, producing some eight sons and six daughters. |
1 |
503 | I45427 | de Sille | Nicasius | 23 Sep 1610 | Abt 1673 | 0 | Nicasius, son of Laurens and Walburga and the first in the family to emigrate, was born in Arnheim in 1610. He studied at the universities of Leyden and Orleans, from where he graduated, a Doctor of Law. He was a High Council, a Fiscal, and an Advocate. Nicasius de Sille was a man of unusual acquirements, an author, a statesman, a lawyer, an expert in military affairs with especial knowledge of fortifications; he came here in 1653 a widower with five children." "De Sille came from a prominent family in the Republic. He studied law and became an advocate at the Court of Holland, not neglecting his military duty. When, after the Remonstrance of 1650 and the near recall of Stuyvesant in 1652, the Heeren XIX looked around for an 'expert and able statesman' to be Stuyvesant's first councillor (and possibly his successor), their eyes fell on the forty-two year-old De Sille, a widower with five children." (p. 275) [Ref. Schuyler van Renssalaer History of the City of New York in the 17th Century, Vol. 1, p. 353] They offered him a monthly salary of one hundred guilders, and he sailed in August 1653 with his two sons, three daughters, and a maid. [Ref. Brodhead & O'Callaghan, Documents relative to the Colonial History of New York, II, p. 400] In 1655 there was a confrontation at Fort Christina with the Swedes, under the command of Johan Rysingh. Stuyvesant sent a small fleet of ships with instructions to claim the South River for the Dutch. The Dutch grouped themselves into three divisions and surrounded the fort. "The one under Stuyvesant dug in north of Christina, three hundred feet from its walls, with four cannon, of which one was an eighteen-pounder. The company of Frederick de Koningh, the captain of the Waegh, constructed at the south side a battery with three guns; while northwest of the fort the third company, under the command of Councillor Nicasius de Sille, completed the encircling with two twelve-pounders." (p. 268) After a siege of ten days, as the Dutch soldiers began to roam around the countryside, robbing and pillaging, the Swedes surrendered. Stuyvesant immediately had to return to New Amsterdam, where a force of 900 Indians had gathered to threaten Manhattan, in what became known as the Peach War. |
1 |
504 | I20889 | de Skene | Alexander | 1465 | 1507 | 0 | Alexander was infeft as heir, served and retoured as Laird in 1485 and must have been of age. Thus his age is estimated to have been c. 1465. In 1485, infeft as heir, served and retoured as Laird. He is thought to have died in 1507 as, on 12 Feb 1507/8, there is a Privy Seal record to Sir Alexander Irvine of Drum and Duncan Forbes of the Ward of the lands of the late Alexander Skene of that Ilk and of the marriage of Alexander Skene, his son and heir. His wife, Agnes, appears on 3 Oct 1508 as his widow. |
1 |
505 | I1511 | De St. John | Margaret | 1304 | 19 Nov 1361 | 0 | daughter of John St John, 1st Baron St John of Basing, Hampshire and hi s w i f e I s abel Courtenay. |
1 |
506 | I1639 | De Stafford | Edmund | 15 Jul 1273 | 20 Aug 1308 | 0 | Edmund de Stafford, who, having distinguished himself in the Scottish w a r s , w a s summoned to parliament as a Baron, by King Edward I, from 6 Fe b r u a r y, 1299, to 26 August, 1308, the year of his decease. |
1 |
507 | I1416 | De Stafford | Ralph | 24 Sep 1301 | 31 Aug 1372 | 0 | At the time of Ralph's birth, on 24 September 1301, the Staffords exerc i s e d c o nsiderable influence in the west midlands, but had yet to assume t h e p r o m inent role in national affairs that fell to them as a result of h i s o w n s u ccess as a soldier, administrator, and courtier. The bulk of t h e i r e s tates lay in Staffordshire and Warwickshire, with a few addition a l h o l d ings in Oxfordshire and Lincolnshire. |
1 |
508 | I7379 | De Taillebois | Ives | Abt 1036 | 1094 | 0 | Came with William the Conqueror. |
1 |
509 | I9720 | de Taillebois | Ivo | 1036 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Ivo de Taillebois arrived in England in 1066 with William of Normandy. A c c o u n ts are not clear cut as to who his parents were, Fulk of Anjou is a p o s s i b le contender for the title. There is also a suggestion that like W i l l i a m, Ivo may have been illegitimate. Many of the records related to Ivo are vague or lost. One thing is cle a r . H e d i d well from the invasion. He gained parts of Lancashire, West m o r la n d and also Lincolnshire. He became Sheriff of that County two yea r s a f t e r the invasion and features as an extensive landowner in the Dom e s d a y B ook. There is some debate as to how Ivo acquired Kendal or Kenda l e , w h i ch later became a barony. The Strickland sisters say that he mar r i e d a S a xon Noblewoman, Lucy, Countess of Chester, sister of the earls E d w i n o f M ercia and Morcar of Northumbria. Lands in Kendal would have co m e t o h i m t hrough his marriage but it is also evident that he was given l a n d s b y W illiam Rufus. It is certain that he gave the church in Kendale t o S t M a r y ’s Abbey in York. It should also be added that the Scots were o n ly d r i v en out of Cumbria in 1092 - so Kendal was no sinecure. The rem a in s o f h i s motte and bailey castle can be viewed at Castle Howe, the s t o n e c a stle is from a later period. But back to Lucy. She held lands in and around Spalding. This may have b e e n p a r t of the reason, along with his role as King’s man, that Ivo fou n d h i m s elf in Ely taking up arms against Hereward the Wake in 1071. Luc y ’ s b r o thers were also caught up in the rebellion against the conqueror - m a k i n g t heir lands forfeit- so Ivo seems to have done quite well out of i t a l l . N o o ne seems to have recorded what Lucy thought of all this or t he f a c t t h at she appears to have been married not once, not twice but t hri c e ( h e r third husband being Ranulf le Meschin) dying in 1131. One th in g i s c l e ar though Lucy has disappeared into history leaving some very f r a g m e ntary and tantalizing historical evidence behind her. |
1 |
510 | I7493 | De Toeni | Ralph | 1255 | 25 May 1295 | 0 | 1299: summoned to parliament ... became Lord Tosny/Tony. |
1 |
511 | I7887 | De Tregoz | John | Abt 1227 | 21 Aug 1300 | 0 | Summoned to parliament by Edward I. He was granted quittance of common s u m m o n s for Sussex, 1271, and for co. Hereford, 1272, in which counties h e a l i e n ated lands in 1280 and 1277; and he and his wife Mabel were gran te d f r e e w arren in Iden and Iham, Sussex , 11 June 1271. He was on the K i n g ' s s ervice in Wales, 1277, 1282 an d 1287; was ordered to aid the ro y a l o f f icials in Wales, 1287 and 1288 ; and men were recruited from his l a n d s t o s upply armies against t the Welsh in 1294. On 14 June 1287 he w a s s u m m oned to a military council at Gloucester; and in January and Feb r u a r y 1 290/1 he was summoned as a witness in the dispute between the Ea r l s o f H e reford and Gloucester. He served in Scotland, 1292, 1296 and 1 2 9 7 , a n d in Gascony, 1294. He was summoned to Parliament from 26 Januar y 1 2 9 6 / 7 to 10 April 1299 , by writs directed Johanni de Tregoz, whereb y h e i s h e l d to have become LORD TREGOZ. In March 1296/7 he was ordered t o a i d t h e s heriff of Hereford in punishing those who disturbed the real m, b e i n g a lso one o f the Commissioners concerning the clergy, for many o f w h o m h e v ouched . He was summoned for service across the seas, May fo ll o w i n g; and wa s one of the council to adadvisise the King's son, Oct. 1 2 9 7 . I n 1 298 he served again in Scotland, where he was present at the b a t t l e o f Falkirk , 22 July, and afterwards at Stirling. He made several g r a n t s t o Ewyas Harold priory, confirmed grants which had been made to D o r e a b b ey, co. Hereford, and to Newark, by Guildford, priory, and (Nove m b e r 1 2 83 ) endowed a chapel on the manor of Eaton Tregoz. |
1 |
512 | I38 | De Valois | Charles | 12 Mar 1270 | 16 Dec 1325 | 0 | Charles of Valois (12 March 1270 - 16 December 1325), the third son of P h i l i p I II of France and Isabella of Aragon, was a member of the House o f C a p e t a nd founder of the House of Valois, whose rule over France woul d s t a r t i n 1328. The grandson of Louis IX of France, Charles of Valois was a son, brothe r , b r o t her-in-law and son-in-law of kings or queens (of France, Navarre , E n g l a nd and Naples). His descendants, the House of Valois, would beco me t h e r o y al house of France three years after his death, beginning wit h h i s s o n P hilip VI of France. Charles thus dreamed of more and sought all his life for a crown he nev e r o b t a ined. In 1284, the pope recognized him as King of Aragon (under t h e v a s s alage of the Holy See), as son of his mother, in opposition to K i n g P e t er III, who after the conquest of the island of Sicily was an en e m y o f t h e papacy. Charles then married Marguerite of Sicily, daughter o f t h e N e a politan king, in order to re-enforce his position in Sicily, s up p o r t ed by the Pope. Thanks to this Aragonese Crusade under taken by h i s f a t h er Philip III against the advice of his brother, the future Phil i p t h e F a ir, he believed he would win a kingdom and won nothing but the r i d i c u le of having been crowned with a cardinal's hat in 1285, which gav e h i m t h e s obriquet of the "King of the Cap." He would never dare to us e t h e r o y al seal which was made on this occasion and would have to reno un c e t h e t itle. His principal quality was to be a good military leader. He commanded ef f e c t i vely in Flanders in 1297. The king quickly deduced that his brothe r c o u l d c onduct an expedition in Italy against Frederick II of Sicily. T h e a f f a ir was ended by the peace of Caltabellotta.. |
1 |
513 | I10576 | de Valois | Charles | 30 Jun 1470 | Abt 1502 | 0 | Started the Italian Wars by trying to capture the Kingdom of Naples (14 9 4 - 9 5). His sons died before him and he was the last King of the elder H o u s e o f Valois; he was succeeded by his cousin Louis XII, of the Orléan s - V a lois branch. Named 'Blue King' in the Weisskunig, the semi-biographical project init i a t e d but never completed by Emperor Maximilian I. |
1 |
514 | I7601 | De Warenne | Ranulph | 12 Dec 1018 | 15 Feb 1074 | 0 | Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocr a t a n d p r ogenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line. He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father f o r t h e H o ly Trinity of Rouen. As his father's lands near Rouen and in t h e P a y s d e Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendant s , i t i s l i kely that Rodu l f succeeded to them on his father's death. The de Warenne family originated from Normandy, France. The de Warenne s u r n a m e derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which f l o w s t h rough the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy. |
1 |
515 | I7670 | De Warenne | William | Abt 1118 | 19 Jan 1148 | 0 | Deserted Stephen's army in Normandy. The King pursued them to Pontaudem e r , w h e re he held William de Warenne junior and other youths and did hi s b e s t t o p acify them; but did not dare to make them fight. He was with his half-brother Waleran, Count of Meulan, at Rouen on 18 D e c . 1 1 3 8 , and at Oxford in 1139 or early in 1140. Battle of Lincoln 2 Feb 1140/1: in Stephen's army, and with Waleran fle d b e f o r e the enemy's opening charge. However, the brothers soon rallied t o t h e Q u e en and were with her in London about June 1141. After the King's release on 1 November he witnessed royal charters at C a n t e r bury at Christmas 1141 and at Ipswich early in 1142. Crusade 1147: Earl of Warrenne and Surrey took up cross and accompanied L o u i s o f F rance, to Holy Land against the Saracens. He never returned. I t ' s u n k nown if he died in battle or captivity |
1 |
516 | I7583 | De Warren | William | Abt 1081 | 11 May 1138 | 0 | William de Warrenne (Earl of Warrenne), 2nd Earl of Surrey, joined Robe r t d e B e l esmie, Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, in favour of Robert Cur t h os e a g ainst Henry I, and in consequence forfeited his English earldom a n d e s t a tes, but those were subsequently restored to him and he was ever a f t e r w ards a good and faithful subject to King Henry. His lordship m. Is a b e l , d au. of Hugh the Great, Earl of Vermandois, and widow of Robert, E a r l o f M e llent, by whom he had issue, William, Reginald, Ralph, Gundred , a n d A d e line. |
1 |
517 | I45439 | de Wit | Jan | Abt 1600 | 31 Mar 1699 | 0 | Jan was not a respected leader, was an indentured child, and was called a 'half-breed' by another Dutchman. There is also some evidence that Jan's father, Cornelius, returned to Holland where he married a Dutch widow who had other children and that they returned to Long Island where Cornelius found the son and took him to raise Dutch rather than leave him with the natives to be treated as a slave, the usual happening in that era with children of mix parentage. Moreover, Jan did not begin using 'Van Texel' until the English took New York and made all the Dutch families choose a family surname. He took 'van Texel' as it appears that his father, Cornelius Janson, was from the Dutch island of Texel, a stopping point where ships heading to sea picked up supplies and crew members. It is assumed that his father was a crew member on an early voyage and that is when he met and impregnated the native American. It was upon one of his return trips that he likely found out she had boy and seized the boy to be raised Dutch. |
1 |
518 | I45441 | de Witt | Pieter Jansen | Abt 1626 | May 1705 | 0 | Pieter Jans DeWit was a well respected educated man who spoke several languages, and was appointed to assist the French Huguenots in setting up the village of Boswyck. Pieter Jans DeWit was one of the few who, in that era, used an identifier after his given name - Pieter Janson. The 'de Wit' means 'the white one' likely for his hair color of blond. Other times, an identifier was used only in court records when more than one person was in the area with the same given name. |
1 |
519 | I9590 | Denmark | Siegfried | Abt 885 | 0 | Siegfried 'the Dane' (''Sifridus de Dachia''), a viking, controlled the a r e a a r o und Gu�nes in 928, though he never seemed to have been designate d a s C o u n t. In about 965 he fell in love with Elftrude (''Elstrude'') the beautiful d a u g h t er of Arnulf (Arnoul) I, Count of Flanders, and she fell pregnant. S i e g f r ied died in 965 and she had a posthumous son, baptised as Ardolf ( A r d o l ph), who became the first Count of Gu�nes |
1 | |
520 | I45254 | Denton | Phoebe | Abt 1679 | 1728 | 0 | Flushing Cemetery Flushing Cemetery |
1 |
521 | I45244 | Denton | Richard | 5 Apr 1601 | 6 Dec 1663 | 0 | Denton was a crucial element in the early development of religious pluralism in colonial America and in American Presbyterianism, specifically. Richard Denton was born in Warley, West Yorkshire, England to Henry Denton and Maria Duerden. He was baptized April 19, 1601 at the parish church in nearby Halifax. Denton matriculated from St. Catherine's College, Cambridge. He was ordained a Deacon in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire on March 9, 1623 and a Priest on June 8, 1623. He first became pastor in Turton, Lancashire and later Curate of Coley Chapel in Halifax, West Yorkshire. It is not known exactly when or why Denton split from the Church of England to profess and preach Reformed theology, but it was at a time of much religious upheaval. It may have had something to do with the "Book of Sports" controversy. The "Great Migration" of the Puritans to New England had been underway for several years when Richard Denton and his young sons led a large group of Presbyterians to Massachusetts circa 1635, possibly on the ship "James." He arrived abt 1638/39 to America before soon removing to Wethersfield, Connecticut and even later to Stamford in 1641, probably due to friction with local Puritans. This friction may have been political, rather than religious, in nature. As early as 1644, Denton relocated his congregation to Hempstead, Long Island, situating themselves under Dutch rule and law. All inhabitants were allowed to vote in New Netherland, and the Denton congregation made it a requirement to do so; they were likely barred from voting in Puritan territory. However, this was not the end of Denton's interactions with his own people, for he is said to have preached to English soldiers at the military fort in New Amsterdam during the Indian wars. Denton was well received in New Netherland, as evidenced by two letters sent to Holland by Johannes Megapolensis and Samuel Drisius, the former being the leader of the Dutch Reformed Church in New Netherland and the latter being a pastor who could minister in French as well as Dutch. These letters also inform us that the Puritan Independents in Hempstead attended Denton's services, but left his church when he baptized children of parents who were not members. Nonetheless, he was respected by prominent Congregationalists - notably, Cotton Mather - for his theological treatise "Soliloquia Sacra." Despite flourishing in Hempstead, Rev. Denton became dissatisfied with his salary and departed Long Island for Virginia in 1657 "seeking remedy." Gov. Stuyvesant himself had appealed to Denton to stay in New Netherland, to no avail. Apparently no remedy was found in Virginia, for in 1658 he was again contracted to minister at Hempstead, the same place he had left one year earlier. This return to normalcy, however, would be short lived for Richard and his wife returned to England in 1659 to settle a deceased friend's estate and collect a legacy of 400 Pounds Sterling. Richard Denton died in Hempstead, Essex in 1663. The church he founded and pastored in Long Island - Christ's First Presbyterian - still exists at 353 Fulton Ave. http://www.christianforums.com/threads/the-rev-richard-denton-c-1635.7619647/ |
1 |
522 | I45246 | Denton | Samuel | Bef 29 May 1631 | 0 | From the "Tennessee Valley Historical Review:" Hempstead town recordsshow that Samuel Denton and others took up land, 50 acres each, on the same terms as the first proprietors. In 1663, jointly with Thomas Rushmour, Samuel Denton obtained all rights and privileges upon Matthew Garrison's Neck and at Mattinacock, from Jeremy Wood of Hempstead. On April 18, 1665, John Smith of Hempstead sold to "myson-in-law Samuel Denton" certain lands. In 1698 he was called SamuelDenton, Senior. A deed of gifts from Samuel Denton of Hempstead,Yeoman, in consideration of "paternal love and affection I have and do bear toward my well-beloved son James Denton of Hempstead, Yeoman" to land within the township of Hempstead. December 16, 1710. |
1 | |
523 | I45433 | Denyse | Annetje Theunis | Abt 1645 | 1734 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery |
1 |
524 | I45416 | Des Mares | Jeanne | Abt 1590 | Abt 1636 | 0 | This family which has been researched by a Certified Professional Researcher. Please be so kind to not make any changes until you have followed the Red Alert instructions. Thank you kindly See research on The Ancestry of Lambertje Roeloffse Suebering, 7 February 2020, 9 pages, included in her Memories. See (L9GD-W4R) by an Accredited Professional Researcher. There is no credible sources that Jeanne Demarest is the wife of Roelof Lukassen Dorland Suebering; however, a speculative, secondary source does list her as his wife. In any event, she is an End of Line |
1 |
525 | I9413 | Dhonnchadha | Uilleam | 1222 | 25 Jul 1281 | 0 | William of Mar, also known by the name Uilleam mac Dhonnchaidh (Anglici z e d a s " W illiam, Duncan's son"), was the mormaer of Mar in medieval Sco t l a n d f rom 1244 to 1276. His father was Donnchadh of Mar. Uilleam was responsible for the construction of Kildrummy Castle, the g r e a t e st castle to have been built in 13th-century northern Scotland. It i s o n e o f t h e few examples where a native Scottish magnate built a large -s c a le f o rtification, something normally practiced by the incoming Norm a n s . Uilleam, more than any of his predecessors, participated in Scottish an d e v e n B r itish-wide politics, becoming a leading figure in the royal re gi m e o f A l exander II, and the minority of Alexander III. By 1244, Uille a m h a d m a rried into the Comyn house, the fastest rising French family i n t h e S c o ttish kingdom. He married Elisabeth Comyn, the daughter of Wil li a m C o m yn, jure uxoris Earl of Buchan and Marjory, Countess of Buchan. T h e C o m y n-Mar alliance helped fight off the ambitions of the Durwards, w h o w e r e t hen in prime favor with the king. Alan Durward used his descent from a daughter of Gille Críst to contest U i l l e a m's right to the Mormaerdom, but Uilleam successfully held off the s e c l a i ms. Uilleam and the Comyn Earl of Menteith then launched accusat i o n s o f t reason towards Alan while at the court of Henry III of England a t Y o r k . Chamberlain to Alexander III, Sheriff of Dunbarton |
1 |
526 | I9716 | Dian | Diarmait | Abt 660 | 689 | 0 | Diarmait Dian mac Airmetaig, also Diarmait Guthbinn, (died 689) was Kin g o f U i s n ech in Mide of the Clann Cholmáin. He was the grandson of Cona ll G u t h b inn mac Suibni (died 635), a previous king. His father Airmetac h C á e c h w as slain at the Battle of Mag Rath in 637.[5] Diarmait ruled f ro m 6 5 3 t o 6 89.[6] The feud between Clann Cholmáin and the Síl nÁedo Sláine of the early 7 t h c e n t ury had ended in victory for the Síl nÁedo Sláine who dominated t h e h i g h k ingship of Ireland in the second half of the 7th century. They b e g a n t o f eud among themselves, and Clann Cholmain was caught up in the f e u d a s w e ll. In 662, a member of the cousin line of Clann Cholmáin Bicc , F á e l c hú mac Máele Umai was slain at the Battle of Ogamain fighting on t h e s i d e o f Conaing Cuirre mac Congaile of Cnogba and Blathmac mac Áedo S l á i n e ( died 665) while fighting the adherents of Diarmait mac Áedo Slái n e ( d i e d 665). Diarmait himself was killed in 689 as part of the old feud by Áed mac D l ú t h a ig (died 701) of the Fir Cúl Breg sept of Síl nÁedo Sláine. Áed's g r a n d f ather Ailill Cruitire mac Áedo Sláine was slain in battle by Diarm a i t ' s g randfather Conall Guthbinn in 634. |
1 |
527 | I29205 | Dickens | Joseph | 15 Jun 1737 | 19 Feb 1802 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-147731 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Captain / Patriotic Service DAR #: A033599 Birth: 1749 / Caroline / VA Death: Nov 1802 / Halifax / NC Qualifying Service Description: Militia Sold provisions to the Revolutionary Army in NC Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Vouchers, NC Halifax District, No 3286, 3557, 3976, & 6396; Roll # 68.9 Historical Southern Families, Volume IX, John Bennett Boddie, 1971, pg 66 |
1 |
528 | I7399 | Dinan | Josce | Abt 1106 | 1167 | 0 | Josce de Dinan (died 1166) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman who lived durin g a n d a f t er the civil war between King Stephen of England and his cousi n M a t i l da over the throne of England. Josce de Dinan (died 1166) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman who lived durin g a n d a f t er the civil war between King Stephen of England and his cousi n M a t i l da over the throne of England. |
1 |
529 | I1740 | Dinefwr | Rhys | 1196 | 1244 | 0 | Rhys Mechyll (died 1244) was a Welsh prince of the House of Dinefwr, ru l e r o f p a rt of the kingdom of Deheubarth in southern Wales from 1234 to 1 2 4 4 . |
1 |
530 | I45355 | Dirckse | Geertje | Abt 1625 | Bef 15 Apr 1693 | 0 | Flatlands Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery |
1 |
531 | I45300 | Dirckszen | Elisbeth Paulis | 1651 | 10 Jul 1734 | 0 | Old Newtown Cemetery | 1 |
532 | I23343 | Doane | John | Abt 1590 | 21 Feb 1685 | 0 | John Doane first arrived in North America, at Plymouth Colony, in 1630, b r i n g i ng with him his wife and possibly a daughter (all later children w e r e b o r n in Plymouth or Eastham). He was a yeoman and an innkeeper. Mr D o a n e b e came a freeman in Plymouth Colony in 1633, and was later a found i n g f r e eman of Eastham (called Nauset from 1644/5 to 1651) . His inven t o r y c o ntained nine books, indicating that he wa s likely educated in E n g l a n d. In support of his being educated, he was appointed to a committ e e t o r e v ise laws. Source: "The Pilgrim Migration" by Robert Charles Anderson. Pages 17 1 - 7 7 . |
1 |
533 | I7103 | Dol | Flaald | Abt 1011 | Abt 1076 | 0 | '''Flaald''' is the name by which he is most often known. His name sometimes appears with his title, Flaald Dapifer (Flaald the cup-bearer). 'Fledaldus' is the Latin equivalent and sometimes it too appears with a title, Fledaldus Senescal. |
1 |
534 | I45404 | Domville | Ursula | 1654 | 31 Aug 1724 | 0 | St Martin's |
1 |
535 | I7397 | Donzy | Agnes | Abt 1200 | 1225 | 0 | Agnes II of Nevers or Agnes II of Donzy , born about 1205 and died in 1 2 2 5 , i s c ountess consort of Saint Pol from 1221 to 1225 .Agnes became t h e h e i r ess of the counties of Nevers, Auxerre and Tonnerre after the de a t h o f h e r brother Guillaume (about 1207/14). |
1 |
536 | I9370 | Douglas | Ellen | 1685 | 0 | Renowned for her beauty and charming manners. |
1 | |
