Matches 4,201 to 4,400 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 4201 |
Cond ba Drui also known as Cronn Badhraoi born between 260-500[citation needed].
Cond ba Drui mac Eochaid Cobo (Cronn Badhraoi), son of Eochaidh Cobha Of the Dal nAraide, Ui Echach Cobo
Caolbhaidh son of Cronn Badhraoi, son of Eochaidh Cobha, son of Lughaidh, son of Rossa, son of Iomchaidh, son of Feidhlimidh, son of Cas, son of Fiachaidh Aruidhe, son of Aonghus Gaibhnionn, son of Fearghus Foghlas, son of Tiobraide Tireach, son of Breasal, son of Fearb, son of Mal, son of Rochruidhe, son of Cathbhadh, son of Giallchaidh, son of Cunnchaidh, son of Fionnchaidh, son of Muireadhach, son of Fiachaidh Fionnamhnus, son of Irial Glunmhar, son of Conall Cearnach of the race of Ir son of Milidh, held the sovereignty of Ireland one year. Inneacht daughter of Lughaidh was the mother of Caolbhaidh son of Cronn Badhraoi; and he was slain by Eochaidh Muighmheadhon.[1]
Sources
↑ CELT - The History of Ireland, Geoffrey Keating
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-3 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
According to Foras Feasa ar Éirinn, Caolbhaidh was a son of Cronn Badhraoi, son of Eochaidh Cobha, son of Lughaidh, son of Rossa, son of Iomchaidh, son of Feidhlimidh, son of Cas, son of Fiachaidh Aruidhe, son of Aonghus Gaibhnionn, son of Fearghus Foghlas, son of Tiobraide Tireach, son of Breasal, son of Fearb, son of Mal, son of Rochruidhe, son of Cathbhadh, son of Giallchaidh, son of Cunnchaidh, son of Fionnchaidh, son of Muireadhach, son of Fiachaidh Fionnamhnus, son of Irial Glunm
Descendants of Coelbad O'Columb - Unsourced | COBO Cond ba Drui mac Eochaid (I58542)
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| 4202 |
Conde de Burgos (c.899 - 915). Conde de Castilla (c.909 - 915) Fundador de Lara.
Gonzalo Fernández married Muniadomna. [1]
Fernando.
Ramiro.
Research Notes
The ancestors of Fernán González "Conde de Castilla y de Álava" de Castillaare germane to this profile discussion. The family tree for Munio Nuñez and Argilo, his great-grandparents, taken from the work of the historian Gonzalo Martínez Díez, can be consulted in the digital publication, Historia del Condado de Castilla: "El Primer Fuero Castellano: Brañosera, 13 de Octubre 824". [2]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2024, Condes en Castilla.
↑ _ Website Historia del Condado de Castilla: Iglesia Aparicio, Javier, "El primer fuero castellano: Brañosera, 13 de octubre 824 por Gonzalo Martínez Diez", 13 Oct 2016 (https://www.condadodecastilla.es/)
El Gran Diccionario Historico, pp. 111-2. | FERNANDEZ Gonzalo Fernández (I59761)
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| 4203 |
Conde de Gallaeciae 820
Sources
https://www.geni.com/people/Guterico-Os%C3%B3riz-Conde-de-Gallaeciae/6000000003983855600 Family records | OSORIZ Guterico (I59907)
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| 4204 |
Conde de Ribagorza y Pallars
Birth
Birth:
Date: ABT 875
Note
Also called Unifredo I Bernardo de Pallars y Ribagorza. | RIBAGORZA Bernard (I59779)
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| 4205 |
Conde de Ribagorza y Pallars [1]
Marriage
His wife may be the Giniguentes, daughter of Aznar Dat, mentioned in the Códice de Roda, but the text is ambiguous and probably refers to the wife of his son, Isarn. [2]
Children
Bernardo Unifredo , his successor in front of the county of Ribagorza.
Lope I de Pallars, successor in front of the county of Pallars
Isarno I de Pallars, successor in the county of Pallars
Miró I of Ribagorza, count of Ribagorza next to Bernardo Unifredo.
Aten, succeeded as bishop of Pallars to Adulfo.
Research Notes
According to the medieval manuscript Códice_de_Roda:
Garsea Scemenonis et Enneco Scemenonis fratres fuerunt. Iste Garsea accepts uxor Onneca Rebelle by Sancossa et genuit Enneco Garseanis et domna Sanzia. Post accepit uxor domna Dadildi de Paliares soror Regimundi comitis , et genuit Sanzio Garseanis et Scemeno Garseanis. [3]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Condes de Ribagorza.
↑ Wikipedia:Raymond_I,_Count_of_Pallars_and_Ribagorza.
↑ "Códice de Roda." | RIBAGORZA Ramón (I59799)
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| 4206 |
conde Fruela Gutiérrez was one of the five children of Gutierre Menéndez and his wife Ilduara Eriz. In several documents he is third in their list of sons.[1]
He married Sarracina, family name or patronymic unknown.[1]
Children
Research Notes
Don Froila Gutiérrez, III conde de Trastámara, Conde de Astorga MP
Spanish: Dn. Froila Gutiérrez, III conde de Trastámara, Conde de Astorga,
Portuguese: Froila Guterrez, III conde de Trastámara, Conde de Astorga
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 904
Spain
Death: circa 1025 (112-130)
Galicia
Immediate Family:
Son of Conde Don Gutierre Arias de Menéndez, II conde del Sobrado and Doña Ildaura Ériz de Lugo, Santa
Husband of Doña Sarracina ?
Father of Bermudo Froilaz de Trastámara; Rodrigo Fróilaz, IV Conde de Trastamara; Muniadomna (Todadomna) Fróilaz de Arlanza; Munio Forjaz de Coimbra; Don Gutierre II Menéndez; and Gonzalo Muneoniz
Brother of San Rosendo and Munio Guterres de Celanova, III Conde del Sobrado
Half brother of Ermesinda Gutiérrez de Coimbra; Froila Guterres; Adosinda Gutiérrez and Ildaura Gutiérrez
Monk in Celanova
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles, 'Galicia Nobility 9th-11th Century: Chapter 3 Menendez Family' version 4, 2019, in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm : accessed 20 November 2022).
See also
https://www.geni.com/people/Don-Froila-Guti%C3%A9rrez-III-conde-de-Trast%C3%A1mara-Conde-de-Astorga/6000000001412929513
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-den-hollander-en-van-dueren-den-hollander/I6000000001412929513.php | GUTIÉRREZ Fruela (I59845)
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| 4207 |
Conde, Conde de Castilla, O Negro de Castrosiero n 795 m 870 | URRÁQUEZ Fernando Núñez de Rasura y (I59763)
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| 4208 |
Condesa Ermesenda Gatónez was the daughter of conde Gatón, a younger son of Ramiro I, King of Asturias, and his wife Egilona (of unknown family), and was born about 855.[1]
She married circa 870, conde Hermenegildo Gutierrez and had issue.[1]
Ermesenda died after 30 May 912.[1]
A condessa Ermesinde documenta-se como senhora do mosteiro de Santa Maria de Loyo, junto a Lugo.
Señora de la Villa de Porto Marim
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Salazar y Acha, Jaime de, Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media (Madrid : Real Academia de la Historia, 2021). p. 52. Electronic edition, Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado, https://www.boe.es/biblioteca_juridica/publicacion.php?id=PUB-DH-2021-233 : accessed 16 October 2022.
See also:
Ermesinda Gatoniz, Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands. Asturias, Leon, Chap. 1 Kings of Asturias 718-914; retrieved Sept. 2018.
http://roglo.eu/roglo?lang=pt;i=3391202
https://geneall.net/pt/nome/11702/ermesinda-gatones-de-vierzo/ | ASTURIAS Ermesenda Gatónez (I59850)
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| 4209 |
Congestion of brain | RICHARDSON Henry B. (I56371)
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| 4210 |
Conn Cétchathach legendary High King of Ireland
Ireland Native
Conn Cétchathach Ceadcatha was born in Ireland.
Conn Cétchathach, the legendary 2nd century High King of Ireland is remembered as one of seven sons of the Ard Ri (king of Tara), Feidlimid Rechtaid,. The kings of Tara were the over-kings, or High Kings of Ireland. [1] His mother is sometimes said to have been "the daughter o the king of Denmark"[2] In Irish mythology, Conn's mother is remembered as Medb Lethderg, a legendary goddess of Sovereignty associated as the spouse of nine successive kings of Tara; the Medb of the Connachta of the Ulster Cycle. [3] [4]
Conn Cétchathach was the ancestor of the Connachta. Conn's descendant, Niall Noigiallach was the founder of the Uí Néill dynasties, which dominated Ireland in the early Middle Ages. [5]
Conn Ceadcathach, Conn of the Hundred Battles was so named for his many battles fought and won; sixty battles against Cahir Mór, King of Leinster (109th Monarch of Ireland) whom he slew and succeeded in the Monarchy; one hundred battles against the Ulsterians; and one hundred more in Munster against Owen Mór. Conn and Owen (Eogan) Mor divided Ireland between them; all the country north along the long ridge of hills, Esker Riada, running between Dublin and Galway, Leath Cuinn belonged to Conn; the southern portion, Leath Mogha to Owen Mór. [6] [7] [8]
He had two brothers, Eochaidh Fionn-Fohart and Fiacha Suidhe, who, to make way for themselves, murdered two of his (Conn Ceadcathach's) sons named Conla Ruadh and Crionna; but they were by Conn Ceadcathach's third son, Art Eanfhear banished, first into Leinster, and then into Munster, where they lived near Cashel. They were seated at Deici Teamhrach (now the barony of Desee in Meath), whence they were expelled by the Monarch Cormac Ulfhada, son of Art; and, after various wanderings, they went to Munster where Oilioll Olum, who was married to Sadhbh, daughter of Conn of the Hundred Battles, gave them a large district of the present county of Waterford, a part of which is still called Na-Deiseacha, or the baronies of Desies. They were also given the country comprised in the present baronies of Clonmel, Upper-Third, and Middle-Third, in the co. Tipperary, which they held till the Anglo-Norman Invasion.
From Eochaidh Fionn-Fohart descended O'Nowlan or Nolan of Fowerty (or Foharta), in Lease (or Leix), and Saint Bridget; and from Fiacha Suidhe are O'Dolan, O'Brick of Dunbrick, and O'Faelan of Dun Faelan, near Cashel. Conn of the Hundred Battles had also three daughters: 1. Sadhbh (or Sabina), who m. first, MacNiadh, after whose death she m. Oilioll Olum, King of Munster. 2. Maoin; and 3. Sarah (or Sarad), m. to Conan MacMogha Laine.
Conn reigned 35 years; but was at length barbarously slain by Tiobraidhe Tireach, son of Mal, son of Rochruidhe, King of Ulster. This murder was committed in Tara, A.D. 157, when Conn chanced to be alone and unattended by his guards; the assassins were fifty ruffians, disguised as women, whom the King of Ulster employed for the purpose.[9]
Children
Conla Ruadh
Crionna
Art Eanfhear, the 112th Monarch of Ireland, in the second century of our era.
Sadhbh (or Sabina), who m. first, MacNiadh, after whose death she m. Oilioll Olum, King of Munster.
Maoin; and
Sarah (or Sarad), m. to Conan MacMogha Laine.[10]
Research Notes
No dates associated with this person are directly known. A number of secondary sources have attempted to estimate chronologies of early Irish history, but they do not agree with each other and the estimates could easily be off by centuries.
Sources
↑ Library Ireland: The Royal Residence of Tara
↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: Conn Cétchathach by Philip Irwin
↑ Wikipedia : Medb
↑ The Book of Leinster section 37 : Medb Lethderg cecinit Celt: corpus of electronic texts edition : Book of Leinster, Volume 1, edited by R. I. Best, Osborn Bergin and M. A. O'Brien, Dublin 1954.
↑ Wikipedia : Niall of the Hundred Hostages
↑ "The reader will remember that the descriptive name Leith Cuinn was unknown until Conn Cetchathach, who lived, according to the traditional chronology, in the second century, and Mogh Nuaghat divided Ireland between them, the northern part being known as Leith Cuinn and the southern as Leith Mogha. The boundary was, roughly, from Dublin to Galway Bay." Celt: The Glenmasan Manuscript p.210 column 43 section 1 corpus of electronic texts edition - note: the Glenmasan ms with translation by Professor Mackinnon can be found in The Celtic Review Vol. 1, No. 1 (Jul., 1904), pp. 3-17 & available in JSTOR
↑ Éogan Már qui et Mug Nuadat Celt: Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502 p: 206 line: 1105 & "Owen/Eogan Mor sometimes known as Mogha Nua-Dhad" in Keating's General History of Ireland p: 54
↑ Library Ireland : The Line of Heber : 83 Owen Mór O'Hart
↑ Heremon, retrieved 2014-04-27
↑ Heremon
See also:
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-1 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
Celtic Literature Collective : The Ecstasy of Conn of the Hundred Battles
General History of Ireland,
John O'Hart, Stem of the Irish Nation, Heremon to Art Eanfhear — Heremon, - Araltas
John O'Hart, Irish Pedigrees: Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation. Genealogical Publishing Company, Nov 1, 1989 - Reference. Google book.
Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 7 June 2015), "Conn of the Hundred Battles," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conn_of_the_Hundred_Battles.
Encyclopaedia Britannica Conn Cétchathach | CEADCATHA Conn Cétchathach (I58524)
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| 4211 |
Conrad (later Conrad I Comte de Luxembourg) was the son of Giselbert, Graf von Salm, Comte de Luxembourg and his wife whose name remains unknown but who is considered to have been connected to the family of Emperor Konrad of Lotharingia. [1]
Conrad succeeded his father as Comte de Luxembourg in about 1057 (1056-59). He was later excommunicated in connection with the capture of Eberhardus, the Archbishop of Trier, who died in 1066. The excommunication was to be lifted following a pilgrimage to the Holy Land on which Conrad himself died on 8 Aug 1086, on his return from Palestine (never reaching Italy). [1] [2]
Marriages and Family
Conrad's first marriage was to Ermesinde de Poitou. She is considered to have been a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou (see Research Notes below regarding Ermesinde de Poitou). [1]
Conrad's second marriage, presumably after the death of Ermesinde de Poitou, was to a woman named Clementia whose surname is not certain but who is considered likely to have been a member of the Braunschweig family. [1]
Conrad had as many as eight reported children - of which three sons and two daughters are considered certain: [1]
Henri de Luxembourg - who in 1086 succeeded his father as Henri II Comte de Luxembourg
Guillaume / William de Luxembourg - who married Liutgard von Beichlingen; succeeded his brother in about 1096 as Guillaume I Comte de Luxembourg and was succeeded by his son in about 1130 who became Conrad II Comte de Luxembourg
Adalbero de Luxembourg - who was killed at Antioch in early 1098
Ermesinde de Luxembourg - who first married Albert II Graf von Dagsburg and secondly (in 1109) Godefroi Comte de Namur; who became the heiress to Luxembourg after the death of her nephew Conrad, following which Luxembourg passed into the Namur family though her son Henri IV Comte de Luxembourg [3] [4]
Mathilde de Luxembourg - who married Gottfried von Metz, Graf im Bliesgau
Other children have been reported but are considered less certain or uncertain: [1]
Conrad
Rudolph
Odilia
Research Notes
Note regarding wives of Conrad
Conrad's first wife, Ermesinde de Poitou, is considered to have been a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou and also heiress to Longwy. While the Longwy connection was questioned by Cawley FMG,[1] the apparent misinterpretation may come from a secondary source and not the primary.
Specifically, Cawley FMG tracks certain secondary sources as indicating that the connection between Conrad's first wife Ermesinde de Poitou and the estate of Longwy "appears to have been based on a misinterpretation of the primary sources" (namely the Chronicle of Alberic (Alberic of Trois-Fontaines (French: Aubri or Aubry de Trois-Fontaines; Latin: Albericus Trium Fontium) from 1232, reflecting in this case records from 1168). It is suggested that: "The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names comitissa de Longui et de Castris Ermensendis as wife of Conrado comiti de Luscelenburch [citing the Chronicle of Alberic]. "Castris" is normally the Latin name for Bliescastel… No connection has been found between between Ermensende and the Bliescastel family, although her daughter’s husband was Graf von Bliescastel." [1]
The indication that Ermesinde was noted as being the countess of both Longui and of Castris (Bliescastel) appears to have come from a secondary source suggesting that she was referred to by Albaric as being comitissa de Longui et de Castris Ermensendis. However, the Chronicle of Alberic as transcribed in 1698 does not indicate that Ermesendis was associated with Castris - but rather that she was associated with the estate of Longwy - and that her daughter Mathilde was later associated not only with Longwy but also with Castris (i.e. Bliescastel): [5]
Quadeam autem nobilis Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis nomine peperit Comitem Guillelmum de Lucemburc patrem Conrardi, & Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi, & Mathildam Comitissam de Longuy & de Homberc, & de Castris.
Regarding Castris / Bliescastel then, it was Ermesinde's daughter Mathilde de Luxembourg as reflected in the Chronicle (i.e. not Ermesinde herself) who became connected with Castris / Bliescastel - and Mathilde in fact married Gottfried de Metz - who was indeed Graf von Bliescastel (as recognized by Cawley FMG). [1]
Regarding Longwy, the further suggestion in Cawley FMG that Conrad's wife Ermesinde de Poitou might not have been the Comtesse de Longwy (going through potential acquisitions of Longwy by Conrad's father that are not supported by any primary sources) is also inconsistent with the closest source - which clearly indicates that the mother of Conrad's relevant inheriting children was "Ermonsendis" and that she had been "Comitissa de Longuy." [5]
Ermesinde de Poitou was also apparently connected to the house of Poitou, and was likely a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou based on texts and reasons laid out in Cawley FMG. As Cawley FMG further notes: This suggestion appears confirmed by Albert of Aix who names one of her sons "...Adelberonem…juvenem nobilissimum de regio sanguine et proximum Henrici tertii Romanorum Augusti", the wife of King Heinrich III being Agnès de Poitou, daughter of Guillaume V." (Citing RHC, Historiens occidentaux, Tome IV (Paris, 1879), Alberti Aquensis Historia Hierosolymitana ("Albert of Aix (RHC)"), Liber III, Cap. XLVI, p. 370). [1]
The question then, as Cawley notes, is through which child of Guillaume V of Aquitaine was Ermesinde de Poitou descended - also taking into account (as Cawley thought was not necessarily the case), that she was in fact reported by early sources as being the Countess of Longwy (and his basis for potentially "correcting" that was based on a misreading of the record, as noted above). While there have been some suggestions that her father might have been Gui Geoffroi de Poitou, Guillaume VIII duc d'Aquitaine,[1] that appears to be incorrect. Guillaume VIII had several wives, but none of them appear to have been associated with Ermesinde. However, Guillaume's elder brother Pierre de Poitou, Guillaume VII duc d'Aquitaine also took the name of Guillaume upon becoming Guillaume VII duc d'Aquitaine - and his wife was Ermesinde. Consistent with the Longwy inheritance, the German history of the nobility and associated families known as the Europäische Stammtafeln has been cited as indicating that this person Ermesinde of Longwy was a daughter of Adalbert de Metz and his wife. [6]
While these relationships of Ermesinde de Poitou are consistent with the principal records - and also the indications from early sources that both she and her daughter were associated with the inheritance of Longwy - they are not considered to be proven on the basis of a primary source. As in many cases of the time, the relationships can only be considered as likely based on a combination of associated records - including the co-occurrence of names and apparent family relationships - and in this case also with consistency of the inheritance of associated estates.
Conrad's second wife was reflected in records as "Clementia". She may have been a member of the Braunschweig family although her parentage is not considered certain. [1]
Some secondary sources effectively blend the earlier references to Ermesinde and the later referencs to Clementia into a single person, often then referred to as Clemence de Poitou or Clementia of Aquitaine - but there is no clear evidence to show that these were the same person. [1]
Note regarding children of Conrad
Regarding several of Conrad's reported children, certain of the references that have influenced genealogies are considered suspect, as reviewed in Cawley FMG. Conrad, Rudolph and Odilia are characterized accordingly. [1]
The five children referenced in the top list above are reflected in records - but their order as reflected in Cawley FMG is not entirely consistent. A principal source related to Guillaume and Ermesinde (both of whom were later heirs), apparently indicates that both they and their sister Mathilde were children of Count Conrad of Luxembourg and his wife first wife Ermesinde. Cawley's basis for potentially "correcting" their parentage is a later charter in which Conrad's second wife Clementia, as countess, makes reference to the consent of Ermesinde and Guillaume, but her step-children might well have been referenced as her children. Furthermore, Cawley's chronology is difficult with respect to Clementia being the mother of Mathilde (leading to his conclusion that she must instead have been a daughter of the first marriage).
There is also the actual inheritance of the estate reflected in Conrad's succession - which went from Conrad's eldest son Henri to his son Guillaume, and then from Guillaume to Guillaume's son Conrad, and finally from Conrad to his aunt Ermesinde - in connection with which Luxembourg passed into the Namur family.[4] If as the cited reference apparently reflected, both Guillaume and Ermesinde were children of the first marriage, and the later reference was simply referencing their consent in their capacity as step-children of the then-current countess Clementia (particularly since they were in fact in a position to become Conrad's heirs and did in fact become his heirs), then none of these would be inconsistencies requiring a proposed "correction" or suggestions of unusual inheritance patterns (as posited by Cawley).
Finally, while the children may have been referenced in association with their step-mother in connection with subsequent consents, the opposite is not true. That is, if they were actually the biological children of Conrad's second wife and not his first, then they would not be referenced in connection with his first wife Ermesinde. In fact, the primary reference from 1232 reflecting an account regarding the year 1168 not only associates them with Ermesinde but it uses the more distinctive term of peperit (third person singular perfect of pario: she gave birth to): [5]
Quadeam autem nobilis Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis nomine peperit Comitem Guillelmum de Lucemburc patrem Conrardi, & Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi, & Mathildam Comitissam de Longuy & de Homberc, & de Castris.
Regarding the passage of Luxembourg through Ermesinde as heir to the Namur family, it is reflected in both the original Chronicle by Alberic quoted above (Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi being the daughter and "progeny" of Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis) [5] - and also in the subsequent records reflected in Cawley FMG related to the house of Luxembourg - Namur. [4]
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Comtes de Luxembourg 963-1136 by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ Gades, John A. (Brill Archive, 1951) Luxemburg in the Middle Ages. Cf. pp. 55-58. Available via Google Books: Luxemburg in the Middle Ages
↑ Comtes de Namur 907-1190 - Godefroi de Namur by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Comtes de Luxembourg 1136-1247 (Namur) by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Alberici monachi Trium fontium Chronicon, è manuscriptis nunc primum editum à Godofredo Guilielmo Leibnitio; available online via Internet Archive, Alberici monachi Trium fontium Chronicon (cf. page 350, image 644 of 884)
↑ Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. p 28 | LUXEMBOURG Conrad (I59528)
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| 4212 |
Conrad II, a member of the Bavarian branch of the Welfs, was Comte d'Auxerre and Marquis of Tranjurania.
In 858, at the coaxing of Charles the Bald, his cousin, he and his brother betrayed Louis the German when he sent them on an espionage mission and went over to Charles, who rewarded them handsomely because he had lost his Bavarian honores. He acted as Duke of Transjurane (Upper) Burgundy from then until about 864. [1]
Parents
Father: Conrad I l'Ancien [2]
Mother: Adelais of Tours
Marriage
He married Waldrada ___. [3]
Children
Rudolf de Bourgogne.
Adelais, married (887/8) Richard "le justicier"
Death
Conrad, Comte d'Auxerre, died in 876. [3]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Conrad_II,_Duke_of_Transjurane_Burgundy.
↑ The Peerage.
↑ 3.0 3.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Kings of Upper Burgundy. | WELF Conrad (I57968)
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| 4213 |
Conrad Welf, was installed as Conrad I 'le Pacifique', King of Burgundy. He was buried at Vienne, Cathédrale Saint-Maurice.[1]
Conrad de Bourgogne married Mathilde de France. [2]
Sources
↑ Settipani, Christian. La Préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987. Villeneuve d’Ascq, 1993. P330.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Kings of Upper Burgundy.
Caroli Magni Progenies, Neustadt an der Aisch, 1977 , Rösch, Siegfried. 177 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020211&tree=LEO
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac. Web.[1]
Original Charters, Prior to 1121, Held in France
Year 943, Charter 1596: "Conrad the Peaceful, King of Burgundy, to the Abbey of Cluny"
Year 943, Charter 1599: "..., for Priest Ermenteus"
Year 950, Charter 3973: "..., for Arlulfus"
Year 950, Charter 4074: "..., for Lord Erlulfus"
Year 976, Charter 539: "..., to the Abbey of SAVIGNY SUR BRESSE" | BOURGOGNE Konrad (I58445)
|
| 4214 |
Conrad, Comte de Genève. [1]
Sources
↑ Guichenon, Samuel. Histoire généalogique de la royale maison de Savoie, justifiée par titres, fondations de monastères, manuscrits, anciens monumens, histoires, et autres preuves authentiques, Tome III (Chez Jean-Michel Briolo, Turin, 1778) "Extraction de Béatrix de Genéve, Comtesse de Savoie," p. 309. | GENÈVE Conrad (I58551)
|
| 4215 |
Consider Cooke died, in his seventy-fifth year, on April 20, 1819, and was buried in the Cooke section
of the Marksboro Presbyterian Cemetery, about three miles from his home where many others of his
generation, including some of his brothers, are buried. He was probably one of the founders of the
Marksboro Presbyterian Church in1815. The inscription on his gravestone is as follows:
"Sacred to the Memory of CONSIDER COOKE, SR.
Who departed this life April 20th, 1819 In the 75th year of his age"
Consider Cooke died without a will as there is recorded at the Court House at Newton, N. J., a
partition deed, executed by his threechildren on August 19, 1819, four months after his death, which
divides "certain lands tenements and hereditaments situate in thecounty of Sufsex, which descended
to the said Rebeckah Cooke, WilliamCooke and Nathan Cooke by the death of their father intestate."
There is also recorded at the Court House an Inventory of ConsiderCooke, Sr., taken May 18, 1819,
as follows: Purse and apparel............$44.52 1/2
One Bond with interest.......537.31
$581.83 1/2
House and farm equipment..... $972.69
Daniel Curlis and Isaac Reed, Seno. were Appraisers and Nathan Cooke,Consider's younger son,
was Administrator of the estate. Children: Rebecca Cooke b. 17-Aug-1771. William
Cooke b. 14-Nov-1773. Nathan Cooke b. 13-Jun-1775.
