Matches 6,601 to 6,800 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 6601 |
Jeanne and Jacques-Charles had six children | BOUCHER Jeanne (I1263)
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| 6602 |
Jeanne Bauche et son mari Jean Varin sont nommés par leur fille Catherine à son acte de mariage en 1666 en Nouvelle-France.[1]
Biography
Jeanne Bauche and her husband Jean Varin are named on the marriage record of their daughter Catherine in 1666 in New France. Jean was indicated to be deceased; the place of origin was said to be Limboeuf in Normandy.[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec). Registres paroissiaux catholiques 1621-1979, FamilySearch database with images. Montréal (Notre-Dame) 1642-1694; baptêmes, mariages, sépultures, images 154/598. (Free account required.) FamilySearch | BAUCHE Jeanne (I60351)
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| 6603 |
Jeanne Calipeau married Mathurin Gaillard and had 4 children:
Michel Gaillard, Général des Finances
Mathurin Gaillard, a lawyer in Blois
Jean Gaillard, married Jacqueline de Beauvillier father of Marie Gaillard, wife of Etienne de Morvillier
Marie Gaillard, married Pierre Burdelot.[1]
Sources
↑ Les Mémoires de messire Michel de Castelnau, seigneur de Mauvissière, Michel de Castelnau, Le Laboureur (J. Léonard, 1731), page 171, acccessed Oct 2019 via Google Books | CALIPEAU Jeanne (I60239)
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| 6604 |
Jeanne Chevalier Variation: Le Chevalier.
Note: Elle est nommée Jeanne Marguerite à partir de 1686 seulement, les actes précédents ne la nommant que Jeanne. Elle sera nommée Jeanne Marguerite souvent après 1686, incluant sur son dernier mariage.
Fille de Jacques Alexandre ou Jean Chevalier et de Marguerite Scorban / Secorman / Scormand, elle nait vers 1645, soit en la paroisse de Saint-Jacques de Dieppe (Seine-Maritime), ou soit en la paroisse de Saint-Nicolas, évêché de Coutances (Manche), selon ses contrats et mariages. (36 ans en 1681 au recensement, 57 ans en 1701 à son 3ème mariage)
Jeanne arrive à Québec le 30 juillet 1671 à bord du vaisseau Le Prince Maurice[1] comme Fille du Roi[2], apportant des biens estimés à 300 livres plus un don du roi de 50, ne sachant pas signer.[3]
Drapeau identifiant les profils du Canada, Nouvelle-France
Jeanne Chevalier a vécu
au Canada, Nouvelle-France.
Mariage
Guillaume Lecanteur et Jeanne Chevalier firent un contrat de mariage le 11 octobre 1671 devant le notaire Romain Becquet.[4][5]
Guillaume Lecanteur, habitant de la Durantaye, fils de Nicolas Lecanteur et de Jeanne Hamelot de la paroisse de Beaumont en Auge, évêché de Lisieux, épouse Jeanne Chevalier, fille de défunt Jacques Alexandre Chevalier et de Marguerite Scorban de la paroisse de Saint-Jacques de Dieppe, archevêché de Rouen, le 19 octobre 1671 à Notre-Dame de Québec. Parmi les témoins cités se trouve Adrien Michelon. (1)[6]
Liste de ses enfants connus:
Nicolas Lecanteur, né 7 septembre 1672, baptisé 8 à Château-Richer[7]; Nicolas Canteur décédé 1 novembre 1692 inhumé 2 Rivière-Ouelle à 20 ans[8]
Charles Lecanteur, baptisé 21 décembre 1675 L'Ange-Gardien[9] (son père noté Nicolas Lecanteur dit Latour sur l'acte); Nicolas Canteur décédé 5 octobre 1699 inhumé 6 Rivière-Ouelle (âge en blanc)[10]
anonyme Lecanteur, un enfant dont ni le nom ni le sexe n'est noté sur l'acte, baptisé/(e) le 24 juillet 1678 à L'Ange-Gardien (la mère nommée Jeanne Leroi sur l'acte), en marge est noté le nom Guillaume Lecanteur.[11]
Guillaume décède entre le baptême de son dernier enfant et le prochain contrat de mariage.[12]
Marriage 2
Robert Lévesque et Jeanne Chevalier firent un contrat de mariage le 21 avril 1679 devant le notaire Paul Vachon. Robert fait sa marque, ni l'un ni l'autre ne pouvant signer. Le parents de Jeanne sont nommés feu Jean Chevalier et défunte Marguerite Secorman, de la paroisse de St-Nicolas, diocèse de Coutance. Charles Letartre est parmi les témoins signant, ainsi que son épouse.[13]
Robert Léveque, fils de Pierre Lévêque et de Marie Caumont de la paroisse de Hautot-Saint-Sulpice, archevêché de Rouen, épouse Jeanne Le Chevalier, fille de Jean Le Chevalier et de Marguerite Scorman de la paroisse de Saint-Nicolas, diocèse de Coutances, le 22 avril 1679 à L'Ange-Gardien, en présence de Charles Letartre et de Mathurin Huart.[14]
6 enfants du mariage, dont 3 mariés et 3 décédés en bas âge (liste ci-bas dans la section en anglais); Robert décède en 1699.[12]
Recensement 1681: La Bouteillerie
Robert Levesque, charpentier, 40 ; Jeanne Chevalier, sa femme, 36 ; enfants : Nicolas 9, Charles 7, Françoise 2 ; 4 fusils ; 11 bêtes à cornes ; 10 arpents en valeur.[15]
Mariage 3
Jean Baptiste Deschamps, âgé de 55 ans, seigneur de la Bouteillerie, fils de défunt Jean Deschamps, seigneur des Landes, et de défunte Élisabeth de Bin, épouse Jeanne Marguerite Chevallier, âgée de 57 ans, fille de défunt Jean Chevallier et de défunte Marguerite Scormand, le 5 avril 1701 à Rivière-Ouelle, en présence de François Aubert et de René Brisson, le prêtre Bernard de Requeleyne officiant. Les témoins signent avec l'époux, l'épouse ne peut signer.[16]
Aucun enfant du mariage.[12]
Jeanne Chevalier fut marraine des enfants suivants: Pierre Greslon, fils de Jacques et de Jeanne Vignaud, le 24 juin 1674 à L'Ange-Gardien; Jeanne Marguerite Bérubé, fille de Damien et de Jeanne Savonnet, le 15 décembre 1680 à Rivière-Ouelle (enregistré à L'Islet); à Rivière-Ouelle tous: Jeanne Marguerite Grondin, fille de Jean et de Sainte Mignaud, le 31 janvier 1689; François Houallet, fils de René et de Thérèse Mignaud, le 28 octobre 1693; Jeanne Hautin, fille de François et de Marie Boucher, le 28 novembre 1693; Michel Bouchard, fils de Pierre et de Marie Anne Bourasa, le 4 février 1701; Joseph de Lavoye, fils de Jean et de Marie Boucher, le 2 février 1702; Marie Jeanne Lévêque (sa petite-fille) fille de François, le 30 novembre 1702; Jeanne Marguerite Lévêque (sa petite-fille) fille de Pierre Joachim, le 13 avril 1706; et Pierre de Font trouvé, fils de Pierre et de Magie Agnès Aymond, le 3 octobre 1714.[12]
Décès
Jeanne Chevaillier, épouse de défunt monsieur Deschamps de la Bouteillerie (veuve de Robert Lévesque en marge), décède le 24 novembre 1716 et est inhumée le 25 à Rivière-Ouelle, l'acte lui donnant 78 ans environ.[17]
Biography
Flag of France
Jeanne Chevalier migrated from France to New France.
Flag of New France
Jeanne Chevalier Variation: Le Chevalier.
Note: She is named Jeanne Marguerite starting in 1686 only, the acts before then only naming her Jeanne. She gets named Jeanne Marguerite often after 1686, including her last marriage.
Daughter of Jacques Alexandre or Jean Chevalier and of Marguerite Scorban / Secorman / Scormand, she was born around 1645, either in the parish of Saint-Jacques of Dieppe (Seine-Maritime), or in the parish of Saint-Nicolas, diocese of Coutances (Manche), sper her contracts and marriages. (36 in 1681 census, 57 in 1701 at her 3rd marriage)
Identifiant des profils des Filles du Roi
Jeanne Chevalier
is a Fille du Roi.
Jeanne arrived in Québec city on 30 July 1671 aboard the ship Le Prince Maurice[1] as a Fille du Roi[2], bringing goods estimated at 300 livres plus a gift from the king of 50, unable to sign.[3]
Drapeau identifiant les profils du Canada, Nouvelle-France
Jeanne Chevalier lived
in Canada, Nouvelle-France.
Marriage
Guillaume Lecanteur and Jeanne Chevalier entered into a marriage contract on 11 October 1671 before notary Romain Becquet.[4][5]
Guillaume Lecanteur, inhabitant of La Durantaye, son of Nicolas Lecanteur and of Jeanne Hamelot of the parish of Beaumont-en-Auge, diocese of Lisieux, married Jeanne Chevalier, daughter of the late Jacques Alexandre Chevalier and of Marguerite Scorban of the parish of Saint-Jacques of Dieppe, archdiocese of Rouen, on 19 October 1671 in Notre-Dame de Québec. Among the witnesses cited is found Adrien Michelon.[6]
3 children from the marriage, none of whom will live to marry. (listed above) Guillaume died between the baptism of his last child and Jeanne's next marriage contract.[12]
Marriage 2
Robert Lévesque and Jeanne Chevalier entered into a marriage contract on 21 April 1679 before notary Paul Vachon. Robert made his mark, neither spouse being able to sign. Robert's parents are both listed as deceased on this contract. Jeanne's parents are listed as the late Jean Chevalier and the late Marguerite Secorman, of the parish of St-Nicolas, diocese of Coutance. Charles Letartre was among the signing witnesses, as was his wife.[13]
Robert Léveque, son of Pierre Lévêque and of Marie Caumont of the parish of Hautot-Saint-Sulpice, archdiocese of Rouen, married Jeanne Le Chevalier, daughter of Jean Le Chevalier and of Marguerite Scorman of the parish of Saint-Nicolas, diocese of Coutances, on April 22, 1679 in L'Ange-Gardien, in the presence of Charles Letartre and Mathurin Huart.[14]
Children of the marriage
+François Robert Lévesque, b 12 Feb 1680 La Bouteillerie bapt. 14 L'Islet[18]; François Lévêque married Marie Charlotte Auber 7 Nov 1701 Rivière-Ouelle[19]
+Pierre Joachim Lévesque, b 24 Jan 1682, bapt. 21 April in Grande-Anse (recorded in Cap-Saint-Ignace)[20]; Pierre Joachim Lévesque married Angélique Letartre 30 Jun 1705 L'Ange-Gardien[21]
+Joseph Lévesque, b 11 Dec 1684 bapt. 6 Jan 1685 Rivière-Ouelle[22]; Joseph Lévêque married Angélique Meneu 26 Nov 1704 Rivière-Ouelle[23]
Jean Baptiste Lévesque, b 13 Oct 1686 bapt. 20 Rivière-Ouelle[24]; died December 1687, buried with his brother 11 Mar 1688 Rivière=Ouelle[25]
Jean Baptiste Lévesque, bapt. 3 Feb 1688 Rivière-Ouelle, died soon after [26]; died Mar 1688 buried 11 Mar 1688 aged 1 month, with his brother[27]
Marie Anne Lévesque, b & bapt. 3 Oct 1690 Rivière-Ouelle; her godfather was her half-brother Charles Lecanteur.[28]; died 13 Oct 1690, buried 15th Rivière-Ouelle aged 10 days[29]
1681 Census: La Bouteillerie
Robert Levesque, carpenter, 40 ; Jeanne Chevalier, his wife, 36 ; children : Nicolas 9, Charles 7, Françoise 2 ; 4 guns ; 11 horned beasts ; 10 arpents in value.[15] (sic, François, not Françoise)
Marriage 3
Jean Baptiste Deschamps, aged 55, seigneur of la Bouteillerie, son of the late Jean Deschamps, seigneur des Landes, and of the late Élisabeth de Bin, married Jeanne Marguerite Chevallier, aged 57, daughter of the late Jean Chevallier and the late Marguerite Scormand, on 5 April 1701 in Rivière-Ouelle, in the presence of François Aubert and of René Brisson, the priest Bernard de Requeleyne officiating. The witnesses sign with the groome, the bride could not sign.[16]
No issue from the marriage.[12]
Death
Jeanne Chevaillier, wife of the late monsieur Deschamps de la Bouteillerie (widow of Robert Lévesque in margin), died on 24 November 1716 and was buried on the 25th in Rivière-Ouelle, the record giving her around 78 years of age.[17] | CHEVALIER Jeanne Marguerite (I57777)
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| 6605 |
Jeanne de Morvillier was the daughter of Etienne de Morvillier[1] and his wife Marie Gaillard[2].
Jeanne married Jean de la Saussaye the first in the month of November, 1513. [1]
Children:
Mathurin de la Saussaye, lord of Lion-le-Marchais, of Bruzolles, Villedamblin, Villecoulon and Guillonville, was born in 1513. Destined and groomed for the priesthood from a young age. Bishop of Orléans[2].
Olivier de la Saussaye, marries Marguerite Alleaume, daughter of Jacques Alleume, lord of Bellassart and Magdeleine Compaing. Has issue.
Marie de la Saussaye, wife of Jean d'Alesso, son of a nephew of Saint Francois de Paule, lord of Lezeau and Eragny, Master of Accounts, etc. They had six children.
Francoise de la Saussaye, who married Francois de l'Hospital, a private lieutenant in Bourges. They had 2 children
Anne de la Saussaye, who married Adam de Baillon, squire, seigneur de Villiers and de Vallance. They had 6 children.
Jeanne de la Saussaye, who married Jean de Foucault, seigeur de Rozay, president of the parliiment of Bretagne. They had 6 children.
Olive de la Saussaye, a nun at the convent of the noble girls of Guiche, near Blois, where she died on July 8, 1580. [1]
It is presumed that Jeanne passed away before 1538 since, at this time, her husband Jean de la Saussaye remarries. [1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Péan, Alonso. Histoire généalogique de la maison de La Saussaye. pg. 13-14, pg. 33: Read Nov. 2017
↑ 2.0 2.1 Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, des pairs, grands officiers de la Couronne, de la Maison du Roy et des anciens barons du royaume.... Tome 6, par le Père Anselme de Sainte-Marie, continuée par Honoré du Fourny, La compagnie des Libraires, 1726-1733. Page: 491 http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k76080b/f502.image. Gallica, Dec. 2017
Les Mémoires de messire Michel de Castelnau, seigneur de Mauvissière], Michel de Castelnau, Le Laboureur (J. Léonard, 1731), Page 162. | MORVILLIER Jeanne (I60233)
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| 6606 |
Jeanne fille de Mathieu Amiot et Marie Miville s'est mariée le 26 février 1691 avec Paul Tessier à Neuville, Québec.[1]
Sources
↑ Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec). Registres paroissiaux catholiques 1621-1979, FamilySearch database with images. Neuville 1679-1752; baptêmes, mariages, sépultures, image 106/587. (Free account required.) FamilySearch
Source: S2395125019 Repository: #R2395123340 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27515540/family
Repository: R2395123340 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note:
Programme de Recherche en Démographie Historique, Université de Montréal PRDH: Research Programme in Historical Demography (membership): Famille: 86337
http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Amiot_Jeanne&pid=96339&lng=en Nos Origines | AMIOT Marie Jeanne (I60343)
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| 6607 |
Jeanne Liénard was born about 1621[1]
Sources
↑ date guess based on birth of daughter
http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Marguerite_Robineau&pid=99151&lng=en | LIÉNARD Jeanne (I60324)
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| 6608 |
Jeanne Peloquin était la femme d'Olivier II de La Saussaye, seigneur de Brusolle en Orléanais[1].
Le couple a eu cinq enfants:
Olivier III, marié à Jeanne de Bréda
Jean, marié à Jeanne de Morvillier
Marguerite, femme de Simon Boudet, seigneur de la Boullie
Jeanne, mariée à François Durant, seigneur de Bignon, bourgeois d'Orléans
Catherine, femme de Nicolas Aubelin, seigneur de Fauvelles[1].
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Histoire généalogique de la maison de La Saussaye, par Alonso Péan, impr. de L. Perrin (Lyon) 1860. Pages: 7 et suiv. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k8594678/f31.image Gallica, Dec. 2017 | PELOQUIN Jeanne (I60244)
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| 6609 |
Jeanne was born in 1507. Jeanne Pele ... She passed away in 1565. [1]
Can you add any information on Jeanne Pele? Please help grow her WikiTree profile. Everything you see here is a collaborative work-in-progress.
Sources
No sources. The events of Jeanne's life were either witnessed by Darrell Parker or Darrell plans to add sources here later.
Footnotes
↑ Entered by Darrell Parker, Wednesday, October 16, 2013. | PELE Jeanne (I60282)
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| 6610 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I272)
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| 6611 |
Jefferson County Union Newspaper 9 May 1890
Obituary for Cary Alward Brown
1860-1890
Death of Cary Brown
Cary Brown, who the past two years has made a heroic battle against that dread disease, consomption, died at Mobile, Alabama, Tuesday. He was married about two and a half years ago to Miss Cella (Marcella) Thiry, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Thiry, and apparently had a fine start in life. The news that he was in the first stages of consumption was a painful surprise to his friends at the time, as he was known to possess a vigorous constitution, was always strong and broad of chest. The disease had progressed very far before anything was done. Shortly after a medical examination he went to Colorado, alone, to recuperate. Not improving, his wife joined him and a few months after, they started home with a prairie schooner, arriving early last fall.
Afdter a months's stay they set out with their covered wagon for the gulf states. They reached Alabama some weeks since and were journeying to Thomasville, GA when Carey becaem much worse and they went into Mobile. In their travels they had journeyed over 2,000 miles. Deceased was born in this township, April 27, 1860 and was thus 30 years old. The body was brought here for burial Thursday. The funeral services are to be held at the Congregational Church at 3:30 p. m. today, conducted by Rev. W. W. Rose. The remains wil be interred in Evergreen cemetery. Much sympathy is expressed for his young and faithful wife, thus early bereaved.
Also in the Jefferson County Union paper, 9 May, 1890 was the following:
Honorable Neal Brown, of Wausau, is in attendance at the funeral of his brother Carey, today. He has been the mainstay of the family since Carey's illness, and has done all for his brother that it was posssible to do.
Jefferson County Union paper; EAst Koshkonong (from a Union Correspondant) 16 May 1890.
Mrs. Cary Brown, who for one and one-half years has been traveling with her husband through the West and South in the vain attempt to restore him to health , returned last week with his remains and they were interred in Evergreen cemetery. She is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Thiry, where she will, for the present remain. Their many friends here deeply sympathize with her in her sorrow. | Brown Carey Alward (I52696)
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| 6612 |
Jeffery received a land grant in Salem, 1636
His ill probated 23 Jan. 1657 | ESTEY Jeffery (I2726)
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| 6613 |
Jemima was buried on 13 Feb. 1835 at the age of 74 years. She was the wife of Lieut. Edward Annable. | Smith Jemima (I53704)
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| 6614 |
Jerry’s lifelong interests included his family, travel, model ship building and wood working. He was a history buff and an aviation and maritime enthusiast. Jerry was extremely loving and proud of his 12 grandchildren and six great grandchildren. | LAMOTTE Jerome Andre (I4833)
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| 6615 |
Jetté et. al.[1] assert that Jean Bizet was the husband of Marguerite Chabot, who in turn was the daughter of Antoine Chabot and Catherine Lombard, and that he died prior to 30 December 1607.
Their evidence is based primarily from the deed of division of the estate of Antoine Chabot and Catherine Lombard, dated 30 December 1607, which they cite from the Cabinet d'Hozier[2] They include the following support below:
Le dossier du Cabinet d'Hozier est le résumé de l'acte de <>.
Sources
↑ René Jetté, John P. Dulong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, and Joseph A. Dubé. Table d'ascendance de Catherine Baillon: 12 générations. Montréal, Québec: Société généalogique canadienne-française, 2001.
↑ Cabinet d'Hozier, vol. 82, dossier 2147 | BIZET Jean (I57804)
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| 6616 |
Jetté et. al.[1] assert that Marguerite Chabot was the wife of Jean Bizet, seigneur de Paponville and the daughter of Antoine Chabot and Catherine Lombard, and that she died prior to 30 December 1607.
Their evidence is based primarily from the deed of division of the estate of Antoine Chabot and Catherine Lombard, dated 30 December 1607, which they cite from the Cabinet d'Hozier[2] They include the following support below:
Le dossier du Cabinet d'Hozier est le résumé de l'acte de <>.
Research notes
Based on the information in the biography relating to the family's constitution in 1607 and her parents' marriage contract date in 1555 it is reasonable to place Marguerite's birth circa 1560, plus or minus five years.
Sources
↑ René Jetté, John P. Dulong, Roland-Yves Gagné, Gail F. Moreau, and Joseph A. Dubé. Table d'ascendance de Catherine Baillon: 12 générations. Montréal, Québec: Société généalogique canadienne-française, 2001.
↑ Cabinet d'Hozier, vol. 82, dossier 2147 | CHABOT Marguerite (I57803)
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| 6617 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I6639)
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| 6618 |
Jimena Fernández was queen consort of Pamplona and countess consort of Aragon by her marriage to King García Sánchez II. [1]
She died after 1035. [2]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Jimena_Fernández.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Family of Vermudo Nunez. | FERNÁNDEZ Jimena (I59842)
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| 6619 |
Jimena married Alfonso III de Asturias. [1]
Sources
↑ Jaime de Salazar y Acha. Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media (Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid, 2021) p. 54.
Geni profile: Jimena Garcés de Pamplona, reina consorte de Asturias.
Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica - pg. 317 ((Tab. I)). | PAMPLONA Jimena Garcés (I59908)
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| 6620 |
Jimeno is the founder of the Jimena dynasty of the medieval Kings of Pamplona, but his existence and name are only deduced from the patronymic of his sons, and nothing more is known about him from primary sources.[1],[2]
Birth
Based on dates of other members of this family, he was probably born about 820.[1]
Marriage & Children
The name of his wife is unknown, but there were two sons who are definitely named as brothers: [1] [2] [3]
García Jiménez
Íñigo Jiménez
Research Notes
There have been various theories and proposals about his origins and other family relationships, none of which are supported by primary sources.[2],[4]
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. 89. Electronic edition, Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado, https://www.boe.es/biblioteca_juridica/abrir_pdf.php?id=PUB-DH-2021-233 : accessed 1 May 2022.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Cawley, Charles, 'Navarre Kings - Chapter 1B Origins of Kings of Pamplona-Version B' in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Electronic edition, Foundation of Medieval Genealogy, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands : accessed 1 May 2022.
↑ Lacarra, José M., "Textos navarros del códice de Roda", Estudios de Edad Media de la Corona de Aragón, I (1945) : 194-283. Online , Universidad Zaragoza, p. 208 (16).
↑ Wikipedia contributors, "Jimeno of Pamplona," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jimeno_of_Pamplona&oldid=1033845450 (accessed May 1, 2022). | UNKNOWN Jimeno (I59577)
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| 6621 |
Joan Kilpeck was the younger daughter and coheir of Hugh of Kilpeck.[1] Hugh's younger daughter was aged 17 in 28 Henry III,[2] which was 28 October 1243-27 October 1244, so she was born 1226-7.
Joan was the sister of Isabella Kilpeck.[1]
Joan was married to Phillip Marmion before 7 February, 1244.[1]
Joan's heirs were her three daughters.[3]
An Extent was made in 28 Henry III (28 October 1243-27 October 1244) of Hugh de Kylpek's land in co Gloucester, and the panel, which included Richard Marmihun and Ralph Walens', said that Hugh held property in Parva ....., and he had daughters, the younger of whom was aged 17 years, and he held that land by serjeanty of ..... of Kilpek.[2]
On 7 February, 1244, the king, Henry III of England, had taken the homage of Phillip Marmion, who had taken to wife Joan, the younger daughter and the other heiress of Hugh of Kilpeck, for the rightful share which fell to her of the lands formerly of the aforesaid Hugh her father, and the king committed the share of the aforesaid lands falling to Isabella, the first-born daughter and other heiress of the same Hugh, to W. de Cantilupe to keep until Isabella had come to the king and done what she ought to do for it. The sheriff of Herefordshire was ordered to cause the said land to be partitioned by the oath of trustworthy men, to cause the rightful part falling to Joan to be assigned to Phillip and Joan, his wife, and to cause them to have full seisin thereof, having accepted security from them that they will answer the king for the relief due to the king for this, saving esnecy to the aforementioned Isabella, and to cause him to have full seisin of the share falling to the same.[1]
Research Notes
The following was provided by Carol (O'Brien) McDonald: The Kilpeck family, a distaff line of the Whitney family of Herefordshire, was one of those families that has gone largely unnoticed by the historians. Joan Kilpeck [c1227-<1282] was the younger daughter and coheir of Hugh Kilpeck [>1192-1244], married Philip Marmion [died 1291] as his first wife. Could find no information on Hugh’s origins other than he held lands in chief by serjeanty being the forester of Kilpeck in co. Hereford. Hugh was a minor in 1212 when William Cantilupe was the custodian of his lands, but had attained his majority by 1219. [Book of Fees, page 101, Calendar Patent Rolls HIII] However, whilst searching for a record for the parentage of Walter I Cantilupe in the Pipe Rolls, came across the name of Kilpeck immediately under the name of Cantilupe. We have now have four earlier generations prior to Hugh Kilpeck, the father of Joan, from the introduction written by Round, in which is written: In Herefordshire Henry de 'Kilpeed' (i.e. Kilpeck), who was fined 100 marcs 'pro foresta,' was himself the keeper of the forest, being identical with the Henry 'filius Hugonis forestarii ' of the previous page (p. 53), whose father, as Hugh ' filius Willelmi forestarii,' had made his return in 1166. The roll of the previous year (p. 42) records his succession to his father. [Pipe Roll 23HII, page xxvi ] As Hugh was a minor in 1212, the time frame is consistent with Henry being the grandfather of Hugh. The father of Hugh is likely to have been John Kilpec , as an entry that I had previously missed reads, Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet de garela hered' Johannis de Kylpec feudum j. militis et dimidii. [Book of Fees, pages 100, 101] John Kilpeck was living 1200 but deceased 1204 when his widow Juliana was assigned her dower. [Rotuli de Oblatis et Finibus, pages 78, 233 ]
“Great Roll of the Pipe for the 23rd year of the reign of King Henry the Second: A.D. 1176/7:” Published by the Pipe Roll Society. Introduction by J. H. Round. [Book of Fees pages 100, 101] 1212. Hereford - Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet de garela hered' Johannis de Kylpec feudum j. militis et dimidii. De seriantis - Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet medietatem de Bradeford' de garda heredis [f.n. 4 - 326 reads Johannis] de Kilpec per seriantiam forinsecam et aliam medietatem tenent monachi de Radinges de dono Rogeri comitis Herefordie in puram elemosynam. [Rotuli de Oblatis et Finibus 2J, page 78, 6J, page 233] 1200. Hereford’ – Jon’s de Kilpeal ---------------- de forester. 1204. Hereford’ – Julia’ que fuit uxor Johis de Kilpac -------------- et assignet’ Rokesleia et LFerna -----------------. Et mandatii est Willo de Cantilupo.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Calendar of the Fine Rolls of the Reign of Henry III [CFR] 1243–4, ed. P. Dryburgh and B. Hartland, technical ed. A. Ciula and J.M. Vieira, Henry III Fine Rolls Project's website, no 91, (https://finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_041.html#it091_009 : accessed 4 November, 2018).
↑ 2.0 2.1 Sidney J Madge, ed, Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem for Gloucestershire, Returned Into the Court of Chancery During the Plantagenet Period. Part IV. 20 Henry III. to 29 Edward I. 1236-1300, (Germany: Kraus reprint, 1968, of The Index Library, XXX,1903), 4, Digital Image Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/abstractsofglouc00grea#page/4/mode/2up). The original document is damaged.
↑ Sanders, English Baronies, p.74 | KILPEC Joan (I60151)
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| 6622 |
Joan was a co-heiress of the Marmions of Tamworth, receiving one third of that barony.
Sources
Sanders, English Baronies, p.145
Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem and Other Analogous Documents preserved in the Public Record Office (H.M. Stationery Office, London, 1912) Vol. 3 Edward I., Years 20-28.
Page 18: #29 Joan the wife of Alexander de Frivill, daughter of Mazera late the wife of Ralph de Croumbewell and daughter of the said Philip, ..." | CROMWELL Joan (I60148)
|
| 6623 |
João Rodrigues, traduction française / French translation: "Jean Rodrigue"
Note
Ils se nommaient João Rodrigues et son épouse Susana da Cruz, de St-Jean de Lisbonne, Portugal, mais on les présentait comme Jean Rodrigue et Suzanne Lacroix, traduction de leur nom en français. Avec le temps, on a cessé ces traductions.
João Rodrigues and spouse Susana da Cruz, were from de St-Jean de Lisbonne, Portugal, In New France, they were presented and known as Jean Rodrigue and Suzanne Lacroix, the french translation of their names. With time, their original names were droped off.
Mariage: João Rodrigues épouse Susana da Cruz à Saint-Jean de Lisbonne, Portugal.
Marriage: João Rodrigues and Susana da Cruz were married in Saint-Jean de Lisbonne, Portugal.
Enfants connus de / Known children: Suzanne Lacroix & Jean Rodrigue:
Jean Rodrigue (1641 - 1720)
Sources
Tanguay - Volume 1, p. 525 - 1671 RODRIGUE Jean, fils de Jean et de Suzanne Lacroix,
Voir aussi / Also see
Généalogie Québec
origines | RODRIGUES João (I60277)
|
| 6624 |
Joel fought in the Revolutionary War with the Woodward's Company Rangers,out of New Hampshire. | BROWN Joel (I1564)
|
| 6625 |
Johannes Olofsson/Olsson changed his name to John Wilhelm Wilson when he left Hulterstad, Scärlof,Kalmar County, Island of Öland, Sweden and arrived in America in the year 1864. Before coming to the United States, he first went to Helsingör, Denmark on 9 February, 1854 possibly, to work as a sailor on the open seas.