537 | I920 | Douglas | William | 1582 | 7 Aug 1648 | 0 | "William Douglas, 7th Earl of Morton (1582 - 7 August 1648) was a grandson of the 6th Earl of Morton. He was Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, and a zealous Royalist, who, on the outbreak of the Great Rebellion in 1642, provided £100,000 for the cause |
1 |
538 | I45134 | Dover | Sarah Starbuck of | Abt 1620 | 0 | , dau. of Edward and Catrharine (Reynolds) Starbuck |
1 | |
539 | I57 | Drummond | Annabella | Abt 1350 | Oct 1401 | 0 | Anabella was crowned with Robert at Scone Palace when he came to the th r o n e i n 1 390. She continued bearing children until she was past forty a n d h a d h e r last child, the future James I of Scotland, in 1394. King Robert, an invalid since 1384 due to an accident with a horse, gre w i n c r e asingly despondent and incompetent throughout his reign and was n o t c a p a ble to govern. During this time he is said to have said to her t h a t h e s h ould be buried in a dung heap with the epitaph "Here lies the w o r s t o f k ings and the most miserable of men". Because the king was not able to rule, Anabella was prompted to manage s t a t e a f fairs as de facto ruler. The chronicles of Scotland generally pr a i s e q u een Anabella and her conduct as queen. Protecting the interests o f h e r o l d est son, David, she arranged a great tournament in 1398 in Edi nb u r g h , where her oldest son was knighted. In April of that year she al s o c a l l ed a council where he was created Duke of Rothesay and Lieutenan t o f t h e R e alm in the same year. Shortly after his mother's death he wo ul d b e i m p risoned by his uncle and died in mysterious circumstances. Da v id w a s d e scribed as debauched, self-indulgent and erratic, and the Duk e o f A l b a ny did not have to fight hard to control him. |
1 |
540 | I6998 | Drummond | Malcolm | 1268 | 1325 | 0 | SIR MALCOLM DRUMMOND, LORD OF THAT ILK, THE 9th. THANE OR SENESCAL OF L E N N O X , Sir Malcolm Drummond succeeded to his father, as ninth chief of the hou s e o f D r u mmond. He flourished in the reign of king Robert Bruce, and wa s f i r m l y attached to the interests of that great prince. At the battle o f B a n n o ckburn, in 1314, he exerted in a most conspicuous manner his gre at t a l e n ts, undaunted bravery, and military skill. Immediately after th at b a t t l e in 1315, king Robert, as a reward of his good and faithful se rvi c e s , c onferred upon him a grant of several lands in Perthshirre; and i t i s n o t u n likely that the caltrops were then added, for the first time , b y w a y o f c ompartment to his coat of arms, as in that memorable battl e t h e y w e re used with great success against the English horse, and very p o s s i b ly by the advice, or under the direction of Sir Malcolm. |
1 |
541 | I7577 | Drummond | Malcolm | 1295 | 17 Oct 1346 | 0 | Succeeded about 1325.- Died about 1346. From 19th Robert I, to 16th Dav i d I I . Ancestor of the families of Concraig, Colquhahie, Pitkellony, Mircie, L e n n o c h, Megginch, Balloch, Droich, Milnab, etc. Sir Malcolm Drummond, on the death of his father, succeeded to the esta t e s o f t h e house of Drummond, and was the tenth hereditary thane of Len n o x . H e w as a worthy patriot, a steady loyalist, and deservedly esteeme d f o r h i s m erit and accomplishments. He had a chief concern in all the n o b l e e f forts made by the loyalists in the minority of king David Bruce, i n d e f e n ce of the liberties of their country. In those arduous exertions , h e s u f f ered many hardships: and, at the time when Edward III. of Engl an d f o r f eited Malise the seventh earl of Strathearn, in 1334, he also g a ve a g r a n t of several lands belonging to Sir Malcolm Drummond, to Sir J o hn C l i n ton of England, for opposing, as he said, his lawful sovereign E d w a r d B aliol. |
1 |
542 | I8020 | Drummond Of Stobshall | John | 1438 | 22 Sep 1519 | 0 | Drummond, ninth successive knight of his family, was the eldest son of S i r M a l c olm Drummond of Cargill and Stobhall, Perthshire, by his marriag e w i t h M a riota, eldest daughter of Sir David Murray of Tullibardine in t h e s a m e c ounty. He sat in parlliament 6 May 1471, under the designation o f L o r d o f S tobhall. On 20 March 1473-4 he had a charter of the offices o f s e n e s chal and coroner of the earldom of Strathearn, in which he was c on f i r m ed in the succeeding reign. In 1483 he was one of the ambassador s t o t r e a t with the English King, with a safe-conduct (passport) grante d 2 9 N o v e mber of that year; again, on 6 August 1484, to treat of the ma rr ia g e o f J ames, Prince of Scotland, and Anne de la Pole, niece of Rich a r d I I I . He was a commissioner for settling border differences nominat e d b y t h e t reaty of Nottingham, 22 September 1484 ; his safe-conduct in t o E n g l and being dated on the ensuing 29 November. |
1 |
543 | I408 | Duncan | Stephan | 1729 | 30 Mar 1794 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-151133 State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Private / Patriotic Service / Civil Service DAR #: A034999 Qualifying Service Description: Private, 2nd Class, 6th Battalion, Cumberland County, Militia under Colonel James Dunlap. On the roll dated 8/2/1782 Member of the Assembly from 1780 to 1783 and was appointed first treasurer of Cumberland County 10/22/1768 During the War he was the sub-Lieutenant for Cumberland County 2ND Company, Captain William Moorhead, 6th Battn, 6TH Battn, Colonel James Dunlop, Cumberland Co. Militia Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 SAR # 45695, 60275 DAR # 224507 cites: PA Archives 2nd Series Vol pg 357, 750, 751 Vol S, PL 67 3rd Series, Vol 5, pg 107, 116, 136, 138, 144 |
1 |
544 | I45268 | Duncanson | James | 18 Jul 1564 | 11 Jul 1624 | 0 | Presbyterian Minister, Vicar of Alloa (1589+) EDUCATION: University of Glasgow, graduated 1585 |
1 |
545 | I8416 | Dunkeld | Eadgith | 1079 | 1 May 1118 | 0 | **Special note** We have a convergence of lines. Henry, 6th great grandson of Alfred the Great, now marries Matilda (Edith) of Scotland, 6th great granddaughter of Alfred the Great) On November 11, 1100, Henry married Edith, daughter of King Malcolm III of Scotland and niece of Edgar Atheling, gained him some popularity with his English (as opposed to Norman) subjects Buried in Westminster Abbey beside her uncle King Edward the Confessor. |
1 |
546 | I8421 | Dunkeld | Henry | Abt 1114 | 12 Jun 1152 | 0 | Henry of Scotland was a Prince of Scotland, heir to the Kingdom of Alba His mother had a hereditary claim to the earldom of Northumberland whic h K i n g D a vid demanded also be invested in Henry, but King Stephen refus ed t o d o s o . Henry was trained from the age of about fourteen to inherit the throne o f S c o t l and, his name constantly linked with his father's in charters, a nd i n a d o c u ment dated 1144 he was styled "rex designatus" (king-design ate ). C o i n s were issued in his name at Bamburgh, Carlisle, and Corbridg e. O n 2 2 M a y 1 149 he stood sponsor to Henry Plantagenet for his knighti ng. I n 1 1 5 0 h e joined with his father to found a Cisterian house at Hol mcul tr a m , C umberland for monks from Melrose Abbey. |
1 |
547 | I1265 | Dunkeld | William | Abt 1143 | Abt 4 Dec 1214 | 0 | The Lion King of Scots Earl of Northumberland, 1152-7 Earl of Huntingdon, 1165-1174 William, King of Scotland, was surnamed "The Lion" due to the rampant ( s t a n d ing on hind legs) red lion on a yellow field, which he had as his s t a n d a rd. It would go on to become Scotland's Royal Heraldic colours and i s e a s i l y recognizable eveven today. He was the second son of Henry, Earl of Huntingdon (died 1152), a son o f K i n g D a vid I, he became king of Scotland on the death of his brother, t h e w e a k -willed Malcolm IV. In December 1165, William was crowned at Sco n e . S h o rtly after his accesssion to the throne, he spent some time at t h e E n g l ish court of Henry II; then quarrelling with Henry, he arranged a n a l l i a nce betgween the two countries, Scotland and France,which would t a k e r o o t again over 100 years later (in 1294) and last until 1746, know n a s t h e " A uld Alliance." The oldest mutual self-defence treaty in Euro pe . H e a r r anged this treaty with French King Louis VII; and even assist e d H e n r y' s sons in their revolt against their father (Henry II of Engl a n d ) i n 1 173. In return for this aid, the younger Henry granted Northum b e r l a nd , a possession which William had sought, in vain, from the Engl i s h k i n g .: William was a ferocious fighter and military commander, but o f q u e s t ionable ability as a tactician, by English chronicle accounts. H e l e d a b a n d of well armed men, a mix of wild Irish Kerns, Norman-Scots , C e lt s a n d Galloway men. According to the chroniclers the kerns slaugh te r e d c h ildren, ripped open pregnant women, and cut down priests at the i r a l t a rs." But, this type of description of William's actions were wri t t e n b y f rightened and highly propagandized English chroniclers, whose p r o s e w a s so compelling that later chroniclers and writers would use thi s s a m e p r opaganda when they described the behaviour of William Wallace' s m e n . |
1 |
548 | I9648 | Durham | Ecgfrida | 973 | Dec 1067 | 0 | According to Simeon of Durham, Ecgfrida seems to have been left by both o f h e r h u s bands. After her marriage with Kilvert fell apart, her father m a d e h e r r eturn to Durham ... where she became a nun, and was supposedly b u r i e d i n the yard of the church. |
1 |
549 | I24985 | Eads | Henry | 1755 | 23 Aug 1843 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-152167 State of Service: MD Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A035323 Birth: 1755 on Shenandoah River / / VA Death: 23 Aug 1843 / Franklin / IN Qualifying Service Description: Served as a Private in Kent Co, MD under the command of Captain THOMAS MARSLAND, Colonel BROWN Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Pension Number *S32226 Spouse: Sarah Elizabeth Sailors |
1 |
550 | I44546 | Eads III | Henry | 1690 | 7 Dec 1727 | 0 | Christ Church, Surrey, England a/k | 1 |
551 | I2568 | Eckerson | Thomas Cornelius | 3 Mar 1706 | 1 Mar 1778 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-152879 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 |
1 |
552 | I44079 | Edwards | Edward Holmes | 1794 | 14 Apr 1843 | 0 | Saint Philips Episcopal Church Cemetery | 1 |
553 | I44062 | Edwards | Rebecca E | Nov 1818 | 21 Feb 1846 | 0 | Saint Philips Episcopal Church Cemetery | 1 |
554 | I24980 | Eichelberger | Johann Valentine | 8 Mar 1748 | 15 Nov 1827 | 0 | Bockenheim |
1 |
555 | I45371 | Elderinck | Willemptje Warnaar | 1630 | 28 Oct 1697 | 0 | She is also known as Willemken Elderinck The Geesteren DRC records show: Marriages, 1652 onwards: 27 March 1653: Harmen Lubberdinck son of Jan Lubberdinck from Geesteren with Willemken Elderinck daughter of Warner Elderinck from Hengelo and married there 11 April. Hengelo, located southwest of Ruurlo and Borculo, is the village where Willemke Warnaers Elderinck was born about 1630. She died in Constable's Hook, N.J., and was the 79th person to be buried with a pall. (Bergen, N.J., Burs. Nos. 148 & 165) The old spelling seems to have been "Constapels Hoeck", N.J. |
1 |
556 | I45498 | Emans | Andries | Abt 1667 | 1 Sep 1729 | 0 | New Utrecht Cemetery Event Description: New Utrecht Cemetery |
1 |
557 | I45498 | Emans | Andries | Abt 1667 | 1 Sep 1729 | 0 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S101@ PAGE "New York, Land Records, 1630-1975," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?cc=2078654&wc=M7H1-538%3A358137801%2C358904301 : [REFERENCE-ERROR]), Kings > Conveyances 1679-1736 vol 1-4 > image 544 of 666; multiple county courthouses, New York. NOTE @N2201@ _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L9WT-4KRR?view=explore |
1 |
558 | I45496 | Emans | Jan | 1624 | 11 Oct 1715 | 0 | New Utrecht Cemetery |
1 |
559 | I8479 | Enie | Margaret | 1740 | 0 | Arrived in 1775: From Morayshire, Scotland on the "John and Elizabeth" ( 52 passengers) Prince Edward Island, Canada |
1 | |
560 | I472 | Ensign | James | 1 Jun 1606 | 23 Nov 1670 | 0 | James immigrated in 1634 and was made a freeman. James Ensign is possibly the ancestor of every Ensign in the United States. Arrived in Newtown, now Cambridge, MA., with Rev. Thomas Hooker's company. In Governor Winthrop's "History of New England", under the date of 14 August 1632, is this entry: "The Braintree company by order of court, removed to New town. " This was Rev. Hooker's Company. They were called the Braintree Company because they came from Braintree, England a town about forty miles from L ondon. Rev. Hooker and his congregation removed to Hartford CT May 1, 1636. Many of these settlers became the founding fathers of Hartford CT. James Ensign was one of the original proprietors he was allotted twenty-four acres on the south side of the town. He was prominent in church and town affairs, was chosen constable for several years, and was chimney viewer, surveyor, and townsman. | 1 |
561 | I7253 | Evreux | Richard | Abt 986 | 13 Dec 1067 | 0 | He was the founder of the great Norman abbey of St. Sauveur, furnished e i g h t y s hips for the invasion of England, and with his son, William, fou g h t b y t h e Conqueror's side at Hastings, "bearing himself gallantly in t h e b a t t le. |
1 |
562 | I27507 | Felter | Harriet Kitchell | 27 Nov 1808 | 3 Jul 1830 | 0 | Hopewell Cemetery | 1 |
563 | I46013 | Felter | Jacob | 14 Jun 1768 | 18 Oct 1841 | 0 | Hopewell Cemetery | 1 |
564 | I46015 | Felter | Matthias | 26 Apr 1737 | 25 Apr 1796 | 0 | Rose Hill Cemetery | 1 |
565 | I46015 | Felter | Matthias | 26 Apr 1737 | 25 Apr 1796 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-157301 State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Captain DAR #: A038912 Qualifying Service Description: Colonels James Clinton, James McClaughery, Jonathan Hasbrfouck, Militia Additional References: NARA: SERIES M881, COMPILED MILITIARY SERVICE RECORDS, ROLL #740 |
1 |
566 | I45171 | Felton | John | 1680 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Shrewsbury St Chad | 1 |
567 | I45057 | Fenstermacher | Anna Maria Barbara | 16 May 1740 | 10 May 1801 | 0 | She is wife of Pennsylvania patriot Beaver, Michael (11 Feb 1740 Germany to 26 Oct 1832 Lehigh County, Pennsylvania) DAR Ancestor #: A008241 Daughters of the American Revolution, DAR Genealogical Research Databases, database online, (http://www.dar.org/ : accessed 30 Nov 2021), "Record of Beaver, Michael", Ancestor # A008241. |
1 |
568 | I45058 | Fenstermacher | Johann Jakob Bernhard | 21 May 1709 | 26 Feb 1790 | 0 | Achtelsbach |
1 |
569 | I45058 | Fenstermacher | Johann Jakob Bernhard | 21 May 1709 | 26 Feb 1790 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-157398 State of Service: PA Qualifying Service: Patritoic Service DAR #: A039056 Qualifying Service Description: Took Oath of Allegiance, Berks County, PA 8 Jul 1778 Additional References: DAR RC # 902849 cites OWEN, PERSONS WHO TOOK THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE IN BERKS CO PA, COLLS OF GEN SOC OF PA, Volume 268, pg 212, FHL ROLL #20824 Spouse: (1) XX XX; (2) XX Koehler Children: Anna Maria; Burial:Neffs Union (aka Unionville) Cemetery (C-0375031) Location:Neffs / Lehigh / PA / USA Find A Grave Cemetery #:1973098 PVT 7 CO 3 BATT PA MILITIA REVOLUTIONARY WAR VETERAN Jacob Fenstermacher, the eldest son of Mathias, was one of the founders of the Longswamp Reformed church. The proprietary return of 1767 shows that he was the owner of one hundred acres of land in that township, and his name appears in the federal census of 1790, indicating that he was then still living. |
1 |
570 | I45059 | Fenstermacher | Matthias | 1678 | Abt 1761 | 0 | The Fenstermacher family with which we are most familiar, and whose representatives are quite numerous in this and nearby counties, has its origin in Mathias Fenstermacher, a native of the German Palatinate, who crossed the sea on the good ship "Glasgow" which landed at Philadelphia, on 9 September 1738. On the original list of passengers his age is given as sixty years, and he was therefore born about 1678. He was accompanied to America by his two sons, Jacob, then twenty-nine years of age, and Wilhelm, twenty-five years of age. These three were preceded to the new world by a third son, Philip, who was removed to Alburtis and there carried on a general store business until he died in 1809. Altogether he followed the life of an enterprising, successful merchant for upwards of forty years. a passenger on the good ship, Samuel, and qualified at Philadelphia, 30 August 1737. He was then twenty-four years of age." "There is a tradition that the family first settled in Oley township, Berks County. The first positive record we have, however, is in the Berks County tax list of 1753, where Longswamp Township is given as the residence of the father and of his two sons, Jacob and Philip. Concerning the other son, Wilhelm, who accompanied his father to the new world, nothing further is known at this time. The name of Mathias Fenstermacher appears in the early tax lists as late as 1761, at which time he probably died, being then eighty-three years old." Buried Longswamp Reformed Church Cemetery, Lehigh [Berks] County, Pennsylvania |
1 |
571 | I9468 | ferch Brychan | Arianwen | Abt 775 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Arianwen ferch Brychan ap Marchell ap Tewdrig (King of Garthmadrun) ap T e i t h f all ap Teithrin ap Tathal ab Annun Ddu (King of Greece) was the wi f e o f I o r werth Hirflawdd ap Tegonwy. *Carl Boyer 3rd. ''Medieva l W e l s h A ncestors of Certain Americans.'' Generally follows Bartrum. By t h e a u t h or: Santa Clarita, California 2004. Iorwerth Hirflawdd is #9 on p a g e 3 4 6 . Boyer estimates Iorwerth's birth as 770. Therefore estimate Arianwen's b i r t h a s s lightly later, say, 775. |
1 |
572 | I9447 | ferch Einudd | Hunydd | Abt 1063 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Baldwin is confident that Hunydd is the daughter of Einudd of Dyffrin C l w y d , b ut believes her mother is unknown. ===1081 Marriage to Maredudd ap Bleddyn=== Maredudd married first Hunedd ferch Einudd, who bore him two sons, Mado g a p M a r e dudd and Gruffydd ap Maredudd. |
1 |
573 | I9458 | ferch Gwrgan | Efa | Abt 1035 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Following Bartrum, Boyer shows Efa as the daughter of Gwrgan ab Ithel abId wallon ap Morgan Mawr, the King of Morgannwg who died in 974. While Boyer identifies two wives of Gwrgan, he notes that it is unknown which wife was the parent of specific children of Gwrgan. Thus Efa's mother is not known. Assume that king was aged 60 at death, born, say, 915; his son born 945 , grandson born 975, great-grandson born 1005, and Efa born 1035. Since Gwrgan was a king of Gwent, assume Efa was born within the Kingdom of Gwent. |
1 |
574 | I9505 | ferch Llywarch | Elen | 893 | 929 | 0 | Cawley states that Elen of Dyfed, who died in 943, was the daughter and h e i r e s s of Llywarch ap Hyfaidd, King of Dyfed, who died in 904. |
1 |
575 | I9555 | ferch Madog | Margred | Abt 1130 | Abt 1201 | 0 | Charles Cawley asserts that Marared ferch Madog was born about 1130. Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Data b a s e Cawley notes that her parentage is recorded in a manuscript now at Jesu s C o l l e ge which states, "Marareda merch Madawc m Maredud" or, "Marared t h e d a u g hter of [[ap_Maredudd-21|Madog]] the son of Maredudd. Cawley fu r t h e r n otes that her father, Madog ap Maredudd, who died in 1161 and wa s b u r i e d in Meivod, was the son of Maredudd ap Bleddyn and his first wi fe , H u n y dd, daughter of Eunydd (Efnydd) ap Gwernwy. Her father suceede d h i s f a t her in 1132 as Prince of Powys. Marared's mother is shown by Cawley as Susann of Gwynedd, daughter of G r u f f y dd ap Cynan, King of Gwynedd, and his wife Angharad of Deheubarth. |
1 |
576 | I45666 | Fetters | Franklyn | Abt 1912 | 0 | Donnie (Catlin/Bunker) and Budsie grew up together, never had children, and both left their family photos and memorabilia with Ann Bunker. |
1 | |
577 | I9434 | Fezensac | Luithard | Abt 760 | Aft 813 | 0 | Leuthard I of Paris (died c. 813) was count of Paris and Fézensac. He was the son of Gerard I of Paris and Rotrude. His brothers were the c o u n t s S tephen of Paris and Beggo of Paris. Around 781, Leuthard was sent by Charlemagne to the duchy of Aquitaine w h e r e h e s tayed in the circle of Louis the Pious, king of Aquitaine (781 - 8 1 4 ) a nd emperor of the West (814-840). Leuthard married Chrimhilda, |
1 |
578 | I45242 | Field | Mary Whitehead | 10 Jan 1767 | 15 May 1841 | 0 | Saint George Church Cemetery Saint George Church Cemetery |
1 |
579 | I45197 | Field | Robert | Abt 1630 | 13 Apr 1701 | 0 | "Robert Field was born about 1636 in Rhode Island, and was probably the eldest son of (844) Robert Field, who came to Roger Williams' Colony in Rhode Island at about that time. The family moved to Flushing, Long Island in 1645. Land was deeded to Robert Field there in 1653 by his father. He was living in Newtown, Long Island by 1670, and was one of the patentees of the town in 1686. He was one of the two overseers of Newtown in 1672, '74, '75, '78 and '80, and Constable in 1685. He was a Quaker in religion. He died at Newtown April 13, 1701." |
1 |
580 | I45201 | Field | Robert | 12 May 1698 | 9 Dec 1767 | 0 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S111@ PAGE "New York, Probate Records, 1629-1971," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?cc=1920234&wc=Q758-4W5%3A213306101%2C226625101 : 28 May 2014), New York > Wills 1767-1769 vol 26 > image 93 of 377; county courthouses, New York. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore |
1 |
581 | I1771 | Fitz Hugh | Hugh | 1195 | 28 Apr 1261 | 0 | The High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and the Royal Forestsis a p o s i t i on established by the Normans in England.The High Sheriff is the o l d e s t s ecular office under the Crown. Formerly the High Sheriff was the p r i n c i pal law enforcement officer in the county but over the centuries m o s t o f t h e responsibilities associated with the post have been transfer r e d e l s ewhere or are now defunct, so that its functions are now largely c e r e m o nial. |
1 |
582 | I8044 | Fitzalan | Edmund | 1 May 1285 | 17 May 1326 | 0 | Was a favorite of KingEdward II and of the faction of the Spensers. He f e l l p r e y to the fury of the people, and was beheaded at Hereford, by th e p r o c u rement of Mortimer, 1326 |
1 |
583 | I8018 | Fitzalan | Richard | 1313 | 24 Jan 1376 | 0 | Upon the death of his uncle John, his mother's brother, he inherited th e v a s t e s tate of the family of Warenne and he assumed the title of Earl o f S u r r e ly, settling the estate in 1366. He was beheaded. |
1 |
584 | I533 | Fitzalan | Richard | 25 Mar 1346 | 21 Sep 1397 | 0 | There is a confluence of family lines with Richard FitzAlan and Elizabe t h B o h u n's children. 12 generations down the line, the line from Eliza b e t h F i tzAlan marries back into the line of Alice FitzAlan. Richard FitzAlan, 11th Earl of Arundel and 10th Earl of Surrey (1346 -S e p t e m ber 21, 1397, beheaded) was an English nobleman and military comma n d e r . H e was the son of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and Elea n o r o f L a ncaster. In 1377 he was Admiral of the West and South, and in 1 3 8 6 A d m iral of all England. In this capacity he defeated a combined Fra n c o - S panish-Flemish fleet off of Margate in 1387. The following year he w a s o n e o f t he Lords Appellant to Richard II. In 1397 he was arrested fo r h i s o p p osition to Richard II, and then attainted and beheaded. |
1 |
585 | I7380 | Fitzflaald | Alan | Abt 1055 | Bef May 1121 | 0 | Alan Fitz Flaald became a close friend of Henry (c.1068-1 December 1135 ) , a l s o k nown as Henry Beauclerc, later King Henry I of England, during t h e p e r i od when Henry controlled Mont Saint Michel as Count of the Conte n t i n . |
1 |
586 | I7265 | Fitzgerald | Maurice | 1100 | 1 Sep 1177 | 0 | Maurice FitzGerald was a Norman who held land at [https://en.wikipedia . o r g / w iki/Llansteffan Llansteffan] in Carmarthenshire, on the south-wes t c o a s t o f Wales. |
1 |
587 | I7656 | Fitzgilbert | Richard | Bef 1100 | 15 Apr 1136 | 0 | The Clare Family of English nobles was prominent in the 12th and 13th c e n t u r ies. The first earl of Clare, the founder of the family, was Richa r d F i t z gilbert, a knight who accompanied William the Conqueror on the N o r m a n i nvasion of England in 1066. His great-grandson, Richard de Clare , 2 n d E a r l o f Pembroke, known as "Strongbow", laid the foundations for Eng l i s h r u le in Ireland, Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Clare (died 12 17), a n d h i s s o n, Gilbert de Clare, 7th Earl of Clare (flourished 1215- 1280) , w e r e l e aders of the barons who forced King John to sign the Magna Cha rt a i n 1 2 1 5 |
1 |
588 | I7137 | Fitzgilbert Clare | Richard | Abt 1030 | Abt 1090 | 0 | A kinsman of William the Conqueror, in Normandy he was Count of Brionne a n d L o r d o f Orbec and Bienfaite. In England after the 1066 invasion he w a s g i v e n lordship over the large Honour of Clare, and the castle of Ton b r i d g e in Kent . |
1 |
589 | I7045 | Fitzgilbert Lancaster | William | Abt 1100 | Aft 1166 | 0 | William's father Gilbert appears to have been a member of the "French" c o m m u n ity holding offices for the Norman dynasty in the far northwest of E n g l a n d, bordering Scotland. Gilbert seems to have been associated with t h e a r e a o f Furness, which came to be part of Lancashire and was probabl y a l r e a dy administered together with northern Lancashire |