Page 10 of 25 Monday, August 13, 2018 9:43:43 AM
Descendants of Francis Cooke
Generation 6 (con't)
Cooke b. 14-Nov-1773. Nathan Cooke b. 13-Jun-1775.
The above information was contributed by Willson O'Connell . | COOKE Consider (I57051)
|
| 4216 |
Constance de Bourgogne (b. after 1045 - d.25 Jul/25 Oct 1093).[2][3]
bur Sahagún, León, royal monastery of Santos Facundo y Primitivo).
Parents
Father: Robert "le Viex" Capet, Duke of Burgundy
Mother: Hélie de Semur[1]
Marriage
m.1 (1065) Hugues II, Comte de Chalon (d. Nov/Dec 1079), son of Thibaut de Semur (d. 1065 Tolosa), Comte de Chalon and Ermentrude. No issue.[4][5][2]
m.2 (Dec 1079 or 08 May 1081) Alfonso VI, King of Castilla y Leon. Issue: 1.
Urraca, Queen of Castilla y León (b. 1080 - d. 08 Mar 1126 Saldaña)
Sources
↑ Van Kerrebrouck, Patrick. Les Capétiens 937-1328. Villeneuve d’Ascq, 2000. Pp 554 & 555.
↑ Thibaut's parents were Geoffroy I, Seigneur de Semur and Mathilde de Chalon, dame de Donzy.[1]
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac. Web.[6]
Wikipedia: Constance of Burgundy | CAPET Constance (I59818)
|
| 4217 |
Constance of Castile was the daughter of Alfonso VII, King of León and Castile and Bereguela of Barcelona.[1][2][3]
She was recruited from Spain to marry Louis VII after his divorce from Eleanor of Aquitaine.[2] They married at Orléans in 1154.[1]
They had two daughters:
Margaret[1][4][5]
Alix[4] aka Alice[6][7]
Constance had been queen for only six years when she died on 4 October 1160 while giving birth to her second daughter.[1][2][7] Louis quickly wed Adela of Champagne in the same year, as he was desperate to produce a male heir.[4]
Constance was buried with a silver seal matrix, which was discovered in her tomb at Saint-Denis in 1793.[2] It is now in the Cabinet des Médailles in Paris.[2]
Constance is the matrilineal ancestor of Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward I.[6]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 G. W. Watson, "The Seize Quartiers of Margaret (of France), Queen Consort to Henry (the younger)." The Genealogist New Series X (1894) Internet Archive Table IV p. 79 incorrecetly names her father as Alfonso VIII, Additions to table IV pp. 81-85
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Kathleen Nolan, Queens in Stone and Silver: The Creation of a Visual Imagery of Queenship in Capetian France (2009) p. 88.
↑ Bernard F. Reilly, The Kingdom of León-Castilla Under King Alfonso VII, 1126-1157 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998) Google Books Preview pp. 123-124
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Chronicle of Hainaut by Gilbert of Mons, translated to English by Laura Napran (Boydell, 2005). Google Books Preview p. xii French Royal House and p. 52 footnotes 233 and 234. Latin edition by Vanderkindere (1904). Internet Archive p. 84 footnote 5.
↑ Alberici Monachi Trium Fontium Chronicon (1698) Internet Archive p.344
↑ 6.0 6.1 G. W. Watson, "The Seize Quartiers of Eleanor (of Castile) Queen Consort to Edward I." The Genealogist New Series XI (1895) Internet Archive Table XIII p. 31
↑ 7.0 7.1 John Gillingham, "Richard I and Berengaria of Navarre." Historical Research 53.128 (1980) p. 158 and footnote 5.
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. III page 21 | CASTILLA Constanza (I59647)
|
| 4218 |
Constance was born about 1673. She was not mentioned in her husband's will of 17 Mar 1696, so it is believed that she had died before that date, probably in Worcester, Worcester, MA | JAMES Constance (I39678)
|
| 4219 |
Constantia was born between 920 and 930. [1]
Constance, wife of Boso count of Arles, appears with her husband and sons Guillaume and Roubaud in an act of May 961. [2]
Research Notes
She has been detached from Carolus (Vienne) d'Arles (abt.0900-abt.0962) and Teutberge Troyes as parents due to lack of evidence.
There are several theories for the relationship of Constance and Charles-Constantine:
Chaume proposed that she was his daughter. [3]
Jean-Pierre Poly proposed that she should be his sister.
She could also be the niece of Charles-Constantin, but it is very unlikely that the latter had a sister or a first brother (brevity of the marriage of the parents and absence in the sources). [4]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021, Kings of Provence, Bosonid Family.
↑ The Henry Project.
↑ Chaume (1925), p. 447 n°2, quoted by Settipani (1991), p. 4.
↑ Wikipedia:FR:Constance_de_Provence. | VIENNE Constance (I58821)
|
| 4220 |
Consul of Rome | SABINUS Titus Flavius (I23950)
|
| 4221 |
Consul of Rome | FULVUS Titus Aurelius (I23976)
|
| 4222 |
Content died young.
Content died young. | Peckham Content (I53933)
|
| 4223 |
Contract Notary Ameau | Family: BROSSEAU Denis / HUBERT Marie Madeleine Louise (F1480)
|
| 4224 |
Controde de León
Spanish: Da. Gontroda de Galicia
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 795
Immediate Family:
Wife of Bermudo Alvarez and Joan Per Ñool
Mother of Rodrigue Bermudes, II and Rodrigo II, Conde de Castilla
Sources
https://www.geni.com/people/Controde-de-Le%C3%B3n/6000000000228811508?through=6000000046655504034
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/family-tree-cromer-russell-buck-pratt/P50355.php | LEÓN Controde (I59771)
|
| 4225 |
Cooked in a C. C. Can near Grand Marais. | PELKE Lawrence (I6370)
|
| 4226 |
Cora Bell ran off with a preacher and left her children with Edward to raise. They divorced and he remarried a widow, Rose Hellman...She also had three children. | Simonds Cora Bell (I52815)
|
| 4227 |
Cora Bell ran off with a preacher and left her children with Edward to raise. They divorced on 3 April, 1919, and he later remarried a widow, Rose Hellman. Rose also had three children by a previous marriage.
Cora remarried shortly after Alexander A. Allison obtained his divorce from his wife. Later in life, she lived with a daughter, Violet O'Connell Gray until she died. Charlie or Charles, her brother, also lived with her and her husband.
After her death, Violet and Warren Gray moved to Park Rapids, Minnesota. They built a lovely home on Potato Lake. | Family: O'Connel Edward Almond / Simonds Cora Bell (F24099)
|
| 4228 |
Corky's last name appears on her birth certificate as Brown. Her
father's name is listed as Leroy Brown. However, Corky was informed
that her father was really Robert Lee Strotheide around the time of
her wedding, and did not change her maiden name. | STROTHEIDE Corky Brown (I9331)
|
| 4229 |
Cormac (Cormacc) founded the Sil Chormaic sept (family kin group). [1]
Clan name (Tuath); Sil Chormaic (Clann Cormaic) [2]
Progenitor; Cormaicc (the son of) Nath Í (the son of) Crimthaind (the son of) Énnai Ceinselaig
Location - River Slaney basin in County Wexford, the MacMurrough royal demesne around Ferns, as well as the barony of Scarawalsh
Cinéal (Kinship); Uí Ceinnselaig
Branches; Cuthraighe, Ua Trena, Ui Cruinn or Ui Cuinn, Ua Gabla Fine and Ua Gabla Roireann
Sources
↑ The sons of Nath Í mac Crimthainn, a King of the Uí Cheinnselaig, were - Éogan Cáech (a king of the Uí Cheinnselaig who founded the Síl Fáelchán, Sil Máeluidir, Síl nÉladaig, and Síl Mella septs); Cormacc, who founded the Sil Chormaic sept; and Ailill, grandfather of the high-king of Ireland Áed Mac Ainmuirech. Wikipedia : Crimthann Mac Énnai
↑ Wikipedia : List of Irish Clans
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | Mac Nath I Cormac (I58472)
|
| 4230 |
Cormac Gealta Gaoth (Cormac Gealtach) was the grandfather of Cathair Mór (King of Leinster 119–122 AD) [1] and a descendant of Conchobar Abradruad [2]
Cathaoir Mor son of Feidhlimidh Fiorurghlas, son of Cormac Gealta Gaoth, son of Nia Corb, son of Cu Corb, son of Mogh Corb[3]
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 38
Clann Name: (?)
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[4]
AU - Starts at U 431
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Kings of Leinster : Classical Antiquity: Laigin
↑ "Cathaoir Mor was son of Feidhlimidh Fiorurghlas, son of Cormac Gealta Gaoth, son of Nia Corb, son of Cu Chorb" The History of Ireland page: 144 - by Geoffrey Keating : Foras Feasa ar Éirinn le Seathrún Céitinn trans: Edward Comyn & Patrick S. Dinneen
↑ The History of Ireland (Author: Geoffrey Keating) Section 40 pg.260 - CELT
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
Rawlinson B502 | GAOTH Cormac Gealta (I58497)
|
| 4231 |
Cormac Mac Ailillo, the son of Son of Ailill Mac Dúnlainge, was a king of Leinster 527–535
Names
Cairbre "Coirpri" /mac Cormac/
Cairbre, King of Leinster
Cormac of Leinster
Colman Mor
Death
Death: 567, Bangor, Down, Northern Ireland. Source: #S48. Record for Cairbre Leinster. Record for Cormac Of Leinster
Death: 546, Dublin, Ireland. Source: #S48. Record for Cairbre Leinster. Record for Lillial Leinster
NOTE : The original profile has his DOB as c470, though the bio has it as 460. However, his father was born c470 and grandfather c450, so this date is impossible. Since his son was born c500, his estimated DOB was changed to c485 to eliminate dB error.
Sources
Wikiwand : Kings of Leinster
Source Ancestry.
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | LEINSTER Cormac (I58537)
|
| 4232 |
Cormac mac Airt ("son of Art"; also known as Cormac ua Cuinn, "grandson of Conn") was the son of Art Óenfer.
Cormac Ulfhada "long beard", Cormac (also known as or Cormac ua Cuinn) began his reign in the year 0226 and was the 115th monarch in the line of Heber, the wisest, most learned and best of any that ruled the Kingdom of the Milesian race in Ireland before him. He ordained very good laws, wrote several learned treatises, amoung which his treatise of Kingly government dictated to his son Carbre is yet extant and extraordinary. [1] [2]
Cormac's wife, Eithne, was the daughter of Dunlong, King of Leinster.
He had three sons, Darius, Cairbre and Ceallach, but no issue is recorded from any but Cairbre. He had also ten daughters, but no account of them, only two, Grace or Grania and Ailbhe, who were both successively the wives of the grand champion and general of the Irish Militia, Finn, the son of Cubhall.
During the latter part of his reign, he resided at Sletty on the Boyne, being, it is said, disqualified for the occupation of Tara by the personal blemish he had sustained in the loss of an eye, by the hand of Angus "Dread-Spear," chief of the Desi, a tribe whose original seats were in the barony of Deece, in the county of Meath. [3]
Some versions of the Lebor Gabála Érenn synchronise his reign with that of the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius (161–180)
Keating dates his reign to 204–244
The Annals of the Four Masters date his reign to 226–266.
An entry in the Annals of Ulster dates his death as late as 366.
He was succeeded by Eochaid Gonnat.
Sources
↑ assigned no: 115 in Library Ireland : Roll of the Monarchs of Ireland from Irish Pedigrees or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation by John O'Hart
↑ there are various alternative dates for his timeline Celt : The Burial of King Cormac by Samuel Ferguson
↑ Celt : The Burial of King Cormac by Samuel Ferguson
See also:
Wikidata: Item Q1133072, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Irish pedigrees; or, The origin and stem of the Irish nation part ll chap. ll page 59 by O'Hart, John; pdf
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-1 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
Albert F. Schmuhl, The royal line : chart prepared for the New York Stake Genealogical Board, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints centennial exhibition, March, 1936 (Salt Lake City: self published, 1929) https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/239856?availability=Family%20History%20Library. Google Books (http://books.google.com : accessed 7 June 2015). Revised 1980. Purports to go back to Adam, "Genealogical lineages shown on the chart may not always be from father to son, especially in the reigning houses of Kings; some ancient connections are based on legends, believed to be true." | mac AIRT Cormac (I58519)
|
| 4233 |
Cornelius moved from Barnstable County, MA and was living in Parish of Millington, East Haddam, Middlesex Co., CT in 1728. He was still there by 1747. | Annable Cornelius (I53274)
|
| 4234 |
Corp Oct 15, 1861
92nd NY Inf Co F, Stockholm
Deserted Jul. 20, 1862 from a hospital in York, PA.
He married Cynthia Pulsifer and lived in Hopkinton in 1880 and Edwards in 1882 when his wife died. He lived in Shelby, MI in 1900 with his second wife and died in 1912 (TC, AG, 1850, 1865, 1880, 1900, newspaper, data) | OBER Milo (I6032)
|
| 4235 |
Could he also be the Ephraim Brown who died in Litchfield, Herkimer County,NY on 16 June, 1812? | Brown Ephraim (I50924)
|
| 4236 |
Could not read or write English. | (McDonough) Bridget (I256)
|
| 4237 |
Could not read or write English. | MCDONOUGH John (I5568)
|
| 4238 |
Could William Bateman who was admitted a freeman 18 May, 1642 be her father? He had son, William, of Concord, Freeman 1641 and removed to Chelmsford; Thomas, Concord, admitted freeman in 1642, died. 6 Feb. 1699 at age 55 yrs.
Thomas Bateman had sons, John, Thomas, Ebenezer and Peter who died in Woburn, 1676. | Bateman? Bridget (I51122)
|
| 4239 |
Count Alan of Brittany was appointed one of the guardians for the young William of Normandy while his father Robert, Duke of Normandy was on pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1035. [1] [2]
This profile appears to require splitting up and other work.
The MEDLANDS website distinguishes several Alains of Brittany.
Alain II, son of Matuedo count of Poher. He is the one who married a de Blois and also a Judith from Nantes. (He also had a first wife from Anjou.) This is the one who had a son named Hoël.
Alain III. This Alain was son of Geoffrey son of Conan. His mother was Hawise of Normandy. His legitimate children were Conan and Hawise.
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Alan III, Duke of Brittany]
↑ 1066 The Year of the Three Battles : Duke William of Normandy by Frank McLynn pub:Jonathan Cape 1998
Evergates, Theodore, ed., Aristocratic Women in Medieval France (University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1999) "Adela of Blois: Family Alliances and Female Lordship" by Kimberly A. LoPrete. Page 12. | BRETAGNE Alan (I59997)
|
| 4240 |
Count Cassius (fl. 8th century A.D.), also called "Count Casius" (Spanish: Casio; Arabic: قَسِىّ قُومِس, "Kasi kūmis", or "Qasi qūmis"), was a Hispano-Roman or Visigothic nobleman who founded the Banu Qasi dynasty. [1][2]
The name Fortunius, currently his "LNAB" has not been identified.
As the sources are limited, we know little about this count.[3]
685 Birth Year Estimation
Since he converted to Islam in 714, assume he was already ruling and aged 30 or so at the time, therefore born, say, 685.
Christian Count in Ebro Valley
A Christian Count named Casio who lived in the center of the Ebro valley was the origin of the Banu Qasi. [3]
Ibn Hazm stated that Casio was "Count of the Goths" [3]
714 Umayyad Conquest and Conversion to Islam
According to the tenth century Gothic Muwallad historian Ibn al-Qūṭiyya, Count Cassius converted to Islam in 714, shortly after the Umayyad conquest of Hispania, as a client (mawali) of the Umayyads; his family came to be called the Banu Qasi (بنو قَسِىّ, the "sons [or descendants] of Cassius").
Cassius had converted at the hands of the Arab, Hassan ibn Yassar al-Hudhali, qadi in Zaragoza at the time of Abd ar-Rahman's arrival in the peninsula, as a means to preserve his lands and political power.
Cassius joined forces with Musa ibn Nusayr and Tariq ibn Ziyad, and is reported to have travelled to Damascus to personally swear allegiance to the Caliph Al-Walid I.[4]
Casio helped Musa and Tariq, who headed the Muslim forces of the Emir, between the end of 713 - and early 714. He then traveled to Damascus to adopt the Muslim religion.[3]
Reign
At the time of the Muslim arrival and after, Cassius ruled an area comprising Tudela, Tarazona, Borja, and, probably, Ejea. [4]
The Banu Qasi domain and its rival, the Kingdom of Pamplona, in the 10th century, after they were deprived of most of the Upper March. The Banu Qasi, Banu Kasi, Beni Casi (Arabic: بني قسي or بنو قسي, meaning "sons" or "heirs of Cassius") or Banu Musa were a Muwallad dynasty that ruled the upper Ebro valley in the 9th century. [2]
They were loyal to commercial relations with Abd al-Rahman Ia Omei and Hisham I (788-796) with their son, who did not join the rebels in Zaragoza. [3]
705 Marriage and Issue
If Cassius was born in 685 and married at the age of 20, he would have had a wife by 705 and children born in the following year. Any who were born before 714 would have had "Christian" names. Those who were born afterwards would probably have had names with Arabic patronymics, ibn for boys and bint for girls.
His oldest child appears to have a Christian name. Children 2 and 3 are known not with their own name, but as fathers of their sons. Children 4 and 5 appear to have Arabic language versions of Jonah and John. [5]
One could conjecture a younger man whose children were primarily born after his conversion. The logic of making him an older man is that with a wife and children and lands, he had more at stake which made his conversion personally desirable.
On the other hand, once he converted, he could have taken on a subsequent or additional Muslim wife. Any wife that he married after 714 would be expected to have a Muslim name.
A genealogy made up of the historian Ibn Hazm is the only trace of them. According to this, we know that Fortun, Abu Tawr, Abu Salama, Yunus and Yahya were among the sons of Qasi family. It is striking that among so many Muslim names, one-probably the son's son-is a Christian name.[3]
The eleventh century Arab historian Ibn Hazm attributed five sons to Cassius:
Fortun. Cañada Juste says that the Banu Qasi dynasty descended from Fortun, the eldest son[6]
Abu Tawr, Cañada Juste indicates that the second son may have been the Abu Taur of Huesca who invited Charlemagne to Zaragoza in 778 [6] Note: "Abu Tawr" means "Father of Tawr"
Abu Salama, Cañada Juste suggests that the Banu Salama, a family that ruled Huesca and Barbitanya (Barbastro) in the late tenth century, may have descended from Abu Salama[6] Note: "Abu Salama" means "father of Salama"
Yunus, (Jonah)
Yahya. (John)
Descendants
The Banu Qasi became an important Muslim family located in the Ebro Valley, between the eighth tenth centuries. [3]
The heirs of Casio had a prominent role in the Ebro Valley in the middle of the nineth century. [3]
In the eight or ten generations of this lineage, the name Muza repeated so much, no doubt, in honor of the Arab leader, the Count of Casio. Similarly, other family members, such as Fortun and Lope, say that they were also twinned with the lineage that prevailed in the region of Pamplona.[3]
714-839 First Period in Family's History
Three periods can be distinguished in this family's history. The first one last until 839. [3]
In June 788, Musa Ibn Fortun defeated Said ibn al-Husayn, the rebel Yahya Ansari from Zaragoza, who rebelled against Hisman I and took possession of the city. In this way, he became prominent at the Córdoba court. [3]
The Banu Qasitar signed a treaty with the Eneko family. According to this agreement, Mutarrif ibn Musa Ibn Fortun was governor of Pamplona (798-799) and Tudela took a short time (803), among others. While fighting with the elders of the family of the Eneko family, Banu Qasitarra was confronted with the governor of the border Amrus ibn Yusuf.[3]
This alliance was strengthened with fraternal relations. It seems that Oneka, the mother of Eneko Aritz, married Musa ibn Fortun. Their son Musa ibn Musa later became the most important leader of the family. [3]
839-907 Second Period in Family's History
The second era begins in 839, with Musa ibn Musa, the most important leader of the lineage, and ends in 907 when Lubb Ibn Muhammad's son died. [3]
According to Musa ibn Musa's first news (839), the al-Andalus Upper Mugan government had a significant change, and Banu Qasitares never achieved a leading role in the region, which lasted until the first decade of the 10th century.[3]
The close alliance between Aritza and Banu Qasi protected the Muslims from Muslim attacks. On the contrary, as a result of this relationship, they depended on the political ups and downs of the Arab family, and from 840 onwards, it will begin to be felt. In fact, at that time, Musa ibn Musa began to move away from the emirate, as they were the ones who had been called by the governors of Zaragoza and Tudela.[3]
In 841, they also moved to Musa Borja, they had to take Tudela and return to Arnedo. Garzia Iñigez, brother-in-law , son of Eneko Aritzaren, asked for help from Harit Zaragoza's wali , and they prepared an embassy to harit Harit. Abd al-Rahman II attacked Pamplona in 842 to punish the defeat and punish Irun for his help. Probably, they agreed to the Musa's mother -in-law, for the wali of Arnedo . Musa released Harit. Likewise, they agreed to Eneko Aritza's mother .[3]
The following year, Musa broke the treaty and, as a result, Abd al-Rahman II attacked them with violence. He defeated them and Musa and Eneko Aritza were wounded by the attack. In 844, there was a third attack against Musa and its allied rivals. In Tudela, Musa ibn Musa was defeated and from there they went to Pamplona.[3]
After the death of Eneko Aritza (851), the elders tightened their relations with the kingdom of Asturias, and in some cases they protected their policies, partly because of the family Banu Qasi. Meanwhile, Musa Title wali was named, and Zaragoza, as well as the governor of the whole brand. Thus, he increased the loyalty to the Emir. In 854, the Asturian king Ordoño sent troops to help the rebellious Toledo. Musa helped the Emir, and "the king of Vascones", while the Spaniards. In order to punish this aid, the Emir sent an army under the guidance of the Musa and sacked the lands of Alava.[3]
In the year 86, Musa ibn Musa was killed in a fight against suicide. With him, one of the most significant characters of the time disappeared. According to the report of Alfonso III, "The Third King of Hispania" was known by its successes. When he died, Fortun's son promised a lot of obedience to the Emir. He did not have his father's role, however, and he was not as important as his political and military role.[3]
In 872, Musa ibn Musa's sons raised new uprisings in the Ebro Valley. In eight days, Musa's sons (Fortun, Lubb, Mutarrif and Ismail) took Tudela, Zaragoza, Huesca and Monzon. Although they were an amazing event, they had little time to defend these cities. By the year 875, all the sons of Musa were deceased, except Ismail, who was captive. All the cities were once again in the hands of the Emir, and immediately established their governors. King Gartzia Iñigez and other Basque families supported the uprisings of Banu Qasitar. This caused the anger of the Emir, and again attacked Pamplona and Araba.[3]
At the end of the century, there were major changes in the region. Fortun Gartzes was king of Pamplona, the al-Andalus internal strife began, and around 880, he became the head of the Banu Qasi family, Muhammad ibn Lubb.[3]
Until 880, Ismail, who was the last of the Musa's sons, began to take refuge in the surrounding major cities, and Muhammad was raised against the emir, making Zaragoza. In order to fight it, the Emir sent an army under Muhammad ibn Lubb. He was the niece of the Revolver, and when his father Lubb ibn Musa died, he was abandoned. In a fight in Kalagorri (882), Ismail's uncle and cousins-Fortun's sons-were taken prisoner. In this way, he became the absolute leader of the lineage and acquired all the family heritage (Zaragoza, Tudela, Arnedo, Valtierra and San Esteban castle), increasing his territory. In return for the aid he received from the Emirates, the muladian, unwillingly, gave Zaragoza.[3]
When Muhammad ibn Lubb took up the lineage of the lineage, the family was fully consolidated and had a great heritage, which was very important, bearing in mind that there were great conflicts in Cordoba. Because the emir of Upper Mugan had no power set, local powers struggled together, in a strong competition for most of the lands. When attacked, the family Banu Qasi did not take into account the religious beliefs of the enemies, and therefore, Muslims and Christians-especially their leaders-.[3]
He built a large number of Muhammad strongholds and struggled with the kingdom of Pamplona, causing great damage to his dependents and Arabs. He was a tribe, and the Emir was appointed governor of Arnedo and Tarazona. It was built in Monzone and Lleida, it rebuilt the castles of Naiara and Vigueras and was built by Faltzes and Caparroso. He was probably betrayed by fame and power (898), and sent himself to Cordova.[3]
However, the death of Muhammad ibn Lubb did not bring peace to the Basque provinces. In fact, Lubb ibn Muhammad, his son and heir, kept clashes when he became the head of the lineage. Lubb showed that he was a well-deserved successor, because his father followed his path completely. He defeated the Iruñea and the Asturian army by Borjan (900). Toledo asked for help and offered the city authority. Lubb sent Mutarrif, and was appointed as the lord of Toledo (903). Shortly afterwards he conquered an Arab castle, namely Baiá (903).[3]
907-924 Third and Last Period in Family's History
The third era was between 907 and 924, with the political and military disappearance of the Banu Qasi family.[3]
Meanwhile, a change of dynasties occurred in Pamplona (905): the family Ximena took over the inheritance of the Eneko family. In 907, Lubb established defensive places to be included in the mark of Sancho Garcés I of the new royal king of Pamplona. On the contrary, he made several embassies, and one of them died, along with many followers. When Lubb died, the tribe began to decline, since they had lost their territories since then. The leadership of the lineage did not take children, but Abd Allah's brothers. However, they lost some part of the territory, against Sancho Garcia I. In 915, Antso captured Abd Allah, governor of Tudela. He relinquished Falces and Caparroso. This conquest dynamics, however, reached Abd el-Rahman III in 920.[3]
In view of the success of this campaign, Muhammad ibn Abd Allah - who ruled in Tudela, Naiaran and Vigueran - organized an attack; But the king of Pamplona opposed him and conquered Viguera (922). Iruinseme took Muhammad captive, and he soon passed away. Due to the continuous failures of two decades, the tribe was completely weakened, and losing almost all land, Abd el-Rahman III lost interest in the field. Thus, in 924, the family moved to Córdoba, where they remained forgotten.[3]
Research Notes
Contested Existence
His actual existence has been contested on the grounds that embellishing stories related to Gothic ancestry were rather popular during the Caliphate of Cordova. The name is anachronistic, and no Banu Qasi is attested until Mutarrif ibn-Musa during the 780s, but he is identified with just his father's name and not explicitly linked to Cassius or the Banu Qasi.[7]
Historians point out that the origins of the Banu Qasi, as recounted by Ibn al-Qutiyya, could be a product of the spurious antiquarianism of the later Umayyad period rather than reliable genealogy, satisfying the need for stories which bridged the conquest.[8]
Dubious Wife
He has been shown with a wife named Abd Al Aziz ibn Muza Muza (abt. 0685 - 0717) This is a man's name, and therefore this person has been de-linked.