He left his parents and siblings in the village where he was born and grew to manhood. They lived in a small home about 300 yards off the main road of Hulterstad, Scarlöf, Number 8, on the southeastern part of the island of Öland, just a few blocks south of the Hulterstad Church where so many of his family have since been buried, including his parents and perhaps even his grandparents.
Johannes was a man of the sea. He used to tell of his voyages, starting at about the age of 14. By the time he left Hulterstad, Scarlöf, Öland, Sweden for Denmark, he was an experienced sailor at the age of 21. He sailed around the world, arriving at such ports as Seattle and San Francisco and those of Asia.
From Denmark, he made his first trip to America, but he returned to Sweden two times, the final trip leaving Sweden on January 1, 1870 with his wife, Bertha Hakanason who was two months pregnant with son, Otto. It could have been this last return to America when he was joined by his brother, Nils and a sister, for they immigrated and settled in Chicago, IL. Later, Nils moved to Boxholm, Boone County, Iowa. John became a naturalized citizen in 1864 according to the 1900 federal census for Ganeer, Kankakee co., IL.
On one of his trips to Sweden, Johannes used the name of Olofsson, which could have been the name he was baptised with. Another time, he used the name of Olsson. To this day, it is not unusual for one to change their name, either using their mother's maiden name or their father's, thus making it difficult to trace family lines.
As one can see by the last names in preceeding generations, a son took the father's first name to be his last and adding a "sson" to it. Thus, Olof Anderson's son was called "Olofsson". Daughters were "Olofsdotter". In the vital records, it would be recorded, if her first name was Marie; Marie Olof with a "Dtr" following as we would abbreviate "Jr." This method of naming is no longer used.
On a visit to Hulterstad, we discovered this wonderful old Hulterstad Church where the cemetery surrounds the building. The original Catholic Church was built in 1200 but all that remains of the original part is the tower or nave. The bell was installed in 1630 and remains the same today. It is in this cemetery that surrounds the church, we discovered many names of Olsson, Olofsson and Anderson. These are more than likely descendants of Olof and Brita Anderson, parents of our Johannes Olofsson/Olsson a.k.a. John W. Wilson.
At the time of our visit in the fall of 1997, the only information we had was an obituary of John W. Wilson who died in Momence, Illinois, an immigrant from Sweden in the mid-1800's. We were also made aware by grandson, Harley Wilson, that Wilson was not his birth name but his "Americanized" name. He remembered the name of Olson. With this information and the sleuthing investigation of our guide, we discovered our John, a.k.a. Johannes had changed his name several times with each voyage to America. Weeks after our return to the United State, a letter arrived from our guide with the information containing the vital records. They were confirmed by a genealogist in the Family History Center Library in Salt Lake City, UT.
The Island of Öland is a very small island, 85 miles in length and 9.9 miles in width and only 180 feet in it highest point, connected now by a bridge to the city of Kalmar on the mainland. It used to be the summer home and private hunting grounds for the King of Sweden so anyone who lived on the island was not allowed to cut down any trees or hunt on the property. Timber for their houses had to come by boat from Kalmar. The Islander would go by boat to Kalmer, look at the house he wanted to buy, tear it down, ship it by boat to the island and rebuild it. This was the standard way one would build.
The house where Johannes lived still stands today with very little modification according to an elderly couple that live near by. The house is said to be about 200 years old. The attached barn is probably 300 or more years old. The roofs have been replaced with metal, corregated roofing.
Down the road is an old windmill, possibly used by the family to grind their grain. It is unknown how much land was owned by the family but the land itself is "hard scrabble" and does not seem suitable for raising of any kind of crop other than sheep.
During the mid-1800's, a famine struck the island because of harsh winters and poor crops in the summer. Perhaps there were other economical problems as well. During that period, the area around Hulterstad lost over 80 % of the people either from starvation or immigration to America; the largest group settling in the Chicago, Illinois area and that of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
With so many people coming to the island in recent years in search of their roots, the minister of the church decided to moved to a nearby town so he would not have to be bothered with their inquiries. The elderly lady we talked to said the minister would slam his door on their faces! The old church records were moved to a larger parish.
There is also an Immigrant's Information Center in Vöxjö on the mainland who specialize in the 1800's immigration to America and other parts of the world.
In the Momence Paper, Momence, Kankakee County, IL Friday, December 23, 1910 issue is the following, including a lovely large picture:
A RESPECTED CITIZEN WHO RECENTLY DIED.
John Wilson was born on the island of Oland, Sweden, April 12, 1833, and died at his home south of Momence, December 7, 1910; at the age of 77 years, 7 months and 25 days.
His boyhood days only were spent with his parents as they were in humble circumstances, and when a youth he was deprived of the benefits of an education and was compelled throughout the following years to fight the hardships in the battle of life against those clad in the armoor of defense, "an education." Scarcely had he attained the age of early manhood when he left a rustic home of his native country and entered the ranks as a sailor, and to gain for himself a reputation and character not to be shadowed by the trials and temptations of a worldly life.
In 1848 he began to sail on the North and Baltic seas, starting as an apprentice and later through his honesty and faithfulness was promoted to chief steward.
In 1854, he set out to sail under the Swedish flag for America for the first time. In 1860, he returned home and later made several trips to America under the American flag. At the time of the Civil War he had many thrilling adventures. He would hold the interest of his friends for hours relating the many incidents and hardships of a sailor's life. One of especial interest was that of escaping the Alabama.
Owing to the lack of space only a few of his adventures can here be mentioned. During the twenty-one years of his sailor's life he sailed five times around the globe, stopping at all the important seaports such as Hong Kong, Shanghai and other ports along that coast, at one time passing Calcutta during the terrible famine, and so numberous were the dead bodies that it was necessary to clear them away with oars in order to land the ship. His ship also stopped at many ports in Africa, and various times passed the Cape of Good Hope with cargoes for the American continent. By so doing, he visited the seaports of San Francisco, Seattle and many others.
The seas are oftimes merciless to the ships, and three times was Mr. Wilson shipwrecked. Once he came to land in a beef barrel, bringing with him a little girl. There was a rope around the barrel. After the waves had washed them ashore, another rope was attached to the barrel and by this means the entire crew was saved, and showed his bravery and heroism.
Concluding his voyages on the seas in 1868, he came to Illinois, purchased a farm northeast of Momence where he spent one year. He then went to Chicago where in 1869, he was united in marriage with Miss Bertha Hawinson. He then sailed the Great Lakes for a few months, after which he returned to Momence, building his first residence on the south side of the river. Later he purchased a farm 3 1/2 miles southwest of Momence where he resided until 1902 when he devided the farm between his three oldest sons--he moving to his late residence.
To this union, six children were born, of which three survive; Theodore and John W. of this place, and N. G. Wilson of Chicago. In 1888 the Lord saw fit to call the wife and mother home, leaving four small children to their father's care and guidance. Six years later Otto passed to the beyond.
In 1889, Mr. Wilson was married to Miss Bertha Larson of Chicago, and to this union two children were born; Freida V. and Oscar L., who, with their mother, survive him.
Mr. Wilson was a kind and loving father, a good neighbor and ever ready to offer his services or advice for the benefit of his family or community. He was a determined man, and to a friend, he was just as faithful and loyal as was Damon to Pythias. Many are the poor and friendless that he has fed and clothed within his gate; others he assisted to the best of his ability to secure and education. he was a man who won the respect and esteem of all who knew him, and had many friends who were deeply grieved to hear of his sudden death.
Besides his immediate family he leaves a brother, N. G. Wilson of Iowa, one sister, Mrs. Benson of Chicago, beside other relatives and a host of friends. The funeral services were held at the residence on Saturday, Dec. 10, at 10:30 a. m., conducted by Rev. Connor of the M.E. church. Interment in Mt. Airy cemetery.
Among those from abroad who attended the funeral were N. G. Wilson of Boxholm, Iowa, N. G. Wilson and wife of Chicago, and J. R. Wright of Morocco, Indiana.
More on the History of Hulterstad:
Hulterstad is a small coastal town on the southeastern part of the island of Öland , Sweden. Hulterstad is situated at the eastern fringe of the Stora Alvaret, a limestone pavement habitat which hosts a diversity of rare plants and has been designated a World Heritage Site1. Hulterstad is the municipal government center for this district and central records for centuries were kept at the Hulterstad Church. Significant gravefields and a Viking stone burial ship structure are located immediately south of Hulterstad. To the north is located the village of Alby , where a mesolithic village of early human settlement has been found,[2] and to the south is the Ottenby Nature Reserve. Across the alvar to the west is the village of Gettlinge.
Emigranten Populär, 1783-1951 Swedish Emigration Records, 1783-1951 about Lars Johan Olsson
Name: Lars Johan Olsson
Birth Year: abt 1832
Gender: Man (Male)
Place of Origin: Gårby Öland Kalmar Län, Sverige
Destination: San Fransisco
Record Date: 3 dec 1880
Port of Departure: Göteborg
Database Name: EmiHamn
Archive Call Number: 16:499:150
Principal Person: Olsson Lars Johan
The last trip to Sweden and his return was:
John Wilsson
Birth Year: abt 1840
Gender: Man (Male)
Place of Origin: Öland Kalmar Län, Sverige
Destination: San Francisco
Record Date: 21 Nov 1884
Port of Departure: Göteborg Database
Name: EmiHamn
Archive Call Number: 25:645:23295
Principal Person: Wilsson John | Olofsson Lars Johannes (I54302)
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| 6626 |
John "The Fairborn" | PLANTAGENET-BEAUFORT John (I22792)
|
| 6627 |
John (Quincy Adams?) Castner was 13 years, 4 months old when he died. He is buried in the Adam Castner plot in City Hill Cemetery, Torrey, NY. Thre is another birthdate for him as 4 Aug. 1828. | Castner John Quincy Adams (I53640)
|
| 6628 |
John and Elizabeth lived in Truroe, Barnstable County following their marriage and having their first child, Ambrose there. They moved to Barnstable, Barnstable County, MA before their second child was born. About 1740, they left Barnstable to settle the new town of Rochester, Plymouth County. They were one of the first families of settlers in Rochester. From there they moved to Dartmouth, Bristol County, MA.
No probate records for John or Elizabeth Annable have been found in Plymouth County. John was mentioned in his father, John's will of Feb. 28, 1750.
John and Elizabeth were both baptized in the Rochester Church, bp. 18 July,1747. | Annable John (I53556)
|
| 6629 |
John and Hannah moved to Vt sometime between 1790 and 1797, according to the census report for Swanzey, NH and VT. | Wright John (I51578)
|
| 6630 |
John and his brother, Joseph were some of the early settlers to settled in the town of Nichols, NY. They settled along the river flats. | Annable John B. (I53470)
|
| 6631 |
John and Jane had one child; unknown. | Annable John Stewart (I53320)
|
| 6632 |
John Annable was living in Milo, Yates County, NY in 1830 according to the NY census. | Annable John (I53768)
|
| 6633 |
John came to New England on the "Francis and James" (or was it the William and Francis?) with Winslow in 1632, arriving in Boston on June 5th. He resided in Plymouth and became a freeman on March 1, 1642. He removed to Eastham, Barnstable County in 1645 and Piscataway by 1670 with the first settlers.
During the time he lived in Eastham, he was the Constable in 1646, Surveyor in 1649 and was part of the Grand Inquest of 1654, 1660 and 1665. Land was granted to him in 1658 between Bridgewater and Weymouth and in 1662 near Taunton. | Smalley John (I53782)
|
| 6634 |
John died in 1836 in his 74th year and is buried at Brown's Crossing, Cameron, Steuben County, NY. His wife, Mary died ten years later. He was a soldier in the Revolutionary War.
John came to America in 1790, according the a nephew who wrote the History of Steuben County,NY; Guy H McMaster, 1853 and was a very early settler in Canisteo. | Moore John (I54026)
|
| 6635 |
John Francis Nason had a ship named the
" Penelope" and he would sail all along the Bay of Fundy. This made it difficult to track him down. He went where the work was.Their extended families of Lockharts and Fullers were also in Horton, Nova Scotia.
Ship's carpenter was one of John Francis Nason's occupations. He also served as a Pvt. during the Civil War. He was in his 60's then. He lived a long life and died in his 90's. Abigail Brown Nason did not live as long, and died in her early 50's.
Pvt. John Francis Nason served with the 16th Maine Regiment Company K. He is Buried in the Western Cemetery on Vaughn St. in Portland, Maine. | NASON John Francis (I57588)
|
| 6636 |
John George Morrison
Posted by Dick Campbell on Fri, 18 Jun 1999
>From the 1907 book by Alvin H. Wilcox, "A Pioneer History of Becker
County Minnesota" chapter XVIII, pages 267-269:
John George Morrison, son of Allan and nephew of William, was born at
Lake Winnebegoshish, Minnesota, April 29th, 1843, where his father
was managing a trading post for the American Fur Company.
He attended the Mission Schools at Crow Wing and Belle Prairie,
Minnesota, for a few years, but was compelled to quit school on
account of his father's ill health; he soon became the mainstay of
the family and so continued until his brother Allan became old enough
to take his place.
While yet a mere boy, he carried on some trading with the Indians
around Gull Lake and towards Leech Lake, and became quite popular
with them; during the Indian outbreak he was chosen by Governor
Ramsey and the Indians themselves to carry messages between the two
camps and in that capacity rendered valuable services.
After the Civil War, in 1865, the United States government, desiring
to ascertain the true conditions and feelings of the Indian tribes,
organized, at all Indian agencies, bodies of scouts, whose mission
was to inquire into and report the causes of troubles and
dissatisfaction among the Indians. These scouts were chosen from
among the intelligent and loyal mixed bloods, and were place under
the supervision of the military authorities.
Upon the recommendation of the officer then in command at Fort
Ripley, John George Morrison was placed in charge of the scouts at
the Crow Wing Agency, and so remained until the corps was disbanded.
July 3rd, 1863, he married
Margaret Elizabeth Fairbanks, daughter of Robert Fairbanks and
Catherine Beaulieu. Ten children were born to them; six in Crow Wing
and four near White Earth Agency. Two lived only a few years, the
others are, with the exception of his daughter Mrs. Julia A. Spears,
(the second), who lives at Red Lake, all members of the White Earth
Reservation, and possess valuable landed interests there. He removed
to the White Earth Reservation, from old Crow Wing, on the
Mississippi, in the fall of 1874, and some years afterwards entered
the government service and occupied several positions, being
successively captain of Indian police and judge of the court of
Indian offenses, and later government farmer, which position he held
until the winter of 1892-3. In the fall of 1893, he removed to Red
Lake, and has since successfully carried on hotel keeping and
trading.
GEO. A. MORISON | MORRISON John George (I5835)
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| 6637 |
John Hayward's last name is spelled Heaward in the county vital records of
Concord.
John Hayward is spelled Heaward on his marriage license in county records of
Concord, Ma. John died at the age of 78 yrs.
There are no probate records for John or Anna but on 1 March 1702/3, John Hayward gave to "eldest son, George Haywood of Concord...the west end of my dwelling house.." and on 12 Feb. 1711/12 to John Hayward, Jr. of concord the rest of the dwelling house, barn and land in Concord :said John to provide for me and my wife, Anna... and to pay my daughter, Judith Goss...my daughter, Mercy Browne...my daughter, Anna Allen...and my daugther, Sarah Allen.." Every Middlesex County deed involving John and Anna has been searched but no provision has been found for daughter Mary. | HAYWARD John (I3911)
|
| 6638 |
John J. Newland was born on 22 Nov 1867 in NY. He appeared in the census on 21 Jul 1870 at Oil Creek
Township in Shamburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. He died on 15 Aug 1870 at the age of 2 in
Shamburg, Pennsylvania, United States. John has reference number 199. | NEWLAND James J. (I57146)
|
| 6639 |
John Jones, rector of St. Nicholas Acons, London; died 14 May 1636 at Highgate, Middlesex, England.
John Jones, rector of St. Nicholas Acons, London; died 14 May 1636 at Highgate, Middlesex, England. | Jones John (I50297)
|
| 6640 |
John Joseph was born in Bohemia. At the time of his death, he lived in Elgin, Kane County, IL. He worked as a Tool and Die maker. He is buried in a cemetery in Palatine, Cook county, IL. | von Druska John Joseph (I52819)
|
| 6641 |
John later moved from Concord to New Ipswich during the early period of the Revolutionaary war, settling one-half mile east of his brother, Josiah. John's farm, between Barrett and Kidder mountains, was near the crest of the turnpike, just two or three hundred feet below the summit which crossed the range around 1804.
All of his children were born in Concord except the youngest which was born in Ipswich. John died in 1803, and his son-in-law, Aaron acquired the farm. Aaron also kept a store near his home after the construction of the turnpike.
Aaron had five brothers who moved from New Ipswich to Whitingham, VT around 1800: Josiah, Joseph, Jonas, Amos and Nathan. | Brown John (I50817)
|
| 6642 |
John married widow, Dorothy Wright. He came over on the "Confidence" with
Thomas Browne et al, as an indenturd servant. His station rose quickly and he held a number of responsible public offices. He evidently held his son-in-law,Jabez Browne, in high esteem because in his will he called him "my son" and | Blandford John (I51896)
|
| 6643 |
John Mason was Major General, Connecticutt Forces and Deputy Governor, CT. | Mason John (I51513)
|
| 6644 |
John moved to Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio in 1835. In 1844, he was in Russia, Lorraine County, Ohio. He was in Burr Oak, St. Joseph County, Michigan in 1845. (Source for Russia, Lorraine Co.OH is from a probate record filed 1 Apr. 1844 of the Joseph Leander Loghry estate.)
He married Electa Foster between 1823 and 1825 in Steuben County, NY. It is thought he died in Kankakee, Kankakee County, IL in 1860. | Loghry John Joseph (I54158)
|
| 6645 |
John Peckham probably immgrated between 1634-1638 and appears in Newport, R. I. in 1638. He was associated with the Clarkes and others, who were among the active supporters of Anne Hutchinson. His name is not found in any passenger list, nor in the Boston records. It is probable that he came with the Hutchinson party on the "Griffin" He was a zealous Baptist, but his name does not appear in the list of those disarmed in Boston, nor among the followers of Wheelwright,nor was he one of the signers of the Portsmouth covenant. He was a brother-in-law of John Clarke, and his lands were allotted along with those of William Freeborn, John Coggeshall and others who were the first settlers of the Island of Aquidneck in 1638, where, on May 20th his name is in a list of those who were admitted inhabitants of Newport. In 1640, the bounds of his lands were established. March 16, 1641 he was admitted a freeman. In 1648, he was one of the ten male members of the first Baptist Church of Newport,in full communion. This same year, Eleanor Peckham, his second wife, was baptized. His residence was in that part of Newport that afterwards became Middletown, and a stone marked I. P. is supposed to mark his grave. A reference to his will is found in a list of seventeen wills (between 1676 and 1695) that were presented to the court in 1700, by parties interested, the law requiring three witnesses and these wills having but two.
John Peckham and his sons became, prior to 1700, very extensive landholders. They were first, amoung the proprietors of the Petaquamscot purchase in 1660; second, in the Westerly purchase in 1661; third, in the East Greenwich purchase in 1677. These tracts reached across southern Rhode Island from Westerly to Narragansett Bay. Their purchases also included Connannicut Island and Dutch Island, in the Bay, besides large tracts on the island of Rhode Island, where the original settlement was made. Soon after the first settlement of Rhode Island, the Peckhams bought a tract of land one mile square in Little Compton, on which they buit a house in 1640,which stood two hundred years and in which six generations of Peckhams were born. Their purchases also extended into Dartmouth, Massachusetts, to the Acushnet River, where a part of the city of New Bedford now stands. The great-grandchildren of John Peckham were among the settlers of Stonington and other towns of eastern Connecticutt; Westerly, Charlestown, Hopkinton, North and South Kingstown, East Greenwich, Scituate, Gloucester, Providence, Jamestown, Newport, Middletown, Portsmouth, Tiverton and Little Compton, R. I.; and Darmouth, Westport, New Bedford, Rehoboth and Petersham, Massachusetts. The succeeding generation migrated to Dutchess County and central New York.
In a deed dated May 30, 1651, from Joshua Coggeshall and his mother, Mary Coggeshall, to Walter Connigrave, the land is described as bounded "on land granted to Mary Clarke, now deceased, sometime the wife of John Peckham."
The grant referred to was made previous to 1644. Mary Clarke was the sister of the five brothers, Carew, Thomas, Jeremiah, John and Joseph, and was born in 1607. It is not known where or when she was married, or when she died. The date of John Peckham's second marriage, the surname of his second wife, and the date of his death, are also unknown. There are reasons for believing that Mary Clarke was the mother of his sons John,Thomas and William. (The above was written by Stephen Farnum Peckham, A. M., of New York City, NY in 1903.) | Peckham John (I53946)
|
| 6646 |
John Santee (sometimes spelled Santer) was commissioned Captain, Northampton Company, Pennslyvania Militia on Sept. 5, 1776. His war records can be found in the PA Archives, Sec. Series, p. 199, vol. 13. He died near Easton while on furlough and was buried at Hecktown, Pennslyvania. He was married to Catherine Requa Smith and was a farmer when not in the military. | Santee John (I54213)
|
| 6647 |
John took the freeman's oath at Eastham 5 June 1684 and resided there most of his life except for a short period at Piscataway, NJ where his wife's parents also moved. He was 54 years old when he died in Eastham, MA.
An inventory of the estate of John Snow of Eastham, deceased was taken 4 April 1692 and sworn to by Mary Snow. "Relict of sd deceased," 20 April 1692. Settlement proceedings the day before included the usual widow's thirds for Mary "and ye Rest of said personal estate for bringing up ye children of Sd deceased Saving her paying to each of the Daughters four pounds apeece as they com to be of age or married: and the Sons of sd deceased to have the Lands and Housing...." | Snow John (I53344)
|
| 6648 |
John was 60 years old when he died at Duck Creek, Kent County, Delaware. He settled at Truro on property given to his father by grandfather Nicholas Snow. John bought land at Lebanon, CT in 1710-11 and was founder of the Truro Church (Truro, Barnstable County, MA) 1 November 1711. Elizabeth Snow, wife of John, was admitted to the church 30 August 1713. He served as deacon from 1717/18 to 1726/27 and as Truro's town clerk. On 20, November 1721, Deacon John Snow, wife, Elizabeth and son, Joshua witnessed the will of Joseph Young of Truro; she swore as to attestation on 30 January 1722/23 and Deacon John swore 4 July 1723. On 11 January 1726/7 he was chosen ruling elder of the Truro Church. On 31 March 1728, he was "discarded for suspected adultery and other misdemeanors." Probably as result of his troubles, he moved ca 1728 to Duck Creek (now Smyrna), Kent Co. DE where his brothers, Elisha and Isaac had settled in 1711. John was there by 7 May 1729 when brother Isaac sold him 246 acres on the north side of the southwest branch of Duck Creek. John conveyed this tract to brother Elisha 11 Nov. 1734, with brother Isaac serving as witness and no spouse participating.
The will of John Snow of Kent Co. Delaware, dated 9 oct 1738 and proved 14 Oct. 1738, mentioned wife, Hannah and son David; brother, Isaac was named executor, and witnesses were Elisha Snow, Abraham Cockrill and Thomas Harrod.
The first wife, Elizabeth apparently remained on Cape Cod. She may be the Elizabeth Snow whose cattle mark was recorded at Truro 29 April 1736. No record of divorce or probate has been found for her. John's children by his first wife appear to have remained on Cape cod and were not mentioned in his Delaware will. They are identified in a family record prepared by his grandson, Dr. Samuel Nye (1749-1834) as follows:
"Children of my maternal grandfather; Joshua Snow, Isaac, Anthony, Amasa, Ambrose, John, Elizha, Mrs. Annable (Elizabeth Snow), Mrs. Young and Mary Nye." | Snow John (I53489)
|
| 6649 |
John was a banker. | Santee John (I54047)
|
| 6650 |
John was a loyalist and suffered the lost of his lands during the Revolution. He returned to England during the War and died there in 1797. | Vassall John (I50274)
|
| 6651 |
John was a Millwright. | Powers John (I52137)
|
| 6652 |
John was aboard his brother Joseph's ship, "Anna", circa 1808, when he died at sea. He died on a passage home from Turk's Island in the Bahamas. | Annable John (I53657)
|
| 6653 |
John was born in Franklin, Minnesota having lived in Stillwater, MN,
St. Paul, MN, W. Dundee, IL, Muskegon, MI and Joliet, IL before
moving to Wayne, NJ in 1972.
John graduated from St. Agnes High School, St. Paul, MN with the
class of 1959. He went on to receive his Bachelor of Science degree
in Chemistry from College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, MN with the class
of 1963.
John was a chemist for thirty four years having worked for GAF
Corporation, Wayne, NJ for the past two years and previously the
Witco Corporation Paterson, NJ and Richardson Chemical Corporation,
West Paterson, NJ.
John had a love of family, gardening, photography and wood-working. | FREEMAN John McDonough (I3124)
|
| 6654 |
John was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts on 8.11.70, which translates to 8 January 1670. [1] "One of the first settlers to explore the wilderness around Mt. Monadnock, NH. He was a famous scouting officer, leading more than sixty parties, transversing large areas to the north, east and west." "Jabez FAIRBANK's father, and brothers Joshua and Jonathan died in the Indian raids of 10 Feb 1676 that destroyed the town of Lancaster, and of 11 Sep 1697. His brother Jonas died earlier, within days, leaving Jabez as the only male heir with male offspring. He was the means of saving the rest of the Lancaster Garrison, saving many lives, including that of his little son Joseph. Outside the garrison 21 were killed and 6 carried away into captivity, of whom 5 were returned."
"Gen. Daniel Gookin states that this bloody foray was headed by a one-eyed chief of the Nipmucks, named John Monoco "who lived near Lancaster before the war began," and that he had twenty of Philip's men with him. The bold incursion of one-eyed John was but the prelude to tragedy of February 10th. Of the plan for the destruction of Lancaster in all its details, even to the very day assigned for its accomplishment, the colonial authorities were fully advised; yet with a neglect that seems criminally strange, they did almost nothing to ward off the blow. Of the aboriginal possessors of Nashaway, none better deserves to be honored among us than that Indian scout, whose courage, skill and fidelity should have saved the town from the massacre of 1676, James Quanapaug, alias James Wiser, also known as Quenepenett or Quannapohit."
"In the year 1700 he had lands laid out to him "on both sides of Dane's Brook above Thomas Sawyer's sawmill. This site became the home of the Fairbanks, and so remained for a hundred years or more."
He was elected as a representative to the General Court in 1714, 1721, 1722, and 1723.
Burial: Old Settlers Burial Yard, Lancaster, Worcester, Mass.
gravestone reads: "In Memory of Lieut Jabaz Fairbank who died in March 1758 Aged about 84 Years. Mrs. Mary his first wife died in March 1718 aged 42 years. Mrs. Elizabeth his 2nd wife died May ye 11, 1755 Aged 80 years 7 months." | FAIRBANKS Jabez (I57738)
|
| 6655 |
John was buried in Momence Cemetery, Momence, Illinois. He died suddenly at the age of 55 yrs. 2 mos. 6 days of a heart attack. At one time he was a school teacher, sold real estate for one year and was a farmer. His daughter, Ruby often told the story that he had come out of court as a juror and mentioned to a fellow-juror
"that one never knows when one's time is up." Minutes later, he suffered his fatal heart attack.
Born in the Momence area of Kankakee County, he graduated from Momence High School and went on to Valporaso State Teacher's College in Valporaso, Indiana. He taught one-room schools in Momence and the Grant Park areas for years. He later became a school board member of several schools where his daughter, Ruby later taught. One of the schools was Point School. Ruby also taught at Bebeetown and Clapsaddle Schools.
John and Delia discovered she was pregnant with their first child, Harold and rushed into marriage. Unfortunately, little Harold died almost on his first birthday of spinal meningitus. They buried him in an unmarked grave next to his grandparents, Thomas and Rosella O'Connell, also in Momence Cemetery. His birth and death were not discovered until after the death of both parents when an aunt told Ruby of the child. Because of the "disgrace" of having to get married, it was kept a family secret for over 70 years, unknown to the rest of John and Delia's children.
John was a well-respected citizen of Momence and Grant Park communities.
He and his brother, Theodore owned large farms that were left to them by their father, John W. Wilson (Johannes Olsson). He raised corn and chickens, selling the eggs and meat to the local stores.
They lived in several places; the last one, a house in the town of Grant Park (Kankakee Co.) located on the Dixie Highway, almost across the street from a park. | Wilson John Wilhelm (I53048)
|
| 6656 |
John was from Richmond, Cheshire Co. NH at the time of his marriage to Laura Wright. | Scott John (I51583)
|
| 6657 |
John was listed as living in Papaneau Township, Iroqoise county, IL in the Tax Records census of 1890. Also listed was his brother, Guilford (G. D.) Brown and a Sarah Brown.
ILLINOIS CIVIL WAR DETAIL REPORT
Name BROWN, JOHN
Rank PVT Company H Unit 10 IL US CAV
Personal Characteristics
Residence ST ANNE, KANKAKEE CO, IL Age 25 Height 5' 9 1/2 Hair LIGHT
Eyes BLUE Complexion FAIR Marital Status N/A Occupation FARMER
Nativity NY
Service Record
Joined When SEP 23, 1861 Joined Where SPRINGFIELD, IL
Joined By Whom THOS S CRAFTON Period 3 YRS
Muster In NOV 25, 1861 Muster In Where CAMP BUTLER, IL
Muster In By Whom N/A Muster Out N/A
Muster Out Where N/A Muster Out By Whom N/A
Remarks REENLISTED AS A VETERAN | Brown John (I52953)
|
| 6658 |
John's birthdate and time he came to England from Normandy, France is unknown. His birthdate is somewhere around 1525-1530 and he lived in Rinart by Cany in Normandy, France.
