Matches 7,001 to 7,200 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 7001 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: FREEMAN John McDonough / Living (F3124)
|
| 7002 |
Married at the churck of St. Nicholas in West Union on Wedensday, November 16th by Rev. Father Idlephonre. | Family: HART Steven Douglas / BURLEE Clara B. (F25429)
|
| 7003 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / Living (F9289)
|
| 7004 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Living / WOLFE Susan Elizabeth (F25699)
|
| 7005 |
Married Awde of Osrhoene
Children Sanatroukes/Sanatruces 'Apostle Killer' Arshakuni, King of Armenia
Citations
Maurice Boddy Web Site showing Middle & Far East Families, 7/7/2007
GeneAll.net, unknown publish date. | ARSHAKUNI Meherdates of Armenia (I57942)
|
| 7006 |
married before 1853, ? Williams, still living in 1853. | FREEMAN Dolly Philander (I3059)
|
| 7007 |
Married by John Dexter | Family: FREEMAN Dan / ALEXANDER Jemima (F3049)
|
| 7008 |
Married by Rev. Abiel Abbot of Peterborough, NH. | Family: Brown Addison / Wetherbee Ann Elizabeth (F23621)
|
| 7009 |
Married by Rev. Dr. Kerr of Rockford, IL. | Family: Schuster Paul Frederic / Butterworth Elizabeth (Lissie) (F23442)
|
| 7010 |
Married by Rev. William H. Channing. | Family: Brown Jr. Addison / Starr Florida S. (F23501)
|
| 7011 |
Married by the Rev. Stephen Farrar of New Ipswitch, NH. | Family: Brown Aaron / Brown Hannah (F23428)
|
| 7012 |
Married by Thomas Whiting, Esq. in Concord,Middlesex county, MA but license was taken out in Wayland. | Family: Brown Hope / Hosmer Ruth (F23493)
|
| 7013 |
Married in about 1858. Naturalized 1866 in PA. Census of 1900 indicated that there were 5 children born but only 4 are listed on the census the fifth may have remained in Canada or since immigration was in Penn. maybe remained there. | Lynn William Sr. (I49970)
|
| 7014 |
Married in Grace Church | Family: BARREN John C. / CHILDS Mertie May (F25279)
|
| 7015 |
Married in Las Vegas, NV 7-28-76 and 11-76 in St. Paul Blessed Sacrament Church | Family: LEEDOM Robert Allison / FREEMAN Elizabeth Jane (F5015)
|
| 7016 |
Married in North Dakota.
Has one daughter. | BISSON Dorothy (I1054)
|
| 7017 |
Married Joshua Hubbard of Virginia.
Married Joshua Hubbard of Virginia. | Vassall Margaret (I50429)
|
| 7018 |
Married July 16, 1646 to James Adams of Plymouth, MA
Married July 16, 1646 to James Adams of Plymouth, MA | Vassall Frances (I50425)
|
| 7019 |
Married Surname | HAMLIN Frances Marie (I12500)
|
| 7020 |
Married to Michael Steiner per Austrian-Hungarian marriage records via Burgenland Bunch website | Family: STEINER Michael / GISCH Janka (F25437)
|
| 7021 |
Married twice
had 1 son (Jacob) from second wife | EKSTROM John (I2630)
|
| 7022 |
Married twice but had no children | WRIGHT Linda (I49796)
|
| 7023 |
Martha died a widow at 9:15 A. M. on Apr. 3, 1939. She had been a housewife for 50 years and had lived at 322 Brink Street, Cary, McHenry Co. IL for the last two years of her life. Although she was senile in her later years, her cause of death as stated on her death certificate, # 16728, was myocarditis. Her sister, Dora Raue, (Mrs. Ben Raue) was the informant. No autopsy was performed.
In an article under the heading of CARY ACTIVITIES AND HAPPENINGS, published in the Crystal Lake Herald on February 20, 1930 is the following:
MRS. OSGOOD HONORED ON BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY
Several friends of Mrs. Martha Osgood gathered at her home in Wauconda Wednesday afternoon, Feb.12 in honor of her birthday anniversary.
A very pleasant aftternoon was spent with Mrs. Osgood, at the close of which refreshments of sandwiches, pickles, coffee, cake and ice cream were served; these having been prepared by the guest.
Mrs. Osgood's cousin, Mrs. Geradine Smith, is spending the winter months with her.
Those who enjoyed this delightful afternoon together were: Mrs. George Lindsey, Mrs. Ben Raue, Miss Faye Brink, Mrs. F. S. Lindsey and Mrs. Will Trout of Cary and Mrs. Sydney Osgood and two children of Wauconda. | Brown Martha Eunice (I52940)
|
| 7024 |
Marthe was born about 1640.
Sources
PRDH: Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (membership): Famille: 6752 Pierre Courteau & Madeleine St-Denis
"Roots Finder," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/2:3:MM7G-ZY6 : accessed 13 September 2019), entry for Pierre Courteau; "User:trishymouse Tree:Trishymouse" file (2:3:2:MMMM-JV9), submitted 25 February 2018 by Trish Short Lewis. | MARCHAND Marthe (I60307)
|
| 7025 |
Martin appears briefly in two 8th century Frankish sources, the Liber Historiae Francorum (LHF), and the continuation of the Chronicle of Fredegar, which may have been based on the LHF.
In both sources Martin and Pepin (Pippin) the younger, son of Ansegisel are the leading rulers in Austrasia and lead an army against Ebroin, the Mayor of the Palace of Neustria and Theuderic III, King of Neustria, who are want to unite all of the Frankish kingdoms. There is a major battle at Lucofao or Locofao, now known as Bois-du-Fas in the Ardennes.
Martin and Pepin's army are defeated with major losses but they both manage to escape, Martin taking refuge in Laon. Ebroin after devastating most of the region came to the villa of Ecry (now Asfeld) and with promises of safe conduct asked Martin to come there. Martin did attend but was killed with his followers.[1],[2]
Research Notes
Dating
Both sources indicate that this all happened after the death of Wulfoald,[1] Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, which occurred probably early in 680 as it was shortly after the assassination of Dagobert II, King of Austrasia dated to 23 December 679.[3] However the LHF states that Martin and Pepin's rebellion started sometime after Wulfoald's death and there is discussion that it might have happened before that traditional date Settipani, for instance setting the initial mention of Martin and Pepin in circa 675 and Martin's death to 679.[4]
Title
Martin is referred to in the continuation of the Chronicle of Fredegar as 'Dux' (Duke) but not of where and this title is not mentioned in the LHF at all. Settipani names him Duke of Champagne, but doesn't appear to cite a source for this information.
Although we might assume that he retreats to Laon because that is his stronghold and where his supporters would be found, he is never named as Martin of Laon or given the title Count of Laon and it could simply be the nearest town with some defences. However the LNAB of Laon has been retained as that is the name which is familiar but the title Count of Laon (comte de Laon) has been removed.
Family
None of Martin's family are mentioned in these two principle sources but there have been a number of theories or connections made.
Wife and son
As Charibert, the son of Bertrada, the founder of the Abbey of Prum, and the father of Bertrada, the wife of Pepin the Short and mother of Charlemagne is named as Charibert, Count of Laon, it has been proposed that Bertrada de Prum was the wife of Martin de Laon and Charibert his son.[5]
However these wife/son relationships are never mentioned in any sources, and if Martin did die in about 680, then even if they were related in some way, it seems more likely that Bertrada who founded Prum in 721 would be from a generation later than Martin.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Book: Liber Historiae Francorum
edited & translated by Bernard Bachrach (Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press, 1973). p. 105. Digital image,
Internet Archive (borrowed 30 September 2024).
↑ Monumenta Germaniae Historica: Scriptorum Rerum Merovingicarum, vol. 2 (MGH SS rer.Merov.2) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_rer_merov_2/index.htm#page/320/mode/1up
↑ Settipani, pp. 108-9
↑ Settipani. p. 154.
↑ Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners: The complete known lineage of John of Gaunt, 2nd edition (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing, 1992). Line 214, p. 158. | LAON Martin (I58865)
|
| 7026 |
Martin Bisson
Notes
INFORMATION TAKEN FROM THE WORK OF PATRICK E JACOBY - 1983 OF "THE
FAMILY OF THEODORE BELLEFEUILLE"
Section 4 Affiliated Families
Since Martin Bisson, Bazil Beaulieu, and 0-ge-mau-ge-shi-go-guay
played such important roles in shaping the destiny of the
Bellefeuille family, it is of interest to look at their lives and the
family traditions from which they came.
A. Bisson family (This name can be translated to mean 'twins" or
"bush")
Theodore Bellefeuille's wife Sophia was of the family Bisson. Her
father, Martin Bisson was born to Antoine and Rosalie (Caille) Bisson
in 1797 at La Prairie, Quebec, Canada. According to William Joseph
Bisson, Martin, at a very early age, became active with the fur trade
in what is now northern Minnesota. While working as an agent near
Thief River Falls he became acquainted with the Beaulieus (probably
through Paul, brother of Bazil). He later married Margaret Beaulieu
and they resided in Wisconsin at the time of the birth of their first
child Antoine in 1828. Sometime before 1834, however, they moved
back to Canada where Martin took up farming. The other two children
were born there, Archange in 1834 and Sophie in 1836 (who later
married Theodore Bellefeuille). In 1853 after almost twenty years in
Canada Martin and Margaret returned to Minnesota to settle at Belle
Prairie, Margaret's brothers Paul and Clement and her mother
Marguerite Beaulieu had followed the westward flow of migration from
Wisconsin and had settled a few miles north at Crow Wing.
From Clara Fuller's History of Morrison & Todd Counties we get a
brief biography of Martin Bisson:
Martin Bisson is looked upon as the pioneer of the French race in
Morrison County. He was a man universally respected for his honesty
and much sought after for his generous hospitality. I am told that
his modest home was crowded by travelers or prospective settlers whom
he induced to settle in his neighborhood. Mr. Bisson was born in
Maskinonge, Quebec about 1790. As a young man he had engaged in the
fur trade in the Northwest, had married a sister of the Beaulieu, a
people closely associated with the early history of Minnesota, had
returned to his native home, where he purchased a fine farm. But the
fascination of the West was too great to permit him to enjoy the
peaceful life of a farmer in a quiet rural community. He sold out
and came to Belle Prairie, bringing with him two of his neighbors,
John Branchaud and Theodore Bellefeuille, who eventually became his
sons-in-law. He must have lived about thirty years in Belle Prairie,
to which he was really a benefactor, giving forty acres of his farm
for the church. In his old days he followed his children to White
Earth, where he died.
Martin Bisson had a brother Francois, who although he did not leave
Canada, has many descendants in Minnesota. One of those is Ginnor
Bisson, Jr., who was born at La Prairie July 19, 1857. He was a
grandson of Francois. Ginnor married Emma Bellefeuille and after her
death he married her sister, Julia. Their descendants then have two
strains of Bisson blood.
Morrison County land records show a transaction dated November 23,
1860 in which Charles Beaulieu sold land to Martin and Margaret
Bisson (SE 1/4 of Sec 14, T 41, R 32 plus lots 3,4, and 5 in same
section). This may have transpired earlier but With the Military
Bounty Land Act of March 3, 1855, the organization of Morrison County
in 1856 to get legal title to their land.
According to church records Martin's home provided the shelter for
the first Mass said in Morrison County, when in the fall of 1853 the
famous missionary Father Francis Xavier Pierz came to the small
French-Canadian community of Belle Prairie to open a mission. From
this first service evolved the Holy Family parish which was the first
parish in what is now the Diocese of St. Cloud. In July, 1861 Martin
finally received a patent for his land from the U.S. Government. Ms
farnhy gave a portion of the acreage to the church, which became the
site of the Holy Family Church and Cemetery. At the time the little
congregation included sixteen families. Father Pierz remained pastor
there until 1865.
Martin was well established at Belle Prairie at the time of the 1860
Federal Agricultural Census as he was one of the wealthiest men of
the area. He owned 157 acres of land of which 74 were suitable for
cultivation, the cash value of his farm was $2,000, the value of his
implements and equipment was $250, he owned 6 horses, 4 milk cows, I
I other cattle, 16 swine, I I sheep, the total value of his stock was
$735. His crops had done well. He had 100 bushels of wheat, 5
bushels of rye, 40 bushels of Indian corn, and 1000 bushels of oats.
Because of Margaret's affiliation with the Lake Superior Chippewa
(her mother was a full blood) she was able to receive scrip. This
took the form of both cash annuities and land issuances. The parcel
of land that she received pursuant to the treaty of 1854 was located
in Douglas Co., where she had grown up at Lac du Flambeau. The
patent was issued January 18, 1869 and included the N 1/2 of SW 1/4
of Sec 20, Twp 47, R 15 W. This land was sold May 26, 1881 to William
Cranwel.
On July 25, 1877 Martin Bisson ad wife Margaret, gave a Quit claim
Deed to the Western Railroad Company of Minnesota for a tract of land
50 feet on each side of the railroad bed. He was paid $1,877. today
the Burlington Northern Railroad owns this strip of land.
Martin and Margaret moved to Callaway in the late 1880's and lived
the rest of their lives in that area, Martin died on May 11, 1890 and
Margaret on April 27, 1896. Both are buried at Calvary Cemetery, St.