Sources
↑ Roger Collins, The Arab Conquest of Spain, 710-797, (Blackwell Publishing, 1994), 191, 204. Cited by Wikipedia: Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ 2.0 2.1 Revolvy Article. Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 3.26 3.27 3.28 Mikel Etzegarai Garaikoetxea. AuÑamendi Basque Encyclopedia. Banu Qasi Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ 4.0 4.1 Wikipedia: Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ Wikipedia:Arabic_name
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Cañada Juste, Alberto (1977). "Los Banu Qasi (714-924)", in Principe de Viana, vol. 41, pp. 5-95 (1980). pages 7-9. Cited by Wikipedia: Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ Collins, Roger (1983). Early Medieval Spain. New York: St. Martin's Press. p. 180. ISBN 0-312-22464-8. Cited by Wikipedia: Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
↑ Ann Christys, Christians in Al-Andalus, 711-1000, p. 176. Cited by Wikipedia: Count Cassius Accessed 12/29/2018 jhd
See also:
Carlos Sanchez-Marco,
http://www.lebrelblanco.com/00.htm Historia Medieval del Reyno de Navarra]
Wikipedia Bibliography
Cañada Juste, Alberto (1977). "El posible solar originario de los Banu Qasi", in Homenaje a don José M.ª Lacarra..., Zaragoza, I.
Cañada Juste, Alberto (1977). "Los Banu Qasi (714-924)", in Principe de Viana, vol. 41, pp. 5-95 (1980).
Collins, Roger (1983). Early Medieval Spain. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-22464-8.
Collins, Roger (1994). The Arab Conquest of Spain, 710-797 (Blackwell Publishing).
Christys, Ann (eds.) (2002) Christians in Al-Andalus, 711-1000, Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1564-9
Glick, Thomas F. (eds.) (2005) Islamic and Christian Spain in the Early Middle Ages, BRILL. ISBN 90-04-14771-3
Revolvy External links
Banu Kasi, Casius, Kasi and Qasi in the Spanish-language Auñamendi Encyclopedia. | FORTUNIUS Cassius (I59754)
|
| 4241 |
Count De Dijon was born about 0565. Count De Dijon De Dijon ... [1]
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Enrique Treat Gleason Aguiluz, Sunday, June 22, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source. | De DIJON Unknown (I58851)
|
| 4242 |
Count Eberhard of Sülichgau (d. after 889)
Origins
Grandfather: Margrave Eberhard
Marriage
m. Gisela of Verona
Sources
Wikipedia: Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria#Marriage and children | SULICHGAU Eberhard (I58293)
|
| 4243 |
Count of Aragón, King of Navarre, Count of Castile
Sancho ranks as one of the first great patrons of the Saint James Way.
Besides four legitimate sons by Mayor, Sancho also fathered one by his mistress Sancha de Aybar named Ramiro, who was the eldest of his sons but, as a bastard, not entitled to succeed. Before his death in 1035, Sancho divided his possessions among his sons. García received Navarre and the Basque country with a certain seniority over his brothers (a "high kingship"), Ferdinand received Castile as a kingdom, and Gonzalo got Sobrarbe and Ribagorza, also raised to kingdom status. The illegitimate son obtained the county of Aragón, which was elevated to a kingdom, small as it was at the time (Ramiro was known as "the petty king"). Sancho left a younger son who did not partake in the inheritance, Bernard. He left two daughters, Mayor and Jimena, who married Bermudo III.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sancho III of Navarre.
Sancho III Garcés (late 10th century - 18 October 1035), called the Great (Spanish: el Mayor or el Grande), was King of Navarre (which included the County of Aragon) from 1004 until his death and claimed the overlordship of the County of Castile from 1017 to his death, appearing in a charter as "king in Castile". Between 1015 and 1019, he conquered Sobrarbe and Ribagorza.
During his lifetime, he was the most important Christian monarch of the Iberian Peninsula, bearing, in various media, the title of rex Hispaniarum. Having gone further than any of his predecessors in uniting the divided kingdoms of Iberia, his life's work was undone when he divided his domains shortly before his death to provide for each of his sons. The Kingdom of Navarre existed for almost six centuries after his death, but was never as powerful again.
Sancho was born around 985 (or even 992 or later) to García Sánchez II the Tremulous and Jimena Fernández, daughter of the count of Cea on the Galician frontier. He was raised in Leyra. He became king in 1004, inheriting the kingdom of Pamplona (later known as Navarre). He was initially under a council of regency led by the bishops, his mother Jimena, and grandmother Urraca Fernández.
Sancho aspired to unify the Christian principalities in the face of the fragmentation Muslim Spain into the taifa kingdoms following the Battle of Calatañazor. In about 1010 he married Muniadona Mayor, daughter of Sancho García of Castile, and in 1015 he began a policy of expansion. He displaced Muslim control in the depopulated former county of Sobrarbe, and profited from the internal difficulties in Ribagorza to annex that county between 1016 and 1019, a conquest initiated before the 1017 death of his brother-in-law left his wife with a distant claim. In 1025 he received the submission, as vassal, of Raymond III of Pallars Jussà, who had also been a Ribagorza claimant. He also forced Berengar Raymond I of Barcelona to become his vassal, though he was already a vassal of the French king. Berengar met Sancho in Zaragoza and in Navarre many times to confer on a mutual policy against the counts of Toulouse.
In 1016, Sancho fixed the border between Navarre and Castile, part of the good relationship he established by marrying Muña Mayor Sánchez (Muniadona), daughter of Sancho García of Castile. In 1017, he became the protector of Castile for the young García Sánchez. However, relations between the three Christian entities of León, Castile, and Navarre soured after the assassination of Count García in 1027. He had been betrothed to Sancha, daughter of Alfonso V, who was set thus to gain from Castile lands between the rivers Cea and Pisuerga (as the price for approving the marital pact). As García arrived in León for his wedding, he was killed by the sons of a noble he had expelled from his lands.
Sancho III had opposed the wedding - and the ensuing Leonese expansion - and received a chance to act upon García's death. As the late count's brother-in-law, he immediately occupied Castile and was soon engaged in a full-scale war with León under Alfonso's successor, Vermudo III. The combined Castilian and Navarrese armies quickly overran Vermudo's kingdom, occupying Astorga. By March 1033, he was king from Zamora to the borders of Barcelona.
In 1034, even the city of León, the imperiale culmen (imperial capital, as Sancho saw it), fell, and there Sancho had himself crowned again. This was the height of Sancho's rule which now extended from the borders of Galicia in the west to the county of Barcelona in the east.
In 1035, he refounded the diocese of Palencia, which had been laid waste by the Moors. He gave the see and its several abbacies to Bernard, of French or Navarrese origin, to whom he also gave the secular lordship (as a feudum), which included many castles in the region.
Taking residence in Nájera instead of the traditional capital of Pamplona, as his realm grew larger, he considered himself a European monarch, establishing relations on the other side of the Pyrenees. He was assassinated at Aguilar de Bureba on 18 October 1035 and was buried in the monastery of San Salvador of Oña, an enclave in Burgos, under the inscription Sancius, gratia Dei, Hispaniarum rex.
Sancho established relations with the Duchy of Gascony, probably of a suzerain-vassal nature, him being the suzerain.[1] In consequence of his relationship with the monastery of Cluny, he improved the road from Gascony to León. This road would begin to bring increased traffic down to Iberia as pilgrims flocked to Santiago de Compostela. Because of this, Sancho ranks as one of the first great patrons of the Saint James Way.
Sancho VI of Gascony was a relative of Sancho of Navarre and he spent a portion of his life at the royal court in Pamplona. He also partook alongside Sancho the Great in the Reconquista. In 1010, the two Sanchos appeared together with Robert II of France and William V of Aquitaine, neither of whom was the Gascon duke's suzerain, at Saint-Jean d'Angély. After Sancho VI's death (1032), Sancho the Great extended his authority definitively into Gascony, where he began to mention his authority as extending as far as the Garonne in the documents issued by his chancery.
In southern Gascony, Sancho created a series of viscounties: Labourd (between 1021 and 1023), Bayonne (1025), and Baztán (also 1025).
Throughout his long reign, Sancho used a myriad of titles. After his coronation in León, he styled himself rex Dei gratia Hispaniarum, or "by the grace of God, king of the Spains," and may have minted coins with the legend "NAIARA/IMPERATOR".[2] The use of the first title implied his kingship over all the independently founded Iberian kingdoms and the use of the form Dei gratia, adopted from French practice, stressed that his right to rule was of divine origin and sustenance. The latter, imperial title was only rarely employed, for it is not documented, being found only on coins only probably datable to his reign. It is not unlikely, however, that he desired to usurp the imperial title that the kings of León had thitherto carried.[3]
Despite this, the contemporary ecclesiastic Abbot Oliva only ever acknowledged Sancho as rex Ibericus or rex Navarrae Hispaniarum, while he called both Alfonso V and Vermudo III emperor. The first title considers Sancho as king of all Iberia, as does the second, though it stresses his kingship over Navarre alone as if it had been extended to authority over the whole Christian portion of the peninsula.
To the Moors, he was always only Baskunish, the "lord of the Basques."
Besides four legitimate sons by Mayor, Sancho also fathered one by his mistress Sancha de Aybar named Ramiro, who was the eldest of his sons but, as a bastard, not entitled to succeed. Before his death in 1035, Sancho divided his possessions among his sons. García received Navarre and the Basque country with a certain seniority over his brothers, Ferdinand had received Castile on the death of count García Sánchez, and Gonzalo got Sobrarbe and Ribagorza. The illegitimate son was given property in the former county of Aragón, with the provision that he ask for no more of his brother García. Sancho left a younger son who did not partake in the inheritance, Bernard. He left two daughters, Mayor and Jimena, who married Vermudo III.
Legacy
The Arrano Beltza flag was derived by Basque nationalists from Sancho's seal, since his kingdoms covered most of the Basque Country.
He introduced French feudal theories and ecclesiastic and intellectual currents into Iberia, such as the Cluniac Reform. He also began the Navarrese series of currency by minting what the Encyclopaedia Britannica calls "deniers of Carolingian influence." The division of his realm upon his death, the concepts of vassalage and suzerainty, and the use of the phrase "by the grace of God" (Dei gratia) after his title were imported from France, with which he tried to maintain relations. For this he has been called the "first Europeaniser of Iberia."[4]
His most obvious legacy, however, was the temporary union of all Christian Iberia. At least nominally, he ruled over León, the ancient capital of the kingdom won from the Moors in the eighth century, and Barcelona, the greatest of the Catalan cities. Though he divided the realm at his death, thus creating the enduring legacy of Castilian and Aragonese kingdoms, he left all his lands in the hands of one dynasty, the Jiménez, which kept the kingdoms allied by blood until the twelfth century. He made the Navarrese pocket kingdom strong, politically stable, and independent, preserving it for the remainder of the Middle Ages. It is for this that his seal has been appropriated by Basque nationalism. Though, by dividing the realm, he isolated the kingdom and inhibited its ability to gain land at the expense of the Moslems. Summed up, his reign defined the political geography of Iberia until its union under the Catholic Monarchs.
Sources
Collins, Roger. The Basques. Blackwell Publishing: London, 1990.
Menéndez Pidal, Ramón. La España del Cid. 1929.
Ubieto Arteta, Antonio. "Estudios en torno a la división del Reino por Sancho el Mayor de Navarra", Príncipe de Viana, vol. 21, pp. 5-56, 163-236. | PAMPLONA Sancho Garcés (I59837)
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| 4244 |
Count of Auriate | TORINO Arduin Glabrione (I58562)
|
| 4245 |
Count of Carcassona in the time of Charlemagne. From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy BORRELL. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Burrello comitis" in a passage dealing with events in 798[8]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Isembardum, Hudemarum, Beram, Burellum" as those leading the campaign against Tortosa [in 809][9]. His name suggests a family connection with the later counts of Barcelona. same person as…? BORRELL . It is unsure whether Borrell, father of Seniofredo, was the same person as Borrell who was named in 798 and [809], although the geographical proximity suggests that this co-identity may be correct. m ---. The name of Borrell´s wife is not known.
Sources
Medlands
Wikipedia: Bello of Carcassonne (stub) Bello of Carcassonne, father of Guisclafred, Oliba, Sunyer, Sunifred, and possibly Arlia and Bera. He was born c755 and died in 810. He became the count of Carcassonne in 790. | CARCASSONNE Bellon (I59592)
|
| 4246 |
Count of Hadensleben | HALDENSLEBEN Konrad (I59399)
|
| 4247 |
Count of Hainault | D'AVESNES William (I22834)
|
| 4248 |
Count of Levanthal & Ortemburg.
Research Notes
It is unsure if Englebert had one or two wives.[1]
Hadwig, widow of ___ von Schwarzenberg.
Hedwig, daughter of Bernhard II, Duke of Saxony. | SPANHEIM Englebert (I58059)
|
| 4249 |
Count of Limoges, Rouergue, Quercy, Toulouse and Albi
He was appointed Comte de Rouergue et Comte de Quercy in 849 by Charles "le Chauve" King of France, in recognition for his help in fighting Pippin II King of Italy. He succeeded in 855 as RAYMOND I, Comte et Marquis de Toulouse. [1]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comte de Toulouse. | TOULOUSE Raymond (I59789)
|
| 4250 |
Count of Provence William II was born circa 0950 in Provence, France. He died at Avignon, France in 993, after August 29, while a monk there.
He was also known as Comte de Provence William d'Arles. He was successively Count of Avignon (962), Count of Provence (972), Marquis of Provence Arles (979) and Prince of all Provence (991).
Sometime before 976, William married Arsinde de Comminges, daughter of Count de Comminges Arnaud I (born c 908) and Arsinde de Carcassonne & Razes (born c 920). He and Arsinde had a daughter, Ermengarde of Provence (c 976). Arsinde died before 984.
William married secondly to Adelaide of Anjou. He and Adelaide had a son, Count of Provence William III (c 986) and a daughter, Constance of Provence (c 986).
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#GuillaumeIIArlesProvencedied993
His parentage has been subject to reevaluation. He has traditionally been called son of Raymond III Pons and Garsinda. However, recent research has revealed that William was instead son of Adelais of Anjou, known to have married a Raymond, "Prince of Gothia." This discovery has required a complete reevaluation of the succession to the County of Toulouse during this period, and no scholarly consensus has developed. (Ref: Wikipedia)
Some historians have suggested a single additional generation (referred to as Raymond III of Toulouse, his father Raymond Pons being stripped of an ordinal), while others follow the Codice de Roda in giving Raymond Pons a son Raymond who in turn had sons Hugh and Raymond. Identifying the last with the husband of Adelais inserts two generations, making William the great-grandson of Raymond Pons. Yet another reconstruction suggests that Raymond and Garsinda died childless, and that Toulouse passed to kinsman Raymond II of Rouergue, from whom the husband of Adelais would descend. See Martin de Framond, "La succession des comtes de Toulouse autour de l'an mil(940--1030): reconsidérations", Annales du Midi 204 (1993), pp 461--488; Thierry Stasser, "Adélaïde d'Anjou. Sa famille, ses mariages, sa descendance", Le Moyen Age 103,1 (1997): 9-52
Note
Note: Stuart calls him Count of Provence and Arles and Marquis of Provence. Acccording to him, William died a monk at Avignon. Stuart's date for his birth is circa 955, and death 994.
His first wife was Arsinde, possibly the daughter of Arnold de Comminges. See Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, at http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PROVENCE.htm#_Toc220666442.
His second wife was Blanche of Alix of Anjou. Lastly married Adelaide d'Anjou. | ARLES Guillaume (I58820)
|
| 4251 |
Count of Toulouse, Nîmes, and Albi; Prince of Gothia. Duke of Aquitaine. He was the son of Raymond III "Pontius" of Toulouse and his wife Gersende de Gascogne. His wife was "Gundinildis".
He and his wife had four (known) children:[1]
Raymond
Hugues
Ledgarde
Unnamed daughter (married Aimery, Comte de Saintes)
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE.htm#RaymondPonsdied940944B
Source S-01 Name: Ancestry.com Address: www.ancestry.com
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/623133295/facts
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27418815/family
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/21525863/person/1642207650/facts | TOULOUSE Raimond (I59811)
|
| 4252 |
Count of VALOIS | DE VALOIS III Charles (I22866)
|
| 4253 |
Countess de Comminges
Sources
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands, Toulouse nobility: Arsinde de Carcassone
https://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I02487 - accessed 13 Feb 2018 | CARCASSONNE Arsinde (I59587)
|
| 4254 |
Countess Of Eu And Brion
marriage to Godfrey in 998
children:
Adela dEu Brienne – 1066
Gilbert DeNormandy – 1033
Gilbert Fitz-Godfrey Of Brionne De Crispen 998 – 1040
Adela DeNormandie 1000 – 1016
Aubree Archearius DeBrionne 1000 – 1016
Brionne Gilbert 1000 – 1040
Fitzgilbert de Clare 1000 –
Geoffrey DeEu DeBrionne 1000 – 1015
Gilbert DeEu 1000 – 1054
Aubree Archearius de Brionne 1002 – 1016
Aubree Archearius de Brionne 1007 – 1060
Adela DeEu 1008 – 1066
ROBERT Lord BRIONNE 1008 – 1083
Rollo DeBec 1013 – 1089
William dePeche 1015 – 1076
Robert Cheddar 1045 – 1086
Sources
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I07185 | GUISNES Hawise (I60057)
|
| 4255 |
Countess of Hainault | DE VALOIS Jeanne (I22836)
|
| 4256 |
Countess of Holland
Gerberge (Gerberga) of Lotharingia (b. about 935 - d. 978), daughter of Giselbert, Duke of Lotharingia, and Gerberga of Saxony. She married Adalbert I, Count of Vermandois. Their children were:
Herbert III of Vermandois
Eudes of Vermandois (b. ca 956 - d. 983)
Liudolfe de Noyon (b. ca 957 - d. 986)
Guy I of Vermandois, count of Soissons
Gerberga of Lorraine was a descendant of Charlemagne.
She was granddaughter of Henry I, the Fowler, King of Germany
Gerberge of Lorraine (ca. 935-978) was the daughter of Giselbert, Duke of Lorraine,[1] and Gerberga of Saxony.[2] She was a descendant of Charlemagne through both her parents.[1][2] Gerberge died sometime after 7 September 0978.[1]
In or before 954, she married Adalbert I of Vermandois.[1] Their children were:
Herbert III of Vermandois[1]
Eudes of Vermandois (c. 956–c. 983–87)[1]
Liudolfe de Noyon (c. 957–986)[1]
Guy I of Vermandois, count of Soissons[3]
Titles
Princess of France
Princess of Lorraine
Name
Name: /Gerberga/[1]
Name: Gerberge //[2]
Name: /Gerberga/ of Lorraine
Name: Gerberge of Lorraine
Name: Gerberge // Princess of Lorraine
Name: Gerberge /de Lorraine/[3]
Name: Gerberge d'Outremer //
Name: Gerberga /von Lothringen/. Source: #S499
Name: Gerberge /von Lotharingia/. Source: #S5 Ancestry.John Scheuerman's data .
Name: Princess Gerberga /De Lorraine/[4]
Married Name: De Vermandois
Birth
Date: 895. Avalgau, Germany[5]
Date: 925. Lorraine, France
Date: ABT 925. Lorraine, Moselle, France[6]
Date: ABT 935. Lorraine, Moselle, France[7]
Date: ABT 935. France
Date: 935[8]
Death
Date: 995. Germany[9]
Sources
Wikipedia.
Source S147.Candace Peebles, Peebles Web Site. MyHeritage.com family tree
Source S5Ancestry Family Trees
FamilyTreeMaker.
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Duke of Lorraine Gilbert
↑ Source: #S27185
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Irmtrude von Avalgau
↑ Source: #S004444 Ancestry.
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Irmtrude von Avalgau
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Duke of Lorraine Gilbert
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Duke of Lorraine Gilbert
↑ Source: #S27185
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Irmtrude von Avalgau
Acknowledgements
Lorraine-2 created on 14 April 2010 through the import of Jamie 2010_2010-04-10.ged.
Created through the import of My Family File.ged on 19 May 2010.
Created through the import of DR fam 9.ged on 14 September 2010.
Created on 25 September 2010 through the import of Geer.ged.
Created through the import of MASTER2011WIKITREE.GED on 27 January 2011.
Created through the import of WikiTree.ged on 20 February 2011.
Created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011.
Created on 21 March 2011 through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged.
Created through the import of Tribal Pages 0004.ged on 25 March 2011.
Created through the import of Holmes.ged on 20 May 2011.
De Lorraine-48 created through the import of My-Family-26-May-2011.ged on May 26, 2011 by Kerry Langlands.
De Lorraine-58 created through the import of My-Family-13-Jun-2011.ged on Jun 13, 2011 by Kerry Langlands.
Lorraine-72 created through the import of Durrell Family Tree.ged on Jul 4, 2011 by Pamela Durrell.
Lorraine-79 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin.
Gerberga-4 created through the import of SRW 7th July 2011.ged on Jul 7, 2011 by Stephen Wilkinson.
UNKNOWN-89484 created through the import of Bierbrodt.GED on Jul 14, 2011 by Becky Bierbrodt.
Vermandois-200 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown.
Gerberga-5 created through the import of mike_walton_2011.ged on Aug 20, 2011 by Mike Walton.
Lorraine-108 created through the import of Main Tree_2011-07-30_2011-08-30.ged on Aug 30, 2011 by Sharryn Hopgood.
De Lorraine-108 created through the import of Grant_David_Meadors_2008-02-17.ged on Sep 18, 2011 by Grant Meadors.
V.Lothringen-1 created through the import of Spencer Family Tree 4 2002.GED on Nov 28, 2011 by Chet Spencer.
Gerberga-8 created through the import of Carp-1_2011-12-15.ged on Dec 19, 2011 by Lyman Carpenter.
Van Lotharingen-2 created through the import of MONAYAAN.GED on Jan 5, 2012 by Yaan Siebens.
Thank you to Jenn Presutto for creating WikiTree profile Lorraine-189 through the import of Judith Chilton Family Tree.ged on Apr 22, 2013.
Lorraine-120 created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011.
Created through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011.
De Lorraine-60 created through the import of WILLIAMS 2011.GED on Jun 22, 2011 by Ted Williams.
De Lorraine-73 created through the import of SRW 7th July 2011.ged on Jul 7, 2011 by Stephen Wilkinson.
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-95088 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown. | LORRAINE Gerberge (I59019)
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| 4257 |
Countess of Portugal
Marriage & Children
Muniadomna Díaz married before about 926 to Hermenegildo González.[1]
Gonzalo.
Diego.
Ramiro.
Oneca.
Nuño,
Arias.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2024, Family of Diego Fernández. | DÍAZ Muniadomna (I59894)
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| 4258 |
Counts of Ponthieu
Wikipedia:Count of Ponthieu gives this list of counts of Ponthieu down to Guy I, the first listed by Cawley.
Counts and Countesses of Ponthieu:
Helgaud III, also Count of Montreuil. d. 926 in combat against the Normans.
Herluin II or Herlouin, also Count of Montreuil. (926–945)
Roger or Rotgaire or Notgard, also Count of Montreuil. (dates unknown)
William I, also Count of Montreuil. (dates unknown)
Hildouin, also Count of Montreuil. (dates unknown) The only count named Hildouin, this would appear to be
Hildouin, d. 1009
Hildouin II, b. 935, died Jerusalem, 981, son of Guillaume de Ponthieu and Maud de St. Pol.
Hugh I, also Count of Montreuil, d. c. 1000.
Enguerrand I, also Count of Montreuil (c. 1000 – c. 1045)
Hugh II, also Lord of Abbeville (c. 1045–1052) Father (by one account) of both #Enguerrand II and Guy I.
Enguerrand II (1052–1053). Married Adelaide II daughter of Robert I Duke of Normandy. Succeeded by his brother (or by his son) Guy I:
Guy I, (1053–1100) brother of Enguerrand II.