The following is from "The Vassalls of New England" by Edward Doubleday Harris, published in Albany in 1862:
"He was a descendant of an ancient French family, traced back, it is claimed, to the eleventh century, of the house of Du Vassall, Barons de Guerden, in Querci, Perigord." | Vassall John (I50363)
|
| 6659 |
John, age, 50, was living with his mother in Horseheads, Chemung County, NY in 1910. She was a widow and he had never married at this point. He was a laborer working on bridge construction. Both could read and write. | McDonald John S. (I52856)
|
| 6660 |
John, born in Normany, France, was of Ratcliffe, Stepney and of Eastwood, Essex, England. He was married three times at St. Dunstan, Stepney Parish, Co. Middlesex, England. He was an alderman in London and a vestryman of Stepney where all three of his marriages took place.. He is the first of the Vassalls of whom there is any definite information. John, a man of great wealth, was an alderman of London, and in 1588 fitted out and commanded two ships of war, with which he joined the Royal Navy to oppose the Spanish armada. He was the descendant of an ancient French family, traced back, it is claimed, to the eleventh century, of the house of Du Vassall, Barons de Guerden, in Querci, Perigord. By his 1st marriage,he had one son. Four sons and one daughter by
his 2nd marriage and 2 sons and four daughters by his third marriage.
,
According to Adventurers of Purse & Person, Virginia 1607-1624/5 by Virginia M. Meyer/John Frederick Dorman, 1987 (Abstracted):
John VASSALL was a subscriber for two shares of stock in the Virginia Company with an investment of £25.10.0 in 1618, and was the son of John VASSALL, a Huguenot of Normandy, sent into England by his father because of the troubles in France. In 1588 John, of county Essex, England, fitted out at his own expense and commanded two ships, the Samuel and the Little Toby, to help repel the Spanish Armada. The arms granted to him by Queen Elizabeth I in consequence of this service were adopted by his family thereafter n place of those used by his French forebears. John VASSALL m (1), 25 Sept. 1569, Anne HEWES [HUGHES], who died without issue, (2), 4 Sept. 1580, Anne RUSSELL of Ratcliffe, Co Middlesex, buried 5 May 1593, and (3), 27 March 1594, Judith (BOROUGH [ABOROUGH]) Scott, daughter of Stephen BOROUGH and his wife Joan OVERYE of Stepney and of Chatham, County Kent, and widow of Thomas SCOTT of Colchester, County Essex. John VASSALL was an alderman of London and also a vestryman in Stepney Parish, Co Middlesex, where his three marriages took place. In a deposition made in 1610, John VASSALL described himself as of Eastwood, Essex, and aged 62. He died 13 Sept. 1625 of the plague and was buried at St. Dunstan, Stepney. His will, dated 29 April 1625, proved 16 Sept. 1625, named his wife Judith and his children. His wife, Judith VASSALL of Eastwood, Co Essex, died testate, her will dated 09 Nov. 1638, proved Jan. 1638/9.
John was one of the builders and owners of the ship, "Mayflower" who in 1588, commanded by one Edward Banks, took part in chasing the Spanish Armada up the Channel. She was commissioned and financed on that occasion by the City of London. John Vassll, then of Stepney, moved in 1591 to Leigh-on-the-Sea, near Southend, at the mouth of the Thames. A Mayflower of Leigh appears in the London port books of 1606, taking a cargo of cloth for Middelburg in Holland; her master was Robert Bonner of Leigh. A year later, Robert Bonner was listed as master of the Mayflower of London, unloading cargo of wine from Bordeaux. In 1608 Bonner was listed as master of the Josian, whose master in 1606 and 1607 was Christopher Jones. In 1609, Jones appeared as master and quarter owner of the Mayflower of London. The Mayflower was chartered for her crossing to New England some two weeks after Tuesday, May 23, 1620 after she docked in London from a recent trip to LaRochelle, France.
Issue of John VASSALL by Anne RUSSELL included Judith, baptized 25 March 1582; d after 29 April 1625; married John FREEBORNE of Prittlewell, Essex (will dated 27 Jan. 1617/8, proved 17 Feb. 1617/8); Samuel; John, born 14 March 1589/90, died 30 Aug. 1591; and William. By his third wife, Judith BORROUGHS (Scott), John VASSALL left issue: Anna, born 10 Jan. 1595/6, buried 24 July 1640, married John JONES, rector of St. Nicholas Acons, London, who died 14 May 1636 at Highgate, Middlesex; Rachel, who m Peter ANDREWES of Ratcliffe, Middlesex (d 1650); Stephen, who matriculated Pembroke College, Cambridge, 1616, with a B.A. 1619/20, and an M.A. 1623, later the rector of Rayleigh, Essex, died 1643, married (1) Mary BROMLEY of Orsett, Essex (d 30 Jan. 1632/3), and (2) Mary GRUBB(E) of St. Alban's , Hertfordshire, b 2 Jan. 1614/5, who resided at Rayleigh when she made a deposition in 1646, aged 30; Thomas, born 7 April 1602, of St. Leonard, Eastcheap, London, when he married and of Whitechapel, London, in 1651, who m 27 June 1625 at St. Nicholas Acons, London, Anne DICKENSON; Mary, who married Edward WEST of Ratcliffe, a mariner; Elizabeth, born 1607, of Ratcliffe, Middlesex, m, 20 Jan. 1625/6 at St. Nicholas Acons, London, Henry CHURCH, born 1602, of Wapping, Middlesex.
Footnotes
1. Thomas Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston; Containging exact Transcripts of Inscriptions on the Sepulchural Monuments in the King's Chapel Burial Ground, in the City of Boston, (Boston:1853), 228.
2. Francis Dillon, The Pilgrims, (New York:1975), 124; Edward Doubleday Harris, The Vassalls of New England and Their Immediate Descendants; (Albany:1862), 3 [hereinafter The Vassalls of New England ]; Reprinted in the New England Historical and Genealogical Rigister, 1863, Vol. XVII, 56 [hereinafter NHGR]; Winsor,The Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 1630-1880, 4 vols (Boston:1882), 2:544.[hereinafter MHB ];
3. Savage, Dictionary of First Settlers , 4:367; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 138, 228; Thomas Hutchinson, The History of the Colony of Massachuste's Bay (London:1765), 17; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 3; NHGR, Vol. XVII, 56; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 138-139, 229.
4. Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Reprinted in: Noel B. Livingston, Sketch Pedigrees of Some of the Early Settlers in Jamaica, (Jamacia: 1909) p. 83,84 [hereinafter Early Settlers of Jamaica; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 5; NHGR, Vol. XVII. 58.
5. Livingston, Early Settlers of Jamaica, 76; Braintree Massachusetts, Town Records 1640-1793; Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 6; NHGR, Vol. XVII. 59; Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Suffolk County Wills 10 June 1737, excerpt reprinted in, Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 7-8; NHGR, Vol. XVII.
6. Henry Flynt, diary (Harvard University Archives), June 30, 1733; Jonathan Belcher, Letter Book (Mass. Hist. Soc.); Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 10; NHGR, Vol. XVII; Winsor, MHB, 3:111; Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts. 1630, 130-132, 187 with a Genealogical Register, (Boston:1877), 461, 674 [hereinafter History of Cambridge ]; Early Files in the Mass. Hist. Soc., Collections, series 6, VII, 426-438; Provincial Papers of New Hampshire, Concord, 1867-1944, VI, 43, 45; Journals of the House of Representatives of Massachusetts, Boston, 1747, June 24, 1747; Middlesex Probate Volume 25:63, 354, 356; 40:154; 44:201, 291, 295; 47:213, 391; 49:79-84; Middlesex Probate 44:291-296; Middlesex Registry of Probate 44: 201;Compiled by Thomas Baldwin, Vital Records of Cambridge Massachusetts To The Year 1850, Volume 1, Births, 722.
7. Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 17 ; NHGR, Vol. XVII.
John, born in Normany, France, was of Ratcliffe, Stepney and of Eastwood, Essex, England. He was married three times at St. Dunstan, Stepney Parish, Co. Middlesex, England. He was an alderman in London and a vestryman of Stepney where all three of his marriages took place.. He is the first of the Vassalls of whom there is any definite information. John, a man of great wealth, was an alderman of London, and in 1588 fitted out and commanded two ships of war, with which he joined the Royal Navy to oppose the Spanish armada. He was the descendant of an ancient French family, traced back, it is claimed, to the eleventh century, of the house of Du Vassall, Barons de Guerden, in Querci, Perigord. By his 1st marriage,he had one son. Four sons and one daughter by
his 2nd marriage and 2 sons and four daughters by his third marriage.
,
According to Adventurers of Purse & Person, Virginia 1607-1624/5 by Virginia M. Meyer/John Frederick Dorman, 1987 (Abstracted):
John VASSALL was a subscriber for two shares of stock in the Virginia Company with an investment of £25.10.0 in 1618, and was the son of John VASSALL, a Huguenot of Normandy, sent into England by his father because of the troubles in France. In 1588 John, of county Essex, England, fitted out at his own expense and commanded two ships, the Samuel and the Little Toby, to help repel the Spanish Armada. The arms granted to him by queen Elizabeth I in consequence of this service were adopted by his family thereafter n place of those used by his French forebears. John VASSALL m (1), 25 Sept. 1569, Anne HEWES [HUGHES], who died without issue, (2), 4 Sept. 1580, Anne RUSSELL of Ratcliffe, Co Middlesex, buried 5 May 1593, and (3), 27 March 1594, Judith (BOROUGH [ABOROUGH]) Scott, daughter of Stephen BOROUGH and his wife Joan OVERYE of Stepney and of Chatham, County Kent, and widow of Thomas SCOTT of Colchester, County Essex. John VASSALL was an alderman of London and also a vestryman in Stepney Parish, Co Middlesex, where his three marriages took place. In a deposition made in 1610, John VASSALL described himself as of Eastwood, Essex, and aged 62. He died 13 Sept. 1625 of the plague and was buried at St. Dunstan, Stepney. His will, dated 29 April 1625, proved 16 Sept. 1625, named his wife Judith and his children. His wife, Judith VASSALL of Eastwood, Co Essex, died testate, her will dated 09 Nov. 1638, proved Jan. 1638/9.
Issue of John VASSALL by Anne RUSSELL included Judith, baptized 25 March 1582; d after 29 April 1625; married John FREEBORNE of Prittlewell, Essex (will dated 27 Jan. 1617/8, proved 17 Feb. 1617/8); Samuel; John, born 14 March 1589/90, died 30 Aug. 1591; and William. By his third wife, Judith BORROUGHS (Scott), John VASSALL left issue: Anna, born 10 Jan. 1595/6, buried 24 July 1640, married John JONES, rector of St. Nicholas Acons, London, who died 14 May 1636 at Highgate, Middlesex; Rachel, who m Peter ANDREWES of Ratcliffe, Middlesex (d 1650); Stephen, who matriculated Pembroke College, Cambridge, 1616, with a B.A. 1619/20, and an M.A. 1623, later the rector of Rayleigh, Essex, died 1643, married (1) Mary BROMLEY of Orsett, Essex (d 30 Jan. 1632/3), and (2) Mary GRUBB(E) of St. Alban's , Hertfordshire, b 2 Jan. 1614/5, who resided at Rayleigh when she made a deposition in 1646, aged 30; Thomas, born 7 April 1602, of St. Leonard, Eastcheap, London, when he married and of Whitechapel, London, in 1651, who m 27 June 1625 at St. Nicholas Acons, London, Anne DICKENSON; Mary, who married Edward WEST of Ratcliffe, a mariner; Elizabeth, born 1607, of Ratcliffe, Middlesex, m, 20 Jan. 1625/6 at St. Nicholas Acons, London, Henry CHURCH, born 1602, of Wapping, Middlesex.
Footnotes
1. Thomas Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston; Containging exact Transcripts of Inscriptions on the Sepulchural Monuments in the King's Chapel Burial Ground, in the City of Boston, (Boston:1853), 228.
2. Francis Dillon, The Pilgrims, (New York:1975), 124; Edward Doubleday Harris, The Vassalls of New England and Their Immediate Descendants; (Albany:1862), 3 [hereinafter The Vassalls of New England ]; Reprinted in the New England Historical and Genealogical Rigister, 1863, Vol. XVII, 56 [hereinafter NHGR]; Winsor,The Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 1630-1880, 4 vols (Boston:1882), 2:544.[hereinafter MHB ];
3. Savage, Dictionary of First Settlers , 4:367; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 138, 228; Thomas Hutchinson, The History of the Colony of Massachuste's Bay (London:1765), 17; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 3; NHGR, Vol. XVII, 56; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 138-139, 229.
4. Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Reprinted in: Noel B. Livingston, Sketch Pedigrees of Some of the Early Settlers in Jamaica, (Jamacia: 1909) p. 83,84 [hereinafter Early Settlers of Jamaica; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 5; NHGR, Vol. XVII. 58.
5. Livingston, Early Settlers of Jamaica, 76; Braintree Massachusetts, Town Records 1640-1793; Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Bridgman, Memorials of the Dead in Boston, 229; Harris, The Vassalls of New England, 6; NHGR, Vol. XVII. 59; Winsor, MHB, 2:544; Suffolk County Wills 10 June 1737, excerpt reprinted in, Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 7-8; NHGR, Vol. XVII.
6. Henry Flynt, diary (Harvard University Archives), June 30, 1733; Jonathan Belcher, Letter Book (Mass. Hist. Soc.); Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 10; NHGR, Vol. XVII; Winsor, MHB, 3:111; Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts. 1630, 130-132, 187 with a Genealogical Register, (Boston:1877), 461, 674 [hereinafter History of Cambridge ]; Early Files in the Mass. Hist. Soc., Collections, series 6, VII, 426-438; Provincial Papers of New Hampshire, Concord, 1867-1944, VI, 43, 45; Journals of the House of Representatives of Massachusetts, Boston, 1747, June 24, 1747; Middlesex Probate Volume 25:63, 354, 356; 40:154; 44:201, 291, 295; 47:213, 391; 49:79-84; Middlesex Probate 44:291-296; Middlesex Registry of Probate 44: 201;Compiled by Thomas Baldwin, Vital Records of Cambridge Massachusetts To The Year 1850, Volume 1, Births, 722.
7. Harris,The Vassalls of New England, 17 ; NHGR, Vol. XVII. | Vassall John (I50301)
|
| 6661 |
John, nicknamed Jack, never married but lived with his widowed mother all her life. After her death, he continued to live in the family home which was a large two-story home in Grant Park, owned by him and his two brothers, Gaylord and Wayne.
Gaylord and Dorothy lived downstairs and Jack and his mother lived in the apartment upstairs. It was fixed into an apartment after Gaylord and Dorothy married so they could have the downstairs part of the house.
Jack entered St. Mary's hospital with a condition thought to be heart failure. It turned out to be a Peptic ulcer that had ulcerated and perferated the wall of his stomach. The doctor who treated him was a foreign doctor from Pakistan and misdiagnosed his condition. This was the second time this doctor had done this to one of the Wilson brothers. The first misdiagnosis was Wayne's condition. He told him he was suffering a liver condition when it was indeed heart failure. This mistake was caught by his nephew, Dr. John Mortensen on a visit from the state of Washington. Wayne was immediately taken to the Veteran's Hospital where he underwent heart surgery and a pacemaker implanted in his chest. Unfortunately, being a small town where most doctors do not want to practice, it is a haven for foreigners who would have a tough time getting into practices in larger cities. Most of the townspeople are left to the mercy of these doctors.
Because of the tragic misdiagnosis, Jack succombed to the infection caused by the perferation to the stomach wall. He was under the impression when he entered the hospital, he would be returning home shortly and begged his niece, Sonja Abate, to take him home. It was just a matter of days, when he passed away.
Jack is buried in the Wilson plot at the Momence Cemetery, Momence, Illinois. Before the (WWII) war, Jack was always the family clown but after returning from the war, he had changed. No longer the family clown, he became a very serious young man.
He worked all his life in a factory in the middle of downtown, Grant Park. He was a PFC US Army, WW II.
Social Security number is 329-07-7311 issued in IL. | Wilson John Woodrow (I53025)
|
| 6662 |
John, who came to New England with his parents in June, 1635 on the Blessing. He was on the 1643 ATBA for Scituate and in 1652 was a lieutenant of the militia under Capt. James Cudworth, later became a Colonel in Carolina, Virginia and Jamaica. He sold his New England holdings by 1661 and left the colony for Jamaica, West Indies where he lived the rest of his life.
He also engaged in the settlement of Cape Fear, North Carolina, was appointed Surveryor General of "Our County of Clarendon" by the Proprietors, 24 Nov. 1664, and in as "Colonel" John Vassall he was chosen as guardian, on 24 Feb. 1670/71, by his nephew John Ware.
Col. John Vassall married Anna Lewis, daughter of John Lewis, and English resident of Genoa. On 17 Dec. 1671, John Vassall gave power of attorney to his wife, Anna, and Edward Lewis, had apparently left Virginia by 17 March 1672/73 when his wife was acting in his behalf, and clearly was away by 9 Apr. 1674. His plantation of 1170 acres in Old Rappahannock County, now Essex County, which he bought from John Weir, 7 Jan 1667/68, was sold to Mrs. Honoria Weir, 13 July 1671. He was a resident of Jamaica when he made his will, 19 Aug. 1684-6 and July 1685, which mentions his wife and children. His widow was naturalized in Jamaica, 20 July 1685 and was buried 23 Feb. 1719/20. (Will dated 20 Feb. 1719/20, proved 2 April 1720.)
According to "The Vassalls of New England", pg 5, he was the son of Samuel (born 1586). However, this is incorrect according to the "Vassall Pedigree", Second Appendix, he is the son of William (born 1592) unless he was adopted by William. The following is also from "The Vassalls of New England" pg 5:
"John Vassall married Anna, the daughter of John Lewis, an English resident of Genoa. He early settled in Jamaica, West Indies, and there died. His widow survived him and died between 1723 and 1725."
BIOGRAPHY: "The Vassalls of New England" states, pg 5: In 1643 his name is on the militia roll of Scituate; freeholder in 1647; lieutenant under Cudworth in 1652; and later, bore the rank of captain. December 16, 1652, he sold his house in Boston, with land attached, to Mark Hands, "Naylor," for L59. In 1661 he sold his Scituate estates and removed, it is supposed, to the West Indies, but later, according to Savage, "was engaged in the settlement at Cape fear, N. C., and in 1657 applied for relief here to be sent to himself and followers."
John, who came to New England with his parents in June, 1635 on the Blessing. He was on the 1643 ATBA for Scituate and in 1652 was a lieutenant of the militia under Capt. James Cudworth, later became a Colonel in Carolina, Virginia and Jamaica. He sold his New England holdings by 1661 and left the colony for Jamaica, West Indies where he lived the rest of his life.
He also engaged in the settlement of Cape Fear, North Carolina, was appointed Surveryor General of "Our County of Clarendon" by the Proprietors, 24 Nov. 1664, and in as "Colonel" John Vassall he was chosen as guardian, on 24 Feb. 1670/71, by his nephew John Ware.
Col. John Vassall married Anna Lewis, daughter of John Lewis, and English resident of Genoa. On 17 Dec. 1671, John Vassall gave power of attorney to his wife, Anna, and Edward Lewis, had apparently left Virginia by 17 March 1672/73 when his wife was acting in his behalf, and clearly was away by 9 Apr. 1674. His plantation of 1170 acres in Old Rappahannock County, now Essex County, which he bought from John Weir, 7 Jan 1667/68, was sold to Mrs. Honoria Weir, 13 July 1671. He was a resident of Jamaica when he made his will, 19 Aug. 1684-6 and July 1685, which mentions his wife and children. His widow was naturalized in Jamaica, 20 July 1685 and was buried 23 Feb. 1719/20. (Will dated 20 Feb. 1719/20, proved 2 April 1720.)
According to "The Vassalls of New England", pg 5, he was the son of Samuel (born 1586). However, this is incorrect according to the "Vassall Pedigree", Second Appendix, he is the son of William (born 1592) unless he was adopted by William. The following is also from "The Vassalls of New England" pg 5:
"John Vassall married Anna, the daughter of John Lewis, an English resident of Genoa. He early settled in Jamaica, West Indies, and there died. His widow survived him and died between 1723 and 1725."
BIOGRAPHY: "The Vassalls of New England" states, pg 5: In 1643 his name is on the militia roll of Scituate; freeholder in 1647; lieutenant under Cudworth in 1652; and later, bore the rank of captain. December 16, 1652, he sold his house in Boston, with land attached, to Mark Hands, "Naylor," for L59. In 1661 he sold his Scituate estates and removed, it is supposed, to the West Indies, but later, according to Savage, "was engaged in the settlement at Cape fear, N. C., and in 1657 applied for relief here to be sent to himself and followers." | Vassall John (I50303)
|
| 6663 |
Joinault/Jouault
PRDH Individual 47916: Leonarde JOUAULT; Status: Immigrant
Birth: St-Martin d'Ige, ev. Sees, Perche (ar. Mortagne, Orne)
Burial: 1652-11-30, Québec
First marriage: before 1637-04-17, France
with
Gervais NORMAND
Father: Francois NORMAND
Mother: Jeanne BOISSEL
PRDH Burial 68782: Québec, 1652-11-30
01 Lienarde LEGUAY; - - d f
• Le rédacteur à omis de signer [The writer omitted to sign]
[[Category:Migrants du Perche au Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category: Québec, Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category:Percheron_Immigration]]
== Biographie ==
{{Migrating Ancestor
| origin = France
| destination = New France
| origin-flag = Flags.png
| destination-flag = Flags-12.png
}}
{{Canada_Nouvelle-France|lang=fr}}'''Léonarde JOUAULT (début XVIIe - 1652?)'''[[http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=15638 PREFEN Fiche 15638, Orignes]][ {{PRDH|Individu|47916}} ][[http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/dicoGenealogie/src/0002/0022/0043/0045/3957-1-422.pdf Tanguay, vol. 1, p. 382]][[https://books.google.com.co/books?id=83RSiE0zuXQC&printsec=copyright#v=onepage&q=Jouault&f=false Normand 1999, pp. 29, 30-32, 130, 295]] [Carpin #141][ [http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Carpin 1999, Annexe D, p. 574]][Numéroté #141 dans la liste de Carpin et dans la liste qu'on peut voir à la page [[:Category:Percheron_Immigration|Percheron Immigration Category]].]
Fille de [[Jonault-1|Guillaume Jonault]] et de [[Creste-58|Gabrielle Creste]], '''Léonarde''' est née en France au début du XVIIe siècle. Elle est originaire de la paroisse Saint-Martin d'[http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igé Igé] située dans le [http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioc%C3%A8se_de_S%C3%A9ez diocèse de Sées] et l'[http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perche_(province) ancienne province du Perche].[Igé ([http://www.insee.fr/fr/methodes/nomenclatures/cog/fichecommunale.asp?codedep=61&codecom=207 INSEE 61207]) est aujourd'hui connu comme la commune française d'Igé située dans le département de l'Orne en région [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normandie_(r%C3%A9gion_administrative) Normandie].]
Elle épousa [[Normand-63|'''Gervais Normand''']], fils de [[Lenormand-4|'''François Normand''']] et de '''[[Gadois-18|Radégonde Gadois''']], le 3 juin 1636 à Igé dans l'église Saint-Martin.[[http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/notices/12535gn.pdf PREFEN Fiche 15638, Notice Complémentaire]][ {{PRDH|Pionnier|47915|lang=fr}} Gervais Normand][Marriage "Igé (paroisse Saint-Martin), Perche, France, Registre paroissial, BMSépultures, 1626–1688", 3NUMECRP207 / EDPT492_6; Archives départementales de l’Orne; Gervais Normand and Léonarde Jouault 3 June 1636 Marriage, image 123 of 160 (last entry); (https://gaia.orne.fr/mdr/index.php/docnumViewer/calculHierarchieDocNum/374740/1057:358061:371693:374740/864/1536).]
Elle migre vers le Canada arrivant à Québec en 1647 avec son époux [[Normand-63|'''Gervais Normand''']], son beau-frère [[Normand-105|'''Jean Normand''']] et son fils [[Normand-27|'''Jean Normand''']]. Il est mentionné pour la première fois au Canada à Québec le 24 février 1650 lors du baptême de sa fille Marie.[[http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=15638&theme=depart PREFEN Fiche 15638, Départ]][[http://www.vt-fcgs.org/leperche.html Lesperance 2002 citant Jetté 1983, p. 853]: "NORMAND, Gervais (Carpenter) with wife Leonarde JOINEAULT, son Jean, and his brother Jean (Carpenter ) departed Ige."] Son neveu [[Normand-73|'''Pierre Normand''' dit '''La Brière''']] migre aussi au Canada en 1657.[ [http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Carpin 1999, Annexe D, p. 577]]
Elle est possiblement inhumée le 30 novembre 1652 à Québec sous le nom de Liénarde Le Guay.[Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec). Registres paroissiaux catholiques 1621-1979, FamilySearch database with images. Québec (Notre-Dame) 1621-1679; baptêmes, mariages, sépultures, image 222/512. (Free account required.) [https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G993-F99Y-F?i=221&wc=HCT2-829%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C19508102&cc=1321742&lang=en FamilySearch]][[http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=15638&theme=nouvFrance PREFEN Fiche 15638, Vie en Nouvelle France]]
Elle avait 212 descendants en 1729.[[https://www.lamemoireduquebec.com/wiki/index.php?title=Normand%2C_Lenormand_%28Gervais%29 La Mémoire du Québec, Gervais Normand]]
==Enfants / Children==Union avec / with [[Normand-63|'''Gervais Normand''']]:
;1. +[[Normand-27|'''Jean''']], b. Igé, (1637 - 1706)
;2. '''Gervais'''], b. Igé, (1641 - )
;3. +'''Charles''' ( - )
;4. +'''Joseph''' ( - )
;5. [[Le_Normand-4|'''Marie''']] (1650 - 1650)
==Sources==
::- [http://www.fichierorigine.com/ Fichier Origine] - Répertoire informatisé de la Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie en partenariat avec la Fédération française de généalogie::- [https://www.prdh-igd.com/fr/leprdh.htm PRDH] - Programme de recherche en démographie historique, Université de Montréal::- [http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/ PREFEN] - Programme de Recherche sur l'Émigration des Français En Nouvelle-France, Université de Caen
:- Carpin, Gervais (1999). [http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Le réseau du Canada. Étude du mode migratoire de la France vers la Nouvelle-France (1628 - 1662)]. Sillery et Paris, Septentrion et Presses de l'université Paris-Sorbonne, vii-552 p.:- [http://www.fichierorigine.com/app/recherche/detail.php?numero=243082 Fichier Origine 243082]: Gervais Normand:- Jetté, René (1983). Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec. Des origines à 1730. Montréal, Les Presses de l’UniversitLesperance, Jerry (December 2002). [http://www.vt-fcgs.org/leperche.html Le Perche], Vermont French-Canadian Genealogical Society:- Normand, Germaine (1999). [https://books.google.fr/books?id=83RSiE0zuXQC&pg=PR6&lpg=PR6&dq=Fonder+foyer+en+Nouvelle-France:+les+Normand+du+Perche&source=bl&ots=zgehpTAeFE&sig=XBzJnVF5Dqvit3G9qLQ1NT3uZg8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=6kbtVI2eFsjDggTCyYGgBA&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=Fonder%20foyer%20en%20Nouvelle-France%3A%20les%20Normand%20du%20Perche&f=false ''Fonder foyer en Nouvelle-France : les Normand du Perche'']. Sainte-Foy: Ed. MultiMondes / Ed. du Trille. ISBN 2-921146-90-8.:- [http://www.perche-quebec.com/files/perche/individus/normand.htm perche-quebec.com]
:- {{PRDH|Individu|47916}} : Léonarde Jouault
:- {{PRDH|Pionnier|47915|lang=fr}} : Gervais Normand:- [http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=15638 PREFEN Fiche 15638]: Léonarde Jouault:- [http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=12535 PREFEN Fiche 12535]: Gervais Normand:-[http://www.biographi.ca/fr/resultats.php/?ft=Tanguay Tanguay, Cyprien]; 1871-1890, [http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/dicoGenealogie/ ''Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes''], 7 volumes | JOUAULT Léonarde (I39668)
|
| 6664 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55494)
|
| 6665 |
Jonah of Taunton, was a settler in Easton in 1717. He was a relative of the Newlands in Norton and lived not far from them. His house was in the extreme southwest part of what is now called Easton, southeast of the Babbitts., on what became the Norton Road. There were at least three houses on the Norton Road between Asa Newcombs and the Norton line. He probably lived in the second or third one.
He married first Joanna Harvey, daughter of Thomas Harvey of Taunton and for a second wife, Abigail Babbit.
In 1757, Josiah (Jonah) was on the Alarm List in Norton, Bristol County, MA, rank of Ensign, in April...under the command of Capt. Simeon Wetherell | Newland Jonah (I52146)
|
| 6666 |
Jonah/Jonas's estate had a warrent for appraisal of his estate on 24th of April, 1771 so he died sometime before that date. He was the son of John and Hannah ....Hamilton. | Hamilton Jonas (I50725)
|
| 6667 |
Jonathon Delano, Jr.of Providence, Saratoga county,NY who on March 11, 1817 was the coroner for this town. In the 1820 Census for Providence, Jonathon is listed as head of household, white male under ten, 1; males ten and under sixteen, 2; males of twenty six year and under forty five, including head of household, 1; white female under ten, 1; white female twenty six but under forty five years, 1; Number of persons engaged in agriculture, 1.
In 1821, the family moved to Orleans County, NY where he worked as a carpenter and a grocer. In 1834, Jonathon moved again to the town of Akron, Erie County,NY and organized the Akron Water Cement Co. He died in Akron on 13 Apr 1843. However, his war pension papers say he died in Newstead, NY.