Benedict's Mission, White Earth, Minnesota.
Sources
↑ Unsourced family tree handed down to Daunelle (Ferdon) Danish. | BISSON Martin (I1089)
|
| 7027 |
Mary Santee, known by Maby, was the dau. of Valentine Santee and his wife Mary Craig. She died at the age of 45 years. No records of her birth have been found.
There is a record of an Elijah Santee, whose birth records are found in the Dryland Church Records of Hecktown, PA. The church is located about 8 miles from Bethleham. (1898). These are also in the Pennsylvania State Archives. It is not known to me who this Elijah is, but certainly an ancestor or relative of Mary. | Santee Mary (I54179)
|
| 7028 |
Mary (Shearer) seems to be well educated, she signed the Deed to purchase the farm in the Town of Union. Both she and her husband Adam left wills just before their demise. | Shearer Mary (I49817)
|
| 7029 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I8257)
|
| 7030 |
Mary Ann O'Connell and Frank Harris never had children. | O'Connel Mary Ann (I54270)
|
| 7031 |
Mary Ann was a sister to Arthur's first wife, Barbara. | MILLER Mary Ann (I5692)
|
| 7032 |
Mary Cosley Parish, Norfolk, England | TOWNSEND Prudence (I34053)
|
| 7033 |
Mary died at the age of 80 years.
Mary died at the age of 80 years. | Snow Mary (I53119)
|
| 7034 |
Mary died young. | Brown Mary (I50912)
|
| 7035 |
Mary Grubbe of St. Alban's, Hertfordshire, who resided at Rayleigh when she made a deposition in 1646, aged 30.
Mary Grubbe of St. Alban's, Hertfordshire, who resided at Rayleigh when she made a deposition in 1646, aged 30. | Grubb (E) Mary (I50391)
|
| 7036 |
Mary had five brothers; Carew, Thomas, Jeremiah, John and Joseph Clarke. It is not known when she married or when she died.
Mary had five brothers; Carew, Thomas, Jeremiah, John and Joseph Clarke. It is not known when she married or when she died. | Clarke Mary (I53868)
|
| 7037 |
Mary Jane lived with her brothers, Martin B. and Robert Emmet, in later years. They lived in Horseheads, Chemung County, NY. All three remained single. | Brown Mary Jane (I53023)
|
| 7038 |
Mary Juliet had moved to Philadelphia, PA in 1848 with the rest of her relatives. | Anable Mary Juliet (I53330)
|
| 7039 |
Mary M. Brown remained a single woman all her life. She lived in Milo, Yates County where she was born but later moved to Alden, Ontario County, NY. | Brown Mary M. (I52902)
|
| 7040 |
Mary married and had one son | BROWN Mary (I1585)
|
| 7041 |
Mary moved from Ireland to Ontario, Canada in 1871. | COSGROVE Mary Byrne (I2128)
|
| 7042 |
Mary or Marie's surname is unknown. She has traditionally been called Mary PARMENTER. However, we can find nothing to substantiate this claim. Her son Daniel, at his baptism in 1707, called her Mary or Marie OBEN; there is even less evidence to substantiate this. | OBEN Marie (I5981)
|
| 7043 |
Mary Shearer Married Christian Coach, who was working on her parents farm as a labor. | Shearer Mary (I49846)
|
| 7044 |
Mary was 55 years old when she died. | Smalley Mary (I53213)
|
| 7045 |
Mary was a twin sister to Samuel. She died young.
Mary was a twin sister to Samuel. She died young. | Vassall Mary (I50398)
|
| 7046 |
Mary was living in Barbadoes in 1655.
BIOGRAPHY: According to "The Vassalls of New England" pg 6, she "was alive and unmarried at Barbadoes in July, 1655."
Mary was living in Barbadoes in 1655.
BIOGRAPHY: According to "The Vassalls of New England" pg 6, she "was alive and unmarried at Barbadoes in July, 1655." | Vassall Mary (I50437)
|
| 7047 |
Mary was married twice. Her first husband was William Woodbury and her second was John Gove.
After Mary's brother, Jabez's death, his widow and son received a letter from John Gove of Cambridge who called her, "My sister Brown" and offered to sign their administration bond on September 29, 1692.
In December of 1670, Mary's conduct just before or during her marriage to William Woodbury, made it necessary for her father, Thomas to write two letters to the Governor. | Browne Mary (I51042)
|
| 7048 |
Mary was the second wife of Daniel Dane. | Annable Mary (I53185)
|
| 7049 |
Mary was the youngest daughter of Malcolm III, king of Scots, and his (second) wife, Margaret.[1][2][3] She married, in 1102, Eustace III, count of Boulogne and Lens.[1][2][3] There were two children from this marriage:
(Unknown) son de Boulogne, who died young[2]
Matilda (or Maud) de Boulogne, m. Stephen, king of England[2][3][4]
Mary, countess of Boulogne and Lens, died 31 May 1115/16 and was buried at St Saviour's monastery, Bermondsey.[5] [2][3]
Research Notes
There is no question that Mary and her husband had a daughter, Maud, who later became queen of England. Sir Archibald Dunbar suggests they also had one son whose name is unknown and who died at a young age.[2] Douglas Richardson disagrees there were any sons from this marriage, but states that Eustace had three natural sons by an unknown mistress(es): Raoul, Eustache, and Godfrey.[4] The profiles of William de Boulogne, Eustace de Boulogne, and Pharamus de Boulogne are being detached as sons of Mary, countess of Boulogne and Lens, until sources can be provided documenting any relationship. Stevens-17832 16:35, 30 October 2021 (UTC)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 578 SCOTLAND 1.viii. Mary of Scotland.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 32 .
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Paul, Sir James Balfour. The Scots Peerage. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1904), vol. 1, pp. 1-2.
↑ 4.0 4.1 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 1, p. 466 BOULOGNE2.I. Eustache III.
↑ Wharton, Henry. Anglia Sacra. London: Richard Chiswel (1691), Chronicon Sanctae Crucis Edinburgensis, sub A.D. 1115: "Obiit Maria Comitissa de Bolonia secundo Kalendarum Juii [31 May]." p. 160. | DUNKELD Mary (I59939)
|
| 7050 |
Mary's first husband was Jonathan Fairbanks, son of Jonas and Lydia (Prescott)Fairbanks. (Fairbanks III). He was born in Lancaster on August 7, 1666, and was slain by Indians on Sept. 11, 1697. She was taken to Canada but was later ransomed.
She married in concord, on May 31, 1700, David Whitcombe. They lived in Lancaster where she died. | Hayward Mary (I50621)
|
| 7051 |
Mary, daughter of Edward II, and Jane (Wilkinson) Winship
Marriage license lists her as Mary Winchat but county record lists it as
Winship | Winship Mary (I50841)
|
| 7052 |
Mary, sister of Cynthia, was the second of wife Seth Burgess Caldwell after her sister died. | Annable Mary (I53405)
|
| 7053 |
Mass of Christian burial August 20, 2009 11 AM at St. Michael's Catholic Church, Stillwater, MN.
Interment at St. Michael's Cemetery, Bayport, MN
Last lived at 108 W. School Street, Stillwater, MN 55082 | FREEMAN Margaret Joanne (I3145)
|
| 7054 |
Mathew Short was the Minister for Attleboro.
Notes for MATTHEW SHORT:
Mathew was the Town of Attleboro, MA, Minister of God. He received a
land grant which was recorded in the book of Attleboro's Town
Records, Page 178. | SHORT Matthew (I8637)
|
| 7055 |
Mathieu AMIOT (1628 - 1688), Amyot, Sieur de Villeneuve
Père et mère:
Il est le fils de Philippe Amiot et d'Anne Couvent,
Naissance
Mathieu Amiot naît vers 1628 à Estrées, Île-de-France. France
Migration en Nouvelle-France
À l'été 1635, Philippe Amiot et Anne Couvent migrent avec leurs deux fils aînés. Mathieu et Jean, en Nouvelle-France.
Mathieu fut un Interprète
Mathieu et Jean furent pendant quelques années interprètes des Jésuites, travaillant chez eux à Trois-Rivières et en Huronie. Puis Mathieu se fit colon.
Drapeau identifiant les profils du Canada, Nouvelle-France
Mathieu (Amiot) Amiot dit Villeneuve a vécu
au Canada, Nouvelle-France.
Mariage
Ayant le 19 novembre 1650 signé un contrat de mariage par devant le notaire Guillaume Audouart[1] Le 22 novembre 1650, dans l'église Notre-Dame de Québec, Mathieu Amiot dit de Villeneuve âgé d'environ 22 ans épouse Marie Miville âgée de 17 ans, fille de Pierre Miville et de Charlotte Maugis. [2] Lors de ce mariage, Marie Miville apporte en dot une propriété dans la ville de Québec.
Enfants connus / Known children: Marie Miville & Mathieu Amiot
Charles Amiot dit Villeneuve (1651 - 1711)
Pierre Amiot dit Villeneuve (1653 - 1714)
Anne Marie Amiot (1654 - 1737)
Marguerite Amiot (1656 - 1724)
Jean Baptiste Amiot de Neuville (1658 - 1685)
Françoise Amiot (1660 - 1736)
Jean Amiot (1662 - )
Catherine-Ursule Amiot (1664 - 1715)
Daniel Joseph Amiot (1665 - 1725)
Mathieu Amiot (1667 - 1684)
Philippe Amiot de l'Erpinière (1669 - 1722)
Jeanne Amiot (1670 - 1749)
Étienne Amiot dit Villeneuve (1672 - 1730)
Marie Amiot (1673 - 1714)
Marie Françoise Amiot (1676 - 1758)
Geneviève Amiot (1678 - 1678),
Mathieu Amiot réussit pendant sa vie à accumuler un nombre assez intéressant de possessions:
En 1649, le gouverneur Louis d’Ailleboust lui concéda une terre à Trois-Rivières.
En 1661, les Jésuites lui firent concession d’un lot à Sillery, où il se construisit une maison, tout en conservant sa demeure en ville.
En 1665, concession par Jean Juchereau de Maur à Mathieu Amiot dans la seigneurie de Maur mesurant douze arpents de terre de front sur vingt arpents de profondeur situé quatre arpents au dessus de la Pointe Villeneuve et huit arpents au dessous en descendant vers Québec.[3][4] Il aurait agrandi cette propriété en 1677 et en 1685.
Le 25 octobre 1663, Mathieu Amiot fut témoin au contrat de mariage de Toussaint Le Dran et Louise Menacier.
Recensements / Censuses
La famille de Mathieu Amiot figure ainsi dans les recensements:
1666 - Québec
Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve, 37, habitant ; Marie Miville, 33, sa femme ; Charles, 14 ; Pierre, 13 ; Anne-Marie. 11 ; Marguerite, 9 ; Jean-Baptiste, 8 ; Jean, 6 ; Françoise, 5 ; Catherine, 3 ; Daniel, 6 mois ; Antoine Ducos, 26, domestique engagé. Ils vivent à Québec.[5]
1667- Sillery
Mathieu Amyot, 40 ; Marie Miville, sa femme, 35 ; Charles, 16 ; Pierre, 15 ; Anne-Marie, 14 ; Marguerite, 11 ; Jean-Baptiste, 9 ; Françoise, 7 ; Jean, 6 ; Catherine-Ursule, 5 ; Daniel-Joseph, 2 ; Mathieu, 1 1/2 mois ; domestiques : Adrien Saillot, 19 ; Daniel Le Roy, 20 ; 9 bestiaux, 27 arp. en valeur. [5]
En 1667, le roi agréa la requête de Talon de lui octroyer des lettres de noblesse. Cependant, quand elles arrivèrent, en 1668, l’intendant ignorait s’il devait les faire enregistrer au Conseil souverain de Québec ou au parlement de Paris. En attendant la réponse de Versailles, il apprit que Louis XIV avait aboli tous les titres non encore enregistrés (1669). Trois autres colons avaient reçu des lettres de noblesse en même temps que Amiot. Eux ou leurs descendants les firent reconnaître en dépit de l’ordonnance de 1669. Amiot n’ayant fait aucune revendication au sujet des siennes, semble-t-il, elles furent définitivement annulées.
Le 3 novembre 1672, Talon lui avait concédé en fief et seigneurie un autre domaine à la Pointe-aux-Bouleaux.[6]
Recensement 1681 - seigneurie de Maur
Mathieu Amyot 53 ; Marie Miville, sa femme, 50 ; enfants : Jean-Baptiste 22, Jean 20, Daniel 16, Mathieu 14, Philippe 13, Marie 8. Catherine 17. Jeanne 11. Marie 6 ; 3 fusils ; 3 bêtes à cornes ; 30 arpents en valeur.[7]
A noter que le recensement de 1681 semble indiquer que la famille de Mathieu Amiot vivait entre les terres de Tugal Cottin et Jacques Lemarié.
Le 5 février 1687, il est présent lors du mariage de Marie Martin et Jacques Croteau à Pointe-aux-Trembles (Neuville), Canada
Le 16 avril 1687, concession augmentée.