Research Notes
This person's mother was previously shown as Maud de St. Pol. No evidence has been found for the existence of Maud de St. Pol and she has therefore been delinked as this person's mother. Day-1904 11:48, 8 January 2020 (UTC)
The popular genealogy site Geni shows this Hildouin de Ponthieu, born 930 and died 1009. [1]
However, Cawley's information of the Comtes de Ponthieu does not include anyone named Hildouin, and begins with Guy de Montreuil, who died in 1100. [2]
Profiles Previously Linked
The following profiles have previously been linked together. As part of the Disproven Existence Project, these links are being severed;
Mother: Mahaut de Crequy
Daughter: Maud de St Pol
Daughter's Spouse: Malahule Haldrick (Ragnvaldsson) Regraldsson
Daughter's Spouse: Guillaume (Ponthieu) de Ponthieu
Children
Richard (St Sauveur) de St Sauveur
Ranulph (Bayeux) de Bayeux
Hugo (Cavalcamp) de Calvacamp
Asperling (Vaudreuil) de Vaudreuil
Hildouin De Pohthieu
Ernicule (Boulogne) de Boulogne
Hildouin (Ponthieu) de Ponthieu
Hugo (Calvacamp) DeMaer
Sources
↑ Geni. Hildouin de Ponthieu Added by Kaylene Hansen on July 26, 2010, Managed by: Erin Spiceland and Kaylene Hansen. Accessed Sept 23, 2018 jhd
↑ Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Counts of Ponthieu Accessed Sept 23, 2018 jhd
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I01023 - accessed 22 July 2017 | PONTHIEU Hildouin (I59085)
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| 4259 |
Created Duke of Gascony (a diminution of Aquitaine to its northern territory 1254, he was later accepted as Duke of Aquitaine after paying homage to the King of France. Created Earl of Chester 1254. King of England 1272. Overlord of Wales after 1282 when that territory was annexed to the English crown. | PLANTAGENET-FITZHENRY Edward I "Longshanks" (I22784)
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| 4260 |
Created Earl of Chester 1312. Count of Pontieu and Montreuil 1325. Duke of Aquitaine 1325. King of England January 1327, after his father abdicated. In October 1330 he assumed personal rule after overthrowing his mother the Queen and her lover Roger Mortimer, Earl of March. He formerly styled himself King of France in January 1340 (He claimed this right through his mother). | PLANTAGENET III Edward (I22859)
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| 4261 |
Created Earl of Chester and Prince of Wales February 1301 (He was the first English Prince of Wales). Duke of Aquitaine 1306. King of England July 1307. Edward was deposed by Parliament on 20 January 1327 and formally abdicated in favour of his son. | of CASTILE Eleanor Princess (I22850)
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| 4262 |
Created Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall and Earl of Chester October 1399. Knight of the Garter 1399. Created Duke of Aquitaine and Duke of Lancaster November 1399. King of England March 1413. Designated heir to the throne of France on 21 May 1420. | PLANTAGENET Henry (I21896)
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| 4263 |
Created Prince of Wales, Earl of Chester and Earl of Cornwall November 1376. Knight of the Garter April 1377. King of England 22 June 1377. Richard was deposed by Henry of Bolingbroke and formally abdicated on 29 September 1399. | PLANTAGENET Richard II (I21583)
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| 4264 |
Cremated and interred at the Masonic Cemetery in West Union, West Virginia. | STINESPRING William Eli (I38947)
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| 4265 |
Cremated and interred at the Masonic Cemetery in West Union, West Virginia. | COULEHAN Dorothy E. (I38948)
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| 4266 |
Cremated. Grant D. Miller mortuary, Alameda, CA | SMITH James Tredea (I8952)
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| 4267 |
Cremation - Ashes St. Christopher's Rosery
St. Dunstaw's - Madison, WI | CHILDS John Keble (I34474)
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| 4268 |
Crewed on whaling ships | Sr. Henry Leroy STEWART (I47606)
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| 4269 |
Criomhthan Liath was a son of Fiach. "Liath" (grey haired) is an epithet implying that Criomhthan was an old man when Saint Patrick came to Ireland about the year AD 433. [1]
Crimthann was the son of Fiacc. He also had brother Brion. [2]
Criomhthan Liath had five sons - [3]
Eochaidh
Fergus Ceannfada
Luighaidh
Muireadacb,
Aodh (also called Eochaidh)
Sources
↑ John O'Hart in page: 188 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
↑ Eoin MacNeill, "The Vita Triparta of St. Patrick," digital images, Google Books Ériu: Founded as the Journal of the School of Irish Learning Devoted to Irish Philology and Literature 11, (1932): 30-31;
↑ Irish Pedigrees : Heremon Genealogies by John O'Hart page: 670 - "89: Criomhthan Liath"
Wikipedia : Crimthann Mac Fidaig
Wikidata: Item Q1272225, en:Wikipedia help.gif
John O'Hart in page: 188 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-24,48 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265 | mac FIACH Criomhthan (I58511)
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| 4270 |
Crowned at Westminster Abbey 26 Sept. 1087; never married
Called Rufus because of his red hair. Also call William the Red. | GUILLAUME William Rufus (I3632)
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| 4271 |
Cruitlinde, son of Findacha Achir, is listed as an ancestor of William, King of Scots by Ralph de Diceto in his Imagines Hlstoriarum; and included by Allan Orr Anderson in his Scottish annals from English chroniclers, A.D. 500 to 1286 Scottish annals from English chroniclers, A.D. 500 to 1286]
detail showing Cruitlinde's place in de Diceto's genealogy
Sources
Alan O. Anderson., Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286 . Published 1908 by D.N. Nutt in London . | FINN Cruitlinde (I59365)
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| 4272 |
Crundmael Erbuilc Ronain, King of Leinster and , King of Uí Cheinnselaig,, was born about 605, in Ireland, son of Rónán Colmain (~0585–0625).
Marriage and Issue
Áed Rón was ancestor of a branch which took over leadership of the Uí Dróna
Fiachra was ancestor of the later Leinster king Áed mac Colggen (died 738).
Eithne (mother: Faílend ingen Suibne of the Déisi Muman) married Failbe mac Domnaill of the Uí Bairrche.
Failbe mac Domnaill meic Cormaic meic Díarmata of the Uí Bairrche married Eithne, daughter of Crundmáel mac Rónaín, they had a daughter
Mugain.[1]
In the seventh century, a King of Uí Bairrche was Suibne mac Domnaill (grandson of Cormac mac Diarmata). In the Life of Munnu of Taghmon ( 635 AD), it would appear that he controlled the area of Leighlin at the time of the synod over the ordering of Easter (630 AD). It is stated that Munnu, as a result of being insulted by Suibne, prophesised that his head would be cut off by his brother’s son (Cind Faílad?) and would be thrown into the Barrow, near the Blathach stream (Madlin River?). His brother Faílbe married Eithne daughter of Crundmael mac Rónáin ( 656 AD) king of Uí Cheinnselaig and Lagen Desgabair (South Leinster) and Mugain, the daughter of Faílbe, married Cellaig Cualand, King of Leinster ( 715 AD) from whom are the Uí Cellaig Cualand. There is an entry in the Annals of Ulster recording the death in 766 AD Cernach son of Flann who is also thought to be of this line.[2]
Sources
↑ T. M. Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland, p. 94, retrieved 2014-06-23, amb
↑ Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, retrieved 2014-06-23, amb
T. M. Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland. Edition illustrated, reprint. Publisher Cambridge University Press, 2000
Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, taken from Rawlinson B502, Book of Leinster, Book of Lecan, Book of Ballymote, hagiography and the Annals.
Wikipedia entry for Crundmáel Erbuilc mac Rónáin (died 656)
Wikidata: Item Q5190108, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | RONAIN Crundmail Erbuilc (I58469)
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| 4273 |
Crystal Lake Herald
October 27, 1966
Obituaries
Mrs. Mabelle Raue
Mrs. Mabelle Raue, born Jyuly 31, 1876, in Janesville, Wisconsin passed away at her home, 25 W. Crystal Lake Avenue, Tuesday, October 25, after a lingering illness.
Born the daughter of the late Frank and Martha Brown Osgood, she was married October 28, 1915 in Denver, Colorado to Ben Raue, who preceded her in death in 1961.
She is survived by three step-daughters, Ethel, Leone, Lucille and one step-son, Ben, all of Crystal Lake. One sister, Maude O. Dodd, of this city, and a niece, Mrs. Martha Gainer, Wauconda. One brother preceded her in death.
Mrs. Raue had taught in the public schools of Crystal Lake and Cary, and also Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Friends may call at the Warner funeral home after 2 p. m. Thursday. Services will be conducted Friday at 1:30 p.m. from the funeral home by the Rev. M. J. A. Darymple. Interment will be in Crystal Lake Union Cemetery.
According to Francis Richards ,a relative , Mabelle did not want to marry Benno and fled to Colorado to get away from him. He followed her there and they finally married there before returning to IL. | Osgood Mabelle Blanche (I52987)
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| 4274 |
Cuach Ingen Coelbad was born in Ireland, daughter of Cóelbad mac Columb (~0285–0357).
Cuach married Ailil na Leinster (born about 410 in Leinster, Ireland).
Cuach died about 450
Ui Bairrchi
Sources
Descendants of Coelbad O'Columb
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CONTENTS.htm
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORWEGIAN%20NOBILITY.htm
This person was created through the import of Bishop Family Tree.ged on 18 February 2011.
This person was created through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011. | COELBAD Cuach Ingen (I58539)
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| 4275 |
Culpeper County Hospital | POULTON Arthur Westood (I37196)
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| 4276 |
Cwrrig was born about 0180. Cwrrig Goruc Fauir ... [1]
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Erin Jacobson, Friday, October 17, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source. | FAUIR Cwrrig Goruc (I59275)
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| 4277 |
Cynthia Colleen Pulcifer Phelps Leutz, 63, of Saranac passed away Aug. 15, 2014. She was born. Jan. 8, 1951, in Grand Rapids, the daughter of Russell and Lorraine (McClain) Pulcifer.
Cindy married John Leutz May 13, 1994. She was certified in genealogy and loved doing it. She assisted Mackinaw and Burt Lake Native American Tribes and several other tribes with their genealogy.
Surviving Cindy are her husband John Leutz of Saranac; children Chad Phelps (Dave Walsh) of Wyoming, John (Linda) Leutz II of Saranac and Keith (Rebecca) Leutz of Adrian; grandchildren Eden (Mitch) Piotrowski of Muskegon, Angel Leutz of Texas, Brenton Mann of Grand Rapids, Logan Leutz of Saranac, Kristopher Leutz of Saranac, Ryan Leutz of Adrian and Kendall Leutz of Adrian; great grandson Vincent Piotrowski; brother Scott (Eve) Pulcifer of Saranac; and sisters Kathy Mosher of Grand Rapids and Jeanne (Les) Lowder of Kalamazoo.
She was preceded in death by her parents and her daughter, Tracy Pulcifer Phelps Pearo Strotheide.
Funeral Services will be held Thursday, Aug. 21, 2014, at 11 a.m. at the Lake Funeral Home in Saranac with Pastor Jeff Kahl officiating. Interment Saranac Cemetery. Visitation will be on Wednesday 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
Online condolences may be made at www.lakefuneralhomes.com. The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations be made in Cindy's name to the Autism Speaks foundation.
Published in Ionia Sentinel-Standard on Aug. 19, 2014 - See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sentinel-standard/obituary.aspx?n=cynthia-colleen-pulcifer-phelps-leutz&pid=172163436&fhid=16970#sthash.EKB1rmRk.dpuf | PULSIFER Cynthia Colleen (I6989)
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| 4278 |
Cyprian and his wife, Esther, left Swanzey, NH for Pennsylvania and bought land from Mark Wilcox in the township of Delmar, Tioga County, PA on 1 September, 1808 as recorded in the land transactions of the county of Tioga, P. 2 and 5. They probably were accompanied by others from NH when they migrated west.
Cyprian, died at the age of 69 years, 5 months and 28 days. He and his wife, Esther Belding Wright are buried in one of the oldest cemeteries, except for the Indian burials, in Tioga County, PA. The Carpenter Cemetery is on the Loren Carpenter Farm about half mile east of Academy Corners in Deerfield. The cemetery is also called Academy Corners Cemetery.
Tioga County, PA History, 1897, by R. C. Brown and Co.
Personally came and appeared before ma Cyprian Wright Esqr. one of the Justices of the Peace in and for the County of Tioga, Godfrey Bowman and acknowledged the signing of the above Power to be his free act and deed for the purpose therein expressed and wished the same to be Recorded as such given under my hand this twenty fourth day of Feb. m the year of our Lord our Lord one thousand Eight hundred and twenty.
CYPRIAN WRIGHT JUST. P.
To Godfrey Bowman Power of Attorney. JOHN RYAN ESQ. | Wright II Cyprian (I51605)
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| 4279 |
Cyprian Stevens, father of Mary, was one of the first settlers of Rutland, Worcester Co. MA in 1686. Mary named one of her sons after her father. | Stevens Mary (I51597)
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| 4280 |
Cyprian Wright died by drowning in Muscopog Pond according to the vital records of Rutland, Worcester Co., MA p.255.
His father, Samuel, died just six months before on January 15, 1739/40.
He and his family were early inhabitants of Rutland, Worcester county, MA. His father, Capt. Samuel Wright owned Lot # 1 and Cyprian owned Lot # 2.
Early Worcester County, MA Probate Records
Cyprian Wright of Rutland, Worcester Co. [Record # 57,737]
Cyprian Wright died at Rutland, intestate, and on 11 July, 1739 an inventory of his property was taken by Joseph Stearns, John Hubbard, and Moses How. The estate came to £ 726 which included stock, house lot # 2, five acres of Pine Plain and a right in undivided lands at Rutland, [2:409] on 24 July 1739, an administrators' bond was issued to Hannah Wright, widow, with Frank Fink, clerk, and William Wright, (brother) yeoman, as sureties, all of Rutland. Hannah signed in her own name. [179:341]
The administrators' account was dated 16 May 1745 and was submitted by Timothy Brown and Hannah Brown, formerly Hannah Wright. It indicated that the widow has received her thirds and that the other two thirds had beeb divided among the children who were not named, that the eldest son, William receiving double share and the two other children, Samuel and John, receiving single shares. [5:352]
Early Worcester County, MA Probate Records.
Esq. Samuel Wright of Rutland, Worcester Co. [ Case No. 67,824]
Samuel Wright, Esq. of Rutland left his entire estate, with the exception of specific cash bequests, to his son, William who was also to be the sole executor. The three sons of Samuel's deceased son, Cyprian, viz: William, Samuel and John, were to receive £10 each when they reached age twenty-one to make up for the part of Cyprian's share he had not received. To his daughters, Samuel left: £25 in one year to Hannah Rice; £25 in two years to Mary Willard; £25 in three years to Dorothy Felps; £15 in four years to Abigail Willard, and 20 shillings to Isabel Frink, all bequests bringing the daughters up to their full shares. Samuel signed his will before John Fletcher, William Fenton and Hezekiah Fletcher on 30 June 1739, and it was allowed on 5 Feb. 1739/40
[2:4-6] | Wright Cyprian (I51555)
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| 4281 |
d'origine inconnue
Décédée après donation 26-3-1709 Jacob père, Île d'Orléans (René Jetté)
Drapeau identifiant les profils du Canada, Nouvelle-France
Catherine Ivory a vécu
au Canada, Nouvelle-France.
Enfants connus:
André Dionne, sép. @ 3 ans 28 Nov 1664 Château-Richer (habitant de l'I.O.)
Anne Diaume, née 27 Jul 1665 IO bapt 3 Aug Québec (ND); mariée vers 1680 à Bernard Laisné
Marie Madeleine Guyonne, née 14 Dec 1667 bapt 22 Ste-Famille IO; Marie Dionne mariée à Charles le Normand 20 Nov 1691 Québec (ND)
Antoine Dione, né 20 Feb 1669 bapt 24 Ste-Famille IO
Jean Guionne, né 8 Mar 1670 bapt 11 Ste-Famille IO; Jean Dionne marié à 24 ans à Marie Mignot 2 Aug 1694 Château-Richer
Marie Dione, née 6 Mar 1672 bapt 7 Ste-Famille IO; mariée @ 22 ans à Pierre Benoist 9 Nov 1694 Ste-Famille IO
Marie Dyone, née 22 Apr 1674 bapt 7 May Ste-Famille IO
Anne Dionne, née 13 Sept 1676 bapt 27 Ste-Famille IO; mariée à 22 ans à Barthélemy Gobeille 19 Aug 1697 Ste-Famille IO
Marguerite Dionne, née 5 Sept 1678 bapt 6 Ste-Famille IO; sép 18 Sept 1678 Ste-Famille IO @ 12 jours
Catherine Dionne, née 29 Mar 1680 bapt 31 Ste-Famille IO; sép 10 Apr 1680 Ste-Famille IO @ 13 jours
Catherine Dionne, née 23 Apr 1681 bapt 24 Ste-Famille IO; sép 7 Feb 1683 Ste-Famille IO @ 2 ans
Catherine Ivori, née 10 Aug 1683 bapt 11 Ste-Famille IO; Catherine Dionne mariée @ 17 ans à Joseph Michaud 30 May 1702 Ste-Famille IO[1]
Antoine Dionne, Catherine Yvory et Anne Dionne vivaient en 1666 à l'Île d'Orléans [2]
Recensement 1667 Census: L'ILE D'ORLÉANS
Antoine Guyosne (Dionne), 26 ; Catherine Yvory, sa femme, 24 ; Anne, 2 ; 1 tête de bétail, 8 arpents en valeur.[2]
Recensement 1681 Census: COMTÉ DE ST-LAURENT (Île d'Orléans)
Antoine Dione 45 ; Catherine Juory (Ivory) sa femme, 40 ; enfant : Jean 12, Marie 10, Anne 8, Marie 5, Catherine 5 mois ; 1 fusil ; 3 bêtes à cornes ; 25 arpents en valeur. Bernard Lesné (Laisné) 25 ; Anne Dione, sa femme, 16.[3]
Catherine Yvori est marraine de Jean Guillot le 15 Avr 1679 à Ste-Famille IO[1]
Ratification de vente par Catherine Livory, femme d’Antoine Dionne, à Denis Guyon (14 août 1681). Vol II pg 205 Notaire Pierre Duquet[4]
Donation d ’Anthoine Guionne dit Sans Soucy et Catherine Huoery son épouse à Pierre Besnoist et Marie Guionne son épouse (.. . 1705). Vol VII pg 260 Notaire Étienne Jacob[4]
Vente d’Antoine Dione et Catherine Hivory son épouse à Charles Portier (15 mars 1709). Vol VII pg 189 Notaire François Genaple[4]
Donation d ’Anthoine Guionne et Catherine Houerye son épouse à Barthélémy Gobeil et Anne Guionne son épouse (26 mars 1709). Vol VII pg 280 Notaire Étienne Jacob[4]
NOTE
There is an error that has been made in interpretation of décédée après donation 26-3-1709 Jacob père. Jacob père is actually the appellation for the notary Étienne Jacob, whose son Joseph Jacob was also a notary. All it means is that she died after a donation of that date made before Étienne Jacob. NOT that her father was named Jacob anything. See highlighted text above.Liard-1 02:23, 7 October 2017 (EDT)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1997 - Drouin IGD
↑ 2.0 2.1 Wikisource: Recensements 1666-1667 Censuses selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 4, chap. 4
↑ Wikisource Recensement 1681 Census selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 5, chap. 4
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 BAnQ Notarial acts index Inventaire des greffes des notaires du régime français, par Pierre Georges Roy et Antoine Roy; 27 Vol + index 1-8
Quebec, Genealogical Dictionary of Canadian Families (Tanguay Collection), 1608-1890 Tanguay, Cyprien, Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu'à nos jours, Québec, Canada: Eusèbe Senécal, 1871-1890
Tree: Nos Origines | IVORY Catherine (I60263)
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| 4282 |
d. age 1 yr., 3 days, Gloucester VR's | PULSIFER Georgia Ann (I7292)
|
| 4283 |
d. Dec. 1818 age 8 yrs. Gloucester VRs | PULSIFER Addison Plummer (I6764)
|
| 4284 |
Dad was a farmer and he also worked in the mines at Republic Steel in Lyon Mountain, New York, he was a driller in the shafts. | CASKA Joseph Marshall (I57398)
|
| 4285 |
Dadildis de Pallars. [1]
Birth
Dadildis was born about 858. [2]
Siblings
Raymond I, Count of Pallars and Ribagorza (fl. 884–920) [3]
Marriage
Dadildis married García Jiménez of Pamplona (d. 882), sub/co-king or regent [4]
Children
Sancho I, King of Pamplona (c. 860 – 10 Dec 925) [1]
Jimeno Garcés of Pamplona [1]
Research Notes
Her father is generally thought to be named Loup (Lope).
Some genealogies show him as Loup, Comte de Bigorre.
Others suggest he is Lope, Conde de Ribagorza. [3][4]
According to Cawley, Dadildis was sister to Ramón de Ribagorza and thus the possible daughter of Lope de Ribagorza. [5]
According to the medieval manuscript Códice_de_Roda: [6] [7]
Garsea Scemenonis et Enneco Scemenonis fratres fuerunt. Iste Garsea accepts uxor Onneca Rebelle by Sancossa et genuit Enneco Garseanis et domna Sanzia. Post accepit uxor domna Dadildi de Paliares soror Regimundi comitis , et genuit Sanzio Garseanis et Scemeno Garseanis.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Wikipedia:Sancho_I_of_Pamplona#Biography.
↑ Jaime de Salazar y Acha. Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media (Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid, 2021) p. 90.
↑ 3.0 3.1 Wikipedia: Raymond I, Count of Pallars and Ribagorza.
↑ 4.0 4.1 Wikipedia:García_Jiménez_of_Pamplona.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2024, Condes de Ribagorza.
↑ "Códice de Roda."
↑ Lacarra, J. M. Textos navarros del Códice de Roda, Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón Vol. 10 (Zaragoza, 1945) p. 234. | PALLARS Dadildis (I59574)
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| 4286 |
Dag, King of Westmare (the district around Langesund fjord) appears to have been created to give importance to Hlif, his daughter, the wife of Halfdan the Mild.
Ynglingsaga
There is only one reference to Dag of Westmare in the Ynglinga Saga, making him the father of Hlif of Westmare who married Halfdan Eysteinsson the Mild. No parents or wives are mentioned for Dag.[1] This is all it says: "Hann átti Hlíf, dóttur Dags konungs af Vestmörum."
Medieval Lands
He is mentioned in Medieval Lands as the father of Hlif of Westmare who married Halfdan Eysteinsson the Mild. No wife is mentioned [2]
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. The Ynglinga Saga. Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 41
↑ Medieval Lands: Denmark: Halfdan Mildi
This person was created through the import of Rodney Timbrook Ancestors and Relatives_2010-09-10.ged on 10 September 2010.
This person was created on 21 March 2011 through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged.
Gordon Lokken, firsthand knowledge. | UNKNOWN Dag (I58710)
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| 4287 |
Daig Duirn (Dega Duirn or Deach Dorn) was the son of Rochaid (Rochadh)
His sons are listed by John O'Hart as - [1]
Fiach or Feig
Labhradh (ancestor of the Laury families)
Brian (ancestor of O'Brien of Arcaill)
"In the genealogies, Cremthann is brother of Brion, son of Fiach, son of Daig Dorn, son of Rochaid, son of Colla Fo Chri" [2] [3]
Sources
↑ Irish Pedigrees : Heremon Genealogies p: 670
↑ In the genealogies, Cremthann is brother of Brion, son of Fiach, son of Dorn, son of Rochaid, son of Colla Fo Chri THE VITA TRIPARTITA OF ST PATRICK p: 31 Ériu: Founded as the Journal of the School of Irish Learning Devoted to Irish Philology and Literature, Volume 11pub: Royal Irish Academy, 1932
↑ Colla da Crioch; Roacadh his son; Deach Dorn his son; Fiach (or Feig) his son; Crimthann Liath his son; from Irish Pedigrees vol:2 Appendix no:1 page: 719 by John O'Hart
In the Annuls of Ulster of 514 we read - "Cairpre Daim Airgit son of Eochu son of Crimthann son of Fiach son of Daig Duirn son of Reochad son of Colla Dá Crích, king of Airgialla, died". Celt : Annuls of Ulster U514.1 (author unknown) Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-24 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265 | mac ROCHADH Daig Duirn (Dorn) (I58513)
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| 4288 |
Daimhin, (Daimine Airgit, na Oriel), King of Airgíalla Progenitor of the Síl Daimíne, was the son of Cairbre an Daimh Airgid He was a King of Oriel and had many sons - an ancestor of the Siol Daimhin [1]
There is a story that "Daimin son of Cairbre" and two other children were missing, thought drowned in Lough Erne (County Fermanagh). His mother begged for help to find their bodies for burial without success until Molaise of Devenish, suggested she wait for Máedóc of Ferns (also known as Aedan), who would surely restore them to life by the favour of the Holy Spirit. Máedóc, with compassion for the loss of the children, went to Lough Erne and prayed intensely to God, and the children were found alive, and returned to their mothers. "When Cairbre son of Eochaid saw his son raised from death, he gave himself and his son, and his seed, to God and Máedóc in perpetuity, and a scruple (tithe) from every house in the nine cantreds of Oriel. [2]
This is the Daimhin for whom Devinish Island in Loch Erne, Fermanagh is named; mistakenly named Ox Island by some because the Irish "damh" is "oxen" in English. Devenish Island is a Monastic Site founded in the 6th century by Laisrén mac Nad Froích (also known as Molaise). [3] [4] [5]
Devenish Island was ruled by the Síl nDaiméni branch of the Uí Chremthainn. [6] [7] According to the Irish genealogies of saints, Laisrén belonged to the Uí Chóelbad, who were based in Mag Line (Co Antrim) and formed the leading branch of the Cruithni ... The Loígis, who gave their name to County Laois in Leinster ... are claimed as Cruthin in early Irish genealogies. [8]
Death - Annul for the year 560 : Daimhin Damhairgitr, i.e. Cairbre, died. From him are the Airghialla. [9] alternatively, Daimhin, King of Orgiall son of Cairbre an Daimh Airgid died AD 566 [10] [11]
Sources
↑ John O'Hart in page: 189 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
↑ Celt : Bethada Náem nÉrenn : Life of Maedoc of Ferns page: 191(author unknown) Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
↑ John O'Hart in page: 189 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
↑ St. Molaise of Devenish
↑ Wikipedia : Laisrén mac Nad Froích
↑ Laisrén mac Nad Froích
↑ Wikipedia : Airgíalla
↑ Wikipedia : Cruthin
↑ Annals of the Four Masters M560.2 (author unknown) Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
↑ John O'Hart in page: 189 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
↑ Daimine Daim Argat, died 565 - in Wikipedia : Kings of Airgíalla
Family Tree DNA : Clan Colla
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-24,33 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
This person was created through the import of David Rentschler Family Tree_2010-09-30.ged on 01 October 2010.
Thank you to Tayler Mccormick for creating Daimme-1 on 21 Jul 13. | AIRGIT Daimhin mac Cairpre Daim (I58508)
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| 4289 |
Daniel and Elizabeth, plus 2 sons, are listed as a family in the history of Cornwall written by the Rev. Lyman Matthews; this book is considered a reliable, standard history of the town, printed 1842.
Subsequently they removed to Geauga County, Ohio, with the 2 sons, Joseph Pitts, my ancestor, and Daniel Norman, leaving a third son and an unnamed infant daughter in the church graveyard. Daniel Norman evidently remained in Ohio and there are lots of his descendents still there. I believe that Joseph Pitts reared his family in Ohio, but the son who was my grandmother's father moved to South Haven MI and is buried there (and his wife) and his descendents have all been Michiganders. I myself lived in MI for over 70 years, but after my parents and only sibling were all gone, and one of my sons had moved to MA, I decided to move east also to be near him. And I found that most of my family history research had been calling me to New England. So here I am settled.
Written by Geraldine Boyd, August 2011 | INGRAHAM Daniel (I46526)
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| 4290 |
Daniel and Michael Lynch were brothers | Lynch Michael (I55957)
|
| 4291 |
Daniel probably is the Daniel O'Connel who came over on the ship, "Agitator" From Ireland, landing in the port of New York harbor on May 28th, 1841. He was listed as 22 years old and a laborer. John Henry, Captain. The ship left Liverpool, England and lastly Cork, Ireland before sailing to NY. He would have been single at the time so he married Catherine Cavanaugh in NY.