1 |
590 | I7424 | Fitzhamon | Robert | 1070 | Abt 10 Mar 1107 | 0 | He was a kinsman of William the Conqueror. In 1105 he went to Normandy a n d w a s c a ptured while fighting near his ancestral estates near Bayeux. H e n r y I c r ossed the Channel with a substantial force later that year, fr e e i n g F itzHamon who Joined Henry's campaign, which proceeded to besiege F a l a i s e . T here Fizthamon was severely injured in the head, and althoug h he l i v e d t wo more years he was never the same mentally. |
1 |
591 | I8399 | Fitzjohn | Joan | Bef 1189 | 2 Feb 1237 | 0 | King John Lackland acknowledged his natural daughter Joan, so there is no question regarding paternity. Joan's mother, however, is the subject of an ongoing historical debate, which is summarized below. Joan was born at a time when both King John "Lackland" and Joan's mother were unmarried, according to letters of pope Honorius III in 1228 legitimating Joan. |
1 |
592 | I7657 | Fitzmaurice | Gerald | Abt 1150 | Bef 15 Jan 1202 | 0 | Gerald FitzMaurice was a Cambro-Norman nobleman, of a Norman family who h a d s e t t led in Wales. He arrived in Ireland, with his father, Maurice F i t z G e rald about 1197, taking part in the conquest of Limerick. He acqu i r e d l a nd and settled at Croom, in County Limerick. |
1 |
593 | I7808 | Fitzmaurice | Maurice | Abt 1238 | Bef Nov 1286 | 0 | He followed his father as Justiciar of Ireland. In May 1262, he was am o n g t h e m agnates of Ireland summoned to inform the King and Prince Edwa r d a b o u t the state of that country, summoned again in June 1265. He followed his father as Justiciar of Ireland. In May 1262, he was am o n g t h e m agnates of Ireland summoned to inform the King and Prince Edwa r d a b o u t the state of that country, summoned again in June 1265. |
1 |
594 | I7378 | Fitzosbern | William | Abt 1023 | 20 Feb 1071 | 0 | William became a close friend of his kinsman William the Conqueror and, a t t h e C o u ncil of Lillebonne, urged the Norman barons to invade England. H e p l a y e d a leading part in the events leading up to, as well as during, t h e B a t t le of Hastings. According to Norman chroniclers, FitzOsbern led t h e r i g h t-wing of the forces at the Battle of Hastings. FitzOsbern was one of William's senior administrators and worked on his b e h a l f i n Normandy and Flanders. In England he was one of the first Norm a n s t o b e g ranted an Earldom, part of which became the Earldom of Heref o r d . |
1 |
595 | I7357 | Fitzrichard Clare | Gilbert | 21 Sep 1065 | Abt 17 Nov 1114 | 0 | Gilbert de Tonebruge, who resided at Tonebruge and inherited all his fa t h e r ' s lands in England, joined in the rebellion of Robert de Mowbray, E a r l o f N o rthumberland, but observing the king (William Rufus ) upon the p o i n t o f f alling into an ambuscade, he relented, sought pardon, and save d h i s r o y al master. Subsequently, however, he was again in rebellion in t h e s a m e r eign and fortifying and losing his castle at Tunbridge. |
1 |
596 | I7898 | Fitzrichard Clavering | John | 1144 | 11 Oct 1190 | 0 | He was a Governor in Ireland for Henry II. Being a patron of science, h e m a i n t ained an astronomer at Halton Castle. He founded the Cistercian m o n a s t ery at Stanlow. In 1190 he granted the second known charter for a f e r r y a t R uncorn Gap . |
1 |
597 | I7819 | Fitzrobert | William | Abt 23 Nov 1116 | 23 Nov 1183 | 0 | William was heir to one of the greatest Anglo-Norman baronies. From his m o t h e r , Mabel (d. 1157), daughter of Robert fitz Haimon, came Norman lan d s , t h e W elsh marcher county of Glamorgan, and the English honour of Gl o u c e s ter. His total annual income at times may have been more than 700, a n d h e c o m manded the service of more than 300 knights' fees from England a n d W a l e s alone. Significant additions came from the patronage which Wil l i a m ' s grandfather Henry I bestowed on his father, Robert, earl of Glou c e s t e r, and from Robert's own acquisitions. William was the eldest of a t l e a s t f ive sons and one daughter born to Earl Robert and Countess Mab el . H e a l s o had a number of illegitimate siblings, products of his fath e r' s e x t ramarital liaisons. |
1 |
598 | I1116 | Fitzroger Warkworth | Robert | Abt 1168 | Bef 22 Nov 1214 | 0 | Robert obtained a confirmation, upon the accession of King John, of the c a s t l e a nd manor of Warkworth, of the manor of Clavering, in Essex, to h o l d b y t h e service of one knight's fee each. And in that monarch's reig n h e s e r v ed the office of sheriff for Northumberland, Norfolk, and Suff ol k, f o r e a ch county thrice. In the conflict between John and the baron s , t h i s p owerful person, although indebted to the crown for immense ter r i t o r ial possessions, took part in the first instance with the latter, b u t u n d e r the apprehension of confiscation, and the other visitations of r o y a l v e ngeance, he was very soon induced to return to his allegiance. |
1 |
599 | I7881 | Fitzroy | Richard | Abt 1186 | Abt 6 Aug 1270 | 0 | Richard FitzRoy was the illegitimate son of King John of England and wa s f e u d a l baron of Chilham in Kent. His mother was Adela, his father's c ou s i n a n d a daughter of Hamelin de Warenne |
1 |
600 | I7582 | Fitzroy | Robert | 11 Apr 1090 | 31 Oct 1147 | 0 | Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester (c. 1090 - 31 October 1147) was an illeg i t i m a te son of King Henry I of England, and one of the dominant figures o f t h e p e r iod of English history sometimes called The Anarchy. Robert w as a c k n o wledged at birth, and raised at his father's court. He eventual ly t o o k t h e side of Mathilda the Empress, against King Stephen the Beau mon t f a c t ion. He had a reputation of being an educated man, not altoge th er s u r p rising considering his father's scholarly inclinations. He was a p a t r o n o f William of Malmesbury and Geoffrey of Monmouth. Robert was probably the eldest of Henry I's many illegitimate children. |
1 |
601 | I7414 | Fitzwalter | Alan | 1150 | 1204 | 0 | The title of High Steward or Great Steward was given in the 12th centur y t o W a l t er Fitzalan, whose descendants founded the "Royal" House of St ew ar t , C l an Stewart and all other Stewart cadet branches. In 1371, the l a s t H i g h Steward inherited the throne, and thereafter the title of High S t e w a r d of Scotland has been held as a subsidiary title to that of Duke o f R o t h e say, held by the heir-apparent. Thus, currently, The Prince of W al e s i s H i gh Steward of Scotland, sometimes known as the Prince and Gre a t S t e w ard of Scotland. |
1 |
602 | I9708 | Flandre | Adalolf | Abt 890 | 13 Nov 933 | 0 | Adelolf, Count of Boulogne (died 933), was a younger brother of Arnulf I , C o u n t o f Flanders and was granted the County of Boulogne by his fathe r. He was a son of Baldwin II, Count of Flanders, and of Ælfthryth, daught e r o f A l f red the Great. He was probably named for his maternal great-gr a n df a t her, King Æthelwulf of Wessex. Baldwin II's extensive lands and m a n y o f f ices in what is now the north of modern France and the west of B e l g i u m were divided among his sons on his death in 918. The elder, Arnu l f , b e c ame Count of Flanders while Adelolf succeeded his father as coun t o f S a i n t-Pol, Count of Boulogne and of Thérouanne. He was also the la y a b b o t o f the Abbey of Saint Bertinus (Saint-Bertin) at Saint-Omer. } ==Research Notes== Wives and Children currently linked on Wikitree need to be researched. S o m e s h o uld be delinked following research.[[Day-1904|Day-1904]] 05:33, 2 O c t o b e r 2017 (EDT) == Biography == ===890 Name, Birth, Parentage=== Adalolf, also called Adalulf, and a range of other variations, was most l i k e l y t he second son, of Baldwin II, Count of Flanders, and his wife, A E l f t h ryth of Wessex, the third daughter of Alfred 'the Great', King of W e s s e x . Richardson reports that Adalolf (or Adolf) was one of two sons of Baudo u i n I I , t he Bald, Count/Marquis of Flanders 879-918, Count of Artois an d L a y - a bbot of Saint-Vaast, 892-899, Lay-abbot of Saint-Bertin, 900, Co un t o f B o u logne, 898?-918, Count of Ternois, about 892-918, born about 8 6 3 -8 9 5 . Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry, 2013. V o l 5 , p a g e 495 The Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Arnulfum, fratrem eiu s A d e l u lfum" as the two sons of "Balduinus"[79]. Stewart Baldwin states, however, that "Adalolf is falsely called a uter i n e b r o ther of Arnulf." Adalolf (�thelwulf) was named after his great-grandfather �thelwulf, ki n g o f W e s sex. Stewart Baldwin. '[http://home.e a r th l i nk.net/~henryproject/hproject/prov/baldw002.htm Baldwin II "the B a l d " ( B audouin "le Chauve", ''Balduinus Calvus'')]' updated 25 November 2 0 0 7 . I n ' 'The Henry Project: The ancestors of king Henry II of England' ' v i e w e d 19 March 2017]. Accessed October 2, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd]] < /r e f > Adalulf (or Adolphe, Allou, Athelwulf) of Flanders (born ca 890) was co u n t o f Boulogne-sur-Mer & Th�rouanne (Ternois) in 918, later co-count ofFlande r s & a b b o t of Saint-Bertin. Peter Stewart [http: / /ar c h i ver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/2004-01/107334464 8 R e M a u d d e St. Pol] 5 Jan 2004. First Response in answer to a questi on b y D o n M a tson, 5 Jan 2004: "Need birthdate of Maud de St. Pol Sur-M er d e T h e r ouanne, wife of Hugo/Hugh de Cavalcamp b. ca. 890 near Dieppe o r M a e r , N ord Trondalag, Norway. Was Maud also married 1st to Guillaum e I d e P o n t hieu? Was Maud a dau. of Adolf de Boulgogne Sur-Mer de Ther ouan ne w h o d . 9 33 & wife Mahaut Crequy or Ragnvald Olafsson, of Agdar & w i f e T h o ra Sigurdsdottir???". Accessed October 1, 2017. [[Day-1904|jhd ] ] < / r e f> Adalolf [�thelwulf] de Flandres was born after 893/99. C h a rles Cawley. [http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINA U T . h t m Medieval Lands Database: Flanders] Accessed October 2, 2017. [ [ D a y - 1904|jhd]] ===Marriage=== The name of his wife, or whether he had a wife, is not known. [[Flandre-56|Adaloif de Flandre]] was previously linked to two profiles o f w i v e s , which are most likely duplicates: [[Crequy-3|Mahaut (Crequy) d e B o u l o gne]] and [[De Crequy-13|Mahaut De Crequy]], born 875. These pr of i l e s h ave been delinked from Adaloif. ===918 Succession of Father=== He succeeded his father in 918 as Comte de Boulogne-sur-Mer, de Th�roua n n e , a n d lay-Abbot of St Bertin. He succeeded his father as count of Boulogne and Ternois and lay-abbot o f S a i n t -Bertin in 918. "Adalolphus" is named son of Count Baudouin II in the Cartulaire de Sai n t - B e rtin, which specifies that he succeeded his father in 918 as Comte d e B o u l o gne-sur-Mer, de Th�rouanne, and lay-Abbot of St Bertin[80]. ===933 Death=== He died 13 November 933. Dying on 13 November 933, he was buried in the church at Saint-Bertin a n d w a s s u cceeded by his brother Arnulf He died 13 Nov 933 and was buried Gent St Pieter). The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 933 of "Adalulfus comes", s p e c i f ying that he was buried "in monasterio sancti Petri"[82]. ===Issue=== Per Curt Hofemann, he knows of no sources giving Adaloff a wife or any c h i l d r en. So this is very 'iffy' as to his being the father of Maud de S t . P o l . The fact that Adalolf was succeeded by his brother rather than a son ca s t s d o u bt on the possibility of children. '''Documented Children''' #Name unknown. His legitimate children were a son (name unknown) who w a s e x e c uted before September 962 (no recorded descendants), #[[Boulogne-25|Arnulf de Boulogne]]. Arnulf I, count of Boulogne-sur- M e r ( d i ed after 31 January 972) who _may_ (NB not proven) have been anc e s t o r o f the later counts of Boulogne. Arnulf wa s b o r n 9 2 2, Boulogne, Artois, France. Leo van der Pas reported that Ad al o l f , C omte de Boulogne-sur-Mer et de Therouanne, son of Baudouin II ' t h e B a l d', (Graaf van Vlaanderen 879-918) , b. Abt 863, d. 10 Sep 9 1 8 ( A g e ~ 5 5 years) and Elftrudis|Alfthryth of Wessex, d. 929, was t h e f a t h er of an unnamed child who died before September 962, and also A r n u l f , Comte de Boulogne, who died after 31 Jan 972. L e o v a n d e P as and Ian Fettes. Genealogics. [http://www.genealogics.org / g e t pe rson.php?personID=I00331100&tree=LEO Adalolf Comte de Boulogne] B a s e d o n E urop�ische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwen n i c k e , Detlev (Ed.). Last modified 6 April 1999. Accessed Sept 23, 20 1 8 [ [ D a y-1904|jhd]] #Balduin. This Adalulf of Flanders _may_ als o h a v e h a d an illegitimate son named Balduin (Baldzo, Bauces), who was r u l e r o f F landers as guardian of Count Arnulf II ca 864, and died in 973 . < r e f n a me="stewart"/> '''Other children previously linked on WikiTree'' ===Parents=== [[Flandre-56|Adalolf, Comte de Boulogne]], was previously shown as the f a t h e r o f [[Mer De Therouen-1|Polsur (Mer De Therouen) De Ponthieu]], bo r n 0 9 0 0 a nd [[De St Pol-1|Maud (De St Pol) St Pol,]] born 0904, Maer, N o r w a y . ''Since Adalolf was not likely born earlier than 890, the poss i b i l i ty of him siring a daughter in Norway at the age of 14 is quite im p r o b a ble. No other documentation has appeared suggesting that he had s u c h a d a u ghter. These are probalby the same person, and cannot have be e n t h e d a ughter of Adalolf. They have been delinked. == Sources == See also:* Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Families of the Pacific Nor t h w e s t, by Jim Weber, rootsweb.com === Acknowledgments === |
1 |
603 | I7206 | Flandre | Arnoul | 12 Dec 889 | 27 Mar 965 | 0 | Arnulf of Flanders (c. 890 - March 28, 965), called the Great, was the third Count of Flanders, who ruled the County of Flanders, an area that is now northwestern Belgium and southwestern Netherlands. Arnulf was the son of count Baldwin II of Flanders and Alfthryth of Wessex, daughter of Alfred the Great. Through his mother he was a descendant of the A nglo-Saxon kings of England, and through his father, a descendant of Charlemagne. Presumably Arnulf was named after Saint Arnulf of Metz, a progenitor of the Carolingian dynasty. At the death of their father in 918, Arnulf became Count of Flanders while his brother Adeloft or Adelolf succeeded to the County of Boulogne. However, in 933 Adeloft died, and Arnulf took the countship of Boulogne for himself, but later conveyed it to his nephew, Arnulf II. Arnulf I greatly expanded Flemish rule to the south, taking all or part of Artois, Ponthieu, Amiens, and Ostrevent. He exploited the conflicts between Charles the Simple and Robert I of France, and later those between Louis IV and his barons. |
1 |
604 | I7358 | Flandre | Arnulf | Dec 961 | Abt 30 Mar 987 | 0 | He was graaf van Vlaanderen from 965 until his death. His father died i n 9 6 2 . W h en his grandfather Count Arnulf I passed away, his grandson, t he y o u n g A rnulf II, was only four years of age. |
1 |
605 | I6164 | Flandre | Audacer | 810 | 864 | 0 | Lambert's Genealogia Comitum Flandrie, also dated to the early 12th cen t u r y , n ames "Audacer" as son of "Ingelramnus comitem". His birth date r a n g e i s e stimated on the basis of the estimated birth date range of his s o n . |
1 |
606 | I9709 | Flandre | Baudouin | Abt 864 | 10 Sep 918 | 0 | Baldwin II (c. 865 - 10 September 918) was the second margrave (or coun t ) o f F l a nders, ruling from 879 to 918. He was nicknamed the Bald (Calv u s ) a f t er his maternal grandfather, Emperor Charles the Bald. Baldwin II was born around 865 to Margrave Baldwin I of Flanders and Ju d i t h , d aughter of Emperor Charles the Bald.[2] The early years of Baldw i n I I ' s r ule were marked by a series of devastating Viking raids into F l a n d e rs.[3] By 883, he was forced to move north to Pagus Flandransis, w h i c h b e came the territory most closely associated with the Counts of Fl a n d e r s.[3] Baldwin constructed a series of wooden fortifications at Sai n t - O m er, Bruges, Ghent, and Kortrijk. He then seized lands that were ab a n d o n ed by royal and ecclesiastical officials.[4] Many of these same ci t a d e l s later formed castellanies which housed government, militia, and l o c a l c o urts.[3] [[Category: Descendants of Charlemagne]] [[Category: 9th Century]] [[Ca t e g o r y: 10th Century]] [[Category: County of Flanders]] [[Category: Hou s e o f F l a nders]][[Category: European Royals and Aristocrats Project Nee d s B i o g raphy]] } ==Biography=='''Baudouin II "le Chauve", Comte de Flandre'''EN: Ba l d w i n I I, Count of Flanders '''BAUDOUIN''' II ''The Bald'', Count/Marquis of Flanders, 879-918, Cou n t o f A r t ois, Count of Boulogne, 898? -918, etc, 2nd and eldest survivi n g s o n a n d heir, born about 863-865. He married in 884 '''AELFTHRYTH (o r E L S T R UDE) OF WESSEX''', daughter of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, b y E a l s w ith, daughter of Aethelred Mucil, earldorman of the Gaini. She w as b o r n a b out 870. They had two sons, Arnulf (I) [Count/Marquis of Flan der s ] a n d A dalolf (or Adolf), and two daughters, Ealhswid and Ermetrude . B A U D O UIN II, Count/Marquis of Flanders, died in 918, probably 10 Sept . H i s w i d ow, AElfthryth (or Elstrude), died 7 June 929. He and his wife w e r e b u r ied in the abbey of Saint-Pierre, Gand.Richardson, D. (2013 ) . R o y a l Ancestrym V. pp. 495. ===Parents=== * Father: Baldwin I of Flanders * Mother: Judith, dau. Charles the Bald ===Marriage===m. (888) '''�lfthryth of Wessex''', dau. Alfred the Great . < r e f >alias: �lfthryth, Elftrude, Elfrid Issue: * Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890-964) ::: m. Adela of Vermandois. * Adalulf (c. 890-933), Count of Boulogne. * Ealswid * Ermentrud ==Research Notes== ===Previously-shown children===The following children have previously b e e n a t t ached on WikiTree, but there is no evidence for the relationship , s o t h e y h ave been detached: * [[Flandres-4|Englebert]] * Adele, now merged into [[Flandre-49|Flandre-49]] ==Sources== See also:* Flandria illustrata, sive Descriptio comitatus istius per to t u m t e r rarum orbem celeberrimi, III tomis absoluta / ab Antonio Sandero [ . . . ] ] a uthor Sanderus, Antonius, 1586-1664 (viaf)51680321 publisher Col o n i a e A grippinae : sumptibus Cornelii ab Egmondt et sociorum, 1641-1644 . ( i m a g e is of Boudewijn I).[http://lib.ugent.be/viewer/archive.ugent.b e% 3 A E E B84A32-D219-11DF-9DFE-FEF978F64438#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=31&r=0&xywh=59 0 6 % 2 C 1554%2C2476%2C1642] * [[Wikipedia: Baldwin II, Count of Flanders]] |
1 |
607 | I9634 | Flandre | Hildegaert | 937 | 980 | 0 | Hildegard van Vlaanderen (born 936/937 - died. 975/980), by marriage she became countess (gravin) van Holland. Daughter of Arnulf I, graaf van Vlaanderen (885/890-965) and Adela van Vermandois (910/915-960). Hildegard van Vlaanderen married in 948 or 949 Dirk II, graaf van Hollanden West - Friesland (936/941-988). Diederik II died in 988. He was buried in the new abbey church of Egmond, in the grave in which Hildegard was buried eight years earlier. Their gospel book remained in the abbey for six centuries, then swirled around, and resurrected in Utrecht in 1805. Thanks to King Willem I, it has been in the Royal Library since 1830 |
1 |
608 | I747 | Fleming | Malcolm | 12 Jan 1494 | 10 Sep 1547 | 0 | Malcolm married Janet Stewart, illegitimate daughter of King James IV o f S c o t l and, after being granted a dispensation on 26 February 1524/5. Taken prisoner by the English at the Battle of Solway Moss and released a t a r a n s o m of 1,000 marks. |
1 |
609 | I100 | Fones | Elizabeth | 21 Jan 1610 | 1 Feb 1673 | 0 | St. Sepulchres Parish |
1 |
610 | I100 | Fones | Elizabeth | 21 Jan 1610 | 1 Feb 1673 | 0 | Mount Olivet Cemetery |
1 |
611 | I100 | Fones | Elizabeth | 21 Jan 1610 | 1 Feb 1673 | 0 | Elizabeth Fones was the immigrant ancestor to America. She was born Jan. 21, 1610 in St. Sepulchres Parish, London. She died 1673-74 at Hallett's Cove, Long Island. She married first on April 25, 1629 her ne'er-do-well, but charming cousin, Henry Winthrop. When Henry's father John Winthrop was appointed Governor by the Massachusetts Bay Company, he made arrangements for Henry to come to Massachusetts with him on the ship, Arabella, about the end of March 1630. Irresponsible Henry missed the boat and had to take the next vessel, which landed at Boston July 1, 1630. On the very next day he was drowned in a river. He was then twenty-three years old. After Henry's death Elizabeth married 2nd Robert Feake, who had come with the first fleet of 1630 and settled at Watertown; where he was one of the first and largest proprietors. Robert, a silversmith, was unfitted for the rigorous, dangerous life of a pioneer and lost his mind. He went back to England, leaving Elizabeth, her six children and his considerable property, including the Manor of Greenwich, to shift for themselves. (Lawrence Mayo, The Winthrop Family In America, Boston, 1948). In 1642 Elizabeth and Captain Dan Patrick were forced to surrender Greenwich to the Dutch. Patrick died the next year and Governor Peter Stuyvesant placed William Hallett in charge. In 1647 Elizabeth dared to do one of the most shocking acts of Puritan history. She went to the Dutch court in New Amsterdam and applied for a divorse from Robert Feake. In order to get it she had to declare herself an adulteress with William Hallett, and only her connection with the powerful Winthrop family saved her from being publicly flogged, having her ears cut off, or from execution. Elizabeth and William Hallett, who was six years younger, were married at New Amsterdam, where they were forced to flee from Greenwich. Their marriage date is uncertain. (Massachusetts Historical Society, Letters of Winthrop Family. One dated Feb. 1649, signed "Eliz.Hallett" to "brother, John Winthrop, Esq." states that they have "made a quiet end about the estate of Mr. Feke.") Governor Winthrop, Elizabeth's uncle, quardian and father-in-law referred to her as "my unregenerate niece" and Governor Stuyvesant called her "that verdombe Winthrop Woman." (Jacket cover of The Winthrop Woman, by Anya Seton, Cambridge, 1958.) Elizabeth Fones has thousands of descendants for she had children by all three of her husbands. |
1 |
612 | I45224 | Fones | Thomas | Abt 1600 | 15 Apr 1629 | 0 | Thomas ran an apothecary at the sign of the Three Fawns on Old Bailey Street. Thomas and his family lived in the cramped town house above his apothecary shop in the Old Bailey area of London. He was well educated and relatively prosperous. It was probably because he was a Puritan that he refused a knighthood to the King who had married a Roman Catholic. “Bromsgrove gentlemen fined for refusing a knighthood: The following is a list of gentlemen belonging to Bromsgrove who were fined for not taking the order of Knighthood on the coronation of Charles 1st (1626) Roger Lowe, John Crabbe, Walter Brace, Thomas Fownes – 10 pounds sterling each. Nicholas Lilley 9.6.8 pounds sterling. John Westwood and Richard Burford 12 pounds sterling each.” William H. Whitmore, "Notes on the Winthrop Family and its English Connections, viz: The Families of Forth, Clopton, Tyndale and Fones," NEHG Register, vol. 18, Apr 1864, p. 185. Milton Rubincam, "A Winthrop-Bernadotte Pedigree," NEHG Register, vol. 103, Oct 1949, p. 247: ANNE WINTHROP, b. 16 Jan. 1585/6; d. 16 May 1618. Married 25 Feb. 1604/5 THOMAS FONES, who died 15 April 1629. She was his first wife. (footenote says marriage was in Groton). |
1 |
613 | I27462 | Foote | Ebenezer | 1740 | 16 Feb 1778 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-160071 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A040522 Birth: 21 May 1740 Harwinton / Hartford / CT Death: Jun 1778 Qualifying Service Description: CAPT THEODORE WOODBRIDGE, COL HEMAN SWIFT, 1777 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 NARA, M881, COMP MIL SERV RECS, ROLL #314 Spouse: Rebecca Barker |
1 |
614 | I37426 | Forbes | William T. | 1842 | 27 Jun 1891 | 0 | It is with regret that we announced the sudden death of Wm. Forbes in o u r l a s t i ssue. He was a native of Prince Edward Island, Canada and of S c o t c h d escent. He came to Nevada 30 years ago and in 1875 settled in t h e A z u s a Valley. He was married to Susannah McCallum of his native hom e a f e w y e a rs ago. Only a short time ago the writer visited him and his e st i m a b le [home?] and while complaining he was around and delighted in c a r e s s ing the twins. He was a true friend, with a large and generous he a r t , b u t his maker called him home, thus we shall all have to part and b e n u m b e red in silent city of the dead. |
1 |
615 | I394 | Fosdick | Ezekiel | 17 Feb 1719 | 2 Jan 1786 | 0 | Ezekiel Fosdick was a double descendant of Elder William Brewster of the 1620 Mayflower voyage and Plymouth Colony, as he was a lineal descendant of two of Elder Brewster's daughters. |
1 |
616 | I45118 | Foster | Olive | Abt 1659 | 0 | Olive Foster, who was probably born (and definitely was married) in Yorkshire, died in West New Jersey Province, as her given name is shown in Quaker records at the birth of daughter Elizabeth, 9 Feb 1680. |
1 | |