Décès
Le 19 décembre 1688, âgé de ~62 ans, le Sieur de Villeneuve (70 ans selon le registre) Mathieu Amyot est inhumé au cimetière de Notre-Dame de Québec.[8]
Il laissa à ses héritiers plus de dettes et de soucis que de biens. En 1703, les dettes de la succession s’élevaient encore à 700 livres et Marie Miville, qui avait vendu les terres pour 1 500 livres, était morte (septembre 1702) des angoisses que lui causait un procès intenté contre elle par son fils Charles, l’aîné de ses 16 enfants.[9]
Sources
↑ BAnQ Notarial acts index Inventaire des greffes des notaires du régime français, par Pierre Georges Roy et Antoine Roy; 27 Vol + index 1-8 Vol I pg 41 notaire Guillaume Audouart, Contrat de mariage de Mathieu Amiot et Marie Minville (19 novembre 1650).
↑ FamilySearch, Mariage / Marriage, Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve et Marie Miville.
↑ Concession par Jean Juchereau de Maure a Mathieu Amiot
↑ sphslotbiniere.org, seigneurie de Bonsecours
↑ 5.0 5.1 Wikisource: Recensements 1666-1667 Censuses selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 4, chap. 4
↑ La Mémoire du Québec, seigneurie de Bonsecourt / Lotbinière
↑ Wikisource Recensement 1681 Census selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 5, chap. 4
↑ FamilySearch, Sépulture / Burial, Mathieu Amyot, le Sieur de Villeneuve
↑ BANQ Résultat de recherches.
Tanguay, Cyprien. Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Canadiennes. 1871. Pg. 6 and 435. Archive.org. [1] [2]
https://ia800300.us.archive.org/9/items/dictionnaireg01tang/dictionnaireg01tang.pdf
« 1666, État Général des Habitants du Canada en », compilé par Senécal, Jean-Guy ; Sep 27, 1998, compilation OCR de trois documents Word disponible en ligne, ses documents se référant principalement au Tome IV & V, Chapitre IV du livre Histoire des Canadiens-Française de Benjamin Sulte, édition 1977.
« 1667 en Nouvelle-France, Recensement de », compilé par Senécal
« 1681 en Nouvelle-France, Recensement de », compilé par Senécal
amyotfamily.org. Amyot Family Genealogy Pages
Drolet, Yves (2009). Tables généalogiques de la noblesse Québecois du XVIIe au XIXe siècle, Table 14
FamilySearch. registres paroissiaux BMS, 1621-1979.Notre-Dame-de-Québec > Mariage / Marriage - Mathieu Amiot - Marie Miville, accessed 18 May 2016
FamilySearch. registres paroissiaux BMS, 1621-1979.Notre-Dame-de-Québec > Inhumation / Burial -> Mathieu Amyot, Sieur de Villeneuve, accessed 18 May 2016
Fichier Origine 242946: Miville, Marie conjoint de Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve
[3]: Anne Couvent - sa mère
Grenier, Benoît (28 août 2000). Devenir seigneur en Nouvelle-France : Mobilité sociale et propriété dans le gouvernement de Québec sous le régime français, Voir tout particulement p. 65
histoiresdancetres.com. Petites histoires de la Nouvelle-France -> Vaillancourt -> Pierre Miville dit le Suisse: Une excellente biographie familiale peut être consultée sur le site d'Histoires d'Ancêtres.
Lotbinière, Patrimoine et histoire des seigneuries de: seigneurie de Bonsecours
La Mémoire du Québec. Bonsecours (seigneurie)
La Mémoire du Québec. Amiot ou Amyot dit Villeneuve (Mathieu)
La Mémoire du Québec. Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures (municipalité)
PRDH: Research Programme in Historical Demography (free): Pionnier: 1053 MATHIEU AMIOT VILLENEUVE
Monet. J. (1966, 2014). « Dictionnaire biographique du Canada AMIOT (Amyot), dit Villeneuve, Mathieu » dans DBC / DCB, vol. 1, consulté le 11 janv. 2018,
Registres paroissaux de Neuville, 1679 -1724, p. 77
Roy, Joseph-Edmond (1897). Histoire de la seigneurie de Lauzon. Volume 1: Pp. 263, 265, 610
Saint-Augustin-de-Desmaures, Société d'Histoire de, Plan de la seigneurie de Desmaures vers 1697-1702 par l'arpenteur Hilaire Bernard de la Rivière Note: à aller chercher le lien au BAnQ
Tanguay, Cyprien (1871-1890), Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes, 7 volumes: Vol. 1, pp. 6, 49, 151, 219, 268, 309, 325, 416, 435, 566; vol. 2, pp. 30, 31
villeneuves.com. Actes Notariés, Philippe Amiot & famille
Drouin Rouge, Tome III (PÉF) - pp.1359, 1357
http://habitant.org/couvent/index.htm | AMIOT Mathieu (I60346)
|
| 7056 |
Mathilda was born in 1110 and passed away in 1145.
Sources
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). VI 2,26 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00050083&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA%20(LOWER%20RHINE).htm#MathildeSaffenbergdied1145
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. | SAFFENBERG Mathilda (I58884)
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| 7057 |
Mathilde ("Maud, Mahaut, Mahalta") was the daughter of Robert "Guiscard" de Hauteville, Duke of Apulia, Calabria and Sicily and his second wife Sichelgaita / Sikelgaita di Salerno. [1]
Marriages and family
Mathilde (Maud / Mahalta) was first married to Ramon Berenguer (II), Count of Barcelona and was known as "Mahalta" in Catalonia. Her husband Ramon Berenguer and his twin brother Berenguer Ramon co-ruled the county of Barcelona following the death of their father in 1076. [2]
Mahalta and Ramon Berneguer had a son Ramon Berenguer who was born on 12 Nov 1082 - and within weeks the two brothers became involved in a quarrel with Berenguer Ramon calling for a division of the estate. On 6 Dec 1082 near Girona, Mahalta's husband Ramon Berneguer was killed by his brother Berenguer Ramon, who then became the sole count. [2]
Mahalta and their infant son were supported by other members of the Catalan nobility and she later remarried to Narbonne-17:Aimery de Narbonne, with whom she had four children. [2] [3]
Their son Ramon Berenguer eventually succeeded his uncle as Ramon Berenguer (III), Count of Barcelona. [2]
Ramon Berenguer (III) de Barcelona and his mother Mahalta issued a charter on 6 June 1112, which is the last know document reflecting her, so she died sometime after that date. [2] [3]
Sources
↑ Robert "Guiscard" de Hauteville, Duke of Apulia, Calabria and Sicily by Cawley, Charles and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG: Sicily / Naples: Counts & Kings v5.0 Updated 23 Jul 2025 (see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Comtes de Barcelona by Cawley, Charles and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG: Catalonia v5.0 Updated 23 Jul 2025 (see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 3.0 3.1 Aimery de Narbonne by Cawley, Charles and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG: Toulouse - Languedoc v5.0 Updated 16 Jul 2025 (see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
See also:
- Evans, Charles F. H., The Hauteville Ancestry, (The American Genealogist, Barrington, RI, 1976) Vol. 52, Page 23. Also available online through the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy.
- Wikipedia (en) - Maud of Apulia
- Wikipedia (es) - Mafalda de Apulia
- Wikipédia (fr) - Mahaut de Pouile | HAUTEVILLE Mahaut (I59703)
|
| 7058 |
Mathilde (d. 03 Dec 992) is an unproven child of Bruno, Graf von Arenburg and Frederuna [Harzgau?].[1] She married Lothaire II, Graf von Walbeck (d. 986). They had a max of 4 kids:[2]
Lothair III von Walbeck, Graf im Derlingau und im Nordthüringgau ... later Markgraf der Nordmark.
Eilika (a.k.a Eiliswintha or Eila)
Seigfried I 'der Ältere'
(unproven) Dietmar
Tracking Notes
GEDCOM: Birth: ABT 928 Walbeck, Sachsen. Lenzen, Hannover. Marriage: Nassau, Deggendorf, Bayern.
Sources
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | ARENBURG Mathilde (I58239)
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| 7059 |
Mathilde (Mechtild) married Dietrich VI. von Kleve Um 1214 .
Otto II van Gelre in 1240 married Margarete van Kleef , daughter of Diederik V van Kleef and Mechtild van Dinslaken. Two daughters from this marriage: Elisabeth and Margareta. In 1240 Dirk of Kleve promises to liberate duke Henry I of Brabant of his pledge for him made at the time of the marriage of his daughter to count Otto of Gelre.[1]
Marriages of her by many assumed husband Dietrich VI von Kleve :
1. The name of his first wife, who died around 1224 , is not known, but it is assumed she was this Mathilde (Mechtild) van Dinslaken. They had children:
born around 1214/1215 son Dietrich primogenitus ( died in 1245 )
Margaretha ( died 1251 ) , the future wife Count Otto II . von Geldern ( born around 1215, reign 1229-1271 )
2. His second wife he married around 1226 Hedwig of Meissen ( died 1249/1250 ) , children:
Dietrich ( V./VII )
Jutta ( died 1275/1276 ) , who married the Duke of Limburg
Agnes ( died probably in 1285 )
Sources
↑ A. Verkooren, Inventaire des chartes et cartulaires des duchés de Brabant et de Limbourg et des pays Outre Meuse. Deuxième partie. Cartulaires. Tome I, 1961, p. 87.
Source: Dietrich VI von Kleve | DYUSLECHEN Mathilde (I59033)
|
| 7060 |
Mathilde Carinthia von Sponheim (d. 13 Dec 1160/1).[1][2]
Parents
Father: Engelbert Sponheim, Marchese di Istria, later Duke of Carinthia (d. 12/13 Apr 1141).[3]
Mother: Uta Ratpotonen von Passau (d. 09 Feb 1150), dau. of Ulrich Ratpotonen, Graf von Passau and Adelheid von Lechsgemünd.[4]
Marriage
m. (1123/5) Thibaut IV 'le Grand/le Vieil', Comte de Blois et II Comte de Champagne (1090/5 - 10 Jan 1152), son of Etienne, Comte de Blois and Adela of England.[5][6] Issue: 10.[7]
Henri I 'le liberal', Comte de Champagne et de Brie (1126 - 17 Mar 1181 Troyes)
Marie (1128 -11 Mar or 7 Aug 1190)
m. Eudes II, Duke of Burgundy. Later Abbess of Fontevrault
Thibaut V 'le bon', Comte de Blois (c. 1130 - 1191 Acre)
Isabelle
m.1 Roger, Duke of Apulia
m.2 Guillaume V Goët de Montmirail Baron du Perche-Goët
Etienne, Comte de Sancerre (d. 1191 Acre)
Guillaume -called White Hands (d. 7 Sep 1202 Laon), Bishop of Artres (1164); Archbishop of Sens (1168); Archbishop of Reims (1176).
Mathilde (d. 01 Jan 1184)
m. Rotrou II, Comte de Perche
Agnes (d. 07 Aug 1207)
m. Renaud II, Comte de Bar (d. 25 Jul 1170).
Alix (c. 1140 - 04 or 13 Jun 1206 Paris)
m. Louis VII, King of France
Marguerite (d. 06 Nov) nun at Fontevrault
Sources
Primary
Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines
Orderic Vitalis
Montiérender donation charter (1139)
necrology of Saint-Etienne, Troyes
property charter (c. 1125/49)
Secondary
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac. Web.
Richardson, D. (n.d.).Royal Ancestry, I, pp. 390
Wikipedia: Matilda of Carinthia
Wikipédia (Français) Mathilde de Carinthie | Von SPONHEIM Mathilde (I58296)
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| 7061 |
Mathilde de Clermont, daughter of Renaud III de Clermont, comte de Clermont (en Beauvaisis) and his second wife Clémence de Bar, married (as his second wife) Aubri II de Dammartin[1]. They were parents of:
Renaud, comte de Dammartin
Raoul
Simon, comte de Ponthieu
Alix, married Jean de Trie
Agnès, married Guillaume de Fiennes
Clémence, married Jacques de Saint-Omer
A daughter, name unknown, identified as the grandmother of Enguerrand and Renaud de Picquigny
Juliane (unconfirmed, and probably incorrect, since her descendants are absent from the enquiry in 1267, which names the heirs of Mathilde de Dammartin comtesse de Boulogne descended from her paternal aunts[2]), married Hugues de Gournay.
Mathilde died after May or July 1218[1].
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Mahaut de Clermont: Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Paris Region, Clermont, Dammartin, Chap. 1B Comtes de Clermont (en Beauvaisis), accessed Oct. 2018
↑ Juliane de Dammartin, Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Paris Region Chap 2C Comtes de Dammartin (Trie), Oct 2018 | CLERMONT Mathilde (I60020)
|
| 7062 |
Mathilde Meissen ... She passed away about 1040.[1]
Sources
Medieval Lands - Meissen
Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser . 1956 142 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022880&tree=LEO
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 42 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022880&tree=LEO | EKKEHARDINER Mathilde (I58034)
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| 7063 |
Mathilde of Bavaria, the third of four daughters and fifth of seven children of Heinrich IX Bayern and Wulfhild Billung, was born in Munchen, Bayern c.1119.
Mathilde married first ([1128]) Diepold [IV] Markgraf von Vohburg, son of Diepold [III] Markgraf von Vohburg & his first wife Adelajda of Poland. He died in the same year as their marriage.