Index of War of 1812 Pension File by Virgil D. White, page 571:
Delano, Jonothon, Phebe (Hart) WC-2155. Married 24 March 1805 in Saratoga County, NY. Soldier died 13 Apr 1843, Newstead, NY. Wife died 1879. Served as a Captain in the NY Militia, lived in Erie County, NY. | Delano, 4th Jonathon (I53857)
|
| 6668 |
Jonathon lived in New Bedford, Bristol County, MA at the time of his marriage to Sally Whittemore of Rochester, Plymouth County, MA. Will of Jonathon Delano, Jr. Dartmouth, Bristol County, MA Below is the Will of his father, Jonathon Delano, Jr.
In the name of God, Amen.
I, Jonahton Delano, Junior of Dartmouth in the county of Bristol and province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, Marriner, being weak in body but sound and disposing mind and in memory, thanks be to God. Therefore I do make and devise this my last will and testament in manner and form following vs first and principally, I commend my soul into the honor of God that gave it: and my body I commit to the Earth to be decently buried therein at the direction of my Executor. Herein after named and touching my temporal Estate wherewith God hath blessed , I give and dispose thereof as followeth. I will that all my last debts and funeral charges be paid out of my personal estate by my Executor.
Item: I give and bequeath unto my well beloved wife, Lydia Delano, all my personal estate that I have after my just debts and funeral charges are paid to be her and hereafter heirs and assigns for ever. I also give her the profit and improvement on one half of my farm where on my Honoured father and mother now live during the time she remains my widow. All which give her in lue of the right of dowry and prower of thirds and to inable her to bring the chld if she have one born of her body in nine month after a date of these ---?
Item: I give unto my Honoured father and mother: Jonathon Delano and Abigail Delano a profit and improvement of the other half of my farm aforesaid during their natural lives and they allowing my brother, Amasa to live with them.
Item: I give unto my child if my wife hath one born of her body in the nine months after the date of those present all my real estate in the township of Dartmouth to be to said child and to said heirs and ofsprings of the child forever excepting to profit and improvements as above expressed.
Item: Further my will is that if the child before expressed should have no lawful heir before it arrive to the age of twenty one years, not live it self to the age of twenty one years therefor my two brothers Amasa Delano and Stephen Delano to have the aforesaid real estae as the child was to have if it had lived to go to them, their heirs and assigns forever.
Lastly, I do hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my Honoured father, Jonathon Delano of Dartmouth to be my Executor of this my last will and testament: Hereby revoking, disallowing and making void all former Will or Wills by me hereto fore made.
Ratifying and allowing this and no other to be my last Will and Testament in witness Whereof I have there unto set my hand and seal this twenty second day of July in the seventh year of His Majesties Reign, George, the third, King of Great Britten. 22nd of Domini 1767. Signed, Jonathon Delano, Jr.
Signed and Sealed, Published and Declared by the Testator to be his last Will and Testament in the presence of
Signed:
James Smith
Job, Jab or Jabez Moffet ?
Abrham Shearman
At the bottom of the will is written " April 25th 1768 Proved" | Delano, 3rd Jonathon (I53895)
|
| 6669 |
Joseph and his brother,John, settled in Nichols, Tioga Couty, NY along the river flats in the early 1800s. | Annable Joseph (I53437)
|
| 6670 |
Joseph fought in the Civil War in the 189th New York Infantry. He filed for a pension on Feb. 19, 1868., Application NO. 131553, Certificate NO. 337234, Nebraska. His widow applied on Feb. 20, 1888, Nebraska, Application NO. 368011, Certificate NO.337234.
From the National Archives Military Service Records for Joseph B. Loghry: Mustered in on August 13, 1862 in Elmira, New York. 6'1" tall with light hair and grey eyes. He was 19 years old at the time of his enlistment. Private in Company B of the 86th Regiment of the New York Infantry. Saw action at Fredericksburg on December 11, 1862. Wounded at Chancellorville on May 1, 1863 and hospitalized. Wounded again at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. Wounded severely in unnamed battle on May 28, 1864. Gunshot wound on the right side - bullet entered under his sixth rib. Sent to Division Hospital in Alexandria, VA. Made corporal on November 2, 1864. Discharged June 1, 1865 in Washington, D.C. | Loghry Joseph B. (I54150)
|
| 6671 |
Joseph Leander Loghry, generally called "Land Joe", was one of the first settlers of the Brown's Crossing area of the Canisteo Valley. Joseph Loughry, who very early ran a saw-mill on the Canisteo river.
He was a mill owner/operator on the Canisteo River at Brown's Crossing. The mill was below (south) and to the left of the area where the new steel bridge stands today.
He bought, probably of Elisha Brown, the original "proprietor" four hundred acres of land for six shillings per acre. This land lay upon both sides of the Canisteo River and later was included in the farms of George Dawson, Isaac Roosa, Jefferson Hadley and Ira Lane.
At this point he built and operated the saw mill which probably stood on the South bank of the river about 50 rods above the river bridge where there appears to be the outlines of a race.
History says in reference to this family, "Among the early settlers west of Cameron were Andrew and Joseph Loughry, who early ran a sawmill on the river".
Joseph, in his youth was an athlete holding records in his native village near Wilkesbarre, PA. He was born about 1777, and married in Pennsylvania, Mary Santee who was born about 1785, daughter of Valentine Santee of Huntington, Pa. (The above is history written by Stacy Jackson of Steuben County in 1923.)
Brown's Crossing Cemetery is just to the right (north) of the bridge and above the site of the old mill. It is the place where the Brown, Loghry, Santee and Moore families buried their dead. All were related to each other.
Joseph, who died at the age of 54 years, and his wife, Mary, who was 45 at the time of her death, are both buried at Brown's Crossing Cemetery. CANISTEO BROWN'S CROSSING CEMETERY - On County Route 119 Eastbound at Brown's Crossing near the Canisteo/Cameron Town line.
When seen in 1995, the cemetery only had one stone left after the river flooded and washed out gravestones and bodies from their resting places. This one gravestone is that of Isaac Santee.
At one time the river was much larger than today. It was used to transport the settlers coming up the river on flatbed boats and barges moving their cattle, household goods and families from Pennslyvania.
There also was a Michael Loghry, who was one of the five residents in Cameron township, west of Cameron Corners in 1824. It was supposed that he was the father of "Squire Joe" but it is possible that they were brothers.
Michael settled in Cameron at a somewhat later date than did Willaim or "Squire Joe" and that he was from Tyrone, Pa. He married but his wife is not known. He probably died sometime before 1835. Mrs. Loghry married a second time to Mr. VanAuker, generally known in later years as grandfather "Nauker".
Mrs. Hannah Jones of Cameron in 1923 said Mrs. Van Auker died at the home of her son, "Squire Joe Loghry" of Cameron.
It is believed that Michael's children were; "Squire Joe", Andrew, William Anson, and Nancy (Snediker).
There was also a James Loghry who resided in Cameron in 1823. There is no record of him other than he was Town Accountant that year.
WILL OF JOSEPH LEANDER LOGHRY
I, Joseph Loghry of the town of Canisteo in the County of Steuben and State of New York being of sound mind and memory do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following:
To my daughter Nancy Santee, I bequeath the equal and undivided west half of lot No. 115 in the NE quarter of Township no. 4 in 5th Range said lot containing ninety six and one half acres; the east half of said lot No. 115.
I give and bequeath to the heirs of my son William Loghry, the said William to have the use and benefit of said property during his natural life.
To my son Isaac Loghry, I give an bequeath fifty acres of land in the northwest corner of lot No. 104 in Township No. 4 in fifth Range (lately owned?) by John Loghry containing about one hundred and eleven acres.
To my son George Loghry, I bequeath five dollars the residue of my real estate consisting of the homestead on which I now reside together with two-thirds of the saw-mill and all the personal property of whatever name or nature to remain for the support of myself and my aged father during our natural lives and at my death to become the property of my two little daughters Mary Loghry and Lettice Loghry containing about two hundred and eighty acres of land after paying all legal demands which may remain against me and I hereby revoke all other and former wills by me at any heretofore made.
In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the fifteenth day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty. (In the margin on the first page, it is written: To my son Charles, I give the ______ the residence of said lot No. 104.)Joseph Loghry
_________________
There is also a Joseph Loghry buried at the Lower Swale Cemetery, also known as the Peter Drake Burying Ground in Cameron, Steuben County, NY. | Loghry Joseph Leander (I53993)
|
| 6672 |
Joseph Marie was born in 1729[1]
Marriage
Husband: Joseph Caille
Wife: Marguerite Gagne
Marriage:
Date: 14 FEB 1757
Place: LaPrairie, Quebec, Can
Child: Pascal Caille
Data Changed:
Date: 1 APR 2008
Time: 20:19:15
Husband: Antoine Caille-Biscornet
Wife: Jeanne-Francoise Betourne
Marriage:
Date: 27 APR 1717
Place: LaPrairie, Quebec, Can
Child: Joseph Caille
Data Changed:
Date: 1 APR 2008
Time: 20:19:15
Joseph was born about 1729. He passed away in 1778.
Sources
↑ Birth, Death, Marriage, Parents Programme de Recherche en Démographie Historique, Université de Montréal (paid subscription) PRDH | CAILLE Joseph Marie (I60339)
|
| 6673 |
Joseph married Milcah Ludden in 1788 but died shortly after in Worthington,
Mass. leaving an infant son, Joseph Jr. Joseph Jr. was the only grandson
mentioned in his grandfather, Abner's will. | Brown Joseph L. (I50746)
|
| 6674 |
Joseph Miville was born on 14 Apr 1695 and baptized the 176th in Notre-Dame-de-Liesse parish of Rivière-Ouelle, Canada, Nouvelle-France. His parents were Jean Miville dit Deschênes and Marie Madeleine Dubé. Godparents at the infant's baptism were Mathurin Dubé and Marie Madeleine Bouchard. The officiating priest was J. Bernard de Requeleyne.[1]
Marriage
Joseph Miville married Marie Jeanne Lévesque, daughter of François Robert Lévesque and Marie Charlotte Aubert, on 31 Aug 1722 in Notre-Dame-de-Liesse parish of Rivière-Ouelle, Province of Québec. In the presence of known witnesses Charles Miville, Robert Mivlle, Joseph Lévesque, and Joachim Lévesque. The celebrant priest was Maurice Imbault.[2]
Death and Burial
Joseph Dechêne passed away on 30 July 1780 being given the age of around 86 years on the record. His burial was the following day in Notre-Dame-de-Liesse parish cemetery of Rivière-Ouelle, Province of Québec.[3]
Sources
↑ Baptism IGD
↑ Marriage IGD
↑ Burial IGD
Actes d'état civil et registres d'église du Québec (Collection Drouin), 1621 à 1997 - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection: Institut Généalogique Drouin IGD (membership) https://www.genealogiequebec.com
Baptism - "Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1971-28029-14172-47?cc=1321742 : accessed 5 October 2015), Rivière-Ouelle > Notre-Dame-de-Liesse > Index des baptêmes 1685-1877 Index des sépultures 1681, 1685-1876 Index des mariages 1685-1872 Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1681, 1685-1750 > image 363 of 659; nos paroisses de Église Catholique, Quebec (Catholic Church parishes, Quebec).
Marriage - "Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1942-28029-13963-31?cc=1321742 : accessed 5 October 2015), Rivière-Ouelle > Notre-Dame-de-Liesse > Index des baptêmes 1685-1877 Index des sépultures 1681, 1685-1876 Index des mariages 1685-1872 Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1681, 1685-1750 > image 495 of 659; nos paroisses de Église Catholique, Quebec (Catholic Church parishes, Quebec).
Death - "Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1942-28029-28399-38?cc=1321742 : accessed 5 October 2015), Rivière-Ouelle > Notre-Dame-de-Liesse > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1751-1796 > image 287 of 739; nos paroisses de Église Catholique, Quebec (Catholic Church parishes, Quebec).
Tree: Nos Origines | DESHESNES Joseph Miville dit (I57750)
|
| 6675 |
Joseph moved along with five of his brothers to Whitingham, VT sometime around 1800. His death in Cavendish, VT is not certain, according to an ancestor of his. He is thought to have died in Whitingham, Vt. | Brown Joseph (I51465)
|
| 6676 |
Joseph probably served in the French War and perhaps died while in
service in 1758. Sarah, his widow, appointed administrator Feb. 22,
1759, acknowledged receipt of 5.14.8 pounds for "his services in ye
expedition". He left a dwelling house and 17 rods of land in Ipswich,
#25 old pewter, etc.
He is buried in Warren, New York. | PULSIFER Joseph (I7511)
|
| 6677 |
Joseph Rogers Cemetery was visited by Louis V. Head, ancester of William H. and Mary Annable, in July, 1994. He found the cemetery heavily overgrown with trees and heavy brush and vines. Penetrating the overgrowth from the north west corner, just inside the fence line, a tombstone lying on a fallen fence post read "William W. Annable Dec. 20, 1857". The cemetery lies on a hill directly across the road from a nice brick bungalow which is also placed on a hill. The overgrowth and the mosquitoes discouraged and further exploration! (Words by Louis V. Head) | Hughson Mary H. (I53183)
|
| 6678 |
Joseph Soucy #2834
!MARRIAGE: Contract with notary Janneau, on Jan. 5 172732 | Family: SOUCY Joseph / MIGNIER Madeleine (F9124)
|
| 6679 |
Joseph was born in 1792. He passed away in 1871.
Joseph, son of Michel Chandonne & Claire Maillot, was baptized on 9 April 1792 in Deschaillons-Sur-Saint-Laurent, Lower Canada.[1]
Joseph married Angèle Bibeau on 9 Feb1813 in Lotbinière,Lower Canada.[2][3]
In the 1851 census, Joseph was in Nicolet, Canada East (Quebec), Canada.[4]
Sources
↑ Baptism: "Quebec, Canada, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1968"
Institut Généalogique Drouin; Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Drouin Collection; Author: Gabriel Drouin, Comp
Ancestry Sharing Link - Ancestry ca Record 1091 #14879532 (accessed 30 January 2025)
Joseph Chandonne baptism on 9 Apr 1792, son of Michel Chandonne & Claire Maillot, in Deschaillons-Sur-Saint-Laurent (Deschaillons-sur-St-Laurent), Québec (Quebec), Canada.
↑ Marriage: "Quebec, Canada, Notarial Records, 1637-1935"
Bibliothèque Et Archives Nationales Du Québec; Montréal, Quebec, Canada; Collection: Fonds Cour Supérieure. District Judiciaire De Québec. Cote Cn301. Greffes De Notaires, 1626-1962.; District: Quebec City; Title: Chavigny De La Chevrotière, Ambroise (1804-1834)
Ancestry Sharing Link - Ancestry ca Record 61062 #480342 (accessed 30 January 2025)
Joseph Chandon marriage to Angèle Bibeau on 22 Jan 1813.
↑ Marriage: "Quebec, Canada, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1968"
Institut Généalogique Drouin; Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Drouin Collection; Author: Gabriel Drouin, Comp
Ancestry Sharing Link - Ancestry ca Record 1091 #5504559 (accessed 30 January 2025)
Joseph Chandioni marriage to Marie Archange Bibeau in 1813 in Lotbiniere (Lotbinière), Québec (Quebec), Canada.
↑ 1851 Census: "1851 Census of Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia"
Year: 1851; Census Place: Nicolet, Canada East (Quebec); Schedule: A; Roll: C-1131; Page: 31; Line: 7
Ancestry Sharing Link - Ancestry ca Record 1061 #852596 (accessed 30 January 2025)
Joseph Chandonnet in Nicolet, Canada East (Quebec), Canada. Born in Canada.
https://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogie=Chandonnet_Joseph&pid=862423 | CHANDONNET Joseph (I1907)
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Joseph was in the 13th Reg. of NY in the Rev. War. (New York in the Revolution as a Colony and State. Vol. 1 , Extracts.)
March 2n, 1779 Saratoga District Tax List, p. 11.
West side-1786 Saratoga District Tax List and 13th Albany County Militia. p. 115.
At age, 77 years, Joseph petitioned the Department of the Interior, Bureau of Pensions, for his Revolutionary War pension. He was a resident of Sempronius at the time of his application. In the application he states he enlisted in Stillwater on June 1, 1775 for eight months, rank of Private, under the service of Captain Marvin and Col. Benedict Arnold. In November, 1775 for seventeen months, and served under Captain Moses Knapp and Col. Joseph Read in Roxbury, near Boston, MA. His other terms of duty are discribed in his war record that is attached.
Joseph, giving his age as 89 years, was a pensioner in Niles, Cayuga County, NY on June 1, 1840. He resided with son, Lemuel A. Newland. They left Stillwater in 1803 and moved first to Sempronius,(.Kelloggville.) Cuyuga Co. NY.
Lemuel A. married Mrs. Flora B. Snider, widow of Edward R. Snider. She was the daughter of Pettit and Huldah Smith, born in Galway, Saratoga county, NY. | Newland Joseph (I52078)
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Joseph was killed in the Civil War, according to Helen Smith, gg-granddaughter of Elizabeth Brown.
Joseph was killed in the Civil War, according to Helen Smith, gg-granddaughter of Elizabeth Brown. | Hanen Joseph (I52838)
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Joseph, baptized at Riviere-Ouelle on 1 June 1685 and buried on 12
December 1711. Married on 28 July 1711 at L'Islet to Genevieve
Gamache, daughter of
Nicolas, the Seigneur of L'Islet, and of Elisabeth-Ursule Cloutier.
After a brief marriage, Genevieve was remarried in 1713 to Jean
Gagnon dit Belzile. | BEAULIEU Joseph Hudon Dit (I744)
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Joseph, second son of John and Hannah Stewart Annable, was married to Anna Crosby by Rev. Joeph Vail of Hadlyme, CT.
They settled first in New London, CT where he was engaged in shipping to the Bahama Islands and elsewhere, and removed thence in 1810, to Albany, NY.
About 1810, the family changed the spelling of it's last name, using only one "n", thus Anable, not Annable.
After the death of this first wife, Anna, he married Alma Sheldon. She was born at Adams(Bershire County), MA. and died at Philadelphia, Pa. Her remains were interred at Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, PA. The remains of Joseph Anable, his first wife, Anna, and those of his daughter (by his second marriage) Cynthia Jane, were removed from their original resting place (presumably the Laurel Hill Cemetery) to the Albany Rural Cemetery in 1868.
Alma (Sheldon)Anable's mother, Isabel (Low) Sheldon, was the daughter of Major Samuel Low of Cheshire, MA, owner of a great estate in Massachusetts. He was reported to have been a great hunter who fought valiantly in the Revolutionary War, seeing many acts of mercy while he was fighting for freedom. He set his many slaves free, all of whom elected to remain with the family and lived to an old age in his service.
She was the sister of Urania(Sheldon)Nott, second wife of Dr. Eliphalet Nott, President of Union College, Schenectady, New York, 1814-1866, an all-time record for the tenure of the office of a college president. He was the namesake of Henry Sheldon Anable's only son, Eliphalet Nott Anable, father of the author of "The Anable Family in America 1623-1967". | Annable Joseph Hubbell (I53302)
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Josephte Rosette Laramee b.Dec. 12, 1815 on Drummond Island, died Jan. 22, 1906 at LaFontaine and was buried there. Her mother: Marie Josephte Cloutier listed as aboriginal (#1981) on the Drummond Island List. Christened on April 11, 1785 at Deux-Montages, Oka, Quebec. Buried at Ste. Croix LaFontaine. Her father: Jacques Adam dit Laramee also listed as aboriginal (#2075) on the Drummond Island List b. Nov. 17, 1782 at Longueuil Quebec, died Nov. 14, 1862, burid at Ste Croix in LaFontaine. they had 4 children. (Info found Genforum by David Fournier)
My maiden name was Rosette Larammee, born on Drummond Island December 12th, 1815, the year after the war. My husband was Jean Baptiste Boucher, also a native of Drummond Island. My father's name was Jacques Adam Larammee, born in Lower Canada. He hired with the North-West Company and went up to Lake Superior, came back, and went to New Zealand (?),where he caught the fever. On recovering, he came home and went up to Mackinaw with the British soldiers, where he afterwards married Rosette Cloutier, a half-breed woman; then moved with the forces to Drummond Island. We left Drummond Island in April, 1828, and were in the sugar camp when some of the others started. The Labattes left before the soldiers. We came in a large bateau with two other families and a span of horses. Our family consisted of father, mother, four children Julien, Zoa, James, and myself. James was only two years old. I was about thirteen. There were with us Louis Lepine, wife, and one child, Frances, who afterwards became the wife of William Rawson, of Coldwater. Pierre Lepine, who with his wife and child were wrecked with the soldiers, was Louis's brother. Antoine Fortin, wife, and three children, were also with us. We came by the North Shore, and were one month on the way. We camped at Mississaga Point, McBean's Post,* La Cloche, She-bon-an-ning, Moose Point and Minniekaignashene, the last camping-place before reaching Penetanguishene. Belval, Quebec, and Rondeau all came from Drummond Island and settled at old Fort Ste. Marie. Pierre Rondeau, while planting potatoes, found a root of la carotte a moureau, and his wife took it away from him. While she was getting dinner he ate some and died. Fraser, who kept a canteen on Drummond Island and was wrecked with the soldiers, started a tavern at the old cricket gronnd, near the little lake, which was afterwards called Fraser's lake.** Joseph Craddock, of Coldwater, and his sister, Mrs. Simpson, came from Drummond Island. Their mother was a half-breed. I remember a bishop, named Thombeau, and Father Crevier, once visited Drummond Island. My father and mother were married in Penetanguishene by Bishop McDonnell, who married several couples during his visit to Penetanguishene shortly after we moved from Drummond Island. Louis Descheneaux and his wife, Gustave Boyer and his wife, Charles Cadieux and his wife, and several others were married at the same time. We settled on the lot now owned by Quesnelle, and afterwards moved to our present borne on lot 17, con. 17, Tiny. Dr. Boyer practised and lived in Penetanguishene. Joseph Giroux started for Thunder Bay with provisions for his son, Camile, who was fishing. He lost his way and wandered down to Pinery Point. My son, Narcisse Boucher, and several others started out to hunt for him. The snow was two feet deep and no roads. They found him on the third day in the afternoon lying on some boughs behind a big oak log, his hands and feet frozen solid, and his dog wrapped in the breast of his coat to help keep him warm. They made a stretcher of withes covered with boughs, and carried him borne on their shoulders, relieving each other by turns. Giroux was obliged to suffer amputation of both hands and feet. Mr. Boucher, my husband, died several years ago.
(Research):DEATH:
MS 935, Reel # 127 page 728, registration # 027434 is for Josette Boucher, who died Jan 19th 1906 at the age of 91 years, residence at Concession 19 Lot 16 in Tiny Township, she was married to J B Boucher and her religion was Roman Catholic. Her birth place was given as Quebec. The death was registered by J.B. Boucher
BURIAL:
Ontario French Catholic Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1747-1967 Lafontaine 1857-1921 page 117 (page 64 of 89 ancestry.ca) | LARAMEE (ADAM) Josette (I55128)
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JOSIAH DAVISSON was born in Preble County, Ohio, September 23, 1830, and is the eldest of ten children born to Absalom and Belinda (Adams) Davisson, natives respectively of Virginia and New Jersey, and of Scotch-Welsh and English descent. The parents of Absalom settled in Warren County, Ohio, in 1814, and next year moved to Preble County. There, on the 14th day of June, 1829, he married. His father had given him 120 acres of land, to which he made many additions, and on which he resided until his death, May 24, 1874, at the age of seventy-two. Josiah Davisson, at the age of twenty, hired out as a farm hand for a year, and then learned carpentering. In April, 1855, he came to this township and bought 120 acres of land, but for three years farmed on shares. In April, 1858, he moved upon his own place, and there he still resides. He was married, October 25, 1855, to Ann M. Hoffman, a native of Montgomery County, Ohio. She has borne her husband two sons and five daughters, all now living. Mr. Davisson is a Republican, and be and wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
COUNTIES OF WHITE AND PULASKI, INDIANA, HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL
Published by F. A. Battey & Co.,
Chicago, 1883
Page: 380 | DAVISSON Josiah (I36323)
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Josiah Hammond lived first on the southeast part of his father's farm, the house standing quite near the waters of Buzzard's Bay. He afterwards sold this farm near the salt water, to his son Josiah, and received land to the north of his father's place, where he built a second house. Although the house has disappeared, the place is still pointed out as the "Siah" place. | HAMMOND Josiah (I56992)
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Jouralist | PULSIFER Joseph (I7503)
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Judeth Hayward and Phillip Goss of Lancaster, were married in Concord by Reverend Mr. Joseph Estabrooke.
Judeth is buried beside her husband who died a year before her, in the Indian Cemetery, on Cottage Street, West Brookfield, MA. On the tombstone is written the following: "In memory of Captain Philip Goss who died September 13th 1747 in ye 70th year of his age."
"In memory of Mrs. Judeth Goss, wife of Captain Philip Goss who died April 18, 1748 in ye 74th year of her age."
"As you are now, so once were we. As we are now so you must be"
In this cemetery, there is a monument erected in memory of those killed by Indians, July 20, 1710. (Erected by the town in 1912) The names on the monument are: Ebenezer Hayward, Stephen Jennings, Benjamin Jennnings, Joseph Kellogg, John Grosenor and John White. (Is this John White, an uncle of Judeth Hayward Goss and brother of Anna White?) | HAYWARD Judith (I3914)
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Judith (805 - 19 Apr 843 Tours)[1]
bur. Saint- Martin, Tours[1]
Parents
Father: Welf I[2]
Mother: Heilwig UNKNOWN[2]
Marriage
m. (Feb 819 Aix-la-Chapelle) Emperor Louis I. (16 Apr/Sep 778 - 20 Jun 840). Issue: 3[3]
Gisele di Friuli
Charles II the Bald
(dau) _____
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 MedLands: Swabian Nobility, ref 1249
↑ 2.0 2.1 MedLands: Swabian Nobility, ref 1215
↑ MedLands: Swabian Nobility, ref 1256
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018.
Wikipedia: de: Judith (Kaiserin); Wikipedia: Judith of Bavaria (795-843)
Nationmaster.com[1]
Friedrich von Bezold: Kaiserin Judith und ihr Dichter Walahfrid Strabo. In: Historische Zeitschrift Bd. 130 (1924), S. 377–439.
Armin Koch: Kaiserin Judith. Eine politische Biographie. Matthiesen, Husum 2005, ISBN 3-7868-1486-4 (zugl. Dissertation, Universität Konstanz 2004)
Elizabeth Ward: Caesar's Wife. The Career of the Empress Judith 819–829. In: Peter Goodman, Roger Collins (Hrsg.): Charlemagne's Heir. New Perspectives on the Reign of Louis the Pious (8114–40). Clarendon, Oxford 1990, ISBN 0-19-821994-6, S. 205–227.
E. Dümmler, Gesch. des Ostfrk. Reiches, 3 Bde, 1887-1888 - Fr. v. Bezold, Ksn. Judith und ihr Dichter Walahfried Strabo, HZ 130, 1924.
AdB 14 Seite 655; Fleckenstein, Über die Herkunft, bes. Seite 95ff.;
Werner, Nachkommen Tafel Nr. II/6 c; NDB 10 Seite 639f. (dort fälschlicherweise der 13.4. als Todestag); Biograph. Wörterbuch 2 Spalte 1357f.; Konecny, Die Frauen Seite 89-94 und Seite 97-102; Lexikon des Mittelalters 5 Spalte 797; Ward, Caesars's wife. Zum Todestag: Dümmler, Geschichte des Ostfränkischen Reiches 1 Seite 188 Anmerkung 2.
Nach der am 13.6.823 erfolgten Geburt KARLS DES KAHLEN war Judith klug genug, gerade LOTHAR die Patenschaft anzutragen und ihm eine nicht weiter konkretisierte Zusage für ein künftiges Erbteil KARL zu entlocken.