617 | I4977 | Freeman | Edmund | 25 Jul 1596 | 4 Oct 1682 | 0 | He sailed with his 2nd wife Elizabeth, 4 children from his first marria g e o n t h e " Abigail" which left Plymouth, Devon, England on 4 June 1635. T h e r e w a s an outbreak of smallpox on this ship during the crossing. The f a m i l y a rrived iin Boston Harbor on 8 Oct 1635. They first settled in Sa u g u s w h ich is now called Lynn, MA. Admitted freeman at Plymouth, MA on 2 3 J a n u a ry 1637. He was the assistant to Gov. Bradford 1640-1647 and the principle found e r o f t h e t own of Sandwich, Barnstable, MA in 1637. |
1 |
618 | I21 | Freeman | John | 1622 | 28 Oct 1719 | 0 | Edmund and Bennett's son John was active in civic affairs and is freque n t l y m e ntioned in public records. He served as a soldier, first as Lieu t e n a n t, then as Captain, and later as Major and took an active part in t h e I n d i an Wars. He was a major in the expedition against Indians at Sac o n e t i n 1 677. He served as a member Council of War from 1667-76. He ser v e d a s c a ptain in the fight against Indians at Taunton in 1675. He was a m a j o r o f B arnstable Troop in 1685 and Deputy at Eastham for eight years. H e s e r v e d as a selectman for ten years starting in 1663. John was assist an t i n t h e G overnment in 1666. On 7th Dec. 1692, he was appointed to th e B e n c h o f the Court of Common Pleas. For many years he was a Deacon of t h e E a s t ham Church. |
1 |
619 | I9323 | Frisbie | Edward | Abt 1620 | 10 May 1690 | 0 | EDWARD FRISBYE (so spelled in his will), was one of the earliest settlers of the town of Branford (originally Totoket) in the colony of New Haven, where he is said to have married in 1644, and is on record as having entered his name for land December 15, 1645. No record of his birth has been found; he died in Branford May 10, 1690. He was evidently a thrifty farmer, a substantial citizen, a considerable landowner, and well-to-do, not to say wealthy, for his time. He was a Congregationalist of the early puritan type, though less narrow, apparently, and more tolerant than many of his contemporaries. In 1767, when the new charter of the united colonies (admitted) others than church members … to the rights and privileges of freemen and allowed to participate in the administration of public affairs. Edward Frisbye and his eldest son John were among the signers of the “New Plantation and Church Covenant of Brainford. |
1 |
620 | I4531 | Fuller | Edward | 4 Sep 1575 | 11 Jan 1621 | 0 | DEATH: Sometime the first winter at Plymouth, likely between January and March 1621. yDNA HAPLOGROUP: R-M269 (Y85916) Edward Fuller has been generally identified as the son of Robert and Sara (Dunkhorn) Fuller, baptized on 4 September 1575 at Redenhall, Norfolk. Thomas Morton, writing in 1637, says that Samuel Fuller (brother of Edward Fuller) was the son of a butcher. The name Matthew also occurs in this Redenhall Fuller family. The name of Edward Fuller's wife has not been discovered. In James Savage's Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England (1860-1862), Edward Fuller's wife was given as "Ann". However, there are no American or English records which give her name. I suspect James Savage may have made a simple typographical error: Mayflower passenger Edward Tilley had a wife Ann; or perhaps he was thinking of their sister Ann Fuller. Nonetheless, numerous sources published after 1860 have utilized Savage's Genealogical Dictionary, and so the identification of Ann can be found in numerous other books and online resources. Very little is known about Edward Fuller. What is known is that he, his wife, and his son Samuel came on the Mayflower in 1620 to Plymouth. An older brother, Matthew, had stayed behind, and came to America later. |
1 |
621 | I7105 | Gael | Ralph | Abt 1040 | Aft 1096 | 0 | Ralph was often named after his lordship in France. Gael and Guader rep r e s e n t two forms which evolved from pronunciation such as Wadel or Wade r . H i s l o rdship also included nearby Montfort-sur-Meu and Montabaud-de- B r e t a gne. He was probably born before 1040. He started appearing in French/Breton d o c u m e nts before 1066. One of these described him as Ralph the son of Ra l p h t h e E nglishman |
1 |
622 | I8490 | Gai | Philip | Abt 1120 | 1177 | 0 | Philip de Gai (or Gay) is the son of Stephen de Gai and probably an unn a m e d f i rst wife. Stephen is mentioned as his father in an undated char t e r i n w h ich Philip confirms a grant by his father of the chapel of Nor t h b r o ok and all the tithes to the church of St Mary of Kirklington. Philip is first mentioned in the chronicle of John of Worcester (former l y k n o w n as the work of Florence of Worcester) in 1138 in conjunction w i t h t h e s iege of Bristol castle, by King Stephen. This names Philip as a r e l a t i on (cognatum) of Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the eldest illegitima t e s o n o f H enry I, King of England. |
1 |
623 | I7368 | Galloway | Fergus | Abt 1078 | 12 May 1161 | 0 | Fergus of Galloway was King, or Lord, of Galloway from an unknown date ( p r o b a bly in the 1110s), until his death in 1161. He was the founder of G a l l o w ay, probably in the space left when the Norwegian ("Barel egs") l e d a c a m p aign of subjugation in the Irish Sea world. Fergus was almost c e r t a i nly a native Galwegian his likely power base was the area of Gallo w a y b e t ween the rivers Dee and Cree. It may have been after his marria g e t h a t F ergus began calling himself rex Galwitensium ("King of Gallowa y " ) . H o wever, while his possible father-in-law lived, Fergus, like King D a v i d I o f S cotland), seems to have remained a faithful "vassal" to Henr y . |
1 |
624 | I7910 | Galloway | Roland | Abt 1164 | 19 Dec 1200 | 0 | Known in his youth as Lachlan, his preference in adulthood for being kn o w n a s R o land, the Norman-French equivalent of Lachlan , symbolizes the s p r e a d o f foreign influences into Galloway which followed tthe overthrow i n 1 1 6 0 o f h is grandfather, Fergus of Galloway. Military conquest by Mal co l m I V h a d replaced loose Scottish overlordship with rigorous supervis i o n ; r o yal officials were established in territories bordering Galloway , a n d R o l and's father, and his uncle, Gilbert, between whom Galloway ha d b e e n d i vided, were encouraged to settle colonists to meet new obligat io n s d u e t o the crown. This regime held until 1174, when King William t h e L i o n w as captured during his invasioion of England in support of Hen r y I I ' s r ebellious eldest son. Uhtred and Gilbert, who had served in Wi l l i a m 's army, seized this opportunity to throw off Scottish overlordshi p a n d , h a ving returned to Galloway, they attacked William's officers an d a p p e a led to their kinsman, Henry II of England. Revolt turned into ci vi l w a r a s r ivalries between the brothers surfaced, and in September 11 7 4 G i l b ert murdered Uhtred. An English embassy negotiated terms, but, d e s p i t e an offer of substantial tribute, when he learned of his kinsman' s m u r d e r Henry II refused to make terms with Gilbert, and in 1175 sent t h e n o w - freed King William to subdue him. Supported by the Scots and by U h t r e d 's friends, Roland regained control of eastern Galloway, possibly a s e a r l y a s October 1176, when his uncle submitted to Henry II. Despite h i s c o n t inued open hostility to the Scots, Gilbert thereafter retained p o s s e s sion of western Galloway under English protection. |
1 |
625 | I45622 | Gardner | Hope | Abt 1690 | 0 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S48@ PAGE "Massachusetts, Births and Christenings, 1639-1915", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD : 15 January 2020), Hope Gardner in entry for Peter Coffin, 1729. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VQDZ-GQD |
1 | |
626 | I45617 | Gardner | Joseph | 23 Oct 1651 | 19 Aug 1732 | 0 | Bunker Genealogy by E.C. Moran, Jr. |
1 |
627 | I2652 | Gardner | Thomas | 4 Mar 1592 | 29 Dec 1674 | 0 | Harmony Grove Cemetery |
1 |
628 | I2652 | Gardner | Thomas | 4 Mar 1592 | 29 Dec 1674 | 0 | "Some New England Quaker Families"; James E. Bellarts 1989. He was overseer of first Cape Ann Plantation, innkeeper. He emigrated in 1624 on the "Zouch Phenix", Cape Ann, commissioned by the Dorchester Company with John Balch. On 17 May 1637 Made a freeman. He lived in 1641 at Essex St., Salem. Will on 29 Mar 1674/75. Buried long before Harmony Grove Cemetery was founded (1840), the source below states that he is buried on "Mr. Gardner's Hill", which according to a 1692 map of Salem is along "Gardner's Brook" which is the same location as Harmony Grove Cemetery today. |
1 |
629 | I27711 | Gates | Israel N. | 25 Jan 1727 | 31 Aug 1807 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-164652 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Civil Service / Patriotic Service / Private DAR #: A043476 Birth: abt 1726 / / MA Death: 31 Aug 1807 Conway / Hampshire / MA Qualifying Service Description: PVT, CAPTs DICKINSON, CHILDS, DINSMORE, FRENCH, COLs WOODBRIDGE, LEONARD, FIELDS, WELLS MEM COMM OF CORRES, INSPECT, & SAFETY FENCE VIEWER, SURVEYOR OF HIGHWAYS & SELECTMAN Additional References: Grave Registry form. National Society Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) DAR Patriot Index, Vol I, pg 262 Vital Records of Conway, MA, pg 234 Tombstone Inscriptions, Conway, MA pg 31 MA SOLS & SAILS, Volume 6, pg 314 MADAR, TOWN OFFICIALS 1775-1783, GRC S 1, Volume 2, pg 218, 219, 220, 222 |
1 |
630 | I2732 | Gerard | John Thomas | 4 Oct 1585 | Aft 17 Jun 1641 | 0 | Copies of documents that proved the lineage of Thomas Gerard are found in the Beitzel History of the "Gerard and Cheseldine Families. John Gerard, son of Gentleman Thomas Gerard, the base born son of William Gerard and our direct line was the son of a second marriage.This John and his wife Isabel were the parents of our Dr. Thomas Gerard who was entitled Gentleman. John inherited the property at Newhall in Makersfield. He married Isabel on 16 Feb 1607/8 and an existing marriage record is in existance, however we do not know who the first wife could have been. The date of the record signing was 21 Sept 1629. This record shows that Newhall will become the first born son's property upon the death of Thomas. So it was that Johni nherited Newhall. John and Isabel had five sons. Dr. Thomas Gerard and a couple of his brothers came to America. |
1 |
631 | I5289 | Gerard | Thomas | 30 Jul 1540 | 11 Jan 1628 | 0 | It is this Thomas Gerard who inherited Newhall from his uncle Thomas.Th e r e a r e r ecords in Lancashire of a lawsuit about the possession of New h a l l . T he heirs of Sir Thomas wanted Newhall, but the courts upheld the d e c i s i on of Sir Thomas to leave Newhall to his brother William's son Tho m a s . T h ere are so many Thomases, Williams, and Peters in the Gerard Fam i l y t h a t it is difficult to clearly define each. The records show, that S i r T h o m as Gerard promised his brother William to give to his illigitam a t e s o n T homas the property called Newhall. It must have been a prize w o r t h h a ving for their were lengthy court records. Many witnesses to th e t r a n s ference of Newhall to young Thomas appeared in favor of young Th om a s . T h e court ruled in favor of young Thomas who was not very old at t h e t i m e . Gentleman Thomas Gerard, according to Faris, was married twice , t h e f i r st to Grace and then to Jaine. Their last names are unknown. J a i n e w a s living when Gentleman Thomas died in 1628/29. He had made h i s h o m e a t NewHall. In his will he named his son John and his wife. He m a d e t h e r equest that he be buried in Winwick Church graveyard. Hisson b e c a m e G entleman John Gerard of Newhall and he resided inWarington in 1 6 4 7 . H e h ad married in 1607/8 to Isabel. Isabel was named in the marr i a g e s e ttlement made with her father 21 Sep 1620. Other sources name h e r a s I s a bel of Winwick. Thomas had five sons, but no determination of t h e m o t h ers of each child has been made. |
1 |
632 | I15 | Gerard | Thomas | Bef 10 Dec 1608 | 15 Dec 1673 | 0 | Arrived on the ship The Arc and The Dove with Governor Leonard Calvert and others. Lord of the Manor, Patent Holder and Local Conservator of the Peace of St. Clement's Hundred in St. Mary's County, Member of Lord Baltimore's Council , Justice of the Provincial Court, Member of the Ass e m b l y , Physician, and Planter. Thomas Gerard , surgeon, came from a well connected Roman Catholic family that was traced back to the time of the General Survey of the Kingdom 1078. His relative, Sir Thomas Gerard, Lord Baron of Byrne , was one of those who financed Cecilius Calvert, Lord Baltimore, proprietor of the Maryland colony. Dr. Gerard's first wife, Susanna was the daughter of Justinian Snow, one of the founders of Maryland and Lord Baltimore's factor. He had been chosen by the Lord Baltimore to aid in the development of the "Manor" System in Maryland. On 9/19/1650, Thomas requested land for transporting children Justinian, Susan, Frances, Temperance, Elizabeth & wife Susannah to America. On 11/30/1664, Thomas Gerard requested land for transporting Thomas Gerard, John Gerard & Mary Gerard. They had stayed in England until they completed schooling, then joined the rest of the family in America. |
1 |
633 | I683 | Gerard Of Kingsley | Peter | 1335 | 1380 | 0 | http://cybergata.com/roots/270.htm Ormerod's History of Cheshire, Ge r a r d P e digree, Vol. II, p. 131, knight, son and heir, inquisition took p l a c e a f ter he died |
1 |
634 | I45334 | Gerrits Van Loon | Janneken | 1635 | 1685 | 0 | Wrong Husband Jan Hansen Van Nostrand GLX8-34H can't possibly be Janneken's husband. He is 85 years older than she is. |
1 |
635 | I7070 | Giffard | Gilbert | Abt 1065 | Bef 1129 | 0 | Gilbert Giffard was a tenant of Glastonbury manor in Winterbourne Monkt o n i n W i l tshire, and held a position as a marshal to the King. As expla i n ed b y S t acy, it included "a 3 1/2-hide subtenancy over which the abbo t ' s l o r dship had b e en recognized in 1086 and was to be again in 1173 a n d t h e r eafter, but which was absent from the carta of 1166". |
1 |
636 | I45532 | Gillis Mandeville | Tryntje | 1652 | 15 Sep 1696 | 0 | Came to America on ship "Faith" ("De Trow") or the ship Moesman (the Market Gardener), 1659 with her parents. The passenger list of the Moesman for Apr 1659 show Gillis Mandeville as a passenger. (Vandiver 23). |
1 |
637 | I45643 | Godfrey | Elizabeth | Bef 5 Aug 1627 | Abt 1649 | 0 | Two Godfrey wives of George Bunker Elizabeth Godfrey was the first wife of George Bunker, mother of Elizabeth and William, born in England |
1 |
638 | I45642 | Godfrey | Jane | Abt 1625 | 31 Oct 1662 | 0 | Founders Burial Ground |
1 |
639 | I45642 | Godfrey | Jane | Abt 1625 | 31 Oct 1662 | 0 | Jane Elizabeth Godfrey Swain 16 Mar 1624 Jane Godfrey was the daughter of Thomas Godfrey and Elizabeth Mead. Jane Elizabeth Swain's grave is not marked, their are no existing grave-markers at the Founders Burial Ground, it is an empty meadow. An engraved boulder and Two memorials at the cemetery entrance are the only markers. |
1 |
640 | I7195 | Godgifu | Godiva | Abt 975 | 10 Sep 1067 | 0 | Lady Godiva is a legitimate historical figure, born in 990 A.D. It is u n k n o w n when she died, although it was assumed to be between 1066 and 10 8 6 . T h e r eal Godiva was known for being generous to the church. In the eleventh century, Lady Godiva reportedly rode a horse completely n a k e d t h rough the streets of Coventry on Market Day. According to legend , h e r h u s band, Leofric, demanded an oppressive tax from Coventry citize ns . L a d y G odiva, aiming to help the citizens, pleaded for him to stop. L e o f r i c supposedly said, “You will have to ride naked through Coventry b e f o r e I c hange my ways.” Before beginning this quest to help Coventry, Godiva told everyone to s t a y i n t h eir homes to preserve her modesty. She then rode through the s t r e e t s, her long hair draped so that it covered almost her whole body, a l l o w i ng only her legs and eyes to remain visible. However, one man, now k n o w n a s P eeping Tom, disobeyed her instructions and couldn’t help looki n g o u t a t G odiva riding through Coventry on the horse. Upon doing so, t h e l e g e nd goes, he was instantly blinded. |
1 |
641 | I37452 | Goff | William | 1761 | Aft 1855 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-167367 State of Service: NC Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A046084 Birth: 1761 / Duplin / NC Death: aft 1837 / Madison / FL Qualifying Service Description: MILITIA, WILMINGTON DISTRICT Revolutionary War service as a Lieut., in Capt William Rutledge's company raised for Duplin County (NC) Whig militia Additional References: NC REV WAR PAY VOUCHERS #446, #5501, ROLL #S.115.91 Pension #R4089 Spouse: Sabra Mathis Children: James; Ann; Susannah; Elizabeth; Lewis; He first entered as a volunteer under Captain Lanier of North Carolina who marched him to Fayetteville in said state, then they were met by General Butler who marched them to Atlanta in the State of Georgia. There they met with Gen. Green who marched them to Stone Point in the State of South Carolina at which place they had a battle with the British. After this battle he amongst others were discharged by General Green and returned to North Carolina having been in the service five months and about fifteen days. |
1 |
642 | I7272 | Gometz | Bertrade | 1001 | 1051 | 0 | The earliest known Guillaume de Gometz would appear to be the Guillaume d e G o m e t z who appears for the first time on 20 May 1043 witnessing a cha rt e r o f K i ng Henri I of France ["Signum Guilelmi Comitis de Goms" RHF 1 1 : 5 7 8 ( # 12)]. He also appears as a witness for Philippe I on 29 May 10 6 7 [ " W i llelmus de Gomethiaco" Rec. actes Philippe I, 94 (#30)], again i n 1 0 6 7 [ " Guillelmus Giometensis castri" Rec. actes Philippe II, 98 (#32 )] , a n d o n 2 N ovember 1071 ["Willelmi de Gumetho" Rec. actes Philippe I , 1 6 0 ( # 6 0)]. The earliest known Guillaume de Gometz would appear to be the Guillaume d e G o m e t z who appears for the first time on 20 May 1043 witnessing a cha rt e r o f K i ng Henri I of France ["Signum Guilelmi Comitis de Goms" RHF 1 1 : 5 7 8 ( # 12)]. He also appears as a witness for Philippe I on 29 May 10 6 7 [ " W i llelmus de Gomethiaco" Rec. actes Philippe I, 94 (#30)], again i n 1 0 6 7 [ " Guillelmus Giometensis castri" Rec. actes Philippe II, 98 (#32 )] , a n d o n 2 N ovember 1071 ["Willelmi de Gumetho" Rec. actes Philippe I , 1 6 0 ( # 6 0)]. |
1 |
643 | I9183 | Goodrich | David | 12 Feb 1719 | 17 Jun 1777 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-167779 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Soldier Birth: 1720 Death: 1777 Additional References: Rev War Graves Register. Clovis H. Brakebill, compiler. 672pp. SAR. 1993 SAR Rev War Graves Register CD. Progeny Publishing Co: Buffalo, NY. 1998 |
1 |
644 | I12706 | Gorham | John | Bef 28 Jan 1621 | Feb 1676 | 0 | The July 1915 issue of the New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Vol. LXIX Whole Number 275) contains (between pages 242 and 243) illustrations showing two sides of a leaf that probably at one time formed part of a Bible belonging to Capt. John Gorham who married Desire Howland. Pages 242-243 describe the basis for this conclusion and go on to quote from the remnant, including the names and dates of birth of John and Desire Gorham's children. He immigrated in June 1635 perhaps on the PHILIP. Col. John Gorham, recorded in his "Wast Book" that John Gorham went home to England about this time but returned soon to his family. They moved from Marshfield to Yarmouth in 1652 and then; the Wast Book states, they moved to Barnstable to begin a township called Barnstable. We know that Gorham did have a grist mill and a tannery there. He was surveyor of highways in 1654 In Oct. 1675 Capt. John Gorham was in command of a Company of English and Indians at Swamp Naraganset (in King Philips War ) where in Feb.1676 he was mortally wounded when his powder horn was hit and split against his side, driving pieces of horn and powder into his body. He died at Swansey on Feb. 5, 1676. |
1 |
645 | I12630 | Gorham | Ralph | 1575 | 5 Apr 1642 | 0 | He came to New England before 1637. Genealogy-Boston and Eastern Massacusetts; William R.Cutter; 1908: Page 586. !Plymouth 1637. of Benefield Quendle, North Hamptonship - to Duxbury, MA 1637; "This family has a line to the De Girrams of La Tanniere near Gorram, in Maine, on the borders of Brittany, where they lived in a castle. Members of the family came to England with William the Conqueror. Many of the name in England became men of learning, wealth and influence. Ralph Gorham and his father James, resided at Benefield. Ralph was born 1575 and came to New England with his family being in Plymouth 1637. |
1 |
646 | I45597 | Gorham | Shubael | 21 Oct 1667 | 7 Aug 1750 | 0 | JOHN HOWLAND OF MAYFLOWER, Vol. 1, by White, 1990, pg. 31: Col John Gorham's "Wast Book" states that, when Shubael and his family and friends sailed to Nantucket for his marriage to Puella Hussey, the members of the wedding party were taken prisoner by a French shallop from Port Royal and were stripped of all of their valuables. After his marriage, Shubael moved to South Sea in Barnstable County and built a tavern near Hyannis Port. JOHN HOWLAND OF MAYFLOWER, Vol. 1, by Wh JOHN HOWLAND OF MAYFLOWER, Vol. 1, by White, 1990, pg. 31: Col John Gorham's "Wast Book" states that, when Shubael and his family and friends sailed to Nantucket for his marriage to Puella Hussey, the members of the wedding party were taken priso ner by a French shallop from Port Royal and were stripped of all of their valuables. After his marriage, Shubael moved to South Sea in Barnstable County and built a tavern near Hyannis Port. Caleb was a mariner and master of the s Caleb was a mariner and master of the sloop, "Mayflower." |
1 |
647 | I7500 | Graham | Patrick | Abt 1256 | 28 Apr 1296 | 0 | Sir Patrick de Graham was one of the Scottish knights who in 1296 made t h e d i s a strous attempt to relieve the castle of Dunbar, held for King Jo h n B a l i ol against the English by the famous Countess, Black Agnes . The h i s t o r ian Hemingford tells how Sir Patrick, one of the noblest and wises t o f t h e S c ottish barons, disdained to ask for quarter, and fell in suc h g a l l a nt fashion as to extort the admiration of the English themselves . Sir Patrick acquired the lands of Kincardine in Perthshire from his bro t h e r - in-law Malise, 5th Earl of Strathearn. Patrick was sent to negotiate the marriage of Prince Alexander of Scotl a n d a n d M argaret of Flanders in 1281. He sat in Parliament in 1284 an d a c k n o w ledged Margaret, Maid of Norway as heiress to the throne. He swore f e a l t y t o Edward I of England in 1292, and was summoned to attend Edward i n t o F r a nce in 1294. He was killed fighting against the English. |
1 |
648 | I8488 | Grandmesnil | Petronilla | Abt 1135 | 1 Apr 1212 | 0 | She was the last representative of the great Norman aristocratic house o f G r a n d mesnil. Her father's name is known only from a grant by her to t he a b b e y o f St Evroult in his memory. She was given in marriage by Henry II to Robert de Breteuil. The marri a g e t o o k place by 1159. They first lived in Normandy, where Robert had c h a r g e o f his father's honor of Breteuil. |
1 |
649 | I9601 | Grapfield | Poppa | 800 | Abt 839 | 0 | "Poppo I (d. 839-841) was a Frankish count in the Grapfeld (Grabfeld) from 819-839. Probably a descendant of the Robertian count Cancor, he became the ancestor of the Frankish House of Babenberg (Popponids). Poppo was probably father (or grandfather) of Henry of Franconia, Duke Poppo (II) of Thuringia and Egino. A notable descendant of Poppo's is Queen Elizabeth II. |
1 |
650 | I45151 | Green | Elizabeth | 15 Jun 1669 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Ipswich St Nicholas | 1 |
651 | I8527 | Gregor | Jennet | 29 Mar 1762 | 26 Jan 1822 | 0 | Jennet came to P.E.I. a short time after the McCallums (approx. 1772) with her family. Her father, Peter Gregor, bought the farm next to Duncan McCallum after Janet and Duncan got married. Jennet died of measles |
1 |
652 | I6220 | Gregson | Thomas | 14 Jul 1611 | Jan 1646 | 0 | In the spring of 1637 a group of London merchants formed a company to e s t a b l ish a successful commercial settlement in the New World. On 26 Jun e o f t h a t y ear, Mr. Thomas Gregson was part of a group that arrived in B o st o n l o oking for a site to settle. Reportedly they were given enticing o f f e r s w hile in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, but on 30 March 1638 the c o m p a n y sailed from Boston and settled at Quinnipiac, site of the presen t c i t y o f N ew Haven, Connecticut. They purchased land from the Indians. Thomas Gregson served in a number of positions during the period that h e r e s i d ed in New Haven, including treasurer, deputy to the General Cour t [ l e g i slature], magistrate, and as commissioner for the New Haven Colo ny t o a t t e nd a meeting of the v a a r ious colonies held in Boston in S ept em b e r 1 643. The Articles of Confederation adopted at that meeting, s om e t i m es called the New England Confederation, created the United Colon i e s o f N e w England. This is considered to be the first "constitution" c r e a t e d in the New World and some of its features were adopted in writin g t h e C o n stitution of the United States. An attempt by the merchants to establish a trading post at the mouth of t h e D e l a ware River resulted in major losses and almost impoverished the N e w H a v e n Colony. In an attempt to recoup these losses, a new venture wa s p r o p o sed to ship goods directly to England. A ship apparently was bui lt i n N e w H a ven, but the name is unknown and it has been called "The Gr eat S h i p p e." Even though the weather was not favorable for sailing, the t ow n s p e ople were impatient for it to sail for England and it left in Jan u a r y 1 6 45/6. It was never heard from again, with Thomas Gregson, as the a g e n t f o r the New Haven Colony, and the others on board being lost at se a . I n 1 8 5 8, some 212 years later, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow commemorat e d t h i s t ragedy with his poem, "The Phantom Ship." |