In the 1850 Federal census for the town of Chenango, Broome County, NY, Daniel was living next door to Michael O' Connell, age 40, and his wife, Mary; son, James; Mary Ann; Bridget; and Johanna.
In the 1860 Federal census for the town of Lake, Cook County,with postoffice in Chicago, IL, Daniel is listed as age 40, white male, born in Ireland and could not read or write nor could his wife, Catherine.
The 1880 Federal census lists Daniel as a farmer, age 60 years, living in Pembroke, Kankakee County, IL. Married, white, born in Ireland, as were his parents. | O'Connel Daniel (I54233)
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| 4292 |
Daniel was a 32nd degree Mason in the Medinah Temple and a reporter for the Cary news which was submitted to the Crystal Lake Herald. This was written in an article on the early settlers of Cary Station in their local newspaper. He is also mentioned in the article on his parents, Samuel Right and Sally Ann Coss Brown, in the 1968 published " History of McHenry County, IL."
He was born near North Crystal Lake in Algonquin township, McHenry County, IL but at the age of five he and his family moved to the Brown farm two miles north of Cary. In 1875 the familymoved to Cary where he resided until his death in 1912. He attended the district schools and later finished his education at the Elgin Academy, from which he graduated at the age of 20 years in 1880.
He belonged to many lodges and organizations, endearing himself to many acquaintances and friends. He was a highly regarded member of the Cary community. He died by hanging himself in an upstairs bedroom in his home in Cary, IL.
Sometime between 1908 and 1912, he went to Denmark. Upon his return he had given a bracelet he had purchased there probably to Alice, his niece.
He married Ann Barge but nothing more is known about this marriage. No children were mentioned in his obituary so it is unknown if any were ever born to them. | Brown Daniel McCurdy (I52929)
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| 4293 |
DAR ID Number 11266
1912 - A big meeting was held in June at the YMCA to secure a suffrage amendment to the Ohio Constitution. Jessie Davisson, wife of prominent lawyer Oscar Davisson, was elected president of the Woman’s Suffrage Party of Montgomery County and held the office until ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920. Later that year the organization’s name was changed to the Woman’s Suffrage Association of Dayton and Montgomery County. It had 25 members. Two years later there were 500 members. The biggest opponents in Ohio to woman’s suffrage were the liquor and saloon interests. John H. Patterson gave the suffrage association office space in the Schwind Building and a gift of $4,800-with strings attached. The gift must remain anonymous and they had to notify him of all other income and how it was used. | LEACH Jessie Marion (I36535)
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| 4294 |
DAR, Vol. 104, p. 234. | Fowler Clarissa (I51118)
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| 4295 |
Data Changed:
Date: 1 APR 2008
Time: 20:19:22
Prior to import, this record was last changed 20:19:22 1 APR 2008.
Marriage
Husband: Pascal Caille
Wife: Marie Anne Cote
Marriage:
Date: 22 MAY 1780
Place: St-Phillipe, Quebec
Child: Charlotte Caille-Biscornet
Data Changed:
Date: 1 APR 2008
Time: 20:19:15
Husband: Ignace Cote
Wife: Rosalie Pinsonneau
Marriage:
Date: 9 NOV 1761
Place: LaPrairie, Quebec, Can
Child: Marie Anne Cote
Data Changed:
Date: 1 APR 2008
Time: 20:19:15
Sources
WikiTree profile Cote-64 created through the import of Barcomb Allen.ged on Jun 21, 2011 by Steven Barcomb. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Steven and others.
Source: S0000 Title: Import from Barmast10b.GED Author: Steven Henry Barcomb Data Changed: Date: 1 APR 2008 Time: 20:19:15
Source: Genealogy of Canada | COTE Marie Anne (I47536)
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| 4296 |
Date and place of Ephraim's birth is found in his application for pension which he filed in 1832.
He is the father of William and James and others. William's son, William H., named his first son, Ephraim, after his father, which was common.
(From a microfilm of the handwritten manuscript:)
Declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the Act of Congress, Passed June 7, 1832
State of New York, County of Saratoga.
On this sixth day of September one thousand eight hundred thirtytwo personally appeared in open Court before the Judges of the Courtof Common Pleas of the County of Saratoga now sitting, Ephraim Annable a resident of the town of Stillwater in the county and state aforesaid, aged sixty seven years the third day of March last who being first duly sworn according to law, doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the Act of Congress passed June 7, 1832.
That he entered the service of the United States under the following named officers and served as herein stated.
That in the year 1781 the United States and French troops having been called from Rhode Island to the southern States, several companies of State troops were raised by the State of Massachusetts where he then resided.
That he enlisted as a volunteer for six months starting in the month of June, 1781 for eight dollars per month, that he left the town of Dartmouth in the County of Bristol in the State of Massachusetts, marched to a place called Smiths Mills and joined a company commanded by Captain Gifford. This Company marched from there across Howland's Ferry to a fort on Butt's [?] Hill on the north end of Rhode Island. There were three companies there. The United States and French troops had all but left the fort a few days after he got there. Of the companies, one was commanded by Captain Discards [?], the other by Captain Elliot [?]. His Colonel was named Turner and the Major's name, Claggon. The Lieutenant to his company was named Bosworth [?], the Order Sargeant's name was Dean.(He does not recollect the names of any officers of the regular troops.) He staid (sic) at the fort during his term of service, engaged in guarding the fort and any little service about it. He received a regular discharge from Colonel Turner and returned home some time in the month of December, 1781.
While he was at the fort, news of Cornwallis's defeat was received and the regiment celebrated the occasion.
He has no documentary evidence [?] of his service. He knows of no person whose testimony he can procure who can testify to his service.
To the interrogations propounded by this court the applicant made thefollowing answers:
1. He was born at Nova Scotia on the third day of March, 1765.
2. He has a record of his age in his family Bible at home which he took from his father's family Bible .
3. When he entered the service he resided in the town of Dartmouth (that part now called Fairhaven) in the county of Bristol in the State of Massachusetts, resided in that neighborhood and was on several voyages at sea till 1789. He then relocated to the town of Stillwater the County of Saratoga, State of New York where he has continued to reside ever since -- where he now resides.
4. He entered the service as a volunteer.
5. He recollects the names of no others except those above stated, neither can he state the general circumstances of his service any more fully than above set forth.
6. He received a regular descharge from Colonel Turner. He took it home with him and it was put with his father's papers since which time he has never seen it.
7. Thomas Hunt, David Benedict, Judge Geo. Palmer, Rev. Elnathan Finch, John Wilson, Charles Neilson.
He hereby relinquishes every claim whatever to a pension or anuity except the present, and declares that his name is not on the pension role of the agency of any State.
Subscribed and sworn in open court this 6th day of September 1832
(Signed) Ephraim Annable
Mr. Elnathan Finch, a clergyman presiding in the town of Wiltonin, the County of Saratoga and State of New York and George Palmer, residing in the town of Stillwater in the same County, hereby Certify that we are well acquainted with Ephraim Annable who has subscribed and sworn to the above declaration, that we believe him to be sixty seven years of age, that he is reputed and believed in the neighborhood where he resides, to have been a soldier of the Revolution and that we concur in that opinion.
(Signed)
Elnathan Finch
George Palmer
Time Line: Ephraim Annable
Born 3 March 1765
Enlisted June 1781 age 16
Discharged 16 Dec 1781
Sailor 1789 Age 24
Reloc. Stillwater, N.Y. Abt 1789 Age 24
1790 Census 1790 Age 25
(Males over 16 --
under 16 -- 1
Females - - - - - - - -5 )
William's birth ** 1802/0337
Apply Pension 6 Sept. 1832 67
** Assuming that William was a son of this family. Ephraim's age would seem to preclude an intervening generation, and the geographics are appropriate.
According to The Home Book of the Darius Myer's Family, it states that he was a half brother to Isaac, Jr. Isaac, his father was married to Margaret Coffin prior to his marriage to Lydia Peckham Delano.
Date and place of Ephraim's birth is found in his application for pension which he filed in 1832.
He is the father of William and James and others. William's son, William H., named his first son, Ephraim, after his grandfather, which was common.
(From a microfilm of the handwritten manuscript:)
Declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the Act of Congress, Passed June 7, 1832
State of New York, County of Saratoga. | Annable Ephraim (I53412)
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| 4297 |
Date of birth changed from 1106 to circa 1090. No sources for either -- date guess.
Marriage
Marriage Date: 1124
Husband: UNKNOWN Meginhard
Wife: UNKNOWN Mechthild
Child: UNKNOWN Gottfried
Child: Craffto von Sponheim
Child: Hiltrud von Sponheim
Child: Maud von Sponheim
Child: Adalbert von Sponheim | MÖRSBERG Mathilde (I59619)
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| 4298 |
date of intention*- files Ipswich, Essex, Mass. | Family: BEAL Obadiah / PULSIFER Mary (F671)
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| 4299 |
date of will- Lancaster, Mass. | SMITH James (I8951)
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| 4300 |
Date to be confirmed | STRANTZ Unknown (I56887)
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| 4301 |
Date: ABT 1166
Place: Groitzsch, Leipzig, Saxony
Death: 1195-03-25 at Dießen am Ammersee Germany | ROCHLITZ Agnes (I57867)
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| 4302 |
Dato II Loup, Comte de Bigorre, married Lupa Sánchez. [1]
Research Notes
This profile was examined in the July 2019 C-a-T, in relation to the children of Sancho I Garcés and Toda Aznárez, two of whom were included as new profiles. Lupa/Lupe was not eligible, but information found for her, her husband and son, is given below.
Lupa Sánchez was supposedly a daughter of Sancho I Garcés, King of Pamplona, born out of wedlock, before the six children he would have with Toda Aznárez. [2] Her dates are unknown. One source states that she was probably much older than her legitimate siblings, [3] however, her only son, Raimundo I, Count of Bigorre, was born in 0929 (acc WT, 0910, which is out of sync with his mother, in any event), which, [4] without knowing more, places her birth around 909 (20 years old), in the same period of her half-sisters, considerably prior to the date in WT, 0920. Her birth and death places are unknown, but she may have been born in Pamplona, Al-Ándalus (in today's Autonomous Community of Navarre (Navarra), considering her parents' connections with the area, and she may have died in the Condado de Bigorra, Ducado de Vasconia, because of her marriage with Dato II, Count of Bigorre [2] [4]
As stated, her father had another 6 childen who were her half-siblings: [5]
Ónneca Sánchez
Sancha Sánchez
Urraca Sánchez
Velasquita Sánchez
Órbita Sánchez
García Sánchez
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comtes de Bigorre.
↑ 2.0 2.1 _ WIKIPEDIA: "Sancho I of Pamplona"
↑ _ FMG: "Navarre, Kings. Chapter 2. Kings of Navarre, A. Kings of Navarre 905-1076 (Jimena Dynasty)"
↑ 4.0 4.1 _ WIKIPEDIA: "Raimundo I Dato de Bigorre"
↑ _ Biografías y Vidas (https://www.biografiasyvidas.com): "Sancho Garcés I" | BIGORRE Dato (I59578)
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| 4303 |
Daughter of a Fond Du Lac, MN, Indian trader.
She was the mother of two sons and two daughters. | RONSSAIN Miss (I8251)
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| 4304 |
Daughter of Gandolf Alfgeirsson, King in Norway
Wife of Sigurd Randversson, Danish King of Lethra
Mother of Ragnar "Lodbrok" Sigurdsson; Sigurd Sigurdsson Ringslinger; Aslaug Sigurdsdotter; Thora av Seeland Herodsdotter; Geva Sigurdsdotter Ringslinger; Ruric Lodbrock; Eysteinn Halfdansson; Gudrod Halfdansson; Sineus; Trouvor (le Fidèle) and Ring
Sister of Hysing GANDOLFSSON; Haki GANDOLFSSON; Alfarin, King of Alfheim; Gandolf de VINGULMARK, de SUÈDE; Harold Hylthetan; and Øystein Gandalfsson
Husband: Sigurd 'Ring' Randversson
Wife: Alfhild Gandolfsdatter
Child: Ragnar 'Lodbrok' Sigurdsson
Marriage: ABT 0759 Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
Flateyjarbók
According to a genealogy in Flateyjarbók, Álfhildr was the daughter of Gandálf, son of Álfgeir, son of king Álf the old of Alfheim. She was the mother of:
Ragnar loðbrók, father of
Sigurðr orms-í-auga, father of
Áslaugr, mother of
Sigurd Hjort, father of
Ragnhild, mother of
Harald Hårfagre.
Sources
Flateyjarbók: Ættartölur, accessed 8 Jun 2024
See also;
Abbrev: Stuart (1992) Title: Royalty for Commoners Author: Stuart, R. W. Publication: Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2nd. Ed. 1992 (firstEd. 1988). Page: pp. 175-176 (Line 240) 00: Title: Lineage of the Royal Princes of England
Title: Royal Line, The. Author: Albert F Schmuhl. Publication: Orig. March, 1929 NYC, NY - Rev. March 1980. Note: Good. Genealogical lineages may not always be from father to son, especially Houses of Kings. NS073213. Source Media Type: Manuscript. | GANDOLFSDATTER Alfhild (I58759)
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| 4305 |
Daughter of Goswin (III) Herr von Heinsberg, Heer van Valkenburg and his wife Adelheid von Sommerschenburg. She died 20 Jan 1189 and was buried at Zschillen. | HEINSBERG Mathilde (I57869)
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| 4306 |
David and his wife followed his brothers, Purchase and Reuben in their move to the wilderness but he and his brother, Ephraim and his wife, moved to Flintstown, Maine (later Baldwin), near Lake Sebago. | Brown David (I51209)
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| 4307 |
David became a Justice of the Peace. | Powers David (I52140)
|
| 4308 |
David moved to Boston when young and according to tradition, worked
on the Constitution when it was being built. He was probably
apprenticed to his maternal grandfather, Nathaniel Perkins of
Ipswich, a shipwright, and learned his trade there. About the time of
his marriage, he took up the business of housewright, which he
continued until his death. David was said to have built many
important buildings and blocks of stores. His death is said to have
been hastened due to anxiety expecting the outcome of an important
contract for building a block of stores on India Street or Wharf.
After his marriage, he lived on Levette Street where his first child
was born. About this time he bought a lot of land on Brooks Street
in Charlestown from Leonard Colburn. On this he built a house,
possibly for a home. On Feb. 10, 1807, he mortgaged this house to his
brother Ebenezer for $1200.00. In 1808 he placed a second mortgage on
the same property in favor of Ebenezer for $500.00 On Sept. 11, 1811
he did something for $2000.00; however the page was torn and we can
not determine what this was. His wife did not join in the deed, but
on Nov. 9, 1829, after her second marriage, she waived her right of
dower for $100.00 in favor of George T. Granger, husband of Lucy
Parsons Pulsifer, daughter of Ebenezer Pulsifer and to Joseph P. and
Ebenezer Pulsifer, sons of Ebenezer.
David moved to Temple Street in 1805 and to Milk Street in 1809 where
he died. | PULSIFER David (I7013)
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| 4309 |
David Pulsifer Jr. served as Pvt. in the Revolutionary War. In 1790
he settled in Poland, Maine, where he moved from Essex Co., Mass.,
taking all his family with him except for Hannah (Mrs. Knowlton). She
followed him some 25 years later with part of her family. David
purchased his farm at Bakersfield, now Poland, consisting of 5
hundred acres of land, at $1.25 per acre which he divided among his
sons, all grown men. Two of his sons, Jonathan and Ephraim had
already married and had children. These two sons followed the sea
previous to emigration to Maine. David and his sons cleared the farm
by cutting and burning the trees, which remained in the Pulsifer
family for nearly a century. The last Pulsifer owner of this farm was
the Hon. John Rust Pulsifer. It was sold to Mr. James S. Sandborn of
Chase and Sanborn of Boston in 1886 and was known as the Sanborn farm
and later as the Elmwood farm. After Mr. Sanborn's purchase of the
property from John Rust Pulsifer, he erected on it one of the
largest, most commedious and finely finished barns to be found in New
England. On the Sanborn or Elmwood farm, Mr. Sanborn bred fine
horses. The Elmwood farm lay on the south side of the county road and
along the western boundry of New Glousester, Me. in the Empire
Settlement. | PULSIFER David (I7009)
|
| 4310 |
David Wall and Cynthia Ingraham where married 14 April 1796 in Hallowell (now Augusta), Maine. See Maine Famililes in 1790 9:252 which calls him David Wall Jr. and cites Hallowell VR 4:14, or "Maine Genealogy Archives: Hallowell Marriages, 1763-1797", on line which lists their marriage with those solemnized by Rev. Daniel Stone. See also "David Wall, jun., and Cynthia Ingraham, both of this town, int. m. March 19, 1796, cert. iss. April 8." in Hallowell intentions of marriage, on line, from Nash's History of Augusta, p. 576.
Janice Locke | Family: WALL David / INGRAHAM Cynthia (F21755)
|
| 4311 |
David was one of the three brothers appointed in a meeting at the First Baptist Church in Stillwateron 30 July 1836 to build the Second Baptist Church of Stillwater, in Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY. According to the 1850 Federal Census for Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY, he owned 7,000 acres of land on which he and his sons farmed.
The Stillwater School Districts, 1824-1833, have David listed as having three children attending school in District 2, 1824 (Brick School).
Union Cemetery, Town of Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York.As transcribed by Cornelius Emerson Durkee and listed under Stillwater in volume 2, pages 527-529Newland lot:Newland, Lydia M., d. July 29, 1862, 31ys.Newland, Dea. David, d. Feb. 10, 1860, a.71ys.Newland, Mary, wife of David, d. Dec. 15, 1840, 47ys.Bird, Almira Newland, wife of Wm. J., d. May 9, 1843, 25ys.Newland, Dorcas Adelia, dau of David & Mary, d. May 23, 1844, 7th yr.Newland, Elizabeth, dau. of David & Mary, d. Dec. 31, 1847, a.26 yrs.Newland, Helen, dau. of David & Mary, d. May 19, 1848, a.15 yrs.Newland, Sanford Billings, son of David & Mary, d. Oct. 5, 1848, 22d yr.Newland, Ephraim, b. June 22, 1793; d. Sep. 17, 1859.Newland, Sarah Brill, wife of Ephraim, d. Dec. 22, 1867, 72y.9m.26d.and four additonal inscriptions:Newland, Marilla, wife of David, d. Oct. 13, 1877 ae 75 yrs.Newland, Harriet, d. Oct. 31, 1871, ae 73 yrs.Newland, James B., 1815 - 1885Newland, Maltilda A., 1828 - 1905 | Newland David (I52423)
|
| 4312 |
David was the youngest son of Malcolm III, King of Scots, by his (second) wife, Margaret, daughter of Edward the Ætheling and Agatha, kinswoman of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.[1][2][3] He had five older brothers: Edward; Edmund, prince of Cumbria and later a monk; Ethelred, earl of Fife and Abbot of Dunkeld; Edgar, king of Scots; and Alexander I, king of Scots; and two sisters: Maud, m. Henry I of England; and Mary, m. Eustace III, count of Boulogne and Lens. He also had three half-brothers from his father's first marriage: Duncan II, king of Scots; Malcolm; and Donald. The exact date of his birth is unknown but thought to have been between 1080[2][4] and 1085.[1][5]
David lost both of his parents in 1093 (when he was still a young boy) and he was sent, along with his siblings, to England for safety where the children stayed with their aunt Christina, a nun who lived in Ramsey.[6] When in 1100 his older sister Maud became the queen-consort of Henry I, King of England, she took David under her wing and he spent the rest of his youth at the king's court.[6] He was educated and later knighted by King Henry,[7] and granted a small estate in western Normandy where Henry held lands.[5] Late in 1113, Henry arranged for David's marriage to a very wealthy and highly born heiress who brought with her lands stretching from south Yorkshire to Middlesex, which immediately elevated David to the status of a major land-owner.[5]
Marriage and Children
David married Maud Huntingdon, the widow of Simon de Senlis, earl of Huntingdon and Northampton, and a daughter of Waltheof Huntingdon, earl of Northumberland, and Judith de Boulogne.[1][8] Maud had two sons by her first marriage and was most likely in her early forties, almost ten years older than David.[5][1] There were four children from this marriage:
Malcolm Dunkeld; eldest son and heir, strangled (possibly at two years of age)[9] [see research notes]
Clarice Dunkeld; died unmarried[10][11][12]
Hodierna Dunkeld; died unmarried[10][12][13]
Henry Dunkeld, earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland; b. c.1114;[14] m. 1139 Ada de Warenne;[14][15] d. 12 Jun 1152[16][17]
Queen Maud predeceased her husband, dying in 1131.[18][19][20]
The Honour of Huntingdon
When his brother Edgar died in 1107, his will directed that the kingdom be divided in two and its rulership split between his two younger brothers Alexander and David, with David receiving the southern region and Alexander the north.[6] Alexander, however, was not inclined to share the rulership of Scotland with his younger brother. It was not until David threatened to seize his inheritance by force and the Norman barons in Cumbria threw their support behind him, that Alexander was forced to acknowledge David as the earl (or prince) of Cumbria.[21]
The lands which David held after his marriage to Maud (which followed within months of his securing Cumbria) were concentrated mainly in Northampton, Huntingon, Cambridge, and Bedford and were commonly known as "Waltheof's earldom" or the "Honour of Huntingdon."[5][22] Possession of the Honour of Huntingdon was significant for a number of reasons. It made David an extremely wealthy land-owner;[5] it simultaneously made him an English baron; and it provided a convenient location to recruit Normans (frequently younger sons) willing to move north and settle in Scotland as military tenants of the crown.[22]
Successfully governing Cumbria and the Honour of Huntingdon, both enormous and strategically important holdings, provided an invaluable apprenticeship for the future king of Scots.[6]
King of Scots
David succeeded his brother, Alexander I, as king of Scots 25 April 1124.[23][1] His reign was to last for twenty-nine years[10] and represented a new era in Scotland's history in a number of ways:
First, King David, who had spent his most formative years growing up in a Norman household, moved immediately to feudalize large areas of Scotland by granting charters to Norman barons and settling them in Scotland.[24] One of his first charters, granted at Scone probably on the occasion of his enthronement, was to one of the senior Normans in his court, Robert of Brus, giving him the lordship of Annandale (a holding of 200,000 acres adjacent to the English border north of Carlisle).[24] This was followed by grants to other Normans such as Walter Fitzalan, who became high steward of Scotland; Hugh de Morville; and Ranulf de Soulles until, by the 1140s, most of the southern and western regions of Scotland had been alloted to the king's followers.[5][25]
Second, he either introduced or greatly developed a number of practices which were new to Scotland at that time. He was the first king of Scots to strike his own coins, silver pennies (or 'sterlings') which were equal to English sterlings;[24] he established a new type of sheriffdom which was similar to the system used by the Norman kings in England;[26] he introduced the office of 'justiciar' (also modeled on Norman England);[26][25]and he established many flourishing trading communities including Berwick, Roxburgh, Edinburgh, Rutherglen, Renfrew, and Irvine.[26][25]
Third, King David completely transformed the church in Scotland through his unprecedented generousity and support. He founded Tironensian, Cistercian, and Augustinian orders, and enlarged the Benedictine priory of Dunfermline until it was the second richest abbey in Scotland.[5] He also founded an Augustinian cathedral priory at St Andrews.[5] He famously created a system by which bishoprics were defined by territory, and encouraged parish churches to be built within these territories, served by priests who were supported by tithes.[5]
Death
David I, King of Scots, died 24 May 1153 at Carlisle, less than one year after the death of his only surviving son and heir, Henry, earl of Huntingdon and Northumberland.[27][16][1][10] He was about seventy-three years of age.[10] His body was carried to Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, where he was buried before the high altar in the church of the Holy Trinity, beside his mother and brothers.[10][28]
David I was succeeded by his grandson, Malcolm IV.
Research Notes
Eldest Son Malcolm
Several sources attribute Malcolm's murder to Donald III, (ex)King of Scots,[10][4] but this is not possible as Malcolm could have been born no earlier than 1113 and Donald III died in 1099.[29]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, pp. 578-580 SCOTLAND 2. David I.
↑ 2.0 2.1 Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 58 .
↑ Oram, Richard. David I: The King Who Made Scotland. Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, UK (2004, 2008), p. 25-6, citing, “…marriage of Maël Coluim and Margaret…their four eldest sons were named Edward, Edmund, Aedelred, and Edgar…and Alexander…and David…”
↑ 4.0 4.1 Paul, Sir James Balfour. The Scotts Peerage. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1904), vol. 1, p. 3.
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 Barrow, G.W.S. David I, King of Scots. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online Edition (23 Sep 2004) rv 5 Jan 2006, available here by subscription.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Mackay, A.J.G. David I. Dictionary of National Biography (1888).
↑ Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 38.
↑ Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 59 .
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 580 SCOTLAND 2.i. Malcolm of Scotland.
↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 64.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 580 SCOTLAND 2.iii. Clarice of Scotland.
↑ 12.0 12.1 Paul, Sir James Balfour. The Scots Peerage. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1904), vol. 1, p. 4.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 580 SCOTLAND 2.iv. Hodierne of Scotland.
↑ 14.0 14.1 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, pp. 580-583 SCOTLAND 3. Henry of Scotland.
↑ Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 65 .
↑ 16.0 16.1 Wharton, Henry. Anglia Sacra. London: Richard Chiswel (1691), Chronicon Sanctae Crucis Edinburgensis, sub A.D. 1152: "Obiit Henricus Comes Northanhumborum filius David Regis Scotiae secundo Idus Junii [12 June]." p. 161.
↑ Chron. S. Crucis Edinb., p.31, Bannatyne Club, cited in Norgate, Kate. Dictionary of National Biography Online, vol. 26, Henry of Scotland.
↑ Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 46.
↑ Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), pp. 60-61.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 1, pp. 278-280 BEAUMONT 3. Maud of Northumberland.
↑ Duncan, A.A.M. Scotland, The Making of the Kingdom.Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd (1975), Edinburgh History of Scotland, vol. 1, p. 134
↑ 22.0 22.1 Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 41.
↑ Stevenson, J. (ed). Chronica de Mailros. Edinburgh: the Societatis Edinburgensis (1835), [A.D. M.C.xxiiij:] "Alexander rex Scottorum obiit vij. Kalendas Maij [Apr 25], cui succeffit frater ejus Dauid." p. 67, yr 1124.