Ay, Karl-Ludwig/Maier, Lorenz/Jahn Joachim: Die Welfen. Landesgeschichtliche Aspekte ihrer Herrschaft. Universitätsverlag Konstanz GmbH 1998 Seite 9,25,29,35,53,58,62-65,67,93,98
Borgolte Michael: Die Grafen Alemanniens in merowingischer und karolingischer Zeit. Eine Prosopographie. Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1986, Seite 155,166,169,227,288
Borgolte Michael: Geschichte der Grafschaften Alemanniens in fränkischer Zeit.Vorträge und Forschungen Sonderband 31 Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1984, Seite 92,193,202,229,254
Boshof Egon: Ludwig der Fromme. Primus Verlag Darmstadt 1996 Seite 5,9,10,15,152,153,158,159,167,178,179, 182,283,184,186,188,191,196,198-199,203,204,205,206,211,227,229,230,233,236,240,244,245,246, 248,249,261,263,268
Das Leben Kaiser Ludwigs vom sogenannten Astronomus. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band V Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1974 Seite 308,320,334,344,346,352,358,366,368,372,374,378
Deutsche Geschichte Band 1 Von den Anfängen bis zur Ausbildung des Feudalismus Mitte des 11. Jahrhunderts. VEB Deutscher Verlag der Wissenschaften Berlin 1982, Seite 328
Die Reichsannalen mit Zusätzen aus den sogenannten Einhardsannalen. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band V Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1974 Seite 118,138
Diwald Helmut: Heinrich der Erste. Die Gründung des Deutschen Reiches. Gustav Lübbe Verlag GmbH, Bergisch Gladbach 1987 Seite 102,275
Dümmler Ernst: Die Chronik des Abtes Regino von Prüm. Verlag der Dykschen Buchhandlung Leipzig Seite 9
Dümmler Ernst: Geschichte des Ostfränkischen Reiches. Verlag von Duncker und Humblot Berlin 1865 Band I Seite 28,43-46,56,59,63,67,71,80,83,95,109,111,117,119,128,134,148,150,181, 260,421,446
Ennen, Edith: Frauen im Mittelalter. Verlag C.H. Beck München 1994, Seite 58-63
Fleckenstein Josef: Über die Herkunft der Welfen und ihre Anfänge in Süddeutschland. in: Studien und Vorarbeiten zur Geschichte des Großfränkischen und frühdeutschen Adels Eberhard Albert Verlag Freiburg im Breisgau 1957, Seite 71-136
Glocker Winfrid: Die Verwandten der Ottonen und ihre Bedeutung in der Politik. Böhlau Verlag Köln Wien 1989, Seite 90
Hartmann, Wilfried: Ludwig der Deutsche. Primus Verlag 2002 Seite 29,64
Hlawitschka Eduard: Die Anfänge des Hauses Habsburg-Lothringen. Genealogische Untersuchungen zur Geschichte Lothringens und des Reiches im 9., 10. und 11. Jahrhundert. Kommissionsverlag: Minerva-Verlag Thinnes Nolte OHG Saarbrücken 1969, Seite 157
Hlawitschka Eduard: Lotharingien und das Reich an der Schwelle der deutschen Geschichte. Anton Hiersemann Stuttgart 1968, Seite 10
Hlawitschka Eduard: Studien zur Äbtissinnenreihe von Remiremont. Buchdruckerei und Verlag Karl Funk, Saarbrücken 1963, Seite 36
Jahrbücher von Fulda. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band VII Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1969 Seite 18,22
Jahrbücher von St. Bertin. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band VI Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1972 Seite 12,14,18,20,24, 30,48,50
Konecny Silvia: Die Frauen des karolingischen Königshauses. Die politische Bedeutung der Ehe und die Stellung der Frau in der fränkischen Herrscherfamilie vom 7. bis zum 10. Jahrhundert. Dissertation der Universität Wien 1976, Seite 89-94,97-102
Lebe Reinhard: Ein Königreich als Mitgift. Heiratspolitik in der Geschichte. Deutsche Verlagsanstalt Stuttgart 1998, Seite 34,37,39
Mitterauer Michael: Karolingische Markgrafen im Südosten. Archiv für österreichische Geschichte Band 123. Hermann Böhlaus Nachf./Graz-Wien-Köln 1963, Seite 241,243,245
Mühlbacher Engelbert: Deutsche Geschichte unter den Karolingern. Phaidon Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Athenaion
Nithard, Vier Bücher Geschichten. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band V Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1974 Seite 388-394,406,408,414,420,430
Rappmann Roland/Zettler Alfons: Die Reichenauer Mönchsgemeinschaft und ihr Totengedenken im frühen Mittelalter. Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1998, Seite 408,419,424,426,429,434,436,517
Regino Chronik. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band VII Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1969 Seite 184
Riche Pierre: Die Karolinger. Eine Familie formt Europa. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1991 Seite 183,185,191,196,201,208,354
Schieffer Rudolf: Die Karolinger. W. Kohlhammer GmbH Stuttgart Berlin Köln 1992, Seite 119, 125-129,131,136-138,146,158
Schmid, Karl: Gebetsgedenken und adliges Selbstverständnis im Mittelalter. Ausgewählte Beiträge, Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1983, Seite 403,425-453
Schneidmüller Bernd: Die Welfen. Herrschaft und Erinnerung. W. Kohlhammer GmbH Stuttgart Berlin Köln 2000, Seite 17,23,24,30,31,43,45-59,61,62,112,114,117
Schneidmüller Bernd/ Weinfurter Stefan: Otto III. Heinrich II. Eine Wende? Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1997, Seite 277A
Schnith Karl Rudolf: Mittelalterliche Herrscher in Lebensbildern. Von den Karolingern zu den Staufern. Verlag Styria Graz Wien Köln 1990, Seite 45,50-56,60,79
Tellenbach Gerd: Exkurs Über die ältesten Welfen im West- und Ostfrankenreich. in: Studien und Vorarbeiten zur Geschichte des Großfränkischen und frühdeutschen Adels Eberhard Albert Verlag Freiburg im Breisgau 1957, Seite 335-340
Thegan: Das Leben Kaiser Ludwigs. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band V Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1974 Seite 232-238,246,252
Treffer Gerd: Die französischen Königinnen. Von Bertrada bis Marie Antoinette (8.-18. Jahrhundert) Verlag Friedrich Pustet Regensburg 1996 Seite 45-46
Weinfurter Stefan: Heinrich II. Herrscher am Ende der Zeiten. Verlag Friedrich Pustet Regensburg 1999, Seite 201
Werner Karl Ferdinand: Die Ursprünge Frankreichs bis zum Jahr 1000. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, München 1995, Seite 426, 429,444
Wies Ernst W.: Otto der Große. Kämpfer und Beter. Bechtle Verlag Esslingen 1989, Seite 24
Xantener Jahrbücher. Quellen zur karolingischen Reichsgeschichte Band VI Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft Darmstadt 1972 Seite 340,342,344,346,356 | WELF Judith (I58199)
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Judith married Manasses III de Rethel.[1]
Renaud.
Hugues.
Daughter.
On 26 SEP 1081, Judith gave consent to a charter.[2]
Research Notes
"It is chronologically impossible for Judith to be the daughter of Giselbert de Roucy" as he died about 991.[1] Cawley offers three possibilities for her parentage.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2025, Comtes d'Omont, Comtes de Rethel.
↑ Chartes Rethel (1902), Tome I, I, p. 1.
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). III 625/675a; VII 11 http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00122045&tree=LEO | ROUCY Judith (I60094)
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| 6691 |
Judith of Lens was the daughter of Lambert, Count of Lens and Alice of Normandy (sister of King William the Conqueror).[1]
Her mother was Adelaide of Normandy, the sister of William the conqueror. Adelaide was married three times:
Enguerrand of Ponthieu, lord of Aumale
Lambert, count of Eu, brother of Eustace of Boulogne
Eudo of Champagne
Judith has traditionally been seen as daughter of the second husband Lambert, as she is described this way in one source, but in recent times Enguerrand is sometimes considered a serious contender. According to Williams for example, "The Vita Waldevi makes Judith Lambert's daughter, but she may have been the child of Enguerrand of Ponthieu".[2] (The idea seems to go back to Thomas Stapleton, who however eventually changed his mind back to Lambert.[3])
Husbands and child
She was married about 1070 to Earl Waltheof.[4]
The fact that she was such an important Norman heiress, shows that King William wanted the services of the man who she was given to in marriage, the Anglo-Saxon earl Waltheof. His family had been Earls in Bamburgh, and even under the Normans they held a large fief which largely in Northamptonshire, Huntingdonshire and Leicestershire in the midlands, extending east into Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire and south into Bedfordshire.[2]
Waltheof was executed for treason in 1076, for being part of the so-called revolt of the Three Earls. Keats-Rohan writes that "Judith was one of his accusers, but after his death she arranged for him to be honorably buried at Crowland abbey".[4]
Complete Peerage notes in a footnote that there is a tradition that the King had first assigned the Countess Judith to him as wife to Simon St Liz, later her daughter's husband, "and on her refusal (on account of Simon’s lameness) gave him ]udith’s counties. ]udith fled for hiding to the Ely marches, taking her daughters with her".[5]
Marriage and Issue
m. 1070 Waltheof, Earl of Bamburgh. Issue:
Maud had issue from two husbands, a saint, an earl and a king.
m.1 Simon of St Liz (or Senlis)
m.2 David I King of Scotland
Adelise
m. Raoul III de Conches[6]
Sources
↑ Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols., ed. Kimball G. Everingham. (Salt Lake City, UT: the author, 2013), vol. III, page 233, HARRIS.
↑ 2.0 2.1 Williams, Ann (1995) The English and the Norman Conquest p.58
↑ Stapleton Magni rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae p.xxxi
↑ 4.0 4.1 Keats-Rohan, "Judita Comitissa" in Domesday People, p.286
↑ Cockayne, Gibbs et al., Complete Peerage, 2nd ed., Vol.6 "Huntingdon", p.640 footnote "h".
↑ Conches' sister Godehilde m. Baldwin I of Jerusalem.
See also:
Royal Ancestry 2013 D. Richardson Vol. I p. 277-278, Vol. V page 489
Burke, Bernard. A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct, Peerages of the British Empire (Harrison, London, 1866) (pp. 467-8)
Dugdale
Weber, J. (n.d.) The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest. Rootsweb.com
Reports and Papers of the Architectural and Archaeological Societies of the Counties of Lincoln and Northampton (Savill and Edwards, London, 1850) Vol. 1, Page 236 | LENS Judith (I59183)
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Judith of Sulichgau is *NOT* Judith of Fruili.
Vitals
Judith of Sulichgau (b. c. 888)[1]
Parents
Father: Count Eberhard of Sülichgau (d. after 889)[2]
Mother: Gisela of Verona[3]
Sources
Wikipedia: Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria#Marriage and children; Wikipedia: Judith of Bavaria | SULICHGAU Jhuttle (I58292)
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| 6693 |
Judith was the daughter of a Count of Flanders, and the wife of firstly, Tostig Godwinsson, Earl of Northumbria, and brother of Harold II, King of England, and secondly Welf I, Duke of Bavaria.
Parents
In all the early sources, Judith is identified as a daughter of a Count of Flanders, and in some the daughter of Baldwin, Count of Flanders, but very few identify which Baldwin. Even with those sources that do identify which Baldwin, some list her as a sister of Baldwin V, and thus daughter of Baldwin IV, and others as a daughter of Baldwin V.
The first modern author to analyse these discrepancies was Edward Augustus Freeman in The history of the Norman Conquest of England, and he came to the conclusion that Judith was the daughter of Baldwin IV, Count of Flanders, with this second wife, the unnamed daughter (but often called Eleanor) of Richard II, Duke of Normandy.[1] This theory has generally been followed by most researchers ever since.
For a more detailed discussion of the sources and why Freeman's theory seems to make the most sense, see the Commentary section in the article about Judith in the website The Henry Project by Stewart Baldwin[2]
As Baldwin IV's first wife died on 21 February 1030, and Baldwin died in late May 1035,[2]Judith must have been born somewhere between 1031 and 1036. A date of about 1033 seems reasonable.[3]
First marriage
Marriage and Issue
m.1 (ante Sep 1051) Tostig Godwinson, Earl of Northumbria (1025/30 - 25 Sep 1066; p. Godwin, Earl of Wessex and Gytha of Denmark).[1][4][5]
Morkinskinna states that Skúli was a son of Tostig, and mentions Ketill in the same passage without giving any relationship. In a passage describing the same events, Heimskringla [660] states that Skúli and Ketill were brothers of noble English blood, but does not state their parentage. (Some published versions of Heimskringla based on later manuscripts make the brothers sons of Tostig, but this is not in Hollander's translation, based on the earliest manuscripts.) Skúli was evidently an adult at the time of the Battle of Stamford Bridge (1066), and it has also been pointed out [Cleve & Hlawitschka (1982), 27] that the Norwegian names Skúli and Ketill are unknown among Tostig's and Judith's families, so it seems unlikely that they were children of Judith, and it would be extremely difficult to identify them with the children of Judith mentioned above who were still infants in 1065. If these sons have been correctly attributed to Tostig (and that itself is not certain), then they would have been much more likely to have been born by a Norwegian wife or mistress prior to Tostig's marriage to Judith.
m.2 (1071) Welf I Este, Duke of Bavaria (1030/40 - 09 Nov 1101; p. Alberto Azzo II, Marchese d'Este and Kunigunde von Altdorf).[2]
Sources
↑ Freeman, Edward A., The history of the Norman conquest of England, vol. 3, pp. 656-658, Digitised by Internet Archive https://archive.org/stream/historynormanco07unkngoog#page/n694/mode/2up : viewed 18 October 2016
↑ 2.0 2.1 Baldwin, Stewart, 'Judith of Flanders', updated 11 October 2002, in The Henry Project: The ancestors of king Henry II of England, edited by Stewart Baldwin & Todd Farmerie https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/ : viewed 11 October 2023.
↑ Cawley, Charles & Foundation of Medieval Genealogy
↑ Searle, W.G. (1899). Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings, and Nobles: The Succession of the Bishops and the Pedigrees of the Kings and Nobles, (pp.358-9). London: Cambridge University Press. archive.org
↑ Wikipedia: Tostig Godwinson
https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/judit000.htm
Wikipedia: Judith of Flanders
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | FLANDRE Judith (I59478)
|
| 6694 |
Judith was the daughter of Charles the Bald and his first wife Ermentrude of Orléans. Her birth date is uncertain but may have been about 844.[1][2]
In July 856, she was betrothed to Æthelwulf of Wessex, who was pausing in the kingdom of the Franks on his way back from a pilgrimage to Rome.[3] They married on 1 October 856[2][3] at Verberis near Senlis,[1] and Æthelwulf had her formally consecrated as queen, which was fairly unusual.[3]
After Æthelwulf's death in January 858, she was married to Æthelwulf's son Æthelbald. Asser condemns this marriage to her stepson in strong terms,[4] although there is no sign that the marriage was regarded as scandalous at the time.[5] According to Roger of Wendover, writing in the 13th century, Æthelbald subsequently repented of this marriage and repudiated Judith,[6] but this may well be inaccurate, and no contemporary source refers to any such repudiation.
When Æthelbald died in December 860, Judith returned to her father, having borne no children from either of her fist two marriages.[1][2][3] Her father put her "under episcopal guardianship, and with all the honour due to a queen."[3]
In 862 Judith eloped with Baldwin of Flanders. Her father subsequently initially sought to have her anathematised, but fairly quickly consented to their marriage.[7][2][3] The couple had sought the help of the Pope who intervened to help secure the reconciliation with her father.[7][3] Medlands and Wikipedia say the marriage took place in Auxerre on 13 December 862;[2][8] the Henry Project gives the year as 863.[1] Judith and Baldwin had the following children:
Baldwin, who succeeded his father as Count of Flanders[7][9]
Raoul, who died in 896[7][9]
Some sources give further son to them:
Charles, born in about 864, who died young:[9] he is found only in a late source[7]
Medlands says that there may have been another daughter who was mother of Gautier,[9] but the Henry Project dismisses this.[7] There is currently a profile for an unnamed daughter: Flandre-26.
Both Medlands and the Henry Project state that Guinidilde was not a daughter of Judith and Baldwin, though she is sometimes referred to as one.[7][9]
Judith's death date is not known but was after 870.[1][2] Her third husband died in 879 and was buried in the Abbey of Saint-Bertin, near Saint-Omer.[7][9]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 The Henry Project, entry for Judith wife of (1) Æthelwulf of Wessex; (2) Æthelbald of Wessex; (3) Baldwin I of Flanders
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Charles Cawley. "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.Entry for JUDITH of the Franks (c844-after 870)
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Janet L Neslon for 'Æthelwulf', print and online 2004
↑ Asser. Life of King Alfred, translated by Albert S Cook, Ginn and Company, 1906, pp. 11-12, Internet Archive
↑ Frank Stenton. Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd edition, Oxford University Press, 1971, p. 245
↑ J A Giles (translator). Roger of Wendover's Flowers of History, Vol. I, Henry G Bohn, 1849, p. 187, Internet Archive
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 The Henry Project, entry for Baldwin I "Iron-arm"
↑ Wikipedia: Judith of Flanders
↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 Charles Cawley, Medlands, entry for BAUDOUIN (830/37-Arras 879)
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.Entry for JUDITH of the Franks (c844-after 870)
The Henry Project, entry for Judith wife of (1) Æthelwulf of Wessex; (2) Æthelbald of Wessex; (3) Baldwin I of Flanders
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Janet L Neslon for 'Æthelwulf', print and online 2004
Wikipedia: Judith of Flanders
Wikipedia: Æthelwulf, King of Wessex
Wikipedia: Æthelbald, King of Wessex
Wikipedia: Baldwin I, Count of Flanders
ThePeerage.com - entry for Judith, Princesse des Francs | CAROLINGIAN Judith (I58636)
|
| 6695 |
Judith, born about 1619, joined the church at Scituate, May 14, 1637. She came over on the "Blessing" with her parents and siblings, leaving London 17 June 1635. At the age of 21, she married Resolved White, son of William and Susanna Fuller White in Scituate, Plymouth County, MA.
Her family in later years remained Loyalists to the English government during the Rev. War as did the Winslows who were related through Resolved's mother, Susannah who remarried Winslow after the death of her husband, William White. | VASSALL Judith (I9833)
|
| 6696 |
Judith, the third wife of John, was the widow of Thomas Scott, of Colchester and London, England. In his will, John Vassall mentions her as being of Eastwood, Co. Essex. She died testate, and her will dated 9 Nov. 1638 was proved January 1638/39.
Judith, the third wife of John, was the widow of Thomas Scott, of Colchester and London, England. In his will, John Vassall mentions her as being of Eastwood, Co. Essex. She died testate, and her will dated 9 Nov. 1638 was proved January 1638/39. | Borroughs Judith (I50344)
|
| 6697 |
Judith[1]
Research Notes
This profile is based on speculation by Jackman (1997).[2]
Unverified Parents
Father: (speculation) Conrad l'Ancien, Comte de Paris
Mother: (speculation) Adelais of Tours
Marriage
m. (speculation) Udo, Graf im Lahngau
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles, 'Judith' in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Foundation of Medieval Genealogy, (http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm : accessed 26 April 2020).
↑ Cawley, Charles, 'Judith' citing Jackman in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Foundation of Medieval Genealogy, (http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm : accessed 26 April 2020). | WELF Judith (I58235)
|
| 6698 |
Jueta was the daughter of William son of Baderon and his wife, Dame Hahenisa —.[1]
Jueta was the sister of:
Advenia;[1]
An ancient deed in the King's Remembrancer Office states, "William son of Baderon, Dame Hahenisa his wife and Jueta and Advenia his daughters to Monks of St. Florent (St. Mary, Monmouth): Notification of a grant of the land which King William gave to Hahenisa in marriage and the church of Goodrich Castle, etc., and the land of Villa Cachabren, Herefordshire."[1] William I ruled England from 1066-1087 and William II from 1087-1100.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 The National Archives Website: Discovery: E - Records of the Exchequer, and its related bodies, with those of the Office of First Fruits and Tenths, and the Court of Augmentations: Division within E - Records of the King's Remembrancer: E 210 - Exchequer: King's Remembrancer: Ancient Deeds, Series D: E 210/4437 William son of Baderon, Dame Hahenisa his wife and Jueta and Advenia his daughters to..., (http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C5518570 : accessed 15 November, 2018). | MONMOUTH Jueta (I60209)
|
| 6699 |
Julia Beaulieu - sister to Paul who married the Borrup - they lived on Summit Ave in St Paul - if you know the area - you had to have money to have a house there. They had quite a few parties there and I also wondered if Julia was dark skinned or light skinned and if she ever brought her mother to her house - since she was a full blood. Was it cool to be Indian back than? Julia's daughter started a chocolate company that is still in business today - Maud Borup's Chocolates.
Julie Beaulieu | BEAULIEU Julia Sophia (I747)
|
| 6700 |
Julie E. lived in La Fayette, Indiana with her husband, Daniel Swan. She is the person that had the Loghry family Bible, once owned by Charles and Juliette Brown Loghry. | Loghry Julia Etta (I52900)
|
| 6701 |
Julie was born in 1823. She was the daughter of Jean Beaudet and Genevieve Boucher. She passed away in 1891.
Sources
https://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogie=Beaudet_Julie&pid=953825 | BEAUDET Marie Julie (I680)
|
| 6702 |
Juliette was a twin sister to John Henry Brown. She was known as Ettie. | Brown Juliette Eunice (I53091)
|
| 6703 |
Juliette was the only daughter of Samuel and Eunice (Annable) Brown. On Aug. 14, 1831 she married Charles Loghry, son of Joseph Leander Loghry and Mary (Santee) Loughry of Cameron, Stueben County, NY. Her brother, Robert Emmett Brown and Charles' sister, Mary Loghry were married at the same time in a double wedding. After her marriage, she and Charles settled near the Oregon schoolhouse on the road to Brown's Crossing where John Hedges had formerly resided.
Brown's Crossing is at the foot of the Oregon schoolhouse road, down from North Hill Road where a large steel bridge crosses the Canisteo River. Juliette's brother, Robert Brown had a tavern near the river crossing and a farm directly across the river as well.
Julitette died shortly after the birth of her son, Franklin. She is buried at Brown's Crossing at the bottom of the hill on Oregon Schoolhouse Road and the Canisteo River.
The cemetery near the bridge at Brown's Crossing is the burying ground for some familiy members of the Santee, Moore, Loghry and Brown relatives. At one time there were as many as thirty five people buried at Brown's Crossing but today only one stone, that of Isaac Santee remains intact. Years ago when the river flooded, many of the bodies were washed from their resting places and their markers taken by the rushing river water.
Juliette's birth records have not been found. Her family was in Albany, Albany County, NY from April 1812 and moved to Auburn, Cayuga County in 1813. They continued to live in Auburn until the death of her father in Sept. of 1817. | Brown Juliette Eunice (I52871)
|
| 6704 |
July 31, 1780, Notre Dame, Liesse, Riviere Quelle, Kamouraska, PQ,
Canada | MIVILLE Joseph Dit Deschenes (I5737)
|
| 6705 |
Jun 1956 Fairview Cemetery, Colorado Springs , El Paso Co., CO | MAXSON Grace Emma (I35197)
|
| 6706 |
Jun 22 1914 | HIGHLAND Cecelia J. (I36784)
|
| 6707 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I35685)
|
| 6708 |
Justice of assize at Caen, 1177. Sheriff of Worcestershire, 1185-1188 and 1190. Justice itinerant in Warwickshire and other counties, 1186. In 1191, he attended King Richard I into Normandy; in 1214, was in the expedition made to Pictou. To the Knights Templar he gave a mill at Barton, in the county of Warwick.
He married first Matilda de Beauchamp, with whom he had Robert Marmion the elder and Mabel. He married secondly Philippa, parents unknown, mother of Robert "junior" and William.
Research Notes
Robert had two sons named Robert by different mothers. Robert the elder remained in Normandy and Robert the younger was the representative of the family in England. [1]
By an agreement between the brothers, Robert the younger consented to pay a certain sum for the English possessions, until a final settlement should be made as to the dispostition of the family property in both countries.
Sources
↑ Lodge, Samuel. Scrivelsby, the Home of the Champions: With Some Account of the Marmion and Dymoke Families. Elliot Stock, London, 1894, p. 38. [1]
Burke, John & Burke, Bernard. A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland (Henry Colburn, 1846) Pages 338
CP: Vol VIII[505-521]; AR: Line 30[30], Line 148A[28-31], Line 246A[25-26]; SGM
Alan B. Wilson, correction to CP re wife of Robert Marmion II
English Baronies, by I. J. Sanders, 1960,
History of the Ancient Noble Family of Marmyun, by Thomas Christopher Banks, 1817,
The Origins of Some Anglo-Norman Families, by Lewis Christopher Loyd, 1951, | MARMION Robert (I60165)
|
| 6709 |
Justina died at age 30 years, 19 days, perhaps from complications of pregnancy. She gave her son, Nealy, (Cornelius) who was just nine days old when she died, to her sister, Sarah (Mrs. Henry Beard) to raise. This is according to the family bible in the possession of Margelia Chubb.
Justina is buried in the Wright Brown, Sr. cemetery plot in City Hill Cemetery, Torrey, Yates County, NY.
December 20th 1848. Sophiah Brown daughter of Wright Brown and Emily Brown was born. | Brown Justina Sophiah (I52717)
|
| 6710 |
Jutta von Arnstein was born about 1065 in Arnstein-an-der-Lahn, Hessen-Nassau, Germany and died about 118 in Zutphen, Gelderland, Netherlands.
Judith van Arnstein, countess of Arnstein in Einrichgau, married Count Otto II von Tsoutfen the Rich, as his second wife. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:BG:Юдит_фон_Арнщайн. | ARNSTEIN Jutta (I59518)
|
| 6711 |
Jutta was born in 1093. Jutta VonWassenberg passed away in 1151. [1]
Sources
↑ Entered by Sherri Harder, Apr 16, 2012
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA%20(LOWER%20RHINE).htm#JuttaGelderndied1151 | WASSEBURG Jutta (I58924)
|
| 6712 |
Katherine was also the second wife of Jacob J. Davis. | Tice Katherine (I54074)
|
| 6713 |
Keats-Rohan's entry for him is called Filius Willelmi Forestarii, Hugo:
Son of William fitz Norman the forester of Kilpeck, whom he had succeeded by 1127. He died in August 1158 leaving a son Henry of Kilpeck. Benefactor of St Peter's Gloucester.
Sources
Keats-Rohan, Domesday Descendants, p.976.
http://www.skidmorefamilyhistory.com/OP44%20Notes%2011th%20to%2014th%20cent.pdf | KILPEC Hugh FitzWilliam (I60162)
|
| 6714 |
Kelloggsville Cemetery was the burying ground for the First Baptist Church. | Tirzah (I52267)
|
| 6715 |
Kent Mem. Gardens | PULSIFER Norma Idell (I7775)
|
| 6716 |
KETCHAM--Ira D. 76, of Jamestown, RI, passed away on May 25, 2006, after a courageous battle with cancer. She was the devoted wife of the late James B. Ketcham for 52 years. Born in Weston, WV, she was the daughter of Mary Hart Davisson and George Izard Davisson. She was a graduate of the Baldwin School and Chatham College (Pennsylvania College for Women), where she was president of her class both junior and senior year. She was also a member of the National Society of the Colonial Dames of America. She was a devoted wife and mother. Besides her twin sister Bruce Hart Randolph, she is survived by her son George Bonbright Ketcham of Newport, RI, three daughters, Laurie Camden Ketcham of Jamestown, RI, Susan Ketcham Coffin of Manchester by the Sea, MA, and Brucie Ketcham Donahue of Northfield, VT. In addition, she is survived by sons-in-law Lloyd H. Coffin III, Thomas M. Donahue, a daughter-in-law, Mimi D. Ketcham, and grandchildren Benjamin Bonbright Coffin, Sarah Camden Coffin, James Tredwell Donahue and Catherine Bruce Donahue. She is also survived by her brotherin - law William Tredwell Ketcham Jr. of New York, NY, and Lawrence, NY. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made in her memory to the Baldwin School, 701 Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr, PA 19010-3505. Funeral service will be private.
Published: June 26, 2006 | DAVISSON Ira Camden (I37276)
|
| 6717 |
Keturah Arthur was from Nantucket, Nantucket County, MA when she married Stephen Peckham. She was his second wife.
The information of their marriage was found in the Church Records of the Society of Friends, Darmouth Monthly Meetings. (This record includes also the intentions of all marriages entered therein.) Published in the Vital Records of Dartmouth, MA 1930 by NEHGS.
In the "Vital Records of Nantucket, Nantucket County, MA to the end of 1850". Vol. 4 , p. 265, it does not list Stephen but Richard Peckam of Portsmouth, Rhode Island, as marrying Keturah Arthur, daughter of John and Mary (Folger),__________*P. R. 38. | Arthur Keturah (I53825)
|
| 6718 |
Kezia Goss, the widow of LT. Phillip Goss, married Timothy Brown after the death of his first wife, Thankful. She brought 7 children to this marriage from her prior marriage. She died a year after her marriage to Brown.
The 13 May, 1746 account of the estate of Philip Goss, says that the eldest son Philip Goss had assumed administration, "his mother, the widow Keziah Brown, formerly Keziah Goss, having died." There were no children from this brief second marriage.
Kezia's first husband, Phillip Goss, was the son of Captain Phillip and Judith Hayward Goss, and was a first cousin to Timothy Brown. Timothy's mother, Mercy Hayward Brown and Judith Hayward Goss were sisters. | Cooley) Goss Keziah ( (I54383)
|
| 6719 |
KIA Civil War | CLARY Francis Adams (I33838)
|
| 6720 |
Kilabrogen Parish | HORNIBROOK William (I36053)
|
| 6721 |
killed | FOSTER Samuel (I37849)
|
| 6722 |
Killed by French and Indians 29 FEB 1703/04
abt 29 FEB 1703 | FRARY Samson (I34055)
|
| 6723 |
Killed by his brother | of BURGUNDY Chilperic King (I23496)
|
| 6724 |
Killed in a car accident | LIVINGSTON Betty Lou (I55387)
|
| 6725 |
killed in Seminole War | PULSIFER Christopher Columbus (I6971)
|
| 6726 |
Killed in the Civil War
Interment: Davison (Yankeetown) Cemetery, Clayton , Woodford Co., IL | JACKMAN Samuel S. (I35952)
|
| 6727 |
Killed in War of 1812 | Bassett John (I52299)
|
| 6728 |
killed when 6 yrs. old | JEWETT James (I4355)
|
| 6729 |
King Béla I of Hungary married RYKSA Riquilda (Richza) of Hungary ,of Poland, of Sweden[1]
Sources
↑ http://genealogy.euweb.cz/piast/piast1.html#RM2
Wikipedia: Béla I of Hungary
Wikidata: Item Q311351, en:Wikipedia help.gif
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.
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 104 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020696&tree=LEO
Nemesi Évkonyv 1972/75, Luzern, 1972 . 488
Geni ay http://www.geni.com/people/Bela-I-%C3%81RP%C3%81D-h%C3%A1zi-I-B%C3%A9la-Magyarorsz%C3%A1g-kir%C3%A1lya-King-of-Hungary/6000000000768917054?through=5287530087430075153
Fabpedigree at http://fabpedigree.com/s010/f035097.htm
The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States by Gary Boyd Roberts | ÁRPÁDHÁZI Béla (I58066)
|
| 6730 |
King of Asturias, Galicia and Leon (866-910)[1]
Marriage
Alfonso de Asturias married Jimena Garcés de Pamplona. [2]
Children
Garcia.
Ordoño.
Fruela.
Ramiro.
Gonzalo.
(daughter).
(daughter).
(daughter).
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Alfonso_III_of_Asturias.
↑ 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 Asturias.
Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica - pg. 317 (Tab. I). | ASTURIAS Alfonso (I59909)
|
| 6731 |
King of France | VII Louis, (I120)
|
| 6732 |
King of France, born 22 or 25 August, 1165; died at Mantes, 14 July, 1223, son of Louis VII and Alix de Champagne.