1 |
653 | I1278 | Grey | Henry | Abt 1176 | 16 Jul 1219 | 0 | "In the 6th year of King Richard I, that monarch conferred the manor of Thurrock, co. Essex (afterwards called Thurrock Grey), upon Henry de Grey, which grant was confirmed by King John, who vouchsafed, by special charter, to permit the said Henry de Grey to hunt the hare and fox in any land belonging to the crown, save the king's own demesne-parks. In the 1st Henry III, he had also a grant of the manor of Grimston, co. Nottingham, and having afterwards m. Isolda, niece and heiress of Robert Bardolf, shared in the inheritance of his lands. |
1 |
654 | I8448 | Groom | Joseph | 3 Jan 1748 | 15 Aug 1832 | 0 | Signed Consackie Declaration of Independence SAR Patriot #: P-171223 State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Sergeant DAR #: A048863 Qualifying Service Description: Private, Captains Waldron, Hooghtaling, Colonel Anthony Van Bergen. 11TH Regement, Albany County Militia |
1 |
655 | I9088 | Grubb | John | 20 Apr 1652 | 10 Mar 1708 | 0 | Inscription In 1677, John Grubb (1652-1708) came from Stoke Climsland, C o r n w a ll and settled on the Delaware River at "Grubb's Landing." He was o n e o f t h e f irst Englishmen in Delaware. John and his wife Francis raise d n i n e c h ildren. John Grubb (1652 -1708) was a two-term member of the Pennsylvania Provi n c i a l A ssembly and was one of the original settlers in a portion of Bra n d y w i ne Hundred that became Claymont, Delaware. He founded a large tann e r y t h a t continued in operation for over 100 years at what became known a s G r u b b 's Landing. He was also one of the 150 signers of the Concession s a n d A g r eements for Province of West Jersey. Born in Stoke Climsland, Cornwall, he was the 4th son of Henry Grubb Jr . . H e n r y was an early Quaker who was imprisoned several times for his b e l i e f s. With no chance of being established in his home village, John a n d h i s o l der brother Henry emigrated to the West Jersey colony in 1677 o n t h e K e n t, the first ship of settlers organized by William Penn. While h e a r r i v ed without the funds required to buy his own land, by 1682, he e ar n e d e n ough money to acquire a one-third interest in a 600-acre (2.4 k m 2 ) t r a ct on Naaman's Creek in Brandywine Hundred where he built his ta n n e r y . John was one of the early settlers who greeted William Penn in 1 6 8 2 w h e n he arrived in New Castle before he founded Philadelphia. Ultim a t e l y P enn and Grub b c la sh ed over property they jointly owned and w e r e u n a ble to settle the dispute in their lifetimes. |
1 |
656 | I4061 | Grundy | Alice | Abt 1545 | 17 Feb 1597 | 0 | Alice had a brother John Grundy, who |
1 |
657 | I6351 | Grundy | John | 1500 | 1551 | 0 | John Grundy was born in 1500 in Lancashire, England. John's children were: James Grundy (1530 - 1610) Margaret (Grundy) Parker (~1530 - 1606) John Grundy (~1540 - 1608) Alice (Grundy) Leete (~1545 - >1598). |
1 |
658 | I5938 | Gryg Ap Rhys | Rhys | Abt 1150 | 1234 | 0 | His epithet "Gryg," means "the Hoarse. " He became brenin of Cantref M a w r i n 1 2 04. He was of the tribe of Rhys ap Tewdwr. His epithet "Gryg," means "the Hoarse. " He became brenin of Cantre f Mawr in 1204. He was of the tribe of Rhys ap Tewdwr. |
1 |
659 | I7193 | Guerres | Hawise | Abt 1120 | 1219 | 0 | Hawise (various spellings) is named as the wife of William fitz Rober t o f L i t t l e Easton in various charters made during their lifetime. |
1 |
660 | I7122 | Gunnarsson | Thored | 938 | 992 | 0 | Thored was a 10th century ealdorman of York, ruler of the southern half o f t h e o l d K ingdom of Northumbria on behalf of the king of England. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Thored, son of Gunner" ravaged W e s t m o reland in 966. There are speculations that "Thored was Earl of th e p a r t o f N orthumbria which was previously called Deira, maybe Yorkshir e, t h e t e r ritory being different from Northumbria. |
1 |
661 | I25056 | Haden | Joseph | Abt 1752 | 26 Oct 1820 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-172097 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Captain DAR #: A048979 Birth: abt 1740 / Goochland / VA Death: bef 27 Nov 1820 / Fluvanna / VA Qualifying Service Description: NSDAR cites CAPT, ALBEMARLE CO & FLUVANNA CO MILITIA Additional References: NSDAR cites GWATHMEY, HIST REG OF VA IN THE REV, pg 336 PALMER & MCRAE, CAL OF VA STATE PAPERS, Vol 5, pg 553-554 Spouse: Mary Patross/Peatross; |
1 |
662 | I8856 | Haines | Sufferance S. | 3 Apr 1614 | 22 Jul 1682 | 0 | Sufferance has long been the subject of controversy among genealogists. T h e y d o n 't even agree on her name, variously giving it as Sufferance (as s h o w n h e re), Suffrany, Sufferana, and similar variations. |
1 |
663 | I45217 | Hallett | Joseph | 14 Aug 1704 | 14 Dec 1731 | 0 | Apparently died the same year as his brother, Moses. |
1 |
664 | I45240 | Hallett | Lydia | Abt 1730 | 12 Feb 1812 | 0 | Blackwell Burial Ground Blackwell Burial Ground |
1 |
665 | I45238 | Hallett | Mary | 22 Oct 1687 | 26 Aug 1743 | 0 | Hallett's Cove | 1 |
666 | I45238 | Hallett | Mary | 22 Oct 1687 | 26 Aug 1743 | 0 | Blackwell Burial Ground | 1 |
667 | I6262 | Hallett | William | Oct 1648 | 18 Aug 1729 | 0 | Hallett's Burying Ground Hallett's Burying Ground |
1 |
668 | I6262 | Hallett | William | Oct 1648 | 18 Aug 1729 | 0 | Hallet's Cove | 1 |
669 | I6262 | Hallett | William | Oct 1648 | 18 Aug 1729 | 0 | In 1688, William received that portion of his father's lands which lay south of the road now forming Greenoak, Tvelling, and Main Streets, and Newtown Avenue. The road divided his land from those of his brother Samuel on the north. William served as a justice of the peace, and was captain of one of the foot companies. He died on 18 Aug 1729 in Hallet's Cove at the age of 81. |
1 |
670 | I22095 | Halyburton | Janet | 19 Apr 1503 | 23 Mar 1543 | 0 | Janet inherited the title Baroness Ruthven in her own right in 1505 |
1 |
671 | I6955 | Hamilton | James | 1415 | 6 Nov 1479 | 0 | In early 1474, James married Mary Stewart, Princess of Scotland. He wa s a l m o s t forty years her senior. They received a papal dispensation on 2 6 A p r i l 1 476 thus legitimising the two children already born to them. T og e t h e r James and Mary had three children. James Hamilton was intimately connected with the powerful House of Doug l a s - - h i s mother was a daughter of the Douglas Lord of Dalkeith, and a l s o t h r ough his marriage in 1439/1440 with Lady Euphemia GrahamVyoung w i d o w o f A rchibald Douglas, 5th Earl of Douglas and daughter of Euphemia S t e w a r t, Countess of Strathearn. He was stepfather to the young 6th Earl o f D o u g l as, his brother David, both who would be murdered in November 14 40 a t t h e ' B lack Dinner' at Edinburgh Castle in the presence of James I I. H e w a s a l so the stepfather of Margaret Douglas, the "Fair Maid of Ga llo wa y . " S he was to marry cousins William Douglas, 8th Earl of Douglas , a n d J a m es Douglas, 9th Earl of Douglas. |
1 |
672 | I553 | Hamilton | James | 25 Apr 1475 | 26 Mar 1529 | 0 | James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Arran and 2nd Lord Hamilton (c. 1475 - 1529 ) w a s a S c o ttish nobleman, naval commander and first cousin of James IV o f S c o t l and. He was the eldest of two sons of James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton, and h i s w i f e , Mary Stewart, Countess of Arran. Mary was a daughter of King J a m e s I I o f Scotland and his Queen consort Mary of Guelders, and a siste r o f K i n g J ames III of Scotland. Hamilton succeeded to his father's lordship, inheriting his lands when h i s f a t h er died in 1479. In 1489 his first cousin King James IV made him S h e r i f f of Lanark, a position his father had previously held,[1] and a S c o t t i sh Privy Counsellor. By 28 April 1490 he was married to Elizabeth H o m e , d a ughter of Alexander Home, 2nd Lord Home. Between April and August 1502, Hamilton commanded a naval fleet sent to h e l p K i n g Hans of Denmark, James IV's uncle, defeat a Swedish rebellion. H e n e g o t iated James's marriage to Margaret Tudor and was present at the w e d d i n g on 8 August 1503. On the same day Lord Hamilton was created Earl o f A r r a n , with the formal grant three days later, "for his nearness of b lo o d " a n d his services at the time of the marriage. He was appointed Li e u t e n ant General of Scotland and in May 1504 commanded a naval expediti o n t o s u p press an uprising in the Western Isles. In September 1507, James IV sent Hamilton as his ambassador on a diplom a t i c m i ssion to the court of Louis XII of France. When returning in ear l y 1 5 0 8 , he was briefly detained in the Kingdom of England by Henry VII , w h o w a s s uspicious of a renewal of the Auld Alliance between Scotland a n d F r a n ce. |
1 |
673 | I25031 | Hamner | William | 1730 | 15 Dec 1788 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-174220 State of Service: VA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service / Ensign DAR #: A050702 Birth: 1730 / Hanover / VA Death: bef Jul 1788 / Albemarle / VA Qualifying Service Description: Provided supplies such as Bacon 325 Pounds and Rye 20 Bushels 4th Compnay, 1st Battalion, 47th Regiment, Virginia Line NSDAR cites: FURNISHED SUPPLIES Additional References: "VA Publick Claims, Albemarle" by Abercrombie, Janice L. & Slatten, Richard, pg 39-40 DAR Lineage Book Vol 82, pg 92 DAR Patriot Index 1966, pg 299 ENS PS VA, Albermarkel, VA Public Claims, Patriot Certificate 104, Abercrombie & Slatton VA Rev Public Claims vol 1, pg 20, 26 Spouse: Mary Elizabeth Henley Children: Turner; Mary/Molly; Susan; Elizabeth; Rebecca; Richardson; Henley; |
1 |
674 | I35 | Harrison | Edward Charles | 18 Feb 1825 | 6 Jan 1862 | 0 | Edward Harrison was a native of old Virginia, a graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and for many years was in the service of the navy. Captain Edward Harrison commanded a number of merchant and war vessels prior to the Mexican war and was wounded during the Mexican War, and after being retired from active duty in the navy, was appointed to the consular service at Sydney, Australia. He died at Port Chalmers, New Zealand. |
1 |
675 | I33 | Harrison | Edward Charles | 7 Oct 1855 | 25 Dec 1923 | 0 | A highly honored lawyer of San Francisco, in a tribute in the courtroom of Superior Judge Frank H. Dunne, Edward Charles was described as "one of the most honored and respected members of this bar for a great many years. He was one whom we younger members of the profession looked up to as a gentleman of the older school, one of those tender, generous, lovable characters, whose word everywhere might be taken and accepted by the court and bar and be relied upon. He has been one of the leading practitioners in the Probate Court of this state for several decades; he was an expert in the formulating of court decrees and findings relative to probate of estates." Two of his sons and one daughter followed in his footsteps becoming distinguished members of the legal profession. |
1 |
676 | I10844 | Harrison | John | 1530 | 26 Mar 1595 | 0 | This is from Ancestry.com, was posted anonymously. The source is being sought. The Harrisons are said to have come into England with the Norse Viking Sea Kings, who finally under Canute (1016-1035) conquered and possessed the whole of the country. They were among the "free Danes" and were the last to withstand William the Conquerer, himself of Norse Viking origin. Thus they were in England a generation or more before the time of the Battle of Hastings, Oct 14, 1066, and the period of the Doomesday Book (1085-1086), from which many old English families date their origin. Northumberland, the Danish section of England, is said to be filled with Harrisons now, and the name there is variously spelled, sometimes without an H. The name being of Danish patronymic origin. Arysen, Aertzen, which is common to this day in Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. (Richmond, Virginia Standard, No. 41, June 12, 1880). That Daniel and Robert were favorite early given names among the Harrisons of Northumberland is shown by a record of the baptism of Daniell, son of Robert Harrison in the parish of Berwick-on-Tweed, under date of December 26, 1610. Northumberland, is the northernmost shire of England. To the east it borders on the North Sea, and to the north on the River Tweed, which separates it from Scotland. Berwick, Northumberland is the farthest north of any city of England. From the old kingdom of the north, the Harrisons drifted south among the various other shires and some moved into Scotland. Directly South of Northumberland, and bordering also on the North Sea, lies the county of Durham. The county was one of the Counties Palatine; the other two being Lancashire and Cheshire. The city of Durham is the seat of the catherdral of St. Cuthbert, begun in 1095, the view of which from the river is said be surpassed by no other English cathedral. |
1 |
677 | I6 | Harrison | Lucy Duncan | 2 Jun 1926 | 22 Jan 2021 | 0 | Lucy grew up in San Francisco, in the area called Pacific Heights, which is above the Marina and fairly near the Presidio. She went to school at the Burke school for girls at Sea Cliff. She liked sports a lot, and her school had a place where she could play hockey, basketball and baseball. Her life revolved around that area mostly. She had piano lessons and dance lessons. She remembers many times with the opera and Golden Gate Park, theater, and museums. She always felt there was a lot going on in San Francisco and that it was always exciting. As a young girl, Lucy rode horses with her father. They had two quarter horses and a five gaited warm blood named "Dinner Music" of which they kept at the stables in Golden Gate Park. Lucy continued to be an avid rider throughout her entire life. Don and Lucy celebrated their anniversary every year at R Lazy S ranch in the Tetons of Wyoming. Lucy and Don always said that riding horseback in each country they visited was a different way to see different aspects of the countries they visited. She vividly remembers in 1936, when the Golden Gate bridge first opened, walking across it on opening day. She wore cowboy clothes, like a 49er. She felt it was so exciting with their big fireworks, parades, and all other festivities. Don taught Lucy both snow skiing and tennis, both sports they continued to enjoy through their later years. Lucy and Don both shared a passion for history and travel. Thru the years they have traveled to over 100 countries, sometimes taking all their children and grandchildren with them. Together they have traveled to many of the countries of Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. They traveled the Silk Route, swam in the waters of the Amazon, trekked the plains of the Antarctic, viewed the Northern Lights from the Baltic and enjoyed the surf along Polynesian islands. While Lucy and Don loved to travel, they had a special connection to Yosemite. Lucy started going there as a young child and traveled there throughout her life. Yosemite was where Don and Lucy often camped during the summers with the Allens and taught their children to ski at Badger Pass with Nick Fiori in the winters and spring. They often enjoyed hikes in the area to many of the falls and in Tawalomee Meadows. The whole family even celebrated Lucy's 70th birthday at the Wawonee Lodge in 1996. |
1 |
678 | I32 | Harrison | Maurice Edward | 1 Aug 1888 | 10 Feb 1951 | 0 | Maurice Edward Harrison, American lawyer Decorated Officer Legion of Honor. Member California Code Commission, 1929-1932; member United States Constitution Sesquicentennial Commission, 1935-1939; member Alien Enemy Hearing Board, 1942-1943. Regent University of California since 1944. Member Bar Association of San Francisco (president 1929-1930). (https://prabook.com/web/maurice_edward.harrison/1076494) Maurice E. Harrison, who is the oldest of the children born to his parents, attended the grade and high schools of San Francisco and received his more advanced intellectual training in the University of California at Berkeley, from which he was graduated with the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1908. He pursued the study of law in the same institution, and received the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence in 1910. Then he became associated with his father in the practice under the firm name of Edward C. and M. E. Harrison. When the partnership was dissolved by the death of the senior member, he formed an alliance with his brother Gregory A. Harrison, as Harrison & Harrison. This was maintained until January 1, 1925, at which time he assumed a new affiliation which was known as Dunne, Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison. In 1926, the present firm of Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison was created, with offices in the Crocker building at 620 Market Street. They specialized to a great extent in corporation law, but also conducted much civil litigation. |
1 |
679 | I2635 | Harrison | Richard | 31 Mar 1595 | 25 Oct 1653 | 0 | He came to New England, and took the oath of allegiance at New Haven 5 Aug 1644. He removed with his children to Branford, where he died 25 Oct. 1653. After the death of his parents, Richard and Margaret migrated with their children to New England, arriving in New Haven in 1640. He took the oath of allegiance at New Haven Colony in 5 Aug. 1644 Richard was among the earliest proprietors of Branford, New Haven in the 17th century, or "Totoket " as it was still called for some years, who were named in town records from 7 July 1646 (dividing up the meadows) and 16 September 1646 (constructing a 5-mile fence around the core part of the town). Totoket was part of the land bought from the Mattabesech Indians in 1638 by the first settlers of New Haven. |
1 |
680 | I9321 | Harrison | Thomas | 5 Feb 1626 | 1686 | 0 | Thomas took the oath of allegiance at New Haven on 4 April 1654, but settled at Brandford. He was an ensign in King Phillip's War, and he was elected deputy to the General Court on 10 May 1677. The earliest located record for the Harrison family in New England, is Richard Harrison, Thomas' brother, took the Oath of Allegiance 1 July 1644. Thomas's father Richard was in Branford 1 July 1646, so it is believed the family came together, settling at Branford in the New Haven Colony. |
1 |
681 | I307 | Harrison | Timothy James | 20 Jul 1789 | 10 Mar 1865 | 0 | Timothy graduated from Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA, in 1811. In June of 1813, he married Ann Robinson Maddox in Alexandria, District of Columbia. In 1829, his nomination to serve as a Naval Chaplain (Presbyterian) was approved by Congress. He served as a U.S. Naval Chaplain until 1862, when he retired from active duty. During the Civil War, Timothy Harrison lived in the District of Columbia with his daughter and son-in-law, Augusta and McPherson Barnitz. The Rev. Timothy J. Harrison died on 10 March 1865. His wife, Ann Harrison, remained on their 359-acre dairy farm in Gainesville, Virginia. The farm and family home, were severely affected by the two battles at Manassas -- the farm being immediately adjacent to the battlefield. By the law of 21 December 1861, any officer of the Navy was eligible for retirement "whose name had been borne on the Naval Register forty-five years" or who had attained the age of sixty-two.* This provision made it possible for a number of the older officers to turn over the responsibilities of their office to younger men during the critical days of the war. In the 1862 Navy Register, the following seven chaplains were listed as having been retired under this law: Charles Stewart, T. J. Harrison, George Jones, Moses Chase, J. W. Newton, John Watson, and Henry Wood. Actually, at least half of the chaplains listed as retired continued on duty during the war. |
1 |
682 | I45547 | Harvey | Thomas | May 1580 | Bef 1647 | 0 | The Blessed Virgin Mary Churchyard |
1 |
683 | I5695 | Hastings | Hugh | Abt 1115 | Bef 1166 | 0 | He appears in a Pipe Roll, 1130, where as Hugh de Hastings, he was excu s e d f r o m danegeld in Leics., Bucks., Warws. , and Middlesex on the land s o f R o b e rt de Flamville, his wife's uncle. |
1 |
684 | I27738 | Hawley | Elisha | 26 Mar 1744 | 2 Apr 1818 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-177935 State of Service: VT Qualifying Service: Lieutenant DAR #: A053635 Birth: 26 Mar 1744 Farmington / Hartford / CT Death: 02 Apr 1818 Cambridge / Franklin / VT Qualifying Service Description: Capt Benjamin Wait; Col Joab Hoisington Capt Benjamin Wait; Col Joab Hoisington's Cumberland Co. Militia, enlstd 06 Aug 1776 With Capt Ebenezer Allen, VT Militia, at Ticonderoga, Mar 1778, 15 das svc Private, Capt John Marcy's Co., VT Militia, mrchd 16 Mar 1781, 3 das svc Additional References: Grave Registry form. National Society Sons of the American Revolution (SAR) SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Goodrich. Vermont Men in the Rev War, pg 352, 795-796, 819, 825 FERNOW, DOCS REL TO THE COL HIST OF STATE OF NY, “NY IN THE REV,” VOL 15, pg 129 Spouse: (1) Azuba Russell; (2) Hannah Dean Sayles |
1 |
685 | I33749 | Hayden | William | 1743 | 24 Mar 1817 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-178113 State of Service: MD Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service / Soldier DAR #: A052596 Birth: 1743 / St Marys / MD Death: 24 Mar 1817 / Washington / KY Qualifying Service Description: Served in the St. Mary's militia and signed an Oath of Allegience in 1778 Additional References: SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Clements & Wright, MD Militia in the Revolution, pg 210 Chronicles of St Mary's, Vol 4, #7, Jul 1956, pg 44 Manuscript Revolutionary Militia List, pg 245 and 254 appears the name of William Hayedn in a return of the militia for St. Mary's County, MD 1789 Certified Data Adair, Sullivan, Putnam and Schuyler CO, MO pg 836 Spouse: (1) Susanna Buckman (2) Margaret Mattingly Children: Sarah/Sallie; John B Anna; Mary; |
1 |
686 | I5674 | Haye | Nicola | 1151 | 20 Nov 1230 | 0 | Nicola de la Haye was an extraordinary woman of her time . When her fat h e r d i e d in 1169 leaving no sons she inherited the barony of [https://e n . w i k ipedia.org/wiki/Brattleby Brattleby] and a claim to be the castell a n o f [ h t tps://enen.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Castle Lincoln Castle], a r o l e w h i ch she performed in her own right following the death of her sec o n d h u s band in 1215. On the day of his death, appointed Nicola as She r i f f o f L incolnshire with Philip Mark. Nicola was probably the first w o m a n t o p erform the role of Sheriff by appointment in 13th century Engl a n d . |
1 |
687 | I415 | Hayne | Abraham | 15 Jan 1732 | 1781 | 0 | The following paragraphs are from Margaret Haynes' "Items of Family History" written 1902; "a patriot who died of fever on a British prison ship at the beginning of the American Revolution. There is a portrait of him, as well as one of his wife Susannah, that are still in existence." |
1 |
688 | I23671 | Hayne | Arthur P. | 2 Aug 1892 | 14 Oct 1934 | 0 | Lawyer. Was aide to "the Admiral" during WWI. Mile runner champion |
1 |
689 | I43926 | Hayne | Arthur Peronneau | 12 Mar 1788 | 6 Jan 1867 | 0 | Saint Michaels Church Cemetery | 1 |
690 | I46 | Hayne | Brewton Alston | 17 Aug 1860 | 1 May 1939 | 0 | Brewton was the city attorney of Berkeley, Ca. |
1 |
691 | I9 | Hayne | John | Abt 1680 | 2 Dec 1717 | 0 | Emigrated from Shropshire, England in the year 1700, leaving the conforts of the four hundred year old manor home, for the wilds of South Carolina. |
1 |
692 | I9124 | Hayne | Margaret Perkins | 9 Feb 1888 | 13 Nov 1978 | 0 | There were many newspaper articles surrounding the death of the World War I Ace Baron Von Richtenstien (Better known as "The Red Baron"). According to the articles, Margaret had a special relationship with the Ace and he kept her picture in his cockpit while flying. She met the Baron while traveling in Europe after completion of her legal education at UC Berkeley. Margaret graduated from UC Berkeley in 1908 and received her Masters the following year. While continuing to live in Berkeley, after passing the California Bar, she opened an office next to her father's office in San Francisco. Margaret specialized in cases regarding women and children. She traveled extensively, spoke nine languages’ fluently, translated books as a vocation and wrote several books about her travels and family history. Margaret was a teacher at Technical School in Oakland (Oakland Tech). |
1 |