Her second husband (contract 24 Oct 1129) was Gebhard [III] Graf von Sulzbach, son of Berengar [III] Graf von Sulzbach & his second wife Adelheid von Wolfratshausen (-28 Oct [1188], bur Kastl). [1]
Mathilde died 16 Feb or 16 Mar, probably 1183.[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, (© Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018) "Dukes of Bavaria, (Welf)" Chapter 9 http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BAVARIA.htm; citing Historia Welforum Weingartensis 15, MGH SS XXI, p. 463; Annalista Saxo 1106; and Moritz, J. (1833) Stammreihe und Geschichte der Grafen von Sulzbach (Munich), Vol. II, Erste Beilage, Lateinische Chronik des Klosters Kastel, p. 107.
See Also:
Ancestry Family Trees ($)
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/642667400/facts | BAVARIA Mathilde (I59431)
|
| 7064 |
Mathilde von Horburg (d. 30 Sep 1092/4).[1][2]
Parents
Father: Rudolf, Graf von Achalm (brother of Engino, d. 1030/9).[3][4]
Mother: Adelheid von Wülflingen (d. 29 Aug 1065; bur. Strasburg Cathedral).[5]
Marriage
m. Kuno von Lechsgemünd (d. ante 1094) | ACHALM Mathilde (I58310)
|
| 7065 |
Mathilde von Schwaben, daughter of Hermann II, Duke of Swabia, and his wife Gerberga of Burgundy, married,
(ca. 1002) Konrad, son of Otto duke of Carinthia,
(ca. 1016) Frederic of Upper Lotharingia, son of Thierry I and Richilde
Esiko, Graf in Schwabengau, son of Adalbert von Ballenstedt. This third marriage is uncertain[1].
She died on 20 July 1031 or 1032 and was buried at Worms[2].
Her first two marriages were contested due to consanguinity issues. [3]
About 1001/02 Matilda married Conrad of Carinthia, son of Duke Otto I, a member of the Salian dynasty. Conrad supported her father's bid for the German throne in 1002. f[4]
Conrad outlived his elder brothers, In 1002, his father Otto of Worms was candidate in the royal German election but renounced in favor of the Ottonian Duke Henry IV of Bavaria, the son of late Duke Henry the Wrangler. In that year or thereabouts, Conrad married Matilda, daughter of Henry's rival, the Conradine duke Herman II of Swabia.[5]
Mathilde had the following children by her first marriage:
Konrad II, duke of Carinthia
Bruno, bishop of Würzburg
(uncertain) a daughter, married Hezzelin Graf im Zülpichgau[6].
About 1012/13, Matilda had married her second husband, Count Frederick of Bar, son of Duke Theodoric I of Upper Lorraine. Frederick succeeded his father in 1019; he is usually said to have died c. 1026, although it is possible that he lived until 1033.[7]
Mathilde had the following children by her second marriage:
Frederic III Duke of Upper Lotharingia
Sophie, married Louis de Mousson
Beatrix, married Boniface of Tuscany, and secondly Godefroi "le Barbu" de Verdun
(uncertain) Petronilla[8].
She was not the mother of Doda. Rassinot-1 10:39, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
Research Notes
Several sources have her listed as being born 988 or 989 they also have her giving birth in 990 a physical impossibility , getting married in 1002 and having another child in 1005. So let's do some fast math. Married 1002 - 988 she is 14. Ok very young but I have seen royals marry young. Birth in 1005 she is 17 and that is doable. But the one for 990 which is the one most often documented just makes no sense. So either she was born earlier than 988 or Konrad II was born later after 1002 maybe 1004? Working on finding additional sources to work this timing issue out.
Evidently, the link on the English version of Wikipedia that takes you to the article that is supposed to be her son, is actually taking you to a different Conrad. John Atkinson and I traded emails and he provided the following:
The problem is there is confusion over two men named Conrad in the next generation. Conrad II who became Holy Roman Emperor, was born circa 990 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor but he was the son of Heinrich. Conrad II Duke of Carinthia, the son of Conrad I and Mathilde, who was first cousin to Conrad II HRE, was born circa 1003. See the German Wikipedia article https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_II._(K%C3%A4rnten)
They seem to be often confused because they both died in 1039, even the English Wikipedia article gets the dates confused, perhaps because the source it is using is for the Emperor. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_II,_Duke_of_Carinthia
This source gives Conrad II, Duke of Carinthia, a birth date of about 1007 https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/gnd137058624.html#ndbcontent which might fit better with Mathilde’s year of birth.
Because the marriage is purported to have taken place in 1002 and Konrad is the listed heir, and the second son is listed as born in 1005, I am going to go with his birth as being in 1003. Hopefully this clears this up. She would have been about 15 at the time which is possible.
Sources
↑ Stolberg-Wernigerode, Otto zu: Neue deutsche Biographie, Bd.: 16, Maly - Melanchthon, Berlin, 1990
↑ Charles Cawley, Fondation for Medieval Genealogy, Swabia Chap. 3 Dukes of Swabia (Konradiner) http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIA.htm#Mathildedied1031 accessed Nov 2019
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Swabia
↑ E. Boshoff, Die Salier (Stuttgart, 2008) p23
↑ Stefan Weinfurter, The Salian Century: Main Currents in an Age of Transition, 46.
↑ FMG/Cawley, Franconia, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA.htm#KonradKartenCarinthiadied1011
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Swabia
↑ FMG/Cawley, Lotharingia, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LOTHARINGIA.htm#FredericIIdied1026
This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011.
WikiTree profile Swabia-70 created through the import of Mears Family Tree as Oct 200.ged on Dec 24, 2011 by David Mears.
Ancestry Family Trees: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/11448774/family
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_I,_Duke_of_Carinthia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Swabia | KONRADINER Mathilde (I58896)
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| 7066 |
Mathilde was abdis in Herford. The name of the husband of Mathilde is not known but, if the chronicler Widukind is to be believed, he was a descendant of Widukind of Saxon, probably a great grandson. This appears to be confirmed when his grandson was named Widukind.
Mathilde and her husband had a son:
Theodoric (Dietrich)
Sources
Medieval Lands by Charles Cawley lists the following sources:
Widukindi Res Gestæ Saxonicæ I.31, MGH SS III, p. 431
Vita Mathildis Reginæ 2, MGH SS IV, p. 285.
Grote, H. (1877) Stammtafeln (reprint Leipzig, 1984), p. 505. | DREINI Mathilde (I57982)
|
| 7067 |
Mathilde was the daughter of Konrad Burgundy and his second wife Matilda Carolignian. She was the mother of Bertha, herself mother of Géraud, comte de Genève, per the Continuator of Flodoard[1].
Sources
↑ Mathilde, Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Burgundy Kingdom, Kings, Chap 2. Kings of Upper Burgundy (Welf) 888-1032, accessed May 2019 | WELF Matilde (I58443)
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| 7068 |
Mathisen believes, "the name of Aegidius' son, Syagrius, may imply relations, "to the Syagrii of Lyons" (Wikipedia). MacGeorge (2002), makes a similar statement, but adds that if a relation does exist, it could also be through marriage... instead of blood.
Sources
MacGeorge, P. (2002). "The career of Aegidius." Late Roman Warlords. Oxford University Press. eBook.[1]
wikipedia: Aegidius
Space: Isidore of Seville | AEGIDIUS Aegidius (I58861)
|
| 7069 |
Mathurin de Baillon was the father of Michel de Baillon, a bourgeois of Chartres. He delivered bail for Adam de Baillon in the 1490s[1].
Mathurin de Baillon's parents and wife are not known. The genealogy which makes Michel de Baillon the son of "Matry de Baillon", himself the son of Guy, descendant of Pierre de Baillon[2], has been shown to be bogus. Guy and Pierre de Baillon were noble; Michel de Baillon is known to be bourgeois[1].
Biographie
Mathurin de Baillon était le père de Michel de Baillon, bourgeois de Chartres. Il vivait dans les années 1490[1].
Les parents et la femme de Mathurin de Baillon sont inconnus. La généalogie qui fait de Michel Baillon le fils de "Matry de Baillon", lui-même fils de Guy, descendant de Pierre de Baillon[2], a été réfutée par Archange Godbout. Guy et Pierre de Baillon étaient nobles; Michel Baillon était d'origine bourgeoise[1].
Important note
Mathurin's parents are unknown. His current father Guy de Baillon should be disconnected.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Gail F. Moreau, trans., and John P. DuLong, ed. "Archange Godbout's Baillon, de Marle, and Le Sueur Families of France." Michigan's Habitant Heritage 13, no. 22 (April 1992): 40-51. English translation of Godbout's 1944 article
↑ 2.0 2.1 Louis Pierre d'Hozier, Armorial général ou Registre de la noblesse de France. 2nd ed., 7 vols. in multiple parts (Paris: Firmin Didot frères, fils, et cie., 1868-1878), see vol. 7, part 2, pp. 65-70. (copie hébergée par le site habitant.org) | BAILLON Mathurin (I60252)
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| 7070 |
Mathurin Gaillard, bourgeois in Blois, seigneur of Villemourans-lès-Blois, was the nephew of Guillaume Gaillard, who lived in 1453. He married Jeanne Calipeau 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]
Research notes
Castelnau doesn't know Mathurin Gaillard's parents, and does not list an Alexandre among his children. Similarly, Aubert de La Chesnaye Desbois starts the genealogy at Mathurin (parents unknown) and does not list any Alexandre. Rassinot-1 06:16, 7 October 2019 (UTC)
The following "genealogy" is full of errors, the spelling demonstrates a lack of knowledge of French families and French geography unsourced genealogy on Family Search dated February 2018. Appears to have been compiled by Burbank/Marble descendant.
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
(Aubert) de La Chenaye-Desbois et Badier. Dictionnaire De La Noblesse... Troisième Édition. Tome Huitième. Paris: Chez Schlesinger frères, libraires-éditeurs, 1866. Page 773.
See also:
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaillard_de_Longjumeau | GAILLARD Mathurin (I60240)
|
| 7071 |
Matilda also had twins | HARNEY Matilda (I3748)
|
| 7072 |
Matilda married, as his first wife, Robert Marmion V, son of Robert Marmion IV. [1]
Research Notes
Complete Peerage does not indicate the parents of Maud, merely hinting that she is a descendant of Walter de Beauchamp. [2]
The currently assigned parents of Matilda would both have been about 50 years old at her birth. Although possible, it is unlikely for this time period.
Undated Charter: Her son Robert Marmion, neveu de Guillaume de Beauchamp made a declaration concerning a donation of property to Sainte-Marie-de-Barberie and the charter dated 1224 under which Robert Marmion le jeune, fils de Mathilde de Beauchamp donated property to the same abbey. [3]
William de Beauchamp as the father of Matilda, would make William de Beauchamp the uncle of her son Robert, and Walter de Beauchamp her grandfather.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2020. [1]
↑ Cokayne, G.E. Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom VIII. Sutton Publishing Ltd., 2000, pp.509-10.
↑ Calvados (Anisy), Vol. I, Barberie, 23 and 85, pp. 143 and 149.
Unknown author. Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley. N.p.: n.pub. "Pedigree of Boteler and Marmion".
John Ravilious, in a post to soc.genealogy.medieval, has her as daughter of William de Beauchamp, d. 1170, and Maud de Braose. [2] | BEAUCHAMP Mathilde (I60166)
|
| 7073 |
Matilda of Boulogne was born around 1105 to Eustace III, Count of Boulogne, and his wife, Mary of Scotland. Her maternal grandparents were King Malcolm III of Scotland and Saint Margaret of Scotland, from whom she was a descendant of the old English royal family - - the house of Wessex.
Matilda's childhood was spent in her father's court at Boulogne. When she was roughly twenty years old, in 1125, she married Stephen of Blois. Around this time, Eustace abdicated in favor of monastic life and Matilda and Stephen ruled Boulogne jointly.
The early years of their marriage were marred by sadness: their two eldest children, Baldwin and Matilda, died young. However, they went on to have three more children; Eustace, the eldest of the surviving three, would go on to succeed his mother as Count of Boulogne.
Stephen's uncle, King Henry I of England, died on December 1, 1135, prompting Stephen to head to England in haste and place himself on the throne as king. This was, generally speaking, a poor move on his part. He was not the heir to the throne: that right belonged to his cousin, Empress Matilda of the Holy Roman Empire (commonly known as Maud). Maud was Henry's daughter and the granddaughter of William, the Conqueror. Because England's royal succession laws were only semi-Salic, Matilda legally had the stronger claim and Stephen was a mere usurper. Stephen's succession faux pas was seen as anarchy and ignited a civil war. Matilda, who was then pregnant, followed her husband to England and was his greatest supporter and advisor.
Maud's forces captured Stephen after his loss at the Battle of Lincoln; however, she was entirely unpopular with the people of London and they drove her out, a detrimental act to her cause. Stephen's brother, Henry of Blois, was a very influential bishop in England at the time and was a supporter of Maud; however, he supported his brother after noticing Maud's unpopularity, and also at his sister-in-law, Matilda's, request.
Matilda's forces soon captured Maud's half-brother and greatest supporter, Robert, Earl of Gloucester. Robert's wife was Stephen's jailer and Matilda was able to arrange a swapping of prisoners and regain her husband.
The war continued until the Earl of Gloucester died and Maud, having no other rallying point, returned to the continent. In celebration of the war's end, Stephen and Matilda founded the abbey at Faversham. The rest of their reign was marked by a peace treaty with Scotland and a notable marriage for their son, Eustace.