He was saved from a serious illness after a pilgrimage made by his father to the tomb of Thomas à Becket; he succeeded to the throne 18 September, 1180. His marriage with Isabella of Hainault, niece of the Count of Flanders, the conflicts which he afterwards sustained against the latter, and the deaths of the Countess (1182) and Count of Flanders (1185), increased the royal power in the north of France. His strife with Henry II of England in concert with the sons of that monarch, Henry, Richard, and John, resulted in 1189 in the Treaty of Azay-sur-Cher, which enhanced the royal power in the centre of France. The struggle with the Plantagenets was the ruling idea of Philip II's whole policy. Richard Cæur de Lion having become King of England, 6 July, 1189, was at first on amicable terms with Philip. Together they undertook the Third Crusade, but quarreled in Palestine, and on his return Philip II accused Richard of having attempted to poison him. As Richard had supported in Sicily the claims of Tancred of Lecce against those of the Emperor Henry VI, the latter resolved to be avenged. Richard, having been taken captive on his return from the Crusade by the Duke of Austria, was delivered to Henry VI, who held him prisoner. Philip II sent William, Archbishop of Reims, to Henry VI to request that Richard should remain the captive of Germany or that he should be delivered to Philip as his prisoner. Without loss of time Philip reached an agreement with John Lackland, Richard's brother. Normandy was delivered up by a secret treaty and John acknowledged himself Philip's vassal. But, when in February, 1194, Richard was set free by Henry VI, John Lackland became reconciled with him and endless conflict followed between Richard and Philip. On 13 January, 1199, Innocent III imposed on them a truce of five years. Shortly after this Richard died. Subsequently Philip defended against John, Richard's successor, the claims of the young Arthur of Brittany, and then those of Hugh de Lusignan, Count of La Marche, whose betrothed had been abducted by John. The war between Philip and John, interrupted by the truces imposed by the papal legates, became a national war; and in 1206 John lost his possessions in central France. Philip was sometimes displeased with the pontifical intervention between France and the Plantagenets, but the prestige of Innocent III forced him to accept it. Protracted difficulties took place between him and the pope owing to the tenacity with which Innocent III compelled respect for the indissolubility of even royal marriages.
In 1190 Philip lost his wife, Isabella of Hainault, whom he had married in order to inherit Artois, and in 1193 he married Ingeburga, sister of Canute VI, King of Denmark. As he immediately desired to repudiate her, an assembly of complaisant barons and bishops pronounced the divorce, but Ingeburga appealed to Rome. Despite the remonstrances of Celestine III, Philip, having imprisoned Ingeburga, married Agnes de Méran, daughter of a Bavarian nobleman. Innocent III, recently elected, called upon him to repudiate Agnes and take back Ingeburga, and on the king's refusal the legate, Peter of Capua, placed the kingdom under an interdict (1198). Most of the bishops refused to publish the sentence. The Bishops of Paris and Senlis, who published it, were punished by having their goods confiscated. At the end of nine months Philip appeared to yield; he feigned reconciliation with Ingeburga, first before the legate, Octavian, and then before the Council of Soissons (May, 1201), but he did not dismiss Agnes de Méran. She died in August, 1201, and Innocent III consented to legitimize the two children she had borne the king, but Philip persisted that Rome should pronounce his divorce from Ingeburga, whom he held prisoner at Etampes. Rome refused and Philip dismissed the papal legate (1209). In 1210 he thought of marrying a princess of Thuringia, and in 1212 renewed his importunities for the divorce with the legate, Robert de Courçon. Then, in 1213, having need of the aid of the pope and the King of Denmark, he suddenly restored Ingeburga to her station as queen.
Another question which at first caused discord between Philip II and Innocent III, and regarding which they had later a common policy, was the question of Germany. Otto of Brunswick, who was Innocent III's candidate for the dignity of emperor, was the nephew of Richard and John Lackland. This was sufficient to cause Philip to interfere in favour of Philip of Suabia. They formed an alliance in June, 1198, and when Philip of Suabia was assassinated in 1208 Philip put forward the candidacy of Henry of Brabant. However, the whole of Germany rallied to Otto of Brunswick, who became emperor as Otto IV, and in 1209 Philip feared that the new emperor would invade France. But Otto IV quarrelled with Innocent III and was excommunicated and the pope by an unexpected move called upon Philip for subsidies and troops to aid him against Otto. They agreed to proclaim as emperor Frederick of Hohenstaufen, the future Frederick II, Philip giving Frederick 20,000 "marcs" to defray the cost of his election (November, 1212). Thus was inaugurated the policy by which France meddled in the affairs of Germany and for the first time the French king claimed, like the pope, to have a voice in the imperial election.
The accord established between Innocent and Philip with regard to the affairs of Germany subsequently extended to those of England. Throughout his reign Philip dreamed of a landing in England. As early as 1209 he had negotiated with the English barons who were hostile to John Lackland, and in 1212 with the Irish and the Welsh. When John lackland subjected to cruel persecution the English bishops who, in spite of him, recognized Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury. Innocent III in 1212 placed England under interdict, and the legate, Pandulphus, declared that John Lackland had forfeited his throne. Then Philip, who received at his court all the exiles from England, consented to go to England in the name of Innocent III to take away the crown from John Lackland. It was to be given to his son, the future Louis VIII. On 22 May, 1213, the French expedition was to embark at Gravelines, when it was learned that John Lackland had become reconciled with Rome, and some months later he became a vassal of the pope. Thus failed, on the eve of its realization, the project of the French invasion of England. But the legate of Innocent III induced Philip to punish Ferrand, Count of Flanders, who was the ally of all the enemies of the king. At the battle of Bouvines (27 July, 1214) Ferrand, who supported Otto IV, was taken prisoner. This battle is regarded as the first French national victory. Philip II, asserting that he had on both sides two great and terrible lions, Otto and John, excused himself from taking part in the Crusade against the Albigenses. He permitted his son Louis to make two expeditions into Languedoc to support Simon de Montfort in 1215, and Amaury de Montfort in 1219, and again in 1222 he sent Amaury de Montfort two hundred knights and ten thousand foot soldiers under the Archbishop of Bourges and the Count of La Marche. He foresaw that the French monarchy would profit by the defeat of the Albigenses.
Philip's reign was characterized by a gigantic advance of the French monarchy. Before his time the King of France reigned only over the Ile de France and Berri, and had no communication with the sea. To this patrimony Philip II added Artois, Amienois, Valois, Vernandois, a large portion of Beauvaisis, Normandy, Maine, Anjou, Touraine, and a part of Poitou and Saintonge. His bailiffs and seneschals established the royal power firmly in those countries. Paris became a fortified city and attracted to its university students from different countries. Thanks to the possession of Dieppe, Rouen, and certain parts of Saintonge, the French monarchy became a maritime and commercial power, and Philip invited foreign merchants to France. Flanders, Ponthieu, and Auvergne became subject fiefs, supervised by agents of the king. He exercised a sort of protectorate over Champagne and Burgundy. Brittany was in the hands of Pierre de Dreux, a Capetian of the younger branch. "History", writes M. Luchaire, "does not present so many, such rapid, and such complete changes in the fortune of a State".
Philip Augustus did not interfere in episcopal elections. In Normandy, where the Plantagenets had assumed the custom of directly nominating the bishops, he did not follow their example. Guillaume Le Breton, in his poem the "Philippide", makes him say: "I leave to the men of God the things that pertain to the service of God." He favoured the emancipation of communes, desiring to be liked by the middle classes of the districts he annexed. He often exacted a tax in exchange for the communal charter. But he did not allow the communes to infringe on the property of clerics or the episcopal right of jurisdiction. At Noyen he intervened formally in behalf of the bishop, who was threatened by the commune. He undertook a campaign in defence of the bishops and abbots against certain feudal lords whom he himself desired to humiliate or weaken. In 1180, before he was king, he undertook an expedition into Berri to punish the Lord of Charenton, the enemy of the monks, and into Burgundy where the Count of Chalon and the Lord of Beaujeu were persecuting the Church. In 1186, on the complaint of the monks, he took possession of Chatillon-sur-Seine, in the Duchy of Burgundy, and forced the duke to repair the wrongs he had committed against the Church. In 1210 he sent troops to protect the Bishop of Clermont, who was threatened by the Count of Auvergne.
But on the other hand, in virtue of the preponderance which he wished royalty to have over feudalism, he exacted of the bishops and abbots the performance of all their feudal duties, including military service; although for certain territories he was the vassal of the bishops of Picardy, he refused to pay them homage. Moreover, he declared with regard to Manasses, bishop of Orléans, that the royal court was entitled to judge at the trials of bishops, and he made common cause with lay feudalism in the endless discussions regarding the province of ecclesiastical tribunals, which at the beginning of the thirteenth century were disposed to extend their jurisdiction. An ordinance issued about 1205 at the instance of the king, executed in Normandy and perhaps elsewhere, stipulated that in certain cases lay judges might arrest and try guilty clerics, that the right of asylum of religious buildings should be limited, that the Church might not excommunicate those who did business on Sunday or held intercourse with Jews, and that a citizen having several children should not give more than half of his estate to that one of his sons who was a cleric. Finally he imposed on the clergy heavy financial exactions. He was the first king who endeavoured to compel clerics to pay the king a tenth of their income. In 1188 the archdeacon Peter of Blois defeated this claim, but in 1215 and 1218 Philip renewed it, and by degrees the resistance of the clergy gave way. Philip, however, was pious in his own way, and in the advice which St. Louis gave to his son he said that Philip, because of "God's goodness and mercy would rather lose his throne than dispute with the servants of Holy Church". Thus the reputation left by Philip II was quite different from that of Philip IV, or Frederick II of Germany. He never carried out towards the Church a policy of trickery or petty vexations, on the contrary he regarded it as his collaborator in the foundation of French unity.
Birth
Birth: 21 AUG 1165 Gonesse, Val-d'Oise, Ile-de-France, France
Christening: Paris, Seine, France
Marriages and Children
Isabella of Hainault
In 1190 Philip lost his wife, Isabella of Hainault, whom he had married in order to inherit Artois,
Issue by Isabella of Hainaut [2]
Louis (3 September 1187 – 8 November 1226), King of France as Louis VIII (1223-1226); married Blanche of Castile and had issue.
Robert (15 March 1190 – 18 March 1190)
Philip (15 March 1190 – 18 March 1190)
Ingeburga, sister of Canute VI, King of Denmark
In 1193 he married Ingeburga, sister of Canute VI, King of Denmark. Imprisoned and divorced during most of their marriage.
Agnes de Méran
Agnes de Méran, daughter of a Bavarian noblema. She died in August, 1201, and Innocent III consented to legitimize the two children she had borne the king,
Issue by Agnes of Merania:[3]
Marie (1198 – 15 August 1238); married firstly Philip I of Namur, had no issue. Married secondly Henry I of Brabant, had issue.
Philip (July 1200 – 14/18 January 1234), Count of Boulogne by marriage.
Others currently linked as children on wikitree
Agnes Pierre
Notes
N00139Philip II Augustus (French: Philippe II Auguste) (August 21, 1165 ? July 14, 1223), was King of France from 1180 to 1223. A member of the Capetian dynasty, Philip Augustus was born on August 21, 1165 at Gonesse, Val-d'Oise, France, the son of Louis VII of France and his third wife, AdËle of Champagne. He was originally nicknamed DieudonnÈ: God-given. Philip II was a younger half-brother of Marie, countess palatine of Champagne, Alix, countess of Blois, Marguerite, queen of Hungary and Alys, Countess of the Vexin. He was an older full brother of Agnes of France, Empress of Constantinople.
In declining health, his father had him crowned at Rheims in 1179. He was married on April 28, 1180 to Isabelle of Hainaut, who brought the County of Artois as her dowry. His father and co-ruler died on September 18, 1180. Philip's eldest son Louis (later King Louis VIII), was born on September 5, 1187 and became Count of Artois in 1190, when Isabelle, his mother, died.
As King, Philip II would become one of the most successful in consolidating northern France into one royal domain, but he never had more than limited influence in southern France. He seized the territories of Maine, Touraine, Anjou, Brittany and all of Normandy from King John of England (1199?1216). His decisive victory at the Battle of Bouvines over King John and a coalition of forces that included Otto IV of Germany ended the immediate threat of challenges to this expansion (1214) and left Philip II Augustus as the most powerful monarch in all of Europe.
He reorganized the government, bringing financial stability to the country and thus making possible a sharp increase in prosperity. His reign was popular with ordinary people because he checked the power of the nobles and passed some of it on to the growing middle class that his reign had created.
His relationships with the sons of his rival Henry II of England were particularly notable - close friends with all of them, he used them to foment rebellion against their father, notably turning against both Richard and John after their respective accessions to their inheritance. With Henry the Young King and Geoffrey of Brittany he maintained friendship until their deaths - indeed, at the funeral of Geoffrey, he was so overcome with grief that he had to be forcibly restrained from casting himself into the grave.
Contents [hide]
1 Early years
2 Third Crusade
3 Marital problems
4 Last years
5 Portrayal in fiction
6 Sources
[edit] Early years
In 1179, Louis VII, in the tradition of his forefathers going back to Hugh Capet, had his son Philip crowned king to assure his smooth succession. On 1 November, Guillaume aux Blanches Mains, Archbishop of Rheims, crowned and anointed the fourteen year-old prince in the cathedral there. His father died on 18 September of the next year.
While the royal power had been increased under Philip I and Louis VI, under Louis VII it had diminished slightly. In April 1182, Philip expelled Jews from the Royal domain (the part of France controlled directly by the King rather than by a vassal) and confiscated their goods.
In 1184, Stephen I of Sancerre and his BrabanÁon mercenaries ravaged the OrlÈanais. Philip, aided by the ConfrËres de la Paix, defeated him and established order.
Since 1181, conflict had been ongoing with the count of Flanders, Philippe of Alsace. Philip managed to counter the ambitions of the count by breaking his alliances with Henry I, Duke of Brabant, and Philipp von Heinsberg, Archbishop of Cologne. In July 1185, the Treaty of Boves confirmed to the king the possession of the Vermandois, Artois, and AmiÈnois.
Philip also began to war with the King Henry of England who was also count of Anjou and duke of Aquitaine in France; two years of combat (1186-1188) followed, but the situation remained unchanged. Philip initially allied and worked with the young sons of Henry, Richard and John, who were in rebellion against their father. The death of Henry and the fall of Jerusalem in 1187 diverted attention from the Franco-English war.
[edit] Third Crusade
Philip (right) and Richard accepting the keys to Acre.Philip went on the Third Crusade with Richard I of England (1189?99) and the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick I Barbarossa (1189?1192). His army left VÈzelay on July 1, 1190. At first the French and English crusaders traveled together, but the armies split at Lyons, as King Richard I decided to go by sea, and Philip took the overland route through the Alps to Genoa. The French and English armies were reunited in Messina, where they wintered together. On March 30, 1191 the French set sail for the Holy Land, where they launched several assaults on Acre before King Richard I arrived (see Siege of Acre). By the time Acre surrendered on July 12, Philip was severely ill with dysentery and had little more interest in further crusading. He decided to return to France, a decision that displeased King Richard I, who said, "It is a shame and a disgrace on my lord if he goes away without having finished the business that brought him hither. But still, if he finds himself in bad health, or is afraid lest he should die here, his will be done." So on July 31, 1191 the French army remained in Outremer under the command of Hugues III, duke of Burgundy. Philip and his cousin Peter of Courtenay, count of Nevers, made their way to Genoa and from there returned to France.
[edit] Marital problems
After Isabelle's early death in childbirth, in 1190, Philip decided to marry again. On August 15, 1193 he married Ingeborg (1175?1236), daughter of King Valdemar I of Denmark (1157?82). She was renamed Isambour, and Stephan of Dornik described her as "very kind, young of age but old of wisdom." For some unknown reason, Philip was repelled by her, and he refused to allow her to be crowned Queen. Ingeborg protested at this treatment; his response was to confine her to a convent. He then asked Pope Celestine III for an annulment on the grounds of non-consummation. Philip had not reckoned with Ingeborg, however; she insisted that the marriage had been consummated, and that she was his wife and the rightful Queen of France. The Franco-Danish churchman William of Paris intervened on the side of Ingeborg, drawing up a genealogy of the Danish kings to disprove the alleged impediment of consanguinity.
Philip Augustus' seal, note the fleur de lis in his right hand.In the meantime Philip had sought a new bride. Initially agreement had been reached for him to marry Marguerite, daughter of William I, Count of Geneva, but the young bride's journey to Paris was interrupted by Thomas I of Savoy, who kidnapped Philip's intended new queen and married her instead, claiming that Philip was already bound in marriage. Philip finally achieved a third marriage, on May 7, 1196, to Agnes of Merania from Dalmatia (c. 1180 ? July 29, 1201). Their children were:
Marie (1198 ? October 15, 1224)
Philippe Hurepel (1200?1234), Count of Clermont and eventually, by marriage, Count of Boulogne
Pope Innocent III (1198?1216) declared Philip Augustus's marriage to Agnes of Merania null and void, since he was still married to Ingeborg. He ordered the King to part from AgnËs; when he did not, the Pope placed France under an interdict in 1199. This continued until September 7, 1200. Due to pressure from the Pope and from Ingeborg's brother, King Valdemar II of Denmark (1202?41), Philip finally took Ingeborg back as his Queen in 1213.
[edit] Last years
Understandably, he turned a deaf ear when the Pope asked him to do something about the heretics in the Languedoc. When Innocent III called for a crusade against the Albigensians or Cathars, in 1208, Philip did nothing to support it, but neither did he hinder it. The war against the Cathars did not end until 1244, when finally their last strongholds were captured. The fruits of it, namely the submission of the south of France to the crown, were to be reaped by Philip's son, Louis VIII, and grandson, Louis IX.
Philip II Augustus would play a significant role in one of the greatest centuries of innovation in construction and in education. With Paris as his capital, he had the main thoroughfares paved, built a central market, Les Halles, continued the construction begun in 1163 of the Gothic Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral, constructed the Louvre as a fortress and gave a charter to the University of Paris in 1200. Under his guidance, Paris became the first city of teachers the medieval world had known. In 1224, the French poet Henry d'Andeli wrote of the great wine tasting competition that Philip II Augustus commissioned The Battle of the Wines.
Philip II Augustus died July 14, 1223 at Mantes and was interred in Saint Denis Basilica. He was succeeded by his son by Isabelle of Hainaut, Louis VIII (1223?26).
[edit] Portrayal in fiction
Philip is a character in James Goldman's historical play The Lion in Winter. The play maintains the historical theory that he and Richard the Lionhearted had previously had a homosexual relationship. In the 1968 film of The Lion in Winter, which downplayed the homosexual aspect present in the stage play, Philip was played by Timothy Dalton. Jonathan Rhys Meyers played Philip in a 2003 television version.
[edit] Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Philip II of FrancePayne, Robert. The Dream and the Tomb, 1984
Baldwin, John W. The Government of Philip Augustus, 1991
Catholic Encyclopedia article
Preceded by
Louis VII King of France
1180?1223 Succeeded by
Louis VIII | CAPET Phillippe Auguste (I57866)
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| 6733 |
King of Gandarike ( Kievan Rus'). Married Aud the Deepminded without the consent of her father Ivar Vidfame. Ivar set out to punish them but died on the way, leaving Ráðbarðr free to help Aud's son, Harald Wartooth claim his inheritance in Sweden and Norway. Ráðbarðr and Aud had a son, Randver. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Ráðbarðr
Sögubrot af Nokkrum Fornkonungun í Dana ok Svíaveldi | HALFDANSSON Radbart (I58766)
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| 6734 |
King of Jerusalem; Count d'Anjou | V Foulques (I90)
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| 6735 |
King of Leinster
Ailill Mac Dúnlainge of the Uí Dúnlainge, a son of Son of Dúnlaing mac Énda Niada, was a king of Leinster from 0495 until 0527 when he died. [1] He was a great - grandson of Bressal Bélach. [2]
Ailill, son of Dunlaing was King of Leinster for 20 years [3]
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 38
Clann Name: Uí Dúnlainge
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[4]
AU495.1 The second battle of Granairet, in which fell Fraech son of Finnchad son of Gairchú son of Fothad son of Eochu Lámhdóid son of Mess Corb, king of Laigin. Eochu, son of Coirpre—i.e. Eochu son of Coirpre son of Ailill son of Dúnlang son of Énna Niad—was victor.
0526 - Oilill, son of Dunlaing, King of Leinster, died. [5]
Sources
↑ Wikiwand : Kings of Leinster
↑ The real "Game Of Thrones": The List of kings of Leinster
↑ Kings of Leinster (Rig Lagen) interpreted by Jim Kinsella
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
↑ Celt : Annuls of the Four Masters M526.5 Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
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 Aillill (I58538)
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| 6736 |
King of NorthumbriaEardwulf's background is obscure; his father may also have been named Eardwulf and may have been one of the two Eardwulfs whose deaths are recorded by Symeon of Durham in 774 and 775. [1]
Eardwulf became king of Northumbria on 14th May 796, after being recalled from exile following the deposition of Osbald of Northumbria in 796. [2] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that he was consecrated King by Eanbald I, Archbishop of York, and Bishops Æthelberht, Beadwulf and Hygebald, at York Minster on 26 May 796. [3]
Sources
↑ Symeon of Durham's History of the Kings quoted in Wikipedia : Eardwulf of Northumbria
↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography : Eardwulf
↑ Wikipedia : Eardwulf of Northumbria | EADWULF Eardwulf (I58746)
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| 6737 |
King of Pamplona Rey de Pamplona (882 a 905), último soberano da Dinastia Iñiga.
Sources
Wikipedia contributors, "Fortún Garcés of Pamplona," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fort%C3%BAn_Garc%C3%A9s_of_Pamplona&oldid=770911692 (accessed September 17, 2017).
Sources
WikiTree profile Rey de Pamplona-3 created through the import of 20110708.ged on Jul 8, 2011 by Carlos Molina. See the de Pamplona-3 Changes page for the details of edits by Carlos and others. | PAMPLONA Fortún Garcés (I59755)
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| 6738 |
King of Poland from 1025–1031, and Duke from 1032 until his death.
Sources
Górczyk, Wojciech, "Półksiężyc, orzeł, lew i smok. Uwagi o godłach napieczętnych Piastów" Histmag.org June 14, 2009
Wikipedia: Mieszko II Lambert
Mieszko II Lambert at Medieval Lands Project:
MIESZKO LAMBERT of Poland, son of BOLESŁAW I "Chrobry" Prince [King in 1025] of Poland & his [third] wife Emnilda --- (990-10 May 1034). Thietmar refers to the two sons of Bolesław as his wife Emnilda as "Miesco and another…named after his beloved lord [Otto]". The Chronicæ Polanorum names "secundus Mescho" as son of "magnus Bolezlavum". The Annales Kamenzenses record the birth in 990 of "Mesco filius Bolezlai". The Annales Silesiaci Compilati record the birth in 990 of "Boleslau filius Meczko". The Chronica principum Polonie records that "Boleslaus" had "filium Meziconem secundum" in 990. He succeeded his father in 1025 as MIESZKO II King of Poland. He launched raids on the territory of the Ostmark in 1030, devastating hundreds of villages. A German-Russian coalition defeated Prince Mieszko in 1030, conquered territory, divided what remained of Poland between members of the Piast dynasty and forced the king to send his crown to Germany. The country descended into civil war. The Annales Cracovienses Vetusti record the death in 1034 of "Mysko rex Poloniorum". The necrology of Merseburg records the death "10 May" of "Lanpertus sive Misico dux poloniorum".
m ([1013], [divorced]) RICHEZA, daughter of EZZO Pfalzgraf of Lotharingia & his wife Mathilde of Germany (-21 Mar 1063, bur Köln St Maria ad gradus). The Brunwilarensis Monasterii Fundatio names the seven daughters (in order) "Richza, Adelheit, Ida, Mathild, Theophanu, Heylewig, Sophia" as children of "Herenfridus comes palatinus, qui post Ezo nominatus est" and his wife "Mathilde filia Magni Ottonis", specifying in a later passage that "Richza" was divorced from her husband and was mother of "Gazimerum". The Annales Kamenzenses record the marriage in 1013 of "Mesco filius Bolezlai primi" and "sororem Ottonis tercii imperatoris". "Heinricus…Romanorum imperator augustus" confirmed the foundation of Kloster Brauweiler by charter dated 18 Jul 1051 which names "Richeza regina quondam Poleniæ…pro remedio anime sue fratrisque sui beate memorie Ottonis ducis aliorumque parentum suorum in monasterio Brunwilarensi sepultorum…per manum Heinrici palatini comitis filii patrui sui" and witnessed by "Heinricus comes palatinus, Sicco comes, Starchri comes…". She fled for shelter to a western monastery when Poland descended into civil war. The Kalendarium of Köln Cathedral records the death “XII Kal Mai” of “Rigza regina soror Herimanni archiepiscopi”. King Mieszko II & his wife had four children: KAZIMIERZ, daughter ---, [RYKSA], GERTRUDA. | PIAST Mieszko (I58068)
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| 6739 |
King of the Huns
Sources
Geni http://www.geni.com/people/Kama-Tarkhan/6000000000933331168?through=6000000000933282217
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kama_Tarkhan
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s004/f285559.htm | de HUNNIE Kama Tarkhan (I58690)
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| 6740 |
King of the Huns | de HUNNIE Uldin (I58687)
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| 6741 |
King of the Huns, born about 0210.
Sources
Geni http://www.geni.com/people/Szemen-47th-King-of-the-Huns/6000000003645919059?through=6000000000933331168
Whitham http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=scottwhitham&id=I6000000003645919059
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s008/f571118.htm | de HUNNIE Szemen (I58691)
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| 6742 |
King of the Huns, born about 0300.
Sources
Geni http://www.geni.com/people/Donaton-King-of-the-Huns/6000000000933315099?through=6000000000929481770
The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I30605
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s076/f321389.htm | de HUNNIE Donaton (I58688)
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| 6743 |
King of Uí Cheinnselaig
Death - 625; "The death of Ronán son of Colmán" [1]
A granddaughter - Failbe mac Domnaill meic Cormaic meic Díarmata of the Uí Bairrche married Eithne, daughter of Crundmáel mac Rónaín, they had a daughter, Mugain. [2]
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.[3]
Sources
↑ The Annals of Tigernach T625.1 page: 176 Celt : Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
↑ 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 : Rónán mac Colmáin
*Wikidata: Item Q1416949, 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 | COLMAIN Rónán (I58470)
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| 6744 |
Knight of the Garter and was a person of great eminence in the
turbulent times in which he lived, and one of the gallant heros of
Crecy. He was created Earl of Northampton, 17 Mar. 1337 and from that
period he appears as the constant companion in arms of the marital
King Edward III and his son. | DEBOHUN Sir William (I2318)
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| 6745 |
Knight of the Garter April 1377. Styled Earl of Derby from June 1377. Created Earl of Derby July 1377. Created Earl of Hereford September 1397. Succeeded as Duke of Lancaster, Earl of Leicester and Earl of Lincoln 3 February 1399. Usurped the throne 30 September 1399. | PLANTAGENET IV Henry (I21888)
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| 6746 |
Known as "Nettie". She married John George Frey, from Switzerland. | Young Jeanette (I52196)
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| 6747 |
Known as Amos Davisson, Jr. | DAVISSON Harley Warren "Amos" (I36721)
|
| 6748 |
Konrad was born after 1097. He passed away in 1157.[1]
Ancestor of Philippa of Hainault, wife of Edward III. | von WETTIN Konrad (I57873)
|
| 6749 |
Kunigarde/Kunizza "Hemma", daughter of Konrad I Schwaben, married Friedrich I, probably Count of Dießen.[1][2] She died 6 Mar 1020 in Jerusalem and is buried there.[2]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Conrad I, Duke of Swabia
↑ 2.0 2.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed Mar 2021 Swabia | SCHWABEN Kunigarde (I58256)
|
| 6750 |
Kunigund or Cunégonde (Cynigund) is the daughter of Ermentrude of France, and granddaughter of Louis II, King of France, based on an eleventh century genealogical table.[1], [2] The source that names her mother doesn't mention her father. The most likely proposal is that he is Regnier I, Count and Lay-Abbot of Echternach, but this is unproven.[2]
Her birth date is unknown but must be somewhere between 885 and 895 given her mother's date of birth is between 870-877 and Kunigund's eldest son was born in about 910.[2] For the purposes of providing a birth date on this profile it is about 890.
Marriages
Kunigund married firstly Wigeric, count in Bidgau, who died between 916-919; and secondly Ricuin, Count of Verdun, who died 923.[2]
There have been proposals that she married a third time but this has never been proven.[2]
Children
There has been much discussion over which of her husbands was the father of her children.[2]
Adalbero I, born about 905-910, bishop of Metz 929, died 26 April 962;
Liutgard, still alive 8 April 960, married (1) Adalbert, and (2) Eberhard;
Gozlin (Gozelo), died 18 October 942-943, ancestor of dukes of Lower-Lorraine;
Frederic I, died 978, duke of Upper Lorraine;
Siegfried, died after 997, count in Moselgau, ancestor of the counts of Luxemburg;
Siegebert (probably the same as above);
Giselbert, count in Ardennes
Death
The year Kunigund died is unknown, but two necrologies name a countess Cunice as having died on 2 October and this is likely to be Kunigund.[2]
Research Notes
For a full discussion on many issues related to Kunigund and her family - see the various articles in Stewart Baldwin's The Henry Project: The Ancestors of king Henry II of England http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/henry.htm
Not sure where this is from or how it relates © ____ Author ?[citation needed] -- "Het is helemaal niet zeker, of Kunegonde, de moeder van Graaf Siegfried van Luxemburg, identiek is met de Kunegonde, de echtgenote van de Pfalzgraaf Wigerich en de Graaf Richwin! Zeker is alleen, dat Kunegonde, de moeder van Graaf Siegfried van Luxemburg, een dochter is van Irmtrud, een dochter van Lodewijk de Stamelaar. Haar vader is niet bekend! Verder is zeker dat Bisschop Adalbero van Metz, een zoon van ene Kunegonde, die met Wigerich en met Richwin was gehuwd, door koning Karel de Eenvoudige als Nepos (kleinzoon of neef) werd genoemd. Als dus beide Kunegondes dus dezelfde persoon is, dan was de Bisschop inderdaad de achterkleinzoon van koning Karel de Eenvoudige. Immers, hij is dan een kleinzoon van diens zuster Irmtrud. Zie hierover verder de Herdruk van E. Brandenburg, Die Nachkommen Krals des Grossen, 2e druk, bladzijde 119."[1][2][citation needed]
Google Translate:
It is not certain whether Kunhuty , the mother of Count Siegfried of Luxembourg , is identical with the Kunhuty , the wife of the Palatinate Count and the Count Richwin Wigerich ! The only certainty is that Kunhuty , the mother of Count Siegfried of Luxembourg , a subsidiary of Irmtrud , a daughter of Louis the Stammerer . Her father is not known ! It is also certain that Bishop Adalbero of Metz, a son of one Kunhuty , who was married to Wigerich and Richwin by King Charles the Simple as Nepos ( grandson or nephew ) was named ls so both Kunegondes so the same person , then the wax bishop indeed the grandson of king Charles the Simple . After all, he is a grandson of his sister Irmtrud ( see further Reprint E. Brandenburg , who Nach Bowls Krals des Grossen , 2nd Edition , page 119)
Sources
↑ MGH SS 2(314)
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Baldwin, Stewart, 'Cunégonde/Kunigund' updated 10 June 2010, in The Henry Project: The ancestors of king Henry II of England, http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/henry.htm : accessed 6 May 2019.