693 | I8707 | Hayne | Robert Young | 11 Nov 1791 | 24 Sep 1839 | 0 | Robert Young Hayne (November 10, 1791-September 24, 1839) was an American political leader. Born in St. Paul's Parish, Colleton District, South Carolina, Hayne studied law in the office of Langdon Cheves in Charleston, South Carolina, and in November 1812 was admitted to the bar there, soon obtaining a large practice. For a short time during the War of 1812 against Great Britain, he was captain in the Third South Carolina Regiment. He was a member of the lower house of the South Carolina state legislature from 1814 to 1818, serving as Speaker of the House in the later year; was attorney-general of the state from 1818 to 1822, and in 1823 was elected, as a Democrat, to the United States Senate. Hayne was considered a conspicuously ardent free-trader and an uncompromising advocate of States Rights. He opposed the protectionist tariff bill of 1824 and 1828, and consistently upheld the doctrine that slavery was a domestic institution and should be dealt with only by the individual states. In one of his speeches opposing the sending by the United States of representatives to the Panama Congress, he said, "The moment the federal government shall make the unhallowed attempt to interfere with the domestic concerns of the states, those states will consider themselves driven from the Union." In 1828, in response to the changing economic landscape in Massachusetts (there was a shift towards the manufacturing sector), Daniel Webster backed a high-tariff bill that would preserve manufacturing interest in Massachusetts. This angered Southern leaders and brought Webster into dispute with South Carolina's Robert Young Hayne, later evolving to what would be the Webster-Hayne debate. Hayne vigorously opposed the Tariff of 1832, was a member of the South Carolina Nullification Convention of November 1832, and reported the ordinance of nullification passed by that body on the November 24. After resigning from the Senate in 1832. In 1832, he was elected the 54th South Carolina Governor and served until 1834. After his term he was Mayor of Charleston, South Carolina, (1835-37) and was president of the Louisville, Cincinnati & Charleston Railroad, until his death. |
1 |
694 | I39 | Hayne | William Alston | 25 Apr 1821 | 28 Mar 1901 | 0 | In the year 1867, July 3rd, William Alston Hayne with his wife and seven sons (the first born died an infant in Charleston) arrived at San Francisco, per steamer "Sacramento". There they were met by Dr. Arthur P. Hayne, settled some years previously in San Francisco with his two children. After a few months' residence at Oakland, Ca., Col. Hayne fixed upon Santa Barbara, "El Montecito", as his future home. At the time of his death, he was buried on an open common- his, the first grave. It was through the exertions of his father that the enclosure was made a public burying ground - the company incorporated by Legislature of 1875, of which body Col. Hayne was a member. | 1 |
695 | I45528 | Hendricks | Elsje Pieters | 1626 | 22 May 1701 | 0 | Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery |
1 |
696 | I5469 | Herbert | William | 1501 | 17 Mar 1570 | 0 | William Herbert's early life was distinguished by intense ambition coupled with an equally fierce temper and hot-headed nature. Described by John Aubrey as a "mad fighting fellow", the young Herbert began his career as a gentleman servant to the earl of Worcester. However, when a mercer called Vaughan was killed by Herbert, after an affray between some Welshmen and the watchmen for unknown reasons in Bristol, he fled to France. | 1 |
697 | I7174 | Hesdin | Matilda | Abt 1065 | Aft 1133 | 0 | Matilda is named by Keats-Rohan as a daughter of Arnulf I de Hesdin. &l t r e f & gt K. S. B. Keats-Rohan. ''Domesday Descendants: A Prosopography o f P e r s o ns Occurring in English Documewnts 1066-1166. II Pipe Rolls to C a r t a e B aronum. Woodbridge, Suffo l k: Boydell Press, 2002. Page 391. & l t / r e f> Matilda (or Maud) is named by Richardson as a daughter of Ernulf and Em m e l i n e in his discussion of her husband Patrick de Chaoureces. |
1 |
698 | I45202 | Hicks | Elizabeth | 1699 | Abt 1765 | 0 | (Research):from yearSOUR: SOUR @S111@ PAGE "New York, Probate Records, 1629-1971," images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?cc=1920234&wc=Q758-4W5%3A213306101%2C226625101 : 28 May 2014), New York > Wills 1767-1769 vol 26 > image 93 of 377; county courthouses, New York. _LINK https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore NOTE https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G995-SX59?view=explore |
1 |
699 | I8823 | Hicks | Isaac | 1678 | 1745 | 0 | Isaac Hicks, like his father, was a prominent man in public affairs. He was judge of Queens county, Long Island, for the years 1730-1738, and a member of the colonial assembly of New York from that county, 1716 to1739. |
1 |
700 | I23446 | Hicks | John | 25 Oct 1607 | Abt 14 Jun 1672 | 0 | John Hicks came to New England soon after he married Herodias Long in England. He first settled in Weymouth, Massachusetts where he was granted land in 1637. Thence they removed to Newport, Rhode Island where he was one of those admitted an inhabitant since 1March 1638, and on 14 September 1640 he was made a Freeman. He removed to Flushing, Long Island, then in the governement of New Netherland, where on 19 October 1645 he was designated as one of the Patentees to settle Flushing in a Patent granted by Governor William Kieft. When John Hicks went to New Netherland, his wife Herodias remained in Rhode Island. On 12 December 1645 John hicks wrote from Flushing to John Coggeshall at Newport the following: Now for parting what way there is seeing she have carried the matter so subtilly as she have I know nt, but if there be anyway to bee used to untie the Knott, wch was at first by man tyed that so the world may be satisied I am willing thereunto, for the Knot of affection on her part have been untied long since, and her whoredome have freed my conscience on the other part, so I leave myself to your advice being free to condissend to you advice if ther may be such a way used for the final parting for us. Seversmith states that she obtained a divorce from John Hicks in Rhode Island on 2 December 1543. On 1 June 1655, John Hicks was granted a divorce from Herodias in the Court at New Amsterdam, by Governor Peter Stuyvesant. The original of the decree is in the state archives at Albany. |
1 |
701 | I8529 | Hicks | Mary | Between 1762 and 1764 | 30 Jun 1839 | 0 | A son of Violetta was Lt. Col. Edward Hicks. Lt. Col. Edward Hicks' daughter, Mary Hicks, married a Loyalist, at least 20 years her senior, in London in 1784. |
1 |
702 | I5983 | Hicks | Robert | 1583 | 24 May 1647 | 0 | In 1616 he was a fellmonger (hide dealer) residing in Southwark, London . M a r r i ed, but arrived as a single man as had only one lot in the 1623 l a n d d i v ision. |
1 |
703 | I8863 | Hicks | Thomas | 27 Jul 1640 | 26 Jan 1741 | 0 | Thomas Hicks, only son to John Hicks, inherited his father intellectual vigor and character, owned 4000 acres, owned a mansion, Thomas Hicks was Captain of the Queens Co. troops in 1676. |
1 |
704 | I45194 | Hicks | Thomas | 1667 | 20 Oct 1712 | 0 | "History of Long Island", 3rd Ed, 1962 reprint, p. 470: "Thomas Hicks, eldest son of Judge Hicks, married Deborah, daughter of Daniel Whitehead , one of the most extensive landowners of Jamaica and settled at Bayside, Flushing.... He had four sons and six daughters. He died in 1712 and his eldest son Thomas succeeded to the Bayside estate." |
1 |
705 | I29506 | Hilliard | Lorenzo Dow | 22 Nov 1857 | 1 Jun 1949 | 0 | Visalia Public Cemetery | 1 |
706 | I29506 | Hilliard | Lorenzo Dow | 22 Nov 1857 | 1 Jun 1949 | 0 | 1857 1857 |
1 |
707 | I45292 | Hoff | Dirck Dirxszen | 1594 | 1692 | 0 | Dirck Dircksz in entry for Lijsbetje, "Nethrlands, Archival Indexes, Vital Records, 1600-2000" |
1 |
708 | I9712 | Holland | Arnulf | Abt 951 | 18 Sep 993 | 0 | Arnulf, also known as Arnoud or Arnold, succeeded his father in 988 as C o u n t o f F risia, which by around AD 1100 would come to be referred to as t h e c o u n ty of Holland. He was born in 951 in Ghent and because of this h e i s a l s o k nown as Arnulf of Ghent. Arnulf was the son of Dirk II, Coun t o f H o l l and and Hildegard of Flanders (daughter of count Arnulf I). He w a s n a m e d after his maternal grandfather. |
1 |
709 | I7586 | Holland | Floris | Abt 1011 | 22 Jun 1061 | 0 | Floris I of Holland (born ca. 1010-21 in Vlaardingen - killed June 28, 1 0 6 1 i n G e lderland, Netherlands) was Count of Holland (which was called F r i s i a a t that time) from 1049 to 1061. He was a son of Dirk III and Oth e l i n d is. He succeeded his brother Dirk IV who was murdered in 1049. He was invol v e d i n a w a r of a few Lotharingian vassals against the imperial authori t y . O n a r e treat from Zaltbommel he was ambushed and killed in battle a t N e d e r hemert (called Hamerth at the time), on 28 June 1061. |
1 |
710 | I7219 | Holland | Floris | 1141 | 1 Aug 1190 | 0 | Floris III of Holland (aka van Holland, of Holland) (1141 - August 1 , 1 1 9 0 ) , C ount of Holland from 1157 to 1190. He was a son of Dirk VI a nd S o p h i e o f Luxemburg, heiress of Bentheim. On September 28, 1162 he married Ada, sister of king William I of Scot l a n d , a l so known as William the Lion. The county of Holland adopted from h i m t h e r a mpant lion in the coat of arms and the name of William. Floris III was a loyal vassal to Frederick I Barbarossa. He accompanied t h e e m p e ror on two expeditions to Italy in 1158 and 1176-1178. Frederick t h a n k e d him by making Floris part of the imperial nobility. The emperor gave Floris the toll right of Geervliet, the most importan t o l l s t a tion in Holland at that time. This was actually the legalisation o f a n e x i s ting situation, because the counts of Holland had charged toll s i l l e g ally since the start of the 11th century. Many farmers came to Holland to turn the swamps into agricultural lands . D i k e s a nd dams were build and the border between Holland and the bish op r i c o f U trecht had to be determined. There was a dispute between Flor i s a n d t h e bishop of Utrecht about a new dam in the Rhine at Zwammerdam i n 1 1 6 5 , w hich had to be settled by emperor Frederick. The brother of Fl or i s , B a ldwin became bishop of Utrecht in 1178. War broke out between Flanders and Holland. Count Philip of Flanders wa n t e d t o h ave Zeeland. Floris was captured in Brugge and had to accept F l e m i s h overlordship in Zeeland as ransom in 1167. During his reign Floris III had troubles with West Friesland and a war w i t h P h i lip count of Flanders concerning their respective rights in West Z e e l a n d, in which he was beaten. In 1170 a great flood caused immense de v a s t a tion in the north and helped to form the Zuider Zee. In 1189 Floris accompanied Frederick Barbarossa upon the third Crusade , o f w h i c h h e was a distinguished leader. He died in 1190 at Antioch of pe st i l e n ce and was buried there. Two sons of Floris III became Count of Holland: Dirk VII in 1190 and W i l l i a m I i n 1203 |
1 |
711 | I7896 | Holland | Margaret | 30 Dec 1384 | 30 Dec 1439 | 0 | Margaret (Holland) Beaufort is a descendant of Magna Carta surety baron s (Royal Tombs of Medieval England) Following the death of her second hus b a n d , T homas, Duke of Clarence, Margaret withdrew from public life, an d d i e d a t B ermondsey Abbey on 30 December 1439. Margaret was interred a t C a n t e rbury in St. Michael's Chapel on 8 January 1440. Apparently prio r t o h e r d e ath, Margaret had already decided to erect a triple tomb for h e r s e l f and her two husbands. On 27 January Henry VI instructed the exhu m a t i o n of the bodies of Somerset and Clarence and their reburial accord i n g t o t h e duchess's prior instructions. The triple tomb stands in the c e n t e r o f the chapel and features alabaster effigies and Purbeck marble t o m b - c hest. Margaret Holland's effigy lies in the center of the tomb wit h J o h n B e aufort on the left and that of Clarence in the senior position ; a l l t h r ee are shown with hands clasped in prayer. Margaret's effigy h as a d u c a l c oronet and each husband's effigy is depicted wearing armor. |
1 |
712 | I15649 | Holland | Thomas | 5 May 1314 | 26 Dec 1360 | 0 | Thomas Holland, 1st Earl of Kent (d. 1360) was an English nobleman and m i l i t a ry commander during the Hundred Years War. He was from a gentry f a m i l y i n Holland, Lancashire. In his early military career, he fought in Flanders. He was engaged, in 1 3 4 0 , i n t he English expedition into Flanders and sent, two years later, w i t h S i r J ohn D'Artevelle to Bayonne, to defend the Gascon frontier agai n s t t h e F rench. In 1343, he was again on service in France; and, in the f o l l o w ing year, had the honour of being chosen one of the founders of th e M o s t N o ble Order of the Garter. In 1346, he attended King Edward III i n t o N o r mandy in the immediate retinue of the Earl of Warwick; and, at t h e t a k i ng of Caen, the Count of Euand Guaines, Constable of France, and t h e C o u n t De Tancarville surrendered themselves to him as prisoners. At t h e B a t t le of Crâ ecy, he was one of the principal commanders in the van u n d e r t h e Prince o f Wales and he, afterwards, served at the Siege of Ca l a i s i n 1 346-7. Around the same time or before his first expedition, he married the 12- y e a r - old princess Joan Plantagenet, Joan of Kent, daughter of Edmund of W o o d s t ock, 1st Earl of Kent and Margaret Wake, granddaughter of Edward I a n d M a r g uerite of France, and sole heir of John, Earl of Kent. However, d u r i n g h is absence on foreign service, Joan, under pressure from her fam i l y , c o n tracted another marriage with William Montacute, 2nd Earl of S a l is b u ry. This second marriage was annulled in 1349, when Joan's previ o u s m a r riage with Holland was proved to the satisfaction of the papal c o m m i s sioners. Between 1353 and 1356 he was summoned to Parliament as Ba r o n d e H o lland. In 1354 Holland was the king's lieutenant in Brittany d u r i n g t he minority of the Duke of Brittany, and in 1359 co-captain-gene r a l f o r a ll the English continental possessions. His brother-in-law Joh n , E a r l o f Kent, died in 1360, and Holland became Earl of Kent in right o f h i s w i f e. He was succeeded as baron by his son Thomas, the earldom st il l b e i n g held by his wife (though the son later became Earl in his own r i g h t ) . Another son, John became Earl of Huntingdon and Duke of Exeter. |
1 |
713 | I7895 | Holland | Thomas | 2 Jul 1350 | 25 Apr 1397 | 0 | Thomas Holland is a descendant of Magna Carta surety baron Thomas Holland, 2nd Earl of Kent, 3rd Baron Holand ( 1350 - 25 April 13 9 7 ) w a s a n English nobleman and a councilor of his half-brother Richard I I |
1 |
714 | I7262 | Holland | Willem | Abt 1167 | 4 Feb 1222 | 0 | William was raised in Scotland. He started a revolt against his brother , D i r k V I I and became count in Friesland after a reconciliation. Friesl an d w a s c o nsidered as a part of Holland by the Counts of Holland. His n i ec e , A d a, eventually inheritited Holland in 1203, but William couldn't a c c e p t t his. After a civil war, which lasted for several years, William w o n t h e w a r. Louis and Ada were supported by the bishop of Utrecht, and t h e c o u n t of Flanders. William was supported by the duke of Brabant and b y t h e m a j ority of the Hollanders. Emperor Otto IV acknowledged him as count of Holland in 1203, because h e w a s a s u p porter of the Welfs. He and many others changed allegiance t o e m pe r o r Frederick II after the battle of Bouvines in 1214. He took pa rt i n a F r e n ch expedition against king John of England. The pope excomm uni cate d h i m f or this. Possibly because of this, William then became a fervent crusader. He ca m p a i g ned in Prussia and joined in the conquest of Lisbon. In Europe , h e c a m e t o b e called William the Crazy for his chivalric and reckless be ha v i o u r in battle. William conquered the city of Damietta during the Fi f t h C r u sade. |
1 |
715 | I1865 | Honford | Henry De | Abt 1275 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Henry de Honford or Hanford, of Hanford, Cheshire. [Burke's Peerage] |
1 |
716 | I45634 | Hopcott | William | Abt 1585 | 1657 | 0 | Check sources for proofs and collaboration. |
1 |
717 | I125 | Hopkins | Giles | Bef 30 Jan 1607 | 26 Apr 1690 | 0 | The Hopkins family of the Mayflower was not from Wortley, Gloucester as h a d b e e n p reviously speculated and published. Giles came with his family on the Mayflower in 1620, at the age of 12. H e v o l u n teered for service in the 1637 Pequot War but was not called. He m a r r i e d Catherine Wheldon in 1639 at Plymouth; the family moved shortly t h e r e a fter to Yarmouth, living there for about five years before moving o n t o s e t t le at Eastham, where he died sometime between 1688 and 1690. The Hopkins family of the Mayflower was not from Wortley, Gloucester as h a d b e e n p reviously speculated and published. Giles came with his family on the Mayflower in 1620, at the age of 12. H e v o l u n teered for service in the 1637 Pequot War but was not called. He m a r r i e d Catherine Wheldon in 1639 at Plymouth; the family moved shortly t h e r e a fter to Yarmouth, living there for about five years before moving o n t o s e t t le at Eastham, where he died sometime between 1688 and 1690. |
1 |
718 | I113 | Hopkins | Stephen | 30 Apr 1581 | 6 Jun 1644 | 0 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: R-M269 (R-FGC71615) Read "The Story of Stephen Hopkins of Jamestown and the Mayflower' What do Jamestowne, the Mayflower and Shakespeare have in common? The answer is Stephen Hopkins: a Jamestowne settler, Mayflower passenger and survivor of the wreck of the Sea Venture, reputed to be the basis for Shakespeare’s comedy, The Tempest. ------------------------------------------------------------- Stephen Hopkins was from Hampshire, England. He married his first wife, Mary, and resided in the parish of Hursley, Hampshire. They had their children Elizabeth, Constance, and Giles, all baptized there. It has long been claimed that the Hopkins family was from Wortley, Gloucester, but this was disproven in 1998 with the discovery of his true origins in Hursley. Stephen Hopkins went with the ship Sea Venture on a voyage to Jamestown, Virginia in 1609 as a minister's clerk, but the ship wrecked in the "Isle of Devils" (Bermuda). Stranded on an island for ten months, the passengers and crew survived on turtles, birds, and wild pigs. Six months into the castaway, Stephen Hopkins and several others organized a mutiny against the current governor. The mutiny was discovered and Stephen was sentenced to death. However, he pleaded with sorrow and tears. "So penitent he was, and made so much moan, alleging the ruin of his wife and children in this his trespass, as it wrought in the hearts of all the better sorts of the company". He managed to get his sentence commuted. Eventually the castaways built a small ship and sailed themselves to Jamestown. How long Stephen remained in Jamestown is not known. However, while he was gone, his wife Mary died. She was buried in Hursley on 9 May 1613, and left behind a probate estate which mentions her children Elizabeth, Constance and Giles. Stephen was back in England by 1617, when he married Elizabeth Fisher, but apparently had every intention of bringing his family back to Virginia. Their first child, Damaris, was born about 1618. In 1620, Stephen Hopkins brought his wife, and children Constance, Giles, and Damaris on the Mayflower (child Elizabeth apparently had died). Stephen was a fairly active member of the Pilgrim group shortly after arrival, perhaps a result of his being one of the few individuals who had been to Virginia previously. He was a part of all the early exploring missions, and was used as an "expert" on Native Americans for the first few contacts. While out exploring, Stephen recognized and identified an Indian deer trap. And when Samoset walked into Plymouth and welcomed the English, he was housed in Stephen Hopkins' house for the night. Stephen was also sent on several of the ambassadorial missions to meet with the various Indian groups in the region. Stephen was an assistant to the governor through 1636, and volunteered for the Pequot War of 1637 but was never called to serve. By the late 1630s, however, Stephen began to occasionally run afoul of the Plymouth authorities, as he apparently opened up a shop and served alcohol. In 1636 he got into a fight with John Tisdale and seriously wounded him. In 1637, he was fined for allowing drinking and shuffleboard playing on Sunday. Early the next year he was fined for allowing people to drink excessively in his house: guest William Reynolds was fined, but the others were acquitted. In 1638 he was twice fined for selling beer at twice the actual value, and in 1639 he was fined for selling a looking glass for twice what it would cost if bought in the Bay Colony. Also in 1638, Stephen Hopkins' maidservant got pregnant from Arthur Peach, who was subsequently executed for murdering an Indian. The Plymouth Court ruled he was financially responsible for her and her child for the next two years (the amount remaining on her term of service). Stephen, in contempt of court, threw Dorothy out of his household and refused to provide for her, so the court committed him to custody. John Holmes stepped in and purchased Dorothy's remaining two years of service from him: agreeing to support her and child. Stephen died in 1644, and made out a will, asking to be buried near his wife, and naming his surviving children. |
1 |
719 | I45037 | Hore | Alexander | 1510 | 0 | in 1551 Alexander Hore was a member of the Bakers Guild, Gloucester |
1 | |
720 | I45043 | Hore | Christian | 1380 | 0 | Christian was born about 1315 in Charlton Kings also known as Charlton Regis. He is recorded in the 1450 Cheltenham Manorial records as being the father of Robert Hore who was renting land in Baford Hide. The record states that Walter Brevell was paying 3s 4d on 1 tenement and 7 acres at Bafford Hide, previously belonging to Robert Hore and his father Christian Hore Christian's father is also recorded in the 1450 Cheltenham Manorial records as being Hugh le Hore |
1 | |
721 | I45038 | Hore | Richard | 1480 | 0 | The surname originally came from 'le Hore' then over the years lost the 'le'. Other spelling variations were Whoore, Whoare, Hoore, Woor. In the 1500's and 1600's the English branch of the family slowly changed to Hoare, whilst one branch of the American family kept the 'Hore' spelling, but descendants also changed to 'Hord' and 'Hoard'. Richard is mentioned in the 1522 Military Survey of Gloucestershire with his father Walter and brother Robert. The Military Survey of Gloucestershire 1522, was called for by the then King Henry VIII, he was aware that there may be an upcoming war and wanted to know the worth of each of his subjects and who would be fit and able to bear arms. |
1 | |
722 | I45042 | Hore | Robert | 1350 | 0 | Robert was born about 1350 in Charlton Kings, also called Charlton Regis. Leckhampton came under Charlton for registering various deeds and both were part of the Cheltenham Hundred. Robert is first mentioned in 1377 in the Cheltenham Manor Court Records John Davy to answer Robert Hore in plea of debt In 1378 Robert Hore fined 2d for licence to agree with John Davy in plea of trespass 1384-85 Robert Hore with others give as fine 12d for excuse from court until next Michaelmas In the Cheltenham Rent Roll 14th century, Robert Hore is recorded as holding 7 acres at a rent of 3s 4d in Bafford tithing (Source - SC 11/220 Cheltenham Rent Roll 14 century? Note that it could be earlier.) Robert Hore c1410 is recorded in the Cheltenham Manorial records as holding '7 acres in Charlton Kings formerly his fathers Christian Hore c1380, and grandfather Hugh le Hore 1327.' This document is crucial as it records Roberts father and grandfather |
1 | |
723 | I45040 | Hore | Thomas | 1420 | 0 | The family had land and property at Cudnall in Leckhampton |
1 | |
724 | I45041 | Hore | Walter | 1380 | 0 | Walter Hore is mentioned in the Cheltenham Manorial Survey of 1440 as owning 1 messuage and half virgate formerly belonging to Thomas Wager, previously John Wery. |
1 | |
725 | I45039 | Hore | Walter | 1450 | Abt 1522 | 0 | Walter was born about 1450. He passed away after 1522. The Military Survey of Gloucestershire 1522, was called for by the then King Henry V111, he was aware that there may be an upcoming war and wanted to know the worth of each of his subjects and who would be fit and able to bear arms. In the survey there are only 16 men listed for Leckhampton, three of which were the Hore family, out of the 16 men listed only one was recorded as able to bear arms. Walter Hore was born about 1450 in Leckhampton, Gloucestershire, the only record found so far is the entry in the 1522 survey - he was assessed as being worth £3 pounds, with Robert Hore £4 and Richard Hore £5. By 1551 there were only 93 communicants in 20 households registered in Leckhampton, this gives us an idea of how small the village of Leckhampton was. (Communicant -a church member entitled to receive communion, children were deemed ready to take communion at the age of discretion, the age of 7 or 8, or even younger, the age of discretion also applied to when the church deemed it was okay for young girls to be betrothed in marriage). |