Matilda died May of 1152, possibly due to a fever, and was buried at Faversham Abbey. Stephen would prove an ineffectual ruler without his loving wife's guidance and entailed his kingdom to his nephew instead of his sons.
Issue
Stephen and Matilda had three sons:
Eustace IV, Count of Boulogne
Baldwin of Boulogne (d. before 1135)
William of Blois, Count of Mortain and Boulogne and Earl of Surrey
They also had two daughters:
Matilda of Boulogne
Marie of Boulogne
Sources
www.helium.com/items/1491106-biography-matilda-of-boulogne (broken link and not on archive.org 3 December 2023)
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I page 390
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I. page 496
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I03655
Ancestry Profile: #1124689373
Ancestry Profile: #1538551494
Wikipedia:Matilda_of_Boulogne | BOULOGNE Matilda (I59938)
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| 7074 |
Matilda of Flanders (c.1031 – 2 Nov 1083), Duchess of Normandy, Queen of England[1]
Early Life
Matilda was the daughter of Baudouin/Baldwin V, called of Lisle, Count of Flanders, and his second wife, Adèle or Adela Capet, the daughter of Robert II and sister of Henry I, kings of France.[2] Matilda was a descendant of Alfred, king of the West Saxons, through his daughter Ælfthryth, wife of Count Baldwin II.[2] Matilda was Alfred's great, great, great, great, great grand daughter (see WikiTree's Relationship Finder).
Matilda had 2 brothers:
Badouin VI of Mons, count of Flanders;[3] and
Robert the Frisian, count of Flanders after his brother.[3]
Family
Although a marriage between Matilda and William, the Bastard, duke of Normandy had been forbidden by the council of Rheims held by Pope Leo IX in 1049, they did marry, in 1050 or 1051, in Rouen.[3] Pope Nicolas II granted them a dispensation for their marriage during the Lateran Council of 1059.[2] In atonement for her marriage, Matilda was required to build the abbey of Holy Trinity for nuns at Caen and its church was consecrated on 18 June 1066.[2]
Matilda and William had four sons and possibly six daughters:
Robert Curthose, born 1051 or 1052, died 1134, Duke of Normandy;[3]
Richard, died while hunting between 1069 and 1074;[3]
William Rufus, died 1100, King William II of England;[3]
Henry, fourth son, later King Henry I, born in 1068, allegedly at Selby in Yorkshire, died in 1135;[3]
Adelaide, died before 1113;[3]
Cecilia, dedicated in 1066 to her mother's church in Caen, became a nun in 1075 and abbess in 1113, dying in 1127;[2]
Constance married to Alain Fergant, duke of Brittany in 1086, died in 1090;[3]
Adela, born after 1066, married to Stephen of Blois in 1080, died in 1137;[3]
Matilda, who is referenced in Domesday Book;[3] and
Agatha, about whom there is uncertainty;[2]
Reign
Matilda presented William a ship, the Mora, which had on the prow a golden image of a boy, holding a horn in one hand and pointing the way to England with the other, for his own use in the invasion of England in 1066.[2]
Matilda was regent of Normandy during William's absence in 1066-7 assisted by a council headed by Roger de Beaumont.[2] During William's latter absences in England she resumed ruling Normandy with her oldest son Robert.[2]
William sent men of high rank to escort Matilda to England for her coronation, and a large number of nobles and ladies accompanied her from Normandy.[2] She was crowned and anointed Queen by Aldred, archbishop of York at Westminster on 11 May 1068.[2]
Matilda spent little time in England, being occupied in Normandy with the affairs of the Duchy.[2] When her eldest son Robert was exiled by his father, Matilda supported him with large gifts of gold and silver and other valuables.[2]
Death & burial
Matilda died in Normandy on 3 November after a prolonged illness and was buried at Caen in the church she had built, Abbey of Sainte-Trinité which is also known as Abbaye aux Dames.[2]
Additional note (Wikipedia): The abbey was founded as a Benedictine monastery of nuns in the late 11th century by William the Conqueror and his wife Matilda of Flanders as the Abbaye aux Dames ("Women's Abbey"). Matilda, who died in 1083, was buried in the choir under a slab of black marble. Construction of the abbey was not completed until 1130.[4]
Matilda made her son Henry the heir of her English property and bequeathed her crown and other ornaments of state to her church at Caen.[2]
Additional notes on her burial (Royal Tombs of Medieval England): William's wife Matilda, died on 2 November 1083, and was buried in the abbey church of La Trinite, her own Benedictine foundation in Caen. According to Orderic Vitalis, Matilda's tomb was decorated with gold and jewels, like that of her husband. The tomb was opened in 1562 (apparently by Calvinists), and in 1702 Matilda's remains were installed beneath the original grave-slab in the eleventh-century choir, slightly to the east of what is believed to be its original position.
Myths Debunked
Matilda and William were not cousins.
If Matilda was descended from Rollo, which is doubtful,[2] [5] they were fourth cousins, with a common great-great-great-grandfather Robert Ganger aka Rollo or Hrolf, (see WikiTree's Relationship Finder), The interdict against Matilda and William's marriage did not state why the marriage was forbidden.[6] In the late eleventh century the Church prohibited marriages within seven degrees of consanguinity, this prohibition included relations by blood, by marriage, and spiritual relationships, ie god-parents.[7]
Matilda was not 4'2" tall.
Her incomplete skeleton was examined in France, and her bones were measured to determine her height. The 1819 estimate was under five feet, while the 1959 estimate was 5' (152 cm) tall. A reputed height of 4' 2" (127 cm) appeared at some point after 1959 in the non-scientific literature, misrepresenting the 1959 measurement.[8]
Matilda did not have a daughter, Gundrada.[6]
Matilda was not married before she married William.[6]
Sources
↑ James W. Sheahan. The Universal historical atlas. New York: Warren, Cockcroft and Co., 1873.Original data: James W. Sheahan. The Universal historical atlas. New York, Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, Gen. Pub. Co., Balt.,1992, p103.
↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 "Dictionary of National Biography |editor1-last=Lee|editor1-first=Sidney|year=1894|publication-place=London |publisher=Smith, Elder, & co. |volume=Vol. XXXVII Maxquerier-Millyng|dateaccessed=14 July 2014 |repository=Archive.org |url=https://archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati37stepuoft#page/50/mode/2up|pages=49-52
↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 Elisabeth van Houts, ‘Matilda (d. 1083)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2008, www.oxforddnb.com, 15 July 2014
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbey_of_Sainte-Trinit%C3%A9,_Caen
↑ Constance Brittain Bouchard, Those of My Blood, Creating Noble Families in Medieval Francia, Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, ©2001, 15 July 2014.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Notes and Documents, the Parentage of Gundrada, Wife of William of Warren |editor1-last=Creighton MA LLD|editor1-first=Rev Mandell|journal=The English Historical Review|year=1888 |volume=III|publication-place=London |publisher=Longmans, Green and Co|dateaccessed=14 July 2014 |repository=Archive.org |url=https://archive.org/stream/englishhistorica03londuoft#page/680/mode/2up|pages=680-701
↑ Jennifer Ward ed, Women of the English Nobility and Gentry 1066-1500, Manchester University Press, http://bchistorycore.wikispaces.com/file/view/Women+of+the+English+Nobility+and+Gentry+1066-1500.pdf, p.18.
↑ John Dewhurst, 'A historical obstetric enigma: how tall was Matilda?', Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Vol. 1, No. 4 (1981), pp. 271–72
ROYAL ANCESTRY by Douglas Richardson Vol. I, pages 1-8
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. V page 492
WILLIAM the Conqueror, Duke (or Count) of Normandy, 1035-87, King of England, 1066-87, illegitimate son of Robert, Duke of Normandy, by his mistress, Arlette (or Herleve) [see Appendix, Line A for his ancestry}. He was probably born at Falaise 1027-28. He married about 1050 (marriage prohibited 1049, dispensation dated 1059, they being related by near kinship within the 7th degree) MAUD OF FLANDERS, daughter of Baudouin V, Count-Marquis of Flanders, by Adele, daughter of Robert II, King of France [see Appendix, Line B for her ancestry]. They had four sons, Robert Curthose [Duke of Normandy], Richard, William II Rufus [King of England], and Henry [I] [King of England, Duke of Normandy, Count of Cotentin], and five daughters, Alice (or Adelise) (nun at St Leger in Preaux), Maud, Constance, Cecily [Abbess of Holy Trinity, Caen], and Adele (wife of Etienne Henri, Count of Blois). Maud, died 2 November 1083, and was buried at Sainte-Trinite in Caen. Her tombstone with inscription carved round the edge has survived.
Royal Tombs of Medieval England M. Duffy 2003 page 44
See also:
Wikipedia: Matilda of Flanders
"Matilda of Flanders", The Queens of England and Their Times|last1=Lancelott, Esq|first1=Francis|year=1858 |volume=I|publication-place=New York|publisher=Appleton and Company|dateaccessed=15 July 2014 |repository=Archive.org |url=https://archive.org/stream/queensenglandan03lancgoog#page/n22/mode/2up|pages=1-23. This is a colourful, but unsourced, story about Matilda and William which includes all the legends surrounding them.
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, Gen. Pub. Co., Balt.,1992, p103. | FLANDRE Mathilde (I59948)
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| 7075 |
Matilda of Ringleheim
Matilda was the daughter of Saxon Count Dietrich, a descendant of Widukind, who fought against Charlemagne, and Reinhild. She was born about 892 in Enger, Sachsen, East Francia.[1] As a young girl, she had been sent to the monastery of Herford, where she had been given a literary education.
Names
Countess Matilda von Ringleheim
Mechtilde Von Ringelheim
Matilda Countess of Ringelheim
St. Matilda Mechtilde, Queen of the Germans
Alias: Saint Matilda
Alias: Matilda von Sachsen
Alias: Matilda Widukinde
Alias: Mechtilde von Ringelheim
Marriage and Children
She became so renowned for her lovely face and good works that she attracted the attention of Duke Otto of Saxony, who betrothed her to his son, Heinrich I (the Fowler). They were married in 909 and had three sons and two daughters:[1]
Otto, 912-973, Holy Roman Emperor in 962
Henry, c. 919-955, Duke of Bavaria
Bruno, 925-965, Archbishop of Cologne and Duke of Lorraine
Hedwig, who died between 965-980 and married west Frankish Duke Hugh the Great
Gerberga, who died 968/9, who married first to Gilbert, Duke of Larraine and King Louis IV of France
Death
Matilda died 14 May 968 in Quedlinburg, Sachsen and was buried at Quedlinburg Abbey.[1]
Life
Matilda founded many religious institutions including the Abbey of Quedlinburg. She was later canonized.
Our knowledge of St. Mathilda's life comes largely from brief mentions in the Res Gestae Saxonicae (Deeds of the Saxons) of the monastic historian Widukind of Corvey, and from two sacred biographies (the vita antiquior and vita posterior) written, respectively, c. 974 and c. 1003.
After Henry the Fowler's death in 936, St. Mathilda remained at the court of her son Otto, until a cabal of royal advisors is reported to have accused her of weakening the royal treasury in order to pay for her charitable activities. After a brief exile at the Westphalian monastery of Enger, St. Mathilda was brought back to court at the urging of Otto I's first wife, the Anglo-Saxon princess Queen Edith.
St. Mathilda was celebrated for her devotion to prayer and almsgiving; her first biographer depicted her (in a passage indebted to the sixth-century vita of the Frankish queen Radegund by Venantius Fortunatus) leaving her husband's side in the middle of the night and sneaking off to church to pray. St. Mathilda founded many religious institutions, including the canonry of Quedlinburg, Saxony-Anhalt, a center of Ottonian ecclesiastical and secular life and the burial place of St. Mathilda and her husband, and the convent of Nordhausen, Thuringia, likely the source of at least one of her vitae. She was later canonized, with her cult largely confined to Saxony and Bavaria.
Events
Her feast day is 14th March.