See also:
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac
Lins, J. (1913). "Metz." Catholic Encyclopedia (Vol. 10). WikiSource.[3]
Wikipedia: Cunigunda of France; Wikipedia: Louis the Stammerer | UNKNOWN Kunigund (I58286)
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| 6751 |
Kunigunde was married to Ulrich von Schweinachgau. Her parentage is speculative based on Wilhelm Wegener.[1] She had died before 1000, the year her son-in-law made a donation to St Emmeram for among others her soul.[2]
Sources
↑ Quellen zur bayerischen Geschichte, Neue Folge, Band 8, p. 217- 80, cited in Wilhelm Wegener, Genealogische Tafeln zur mitteleuropäischen Geschichte. Göttingen 1962-69, pp. 138 and 165
↑ Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, DUKES of BAVARIA (LUITPOLDINGE) | von BAYERN Kunigunde (I59415)
|
| 6752 |
Kuno von Lechsgemünd (d. ante 1094).[1]
Parents
Father: Heinrich, Graf an der Pegnitz.[2]
Mother: UNKNOWN
Marriage
m. Mathilde von Horburg (d. 30 Sep 1092/4; p. Rudolf, Graf von Achalm and Adelheid von Wülflingen). Issue: 8. | LECHSGEMÜND Kuno (I58311)
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| 6753 |
La Canardière | Normand Louis [III] (I39563)
|
| 6754 |
Laid to rest at Grace Episcopal Church in Nutley, NJ | AMES Alice Elizabeth (I40203)
|
| 6755 |
Lambert de Louvain (later Lambert II "Baldric" Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven) was the son of Lambert Reginar I, Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven, a member of the Lotharingian noble family known as the "Reginars" or “Régniers” - and Gerberga / Gerberge de Lorraine, daughter of Charles I, the Duke of Lower Lotharingia (Lorraine) and granddaughter of Louis IV, King of the Franks (West Francia). [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
The Chronicon Brabanti also refers to the two names of Lambert when recording the death of "Lambertus II qui et Baldricus dictus Cum-Barba", although it is unclear how reliable this is as "cum-barba" is the nickname applied in other sources to Comte Lambert [I]. If Lambert [II] was in fact also called Baldric, it suggests a relationship (which has not been identified) with the early Graafen van Betuwe (see the document HOLLAND) and Comtes de Looz (see LOWER LOTHARINGIAN NOBILITY), in which three bishops of Liège named Baldric belonged. "Baldricus…cum uxore mea Oda" founded the collegial church in Brussels by charter dated 1047. The Vita Balderici refers to "comes Lowaniensis Lambertus vir profanæ mentis et moribus barbarus", presumed to refer to Comte Lambert II. [1]
Lower and Upper Lotharingia
Lotharingia / Lothringen / Lotharingie
10th century
Lotharingia (lat:Lotharii, nl: Lotharingen, fr: Lotharingie (later Lorraine), de: Lothringen) comprised the territory of "Middle Francia" originally granted to Lothar on division of the Carolingian Empire in 855. It included the territories that make up the modern-day Benelux countries (Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg) - as well as the eastern portion of France and the western Rhineland of Germany. The region was generally part of the Holy Roman Empire but was the subject of frequent political and territorial conflict between the Western Franks (who established the Kingdom of France) and the Eastern Franks (who were associated with the emerging Kingdom of Germany) - particularly from 962 when Otto of Saxony was crowned as the Holy Roman Emperor.
Lotharingia was partitioned in 959 into "Lower Lotharingia" (the lower Northern region) and "Upper Lotharingia" (the higher more Southern region). Upper Lotharingia became a Duchy and was increasingly influenced by the Western Franks - and in Old French the term Loherigne and Loherainc were increasingly used for the territories and people - which later developed into the word Lorraine in French.
The associated territories continue to reflect both French and Dutch/Germanic influences, particularly in Belgium, concentrated in Wallonia and Flanders, respectively - and Belgian place names generally have counterparts in both languages, e.g. Bruxelles et Louvain (fr), Brussel en Leuven (fl/nl). [8]
Marriage, Family and Accession
By 1047, Lambert had married Uda (lat: Oda) de Lorraine / Lotharingia who was the daughter of Gozelon I, Duke of Lower Lotharingia. [1]
The Vita Sanctæ Gudilæ names "Oda…Gozelonis ducis filia" as wife of "Lambertus…comes" in a passage dated 1047. The Genealogica ex Stirpe Sancti Arnulfi names "Godefridum ducem, Odam et Regelindam" as children of "Gozelo, frater Arnulphi et Godefridi". "Baldricus…cum uxore mea Oda" founded the collegial church in Brussels by charter dated 1047. [1]
Lambert and Uda had at least children together: [1]
Henri, who succeeded his father as Henri II, Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven
Adela, who first married Otto, Graf von Weimer and later married Dedo, Markgraf der sächsischen Ostmark
Reginar, who was killed in battle at Hesbaie in 1077
They may also have had an additional son: [1]
Joscelin
Lambert's elder brother Henri, Comte de Louvain was killed in Brussels in 1038; and although Henri had a young son Otton, Lambert succeeded his elder brother as Lambert II, Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven. [1] [6]
The Vita Sanctæ Gudilæ records that "Lambertus…comes" succeeded his brother Henri. The Genealogica comitum Buloniensium records that "Henricum seniorem de Bursella" was father of "Lambertum comitem et Henricum fratrem eius et Mathildem sororem eorum", but this appears to be a confused representation of the situation. He succeeded his brother in 1038 as LAMBERT [II] Comte de Louvain, after depriving his nephew of his rights: the Chronicon Sigeberti records the death in 1038 of "Henricus Lovaniensis Comes" and the succession of "filius eius Otho" who was deprived by "patruus eius Baldricus qui et Lambertus".
Death and Succession
Lambert joined the rebellion of Baudouin V de Flandre against the German emperor Heinrich III, but was killed in battle near Tournai and buried on 19 June 1054 at Nivelles according to the Chronique de Sigebert de Gembloux (1056). [7]
Lambert was succeeded by his son Henri de Louvain who became Henri II, Comte de Louvain. [1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Comtes de Louvain 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 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ Wikipedia (en) – Reginarids (Houses of Brabant, Hainaut and Louvain)
↑ Wikipedia (en) – Lambert I, Count of Louvain
↑ Dukes of Lower Lotharingia (Carolingian) 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 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ Wikipedia (en) – Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine
↑ 6.0 6.1 Wikipedia (en) – Lambert II, Count of Louvain
↑ 7.0 7.1 Wikipédia (fr) – Lambert II de Louvain
↑ Wikipédia (fr) - Basse-Lotharingie | LOUVAIN Lambert (I59032)
|
| 6756 |
Lambert I "dit le Barbu / the Bearded," Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven was a member of the Lotharingian noble family known as the “Reginars” or “Régniers” that was associated with the Houses of Brabant, Hainaut and Louvain / Leuven (see notes below). Lambert was the son of Rainier Reginar, Régnier III, Comte de Hainaut / Graaf van Henegouwen and his wife Adela. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
Lotharingia and place names
Lower (northern) Lotharingia (fl/nl: Neder-Lotharingen, fr: Basse-Lorraine, de: Niederlothringen) comprised almost all of the territory of the modern-day Benelux countries (Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg) as well as the northeastern portion of France and the lower Rhineland of Germany. The region was generally part of the Holy Roman Empire but was the subject of frequent political and territorial conflict between the Western Franks who established the Kingdom of France and the Eastern Franks who were associated with the emerging Kingdom of Germany, particularly from 962 when Otto of Saxony was crowned as the Holy Roman Emperor. Belgium continues to reflect both French and Dutch/Germanic influences, concentrated in Wallonia and Flanders, respectively - and Belgian place names generally have counterparts in both languages, e.g. Bruxelles et Louvain (fr), Brussel en Leuven (fl/nl). [8]
Dynastic family name
The name associated with this family (which in Latin was typically written as Raginerus, Ragenerus or Rainerus) is generally translated in Dutch/Flemish as Reginar or Reinier, French as Renier or Régnier, German as Reginhar and English as Reginar. The name has been associated with the Duke of Lorraine from 910 (Reginar I) and with the succeeding Counts of Hainaut from 915-1039 (Reginar II through Reginar V). [2]
Early Years in Exile and Return to Lotharingia
Lambert's father Rainier Reginar III helped the French in an attempt to take over Lotharingia, which had earlier been governed by his uncle - for which he was exiled from the Holy Roman Empire in about 958 (when Lambert and his brother Reginar (later de Hainaut) were still young). Shortly after their father died in exile in Bohemia in 973, the brothers returned to Lotharingia in an attempt to reclaim the Comté de Hainaut / Graaf van Henegouwen, which had belonged to their father. [5]
The Annales Leodienses, Floressienses et Marchianenses record that "Raginerus et Lantbertus" (sons of Reginar [III] Comte de Hainaut) returned from exile in 973 and killed "Guarnero et Rainaldo", who occupied their father's county, "apud Perronam" and besieged "super Hagnam fluvium castello Buxude. Emperor Otto II ordered their exile again. Sigebert's Chronica records that in 977 "filii Ragineri" were "in terra partum suorum relocati", which presumably marked the beginning of their rehabilitation. [1]
Lambert and his brother Reginar were actively involved in struggles for control over the territories of Lotharingia (modern-day Belgium) between the Kingdom of France - with whom they were generally aligned - and Otto II of Germany who had become the Holy Roman Emperor in 973 and King of Italy in 980. [1] [5]
Marriage and Family
By about 995 (991-1000), Lambert had married Gerberge (Gerberga) de Lorraine - who was the daughter of Charles Duke of Lotharingia and his wife Adelais de Troyes, and whose dowry was Brabant (including Louvain and Brussels). [1] [5] [9]
Lambert and Gerberga had at least three children together: [1] [5] [9]
Henri, who succeeded his father in 1015 as Henri I, Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven
Lambert, who succeeded his elder brother in 1038 as Lambert II, Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven
Mathilde
Another son has been proposed by historians based on their descendants but is considered uncertain: [5]
Reinier / Reginar
Accession
Lambert called "le Barbu" ("the Bearded") became the first named Comte de Louvain / Graaf van Leuven in 1003 - and through his wife also inherited Brussels. [1] [5]
He established himeself as LAMBERT "le Barbu" Comte de Louvain. He is named "comite Lovaniæ Lantberto" in a charter dated 1003. The Annales Colonienses specify that "Lambertus comes" returned to favour with Heinrich II King of Germany in 1007.
The Genealogica comitum Buloniensium records that "Karolus dux" was father of "Ermengardem et Gerbergam", and that "Gerberga soror Ermengardis" was mother of "Henricum seniorem de Bursella". The Gesta Abbatem Trudonensium names "Gerbergam, filiam Karoli ducis Lotharingie" as wife of "Lambertus filius Reyneri comitis Montensis", specifying that Brabant (including Louvain and Brussels) was her dowry. [1]
Death and Succession
Lambert was killed in battle at Florennes in the county of Namur on 12 Sep 1015 - was succeeded by his eldest son Henri, who became Henri I, Comte de Louvain. [1] [5] [6]
Henri and his mother are reflected in a subsequent memorial donation at Gembloux Abbey in the County of Namur:
The Gesta of Gembloux Abbey records that "filio suo comite Heinrico" supported his mother's donation to Gembloux after the death in battle in 1015 of his father "Lantbertum comitem, filium Ragineri Longicolli" [1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Comtes de Louvain 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 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.0 2.1 Wikipedia (en) – Reginarids (Houses of Brabant, Hainaut and Louvain
↑ Wikipedia (en) – Reginar III, Count of Hainaut
↑ Wikipédia (fr) – Régnier de Hainaut
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 Wikipedia (en) – Lambert I, Count of Louvain
↑ 6.0 6.1 Wikipédia (fr) – Lambert I de Louvain
↑ Anderson, James, "A Genealogical History of the House of Yvery; In its Different Branches of Yvery, Luvel, Perceval, and Gournay", London: private, 1742, Vol. II, available online via Google Books, p. 63
↑ [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basse-Lotharingie Wikipédia (fr) - Basse-Lotharingie}
↑ 9.0 9.1 Lot, Ferdinand Victor Henri, "Les Derniers Carolingiens, Lothaire Louis V - Charles de Lorraine (954-991)", Paris: Emile Bouillon,1891. Available via Internet Archive: Cf. p. 287
See also:
Wauters, Alphonse, « Lambert Ier », Académie royale de Belgique, Biographie nationale, vol. 11, Bruxelles, 1891; p. 138-142
Kupper, Jean-Louis, « Annexe II. Les Régnier et les Balderic », p. 509 in Liège et l’Église impériale aux XIe-XIIe siècles, by Presses universitaires de Liège, 1981. ISBN: 9782821828681. Digital version vailable online via OpenEdition Books: Les Régnier et les Balderic
Geni – Lambert I, count of Louvain
Find A Grave - Lambert “the Bearded” of Louvain (Grave ID 148161210) reports burial at the Collegiate Church of St. Gertrude in Nivelles.
Note: this secondary reference in unsourced, and the Collegiate Church of St. Gertrude was not completed until 1049. However, the associated Abbey of Nivelles is from the 7th century, and various family members - including Lambert's son and others - were buried at Nivelles. | REGINAR Lambert (I58941)
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| 6757 |
Lambert II (d. ante 741)[1][1]
Parents
Father: Chrodrobert "Robert" II of Neustria (d. ante 12 Sep 677)[2]
Mother: UNKNOWN[3]
Marriage and Issue
m. UNKNOWN. Issue:[4]
Robert I, Comte de Hesbaie. (700/10 - ante 764)[5][6]
Research Notes
Lambert (682–781), Count of Haspengau (Hesbaye). The identity of Lambert's father remains uncertain, but the prevailing theories identify him as either Robert II (Chrodobert II), Lord Chancellor of France, or a son of Robert's. Some histories identify Lambert as the son of Warnius and Gunza (see, for example, Lambert de Hesbaye), although this is not likely. Lambert would be nevertheless a direct descendant of Clovis I, King of the Franks.
Lambert was possibly married to Chrotlind, daughter of Theodoric III, King of Neustria and Austrasia. Lambert (and Chrotlind?) had three children [2]
"Lambert was possibly a Count of Haspengau (Hesbaye), generally referred to without the number modifier. The identity of his father remains uncertain, but the prevailing theories identify Lambert as either the son or paternal grandson of Robert II (Chrodobert II), Lord Chancellor of Francia. An alternative theory would make him son of Warnius and Gunza, although this is not likely."[3]
Marriage and Children
Lambert was married to Chrotlind, and had three children:
Landrada, married Sigramnus, Count of Hesbaye
Robert I, Duke of Neustria and Count of Hesbaye
Rotrude, married Charles Martel. Grandmother of Charlemagne. (Rotrude's parentage is under dispute).
Death
Upon his death, Lambert was succeeded as Count of Hesbaye by his son Robert.
Sources
↑ Ancestry public member trees: Mayor of the Palace Neustrie, b. Poitiers, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France[citation needed]
↑ Settipani, Christian (1990). "Addenda aux "Ancêtres de Charlemagne", 1990"
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambert,_Count_of_Hesbaye
[Wikipedia Lambert,_Count of Hesbaye]
Wikipedia:fr: Lambert de Hesbaye, Does not say where he was born. | Robertian II Lanthbertus (I58228)
|
| 6758 |
Lambert was born about 0739. Lambert van Hornbach ... He passed away about 0783. [1]
Title
Count of Hornbach
Alias
Alias: Lambert les Herbauges
Alias: Lambert de Treves
Name
Name: /Lambert/ I[2][3][4]
Name: Lambert /Hornbach/[5]
Name: Lambert /De Hornbach/
Source: #S43 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
Source: #S43 Record for Lambert DeHornbach
Source: #S43 Record for Gui De Treves
Name: Lambert /De Treves/
Source: #S43 Record for Guibor De Hornbach
Birth
Date: 720
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hessen, Germany[6][7][8]
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hessen, Germany
Date: 735
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hesse, Germany
Source: #S43 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
Source: #S43 Record for Lambert DeHornbach
Date: 739
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hesse, Germany
Source: #S43 Record for Guibor De Hornbach
Date: 739
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hesse, Germany
Source: #S43 Record for Gui De Treves
Death
Date: 783
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hessen, Germany[9][10][11]
Date: 782
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hessen, Germany
Date: 782
Place: Prussia
Age: 46-47
Source: #S43 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
Source: #S43 Record for Lambert DeHornbach
Date: 783
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hesse, Germany
Source: #S43 Record for Guibor De Hornbach
Date: 783
Place: Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hesse, Germany
Source: #S43 Record for Gui De Treves
Sources
↑ Entered by Steve VanderLeest, Jun 29, 2013
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert I Les Herbauges de Treves Count von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guido Count March
↑ Source: #S004444 Ancestry Family Trees https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/628564466/facts
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert I Les Herbauges de Treves Count von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guido Count March
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guiboar Von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert I Les Herbauges de Treves Count von Hornbach
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guido Count March
Source: #S-1968866219
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/2886322/person/1756267909/facts
Source S-1968866219
Repository: #R-1969211483
Ancestry Family Trees
Repository R-1969211483
Address: http://www.Ancestry.com
Source: S-2087525741 Repository: #R-2142232775 https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27418815/family
Repository: R-2142232775 http://www.Ancestry.com Note:
Source: S6 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees; Repository: #R1
Repository: R1 Name: www.ancestry.co.uk Address: E-Mail Address: Phone Number:
Source: S4 https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/22373421/person/1295013530/facts
Source: S004444 Ancestry Family Trees. Note: #NS044441 Repository: Note: #NS044443
Note NS044443 | HORNBACH Lambert (I58840)
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| 6759 |
Landabaria was the daughter of Cathir (Cathair). She became the 4th wife of Conn of a Hundred Battles. [1]
Sources
↑ Roderic O'Flaherty, Ogygia: or, A chronological account of Irish events (Dublin: W. McKenzie, 1793), p. 210, digital images, https://archive.org/stream/ogygiaorchronolo02oflaiala#page/210. Open Library (http://archive.org: accessed 2 August 2015. | MÁR Landabaria (I58522)
|
| 6760 |
Landbert de Therouanne (425 - 459)[1]
m. Theudria de Boulogne[2]
Parents
Clodion le Chevelu MâEROVINGIEN 455
Hildegonde de COLOGNE 399-450
Spouse(s) and child(ren)
Married to Theudria de BOULOGNE 420,
Clodgar II de THâEROUANNE 445-510
Lambert de THâEROUANNE 516
Siblings
Mâerovâee MâEROVINGIEN /458
Louis de COLOGNE 417
Chlodebaud de COLOGNE 420-483
Lambert de THâEROUANNE 425-459
Ragnhard I de CAMBRAI 430-467 | THÉROUANNE Landbert (I59152)
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| 6761 |
Last address was 275 Dorrax Ave., Imperial Beach, CA. | EKSTROM John Verner (I2631)
|
| 6762 |
Last address was 761 East 7th St., St. Paul, MN.
George was a pensioned money clerk at a Railway Express agency for 35
years, Starting in 1894, retiring at August of 1929.
George was an official member of the Eureka Lodge No. 9 A.O.U.W.
Residences:
1864 -01874 Headingly, Yorkshire, England. Leeds + Otley Rd. #243
1874 - 188? Anoka, Anoka Co., MN, Section 4, Farm
1893 - 1900 553 Forest St., St. Paul, MN, Ramsey Co., MN
1901 - 192? 848 E. 3rd St., St. Paul, MN, Ramsey Co., MN (They built)
192? - 1934 761 E. 7th St., St. Paul, MN, Ramsey Co., MN (Time of death)
Episcopalian (Church of England)
Immigration year 1874 | SMITH George H. (I8941)
|
| 6763 |
Last know address was 1019 W. University, Portalis, NM | RICHMOND Kelly (I8171)
|
| 6764 |
Last known address was Mesilla Park, New Mexico | SMITH Bonnie Hazel (I8892)
|
| 6765 |
Last known location was in Chase County, Nebraska. She married Asa Calkins. | Loghry Adeline (I54062)
|
| 6766 |
Last name may be Callum | KELLUM Mary Martha (I56462)
|
| 6767 |
Laura Ella was born in Huntley, Mc Henry County, IL. She went to high school in Dundee, IL. She married Clarence Edward Brown on 20 April, 1934 and became a housewife and mother, raising five children,; four sons and one daughter. She died in Bakersfield, Kern County, California. | Prahl Laura Ella (I52780)
|
| 6768 |
Laura May Catlow Daly died when she was only 43 yrs. 8 months and 27 days old. Her death due to a pregnancy that caused cardio-renal edema.
Her first marriage was to Dexter Donald Brown. To them was born four children; Clarence, Hellen, Lillian and Dolores. After Dexter died in February of 1926, she remarried and during a pregnancy with another child, she became very ill and died before her child was born.
In the death record, it states her father, John E. Catlow, was from England and her mother, Emma Johnson was born in Barrington, IL.
OBITUARY FOR LAURA MAY CATLOW BROWN DALY
Barrington Review, thursday, December 4, 1930
Barrington, McHenry County, Illinois
Mrs. William Daly of 134 N. Ela Street, died Sunday morning at 2 o'clock at the Belmont hospital, Chicago, after a short illness. Funeral services were held at 2:30 yesterday afternoon from the Foriarhow funeral home, 402 E. Main street, Rev. M. S. Freeman of the Methodist Episcopal church officiating, and burial was in Evergreen cemetery.
Mrs. Daly was the daughter of John E. Catlow of 317 North Avenue and was born in Barrington in 1887. With the exception of a few years on a farm in North Dakota, most of her life had been spent in this community and at Cary. Besides her husband and father, she is survived by three daughters, Helen, Lillian and Delores, and one son, Clarence, her children by a former marriage to Dexter Brown of Cary, who died a number of years ago while they were living on a farm near Barrington.
Mrs. Daly also leaves one sister, Mrs. Hertzfeldt of Chicago, and two brothers, Arthur W. Catlow of 200 W. Station Street, Barrington, and Walter Catlow, who lives in Indiana. | Catlow Laura May (I53046)
|
| 6769 |
Laurent (2), born 29 May 1674 at Lauzon and baptized the following
day at Quebec, died and was buried at Lauzon on 3 June of the same
year. | LEVASSEUR Larent (I5127)
|
| 6770 |
Laurent (3), born 22 May 1675 at Lauzon and baptized four days later
at Quebec, was mentioned in the register of the Hotel-Dieu of Quebec
on 3 July
1695. After that we lose all trace of him. | LEVASSEUR Laurent (I5129)
|
| 6771 |
Lawyer of Boston, graduate of harvard; has been represenative to the general court | LELAND Robert H. (I37812)
|
| 6772 |
LDS Hospital
Burial Mar 19, 1953 Salt Lake City (Mount Olivet Cemetery), Salt Lake Co., UT | CONWELL Juliet Galena (I47632)
|
| 6773 |
LDS Hospital
Burial: Sep. 12, 1947 Salt Lake City (Mount Olivet Cemetery), Salt Lake Co., UT | Dr John Ulrich GIESY (I14229)
|
| 6774 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / NARDINI Valerie (F25680)
|
| 6775 |
Lemuel A. married Mrs. Flora B. Snider, widow of Edward R. Snider. She was the daughter of Pettit and Huldah Smith who was born in Galway, Saratoga county, NY. Lemuel and Flora settled in Kelloggville, NY.
In the year 1840, Lemanuel had his father, Joseph, giving his age as 89, living with him according to a pensioner's report for Cuyuga County. They were living in Niles at the time. | Newland Lemuel Austin (I52316)
|
| 6776 |
Lemuel, Jr. became a physician and surgeon as well as his brother, Royal. | Powers Lemuel (I52105)
|
| 6777 |
Lenormand/Normand
PRDH Individual 47915: Gervais NORMAND; Status: Immigrant
Father: Francois NORMAND
Mother: Jeanne BOISSEL
Birth: 1597-03-16, St-Martin d'Ige, ev. Sees, Perche (ar. Mortagne, Orne)
First marriage: before 1637-04-17, France
with
Leonarde JOUAULT
Comments: Sa date de naissance provient du Fichier Origine.
[His date of birth comes from the Fichier Origine.]
[[Category:Migrants de Picardie au Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category:MtDNA_Haplogroup_T1a1]]
== Biographie ==
{{Migrating Ancestor
|lang=fr
|origin= de France
|destination= au Canada, Nouvelle-France
|origin-flag= Flags.png
|destination-flag= Flags-12.png
}}Elle nait vers 1610 à Bagneux, Picardie, France. Elle épouse Pierre Gareman dit LePicard en 1628 à Bagneux 4.
{{Canada_Nouvelle-France|lang=fr}}Elle décède avant le 29 janvier 1652 lorsque sa fille Marguerite se marie. [[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/66411] Marriage Marguerite]
Liste de ses enfants connus avec Pierre Gareman:
:+ 1. Florence Gareman (1629 Bagneux- 1686/1689) ; mariée à François Boucher 3 sept 1641 Notre-Dame de Québec
:+ 2. Nicole Gareman (1631 Bagneux- 1681/1688) :+ 3. Marguerite Gareman dite LePicard (10 déc 1639 Québec - 1699) ; mariée à Mathurin Tru le 29 jan 1652 à Notre-Dame de Québec:+ 4. Charles Gareman dit Gannonchiase (27 Mar 1643 Trois-Rivières- )
== Biography ==
[[Gareman dit Picard-1|Pierre Gareman]] immigrated from France about 1639 along with his wife [[Charlot-2|Madeleine Charlot]] and their first two children, [[Gareman-3|Florence]] and [[Gareman-1|Nicole]] . Pierre was engaged to work at Portneuf, but the Iroquois threat there drove them to take refuge at the Jesuit mission at Sillery, where daughter [[Gareman-4|Marguerite]] was born and baptized in 1639. By 1643, the family was at Trois-Rivières, where son [[Gareman-5|Charles]] was born and baptized. After another futile attempt to develop their employer’s seigneury at Portneuf, the family settled at Cap-Rouge (now part of Quebec city).
On 10 June 1653 the Iroquois attacked, killing a neighbor and capturing Pierre and his 10-year-old son Charles. Madeleine was already dead before then. Pierre was killed, doubtless in a most unpleasant fashion. But Charles?
For more than twenty years it was assumed that 10-year-old Charles had been likewise killed, but in June 1677 he showed up, very much alive, in Quebec, with an Oneida wife and an infant daughter, who was duly baptized and then turned over to the Ursuline convent to be raised. Charles and his wife then disappeared back into the wilderness and there is no record of them ever having been seen again by any white person; the daughter died in 1683.[[http://habitantsandvoyageurs.blogspot.ca/2011/03/tues-par-les-iroquois-part-2.html]]
=== Name ===: Name: Madeleine /Charlot/[Source: [[#S811]] Page: Place: Quebec, Canada; Year: 1639; Page Number: . Data: Text: Arrival date: 1639Arrival place: Quebec, Canada Note: [[#N38632]]]
=== Birth ===
:: Date: 1608 (estimated):: Place: Bagneux, Aisne, Picardie, France[Source: [[#S795]] Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Pierre Gareman Picard]
=== Marriage ===
: Husband: [[Gareman dit Picard-1|Pierre Gareman dit Picard]]
: Wife: [[Charlot-2|Madeleine Charlot]]
: Child: [[Gareman-3|Florence Gareman]]
: Marriage:
:: Date: 23 SEP 1626
:: Place: Soissons, Picardie, France
: Marriage:
:: Date: BEF 31 DEC 1626:: Place: France[Source: [[#S795]] Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Pierre Gareman Picard]:Note: Actual marriage date and place are uncertain, no valid source has been found.
=== Event ===
:: Type: Arrival
:: Date: 1639:: Place: Quebec City, Canada[Source: [[#S811]] Page: Place: Quebec, Canada; Year: 1639; Page Number: . Data: Text: Arrival date: 1639Arrival place: Quebec, Canada Note: [[#N38632]]]
She had 2 known children born to her after she and her husband arrived in the colony. She was godmother to a few children, the last such record found was for a native child's baptism in Trois-Rivières on 17 Sept 1644[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/87011] 1644 baptism]
=== Death ===
: Before: 29 JAN 1652
:?, Canada, Nouvelle-FranceWhen her daughter Marguerite gets married on 29 Jan 1652, she is already deceased. No funeral record has been found for her. (marriage record source is tied to French version above)
'''Note''': Ancestry had her dying on 29 Jan 1652 in St-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud (which parish was only established in 1727), Kamouraska (wrong place to combine the two, and that parish was only established in 1711). Caveat emptor!