↑ 24.0 24.1 24.2 Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 38.
↑ 25.0 25.1 25.2 Ashley, Mike. The Mammoth Book of British Kings & Queens. New York: Carroll & Graf (1998), p. 404.
↑ 26.0 26.1 26.2 Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 39.
↑ Stevenson, J. (ed). Chronica de Mailros. Edinburgh: the Societatis Edinburgensis (1835). Anno M.C.LIIJ:"Obiit Dauid rex Scottorum ix. kal. Junii [24 May]...p. 75.
↑ Barrow, G.W.S. Kingship and Unity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (1965), p. 48.
↑ Weir, Alison. Britain's Royal Families. London: The Bodley Head (1989), p. 192.
See also:
Barrow, G.W.S. Ango-Norman Era in Scottish History. Oxford: Oxford University Press (1980).
Barrow, G.W.S. The Kingdom of the Scots. New York: St Martin's Press (1973).
Birch, Walter de Gray. Catalogue of Seals in the Department of Manuscripts in the British Museum. London: by the trustees of the museum (1887), p. 3.
Burns, William. Scottish War of Independence. Glasgow: J. Maclehose (1875), 2 vols.
Cawley, Charles. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Medieval Lands Database. David I of Scotland.
David I and the Early Church, BBC history website.
Oram, Richard. David, The King Who Made Scotland. Gloucestershire: The History Press (2004).
Robertson, Eben WIlliam. Scotland Under Her Early Kings. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas (1862), repr. by Forgotten Books (2018), pp. 187-.
Skene, William Forbes. Chronicles of the Picts, Chronicles of the Scots, and Other Early Memorials. Edinburg: Her Majesty's General Register House (1867), Chronicle of Huntingdon, pp. 210-211.
Wikipedia: David I of Scotland
Wikipedia: House of Dunkeld
Goodey, Emma. David I (r. 1124-1153). The Royal Family. London: The Royal Household (2016). David I (r. 1124-1153).
Time Team, Season 11, Episode 12, "The Lost City of Roxburgh" Roxburgh, Scottish Borders | DUNKELD David (I59182)
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| 4313 |
Davison (Yankeetown) Cemetery | HART W. Clark (I35681)
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| 4314 |
Davison (Yankeetown) Cemetery | KERRICK Doris (I35715)
|
| 4315 |
Davison (Yankeetown) Cemetery | PERRY Harriet (Martha) E. (I35782)
|
| 4316 |
Davison (Yankeetown) Cemetery | UNKNOWN Edith M. (I35965)
|
| 4317 |
Death
1545
France
France
Data Changed
Changed:
24 NOV 2012
10:46:29
Prior to import, this record was last changed 10:46:29 24 NOV 2012.
Sources
Jetté, René et al., Table d’ascendance de Catherine de Baillon, Montréal, Société généalogique canadienne-française, 2001. | DUPUIS Jacqueline (I60254)
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| 4318 |
Death
Date: ca 978 or bef 997
Occupation
Occupation: Duke between Morava and Esztergom
marchin ja Granin herttua, King of Hungary
Sources
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands.
Geni at http://www.geni.com/people/%C3%81RP%C3%81D-h%C3%A1zi-Mih%C3%A1ly-Michael-Prince-of-Hungary-Regent-of-Poland/6000000002187690247?through=6000000000687202972
Wikipedia at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_of_Hungary
Fabpedigree at http://fabpedigree.com/s040/f140388.htm | ÁRPÁDHÁZI Mihaly (I59455)
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| 4319 |
Death
Death: Y
Date: 15 JUN 1477
Place: Goupillieres, Montfort Amaury, Ile De France, France
Age: 2-3 | VAULTIER Barthelemi (I60247)
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| 4320 |
Death
Death: Y
Date: 24 FEB 1110
Place: Regensburg, Oberpfalz Schwaben, Bayern, Germany
Age: 59-60
No more info is currently available. Can you add to this biography?
Sources
Charles Cawley: Medieval Lands. Bavarian nobility: Adelheid von Lechsgemünd | LECHSGEMÜND Adelheid (I58308)
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| 4321 |
Death & Burial
The Cartulaire de Saint-Bertin records the death of Count Lideric in 808. [1]
The Annales Formoselenses record the death in 817 of Count Lideric and that he was buried at Harelbeke. [2]
Sources
↑ Guérard, M. (ed.) (1840) Cartulaire de l'abbaye de Saint-Bertin (Paris) ("Saint-Bertin"), p. 11.
↑ Annales Formoselenses 817, MGH SS V, p. 35.
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, HAINAUT.htm#_Toc62122687 Counts of Flanders. | De FLANDERS Lideric (I58644)
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| 4322 |
Death caused by farm accident on Julu 14. He had ret'd to farmyard from cutting grain in field and horses remained hitched while he made repairs on grain binder. The horses became suddenly frightened, dashing off in a wild gallop and thowing him upon the binder, resuliting in serious injury. Burial is in Montello Cemetery. | BRUSTMAN William Fredrick (I34478)
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| 4323 |
Death Cert; 1913; Register of Deeds, Montello, WI; Note; Exat date of dth not given. Cert states Ludwig was 19 months old, having been born on March 21, 19112. The cause of death was convulsions last 24 hours. He is buried at Montello Cemetery with parens and 3 siblings. | BRUSTMAN Ludwig Adolph (I34547)
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| 4324 |
Death location: Nach (It is not known where this location is. More information is needed)
Name
Name: Agnes /Von Wangen/ | Von WANGEN Agnes (I59035)
|
| 4325 |
Death of Thurlow W. Brown----
We grieve to learn that Thurlow W. Brown, the able champion of temperance and editor of The Wisconsin Chief, died at his residence, near Fort Atkinson, Wis., on Friday night last. He had been suffering from physical prostration for some months past, and his friends have for some time had but little hope of his recovery.
Mr. Brown was one of the most remarkable men we have ever known. Without any advantages for education in early life, he nevertheless became a powerful master of language, and was a writer of great force and an orator of thrilling power. With the energy of a giant, he combined the simplicity and generosity of a child. The cause of temperance, to which his life was devoted, and in the ardent service of which he became prematurely infirm, never had a more earnest or effective advocate than he, whether with the pen or as a speaker. We well remember when, about twenty years ago, he left his home in Sterling, in Cayuga County, N. Y., and became a resident of Auburn, where he became editor of the Star of Temperance, and where, subsequently, he established the Cayuga Chief, a paper of great influence and respect among the temperance people thoughout the nation. Some years afterwards he moved his printing office to Fort Atkinson, Wis., where, in connection with his sister he continued to publish his Chief up to the day of his death. During the editorship in Auburn and in Wisconsin, he spent much of his time on the stump, traveling into all parts of the country to fill lecture engagements. While possessed of a peculiar temperament, which made him very despondent under discouragement, extremely sensitive of his personal reputation, and as true to a true friend as he was bitter towards enemies of himself and the cause in which he was so heartily enlisted, yet we have never known a man who was more upright in his intentions, more actuated by noble and generous impulses, or against whose name or character so little of reproach can be spoken. A man of geat native powers of mind, in which the poetic element was conspicuous, he wrote and spoke of with vehemence, eloquence and beautiy. Had Thurlow W. Brown been more ambitious of personal fame than he was enthusiastic in his labors for one great and good principal, he would have ranked amongst the illustrious literati and orators of his age. The cause of temperance loses one of its ablest and most self-sacrificing advocates and workers in his death, and American manhood, one of its noblest specimens. | Source (S1361)
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| 4326 |
Death record per Metz Mortuary record in York Co NE, but burial location unknown. | STILSON William E (I25797)
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| 4327 |
DEATH-BURIAL: Page 667.28
BIRTH-BAPTISM: Page 511. 28 | GODIN Anne (I3440)
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| 4328 |
Death. The Gesta episcoporum Cameracensium, ‘Acts of the Bishops of Cambrai’, composed in the eleventh century, specifically states that the sisters-in-law of Emperor Henry II kept arousing rebellions against him after 1017 and that means there was an alliance of Count Dirk’s mother, and the wife of Count Gerhard of Metz.[1]
Sources
↑ Gesta episcoporum Cameracensium, 3.13, Bethmann ed., p470.
"Royal Ancestry" 2013, by Douglas Richardson, Vol. V. page 503
Links
Wikipedia: Lutgardis of Luxemburg
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#_Toc359915623 | LUXEMBOURG Luitgard (I58591)
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| 4329 |
DEATH: "Vassall Pedigree", pg 1 states "died young".
See "Vassall Pedigree", Second Appendix | Vassall Samuel (I50305)
|
| 4330 |
DEATH: "Vassall Pedigree", pg 1 states she died young. | Vassall Frances (I50281)
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| 4331 |
Death: 1 MAR 1058 Carcassonne, Aude, France Age: 82-83
Death: 1058-03-01 Carcassonne, Aude, France
Death: 1 MAR 1057/58 Carcassonne, Aude, Languedoc-Roussillon, France
Sources
Ancestry Family Trees: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27418815/family
Ancestry Family Trees: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/318369834/facts
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE%20NOBILITY.htm#Ermesindedied1057 | CARCASSONNE Ermensinde (I59722)
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| 4332 |
DEATH: According to "Vassall Pedigree", pg 3, she died young. | Vassall Anna (I50397)
|
| 4333 |
DEATH: According to "Vassall Pedigree", pg 3, she died young. | Vassall Elizabeth (I50431)
|
| 4334 |
DEATH: According to the "Vassall Pedigree", pg 3, this person died young. | Vassall Boardo (I50420)
|
| 4335 |
Death: BET 1840 AND 1850 | CASE Abel Porter (I40620)
|
| 4336 |
DEATH: Death notice in Times Democrat, Friday, 9 Sept 1904.
DEATH: MANGLED BY CARS
_______
DEATH: The Sole Support of a Widowed Mother is Killed
DEATH: Sunday morning the mangled body of Lonnie Brown was found on the C. & E. I. tracks between Papineau and St. Anne. The body was completely cut in two at the waist. A southbound train brought the remains to Papineau where it was viewed by a number of people, none of whom seemed able to identify it.
DEATH: Finally a boy by the name of Brown, who lives northeast of Papineau, viewed the remains and looking at the shoes and socks of the unfortunate victim, pronounced it the body of his brother who had ridden a freight train from Watseka, that being the only train he could get, to the place where he fell off and was run over. The young man had been working at Piper City and left there Saturday with $70. which he had drawn on his wages. About $68. was found on the body.
DEATH: Lonie was the eldest son and only support of a widowed mother who lives on a small farm near Papineau. His death is a hard blow to his mother and a shock to his many friends, as he was an industrious, sober young man and well liked by all. | Brown Lonnie (I52862)
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| 4337 |
DEATH: Died young, according to "Vassall Pedigree", pg 3. | Vassall Lewis (I50343)
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| 4338 |
Death: Drunknad | LINDGREN John (I5184)
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| 4339 |
DEATH: Handwritten note in "Vassall Pedigree", pg 1 states: "of St. Leonard Shoreditch but died at sea about Feb 1666-7, will in Court of Delegates, July 6, 1670. | Vassall Henry (I50439)
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| 4340 |
DEATH: In the Crystal Lake Herald, a newspaper in Crystal Lake, Mc Henry Co. IL on 1 July, 1909, p. 1 appeaed the following:
DEATH: FRANCES BROWN
DEATH: Sudden Death of Old Resident Near Cary
DEATH: On Friday morning, June 25, the lifeless body of Mrs. Frances L. Brown was found by her son, Dexter D. Brown, who upon entering her bedroom to awaken her as was his usual custom, discovered her lifeless form.
DEATH: Mrs. Brown had been in failing health for some time, but for the past few days had been feeling unusually well, and the finding of her lifeless body came as a great shock to him. Death had evidently taken place without a struggle, as she lay in a natural position in bed , and her features were calm and composed.
DEATH: It being considered a coroner's case, Dr. Peck of Harvard was notified and came down on the 10 a.m. train, impaneling a jury as follows: D. M. Auringer, forman; Wm. Swarts, J. C. Lemke, J. J. Smith, M. B. Weaver, J. L. McNett, who upon investigation, rendered a verdict of death from natural causes, probably heart failure.
DEATH: Frances LaJune Harback, only daughter of Dexter and Marie Harback, was born at Silver Lake, McHernry county, Ill., July 22, 1850. March 12, 1874, she was united in marriage to William C. Brown, who was a menber of Co. 1, 95th Regiment, Illinois Infantry volunteers. He died April 25, 1879.
DEATH: To them was born one son, Dexter Donald Brown. Her father passed away in March, 1886, and her mother in September, 1887.
DEATH: She was converted in early youth, and had been a consistent member of the Free Methodist church for many years. She had also been superintendent of the Sabbath school for several years, and was greatly interested in the work and dearly loved by the children of the school. She was also a ateacher in the public schools and very proficient in that line of work. She passed away at her home and birthplace on June 25, 1909, leaving an only son, Dexter D., an adopted sister, Mrs, Jessie Fremont Davies, of Spokane, Wash., and many other relatives and friends.
DEATH: The funeral was held Sunday at 1 p. m. , from the house, and 2 o'clock at the Free Methodist church, Rev. C. G. Hamner of Evanston officiating, assisted by Rev. Klein, the local pastor.
DEATH: The services were very largely attended, many relatives and friends from a distance being present. Many beautiful floral tokens, one a beautiful wreath of roses on an easel, presented by the Sunday school children, were evidences of the high esteem in which she was held.
DEATH: The pallbearers were: Thos. Houghtaling, A. H. Arps, J. J. Smith, R. H. Grantham, F. G. Baldwin, Henry Dahn. Interment in the Cary cemetery. | Harback Francis LaJune (I53036)
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| 4341 |
DEATH: In the Wisconsin Chief, dated May 15, 1866, the following written by Emma Brown, sister to Thurlow Weed Brown;
DEATH: Editorial Correspondance
DEATH: "The Oaks", April 29, 1866.
DEATH: Emma: I am told, and very readily believe, that I walk no more among the living. To those who have been so kind to me and mine, I invoke God's choicest blessings, and give my wasted hand in a feeling "goodbye" to all. The battle is over. The Senior.
DEATH: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DEATH: Personal (in the same paper, directly under his obituary is the following:)
DEATH: We have delayed referring to some matters, hoping the Senior would get strong enough to do so; but, saving one letter and the brief note at the head of our editorial columns, he never wrote a line for over three months before his death. All through the earlier months of his illness, he wrote diligently only giving up his accustomed tasks when to weak to sit up in an easy chair.
DEATH: For his wife, children, father and ourself, we again thank the many friends who have been so kind during his long illness. Their thoughtfulness in word and deed was more gratefully appreciated by him than any words of ours can express. Our own Lodge and friends at home, the Lodges at Hebron, Westford, Beaver Dam, and Fox Lake, old friends at
Lake Mills, H. P. Stanley, of Chicago, Elisha Hitcheus, of Williamsport, Indiana, and Gerrit Smith of N. Y., showed their regard practically, the remembrance adding much to his comfort and relieving anxiety.
DEATH: To the editors of the political papers who have remembered him in his sickness, paying just tribute to his services in the temperance cause, we are also grateful.
DEATH: In closing, we acknowledge the remittance from Ancient City Lodge, Aztalan, received a few days before his death, accompanied by the following resolution:
DEATH: Resolved, That we do not consider we are giving, but that we as a temperance organization owe to Bro. Brown, in view of his past labors in the temperance cause more than we shall ever be able to pay.
DEATH: Thanks to the brothers, and sisters for their testimonial.
BIRTH: Thurlow Weed Brown was an editor of the Cuyuga Chief in Auburn, Cayuga county, NY from Jan 4, 1849 to 1855.
BIRTH: His newspaper policy was Independent in everything, neutral in nothing. Temperance and anti-slavery. Format was: Four pages, varying sizes, 16" x 22 1/4", 18" x 23 1/4 ". Price: $1.00 per year in advance. Published from the corner of 74 Genesee St. and South St. over the Post Office. Then from the Exchange Building, corner of Genesee and South Sts.; in 1854 from the Markham Block on North St. "The Cayuga Chief was an original, vigorous and outspoken temperance journal, continued in Auburn for eight years when it was removed to Wisconsin, and there continued under the same ownership.(Storke, History of Cayuga County, p. 53)
BIRTH: By the time his mother died in April of 1857, Thurlow was already living in Fort Atkinson, WI as was his sister, Emma. He was staunch supporter of the Temperance Movement and his newspaper was dedicated its crusade against alcohol. He wrote a book, ' Minnie Hermon, The Rumseller's Daughter' and completed it while very ill. He wrote with conviction as his family had known the perils and heartaches associated with the trama of living with a drunkard. His father was also a temperance supporter.
BIRTH: He was extemely close to his mother and her death must have left a terrible ache in his heart.
Thurlow spent many years writing the book " Minnie Hermon, The Rumseller's Daughter." Several chapters were written about his own family. It was not until I read this tribute after his death, that it became evident the story was written about his mother and her father, the drunkard.
The Rev. H. A. Reid, of the Dodge County Citizen, gave a tribute to Thurlow about three weeks after his death. The following is the text that was delivered to the Temperance Society. The town in which it was delivered is unknown.
"Rev. H. A. Reid, of the Doge County Citizen, delivered the following on the life and character of T. W. Barown, late editor of the Wisconsin Chief."
Mr. President, and Gentlemen of the Convention:
About three weeks ago I received the appointment of your President to prepare for this occation a "Memorial of the life and character of the late Thurlow W. Brown, of the Wisconsin Chief." The appointment came at a time when I was more than usually pressed with cares and engagements both at home and abroad; and I hence, from this fact, and the very short notice, at best, for such a work, and the task being one of which I had not had the remotest thought before, the preparation I have been able to make is necessarily very imperfecrt and incomplete; but I have done the best that my circumstances in the case would admit of.
Thurlow Weed Brown, our eminent confrere, recently deceased, and whose honorable careet and noble character it is my office to portray in works of fraternal esteem, was born in Preston, Chenango county, NY., Nov. 24th, 1819.
Mr. Brown was descended of full blood New England Puritan stock; he could readily trace the links of his lineage back to the 'Mayflower," of blessed memory, and that dreary December scene, where the Pilgrim Fathers, of towering faith, and calm submissive trust in Freedom's God, landed on Plymouth Rock, and planted amid the snows and rocks of the storm-beaten coast, the seed-principals of empire that now sway our continent and shape the destinies of untold millions of human souls. The blood of the Pilgrims, flowing throught some generations of unworthy veins, revived again and reasserted in him that lofty moral heroism and indomitable faith in God which was the chief great light they lifted amid the darkness of an age that knew not God, neither regared his laws in behalf of the poor, the down-trodden, the oppressed of every name.
Young Thurlow was brought up to habits of industry and thrift; he early evinced a remarkable degree of mechanical ingenuity and skill, making bureaus, stands, tables, chairs, with carvings, ornaments and parts all complete, that would have done credit to a professional master workman. While yet young, and withur any learning of the art, he made three first rate bass biols; and I have seen in his office a writing desk, a bank of drawers, case stands, brass galleys, &., of his own make, which were every way equal, and in some oints better than I have bought from professional manufacturers. From his childhood up, he wa a prodigy both in mechanical genius and handicraft, doing his work always neat, snug, tasteful, and substantial.
In his boyhood he was much engaged at farm work, and at the trade of carriage-making; both of which occupations his father carried on. And thus was built up from a naturally vigorous constitution, a manly frame of great muscular power and exceeding quickness. He was first among his fellows in all the accustomed boyish feats of strength, agility and athletic skill.
As a school boy, he was diligent, quick to learn, and always eager to make progress and gain knowledge; and his large conscientiousness tempered his exuberant love of sport with a deep respectful deference to the rights and wishes of the teachers, so that he rarely needed reproof, and always won the love, confidence and esteem of his teachers. he had also that manly earnestness of character and that matureness of thaought beyond his years, which commands the interest, affection and association of elder people; yet he was the life of the cirlcle among his youthful associates, when they came together for a party of the olden time- sleigh-ride, a quilting, an apple bee, a sugar party, or the like. On such occasions he was the merriest of the merry, and would set the whole company ablaze with the kindlings of his own vivacity.
His advantages of scholastic culture and training never reached beyond the comon schools of his day. But the people of his native town had established a good public library, which was kept by his father, as Librarian, for many years; and, as you might expect, young Thurlow did not fail to improve this advantage to the fullest extent--thus gaining a vast deal of unsystematized general information. His father was a man of strong, ardent sympathies, and alwys worked with a will for any cause he espoused; his house was always well supplied with the leading newspapers of the day, and he daily talked politics and other currents matters with his family just as freely as if they were all grown up, responsible members of society; and in this way the children were all early and deeply impressed with a livng sense of their duties for the public weal. And thus was our departed friend being taught in this daily school of experience, his own dear and cherished home circle those great and practical lessons of burning devotion, of self-sacrifice and enduring faith which his soul instinctively drank in as waters of life, richly refreshing its native thirst; and which laid the foundation of that grand mission, apostleship, martyrdom and triumph, in the midst of whose garnered fruits of fame and success his weary, weary spirit soared away to the haven of rest in the bosom of God's enfolding love, to go no more out forever.
In May, 1839, the family removed from Preston to the town of Sterling, in Cuyuga county; and we first find yung Brown before the public as a speaker during the memorable and fierce presidential campaign of 1840. Though himself not entitled to vote until about two weeks after the election, he seems to have entered into the whirling conflict of parties and policies with youthful ardor, and to have freely exercised and cultivated his gifts as a speaker by taking the stump in the rural districts, where the common people heard him gladly. His career was begun, though it did not yet appear what it should be, or whither it should tend. The passion for oratoruy stirred withim him; but the devine call to a great and holy mission had not yet voiced its living utterance in his soul; the warrior instinct burned and quickened in is spirit, but the great moral war-path of a lifetime was not yet revealed to his prophetic vision.
Again in 1844 we find him and his father hotly engaged in the political conflict, holding meetings and giving public addresses in every neighborhood, village and school district, in all the region round about their village home. In the year following, the State canvass of New York turned mainly on the license law question, as between the whiskey interest and the temperance principle on this subject. The elder Brown (William Brown) was a pioneer veteran in the temperance cause; the first public address ever given in Preston on this subject was by him, about forty years ago--and he took ground then full as radical as its most advanced advocates hold at the present day. The old man (Wright S. Brown) had drank deeply in his boyhood of the cup of bmitterness that comes to the drunkard's family, and commenced his toilsome career "by working to pay the rumseller's executions against his father." And thus from his youth up his heart had been a fiery furnace seven times heated with fire and brimstone hatred of the rum traffic. And his wife, too, Thurlow's mother, had suffered from her girlish days up to ripe womanhood the horrors and agonies that only a drunkard's child can know--pangful experiences more deeply tinged with the gall and bitterness of fate than ever a Bulwer's tragic pen portrayed. And thus was poured into young Thurlow's veins from two such memories, scourged and scarred with the fiendish wrongs of the rum traffic, the read hot currents of a subtler life. And deriving from a hardy stock, a tough and vigorour physical constitution, he leaped as it were into the foremost ranks of that grand army of reformers who have kept the temperance banner proudly afloat for lo, these many years.
From this time forward our friend felt the devine call and annointing for this mission, and daily consecrated every energy of his being to the one gigantic aim and effort of ridding our fair land of that burning curse--drunkenness and the rum traffic. In the latter part of this year, 1845, he achieved his first important success as a newspaper writer, in a series of articles which appeared in the Star of Temperance, a weekly journal published at the city of Auburn, N. Y.; and in a few months he was called to the editorial chair of the paper. Here his genius found full play in a congenial field, and he soon gave forth sterling proof of the fine mastery of language, thought and imagery which was native in him, and of the tremendous energy with which he could hurl the battle blades of logic, sacasm, invecive, denunciation, or sound the bugle blast of valiant leadership in so noble ans so sharp a fight. When he took hold of the Star of Temperance it had four hundred subscrivers, and in about two years he swelled the list to three thousand. In 1848 the Star office wa removed to Rochester; but he remained at Auburn. In 1849 he started the Cuyuga Chief, with a capital of just seven dollars, and a list of a hundred and seventy subscribers, which swelled in a few years upwards of three thousand. Such are the signs and crowning glory of successful editorship. And here he remained seven ears, wielding his trenchant pen, as the master spirit in the conduct of his press, while at the same time he was almost constantly traveling as a lecturer--thus doing double duty, overtaxing his energies, wearing his life out prematurely, as a willing sacrifice to the grand cause which it was his meat and drink to serve.
By the year 1853, he had attained such celebrity that Derby and Miller, the well lnown book publishers of Auburn, with their branch houses in Buffalo and Cincinnati, ventured a volume of "Temperance Tales and Hearth Stone Reveries, " gahtered from his writing in the Cuyuga Chief, and which attianed a large and prifitable sale. This volume was almost immediatley followed by his story of "Minnie Hermon," which made a book of 472 pages, issured by the same publishers, and met with a leeral deree of favor from the sotry reading public. His first volume is dedicated to his mother, with this sentiment, " My she live to see the dark night which rested upon her childhood's heart and home, pass away; and the eveing of her life close as cloudless as its morning dawned desolate and sad." His second volume, of "Minnie Hermon," is dedicated to his father, with this sentiment: "In his green old age, may he witness the passing away of that malign shadow which rested so gloomily upon his childhood."
The introductory pages of his volume of Temperance Tales and Sketches are devoted to a series of letters, under the heading of "Why I am a Temperance Man;" and in the closing letter he gives a brief sketch of his mother's childhood--depicting with sad vividness how her home was ruined, her mother heart-broken and untimely chrushed into a pauper grave by a husband and father's drunkeness. A frail, slender girl of fifteen, borne down with the keen agony of her great bereavement, is driven to toil in a factory, while the besotted father draws her wages week by week, the instant of their falling due, and squanders it at the tavern; he robs her of her hard earnings to slake his unholy thirst for strong drink, leaving her and a large family of smaller children to beg their bread or eke out a scanty subsistance as best they might, with the gnawings of hunger and the bitterness of cold sapping their young life, till at last they are scattered out to menial drudgery, or grudged support as pauper children; and one of the group, a dear little girl of three summers, dies in a dreary, cruel place, neglected and alone--her little heart broken and famished with its unrequited yearning for a mother;s love or a sister's gentle care--literally starved and frozen to death in a wintry night in the house of people who could barely give roof to the drunkard's child; and the factory girl could not even weep over the grave of that baby sister, so early gone to rest in the angel arms of the dear loved one gone before. In conclusion of this dark, sad story, Mr. Brown say: "Such are but the outlines of a childhood and youth of suffering, himiliation and sorrow. The details are known only to the sufferer and to God. Memory rolls back upon its bitter tide the history of such scenes, the fountain of tears is opened afresh, and flows as bitterly as in the past."