Research Note
Removed unsourced daughter Gerelese 8 Mar 2022. | RINGELHEIM Matilda (I57976)
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| 7076 |
Matilda was born out of wedlock. Her father was John Beguhn, Her mother was Jacobina Harley, Daughter of Louis and Cathrine Harley (Ludwig and Katrina Harle). After the death of Adam Shearer jr. Matilda remarried to George Harvey. They had two children Nellie and Della. Matilda died of a Pelvis Absess for 8 days and Peritonitis for 3 days. The doctor was F.E. Bulter | Harley Matilda Beguhn (I49899)
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| 7077 |
Mattfried II was born about 0820. Mattfried II von Eifelgau ... He passed away after 0882. [1]
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Richard Ragland, Wednesday, March 5, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source. | von EIFELGAU Mattfried (I58211)
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| 7078 |
Maud was the daughter of Hugh de Giffard and Sibyl de Cormeilles. Maud de Giffard's brothers were the politically powerful Godfrey de Giffard (Bishop of Worcester), and Walter de Giffard (Archbishop of York, and Bishop of Bath and Wells). Both brothers would later become Chancellors of England. Her sister was Mabel de Giffard, Abbess of Shaftesbury Abbey.[1]
William Devereux and Maud de Giffard had children:
Maud Devereux (~1259)
Archdeacon John Devereux (~1261)
Master Thomas Devereux (~ 1263)
Sibyl Devereux (~1265)
Lady Maud d'Evreux acquired a one sixth-interest in the barony of Tarrington, Herefordshire from her Cormeilles cousin, Thomas de Solers, who died in 1272. In 1286 Godfrey Giffard, Bishop of Worcester, granted Maud d'Evreux and Sibyl, her daughter, an acre of land in the field of Wyston, which after their deaths should go to the prioress and nuns of Wyston.[2]
Maud died in late August 1297. On 3 September 1297 Maud (de Giffard) Devereux was buried in Worcester Cathedral in a place arranged by her brother, Bishop Godfrey de Giffard, near his burial site. (On the south side of the altar of the lady chapel) [3]
Godfrey Giffard died on Friday 26 January 1302, and was buried on 4 February by John de Monmouth, Bishop of Llandaff, in Worcester Cathedral, on the south side of the altar of the lady chapel; his tomb remains there still.[4]
Find A Grave: Memorial #141903030
Sources
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Devereux_(1219%E2%80%931265)
↑ 21 Apr 2006 posting of Douglas Richardson on soc.genealogy.medieval re: Ahnentafel for Sir Baldwin de Freville, of Tamworth, Staffordshire, died 1387
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Devereux_(1219%E2%80%931265)
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godfrey_Giffard | GIFFARD Matilda (I60198)
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| 7079 |
Maude and her husband, Elmer Dodd lived in Janesville, Rock County, WI but died at her home in Crystal Lake, IL. She is buried in Cary Cemetery, Cary, McHenry County, IL. Perhaps Elmer is buried in Janesville because he is not in Cary.
Obituary in Crystal Lake Herald September 9, 1971, page 6.
MRS. MAUDE OSGOOD DODD
Mrs. Maude O. Dodd of 57 Elmhurst St., Crystal Lake, died Sunday, Sept 5, at home. Born February 2, 1878 in Janesville, WI. She was a daughter of the late Frank and Martha Brown Osgood.
Mrs. Dodd lived in the area over 50 years and taught the Cary elementary school and Cary rural school system. she was a graduate of Barrington high school and the oldest living member of the Crystal Lake Woman's Club.
Survivors include a sister-in-law, Mrs. Hattie Osgood of Wauconda, four nieces, Miss Lucile Raue, Miss Ethel Raue and Miss Leone Raue of Crystal Lake and Mrs. Bertha Gainer of Wauconda; a nephew, Ben Raude of Crystal Lake and three step-children; George V. Dodd of Battle Creek, MI; Newton E. Dodd of Louisville, KY; and Mrs. Oscar (Mildred) Johnson of Downers Grove.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her brother, Sidney Osgood, and a sister, Mrs. Ben Raue.
Funeral services were held Wednesday in the Warner-Flagg funeral home with Rev. M. J. A. Dalyrme officiating. Burial was private. | Osgood Maude (I52853)
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| 7080 |
Maurianne married Haymon (Boulogne) de Boulogne in about 530 at an unknown location. The couple had one child: Chrodulphe (Boulogne) de Boulogne.
Sources
See the Changes page for the details of edits by Ryan James and others | D’Aquitaine Maurianne (I59133)
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| 7081 |
MAY 1716/1717 | BEAULIEU Marie Madeleine Hudon Dit (I770)
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| 7082 |
MAY 1716/1717 | BEAULIEU Marie Madeleine Hudon Dit (I770)
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| 7083 |
MAY 1752/1753 | BEAULIEU Madeleine Hudon Dit (I760)
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| 7084 |
May 30 | GOLD Elizabeth (I56215)
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| 7085 |
May be Arthur John Leigh | LEIGH John Arthur (I5041)
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| 7086 |
May be Emerentienne or Merence | CHARLAND Emerence (I56122)
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| 7087 |
May be in May | Family: HOWARD Pitman / DAVISON Lydia (F17998)
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| 7088 |
May be John S. Wayne | WAYNE Fred B. (I9956)
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| 7089 |
May have been an apothecary in Charlestown | PULSIFER Joseph Perkins (I7533)
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| 7090 |
May have been born Jan 6, 1677 | Wright II Henry (I20680)
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| 7091 |
May have been born Mar 3, 1719 | DEWEY Sarah (I14336)
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| 7092 |
may have been dau. of James Mattock of Boston; and this her
4th mar.
(Suffolk Deeds 22:79) | Alice, (I16)
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| 7093 |
May have been in business with his brother in Charlestown. | PULSIFER Ebenezer (I7081)
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| 7094 |
May have been married Mar 24, 1687 | Family: SMITH Samuel / PORTER Ruth (F12643)
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| 7095 |
Mélisende de Rethel was married twice:[1]
Robert Marmion.
Richard de Camville.
She received gift of part of Stanton, co. Oxon. from Adeliza of Louvain, Queen of England, who recognized her as a cousin ["cognata mea"].
Early in the 12th Century, Stanton was given by Henry I to his second wife, Queen Adeliza (or Adela). A large part of it she presented to a kinswomen, Millicent de Camville. From the latter it was inherited in 1191 by Isabel de Camville, and thus passed to her husband Richard de Harcourt, from whom it has come down through the Harcourt family to the present day and from which circumstance the Manor and the village itself became known as Stanton Harcourt. Queen Adeliza also gave land at Stanton to Reading Abbey, which remained patron of the parish church fill the Dissolution of the Monasteries. A close relationship with St Michael's Church has been maintained by the Harcourts, and it contains the chapel under which members of the family have been buried since the 15th century.
Research Notes
The following excerpt from a post to SGM by Alan Wilson, gives the (I think correct) ancestry for Milicent, the wife of Robert, which agrees with AR line 256A--not CP above:
"Robert I Marmion, b. circa 1109, slain 1143/1144, m. circa 1130/1133 Milicent, dau. of Gervase, Count of Rethel & Elizabeth de Namur. Milicent m. secondly Richard de Camville. Robert evicted the monks of Coventry and profaned their church.
"C. T. Clay in an article, "Marmion," in The Complete Peerage, viii, 505-522,indicates that Milicent's parentage is unknown. He lists (?)Elizabeth, dau. of Gervase, Count of Rethel, as the wife of Robert II, son of Milicent (who appears below). Schwennicke (ed.) Europaische Stammtafeln, iii, 625 also lists Elisabeth de Rethel as wife of Robert de Marmion who d. 1181. ES cites Cockayne viii, 509, in connection with this table so this cannot be taken as an independent confirmation.
"Moriarty in TAG xx (Jan, 1944), 255-256, points out that Alberic, Canon of Huyon-sur-Meuse states that Clarembald de Rosoy, who m. Elizabeth de Namur after the death of Gervase in 1124, in order to disinherit her, married the only daughter of Gervase out of the country to a certain noble of Normandy named Robert Marmion. But Alberic does not give the name of the daughter or specify which Robert Marmion was her husband. The daughter of Count Gervase was married about 1132/3, so chronologically it would more likely be to Robert I than to Robert II. The mother of Count Gervase of Rethel was Milicent of Montlhery. Thus Milicent, the wife of Robert I could have been named for her paternal grandmother.
"Queen Adeliza of Louvain, wife of Henry I, gave part of Stanton, Co. Oxon, to Milicent, wife of Robert Marmion, "cognata mea." Stanton passed with Isabel, dau. of Milicent and Richard de Camville to her husband, Robert de Harcourt as her maritagium, and Stanton Harcourt has subsequently remained in that family. Queen Adeliza was a second cousin of the daughter of Gervase, both being descended from Albert III de Namur, d. 1102, & Ida of Saxony.
"Moriarty concludes, in view of these arguments, that it was Robert I who married the daughter of the Count of Rethel, and that her name was Milicent. This corrects Palmer, "History of the Baronial Family of Marmion," 1875, Watson (The Genealogist, n.s., xiv, 70), Clay in "Complete Peerage" (vii, 509), and, of course, although not then published, ES, iii, 625.] [Alan B. Wilson, SGM 14 Apr 1997]"
Robert was seigneur of Fontenay-le-Marmion (destroyed by Count of Anjou, 1140), and lord of Tamworth, co. Warwick.
Sources
↑ 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.
Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley RJCW Ref 175a pedigree of Boteler and Marmion
Gen-Medieval - 17 Mar 2005 posting of John Ravilious re: CP omission? Marmion questions | RETHEL Mélisende (I60169)
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| 7096 |
Mechanic. | BISSON Henry (I1071)
|
| 7097 |
Medieval Lands does not know about her.
Sources
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 42 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022883&tree=LEO
Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser . 1956 141 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00022883&tree=LEO | MERSEBURG Jutta (I58048)
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| 7098 |
MEDLANDS (Jan 2018):
BEATRIX de Hainaut. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Beatricem" as daughter of "Rainero comiti de Hainaco" and his wife Hedwige, naming her husband "Ebalus de Roceio"[162]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis gives more details, naming "Beatricem" as daughter of "Hadevidem…comitissam Hainonensium" and specifying that she married "Ebalus de Roceio, cuius frater fuit Lebaldus de Malla et soror Iveta comitissa de Roitest" and later "Manasses cui agnomen Calva-asina"[163]. m firstly (divorced before 1021) EBLES [I] Comte de Roucy, son of GISELBERT Comte [de Roucy] & his wife --- (-11 May 1033). Archbishop of Reims 1021. m secondly ([1021]) MANASSES de Ramerupt "Calva-asina", son of HILDUIN [III] de Ramerupt [Montdidier] & his wife ---. Vidame de Reims 1053.
Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HAINAUT.htm#ReginarIVdied1013
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, Edition: 7th ed. Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots, 7th ed. Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis, Editor: Sheppard Jr., Walter Lee Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD, 1992 | HAINAUT Beatrix (I58998)
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| 7099 |
MEDLANDS says (Jan 2018) :
daughter of Emperor LOTHAIRE I & his wife Ermengarde de Tours (825/30-?). The Gesta Francorum records that "Gisalbertus, vassallus Karoli" abducted "filiam Hlotharii imperatoris" and took her to Aquitaine where they were married. The Annales Fuldenses also record that "Gisalbertus vassallus Karoli" abducted "filiam Hlotharii imperatoris" and married her in Aquitaine in 846. The Annales Mettenses also date this event in 846. Settipani states that the emperor recognised the marriage in 849. Rösch says that this daughter is often named Ermengarde but that there is no contemporary proof that this is correct.
Title
Title: Duchess of the Moselle (Maasgau); Princess of Italy
Sources
Medlands. This is an entry for Giselbert. He abducted and married Emperor Lothair's daughter (this profile). Rosch says that this daughter is often named Ermengarde.
Medlands. This shows that Boson married Ermengardis in 876, well after this Ermendarde had died.
Geni. Princess Ermengarde de Lorraine, daughter of Emperor Lothair I and Ermengarde of Tours. Wife of Giselbert I. Mother of many listed children. Many sources and long discussion included here. | CAROLINGIAN Unknown (I58405)
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| 7100 |
Meginhard von der Donaugegend ... [1] | von der Donaugegend I Meginhard (I59420)
|
| 7101 |
Meginhard von Sponheim, Graf von Sponheim, was the son of Stephan II von Sponheim and Sophia. Married Mechtild von Mörsperg, daughter of Adalbert Graf von Mörsperg, before 24 February 1118. They were parents of Gottfried, Graf von Sponheim, and possibly Kraft.[1]
Research notes
Other children: Adalbert, Maud, Ida, Albert, Mathilda, not mentioned by Cawley at all. Wikipedia mentions possibly Mechtild (Mathilda), Albert and Rudolf, but rules out Kraft (sources below).
"Sources (which sources?) disagree on the date of death."
wikipedia:de:Meginhard von Sponheim cites the following resources:
Johannes Mötsch, Genealogie der Grafen von Sponheim. In: Jahrbuch für westdeutsche Landesgeschichte. Band 13, 1987, S. 63–179, ISSN 0170-2025
Friedrich Hausmann, Siegfried, Markgraf der Ungarnmark und die Anfänge der Spanheimer in Kärnten und im Rheinland. In: Jahrbuch für Landeskunde von Niederösterreich. Neue Folge Band 43, Wien 1977, S. 115–168 PDF
Sources
↑ Charles Cawley. Grafen von Sponheim, entry in "Medieval Lands" database (accessed 16 August 2025).
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band IV, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 2 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00021700&tree=LEO
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). IV 118 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00021700&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/PALATINATE.htm#_Toc187475032 | SPONHEIM Meginhard (I59621)
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| 7102 |
Meginhard was born about 0905. Meginhard von Niederaltaich ... [1] | von Niederaltaich II Meginhard (I59419)
|
| 7103 |
Mehitable Lincoln Russell, widow of John Russell of Warren, Mass. had four
children before she married Abner Brown.
She named her second daughter, Dorcas, after the second wife of Abner, Dorcas
Greenwood. Abner was much taken with her generosity.
Mehitable Lincoln Russell, widow of John Russell of Warren, Mass. had four
children before she married Abner Brown.
She named her second daughter, Dorcas, after the second wife of Abner, Dorcas
Greenwood. Abner was much taken with her generosity. | Lincoln Mehitable (I50760)
|
| 7104 |
Mehitable was nineteen years of age when she married Samuel Annable. | Allen Mehitable (I53604)
|
| 7105 |
Melvin was an expert mason by trade as written up in an article in the local newspaper on the early settlers of Clary. Also in the 1968 "History of McHenry County, IL."