== Sources ==
*1. Tanguay - Volume 1, p. 71, 251
*4. Tanguay - Volume 1, p. 251
*Source: Généalogie Québec.*tree http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Madeleine_Charlot&pid=24675&lng=en* Source: S608 Abbreviation: Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s Title: Gale Research, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2009.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed.. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2009.Original data: Filby, P. William, ed.. Passe) Subsequent Source Citation Format: Gale Research, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s BIBL Gale Research. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2009.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed.. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2009.Original data: Filby, P. William, ed.. Passe. TMPLT TID 0 FIELD Name: Footnote VALUE Gale Research, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2009.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed.. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2009.Original data: Filby, P. William, ed.. Passe) FIELD Name: ShortFootnote VALUE Gale Research, Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s FIELD Name: Bibliography VALUE Gale Research. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2009.Original data - Filby, P. William, ed.. Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s. Farmington Hills, MI, USA: Gale Research, 2009.Original data: Filby, P. William, ed.. Passe. Repository: [[#R2]]
* https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/13810368/family
== Acknowledgements ==* WikiTree profile Charlot-4 created through the import of Mykin_2012-01-10.ged on Jan 11, 2012 by [[Quigley-140 | Garnet Quigley]].* WikiTree profile Charlot-12 created through the import of For WikiTree 3.ged on Nov 7, 2012 by [[Shenton-23 | Paul Shenton]]. | NORMAND Gervais (I39660)
|
| 6778 |
Lenormand/Normand
PRDH Individual 47918: Jean NORMAND; Status: Immigrant
Father: Gervais NORMAND
Mother: Leonarde JOUAULT
Birth: 1637-04-17, St-Martin d'Ige, ev. Sees, Perche (ar. Mortagne, Orne)
Burial: 1706-07-25, Québec
First marriage: 1656-07-18, Québec
with
Anne LELABOUREUR
Father: Thomas LELABOUREUR
Mother: Marguerite BARDIN
Second marriage: 1703-05-02, Québec
with
Marie Madeleine BRASSARD
Father: Antoine BRASSARD
Mother: Francoise MERY
PRDH Burial 70682: Québec, 1706-07-25
01 Jean NORMAND; 070 - d m
02 Jean BRASSARD le père; Father of 03; - - p m
03 Jean BRASSARD fils; Son of 02; - - p m
04 Francois DUPRE; Occupation: Prêtre, Curé; Residence: Québec; - c p m
• "Trouve mort dans son desert"
["Found dead in his desert"] []
[[Category:Igé, Orne]]
[[Category:Québec, Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category:Petite Auvergne en 1681]]
[[Category:La Côte de Notre Dame des Anges en 1667]][[Category:Notre-Dame-des-Anges, Rivière St-Charles, Charlebourg en 1666]]
[[Category:Migrants du Perche au Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category:Percheron_Immigration]]
== Biographie ==
{{Migrating Ancestor
|lang=fr
|origin= de France
|destination= au Canada, Nouvelle-France
| origin-flag = Flags-12.png
| destination-flag = French_Flags-26.png
}}'''Jean NORMAND (1637 - 1706)'''[[https://www.fichierorigine.com/fr/repertoire/lenormand/-normand-1 Fichier Origine 243080: Jean Lenormand / Normand 2016 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies]][ {{PRDH|Pionnier|47918}} Jean Normand ][[http://www.perche-quebec.com/files/perche/individus/normand.htm perche-quebec.com: Jean Normand]][[https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2021541?docref=_Qh3ao9Lx_86aIPjZYEbgQ BAnQ (PDF): Tanguay, Cyprien, ''Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Canadiennes depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu'à nos jours''; Montréal, 1887 (7 volumes) Vol 1 pg 382]] [Carpin #142][ [https://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Carpin 1999, Annexe D, p. 574]][Numéroté #142 dans la liste de Carpin et dans la liste qu'on peut voir à la page [[:Category:Percheron_Immigration|Percheron Immigration Category]].][[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/membership/voir.aspx?id=H%3a%2fCollections+diverses%2f19+-+Fonds+Ren%c3%a9+Jett%c3%a9%2fDictionnaire+g%c3%a9n%c3%a9alogique+des+familles+du+Qu%c3%a9bec%2fN%2fNo/Le%20Dictionnaire%20Jett%C3%A9%20Page%200853.jpg ''Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec des origines à 1730'', René Jetté, avec la collaboration du PRDH, 1983, Presses de l'Université de Montr853] (membership IGD)] Appelé ''le jeune'' pour le distinguer de son oncle [[Normand-105|Jean Normand dit Le Guay]]
Fils de [[Normand-63|'''Gervais Normand''']] et de [[Joinault-1|'''Léonarde Jouault''']] et filleul de Jean Normand et Marthe Le Sassus, épouse de Jacques Fillon, '''Jean Normand''' est baptisé le 17 avril 1637 dans l'église Saint-Martin d'[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igé Igé] située dans le [https://www.orne.catholique.fr/Histoire-du-diocese-de-Seez.html diocèse de Sées] et l'[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perche_(province) ancienne province du Perche].[[https://cdn.ca.yapla.com/company/CPYzTMIWcEgoOw4JBCqrGZfhP/object/34522/243080.jpg Bapt. image Fichier, AD-61]][Géographie historique et moderne du lieu de baptême:*Igé ([https://www.insee.fr/fr/methodes/nomenclatures/cog/fichecommunale.asp?codedep=61&codecom=207 INSEE 61207]) est aujourd'hui connu comme la commune française située dans le département de l'Orne en région [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normandie_(r%C3%A9gion_administrative) Normandie].][Archives départementales de l'Orne "Igé (paroisse Saint-Martin), Registre paroissial, BMS, 1626-1668", cote 3NUMECRP207/EDPT492_6, Jean Normand 17 April 1637 Bapt., image 30 of 160 (left page, 3rd entry); [https://gaia.orne.fr/mdr/index.php/docnumViewer/calculHierarchieDocNum/374740/1057:358061:371693:374740/686/1220 Image 30 /160] 3ème à gauche]
ll migre au Canada en 1647 avec ses parents [[Normand-63|'''Gervais Normand''']] et [[Joinault-1|'''Léonarde Jouault''']] [''Catalogue des immigrants 1632-1662'': pg 186; Marcel Trudel, Éd Hurtubise HMH 1983 ISBN 2-89045-579-3] Son cousin germain [[Normand-73|'''Pierre Normand''' dit '''La Brière''']] migre au Canada en 1657.[ [https://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Carpin 1999, Annexe D, p. 577]]
{{Canada_Nouvelle-France|lang=fr}}
'''Mariage'''
Le 8 juillet 1656 devant le notaire [[Audouart-1|Guillaume Audouart]], [[Normand-27|Jean Le Normand]] et [[Lelaboureur-1|Anne Le laboureur]] font un contrat de mariage. Le père de Jean, Gervais Le Normand, stipule pour son fils; le père d'Anne, Thomas Le Laboureur, est dit feu dans cet acte; le nom de sa mère pourrait se lire Chardin. Sont cités présents Barthélemy Vimont prêtre jésuite, Jean Le Normand, oncle de Jean, et son épouse, [[Le_Sueur-24|Jean Lesueur de St-Sauveur]] prêtre curé, et quelques autres. Les futurs ne savent pas signer.[[https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSVN-3JHR?cat=1171569&lang=en&i=1497 FamilySearch: Notaire Guillaume Audouart, Actes, Dossiers 1-837 (15 sept. 1634, 1 février 1649 - 23 nov. 1659) (comprend des actes fait aux Trois-Rivières); Granite Mountain Record Vault, United States & Canada Film #2371066, Image Group Number (DGS) 8125038, pgs 1498-1500/2642] contrat de mariage Jean Le Normand - Anne Le laboureur, original]
Le 18 juillet 1656 à Notre-Dame de Québec, '''[[Normand-27|Jean Le Normand]]''', fils de Gervais Le Normand et de défunte Léonarde Jouault, épouse '''[[Lelaboureur-1|Anne Le Laboureur]]''', fille de Thomas Le Laboureur et de Marguerite Bardin de la ville de Caen en Normandie, en présence des sieurs le Gaigneur, [[Audouart-1|Audouart de St-Germain]], le Maistre et autres, le prêtre jésuite Barthélemy Vimont officiant.[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/img/acte/66483 Mariage Jean Le Normand - Anne Le Laboureur] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)][[https://web.archive.org/web/20220220144349/http://www.migrations.fr/FILLE_A_MARIER/fm_mariage_L.htm Migrations: Actes des filles à marier (L) Mariage Anne Le Laboureur - Jean Le Normand] via archive.org)][Marriage Jean Le Normand - Anne Le Laboureur "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L993-F99K-5?cc=1321742&wc=HCT2-829%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C19508102), Québec > Notre-Dame-de-Québec > image 153 of 512; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal.]
'''Enfants du mariage''' (les actes à Notre-Dame de Québec = Qc)#[[Le_Normand-7|Marie Le Norman]], née & baptisée 2 juillet 1657 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57617 Baptême Marie Le Norman 1657] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; inhumée 7 juillet 1657 Qc à 6 jours[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/img/acte/68842 Sépulture-Funeral image Marie Norman 1657] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Normand-38|Marie Norman]], née & baptisée 27 juillet 1658 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57684 Baptême Marie Norman 1658] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; Marie Normand épouse Pierre Lambert le 4 mars 1680 à Québec (ND)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67218 Mariage Marie Normand - Pierre Lambert 1680] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#[[Le_Normand-6|Anne Le Normand]], née 25 janvier 1660, baptisée 26 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57775 Baptême Anne Le Normand 1660] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; inhumée 2 février 1660 à 8 jours Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/img/acte/68883 Sépulture-Funeral image Anne Le Normand 1660] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Lenormand-6|Jean Normand]], né & baptisé 23 janvier 1661 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57833 BaptNormand épouse Anne Chalifour le 6 juin 1686 à Québec (ND)][[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67305 Mariage Jean Normand - Anne Chalifour 1686] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Normand-129|Charles Le Normand]], né 30 octobre 1662, baptisé 1er novembre Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57911 Baptême Charles Le Normand 1662] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; Charles Le Normand épouse Marie Dionne le 20 novembre 1691 à Québec (ND)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67447 Mariage Charles Le Normand - Marie Dionne 1691] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#[[Normand-993|Jacques Normand]], né & baptisé 26 février 1664 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/57963 Baptême Jacques Normand 1664] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#[[Normand-992|Jacques François Normand]], né 1er juin 1665, baptisQc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/58035 Baptême Jacques François Normand 1665] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Normand-13|Suzanne Normand]], née 16 décembre 1666, baptisée 19 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/58131 Baptême Suzanne Normand 1666] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; Marie Suzanne Normand épouse Jacques Huppé le 5 février 1686 à Québec (ND)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67300 Mariage Marie Suzanne Normand - Jacques Huppé 1686] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Normand-62|Joseph Le Norman]], né 10 janvier 1669, baptisé 13 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/58274 Baptême Joseph Le Norman 1669] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; Joseph Normand épouse Madeleine Trefflé dite Rotot le 5 février 1691 à Québec (ND)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67428 Mariage Joseph Normand - Madeleine Trefflé dite Rotot 1691] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)] en même temps que sa soeur Geneviève épouse François, frère de Madeleine.#+[[Normand-64|Jeanne Françoise Normand]], née 6 avril 1670, baptisCollection Drouin, IGD (Membership); Jeanne Lenormand épouse Joseph Lemire le 13 novembre 1690 à Notre-Dame de Québec[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67419 Mariage Jeanne Lenormand - Joseph Lemire 1690] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]#+[[Normand-133|Geneviève Normand]], née & baptisée 19 août 1672 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/58750 Baptême Geneviève Normand 1672] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]; Geneviève Normand épouse François Trefflé dit Rotot le 5 février 1691 à Québec (ND)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67427 Mariage Geneviève Normand - François Trefflé dit Rotot] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)] en même temps que son frère Joseph épouse Madeleine, soeur de François.#[[Normand-994|Louis Normand]], né à La Canardière le 17 septembre 1674, baptisé 18 Qc[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/59104 Baptême Louis Normand 1674] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]
Jean le Normand (50 ans)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/membership/voir.aspx?id=H%3a%2fRegistres%2fQu%c3%a9bec%2fFonds+Drouin%2fQC%2fDivers%2fDioc%c3%a8se+de+Qu%c3%a9bec%2fRegistre+des+confirmations%2f1649-1662/d1p_31400668.jpg Registre des confirmations, évêché de Québec, folio 5] image d1p_31400668.jpg Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)] et Anne Le Laboureur (50 ans)[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/membership/voir.aspx?id=H%3a%2fRegistres%2fQu%c3%a9bec%2fFonds+Drouin%2fQC%2fDivers%2fDioc%c3%a8se+de+Qu%c3%a9bec%2fRegistre+des+confirmations%2f1649-1662/d1p_31400669.jpg Registre des confirmations, évêché de Québec, folio 7] image d1p_31400669.jpg Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)] sont confirmés par Monseigneur [[Laval-89|François de Laval]] le 10 août 1659 à Québec. (âges largement surestimés de toute évidence)
'''Recensement 1666''': NOTRE-DAME-DES-ANGES, LA RIVIÉRE SAINT-CHARLES ET CHARLESBOURG Jean Normand, 28, charpentier, habitant ; Anne Laboureur, 36, sa femme ; Marie, 8 ; Jean, 5 ; Charles, 4 ; Jacques, 2 ; Jacques-François, 6 mois.[[https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Histoire_des_Canadiens-fran%C3%A7ais,_Tome_IV/Chapitre_4 Wikisource: Recensements 1666-1667 Censuses selon Benjamin Sulte ''Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 4, chap. 4'']]
'''Recensement 1667''': LA CÔTE DE NOTRE-DAME-DES-ANGES Jean Norman, 31 ; Anne Laboureur, 36 ; Marie, 9 ; Jean, 7 ; Charles, 6 ; Anne, 5 ; Jacques, 3 ; François, 2 ; Suzanne, 1 ; Jacques, 26 ; 10 bestiaux, 7 arpents en valeur.
'''Recensement 1681''': PETITE AUVERGNE Jean Lenormand 45 ; Anne Lelaboureur, sa femme, 52 ; enfants : Jean 20, Charles 18, Jacques 17, François 16, Marie 14, Joseph 13, Jeanne 11, Geneviève 9, Louis 7 ; 2 fusils ; 12 bêtes à cornes ; 25 arpents en valeur.[[https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Histoire_des_Canadiens-fran%C3%A7ais,_Tome_V/Chapitre_4 Wikisource Recensement 1681 Census selon Benjamin Sulte ''Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 5, chap. 4'']]
'''Mariage 2''' Ayant passé un contrat de mariage le premier mai 1703 à Québec par devant [[Genaple-2|François Genaple]][[https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/4083816?docref=DaMD4n6Zp8rOl_4itmhGUg BAnQ; Notaire François Genaple, actes, 6 avril 1700 - 29 octobre 1704 (1126 fichiers), pgs 698-699/1126] contrat de mariage Jean Normand - Marie Madeleine Brassard, original], '''Jean Normand''' épouse en secondes noces [[Brassard-40|'''Marie Madeleine Brassard''']], veuve de Louis Fontaine, le 2 mai 1703 à Notre-Dame de Québec.[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/acte/67723 Mariage Jean Normand - Marie Madeleine Brassard] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)][Marriage "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G993-F9WC-N?cc=1321742&wc=HCFV-RM9%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C26028101), Québec > Notre-Dame-de-Québec > image 313 of 556; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal.] Aucun enfant de ce mariage.
'''Décès'''
Jean Normand est ''trouvé mort dans son désert'' à La Canardière près de Québec et est inhumé le 25 juillet 1706 au cimetière de Notre-Dame de Québec.[Burial "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-8993-F97G-X?cc=1321742&wc=HCFV-RM9%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C26028101), Québec > Notre-Dame-de-Québec > image 404 of 556; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal.][[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/img/acte/70682 Sépulture-Funeral image Jean Normand] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]
Il avait 210 descendants en 1729.[[https://www.lamemoireduquebec.com/wiki/index.php?title=Normand%2C_Lenormand_%28Jean%29 La Mémoire du Québec, Normand, Lenormand (Jean)]]
== Sources ==
* [https://www.prdh-igd.com/en/LePrdh PRDH] - Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique / The Research Program in Historical Demography. Université de Montréal
** {{PRDH|Pionnier|47918}} Jean Normand* [ttp://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/index.php PREFEN] - Programme de Recherche sur l'Émigration des Français en Nouvelle-France, Université de Caen '''Note''': Le Préfen n'est plus accessible en ligne sauf par la machine Wayback parfois / Préfen is no longer accessible online except sometimes through Wayback Machine** [ttp://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/fichePion.php?id=21469 PREFEN Fiche 21469]* Carpin, Gervais (1999). [https://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Le Reseau du Canada: Étude du mode migratoire de la France vers Ie Nouvelle-France (1628-1662)]* Jetté, René (1983). Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec. Des origines à 1730. Montréal, Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal. xxx-1180 pages* [https://www.lamemoireduquebec.com/wiki/index.php?title=Normand%2C_Lenormand_%28Jean%29 la Mémoire du Québec] - Normand, Lenormand (Jean)* Normand, Germaine (1999). [https://books.google.fr/books?id=83RSiE0zuXQC&pg=PR6&lpg=PR6&dq=Fonder+foyer+en+Nouvelle-France:+les+Normand+du+Perche&source=bl&ots=zgehpTAeFE&sig=XBzJnVF5Dqvit3G9qLQ1NT3uZg8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=6kbtVI2eFsjDggTCyYGgBA&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=Fonder%20foyer%20en%20Nouvelle-France%3A%20les%20Normand%20du%20Perche&f=false ''Fonder foyer en Nouvelle-France : les Normand du Perche'']. Sainte-Foy: Ed. MultiMondes / Ed. du Trille. ISBN 2-921146-90-8.* [https://www.perche-quebec.com/files/perche/individus/normand.htm perche-quebec.com]* Tanguay, Cyprien (1871-1890). [https://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2021541?docref=_Qh3ao9Lx_86aIPjZYEbgQ BAnQ (PDF): Tanguay, Cyprien, ''Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Canadiennes depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu'à nos jours''; Montréal, 1887 (7 volumes) Vol 1 pg 382] | NORMAND Jean (I39569)
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Leon Fokas was appointed curopalates, domestikos of the West, by his brother. [1] and died about 969/70[2]. | PHOKAS Leon (I57901)
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Leonard, born in Jamaica, West Indies, emmigrated to Boston, MA in 1723. | Vassall Leonard (I50352)
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Lestek's wife (or wives or consorts) is unknown. A theory by Stanisław Zakrzewski claims Lestek (or Lestko) could have been married to a Moravian princess. Another theory (inferred from the descriptions of a Belgian chronicler from the 14th century) is that a Saxon princess could have been Lestek's wife. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Lestek. | UNKNOWN Unknown (I58085)
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Letty was only 11 yrs old when her father, Joseph Loghry died in 1831. Her mother having died the year before.
A guardian was appointed for her and she was sent to live with Christian Schock and his wife, Catherine and their family. Christian and Catherine were parents of Esther, who was married to George Loghry (Letty's brother) at the time of Joseph's death. Why she was sent to live with them and not her brother is anyone's guess.
In a letter from Virginia Dickey, County Clerk at Bath, Steuben County, NY, she writes that Lettice was born in 1808. However, there was a guardianship appointed for her after her father's death and at the time she was thirteen, two years after his death. Also, according the 1850 census of St. Anne,Iroquois County,Illinois, it lists Letty as being 30 yrs. old and her husband, Erasmus as 42 yrs. old. This would make her birth date 1820.
Erasmus Darwin Brown, Letty's husband, went to live briefly in Ohio, where Letty was living with the Schock family, in-laws of her brother, George. He and Letty were married about 1834. It isn't certain if they were married in NY or Ohio but their first two daughters were born in New York state.
He and Letty moved their small family to Rob Roy, Fountain county, Indiana around 1838 where his third child, Mary, was born. His son, Allen, born in Shawnee, Fountain County, in 1844 was his last child born in Indiana.
'Dar' and his familiy finally moved to the state of Illinois and settled in the wilderness area known as St. Anne sometime between 1844 and 1846 where his son, Samuel was born.
An article written in the old book of the county history, 'Kankakee County History' is the following:
"Few of the early settlers or families of Kankakee County are better represented in its second generation both among its relief and active citizens, then that established here by Erasmus Brown and Letty Loughry Brown, the former born in New York in 1808. This worthy couple to whom in early life came the desire to travel West and ally their fortunes with its undeveloped strength, left their native New York state and settled in the Wilderness of what then was St. Anne but now is Pembroke township, Kankakee County. Loneliness and deprivation were their portion for they had little of this world's goods and there were few neighbors to whom they could turn for counsel or sympathy. Nevertheless, they had grit and determination and their farm yielded of its fertility in response to their untiring labor.
With the passing of years their family increased until seven children played around their hearthstone. Of these, Jane was the oldest." We know that eventually there were ten children born to this couple. | Loghry Lettice Lorena (I52935)
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Lewis also conspired with his brother Christ to swindel his father out of money. So at the time of his demise Louis left only $1 to these two. | Harley Lewis Albert (I49918)
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Lieut. Zechariah Smith Jr. (aka) | SMITH Zechariah (I9096)
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Line in Record @F2@ (MRIN 1) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
ADDR Ralph Virgil & Mary Ruth Brown
Line in Record @F2@ (MRIN 1) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
PHON (405) 878-8861 | Family: Brown Ralph Virgil / Knouse Mary Ruth (F23354)
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Line in Record @I103@ (RIN 102) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Presbyterian | Vegiard J. Cara Delmart (I50575)
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Line in Record @I19@ (RIN 18) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EDUC Went to Okla College for Women (OCW)
Line in Record @I19@ (RIN 18) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Presbyterian | Knouse Mary Ruth (I50523)
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| 6788 |
Line in Record @I20@ (RIN 19) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer and stock raiser
Line in Record @I20@ (RIN 19) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Congregational Church
Line in Record @I20@ (RIN 19) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
MILF Y | Brown Francis Arthur (I50604)
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Line in Record @I21@ (RIN 20) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Congregational Church | Roberts Harriet Josephine (I50490)
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Line in Record @I3@ (RIN 3) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Manager, Oklahoma Gas & Electric, Retired Wewoka, OK
Line in Record @I3@ (RIN 3) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
EDUC Some undergraduate work, Okla. Baptist Univ., Shawnee, OK
Line in Record @I3@ (RIN 3) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Presbyterian | Brown Ralph Virgil (I50678)
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Line in Record @I554@ (RIN 544) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer
Line in Record @I554@ (RIN 544) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Quaker about 1776 | Brown Jacob (I50603)
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| 6792 |
Line in Record @I615@ (RIN 605) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Farmer
Line in Record @I615@ (RIN 605) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Quaker | Brown Deliverence (I50497)
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| 6793 |
Line in Record @I632@ (RIN 622) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU County Clerk and Banker in Maysville, MO. | Brown Ira (I50585)
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Line in Record @I638@ (RIN 628) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU School Teacher | Brown Calvin (I50477)
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Line in Record @I65@ (RIN 64) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Congregationalist | Hartwell Mary Frances (I50684)
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Line in Record @I66@ (RIN 65) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Unitarian | Catherine Katherine (I50463)
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| 6797 |
Line in Record @I84@ (RIN 83) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Electrician
Line in Record @I84@ (RIN 83) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
RELI Presbyterian | Brown Henry Eager (I50505)
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| 6798 |
Line in Record @I9@ (RIN 9) from GEDCOM file not recognized:
OCCU Lawman | Brown Arthur Ira (I50519)
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| 6799 |
Line of Descent to William the Conqueror
Douglas Richardson [1] provides one line of descent from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror and four lines of descent from Charlemagne to William's wife Maud.
Parent: Heribert II, 880-943
This profile: Robert, 931-968
Child: Adele, 950-984 | VERMANDOIS Robert (I58342)
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Line of Descent to William the Conqueror
Douglas Richardson [1] provides one line of descent from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror and four lines of descent from Charlemagne to William's wife Maud.
Parent: Adele, 950-984
This profile: Ermengarde, 966-992
Child: Judith, 982-1017
Disambiguation
Sometimes Ermengarde and her sister Gerberge are conflated into one person, "Ermengarde-Gerberga" [2][3]
Baldwin, however, notes that "there is no good reason to identify Geoffroy's daughters Ermengarde (wife of count Conan of Rennes) and Gerberge (wife of count Guillaume IV of Angoulême) as the same person, as is sometimes done [4]
Biography
Name
Ermengarde d'Anjou [4][5]
Ermengarde of Anjou[6]
966 Birth
Baldwin states that Ermengarde's date and place of birth are unknown, but that chronologically, she must be a daughter of Geoffroy's first marriage to . Adèle de Troyes, daughter of Robert I, count of Troyes. [4] Richardson gives her birth range from 965 and 974[1] -- bracketing her children's births between her marriage and her death.
In about 965, Ermengarde's mother Adela married Geoffroi I Grisegonelle, Count of Anjou (958/960-987), Count of Chalon (979-987), son of Foulques II the Good, Count of Anjoy, by his wife Gerberge. [1]
The chronologies of other events suggest that Ermengarde de Bretagne, daughter of Geoffroi and Adele, was born, say, 966, and married Conan I of Rennes, born about 950, who died in 992.
Cawley states that Ermengarde was presumably born before 965 if it is correct that her first child was born in 980. [5]
973 Marriage
Ermengarde married Conan I, Duke of Brittany, Prince of the Bretons, son and heir of Juhel (alias Berenger), Count of Rennes.[6] Cawley refers to him as Comte de Rennes, son of JUDICAËL BERENGAR Comte de Rennes & his wife Gerberge. [5][3]
Baldwin reports that Rodulfus Glaber states that Conan married a sister of count Foulques of Anjou. [7]
The Chronicle of S. Florent says that Geoffrey was son of Conan by a sister of Foulques [8]
The Angevin genealogical collection states that Judith, wife of Richard of Normandy, was the daughter of Conan by his wife Ermengarde, daughter of Geoffroy of Anjou. [9]
Cawley gives the date of marriage as 973. [5]
If 966 is the correct estimation of her birth year, she would have been aged 7 at the time of her marriage. Her oldest child is shown born in 9870, when she would have been 14.
Conan was present at the court of Eudes, Count of Chartres, in 979.
In 981 Conan fought a battle against Guerech, Count of Nantes, and his Angevin allies, which is called the "first" Battle of Conquereuil.[6]
Conan succeeded in 990 as CONAN I "le Tort" Duke of Brittany. [10]
In 990 he made a donation to Mont Saint-Michel.[6]
Conan was killed in battle at the 2nd Battle of Conquereuil near Nantes 27 June 992.[6][5]
992 Family Conflict
Ermengarde's husband Conan of Rennes opposed her father and brother Fulk even though the marriage was apparently designed to form a political alliance between Anjou and Brittany. [3]
Even after her husband Conan had been killed by her brother Fulk at the battle of Battle of Conquereuil in 992, and during the period 992-994 when Ermengarde was Regent for their son Geoffrey, she remained loyal to her brother Fulk III, Count of Anjou. [3]
In 992, following the interests of her brother, and functioning as Regent, she accepted Capetian over-lordship for Rennes while rejecting that of Odo I, Count of Blois.[3]
Death of Ermengarde
Baldwin states that Eermengarde's date and place of death are unknown, but she died after the death of her husband Conan in 992. [4]
Issue
Directly Documented Children
Richardson states that they had four sons and one daughter. [6] Baldwin states that both Geoffroy and Judith are directly documented as Ermengarde's children.[4]
Geoffroi I de Bretagne, duke of Brittany, [6] was born in Rennes in 980 [6] He died in 1008. The Cronicle of S. Florent says that Geoffrey was son of Conan by a sister of Foulques [Lobineau (1707), 2: 85].[4]
Judith de Bretagne [6] was born Rennes, say, 982. She married Richard II, duke of Normandy. The Angevin genealogical collection states that Judith, wife of Richard of Normandy, was the daughter of Conan by his wife Ermengarde, daughter of Geoffroy of Anjou [Poupardin (1900), 208].[4]
Probable children
The following children of Conan listed as children by Richardson. Baldwin states they are not directly documented as children of Ermengarde, but they could be her children.
Judicaël de Porhoët, [6], born, say, 984. Some accounts show him born in Rennes in 975, which would make his mother aged 9 at the time. He became Bishop of Vannes. Baldwin notes that if the statement that Judicaël became bishop during the life of his father is correct [Cart. Redon, 309], then placing him as a son of Ermengarde would be a tight chronological fit.[4]
Catuallon born, say, 986. Catuallon was Abbot of Redon[6][4]
Urvod[6][4] This may be the same person as Hurnod, or Hurnodius of (Bretagne), born about 970, although any date of birth before 980 is suspect.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Kimball G Everingham, Editor. Salt Lake City, Utah: By the Author, 2013. Volume V, p. 485-486
↑ Detlev Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, Neue Folge, Band III Teilband 4 (Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, Marburg, Germany. 1989), Tafel 817. Cited by Wikipedia. Geoffrey I Count of Anjou Accessed June 6, 2017. jhd
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Wikipedia page for Ermengarde-Gerberga of Anjou
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 Stewart Baldwin. The Henry Project. First uploaded 11 May 2006. Ermengarde d'Anjou Accesed June 8, 2017 jhd
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Anjou and Maine Ermengarde d'Anjou
↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry. Volume V, p. 486.
↑ Maurice Prou, ed., Raoul Glaber - les cinq livres de ses histoires (900-1044) (Paris, 1886). Cited by Stewart Baldwin. The Henry Project. First uploaded 11 May 2006. Ermengarde d'Anjou Accesed June 8, 2017 jhd
↑ Gui Alexis Lobineau, Histoire de Bretagne, 2 vols., (Paris, 1707) 2: 85], Cited by Stewart Baldwin. The Henry Project. First uploaded 11 May 2006. Ermengarde d'Anjou Accesed June 8, 2017 jhd
↑ René Poupardin, "Généalogies angevines du XIe siècle", Mélanges d'Archéologie et d'Histoire (Paris, Rome) 20 (1900):199-208. Cited by Stewart Baldwin. The Henry Project. First uploaded 11 May 2006. Ermengarde d'Anjou Accesed June 8, 2017 jhd
↑ Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Conan | ANJOU Ermengarde (I58337)
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