The factory girl--that drunkard's daughter--that child-pauper, who toiled while a drunken father drank down her wages--who went hungry for bread--who was deprived of society and education, and entered upon life's stern realities with no inheritance but poverty and a father's infamy--is our Mother!
"God! how the veins knot and burn, as the tide whose every drop is bitter with the memory of her wrongs sweeps to our finger ends! Our soul throbs fimly in our pen, until we clutch involuntarily for a good blade, and wish the rum traffic were embodied in one demon form, that we coudl go forth with God's blessing and smite the hell-born monster.
"To that mother we owe most of our hatred of the rum traffic. We imbibed it from her breast, and learned it from her in childhood. A father, too, his strong form untainted by the scourge, has taught us the same lesson. The memories of his childhood are darkened by the thoughts of a drunken father. He grappled alone with life's difficulties, and commenced his career by working to pay rumseller's executions against his deceased father.
"Thus from the cradle have we been educated to hate the scourge. that hatred is mingled with every Pilgrim drop in our veins. It grows with our growth and strenghtens with our strength. In athe high noon of manhood we swear, by friends on earth and God in Heaven, a life-long warfare against the traffic. There can be no compromise. It is a conflict of extermination, and the blows will only fail when the battle of life is ended, and our strong right arm is mingled with its mother dust."
These extracts will serve to show the heredity head-stream and native springs whence flowed the intensity of righteous bitterness and warfare against the liquor traffic that characterized his whole career, whether as editor, story writer, or public speaker.
In 1855, appeared Mr. D. W. Bartlet's book of "American Agitators and Reformers," in which T. W. Brown was ranked with such worthies of the living age as Theodore Parker, Wm. Lloyd Garrison, Henry Ward Beecher, Horace Greely, and some fifteen others scarcely less known to fame and the archives of heroism--the Hebrew prophets come again in the flesh, to rebuke sin in high places, and rebaptize our grovelling humanity with a sense of the living God, who executes righteousness and judgement in the earth for all them that are oppressed.
In 1849, He married a woman worthy of him, and in whose wifely love and devotion he found unceasing joy to the day of his death.. Unto them seven children have been born, three of whom passed early to the spirit-land, and four remain, to mourn with their mother the loss of him who was cherished with almost idolatrous reverence and affection in that beautiful home circle.
Mr. Brown early joined the Order of Sons of Temperance, and was at one time an officer in the Grand Division of Western New York.--and was, by his own desire , laid away to his rest with his Grand Division regalia on his breast--a fitting emblem of the warefare he had waged, and a token that he died in full panoply of fight.
In 1853, he first came West, to attend a session of the National Grand Divison of Son of Temperance, at Chicago; and lectured a few times before his return. In 1854, he again came West to seek rest and recuperation, and spent several weeks at Hebron, in Jefferson County, Wisconsin, where he had relatives residing. The elimate seemed to be beneficial to him, and he bought a small place at Hebron, where he settled with his family in November of that year. From this quiet retreat he wrote editorial correspondence for the Cayuga Chief, which was still going on in his name, but was conducted and managed by his sister, Emma, he frequently passing back and forth, lecturing, from East to West. In 1856, it was decided to move the Chief West., and preparations were made to that end.
When the time finally came for the departure from Auburn, a grand Temperance demonstration was gotten up by his friends to commenorate the occasion, to give him and his the parting tear of affection and bid them Godspeed in their new field of arduous toil and battle against the great common foe of humanity. This meeting was one of the most flattering tributes ever said to an editor in this country--not even exceeded, all things considered, by the affecting birht-day honors to that venerable partiarch of the press, Wm. Cullen Byrant, less that a year ago. Nearly all the Temperance editors of the State were there, including the vereran, Rv. Dr. Marsh, of New York City, who gave a powerful address, and showered unmeasured thanks and compliments upon the Cayuga Chief. Letters all aglow with warmest gratitude, affection and eulogy, were read from Hon. Myron Clark, then Governor of the State, Hon. Neal Down, of Maine, Gen. S. F. Carey, of Ohio, Hon. Gerritt Smith, and others. Geo. W. Bungay,now one of the recognized poets of ur country prepared and read a lengthy poem for the occasion, in which he says:
"Among the laborers in this vineyard, few
Have worked like Thurlow, or have been so true;
Success to him where'er he drives his stakes:
No grass will grow upon the trail he makes.
When called to battle for the cause of right,
His plume will toss amid the thickest fight;
Wene'er he strikes, his tomahawk is felt,
And a new scalp is added to his belt.
The same poem has this pasing allusion to the elder Brown"
"There's one whose head is crowned with winter's snow,
But whose brave heart is warmed with summer's glow;
A man of vigor, talent, force and skill,
Who writes with aquafortis in his quill."
A tribute is also paid to the sister, Emma, whose noble, womanly worth, and untiring devotion to her brother's aid in his great work, has been an arm of strength, comfort and support to him from the first, and was indeed a corner stone of all the success he achieved. She has been joint editor and publisher with him for seventeen years, and is struggling on alone in the same path, now that his amnly arm is lad low, and his cheerful voice and strudy pen are silenced in the tomb. Let her be honered as a faithful and worthy compeer in our journalistic fraternity.
The first issue of the Cuyuga Chief in Wisconsin was dated at Fort Atkinson, Wednesday, October 15, 1856; but the name was soon changed to Wisconsin Chief, and so it stands to this day. The paper has never enjoyed the repute and sucess in this State that it did in New York, though kept up with the same vigor and abiltiy; many and various circumstances conspired to this result; but it is not my purpose or province now to meddle with matters which it were at once painful and useless to recall. Suffice to say, the paper and the publishers suffered great pecuniary loss by their removal West, and they have from that time to this labored under heavy, wearying, discouraging load of embarrassment, that would long ago have crushed out the last ray of hope from hearts less stout in the championship of their righteous cause.
At the annual session for the 1863 of the Grand Lodge of Good Templars, the Wisconsin Chief was voted to be the official organ of the Order in Wisconsin. The vote was renewed in 1864 and 1865--and so it stands at this day.
I have now passed over, in this hurried and imperfect manner, the main points of note in the personal history as a public man of our worthy friend and brother.
And is now remains for me to speak more particularly of his general character.; his peculiar talents and idiosyncracies, and his special gisfts of genius as an orator, a story wirter, and editor, and a sterling apostle of reform.
General Character.
In the early part of 1852, Mr. Brown passed an examination at the Phrenological rooms of Messrs. Fowler & Wells, in New York City, and received a Chart of his character, as indicated by the rules and principals of Phrenology. On looking over this document, written more than fourteen years ago, I find it to correspond very closely with the general character of the man as I have known him personally, or by reputation, or in his speeches and writings, and shall therefore quote freely from it. The very first sentence in the Chart says;
"Under favorable circumstances your body would be able to sustain your brain; but in a pruely mental occupation, your body would become deprived of its power and vital force."
And it is a painful remembrance among his friends, that for ten or twelve years past he has constantly suffered from a sense of weariness--always tired, so tired, --and finally passed away withut any special desease, but simply worn out--his life forces exhausted by unremitting mental toil. But agian I quote:
"You should be known for four or five leading traits of charachter; one is uncommon Firmness, which gives a desire to carry out what you begin, and makes yu cling to it until you effect your purpose;--another is prudence and watchfulness;--another is combative disposition--desire to be on the opposite side; smooth water would not please you. You began life with but little Self-Esteem--quite too little; but I think it is improving. you often feel so bashful you can hardly speak, though you may have the consciousness that you know as much as other men. You should be known for love of wit and the ridiculous, and the power of sacasm; and for your knowledge of human character, with a desire to understand and develop mind and character; hence you would make a very good story writer. But you would draw your matter from reflection and reason rather than from observation--give a picture of your own mind rather than of the outer world. You have a better memory of of ideas than of facts; you do not take enought notice of the active world around you to classifly facts and get them linked together and make them historically correct; You can make facts, and weave in supposed circumstances, and make a consistent story; but you have much more to do with dieas than facts."
Those who are in anywise famliar with his stories will at onced recognize the correctness of this sketch; and iscover in his large combativeness the source ofhtose almost inevitable scenes of savagery and teror, oozy with bllod, and black with horrible deaths, whcih he so delighted and excelled in portraying. And again;
"Language is well developed, and when warmed up you are quite fluent in conversation. If confined to statistics, with nothing to excite you, you would be a dry speaker. A subject in whcih your faculties work freeely arrouse such a class of energies as to make you eloquent.
You have children; you love home; and you have a strong love for friends; but you are so particular in the selection of your friends that very few will answer your purpose. You would review a whole regiment before you could select your staff.
"If you were a lawyer you would sometimes make a splendid effort, and sometimes make a failure; you must be in just such circumstances to call you out, --and the subject must be a matter of some consequence, and either a matter of ridicule or Benevolence on which you are to gain a victory.
You believe but little in the dogmatiic doctrines of men, yet you ahve a high reverence for things sacred, and for the center of the them--the Great Creator.
Your Casualty and Comparison are both decidedly large; you are a narual reasoner, and are stgrongly disposed to inquire into the philosophy of subjects. Had you more perceptivemess you would be more practiced. In business or in literature you should be coupled with those who have more practical talent."
Mr. Brown's social nature was warm, generous and free, among those with whom he was on terms of friendly intimacy; but he had no disposition to squander his energies with promiscuous acquaintance-making. His mother was the one dear idol of his strong affection, and his heart yearned to her with inexpressible love to his latest hour. A subtle and mysterious bond of the spirit consciously linked them, as only mother and son of noblest nature can feel earch other's living ministry of love. And when he became himself a husband and a father, he was no less idolatrous of the jewels in that new made family shrine. Home was ever to his heart the cherished ideal and synonym of Heaven.
His temperament was of the fine, exquisite, enthusiastic quality, ---susceptable, to a fault, and keenly capable of the most transcendent enjoyment or the most excruciating agony. And from the wild blossoming and fruitage of these extremes of the luxurieant life within himself, he gathered the strange, weird weapons of his power as an orator and a writer; he was unquestionably brilliant, original and impressive in both characters. He was in great measure one of those men who are "in the world, yet not of the world." The ideal life, within his own radiant world of mind, was more of living reality to him than all the pomp and bustle and circumstance of outward things. His philosophy was of the abstract rather thatn the concrete; he was an idealist rather than a materialist. But he stoutly and steadfastly drove his idealism to logical results, as a tangible, material power in the land. When the crucible of his brain had smelted a golden or silver thought, he hatened to barb it with flinty steel, and try its temper gainst some giant wrong of the ages and the age. And he recked not of party or power, of Church or State, if they stood, or seemed to stand, in the vantage ground to shield the monster iniquity, but grasped his trusty lance with all the more vigor and lusty relish of the tilt, as having found a foe waorhty of his knightliest thrust and sternest grapple, to wrench the victory out of the very jaws of fate.
Term: Brown, Thurlow Weed 1819 - 1866
Definition: temperance editor, author, b. Preston, N.Y. He moved with his family to Sterling, N.Y., in 1839 where he began temperance work. In 1849 he established the successful temperance paper, Cayuga Chief, at Auburn, N.Y. He also published two books on the subject, Temperance Tales (1853) and Minnie Hermon (1854). In 1854 he moved to Hebron, Wis., for his health. Two years later he moved the Cayuga Chief to Fort Atkinson, and in 1857 renamed it the Wisconsin Chief, adding antislavery agitation to his temperance crusade. His paper was a financial failure in Wisconsin, but more than any man, he revived the flagging Wisconsin temperance movement. His writing and oratory were vehement, sarcastic, and vitriolic. Proc. Wis. Editorial Assoc., 1866 (1866), pp. 23-27, 1867 (1868), pp. 113-120; Milwaukee Sentinel, May 7, 1866.
[Source: Dictionary of Wisconsin biography]
The dedication of one of his books, Minnie Hermon, was to his Father...as follows:
"To Our Father, whose precept and example have ever guided us to virtue, temperance and honor, this volume is affectionately dedicated. In his green old age, may he witness the passing away of that malign shadow which rested so gloomily upon his childhood." | Brown Thurlow Weed (I52699)
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| 4342 |
Death: Possibly February 10, 1876 | EILITZ Adolfina Charlotta (I2601)
|
| 4343 |
Death: unknown Kingston, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA
Burial: Dark Moon Burying Ground, Frelinghuysen Township, Warren County, New Jersey, USA
Memorial #: 142024103
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/142024103/tabitha-cooke | HALL Tabitha (I57060)
|
| 4344 |
Death: Y
Date: 1472
Place: France
Age: 11-12
Record ID Number
Record ID Number: MH:I5636
User ID
User ID: 7D53E374-0DDA-4C75-A696-0666DE39EB1A | LESEIGNEUR Adam (I60250)
|
| 4345 |
Death: Y
Date: 1520
Place: France
Age: 41-42
Sources
Gnalogie Henri Frebault | Le SEIGNEUR Jeanne (I60249)
|
| 4346 |
Deborah was probably a descendant of William Hammond of London, County of Kent, England and Elizabeth Penn. sister of Admiral Sir William Penn and aunt to William Penn, the Quaker.
William of London and Elizabeth had a son, Benjamin,b. 1621, d. 1703, and three daughters; Elizabeth, Martha and Rachel all born in England. After William died, she broght her family to Boston on Sept 18, 1634, having sailed on the Griffin, having with them the Rev. Lothrop, theri minister.
She lived in Boston and in Watertown, MA until the year 1638, when she joined Rev. Lothrop's church in Scituate, Aprl 16, 1638. being the 33rd member of his church. She probably returned to Boston near the close of the year 1639, as she died and was buried there in 1640.
Son, Benjamin married Mary Vincent and first settled in Sandwich, Barnstable County, MA. Benjamin and his wife moved to Rochester in 1684.
Benjamin and his wife, Mary had six children: Samuel, John, Nathan, Benjamin, Jr., Rose and Mary.
Deborah, b. 1720 in Rochester, was probably the daughter of one of Benjamin's sons and was a resident of Rochester, Plymouth County, MA at the time of her marriage to James Peckham. | HAMMOND Deborah P. (I53931)
|
| 4347 |
Dec. 18 or 19 | HUNGATE Walter Jefferson (I54481)
|
| 4348 |
December 26? | WATERS Elizabeth (I9922)
|
| 4349 |
December 30, 2009
Robert Michael Pulsifer
LEWIS — On Dec. 25, 2009, with his family by his side, our beloved family member was called home into the arms of our Lord. He was born Aug. 4, 1945, the son of Roland and Pearl (Tart) Pulsifer in Elizabethtown, N.Y.
He was raised on the family farm and later worked for Allen Rogers Lumber Mill in Lewis until it closed.
He married Phyllis Bashaw June 2, 1974. He enjoyed hunting, fishing, cutting firewood, trapping and budding. He enjoyed sharing these things with anyone who wanted to learn about them. His greatest joy came from being with family and friends.
He was preceded to heaven by his two brothers, Charles Pulsifer and Frankie Pulsifer; and two brothers-in-law, Joseph Dulac and Marcel Boyer.
He is survived by his parents, Roland and Pearl Pulsifer; wife, Phyllis Bashaw; son Robert Pulsifer and his wife Krissie and their two sons Larry and Brandon; two stepsons, Dean Bashaw and his wife Misty and their children, Dean Jr. and Celia, Todd Bashaw and his wife Dawn and their children, Candace and Sarah; six brothers and sisters-in-law, Howard and Mary Tart of Wallingford, Conn., Roland and Clarice Pulsifer Jr., William and Nellie Pulsifer, Roger and Joanne Pulsifer and Terry and Wendy Pulsifer, all of Lewis; three sisters, Patricia and Tim Aubin of Lewis, Martha Pulsifer and companion Claude Lemieux and Joanne and Ken McFarlane, all of Quebec; six nephews, Nicholas Disogra (Karen), William Pulsifer Jr. (Kendra), Michael Pulsifer (Marlena), Paul Pulsifer, Jessy Pulsifer (Brianna), Terry Pulsifer Jr. (Amanda); and eight nieces, Heidi Tart, Beatrice Disogra, Chrissy Whittemore (Kenneth), Stacey Pulsifer, Anne Reinckens (Michael) Jennell Pulsifer, Mary Dulac Reynolds (Phillip) and Lori Howard (Brian); six great-nieces; eight great-nephews; and one yet to be born. Of these great-nephews, two, Joseph and Nathan Howard, were adopted as grandsons by him after the passing of Joseph Dulac.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 31, 2009, at W.M. Marvin's Sons Funeral Home in Elizabethtown.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the American Cancer Society, the Elizabethtown Lewis Emergency Squad or the Lewis Fire Department.
For online condolences, please visit www.wmmarvins.com. | PULSIFER Robert Michael (I7837)
|
| 4350 |
Declaration of Naturalization dated 7th of June, 1921 filed in
Mackinac County at St. Ignus, Mi. # 195
gives the following information:
Joseph Vallie res. of Cedarville; bn. 28 Feb. 1864 in
Penetingoushone, Canada; emigrated to the US from Sault Ste. Marie,
Canada 30 June. 1900 on the vessel "Chippewa". wife is Agnus Vallie,
bn. 22 Feb. 1865, Penetingoushone, Canada. He gives his age as 57
years. Has the following children:
Edmond, bn. Dec. 10, 1893
Walter, bn. Dec. 9, 1900
Mary, bn. Aug.9, 1899
Elizabeth bn. Oct. 29, 1909
Ernestine, bn. May 20, 1907 Bois Blanc Island.
Witnessed by Charles Weston and Fred E. Izzard both farmers of
Cedarville, Mi.
Declaration if Intent # 228
It is said that Joseph last name was not Valley, but that he had
killed a man in Byng Inlet near Parry Sound, Ontario and fled to
Michigan to escape being jailed. He then changed his name from
Gereau/Giroux/Gerow/Geroux/Gero; or some form of the name.
the 1910 census that Joseph age 40; first appears on in Mackinaw Co.
gives his wife as Mary B...........age 38; mar. 20 yrs. (abt. 1890);
7 children born to mother, 7 children living. The 1920 census gives
his wife as Agnes; age 48 and now Joseph is only age 38 yrs. | Vallee\Giroux Joseph (I9801)
|
| 4351 |
Dedo of Wettin was born ca 950 (estimate) to Count Dietrich I and his wife.[1]
The young Dedo spent his childhood with his relative, Margrave Rikdag, lord of the Margraves of Meissen, Zeitz and Merseburg, and was thus closely related to one of the most influential men in eastern Saxony.
Marriage Dedo was married since ca 980 to Thietburga, the daughter of Margrave Dietrich von Haldensleben, lord of the Nordmark. The date is not sure but had to be some time before the death of Dietrich's death in 985.[2]
In the years from 974 to 985, Dedo I was involved in the rebellion of the Bavarian Duke Henry of Bavaria against Emperor Otto II and later also against his son Otto III, to whom the Bavarian duke only finally submitted in Frankfurt in June 985. In 976, Dedo commanded a Bohemian army that captured Zeitz and robbed the bishop's church. It is said that he also took his own mother away as a prisoner with the spoils.
Dedo obviously had a good relationship with Archbishop Giselher of Magdeburg. After the death of Count Binizo, he procured him the rights of count in northern Hassegau. Dedo also successfully claimed the Burgward of Zörbig for himself and his brother Friedrich.
The years before Dedo's death were overshadowed by a feud with the Walbeckers, the cause of which is unknown. As the husband of the daughter of the Margrave of Nordmark, Dedo claimed the office for himself after his death, but Walbeck's Lothar received it. Lothar ruled the Nordmark from 993 to 1003. Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg, a nephew of Lothar, recounts in his chronicle that Dedo I took part in the devastation of Wolmirstedt Castle, which was owned by Walbeck. The Wettin was also at odds with Margrave Lothar's son and successor Werner von Walbeck (1003-1009; 1014). Dedo was killed on 13 November 1009 together with his vassal Egilhard by his adversary Werner near Mose not far from Wolmirstedt.
Sources
↑ Otto Posse: "Die Wettiner - Genealogie des Gesamthauses";
Leipzig & Berlin : Giesecke & Devrient (1897); Tafel 1
↑ Otto Posse: "Die Wettiner - Genealogie des Gesamthauses";
Leipzig & Berlin : Giesecke & Devrient (1897); pag. 39 Nr.5.
Wikidata: Item Q520301, de:Wikipedia help.gif
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MEISSEN.htm#DedoIdied1009
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 42 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022885&tree=LEO
Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser . 1956 141 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022885&tree=LEO
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | von WETTIN Dedo I (I58046)
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Dedo Wettin ... He passed away in 1075.[1]
Name: Dedi I //, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark
Sources
↑ Medieval Lands - Meissen
Source: Wikipedia profile: Dedi I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark | WETTIN Dedo (I58962)
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Deitrich Thodrich von Ringelheil, Duke of Saxony
Birth: 853: Goslar, Hannover, Niedersachsen, Germany
Count of Westphalia, Count of Ringelheim, Count of Oldenburg
About Dietrich (Theodoric) von Ringelheim From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Saxony:
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SAXONY.htm#Mathildedied968
THEODERIC (-8 Nov 917).
Widukind names "Thiadrici" as father of Queen Mathilde, specifying that the family was "stirpis magni ducis Widukindi"[31]. The father of Queen Mathilde is named "Thietricus" in the Vita Mathildis Reginæ[32].
m REGINLIND [Reinhild], daughter of --- (-11 May ----).
Theoderic & his wife had seven children:
1. WIDUKIND . Widukind names (in order) "Widukind, Immed et Reginbern" as brothers of Queen Mathilde[39].
2. IMMED [I] . Widukind names (in order) "Widukind, Immed et Reginbern" as brothers of Queen Mathilde[40].
3. REGINBERN . Widukind names (in order) "Widukind, Immed et Reginbern" as brothers of Queen Mathilde, specifying that Reginbern fought against the Danes[41].
4. MATHILDE ([896]-Quedlinburg 14 Mar 968, bur Quedlinburg Stiftskirche, married Heinrich, Graf Heinrich, future King of Germany, became Queen of Germany and saint).
5. AMELRADA ([7 Sep] ----, married Eberhard, Graf in der Drenthe und im Salland)
6. FREDERUNA (-18 Jan 971, married Wichmann II, son of Billung, later became a nun before death).
7. BIA [Pia] (-25 May ----, married and had a son named Friedrich)
Wikipedia: Dietrich of Ringelheim
Wikipedia:fr: Théodoric de Ringelheim
Wikipedia:de: Ringelheim
Wikipedia:de: Immedinger
Inhaltsverzeichnis
* 1 Geschichte * 2 Die bekannten Mitglieder der Familie * 3 Die Immedinger (Widukinde) nach Böttger, 1865 * 4 Die Immedinger nach Ohainski, Schubert & Streich, 2004 o 4.1 Die Nachkommen der Äbtissin Mathilde o 4.2 Die Nachkommen des Grafen Immed III. * 5 ohne Zuordnung * 6 Literatur * 7 Weblinks * 8 Einzelnachweise
Geschichte
Die Immedinger hatten umfangreichen Besitz in Ostfalen und waren die Erben der Familie Widukinds in Westfalen; beide Familien werden zu den Gegnern Karls des Großen gezählt. Das Hauskloster der Immendinger war Ringelheim an der Innerste im Zentralbereich des Familienbesitzes.
Der Historiker Gerd Althoff hält es für möglich [1], dass die Unterscheiderung der Immedinger von den Widukinden „genealogische Fiktion“ ist und die Heilige Mathilde zu den direkten Nachkommen Widukinds zu rechnen sei.