DEATH: On a coupon that was detached and retained by Sexton...perhaps a death certificate for the cemetery, the following is recorded:
DEATH: Burial Permit No. 91 Registration Dist. No. 504..Cause Certified by J. A. Roso, M. D.
Name of deceased, Melvin Brown...date of Burial...Nov. 27, 1936
Sex, Male; Color, white; Age, 78 Yrs., 7 Mos., 21 Days. Name of Undertaker, M. W. Hughes
Place of death, Fremont Township., Date of Death, Nov. 24, 1936, Address of Undertaker, Wauconda.
Cause of death, Atrophic Chirrosis. Name of Local Registrar, Walter W. Banks.
DEATH: The obituary published in the Crystal Lake Herald, Dec. 3, 1936 edition says that Melvin died at the home of a niece, Orissa Brown in Wauconda, WI. It also said that he had lived in the area for the last twenty years. There is no mention of a surviving wife or children.
DEATH: Funeral services were held in the M. E. church in Cary. | Brown Melvin (I52854)
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| 7106 |
Memorial Park | ANDERSON Clara Belle (I26768)
|
| 7107 |
Memorial Service at St. Andrew's Church in Mahtomedi, MN January 13,
2006. | HILL Stan (I4024)
|
| 7108 |
Memorial service from Forest Lawn Memorial Park Chapel.
Interment at Evergreen Memorial Gardens.
Garden of Devotion, Block C, Lot 120, Head of 4.
Service was June 6, 1984.
Survived by Wife, Ruth, Daughters, Karen Kotke and Diana Freeman,
Grandchildren Brian and Douglas Freeman, Michelle Kotke and Wendy
Smith, Sister, Bonnie Richmond | SMITH Udal Sprague (I9079)
|
| 7109 |
Memorial service Sunday October 7, 2018, New York Society for Ethical Culture | CHILDS Patricia Ruth (I47363)
|
| 7110 |
Memorial Service: Beaver Lake Lutheran Church, Maplewood, Minnesota Friday December 19, 2008
Interment: Union Cemetery Maplewood, Minnesota | EKSTROM Aileen Helen (I2612)
|
| 7111 |
Menendo González was the tutor and father-in-law of King Alfonso V from at least 1003. He was the royal alférez, the king's armour-bearer (armiger regis) and commander of the royal armies, under Vermudo II.[1]
Menendo González married Toda:[2]
Munio.
Gonzalo.
Ramiro.
Pelayo.
Elvira.
Ilduara.
Ildonza.
Fruela.
Oneca.
He maintained peaceful diplomatic relations with the Caliphate of Córdoba until 1004, after which there was a state of war. In his last years he had to deal with Viking raids, during one of which he was killed.
La mujer de Pedro de Traba. Urraca Fróilaz, aparece en la documentación como hija del conde Froila Arias y de la dama Ardiu Díaz cuyo progenitor fue Diego Gutiérrez, de quien sabemos que es hijo de Gutierre Rodríguez y que, además, tuvo un hermano Ilamado Rodrigo Gutiérrez. Dos datos añade la carta de las generaciones: Gutierre es hijo de un magnate de nombre Rodrigo Munit, hijo del conde Menendo. A primera vista, de esta completa relación paterno-filial, sobresale por su discordancia con la bien hilada ligazón genealógica un patronimico: Munit -¿Muíliz?, ¿Muñoz?- y el origen del mismo: Menendo. Sólo nos queda una opción: el copista del Tumbo leyó, incorrectamente, el nombre Menéndez abreviado. la documentación del reinado de Femando I recoge el nombre de este magnate, cuya mayor dignidad fue la de maiorino regis. A este Gutierre Rodriguez, esposo de Marina, hijo de Rodrigo Menéndez, le unen lazos cercanos de sangre con el rey de León pues su padre, el conde Rodrigo es hijo del conde Menendo González, tutor y suegro de Alfonso V.[3]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Menendo_González.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2025, Family of Hermenegildo González.
↑ Universidade do Porto - Faculdade de Letras: Relaziones Fronterizas entre Portugal y León em Tiempos de Alfonso VII, accessed 12 Feb 2015.
Tabla de parentescos de don Fernando de Castilla, accessed 18 Dec 2014. | GONZÁLEZ Menendo (I59839)
|
| 7112 |
Mentioned 848-860.
Sieghard I died about 861 or after. [1]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Grafen von Ebersberg.
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BAVARIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#Siegharddied861 | EBERSBERG Sieghard (I58105)
|
| 7113 |
Mentioned in 1033[1]. Birth date (probably) estimated from this mention.
Gerard was a witness in 1042 as Gerarus Flamens[2] He was mentioned possibly again as a witness on March 23, 1053 as testerbant in comitatu Gerhardus comitis.[3] (Count of Wassenberg)
In 1064 he was listed as a witness as Gerard count of Gelre.[4]
Research notes
Ad Verschoor published a family tree[5] where Marguerite van Looz, daughter of Gislebert (Loon) van Loon (abt.0985-abt.1045) is mentioned as Gerard's wife.
In Charles Cawley, Medlands Project it appears that Gerard I and II are the same person, while other sources separate a Gerard I and II. | von WASSENBERG Gerard (I57889)
|
| 7114 |
Mentoned in 1223.[1] In 1240 Dirk of Kleve promises to liberate duke Henry I of Brabant of his pledge for him made at the time of the marriage of his daughter to count Otto of Gelre.[2]
Marriages:
1. The name of his first wife, who died around 1224 , is not known, but it is assumed she was Mathilde (Mechtild) van Dinslaken. They had children:
born around 1214/1215 son Dietrich primogenitus ( died in 1245 )
Margaretha ( died 1251 ) , the future wife Count Otto II . von Geldern ( born around 1215, reign 1229-1271 )
2. His second wife he married around 1226 Hedwig of Meissen ( died 1249/1250 ) , children:
Dietrich ( V./VII )
Jutta ( died 1275/1276 ) , who married the Duke of Limburg
Agnes ( died probably in 1285 )
Sources
↑ Oorkonden van Noord-Brabant 690-1312 huygens knaw retroboeken pg nr. 124.
↑ A. Verkooren, Inventaire des chartes et cartulaires des duchés de Brabant et de Limbourg et des pays Outre Meuse. Deuxième partie. Cartulaires. Tome I, 1961, p. 87.
Dietrich VI von Kleve
John fitz Geoffrey, entry in the database Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2000-2017. | KLEVE Dietrich (I59034)
|
| 7115 |
Mercy Hospital. Massive gastrointestinal hemorrhage, ruptured esphageal varices, cirrhosis of liver.
Burial: St. Patrick's Catholic Cemetery, May 13, 1970 in Fairfax, Benton Co., IA | SEBETKA Lester John (I49765)
|
| 7116 |
Mercy is buried in the South Onondaga Cemetery, South Onondaga, NY | Bacon Martha (Mercy) (I53438)
|
| 7117 |
Merichion Fawdfilun was born about 0140. Merichion Fawdfilun Ap Owian ... [1]
No reliable documentation has been found for this person.
Research Notes
Name
Meirchion ap Owain, son of Owain ap Cyllin[2]
Meirchion Fawdfilwr ap Owain (King of Ewyas), born 140 in Ewyas (now Monmoutgh), Mid-Glamorgan, Wales [3]
Parents
Father
Owain ap Beli King of Wales (celt myth) [citation needed]--> was born c.0140-0150 in Trevan, Llanilid, Glamorganshire, Wales, Roman Britannia. [citation needed]
Mother
Eurgen (Meric-2) Britain (abt. 0107 - 0125) was both too old and too dead to have been his mother, at least with these dates.
Eurgen verch Llewfer, born 140 in Ewyas now Monmouth, Wales, wife of Aminadab. [3]
Marriage and Children
His wife, stated here to have been Unknown Aminadab (0168 - 0180),[citation needed] is unlikely at best, at least with those dates. Likewise she cannot have been the mother of these two children:
Children:
Cwrrig (Fawr) Meirchion, born 170 [citation needed] Cwrrig Goric Fawr ('the Great') ap Meirchion, b. 180 in Ewyas, Wales.
Gorac Mawr (Merchion) ap Merchion, born 170 [citation needed]
Unnamed daughter of Aminadab [4]
Aminadab appears in a semi-fictional work by Brian Starr.[3]
Aminadab ap Joshua was born circa 136 in Monmouthshire, Wales. [5]
Aminadab was born 125 in Ewyas, now Monmouth, Wales [3]
Aminadab was a de jure king. [3]
He was the son of Joshua ap Alain [5]
Death
Meirchion ap Owain died about 0210 in Roman Britannia.[citation needed]
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Erin Jacobson, Friday, October 17, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source.
↑ Morgan, Charles Octavius S., Historical Traditions and Facts relating to Newport and Caerleon, by a member of the Caerleon and Monmouthshire antiquarian society (Newport, R.I.: W.N. Johns, 1881) p.7.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Brian Starr. The Life of Saint Brychan. By the author, 2008. Page 153 Accessed 4/28/2019 jhd
↑ Database online. Record for Cwrrig Fawr "the Great" King of the Silures of Britain; Record for .Meirchion ap Owain King of the Silures of Britain; Record for Daughter verch Aminadab; Record for Aminadab ap Joshua. Author: Ancestry.com Title: Public Member Trees Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2006;
↑ 5.0 5.1 Geni. Aminadab ap Joshua Added by: Garrison Proske Brazeal on December 3, 2014.Managed by: Garrison Proske Brazeal. Accessed 4/28/2019 jhd | Ap OWIAN Merichion Fawdfilun (I59276)
|
| 7118 |
Merovech Merovingian was a member of aristocracy in ancient Europe.
Join: Medieval Project
Discuss: MEDIEVAL
Almost nothing reliable is known about Merovech, but his name, Merovech or Merowig (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée) is the source of the name of the Merovingian dynasty which later became the dominant Frankish royal family in the time of his grandson Clovis I. The name is sometimes explained as meaning "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").
Gregory of Tours, some generations later, names him once as the father of Childeric I. He also adds that "some say" that Merovech was of the line of Chlodio.[1] Most or all other references to Merovech were influenced by Gregory and/or legends.
The anonymous "History of the Franks" describes Merovech as a kinsman of Chlodio, but says specifically that he inherited his same kingdom that he had been building, apparently including Tournai (now in Belgium) and Cambrai (now in France).
Merovech's son Childeric was described by such historians as a King of the Franks but is mostly described as ruling over a Roman-Frankish army in northern Gaul, rather than any specific Frankish territory. (At one point, when in exile, a Gregory says that a Roman leader Aegidius replaced him in this position of King.) However, Saint Remigius, in a letter to Clovis, said that Clovis, like his parents, ruled Roman Belgica Secunda - an area containing Tournai, Artois, Cambrai and the Silva Carbonaria, all areas associated with Chlodio.
Nevertheless Gregory of Tours, and also Hincmar of Reims, report that Clovis killed a rival king and relative, named Ragnachar, who was ruling Cambrai and north of the Somme.
Parents
FATHER: Clodius has been selected by Roger Travis as a cut-off point for our attempts at systematizing early medieval genealogy, and has been made the father of Merovech to show a traditional and possible relationship, though the exact relationship is doubted and uncertain.
Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage: This profile has been edited with regard to parents in accordance with principles established by the European Aristocracy user-group. Medieval genealogy is not an exact science, and digital collaborative genealogy must therefore occasionally make choices where old-fashioned print-scholarship did not have to. The parents (or lack of parents) of the person described in this profile were decided upon in consultation with primary sources especially as collected in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project.
Marriage
There is no record of a name for any wife.
Legend
The Chronicle of Fredegar contains a legendary version of Frankish origins, connecting them to the Trojan war. He also referenced to Gregory's history, adding legendary details. He reports a story that Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a "beast of Nepture", resembling "the Quinotaur" (a beast unknown from any other source, but normally presumed to be linked to the Greek Minotaur stories).[2]
Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity. It has been suggested Merovech refers to or is reminiscent to the Dutch river Merwede, nowadays part of the Rhine-Meus-Scheldt delta but historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in the neighborhood of which the Salian Franks once dwelled according to Roman historians. Another theory considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.
Sources
↑ History of the Franks II.9. Latin here: "De huius stirpe quidam Merovechum regem fuisse adserunt, cuius fuit filius Childericus".
↑ Fredegar in Latin.
See also:
Wikipedia: Merovech
Wikipedia:nl:Merovech;
Wikidata: Item Q58165, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Photo: Silvered brass mounting from 1867 depicting Merovech victorious in battle, by Emmanuel Frémiet.