1 |
726 | I246 | Hoskins | Anthony | 12 Apr 1731 | 13 Apr 1819 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-177070 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Sergeant DAR #: A052462 Birth: 12 Apr 1731 Windsor / Hartford / CT Death: 13 Apr 1819 bur. Fort Ann / Washington / NY Qualifying Service Description: Sgt., Capt David Downs, Col Charles Burrell, 1776 Also Pvt, Capt John Spoor, Col John Ashley, 1780 Additional References: 56th-77th Annual Reports DAR. Senate documents (US Congress, Senate). GPO: Washington, DC Rolls and Lists of CTt Men in the Rev 1775-1783, pg 34 MA Soldiers and Sailors of the Rev War, Volume 8, pg 280 Spouse: (1) XX XX; (2) Rhoda Goodrich Children: Issac H; Benjamin Franklin; Seth; Ira; Martha; John; David |
1 |
727 | I12705 | Howland | Desire | Abt 1625 | 13 Oct 1683 | 0 | Howland's slave Totoo/Tata If anyone learns more about Totoo, enslaved by the Gorham's, send me a message. Totoo is identified as Mrs Gorham's slave in 3 sources (added to sources); as here from “Old Cape Cod: The Land, the Men, the Sea": "Old Totoo, slave to Mrs. Gorham, of Barnstable, survived her eight years and, dying, begged that he might be buried at his mistress's feet. In 1678, two Indians of Sandwich, convicted of stealing twenty five pounds, were sentenced to be sold, for the profit of their victims, somewhere in New England as 'perpetual slaves" (103-04). Desire Howland Gorham's inventory references a person named "tota" in her household: "beding & sheets that tota makes use of" (p 219). The index identifies Tota as an "indian" (p 279). If Totoo/Tota is enslaved in 1675-76, then s/he is almost surely 1 of the hundreds of Wampanoag the English sold into slavery at the end of Metacom's War (King Philip's War). Epitaph Desire Gorham's Epitaph per Page 1, front page of the Monday, July 28, 1913 edition of the Barnstable Patriot: "Let us walk in God's Acre, 'tis the hour of the gloaming, The sun has gone down in the luminous west, Here the forefathers and foremothers by steadfast hope strengthened Their life's fitful fever ended, were laid to their rest. Here lies Desire Howland, wife of Capt. John Gorham, Daughter of John Howland, Mayflower Pilgrim was he, In the shadow of the meeting-house, on Cobb's Hill, in old Barnstable, Overlooking the harbor and the far away sea. Earnest Christian, wise counsellor, true friend and kind neighbor, Like a queen she reigned over her little domain. The heart of her husband did safely trust in her, A myriad of descendants rise and bless her loved name. When old Totoo,her black slave, felt his last hours approaching, Would his house set in order, the death angel to meet, Expressed his fond wish, and his dearest ambition, To be laid, when he died, at his dead mistress' feet. Oh, happy the heart full of loyal affection, Love lightens its labors, makes each bitter draught sweet, And rich is the life, sure of one soul's pure devotion, Tho' it is but a slave's, laid, when dead, at her feet." Neponset, Mass. P T. C. |
1 |
728 | I22370 | Howland | John | Abt 1599 | 23 Feb 1673 | 0 | yDNA HAPLOGROUP: R-M269 (R-A9703) John Howland was born about 1599, probably in Fenstanton, Huntington. He came on the Mayflower in 1620 as a manservant of Governor John Carver. During the Mayflower's voyage, Howland fell overboard during a storm, and was almost lost at sea--but luckily for his millions of descendants living today (including Presidents George Bush and George W. Bush, and Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt) he managed to grab hold of the topsail halyards, giving the crew enough time to rescue him with a boat-hook. It has been traditionally reported that John Howland was born about 1592, based on his reported age at death in the Plymouth Church Records. However, ages at death were often overstated, and that is clearly the case here. John Howland came as a servant for John Carver, which means he was under 25 years old at the time (i.e. he was born after 1595). William Bradford, in the falling-overboard incident, refers to Howland as a "lusty young man," a term that would not likely have applied to a 28-year old given that Bradford himself was only 30. Bradford did call 21-year old John Alden a "young man" though. Howland's wife Elizabeth was born in 1607: a 32-year old marrying a 17-year old is a relatively unlikely circumstance. Howland's last child was born in 1649: a 57-year old Howland would be an unlikely father. All these taken together demonstrate that Howland's age was likely overstated by at least 5 years. Since he signed the "Mayflower Compact", we can assume he was probably at least 18 to 21 years old in 1620. John Howland had several brothers who also came to New England, namely Henry Howland (an ancestor to both Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford) and Arthur Howland (an ancestor to Winston Churchill). 13th signer of the Mayflower Compact - Signed on the Mayflower. John Howland as one of the 10 principal men set out in the shallop to explore a settlement site. Please keep "of Fenstanton" in the suffix It does not affect searching in any way and helps keep completely different families separated. By removing it you are the one causing all the problems to start up again Plymouth Colony Its History and People,1620-1691, by Eugene Abrey Stratton P311-312 John Howland of the Mayflower, V.1 Came on Mayflower as servant to John Carver. On 1633 freeman list. Will dated 29 May 1672, inventory 3 Mar 1672/3, mentions wife Elizabeth; oldest son John Howland; sons Jabez and Joseph; youngest son Isaac; daughters Desire Gorham, Hope Chipman, Elizabeth Dickenson, Lydai Browne, Hannah Bosworth, and Ruth Cushman; and granddaughter Elizabeth Howland, daughter of his son John. "Signed Mayflower Compact; took an active part in the early explorations. A partner in the Trading Company of the Colony; Asst. or deputy almost continually. Prominent in the church, so that he "assisted in the imposition of hands" upon Rev. John Cotton, Jr. when he was ordained pastor 30 Jun 1669. He died "a profitable instrument of good; the last man that was left of those that came over in the ship called the May Flower that arrived at Plymouth." (Plym. Col. Rec. VII, 34) Mayflower See Mayflowerhistory.com for list of passengers and biographies of each passenger. Fell overboard from the Mayflower and managed to grab hold of a trailing rope, giving the crew just enough time to rescue him with a boat-hook. |
1 |
729 | I3043 | Hull | Benjamin | Abt 1744 | 24 Aug 1830 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-329726 State of Service: NJ Qualifying Service: Corporal Birth: abt 1744 / Sussex / NJ Death: bef 08 Mar 1832 / Clark / OH Qualifying Service Description: Capt Bond Co. 4th Batt Second Establishment. NJ Militia and Continental Army Additional References: Muster and Pay Rolls of the Rev 1776-1783 Colonial NJ 1600s-1800s - Officers & Men in the Rev War, Part I, pg 217 Spouse: Mary Budd Children: Elijah; |
1 |
730 | I45704 | Hunter | Frederic Lansing | Abt 1901 | 14 Jul 1982 | 0 | Green-Wood Cemetery-Lot 12347(Sec 178) | 1 |
731 | I45704 | Hunter | Frederic Lansing | Abt 1901 | 14 Jul 1982 | 0 | Lived at 336 Ivy Ave - Westbury, Long I Lived at 336 Ivy Ave - Westbury, Long Island, NY |
1 |
732 | I10325 | Hurst | Joan | Bef 13 Mar 1568 | Between Jan and Mar 1621 | 0 | BAPTISM: 13 March 1567/8 at Henlow, co. Bedford, England, daughter of William and Rose Hurst. FIRST MARRIAGE: Thomas Rogers, on 18 June 1593 at Henlow, co. Bedford, England. (No relation to Thomas Rogers the Mayflower passenger of the same name). SECOND MARRIAGE: John Tilley, on 20 September 1596 at Henlow, co. Bedford, England. CHILDREN (by Thomas): Joan. CHILDREN (by John): Rose (died young), John, Rose, Robert, and Elizabeth. DEATH: Sometime the first winter at Plymouth. mtDNA HAPLOGROUP: H1a1 Joan Hurst was born in 1567/8 in Henlow, Bedford, England, the daughter of William and Rose Hurst. She married first to Thomas Rogers in 1593 (not related to the Mayflower passenger Thomas Rogers). With her husband Thomas, she had a daughter Joan, baptized on 26 May 1594 in Henlow. Attempts to determine what happened to Joan have so far been unsuccessful. She may have died young. When her first husband Thomas died, likely around 1594 or 1595, she remarried to John Tilly. John and Joan (Hurst)(Rogers) Tilley came on the Mayflower in 1620, bringing with them daughter Elizabeth. Joan, along with her husband, died the first winter at Plymouth, orphaning their 13-year old daughter Elizabeth in the New World. Elizabeth would later marry to Mayflower passenger John Howland. |
1 |
733 | I45592 | Hussey | Christopher | Abt 1610 | 0 | Tristram Ciffin, Thomas Macy, and Christopher Hussey were among the ten "original purchasers" of Nantucket Island for 30 pounds and two beaver "Hatts"! Jane Godfrey's second was another-he brought her and her Bunker children to the island. When a young man he spent some time in Holland where he met Theodate, the eldest daughter of Rev. Stephen Bachelor, who he desired to marry. Her father gave his consent contingent on their going to America with him. They arrived in Boston in 1632 on the ship William and Francis, settling first in Lynn. |
1 | |
734 | I45595 | Hussey | Stephen | 8 Jun 1632 | 2 Apr 1718 | 0 | Stephen Hussey was born in 1632 and died at Nantucket in 1718, leavin, seven children. His wife was Martha, daughter of William Bunker. He received a good education and naturally took to law. Although it is not known that he was an admitted attorney. From the date when the Court records begin to his death there was seldom a session when he was not party or attorney. He lived in continual turmoil, although, singular to relate, he was one of the petitioners for a Friends Meeting, but he engaged in litigation with some of the members and was disowned in 1717. He was a master mariner, and sailed between Nantucket, Boston and New York. He was three times a constable and once selectman and assessor. He was convicted of smuggling ten gallons of rum, and his ten reasons of appeal show a very ingenious mind. He never failed to assert that justice could not be had on Nantucket because neither Judge nor Jury were entirely impartial. He acquired the interest of his father, Robert Pike and others, and was the largest land owner of his day The house lots assigned to Christopher Hussey and Robert Pike were on the west side of Trott's Swamp, but Stephen Hussey built three houses for himself and family one on Federal street near Chestnut, another at Monomov and a third at Shimmoo. " https://archive.org/stream/nantucketlandsla01wort/nantucketlandsla01wort_djvu.txt |
1 |
735 | I45362 | Huyken | Machtelje | 1605 | 0 | Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Cemetery |
1 | |
736 | I9340 | Ingersoll | George | 2 Jul 1618 | 22 Jun 1694 | 0 | Lieutenant George Ingersoll, Richard's eldest son, was born in England in 1618, and consequently was eleven years of age when he arrived in America. He is first heard of as one of the selectmen of Gloucester. Afterwards he removed to Falmouth, Maine (now known as Portland), and in 1658 was a representative from that town. His military talents and tastes procured for him the command of the military company raised in Falmouth for the defense of the colonists against the Indians. With this company he fought through the first Indian war and won much renown in his skirmishes and combats with the Indians. In 1683 and 85 he was a representative to the General Assembly. Before the second Indian war he returned to Salem where he died in 1694. | 1 |
737 | I7663 | Iorwerth | Gladys | Abt 1205 | 1251 | 0 | It is said she was called "the dark" due to her dark coloring or dark e y e s . |
1 |
738 | I8398 | Iorwerth | Llewelyn | 11 Nov 1173 | 11 Apr 1240 | 0 | Llywelyn ab Iorwerth (pronounced [ɬəˈwɛlɪn ab ˈjɔrwɛrθ], c. 1173 - 11 A p r i l 1 2 40),[2][3] also known as Llywelyn the Great (Welsh: Llywelyn Faw r , [ ɬ ə ˈ wɛlɪn vaʊ̯r]), was a medieval Welsh ruler. He succeeded his uncl e , D a f y dd ab Owain Gwynedd, as King of Gwynedd in 1195. By a combinatio n o f w a r a n d diplomacy he dominated Wales for 45 years.[4] During Llywelyn's childhood, Gwynedd was ruled by two of his uncles, wh o s p l i t t he kingdom between them, following the death of Llywelyn's gra nd f a t h er, Owain Gwynedd, in 1170. Llywelyn had a strong claim to be the l e g i t i mate ruler and began a campaign to win power at an early age. He w a s s o l e r uler of Gwynedd by 1200 and made a treaty with King John of En g l a n d t hat year. Llywelyn's relations with John remained good for the n e x t t e n y ears. He married John's natural daughter Joan in 1205, and whe n J o h n a r rested Gwenwynwyn of Powys in 1208, Llywelyn took the opportun it y t o a n n ex southern Powys. In 1210, relations deteriorated, and John i n v ad e d G wynedd in 1211. Llywelyn was forced to seek terms and to give u p a l l l a n ds east of the River Conwy, but was able to recover them the f ol l o w i ng year in alliance with the other Welsh princes. He allied himse l f w i t h t he barons who forced John to sign Magna Carta in 1215. By 1216 , h e w a s t h e dominant power in Wales, holding a council at Aberdyfi tha t y e a r t o a pportion lands to the other princes. |
1 |
739 | I7899 | Isaac | Thomas | Abt 1306 | 20 Jul 1353 | 0 | Thomas Isaac is a very shadowy person. His existence and connections is s h o w n b y n umerous contemporary statements including marriage dispens ati o n s f o r h is descendants. He was Town Clerk of Aberdeen. |
1 |
740 | I7419 | Ivrea | Berengar | Abt 900 | 4 Aug 966 | 0 | Berengar II (c. 900 - 4 August 966) was the King of Italy from 950 unti l h i s d e p osition in 961. He was a scion of the Anscarid and Unruoching d y n a s t ies, and was named after his maternal grandfather, Berengar I. He s u c c e e ded his father as Margrave of Ivrea around 923 (whence he is often k n o w n a s B erengar of Ivrea), and after 940 led the aristocratic oppositi o n t o K i n gs Hugh and Lothair II. In 950 he succeeded the latter and had h i s s o n , A dalbert crowned as his co-ruler. In 9 5 2 he recognised the su z e r a i nty of Otto I of Germany, but he later joined a revolt against him . I n 9 6 0 h e i nvaded the Papal States, and the next year his kingdom was c o n q u er ed by Otto. Berengar remained at large until his surrender in 964 . H e d i e d i m p risoned in Germany two years later |
1 |
741 | I7360 | Ivry | Emma | Abt 1008 | Bef 1034 | 0 | Through his wife Emma, he inherited a large property in central Normand y , i n c l uding the honours of Pacy, Jouy, and Cocherel on the Eure, lands d e p e n d ant on Breteuil and centred on Ivry, the earliest demesne of the N o r m a n ' dukes' . These lands included the fief of Freschenes. |
1 |
742 | I8224 | Jagiello | Wladyslaw | 1352 | 1 Jun 1434 | 0 | Jogaila (Lithuanian: [jɔˈɡâːɪɫɐ] ⓘ; c. 1352/1362 - 1 June 1434), later W ł a d ysław II Jagiełło (Polish: [vwaˈdɨswaf jaˈɡʲɛwwɔ] ⓘ),[nb 1] was Gran d D u k e of Lithuania (1377-1381 and 1382-1401), later giving the positio n t o h i s cousin Vytautas in exchange for the title of Supreme Duke of L it hu a nia (1401-1434) and then King of Poland (1386-1434), first alongsi d e h i s wife Jadwiga until 1399, and then sole ruler of Poland. Raised a L i t h uanian polytheist, he converted to Catholicism in 1386 and was bapti z e d a s Ladislaus (Polish: Władysław) in Kraków, married the young Queen J a d w iga, and was crowned King of Poland as Władysław II Jagiełło.[1][2] I n 1 3 8 7, he converted Lithuania to Catholicism. His own reign in Poland s t a r ted in 1399, upon the death of Queen Jadwiga, lasted a further thirt y - f ive years, and laid the foundation for the centuries-long Polish-Lit h u a nian union. He was a member of the Jagiellonian dynasty in Poland th a t b e ars his name and was previously also known as the Gediminid dynast y i n t h e Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The dynasty ruled both states until 1 5 72 , [nb 2] and became one of the most influential dynasties in late med i e v al and early modern Europe.[3] |
1 |
743 | I8233 | Jagiellon | Casimir Andrew | 30 Nov 1427 | 7 Jun 1492 | 0 | Casimir IV (Casimir Andrew Jagiellon; Polish: Kazimierz Andrzej Jagiell o ń c zyk [kaˈʑimjɛʂ jaɡʲɛ(l)ˈlɔj̃t͡ʂɨk] ⓘ; Lithuanian: Kazimieras Jogaila i t i sⓘ; 30 November 1427 - 7 June 1492)[1] was Grand Duke of Lithuania f r o m 1 440 and King of Poland from 1447 until his death in 1492. He was o n e o f t he most active Polish-Lithuanian rulers; under him, Poland defea t e d t he Teutonic Knights in the Thirteen Years' War and recovered Pomer a n i a. |
1 |
744 | I45512 | Jans | Swaentje | 1603 | 1686 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery |
1 |
745 | I45512 | Jans | Swaentje | 1603 | 1686 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery | 1 |
746 | I45512 | Jans | Swaentje | 1603 | 1686 | 0 | Swantje Jans was born in Germany, moved with her parents in the early 1620s to newly-settled "Batavia" (Djakarta, Indonesia, which would remain a Dutch East Indies colony for more than 300 years). It was probably there that she married the first of her five husbands, Cornelis Adriaens Bleyck, a mason from the Netherlands who was building fortifications. They had six children, all of whom died young, except their hardy daughter, Ariaentje. Cornelis died, too, about 1638. Swantje then lost two successive husbands, both Dutch East India Company skippers, within three years. Life in the area was obviously precarious and threatened male adventurers with additional hazards. In 1643 thrice-widowed Swantje married Cornelius DePotter, a widower employed by the same Company. Left Indonesia some time after October 1648, were in Amsterdam by 18 March 1651, and in New Netherlands (USA) by 9 July 1651. The two children she had with Cornelius DePotter had died by the time the couple moved to New Netherland in 1651, but they took their two surviving children, Ariaentje and Elizabeth - DePotter's daughter from his previous marriage, who would become an ancestor of Eleanor Roosevelt. After DePotter died nine years later, Swantje remained a widow for nearly twenty years, well into her seventies. She saw both daughters married and re-married, before her own final marriage to widower Jan Strycker, who managed to survive her to wed again. |
1 |
747 | I45377 | Janse | Lysbeth | 1625 | Nov 1684 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery |
1 |
748 | I4650 | Janssen | Albert | Abt 1605 | 26 Feb 1659 | 0 | Settled in Albany in 1642 |
1 |
749 | I7628 | Jarpenville | Alice | Abt 1179 | 1254 | 0 | In 1226, she paid King Henry III a fine of five marks upon receiving s e i s i n o f all her mother's lands in Kent and Buckshire. She requested to be buried at the Abbey of St. Augustine's in Canterbur y . |
1 |
750 | I45095 | Jenckes | Joseph | 1656 | 15 Jun 1740 | 0 | !SOURCE: Genealogies of Rhode Island Families, from Rhode Island Periodicals (Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., 1983), 2:8. !SOURCE: M.M. Wilkinson, _Genealogy of Wilkinson and Kindred Families_ (Shelby, Miss.: Shelby Book Store, 1949), p. 75. !SOURCE: Abby Isabel Brown Bulkley, The Chad Browne Memorial, Consisting of Genealogical Memoirs of a Portion of the Descendants of Chad and Elizabeth Browne (Brooklyn, N.Y., 1888), p. 13. !NOTE: The tallest man in Rhode Island in his day: 7 ft., 2 inches. --A.I.B. Bulkley |
1 |
751 | I45563 | Jenkins | Peter | Abt 1635 | 1703 | 0 | First Cemetery |
1 |
752 | I45445 | Jennings | Sarah | 1604 | 31 Aug 1661 | 0 | Imigration Arrived 1635 at Massachusetts :Age 31,Child Mary 4;Child Elizabeth 6;Child John 14; Child Adam 12; Child Johnathan 9. Disputed Origins and Spouse Some, without source, claim that her parents were Richard Jenynges and Mary Channon, and that her first husband was Engelbert Pieters Lott. There is no known source for these claims and they are disputed. See Research Notes: Both Austin and Anderson state that Sarah Lott was a widow when she married Adam Mott in Horseheath, Cambridgeshire, in 1635; and that her LNAB is unknown.[3][5] The Bishop's Transcript record of her marriage cited above does not indicate that she was a widow at the time of her marriage in 1635.[4] However, that fact may be reflected in the parish register entry, which is reproduced in FHL 1,040,532, items Items 3 - 13, DGS 7,549,344, but accessible only at a FHL/FHC. Some researchers identify her first husband as Engelbert Pieters Lott, but there is no known reliable source for this claim and it appears very unlikely to be correct as he is said to have been born in the Netherlands and there is no reason to believe her first husband was Dutch. This disputed relationship has been detached pending identification of a reliable source. Similarly, the claimed children of that disputed spouse Bartel and Pieter have also been detached. Disputed Origins Some researchers identify her LNAB as Jennings and claim that her parents were Richard Jenynges and Marcy Channon. There is no known reliable source for these claims. Those disputed parents have been removed and her LNAB changed to Unknown consistent with Austin & Anderson pending identification of a reliable source for her origins. Sarah Jennings was married twice Sarah Jennings married, first, Engelbert Lott who died in 1631 [aka Jeremy Lott]. She married, secondly, Adam Mott in Cambridge. She migrated with him to Massachusetts in 1635 on the Defense. Her daughter Mary Lott by her first marriage arrived with her and later married her mother's stepson, Adam Mott, Jr. |
1 |
753 | I31686 | Johnson | James Caleb | 1754 | 28 Feb 1850 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-224973 State of Service: GA Qualifying Service: Patriotic Service - Sergeant DAR #: A063046 Birth: abt 1754 / Chester / PA Death: Feb 1850 / Amite / MS Qualifying Service Description: Minuteman that served 2 years under Captain Henry Walker and Colonels Stewart and Elijah Clark, Columbus County, GA Additional References: Pension *S7081 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 |
1 |
754 | I46039 | Johnson | Susanna | 1581 | 22 May 1633 | 0 | St Dunstan and All Saints | 1 |
755 | I224 | Jones | Dorothy Thatcher | Abt 1608 | 19 Mar 1678 | 0 | Sears Cemetery |
1 |
756 | I224 | Jones | Dorothy Thatcher | Abt 1608 | 19 Mar 1678 | 0 | When Dorothy Jones was born in 1603, in Queen Camel, Somerset, England, her father, George Jones, was 31 and her mother, Agnes Thacker, was 25. Richard Sears and Anthony Thacher married sisters, Dorothy and Elizabeth Jones, who were of Dinder, co. Somerset, England, Dorothy marrying Richard in 1632, Elizabeth marying Anthony, early in 1635. Their brother was Richard Jones who came to New England in 1635 and settled in Dorchester, Mass." |
1 |
757 | I45561 | Jones | Sarah | 1648 | 3 Dec 1710 | 0 | (children) (children) |
1 |
758 | I503 | Keith | Janet | 1494 | 25 Aug 1547 | 0 | Lady Janet Keith was the daughter of William Keith, 2nd Earl Marischal and Lady Elizabeth Gordon born circa 1494 in Kincardineshire, Scotland. She married William Graham, 2nd Earl of Montrose, son of William Graham, 1st Earl of Montrose and Annabella Drummond, in December 1515. As a result of her marriage, Lady Janet Keith was styled as Countess of Montrose in December 1515. |
1 |
759 | I21317 | Keith | Robert | 1483 | 24 Aug 1525 | 0 | Killed in Battle Flodden Field |
1 |
760 | I8443 | Kelsey | Daniel | Abt 1741 | 1 Sep 1822 | 0 | SAR Patriot #: P-346414 State of Service: CT Qualifying Service: Private Qualifying Service Description: 8th Company, Northern Department under General Schuler in CT in 1775 Additional References: CT in Revolution, pg 77 |
1 |
761 | I8830 | Kelsey | Stephen | 7 Nov 1647 | 10 Nov 1710 | 0 | A genealogy of the descendants of William Kelsey, who settled at Cambri d g e , M a ss. Vol1 #8 pg 53 A Genealogy of the Ingersoll family in Americ a 1 6 2 9 - 1925 Pg 129 |
1 |
762 | I12722 | Kember | Joanna | Apr 1584 | 30 May 1661 | 0 | Undocumented research notes moved here from life history [1642] JOANNA KEMBER was born about 1584, of Butler’s in Brixton, Devon, England, to Robert Kember (1556-1612) and Anne Moullinge (1560-1626.) She married Peter Coffyn about 1604 of Brixton, Plymouth, Devonshire, England. She immigrated in 1642 from England to Newbury, Essex, Massachusetts, with her son Tristram and family, and two daughters Eunice and Mary. |
1 |
763 | I7626 | Kevelioc | Hawise | Abt 1180 | Bef 19 Feb 1243 | 0 | Between 1217-1219, Hawise granted a rent to the brethren of the Hospita l o f J e r u salem in England for the foundation of a chantry at the Hospit al le r s ? h ouse at Clerkenwell, London, for the soul of her husband, Robe r t . " Circa 1231, she received a charter from her brother, Ranulph, Earl of C h e s t e r and Lincoln, purporting to convey to her the Earldom of Lincoln. |
1 |
764 | I33886 | Kibbe | Daniel | 15 Oct 1720 | 15 Dec 1810 | 0 | Daniel is not listed as a child of James and Hannah Kibbe. |
1 |
765 | I45627 | Kimball | Abigail | 18 Jun 1618 | 17 Jun 1658 | 0 | Salisbury Colonial Burying Ground |
1 |
766 | I45627 | Kimball | Abigail | 18 Jun 1618 | 17 Jun 1658 | 0 | She and John Severance were NOT on the passenger list of the Elizabeth in 1634. |
1 |
767 | I45623 | Kimball | Richard | Abt 1595 | 22 Jun 1675 | 0 | Old Burying Ground |
1 |