Die bekannten Mitglieder der Familie
* Mathilde, die Äbtissin des Klosters Herford, sowie ihre Enkelin, die * Heilige Mathilde (* wohl 896, 14. März 968), die Tochter des Grafen Dietrich (Theoderich) und der Reginlind, heiratete im Jahre 909 in Wallhausen den späteren ostfränkischen König Heinrich I., Laienäbtissin von Nivelles; sie wurde in der Stiftskirche von Quedlinburg begraben. * deren Schwester Frederuna ( 10. Februar 917), seit April 907 Ehefrau des Königs Karl III. von Frankreich * Bischof Meinwerk von Paderborn (1009-1036), Sohn des Immed IV. * Emma von Lesum, Meinwerks Schwester und Ehefrau des sächsischen Grafen Liutger, jüngerer Sohn des Hermann Billung aus dem Geschlecht der Billunger Die Immedinger (Widukinde) nach Böttger, 1865 [Bearbeiten]
1. Widukind (, erwähnt 777, 789), auch Witekind, Herzog der Westfalen (Sachsen) ∞ Geva
1. Gisela, auch Hasala ∞ Berno, Sohn von Bruno I., Herzog der Engern 775
2. Wigbert ( nach 25. Dezember 834), Herzog der Engern ∞ Odrade
1. Walbert ( 876, erwähnt 834, 874) ∞ Altburge ( 880)
1. Reginbern ( vor 17. Oktober 872), Graf 856 ∞ Mathilde ( nach 911), nachher Äbtissin des Klosters Herford
1. Theoderich ( nach 929, erwähnt 900, 909), Graf in Westfalen ∞ Reinhilde von Dänemark ( 11. Mai nach 929)
1. Mathilde (* wohl 896; 14. März 968) ∞ Heinrich I. (* 876; 2. Juli 936), Herzog von Sachsen 912, ostfränkischer König von 14. April 919 bis 936
2. Bia ( 25. Mai vor 954) ∞ Wichmann I. ( 23. April 944), auch Wigmann, gen. der Ältere (Billunger)
3. Frederuna ( 10 Februar 917) ∞ April 907 Karl III. der Einfältige von Frankreich (Karolinger)
2. Widukind ( 909)
3. Immed (III.)? ( 12. Oktober 953) siehe unten
2. Wigbert ( 8. September 908), Bischof von Verden von 874 bis 908 Die Immedinger nach Ohainski, Schubert & Streich, 2004 [Bearbeiten]
Die Nachkommen der Äbtissin Mathilde
1. Mathilde, Äbtissin des Klosters Herford
1. Dietrich Graf von Hamaland ∞ Reinhilde (Reginlind)
1. Mathilde (* 896; 14. März 968 in Quedlinburg ) ∞ in Wallhausen 909, König Heinrich I. ( 9. Juli 936 in Memleben ), König der Ostfranken 919
2. Widukind
3. Immed
4. Reginbern
5. Friderun ( 18. Januar 971)
6. Bia
7. Amalrada ∞ Eberhard ( 964), Graf in der Betuwe und im Salland ab 944/60 Die Nachkommen des Grafen Immed III. [Bearbeiten]
1. Immed III. (gefallen 954)
1. Waldered (um 984) ∞ Bertha (um 984), Tochter von Burchard III. ( 973), Herzog von Schwaben seit 954
1. Thiedrich, auch Dietrich ( 6. März 995), Pfalzgraf in Sachsen seit 982 ∞ Fritheruna (um 974)
1. Siegbert (995/um 1007, 1017), Graf in Ostfalen & Hessen
2. Dietrich, Mönch zu Corvey
3. Thiedburga
2. Siegbert (984 Sicco, 14. Oktober 995), Graf im Liesgau seit 990
1. Siegbert (um 983), Mönch zu Corvey
2. NN-Tochter ∞ Lothar-Udo (getötet bei Stade am 23. Juni 994), Graf von Stade
3. Unwan ( 17. oder 26. Januar 1029), Erzbischof von Hamburg-Bremen von 1013 bis 1029
3. Gisela (um 984)
2. Immed IV. ( 27. Januar 983), Graf im Bistum Utrecht ∞ Adela ( 6. August 1020/28), Tochter von Wichmann, Graf im Bistum Utrecht ∞ II. vor 996, Balderich, Graf in der Drenthe ( 5. Juni 1021 auf Burg Heimbach)
1. Meinwerk ( 5. oder 6. Juni 1036), auch Meinwart, Domherr zu Halberstadt , königlicher Hofkapellan & Kantor von St. Marien zu Aachen1001 bis 1009, Bischof zu Paderborn von 1009 bis 1036
2. Dietrich ( 17. April 1014), Graf im Bistum Lüttich
3. Athela ( nach 1027), Kanonissin zu Elten
4. Glismod ( 5. Februar vor 1041) ∞ Adalbert ( 26. Mai 1055), Markgraf der Ostmark (Babenberger ), II. ∞ Otakar/Otger/Oci/Ozzi, 993 Graf im Kroatengau (in Kärnten), III. ∞ Graf Reding/Reting
5. Emma ( 3. Dezember 1038) ∞ Liudger ( 1001), Sohn von Hermann Billung, Herzog von Sachsen
ohne Zuordnung [Bearbeiten]
Wiltrud (oder Wiltraut) * um 915, Gemahlin von Herzog Bernhard III. und vermutlich Mutter von Dietrich I., dem Ahnherrn der Wettiner.
Sources
* Uwe Ohainski, Ernst Schubert & Gerhard Streich: Stammtafel der Welfen, nach den Originalquellen bearbeitet von Heinrich Böttger ( ), Königlicher Bibliothek-Secretair. Herausgegeben von F. Klindworth, 1865. Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung Hannover, 2004 ISBN 3-7752-6019-6 Weblinks * Immedinger auf http://www.genealogie-mittelalter.de Einzelnachweise 1. ↑ „Genealogische und andere Fiktionen in mittelalterlicher Historiographie“, in: Fälschungen im Mittelalter, Schriften der MGH 33, I, 1988, Seite 428ff
Notes:
Count of Ringelheim. Theudebert and Dietrich may be different persons, in which case the sources conflict on the parentage of Mathilda.
Count of Westphalia *http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps08/ps08_341.htm DEAD LINK
Dietrich was Count of Ringelheim 856-920, and was also Count of Oldenburg.
Theudebert and Dietrich may be different persons, in which case the sources conflict on the parentage of Mathilda.
Theoderik (Dietrich) var greve av Ringelheim og Oldenburg.
Kilder: Allgemeine deutsche Biographie. Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 59. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 67. | RINGELHEIM Dietrich (I57979)
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Delia was the first wife of Myron A. Loghry but divorced him. They had a son who died in infancy. | Charbonneau Delia (I53044)
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Della Harvey and her sister (Nellie) were the step-sisters of the Shearer children they were from the second marriage of Matilda Shearer to George Harvey. | Harvey Della (I49868)
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Den främsta källan rörande Bröt-Anund (eller "Bryt-Önund" som han också kallas) är Snorres Ynglingasagan. Snorre berättar där att Anund var son till kung Yngvar (Ingvar) av Ynglingaätten som stupade i kamp med esterna. Efter honom blev Anund kung i Svitjod. [1]
Anund het Yngvars son, som näst efter tog konungdom i Svithjod. I hans dagar var god frid i Svithjod, och vardt han mycket rik på löst gods. Anund konung for med sin här till Estland att hämna sin fader. Han gick der upp med sin här och härjade vida om landet och fick mycket härfång, samt for om hösten åter till Svithjod. I hans dagar var god äring i Svithjod. Konung Anund var bland konungar den allra vänsällaste. Svithjod är ett stort skogland, och ödemarker ligga der så, att många dagsleder äro öfver dem. Konung Anund lade stor ifver och kostnad på, att rödja marker och bebygga rödjningarna. Han lät ock lägga vägar öfver ödemarkerna, och funnos då vida om i markerna skoglösa land, och der byggdes då stora härad. Vardt på detta sätt vidsträckt land bebygdt, i ty att det var nog af landsfolk till landets byggande. Konung Anund lät bryta vägar öfver allt Svithjod, både öfver skogsmarker, myrar och fjällstigar: för ty var han Bröt-Anund kallad. Konung Anund satte sine gårdar i hvart storhärad i Svithjod och for om allt landet på vetslor (gästningar).
I Torstein Vikingssons saga hävdas att Anund inte var son till Ingvar/Yngvar, utan till Östen (dvs Ingvar/Yngvars far) och att han hade en bror Olav, som var kung i Firda/Firdafylke/Fjordane i västra Norge. Även denna saga nämner att Anund är far till Ingjald Illråde.[2]
Hur han dog finns det olika tolkningar av;
Enligt Snorre skall kung Anund en höstkväll passerat ett ställe kallat Himmelshed (Himinheid) med trånga fjälldalar och höga berg på båda sidorna. Det regnade, och den snö som tidigare legat på bergstopparna rasade ner tillsammans med lera och sten varvid kungen och många av hans män dog. Han citerar Thjodolf som säger:
Under Himin-fjällen
Anund vardt
häftad af Jonakrs
söners harm
och Esters fiende
frillosonens
hat å vägen
till handa kom
och Högnes rörs
raske främjare
med jordens ben
öfverhöljdes.
Enligt Svensk Biografiskt Lexikon så är Snorres framställning en feltolkning av Tjodolf av Hvins ordknappa, stympade strofer. Först nyligen ha dessa rimligare tolkning: »Anund blev under himlafjällen (d.v.s. under bar himmel, om; ock molntäckt) hejdad i sitt livslopp av det, som väckte Johakers söners grämelse (d. v. s. en oäkta broder), ty frillosonens alltför, stridbara hätskhet drabbade esternas fiende... och denne stenrösets befordrare (d. y. s stenbunden märks röjare) blev själv omgiven av markens ben (d.v.s. stenar).» Så Anund skulle med andra ord blivit mördad av en oäkting, och begravd under ett stenröse. [3]
Enligt Historia Norwegiæ skall han istället ha dödats av sin halvbror Sigvard.
Notera: Både Ynglingasagan och Historia Norvegia skrevs ca 500 år efter att händelserna skall ha skett.
Som hans grav har vid olika tillfällen Anundshögen i Badelunda socken pekats ut. Namnet är belagt från medeltiden (från 1355) då "Anunda Högh" användes som tingsplats. Detta är dock en ren gissning, vem som faktiskt blivit begravd i Anundshögen eller någon av de andra större högarna på området vet man ännu inte. En härd under högen har dock med hjälp av C14-metoden daterats till 210-540 e.Kr.
Note: Haralds slekt fra Odin, enligt Hvordan Norge ble bebygd Hversu Noregr byggdist;
Bure heter en konge som hersket over Tyrkland. Hans sønn var Bor. Bor var far til Odin Åsakonge, far til Frøy, far til Njord, far til Frøy, far til Fjolne, far til Svegde, far til Vanlande, far til Visbur, far til Domalde, far til Domar, far til Dyggve, som vi kaller Trygve, far til Dag, far til Agne Skjalvsbonde, far til Alrek, far til Yngve, far til Jørmunfrode, som vi kaller Jørund, far til Ån den gamle, som vi kaller Aun, som ni vintre drakk av horn for alders skyld før han døde. Aun var far til Egil Tunnedolg, far til Ottar Vendelkråke, far til Adil i Uppsala, far til Øystein, far til Yngvar den gråhårede, far til Braut-Anund, far til Ingjald den illråde, far til Olav Tretelgja, far til Halvdan Kvitbein, far til Øystein, far til Halvdan den gavmilde og matgjerrige, far til Gudrød Veidekonge, far til Halvdan Svarte, far til Harald Hårfagre.
Forskningsanteckning
Bröt-Anund (av Ynglingaätten) var en svensk sagokung vars status som sagofigur eller historisk person är omtvistad. Om han har existerat bör han ha verkat under första hälften av 600-talet. Därför har hans födelsedatum blivit satt till år 600. Enligt Snorre Sturlasson skall han ha härskat i Tiundaland.
Biography
Name(s)
Swedish: Anund, Onund, Önund
Norwegian: Ånund
Icelandic: Önundr
Old Norse: Anundr, Önundr.
Byname(s):
Bröt-Anund, Bröt-Önund, Bryt-Önund, Brøt-Anundr, Braut-Önundr, Braut-Ånund. All of the variations of the byname/nickname is assumed to have the meaning that he cleared land and built roads.
Birth and Parents
The different sagas/legends do not agree on the parents of Anund.
According to "Ynglingasagan" by Snorre Sturlasson, his father is kung Yngvar (Ingvar) of the Ynglings who fell in battle with the Estonians.[1]
According to "The Saga of Thorstein, Viking's Son" Anunds father is not Yngvar, but he is son of Yngvar's father Eystein/Östen, It also relates that he had a brother named Olaf/Olav who was the ruler of Firda /Firdafylke/Fjordane in western Norway.[2]
Wife(s) and children
Both Ynglingasagan and Torstein Vikingssons saga agree that Anund is the father of Ingjald Illråde. No wife is mentioned by name.
Death and burial
How he died has not been agreed upon
According to Snorre; King Anund was travelling in the autumn and came to a place called Himinheiðr (sky heath) and rode between two high mountains. It was raining and the snow on the mountain tops created a landslide with clay and rocks which killed him, and many of his men as well. Snorre is citing an older source, Thjodolf.[1]
According to Svensk Biografiskt Lexikon, Snorre is interpreting Tjodolf av Hvin incorrectly. The meaning should rather be that he was killed outside (under the sky), by a bastard brother and was buried under/in a stone cairn.[3]
According to Historia Norwegiæ he was killed by his half brother Sigvard.
Note: Both sagas was written about 500 years after the events is said to have taken place.
The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, older than Snorri's quotation (continuing after Ingvar): Yngvar bred Braut-Ånund, whose brother, Sigurd, laid him low in Himinheid, a place-name which means 'field of heaven'. After him his son Ingjald [...] [citation needed]
The original text of Ynglingatal is hard to interpret, and it only says that Anund died und Himinfjöllum (under the sky mountains) and that stones were implied. According to Historia Norwegiæ, he was murdered by his brother Sigvard in Himinherthy (which the source says means "the fields of the sky", cœli campus. Such a place name is not known and Birger Nerman suggests that the original place of death was under the sky mountains, i.e. under the clouds (cf. the etymology of cloud). Consequently, he may have been killed outdoors, by his brother and with a stone. In the translation above, Laing has made the same interpretation as Nerman.[citation needed]
Anundshög (also Anundshögen and Anunds hög) is said to be the largest tumulus in Sweden and has been called Anunda Högh since abt 1355. Some historians have associated the mound with Bröt-Anund but this highly speculative, Anund/Onund don't seem to be an uncommon name. On the other hand, folk tales tell that either a king or a giant is buried in the mound. One fact that is known about the mound is that a fireplace under it has been dated by radiocarbon dating to sometime between AD 210 and 540.
Research note
Bröt-Anund (supposedly of the Yngling family) was a "Swedish" ruler mentioned in the sagas, whose status as a mythical/legendary/historical person is contested. If he ever existed he is supposed to have lived in the first half of the 7th century and reigned in the mid-seventh century. Therefore, his birth year has been set as the year 600.According to Snorre Sturlasson, he ruled in Tiundaland.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ynglingasagan
↑ 2.0 2.1 Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar
↑ 3.0 3.1 Svenskt biografiskt lexikon, Anund (art av S. Lindqvist.), hämtad 2018-08-05.
See also:
https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Br%C3%B6t-Anund
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braut-Anund
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anund
Book: Lineage of the Royal Princes of England: Author: Ken Stelmaszek
https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svitjod
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Svitjod | INGVARSSON Anund Bröt-Anund (I58738)
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Denis CLOUSTIER Variation: Cloutier
Naissance
Denis Cloustier est né vers 1565 à Mortagne au Perche.
1° Mariage
Vers 1588 -1589, à Mortagne, en la paroisse Saint-Jean au Perche, Denis Cloustier âgé d'environ 23 ans épouse Renée Brière âgée d'environ 19 ans. [1][2]
Enfants connus / Known children: Renée Brière & Denis Cloutier
Zacharie Cloutier (1590 - 1677)
Michel Cloutier (1592 - )
Catherine Cloutier (1594 - )
René Cloutier (1596 - )
Nicolas Cloutier (1598 - )
Louis Cloutier (1600 - )
Jacques Cloutier (1601 - )
Claude Cloutier (1605
Loyse Cloutier (1608 - 1608)
2° Mariage
Âgé d'environ 43 ans, Denis Cloustier se remarie avec Jeanne Gaultier (abt.1587-abt.1640), une jeune fille sérieuse et dévouée de la paroisse Notre-Dame-de-Mortagne. Une entrée dans les registres paroissiaux est ainsi libellée: "Le troisième jour de novembre 1608, les bans ont été baillés à Denis Cloustier de cette paroisse, ainsi qu'à Jeanne Gaultier-Rahir, de la paroisse Notre-Dame". [3] Avec cette seconde épouse, Denis Cloustier devait encore ajouter 4 enfants à sa progéniture déjà nombreuse.
Enfants connus / Known children: Jeanne Gaultier-Rahir & Denis Cloutier
Léonard Cloustier (18 oct 1609 - )
Denis Cloustier (29 fév 1612 - )
Pierre Cloustier (27 mars 1613 - )
Michelle Cloustier (1614 / 1615 - )
Parrainage
Il fut le parrain de sa petite-fille, Xainte Cloutier, le 1 novembre 1622.
Décès
Le 11 décembre 1634, âgé d'environ 69 ans, Denis Cloustier est inhumé à Mortagne en la paroisse Saint-Jean au Perche.[4] Une courte entrée dans le registre paroissial de St-Jean de Mortagne indique en effet que le 11 décembre 1634, Denis Cloustier fut inhumé dans le soubassement de l'église.
Sources
↑ Théorie Kyber, page 15.
↑ Fichier origine 240944 Zacharie Cloutier 2015 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies
↑ - page 17 - Jeanne Gaultier / Rahir.
↑ Fichier origine Zacharie Cloutier 2015
Les Cloutier de Mortagne-au-Perche ... Pg 15-18 Mariage, etc
treeGénéalogie Québec 3045
treeNos Origines 4671
Rootsweb Wicket I01701 Denis Cloutier
FrancoGène | CLOUSTIER Denis (I60285)
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Denise Marie Claire Gronbach, 52, Belmond, died November 9, 2006, at Mercy Medical Center in Mason City. Funeral services were held Monday, November 13 at the Belmond United Methodist Church with Pastor Patrick Kennedy officiating. Denise Marie Claire Jenkinson was born June 8, 1954 to Frank and Patricia (Witt) Jenkinson in Rock Island, IL. She graduated from Bishop Garrigan High School in Algona. She married Paul W. Gronbach Jr. in Emmetsburg on September 14, 1974. They lived in various communities including Algona, Garner, and most recently, Belmond. Denise had many hobbies: genealogy, scrap booking, sewing, family photography, and visiting and collecting lighthouses. She treasured the time spent with her family. Denise was a member of the Evangelical Free Church Women's Ministry, current president of the Goodell American Legion Auxiliary, and a member of the Belmond VFW Auxiliary. Denise was also a Creative Memories consultant and customer service representative at True Value in Belmond. She was preceded in death by her parents. Survivors include her husband; sons Paul III of Corwith and Justin of Belmond; daughter Krystal Sachen of Belmond; grandchildren: Gavyn, Halo and Audrey; brothers Gary Jenkinson of Huntington Beach, CA, John (Laura) Jenkinson of Protovin, Jim (Becky) Jenkinson of Arkansas; sisters: Rachael Jenkinson of West Bend, Fran (Dean) Peters of Des Moines, Leah (Daryl) Speich of Algona, Sharon Jenkinson of New York, Maria Berg of Missouri, Diana (Isam) Jaber) of Rihadyh, Saudia Arabia, and Judy (Jim) Enos of Algona. ©Belmond Independent 2006 | JENKINSON Denise Marie Claire (I35568)
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Deputy District Judge | RUBIN L. J. Theodor (I8284)
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Descendant of Maine Mál [1]
Sources
↑ Codecs Online Data : early Leinster kings and dynasties
"1146886. Fergnae mac Fergusa (of Uí Máil) [WUD]" in society.genealogy.medieval : Llywelyn ap Iorwerth ancestor table by Stewart Baldwin
Wikipedia : Uí Máil
Begat Us : Lassi ingen Fergna | Mac FERGUSA Fergmae (I58546)
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Descendants
This person was an ancestor of
Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward I,
Richard of York (Philip Nelson, David Dickinson).
Ancestor of the Queens of England, France, and Sicily, and Queen of the Romans, daughters of Raymond Berengar IV of Provence and Beatrice of Savoy. | PONTHIEU Walmar (I59101)
|
| 4362 |
Descendants uncertain; his son may be the same person. | VIEHBACHGAU Markward (I58101)
|
| 4363 |
Description of Armorial.....................
NAME: HART
CREST: A stag's head erased, with an oak branch in the mouth all
proper.
BLAZON: Argent three lozenges azure, each charged with an escallop
or.
SOURCE: Burke, Sir Bernard GENERAL ARMORY OF ENGLAND, SCOTLAND,
IRELAND AND WALES Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1969. | HART Patrick (I3840)
|
| 4364 |
Desideratus, Bishop of Verdun (529 - 554).[4]
alias: Desiderius;[5] Saint (St.) Désiré;[6]
Parents
Unsourced father:
Gondebald of Burgundy (see: Lewis; Boddy).[7][8]
Fictional father:
Torquatius
Children
Syagrus.[9][10]
Occupation
529-554: Bishop of Verdun.[11]
Events
ante 547: Exiled by Theudebert I.[12][1]
Research Notes
links: Desiderius, Bishop of Verdun (Geni);[13] Rootsweb[14]
Lewis, M. (n.d.). Desideratus, Bishop of Verdun M, #103379, b. circa 505, d. circa 554. Web.[15] (Citing: Maurice Boddy Web Site showing Middle & Far East Families, 7/7/2007 -- CAUTION: Unsourced).[16]
Sources
↑ Theudebert Merovingian (499/504-547), was the son of Theoderic I ... but Gregory of Tours calls him the son of Clovis, "specifying that he was born before the death of his paternal grandfather," (Cawley, 2006).[1] ... In any case, although Theudebert exiled the bishop, he still loaned him money in a business deal, briefly recorded by Gregory of Tours.[2][3]
Cochini, C. (1990). "Married clerics: First seven centuries." Apostolic Origins of Priestly Celibacy. Ignatius Press. Google Books.[17] (citing Gregory of Tours).
Goyau, G. (1907). Bourges. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved June 16, 2016 from New Advent.[18]
Goyau, G. (1912). Diocese of Verdun. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved June 16, 2016 from New Advent.[19]
Gruyter, W. (2008). Biographical Index of the Middle Ages, (pp. 305). Google Books.[20]
Mathisen, R. (2013). Roman Aristocrats in Barbarian Gaul: Strategies for Survival in an Age of Transition. University of Texas Press. Google Books.[21]
Wikipedia: Bishopric of Verdun#Sixth century
Wood, I. (2014). The Merovingian Kingdoms 450 - 751, (pp. 67). Routledge. Google Books.[22] | VERDUN Desideratus (I58853)
|
| 4365 |
Detached Meginhard Meginhard as father. See G2G discussion.
Alias: Geva of Friesland Title: Princess of Friesland
Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#_Toc359915623 | HOLLAND Geva (I58645)
|
| 4366 |
Dexter Donald, born in Cary, IL, was a farmer who also worked on the railroad and raised a family of one son and four daughters. He is buried in Cary Cemetery, Cary, IL. His main cause of death was acute asthma and acute bronchitis. Secondary cause was chronic myocarditus. He was only 50 yrs. 1 month and 3 days old when he died.
OBITUARY FOR DEXTER DONALD BROWN
Newspaper unknown.
Dexter Donald Brown, age 50 years, died Tuesday at 9:20 a. m. at his home on the William Manson farm in Cuba township, following an illness of three days.
The deceased had never been a rugged physique. He had long been a sufferer from asthma, and late last week he caught a severe cold, which developed into pneumonia and resulted in his death.
He was born at Silver Lake, in McHenry county on Jan. 30, 1876, the only child of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Brown, both now deceased.
On July 7, 1909, he was married to Miss Laura Catlow, daughter of John E. Catlow of North Avenue. He is survived by Mrs. Brown and four children, Helen, Clarence Edward, Lillian and Dolores.
Four years of their married life was spent in South Dakota, near Dupree, where they proved up on a claim of farm land. The balance of the time they have lived in and around Barrington. For some time they lived in the village and Mr. Brown was employed in the C. & N. W. freight house in Chicago.
Funeral services will be held at the First Methodist church at Cary tomorrow afternoon, preceded by brief services at the E. M. Blocks chapel here. The pastor of the Cary church will officiate and interment will be in the Cary cemetery. | Brown II Dexter Donald (I53072)
|
| 4367 |
Dhuoda married on 24 JUN 824 in Aix-la-Chapelle, Aachen, Germany to Bernard de Septimania. [1]
Research Notes
Deda (Edith), appears in online genealogies as the daughter of Welf and Heilwig. According to Cawley, his wife is called Dhuoda (Doda) and her parents are unknown.[2] There seems to be no primary sources that call her the daughter of Welf and Heilwig and the relationship must be from a much later source, and should be disregarded.
Sources
↑ Manuel de Dhuoda, Introduction, 5, p. 52.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Families of Nibelung, Childebrand and Theoderic.
Dhuoda. | UNKNOWN Dhuoda (I58834)
|
| 4368 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I49368)
|
| 4369 |
died 1 yr., 7 mons. | PULSIFER David Judson (I7039)
|
| 4370 |
Died 11 days after she was born | HUTCHINSON Pearl (I57488)
|
| 4371 |
Died 5 months prior to the birth of daughter Pearl Hutchinson of peritonitis. | HUTCHINSON Charles Wellington (I27295)
|
| 4372 |
died 5 weeks later | WATERS Samuel (I9943)
|
| 4373 |
Died 5:05 A.M. of Carcinomatosis of transverse colon since August 1956,and of left breast for about 9 months. Buried by Smith Funeral Chapel, London Road, E.C. | Schlichting Elsie Augusta (I49859)
|
| 4374 |
died age 18 yrs. | ESTEY Sarah (I2752)
|
| 4375 |
Died age 2., according to "Vassall Pedigree". | Vassall Penelope (I50294)
|
| 4376 |
died age 22 months | PULSIFER Doris Jean (I7064)
|
| 4377 |
died age 22 yrs. | ESTEY Charlotte (I2706)
|
| 4378 |
died age 6 years | TOLLES Alice May (I9556)
|
| 4379 |
Died and buried at sea | CHAPIN John (I55583)
|
| 4380 |
Died and buried at St-Langis-les-Mortagne, France. She never came to
Canada. | Du BARIL Julienne (I602)
|
| 4381 |
Died as a child | Chandonne' Charles III. (I1898)
|
| 4382 |
Died as infant | FERGUSON Sherry (I50144)
|
| 4383 |
Died as infant | FERGUSON Terry (I50146)
|
| 4384 |
Died as infant | CHANDONNAIS Lawrence James (I55045)
|
| 4385 |
Died at 5:45 P. M. in his home of Chronic Endocarditis. He was a retired farmer. His parents were both from Ireland.
He died at the age of 79 yrs,7 mos. 6 days old and is buried in Momence Cemetery, Momence, Kankakee County, IL.
He is recorded as living in Beaver Township, Iroqois County, IL at the time of the Tax Record's census of 1890. On his death certificate, his wife is listed as Catherine Covan. He is also listed as having been born in Binghamton, Broome County, NY, not Chenango where the census says the family lived. | O'Connel Thomas (I53006)
|
| 4386 |
Died at age 3, cemetery marking. | Brown Ida A. (I52664)
|
| 4387 |
Died at age 37 leaving 5 small children | WALSH Peter (I36051)
|
| 4388 |
died at age 9 yrs. | PULSIFER Joseph (I7507)
|
| 4389 |
Died at birth | Annable Unknown (I53532)
|
| 4390 |
Died at birth | POSS James A. (I55499)
|
| 4391 |
Died at birth or young | Annable Ann (I53173)
|
| 4392 |
Died at birth or young | Annable Thomas (I53240)
|
| 4393 |
Died at birth or young | Annable Abigail (I53767)
|
| 4394 |
Died at home on 111 East Beard Ave, Syracuse, Onondaga Co., NY. | Annable Benjamin (I53166)
|
| 4395 |
Died at sa | FREEMAN Samuel (I3203)
|
| 4396 |
Died at sea | (Betty) Elizabeth (I36059)
|
| 4397 |
Died at Sea | ROOT Ebenezer (I40558)
|
| 4398 |
Died at Sea | ROOT Gabriel (I40711)
|
| 4399 |
Died at sea, coming to United States. | (Betty) Elizabeth (I36059)
|
| 4400 |
Died at the age of 29 in a railroad accident | BEAUBIEN Robert (I55083)
|
|