768 | I45623 | Kimball | Richard | Abt 1595 | 22 Jun 1675 | 0 | He brought his family to America in 1634 in the ship Elizabeth. The leaders of a new Colony asked him to come as Wheelwright (made wagon wheels) to Watertown, Mass. He owned considerable property in what is now Cambridge but was then Watertown. He was proclaimed freeman May 6, 1635. He was soon invited to settle in Ipswich, Mass. where he spent the remainder of his life. In 1637 he was given a lot and forty acres of land beyond the North River. In 1653 he was one of the three town surveyors. In 1664 he owned 43 acres on Plumb Island. Before coming to this country he married Ursula Scott in Rattlesden about 1611. She was the granddaughter of Sir William Scott and Lady Mary Howard, daughter of Charles Howard, Earl of Nottingham. While it is true indeed that many generations of descendants and other interested parties have literally spent hours and days and weeks and years striving to find reliable documentation, the parentage of Richard Kimball is still unproven. It is believed by some that he was the son of Henry Kimball LVYY-88H or of Richard Kimball MK82-PD8. . . . . . . . . . . According to NEHGR 28:241 . . . "Richard Kimball and Ursula, his wife, came in the Elizabeth of Ipswich, in 1634... With them came Martha Scott, aged 60, and Thomas Scott, aged 40, who were probably the mother and brother of Richard's wife as he calls Martha Scott his mother in records." Anderson's Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1634-1635, Vol. IV, I-L, p 157 says this: "MARRIAGE: (1) By 1615 Ursula Scott, daughter o Henry Scott of Rattlesden, Suffolk (in his will of 24 September 1623, Henry Scott included bequests to 'Abigail Kemball my grandchild,' to 'my grandchild Henry Kemball' and to 'grandchildren Elizabeth and Richard Kemball [NEHGR 52:248, citing 'Bury Wills, Book Pearle, L., 117"; Phoebe Tilton Anc 117-20]." SOURCE :: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Kimball-60 |
1 |
769 | I34154 | King | Barzillai | Bef 10 Apr 1737 | Abt 1803 | 0 | State of Service: NY Qualifying Service: Private DAR #: A066356 Birth: 10 Apr 1737 Harwich / Barnstable / MA Death: 05 Aug 1817 Covert / Seneca / NY Qualifying Service Description: Private in the 7th Regiment, Dutchess Co, NY Militia commanded by Colonel Henry Ludenton DAR RC# 158787 states: PRIVATE - LColonel REUBEN FERRIS, Colonel HENRY LUDENTON 7TH REGT, DUTCHESS CO MILITIA Additional References: James A Roberts, NY in the Rev as Colony and State, pg 149, 150, 151 SAR Patriot Index Edition III (CD: PP2210, Progeny Publ, 2002) plus data to 2004 Spouse: Lydia Hinckley Children: Tertullus Harrison; Nathaniel; |
1 |
770 | I46004 | King | Charles | 1771 | 1838 | 0 | Kings Cemetery | 1 |
771 | I123 | Knott | Francis | 1648 | 14 May 1705 | 0 | Brought to Maryland by his step-father Robert Cole as a young child. |
1 |
772 | I19 | Knott | James | 1602 | 13 May 1653 | 0 | Arrived in "The George". Immigration aboard, The George, carrying Gove r n o r S a muel Argall, left England after March 31 from Gravesend 1617, an d a n c h o red at Point Comfort May 25th. |
1 |
773 | I7085 | L'Ancien Chaworth | Patrick | Abt 1052 | Abt 1133 | 0 | Patrick acquired the Gloucestershire honour of Kempsford through marria g e i n t o t he Hesding family. Patrick de Chaources married Maud de Hesdin, daughter of Ernult de HEsd i n b y h i s w ife Emmeline. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medie v a l F a m ilies'', by Douglas Richardson, Vol II pp133. They had two sons, H u g u e s a nd Patrick, and two daughters, Sibyl and Cecily. |
1 |
774 | I7897 | La Zouche | Alan | 9 Oct 1267 | 25 Mar 1314 | 0 | 1st Lord (Baron) (La) Zouche, so created by writ of summons to Parliament 6 Feb 1298/9; b. 9 Oct 1267; undertook military service in Flanders, Gascony and Scotland; fought in the vanguard at Battle of Falkirk (Edward I's victory over William Wallace) 1298; Constable of Rockingham Castle and Keeper of the forests between Oxford and Stamford bridges Feb 1311/2 - Fehb 1313/4. |
1 |
775 | I7901 | Lackland Plantagenet | John | 24 Dec 1166 | 19 Oct 1216 | 0 | John (24 December 1167-18 October/19 October 1216) reigned as King of E n g l a n d from April 6, 1199, until his death. He succeeded to the throne a s t h e y o u nger brother of King Richard I (known as "Richard the Lionhear t" ) . J o h n acquired the nicknames of "Lackland" and"Soft-sword". John's r e i g n h a s been traditionally characterized as one of the most disastrous i n E n g l i sh history: it began with defeats- he lost Normandy to Philippe A u g u s t e of France in his first five years on the throne-andended with En g l a n d t orn by civil war and himself on the verge of being forced out of p o w e r . I n 1213, he made England a papal fief to resolve a conflict with t h e C h u r ch, and his rebellious barons forced him to sign Magna Carta in 1 2 1 5 , t h e act for which he is best remembered. Some have argued, however , t h a t J o hn ruled no better or worse than his immediate predecessor or h i s s u c c essor. King John was also the subject of an early history play b y W i l l i am Shakespeare. Born at Beaumont Palace, Oxford, John was the fifth son of King Henry I I o f E n g l and and Eleanor of Aquitaine. John was a younger maternal half -b ro t h e r of Marie de Champagne and Alix of France. He was a younger bro t h e r o f W illiam, Count of Poitiers, Henry the Young King, Matilda of En g l a n d , Richard I of England, Geoffrey II, Duke of Brittany, Leonora of A q u i t a ine and Joan of England. John was always his father's favourite so n , t h o u gh as the youngest, he could expect no inheritance (hence his ni c k n a m e, "Lackland"). He was almost certainly born in 1166 instead of 11 6 7 , a s i s s ometimes claimed. King Henry and Queen Eleanor were not tog e t h e r n ine months prior to December 1167, but they were together in Mar c h 1 1 6 6 . Also, John was born at Oxford on or near Christmas, but Eleano r a n d H e n ry spent Christmas 1167 in Normandy. The canon of Laon, writin g a c e n t u ry later, states John was named after Saint John the Apostle, o n w h o s e f east day (December 27) he was born. Ralph of Diceto also sta te s t h a t J ohn was born in 1166, and that Queen Eleanor named him. His f a mi l y l i fe was tumultuous, with his older brothers all involved in rebe l l i o n s against King Henry. His mother, Queen Eleanor was imprisoned in 1 1 7 3 , w h en John was a small boy. Gerald of Wales relates that King Henry h a d a c u r i ous painting in a chamber of Winchester Castle, depicting an e a gle b e i n g attacked by three of its chicks, while a fourth chick crouch e d, w a i t ing for its chance to strike. When asked theeaning of this pict u re , K i n g Henry said: "The four young ones of the eagle are my four son s , w h o w i ll not cease persecuting me even unto death. And the youngest, w h o m I n o w e mbrace with such tender affection, will someday afflict me m o r e g r i evously and perilously than all the others." |
1 |
776 | I7736 | Lacy | Hugh | Abt 1138 | 26 Jul 1186 | 0 | Hugh de Lacy, Lord of Meath (died 25 July 1186, Durrow , Leinster) was an Anglo-Norman magnate granted the lands of the Kingdom of Meath by Henry II in 1172, during the Norman Invasion of Ireland. He was the first Norman Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. He was the son of Gilbert de Lacy (fl. 1150), 4th Baron Lacy. Hugh de Lacy is said to have had a dispute with Joce de Dinan as to certain lands in Herefordshire in 1154. He was in possession of his father's lands before 1163, and in 1165-6 held fifty-eight and three-quarters knights' fees, and had nine tenants without knight service. In October 1171 he went over to Ireland with Henry II, and early in 1172 was sent to receive the submission of Ruaidri Ua Conchobair (Roderic), king of Connaught. Before Henry's departure about the end of March Lacy was granted Meath by the service of fifty knights and with almost royal authority; he was also put in charge of Dublin Castle. |
1 |
777 | I43928 | Ladson Smith | Jane | 1800 | 4 Mar 1823 | 0 | Saint Philips Episcopal Church Cemetery | 1 |
778 | I45448 | Lamberts | Gertrude | 1632 | Oct 1710 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Protestant Dutch Church |
1 |
779 | I45448 | Lamberts | Gertrude | 1632 | Oct 1710 | 0 | Flatbush Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery |
1 |
780 | I7259 | Lancaster | William | Abt 1154 | 1184 | 0 | William de Lancaster II is chiefly noted as the founder of the Premonst r a t e n sian Hospital at Cockersand, which was erected into an abbey in 11 9 0 . H e c o nfirmed to the monks of St. Bees his father's and uncle's gran t s t o t h a t place. To the hospital of St. Leonard of York he gave land c a l le d D o chergh (now Docker, par. of Kendal ) in exchange for land in K e n d a l , which had been given to the hospital by Ketel, son of Eldred, an d l a n d i n B artonhead which his father gave. He was a liberal benefacto r t o t h e c a nons of Conishead, to whom h e gave land between Ulverston a n d B a r d sea, the church of Ulverston an d the estate of Gascow, near Ul v er s t o n. |
1 |
781 | I25271 | Lane | Ralph | Abt 1532 | 28 Oct 1603 | 0 | Sir Ralph Lane (c. 1532 - October 1603) was an English explorer of the E l izabethan era. He helped colonise the Kingdom of Ireland in 1583 and w a s sheriff of County Kerry, Ireland, from 1583 to 1585. He was part of t h e unsuccessful attempt in 1585 to colonise Roanoke Island, North Carol i na . He was knighted by the Queen in 1593. Lane is best remembered for his attempt to establish a settlement on Ro a noke Island at the request of Sir Walter Raleigh. Queen Elizabeth was l o o k i n g for places to colonise and the Americas appeared ripe for Englis h e x p a n sion. The voyage began on 9 April 1585. The fleet comprised the T i g e r ( G renville's), the Roebuck, the Red Lion, the Elizabeth, and the D o r o t h y. The voyage on the Tiger proved difficult, as Lane quarrelled wi t h t h e a g gressive leadership of Grenville, whom he found a person of "i n t o l e rable pride and insatiable ambition". Unfortunately, during a seve r e s t o r m off the coast of Portugal, the Tiger was separated from the re s t o f t h e f leet. The Tiger arrived on 11 May to Baye's Muskito (Guayan i l la , P u erto Rico). While waiting for the other ships, Grenville establ i s h e d r elations with the Spanish (whilst at the same time participating i n p r i v a teering against their ships) and also built a small fortress. Th e E l i z a beth arrived shortly after construction of the fortress. Despite trouble with the natives (because of the attitudes of the Engli s h ) a n d t he shortage of food, Lane and 107 other settlers were left on R o a n o k e Island, Virginia, on 17 August 1585 to establish a colony on its n o r t h e n d. They built a small fort, probably similar to the one at Guaya n i l l a B ay, but Lane and Grenville fell out with each other, a foretaste o f t h e t r o ubles that dogged the colony until the end. Almost immediately , G r e n v ille and his crew set sail for England, promising to return in A pr i l 1 5 8 6 with more men and fresh supplies. April 1586 passed with no news of Grenville. In June, Sir Francis Drake a r r i v e d at Roanoke and offered Lane and his men a return voyage to Engla n d , w h i ch Lane readily accepted because of a weakened food supply and i n c r e a sed tensions with local tribes. Drake's fleet reached Portsmouth o n 2 8 J u l y , at which the settlers of Roanoke introduced snuff, corn, and p o t a t o es to England. The Account of Ralph Lane first appeared in Richar d H a k l u yt's Principall Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries o f t h e E n g lish Nation in 1589. Lane later participated in other expeditions. In January 1592 he was ap p o i n t ed muster-master general of Ireland and was knighted the following y e a r b y S i r William FitzWilliam, the Lord Deputy of Ireland. |
1 |
782 | I7905 | Le Botiller | Maud | 4 Sep 1225 | 27 Nov 1283 | 0 | After John's death in 1267, she remarried, Richard D'Amundeville. After John's death in 1267, she remarried, Richard D'Amundeville. |
1 |
783 | I7212 | Le Capet | Adele | Abt 1009 | 8 Jan 1079 | 0 | Adele had a strong interest in Baldwin V's church reforms and was behin d h i s f o u nding of several collegiate churches. Directly or indirectly, s h e w a s r e sponsible for establishing the Colleges of Aire (1049), Lille ( 1 0 5 0 ) a n d H arelbeke (1064) as well as the abbeys of Messines (1057) a n d E na m e ( 1063). After Baldwin's death in 1067, she went to Rome, took the nun's veil fr o m t h e h a nds of Pope Alexander II and retired to the Benedictine conven t o f M e s s ines, near Ypres. There she later died and was buried at the c on ve n t . H onoured as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church, her commemora t i o n d a y is 8 September. Adele's influence lay mainly through her family connections. On the dea t h o f h e r b rother, Henry I of France, the guardianship of his seven-yea r - ol d s o n Philip I fell jointly on his widow, Ann of Kiev, and on his b r o t h e r-in-law, Adela's husband, so that from 1060 to 1067, they were Re g e n t s o f France. |
1 |
784 | I7904 | Le Despenser | Hugh | 1 Mar 1260 | 27 Oct 1326 | 0 | Hugh le Despenser (1 March 1261 - 27 October 1326), sometimes referred t o a s " t h e E lder Despenser", was for a time the chief adviser to King Ed wa rd I I o f E n gland. He was the son of Hugh le Despencer, 1st Baron le Despencer (or Despens e r ) , a n d Aliva Basset, sole daughter and heiress of Philip Basset. His f a t h e r w as killed at the Battle of Evesham when Hugh was just a boy , bu t H u g h ' s patrimony was saved through the influence of his materna l gra nd f a t h er (who had been loyal to the king).[2] He married Isabella de Beauchamp, daughter of William de Beauchamp, 9t h E a r l o f W a rwick and Maud FitzJohn. He served Edward I on numerous oc cas i o n s i n b attle and in diplomacy and was created a baron by writ o f sum m o n s t o P arliament in 1295. However, when he became close to Edwa rd II h i s p l a c e was always with the king, which worried the barons. T o that t i m e , h i s highest office was justice of the forests.[3] He was one of the few barons to remain loyal to Edward during the cont r o v e r s y regarding Piers Gaveston. Despenser became Edward's loyal serv a n t a n d c h ief administrator after Gaveston was executed in 1312, but t h e j e a l o usy of other barons - and, more importantly, his own corruptio n a n d u n j u st behaviour - led to his being exiled along with his son Hu gh D e s p e n ser the younger in 1321, when Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent re p l a c e d him as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. |
1 |
785 | I7210 | Le Goz | Richard | Abt 1008 | Aft 1084 | 0 | Richard Goz, Vicomte d'Avranches, or more properly of the Avranchin, wa s o n e o f t h e sons of the aforesaid Turstain, by his wife Judith deMonta no l i er , a nd appears not only to have avoided being implicated in the re b e l l i on of his father, but obtained his pardon and restoration to the V i c o m t â e of the Hiemois, to which at his death he succeeded, and to hav e s t r e n gthened his position at court by securing the hand of Emma deCon te v i l l e, one of the daughters of Herluin and Herleve, and half-sister o f h i s s o v ereign. By this fortunate marriage he naturally recovered the l a n d s f o rfeited by his father and bestowed on his mother-in-law, and acq u i r e d a lso much property in the Avranchin, of which he obtained the Vic o m t â e , i n addition to that of the Hiemois. There was every reason, the r e f o r e, that he should follow his three brothers-in-law in the expediti o n t o E n g land, if not prevented by illness or imperative circumstances. H e m u s t h a ve been their senior by some twenty years, but still scarcely p a s t t h e p rime of life, and his son Hugh a stripling under age, as his m o t h e r , if even older than her brothers Odo and Robert, could not have b e e n b o r n before 1030, and if married at sixteen, her son in 1066 would n o t b e m o r e than nineteen at the utmost. Mr. Freeman , who places the ma r r ia g e o f Herleve with Herluin after the death of Duke Robert in 1035, w o u l d r e duce this calculation by at least six years, rendering the prese n c e o f h e r grandson Hugh at Senlac more than problematical. |
1 |
786 | I7226 | Le Goz | Thurstan | Abt 979 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of th e H i e m o is, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz,abovementione d , w h o s e s on Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favour ite o f R o b e rt Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accomp anie d h i m t o t he Holy Land, and was entrusted to bring back the relics t he D u k e h a d obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the A bb e y o f C e risi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke W i l l i a m in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands c o n f i s cated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herlui n d e C o n t eville. The third son of Gerlotte was Ansfrid the Dane, the first Vicomte of th e H i e m o is, and father of Ansfrid the second, surnamed Goz,abovementione d , w h o s e s on Turstain (Thurstan, or Toustain) Goz was the great favour ite o f R o b e rt Duke of Normandy, the father of the Conqueror, and accomp anie d h i m t o t he Holy Land, and was entrusted to bring back the relics t he D u k e h a d obtained from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to present to the A bb e y o f C e risi, which he had founded. Revolting against the young Duke W i l l i a m in 1041 (Vide vol. i, p. 21), Turstain was exiled, and his lands c o n f i s cated and given by the Duke to his mother, Herleve, wife of Herlui n d e C o n t eville. |
1 |
787 | I7622 | Le Marschall | William | Abt 1160 | 1219 | 0 | Signator of the Magna Charta |
1 |
788 | I7225 | Le Meschin | Mabel | Abt 1150 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Le Meschin, surnamed Kevelioc. |
1 |
789 | I7263 | le Réchin | Fulk | Abt 1043 | 1109 | 0 | Fulk IV (French: Foulques IV d'Anjou; 1043 – 14 April 1109), better known as Fulk le Réchin (Latin: Fulco Rechin), was the count of Anjou from around 1068 until his death. He was noted to be "a man with many reprehensible, even scandalous, habits" by Orderic Vitalis, who particularly objected to his many women and his influential footwear, claiming he popularized the pigaches that eventually became the poulaine, the medieval long-toed shoe. |
1 |
790 | I3535 | Leete | Phebe | 1585 | Bef 1642 | 0 | Phebe married George Parkhurst at Ipswich, Suffolk, England about 1611, or before 1612. George and Phebe Parkhurst of Ipswich are mentioned in the record of their daughter, Elizabeth (Parkhurst) (Hilliard) Merry, in Charles Banks’ "The History of Martha’s Vineyard." |
1 |
791 | I4063 | Leete | Robert | 1525 | 17 Feb 1597 | 0 | Robert was granted a degree of Bachelor of Arts 1544-5, Master of Arts in 1548 from Cambridge. Robert was a Fellow of Saint John's College about 1545, and was so designated in a deed dated 24 Sep 1551, from Christopher Rogar of Little Eversden, husbandman, for 1/2 acre in Little Eversden (Queen's College Archives, Eversden Deed 664). This transfer was for property which Robert's brother, Edmund, had bought from Christopher Rogers, by a deed dated 10 Aug 1550 (Deed 663) and which Edmund bequeathed to Robert in his will dated 12 Jul 1551. The bequest was apparently implemented by reconveying it to Robert. |
1 |
792 | I10925 | Leete | Thomas | 1444 | 3 Feb 1495 | 0 | Thomas Leete died in 1495, and was the son of another Thomas Leete (1423-1454), who was the son of Richard Leete (1398-1423). The Leete family are well-documented, with four brothers of the family being mentioned in the Letters Patent of King John, Henry III, and Edward I, as they had been knight-crusaders who were rewarded for their service with knighthoods and manorial estates in S.Cambridgeshire, where the family had been resident for many generations. A member of the family (John Liet) is mentioned in The Domesday Book as being a 'thegn of Edward's' (The Confessor), which might explain why he was able to keep his rank and possessions after the Norman conquest, as Edward had been as revered in Normandy as he was in England, and because John Liet had no connection to the administration of Harold Godwinson. As several family members became church wardens, their records were kept up-to-date, with their family connections and coats of arms now held in the British Library and other collections. posted Nov 24, 2023 by Julian McSweeney (wikitree) |
1 |
793 | I10641 | Leete of Eversden | John | 1500 | 25 Dec 1551 | 0 | The Leete family is an ancient one, traced back to before the Norman conquest of England. Leit is described in the Doomsday Book as a thane (a rank of nobility in pre-Norman England, roughly equivalent to baron) of the Anglo-Saxon, Edward the Confessor, King of England from 1042 until his death 5 Jan 1056/66. The manor of Foxcote in Buckinghamshire, worth £3 annually, is mentioned as being formerly held by Leit. The Eversden branch of the Leete family embraces the names of the known descendants of John Leete, of Eversden, Cambridgeshire whose name stands at the head of the family pedigree, recorded by the Heralds in their Visitation of Cambridgeshire in 1575, and again in 1619. From this John of Eversden also descend the Leetes of Suffolk, whose pedigree is recorded in the Visitation of Suffolk in 1612. |
1 |
794 | I5481 | Legh Of Adlington | Margarey | Abt 1322 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Margaret (married 2nd William de Radclyffe, of Todmorden), daughter of R o b e r t L egh, of Adlington, and sister of Sir Perkyn de Legh, of Lyme,and d i e d c 1 3 60. [Burke's Peerage] |
1 |
795 | I7274 | Leinster | Donnchad | Abt 1060 | 8 Dec 1115 | 0 | Killed in battle with Domnall Ua Briain, Dublin, Ireland in 1115 by the D u b l i n V ikings that were ruled by his cousin Sigtrygg Silkbeard, and was b u r i e d i n Dublin along with the body of a dog, considered to be a huge i n s u l t . |
1 |
796 | I37732 | Lewis | John | Abt 1600 | 16 Nov 1647 | 0 | St Mary Woolnoth with St Mary Woolchurch Haw | 1 |
797 | I7906 | Lindsay | David | 1405 | 17 Jan 1445 | 0 | David Lindsay, 3rd Earl of Crawford (died 17 January 1446) was a regent t o J a m e s I I of Scotland. He was a member of Clan Lindsay, a Scottish Low la n d c l a n. At the Battle of Arbroath in 1445 the Clan Lindsay, led by the Master o f C r a w f ord, advanced with over 1000 men. Their enemy was the Clan Ogilv y w h o w e r e also supported by men from the Clan Oliphant, Clan Gordon, C la n S e t o n and Clan Forbes of Pitsligo. The Earl, who was the Master of C r a w f o rd's father, rode between the two armies in an attempt to call a t r u c e . H owever, an illadvised Ogilvie, thinking that this was the start o f t h e L i n dsay's attack, threw his spear at the Earl, hitting him in the m o u t h a n d killing him instantly. So the battle began which went in the C l a n L i n dsay's favour. |
1 |
798 | I517 | Lindsay | John | 27 Dec 1395 | 6 Feb 1482 | 0 | In 1424 he was a hostage for King James I's ransom by the English. He w a s c r e a ted 1st Lord Lindsay of the Byres [SCOTLAND] circa October 1444. H e h e l d t h e office of Justiciar of Scotland, North of the Forth in 1457. H e h e l d t h e office of a Lord of Session in March 1457/58. In 1378 Squire Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie with only 50 men seized Be r w i c k c astle from the English by scaling the walls at night. The surpri s e d g a r rison, thinking a large Scots army was attacking, abandoned thei r p o s t s a nd fled to the town of Berwick. However the tables were quickl y t u r n e d when the English garrison called on the Percy family of Northu mb e r l a nd with a huge army to besiege Berwick castle. Ramsay called on help from his two Uncles Archibald 'the Grim' Douglas a n d L o r d L yndsay of Byres castle. However these two Lords were only able t o m u s t e r 500 men at Haddington at such short notice to march on Berwick . As Douglas and Lyndsay's army approached Berwick scouts reported the En g l i s h a rmy encircled around the castle numbered 10,000 with archers, si e g e e n g ines, heavy horse and ships blockading the river. There was no a v e n u e f or their nephew Ramsay to escape as any attempt to create a dive r s i o n w ould be suicidal. As Douglas and Lyndsay reluctantly withdrew towards Melrose they were p u r s u e d and attacked by some of the English heavy horse. Fortunately for D o u g l a s and Lyndsay they were aided to victory by the arrival of the Dou g l a s e s of Tantallon castle. the Dunbars of Dunbar castle and their vass a l s t h e G ordons. Despite this surprise victory Berwick fell back into t h e h a n d s of the English and all the Scots garrison killed apart from Ra m s a y w h o was held to ransom. In 1513 Lord Lyndsays of Byres fought bravely at Flodden but the Scots w e r e c o m pletely routed and King James IV of Scots (1488-1513) killed. During the English invasions of fire and sword from 1544-1550, known as t h e w a r s o f the 'Rough Wooing' to force the marriage of the infant Mary Q u e e n o f S cots to the English Prince Edward, it may be that Byres castle w a s s l i g hted in 1548 while t h e English built a huge earth and timber f o r t a t H a ddington. However the orchard tower escaped this destruction a n d r e m a ins an intriguing ruin. |
1 |
799 | I7909 | Lindsay Of Glenesk | Alexander | 1329 | Oct 1381 | 0 | Died on the way to Holy Land |
1 |
800 | I28663 | Linn | Robert | 2 Feb 1776 | 11 Sep 1859 | 0 | Friedens United Church Of Christ Cemetery | 1 |
«Prev 1 2 3 4 Next»