Geni. Considerable analysis and discussion, with sources. | MEROVINGIAN Merovech (I58173)
|
| 7119 |
Merriman, Moore & Co., Troy, NY 1850
Owned by Lyman A. Wiard, Station A>R>D> #2, Syracuse,NY | Wiard Lyman A. (I53295)
|
| 7120 |
Message from Gene Akins to Sally Stovall on Oct. 19, 2014 **
SALLY STOVALL: EVERYTHING I FIND ON THIS PROFILE INDICATES BLESINDA ALLEMANIE WAS THE DAUGHTER NOT THE SISTER OF CHLODOMER ALLEMANIE. GUINDOMER ALLEMANIE AND MARLARIC TOXANDRIE WERE BOTH MALES AND PROBABLY NOT MARRIED TO EACH OTHER. A QUSTIONABLE INTERNET SOURCE INDICATES IT WAS A FEMALE TOXANDRIE UNNAMED WHO WAS MARRIED TO GUINDOMER ALLEMANIE. THANKS GENE ADKINS, I SENT A COPY OF THIS TO THE FIRST PROFILE MANAGER
Chlodomer Allemanie (320 - 358)[1]
Parents
Father: Guindomar 'd Alemanie[2]
Mother: _____ Toxandrie[3]
Marriage
m. Blesinde[4] | ALLEMANIE Chlodomir (I59143)
|
| 7121 |
Metz, Lorraine, (mozelle) France | GONNEAU Marie Rose (I57767)
|
| 7122 |
Michael drowned in 1928. | PEARO Michael (I6313)
|
| 7123 |
Michael Loghry, spelled Loghrey on his Revolutionary Enlistment papers, signed up on August 16, 1780 under the Company commander, Capt. John McClelan in the 1st Pennsylvania Regiment. He was a private. On October 15, 1780, he was appointed.
P. A. (6) Vol. 2, p.835, 836, 837.
On 13 August, 1781, he was paid $38.00 for duty from August 1, 1780 to January 1, 1781. Certificate # 73882, Letter H, Receipt book A, Final settlements (Pierce's Certificate) p. 59, Records of the Comptroller General, at D. P. R. The Basic Record Proves Active Duty Before 16 November 1783.
He received another payment for active duty on 13 Dec. 1782 for the period from 1 Jan. 1781 to 1 January 1782. Certificate # 74020, Letter B, Receipt Book A, Pierce's Certificate, p. 63, Records of the Comptroller General, at D. P. R.
On August 13, 1783, he was paid $80. to Jan 1, 1783, Certificate # 74197, Letter B, Receipt Book A, p. 69.
He came to Cameron, Steuben county, NY before 1824 and was one of the only residents west of Cameron Corners in 1824 with John Hallett, Isaac Santee, Joseph Butler and Captain Luther White.
He died on his way to Bath, Steuben county, to pick up his annual Revolutionaly War pension of $96 dollars per annum, which he had drawn for sometime.
In the "History of Steuben County, NY by W. W. Clayton, p. 202
John Hallett, who kept tavern near the bridge, half a
mile west of Cameron, Isaac Santee, Joseph Butler, and
Michael Loughry, were the only residents in the town, west
of Cameron Corners, when Capt. Luther White settled
where he now lives, near the Santee place, in 1824. | Loghry Michael (I54097)
|
| 7124 |
Michel Baillon, bourgeois de Chartres, was the son of Mathurin Baillon. He was vicomte[1] de Caudebec in Normandy. He was also seigneur de Louanville, in Beauce[2].
He married Jeanne Le Seigneur, daughter of Adam, seigneur d'Epretot[2]. They had the following children:
Jean, sieur de Louanville, married Jeanne Lecrey
Pierre, esquire, sieur de Noiron and Verrières, vicomte de Caudebec, married Rose de Montdoucet.
[[Baillon-12|Adam]), sieur de Valence
Claude.
He was living on 2 July 1515[2].
Biographie
Michel Baillon, bourgeois de Chartres, était fils de Mathurin Baillon. Il était vicomte[3] de Caudebec en Normandie, et seigneur de Louanville en Beauce[2].
Il a épousé Jeanne Le Seigneur, fille d'Adam Le Seigneur, seigneur d'Epretot[2]. Ils ont eu pour enfants:
Jean, sieur de Louanville, marié à Jeanne Lecrey
Pierre, écuyer, sieur de Noiron et de Verrières, vicomte de Caudebec, marié à Rose de Montdoucet
Adam, sieur de Valence
Claude.
Il vivait le 2 juin 1515[2].
Sources
↑ vice-comitis, in this case a bourgeois appointed to act as an official for a noble or for the King
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Gail F. Moreau, trans., and John P. DuLong, ed. "Archange Godbout's Baillon, de Marle, and Le Sueur Families of France." Michigan's Habitant Heritage 13, no. 22 (April 1992): 40-51. English translation of Godbout's 1944 article
↑ vice-comitis, dans ce contexte, un bourgeois nommé pour agir pour le compte d'un noble ou du roi
See also:
Site de François Marchi | BAILLON Michel (I60251)
|
| 7125 |
Mid 1648 | Burman Thomas (I53691)
|
| 7126 |
Mid March, 1656 | Burman Mary (I53462)
|
| 7127 |
Middle initial: LDS Ordinance data: see Call #1395946, Batch F856071, sheet 15. | Brown Elizabeth M. (I52824)
|
| 7128 |
Middlesex Co., MA Probate docket 3081 Jonathan Brown of Concord 1474
On Nov. 23, 1747 administrators were named:
Aaron Brown of Lunenburg, Worcester Blacksmith
Thomas Brown of Concord, Yeoman
John Barret of Cambridge
"Aaron Brown admin of estate of father Jonathan late of Concord deceasedintestate."
Left something to Thomas Brown for boarding & clothing Lois Brown dau. ofdeceased from Nov. 23, 1745 she being then under 3.
Middlesex Co., MA Probate docket 3081 Jonathan Brown of Concord 1474
On Nov. 23, 1747 administrators were named: Aaron Brown of Lunenburg, Worcester Blacksmith
Thomas Brown of Concord, Yeoman
John Barret of Cambridge
"Aaron Brown admin of estate of father Jonathan late of Concord deceased
intestate."
Left something to Thomas Brown for boarding & clothing Lois Brown dau. of
deceased from Nov. 23, 1745 she being then under 3. | Brown Jonathan (I50963)
|
| 7129 |
Middlesex Co., MA Probate Docket #3219 Thomas Brown Concord
Admin named 9/3/1739 Ephriam Brown.
Names 5/28/1739 son John Brown, blacksmith, Jonathan Buttrick,Gentleman, John Bateman husbandman all of Concord.
Will 10 Feb. 1736/37 leaves wife Rachel dwelling, daughter Lydia, unmarried, use of cellar.
Thomas mentions his 5 daughters:
Mary wife of Thomas Flint, Rachel wife of Jonathan Harris, Abigail wife of Jonathan Davis,
Dinah wife of Henry Jefts, Lydia as single. Also sons Jonathan, Thomas, (leaves blacksmith shop) friends and neighbors John Hunt, Ephriam Browne, grandson Aaron Brown six pounds when he reaches 21years of age, grandson David Rufiells? son of daughter Hannah decd., grandchildren Simon and Lydia Whittaker children of Mary decd., son John Browne.
There is also the information that he died in Lexington, Middlesex County, MA. | Brown Thomas (I51330)
|
| 7130 |
Migrated to Canada in 1828 | Williams Thomas (I55940)
|
| 7131 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I49930)
|
| 7132 |
Mildred S. Loghry, 92, formerly of 4985 Oak Hill Road, Cameron, New York, went to her eternal home to be with her Lord and loved ones on Saturday, April 24, 2004. She passed away at the Steuben County Health Care Facility following a long battle with Alzheimer's and cancer.
She was born October 3, 1911 in the Town of Bath, the daughter of Frank and Alfa Carr Shattuck. Mildred was happy and proud to be a farmer's wife, who loved life, the outdoors and her many friends. The joy of her life was her church activities whre she taught Sunday school for over 40 years. Her love of music and her musical talents kept her singing and playing into her 80's. She was a devoted Mother, Grandmother and great Grandma. Her good life was filled with doing for others, her garden, cooking and baking. She was a correspondent for the Courier Advocate writing the "Oregon Trail" for over 50 years, active RSVP who really enjoyed her visits to the shut-ins and a 70 year member of the North Cameron Grange.
Mildred and Lynn D. Loghry were married March 23, 1933. He predeceased her on November 20, 1973. She is survived by her daughter, Lucille Schuchardt-DeSerio (Joseph, Sr.) of Bath and one son, Gerald (Sylvia) Loghry of Cameron, NY. Four grandchildren, ten grandchildren: Sheryl (Johnny) Badeau, Ryan and Nick; Denise (Jerry) Keeler, Chelsey; Greg (Julie) Schuchardt, Kristy, Andy,
Adam, Katie, and Kelly; Curt (Kim) Loghry, Megan and Morgan. A brother, Earl (Mable) Shattuck of Bath, NY; niece, Elaine Talbot; nephew, Steven Shattuck; special cousin (like sisters) Oletha Townsend and family.
Funeral services will be held at Buena Vista Church, Canisteo, NY on Tuesday, April 27th at 1:00 p. m. with Rev. Daniel Pickering officiating. Burial will be in Nondaga Cemetery, Bath, NY. Memorials may be made to Buena Vista Church at 6034 County Route 69, Canisteo, NY 14823 or the Oregon Free Church, c/0 John and Helen Paucke, 5124 Oak Hill Rd., Cameron, NY 14819.
Mildred was the Oregon Missionary Society's Director for over 50 years. Her heart ws always close to the Oregon Trail.
The family wishes to thank Maryville Adult Care Home and the fantastic caregivers who were her special friends for 8 years. The Steuben County Health Care Facility for their wonderful tender loving care, Dr. Dennis O'Conner, Barbara Hood and all the wonderful staff of Keuka Family Practice. God Bless each and every one. (Sent to us by Sylvia and Gerald Loghry, printed in the Wolf Prints newsletter.) | Shadduck Mildred (I54079)
|
| 7133 |
Millard Filmore became the 13th President of the United States of America in 1850-1853 and the second vice-president to finish the term of a deceased president. He succeeded Zachery Taylor at a critical moment in United States history. The Mexican War (1846-1848) had renewed the conflict between the Northern and Southern states over slavery, since it had added new territories to the United States. The debate over whether these territories should be admitted as free or slave states precipitated a crisis that threatened civil war. Much to the relief of Northeren and Southern politicians, Fillmore pursued a moderate and conciliatory policy. He signed into law the Compromise of 1850 , which admitted one territory as a free state and allowed slave owners to settle in othe others. This compromise did not solve the basic problem of the slavery but did preserve peace for nearly eleven years. During that time the North gained the industrial power that enabled it to defeat the South when civil war eventually came.
His first wife, Abigail became first lady. After her death, he remarried Caroline Carmichael McIntosh. Both wives are buried in the family plot in Buffalo, Erie County,NY.
The house of Abigail and Millard, The Millard Fillmore House, is located about 15 miles SSE of Buffalo, New York, at 24 Shearer Avenue, just off Main Street in East Aurora, New York. It is open to the public on Wed., Sat., and Sun., from 2 pm-4 pm. from June to mid October. Fillmore built this house in the early 1820s and lived in it with his wife, Abigail from 1826-1830.
In his early years, Millard was able to educate himself with the help of the village school teacher, Abigail Powers who would later become his wife. He later studied law with Judge Walter Wood of Cayuga County. In the early years of their marriage, Abigail continued to teach school and to help her husband with his law studies. | Fillmore President Millard (I52135)
|
| 7134 |
Milles de Maillard, Seigneur of le Breuil and of Ia Boissiere in part 1551
He was the son of Jacques Maillard, seigneur of Champagne and Bénigne Bouteillier (who were married April 16, 1516) [1]
Miles had an older brother Christophe de Maillard, Sieur of la Boissiere, (which) he shared with his brother, through an inheritance from their mother on July 15, 1551 [2]
Milles married Marie Morand by contract June 25, 1555, her father present [3][4]
They had at least two children:
Renée de Maillard who married Adam Baillon [1]
Christophe de Maillard seigneur du Breuil[5]; his wife was Françoise de Crémainville who was remarried in 1600 to Louis d'Allonville[4]. Descendance.
Miles de Maillard passed away about July 7, 1605 as evidenced by a receipt in which Marie Morant is listed as a widow. [1] [4]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Jetté et al. From Charlemagne to Catherine Baillon, American-Canadian Genealogist, Issue 82, Vol. 25, No. 4, 1999; Read Nov 2017
↑ Nouveau d'Hozier, vol. 218, dossier 4949 via Jetté et al. From Charlemagne to Catherine Baillon, American-Canadian Genealogist, Issue 82, Vol. 25, No. 4, 1999; Read Nov 2017
↑ Nouveau d'Hozier, vol. 218, dossier 4949 via Jetté et al. From Charlemagne to Catherine Baillon, American-Canadian Genealogist, Issue 82, Vol. 25, No. 4, 1999; Read Nov 2017
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Pattou, Etienne. "Familles Maillard" pgs. 3 & 4 [1]; Read Jan 2019
↑ Jetté, René et al., Table d’ascendance de Catherine de Baillon, Montréal, Société généalogique canadienne-française, 2001.
See also:
www.greenerpasture.com | MAILLARD Miles (I57838)
|
| 7135 |
Mine foreman in Butte | MORISETTE Mart (I5815)
|
| 7136 |
Minnie came to U.S. in 1874, had been in U.S. 24 years as of 1900 census.
Place of birth variously given as Germany or Prussia. On map of what is currently East Germany, a town of Dalmen is near a town of Werder. | WERDER Wilhemina "Minnie" (I143)
|
| 7137 |
Minnie Lincoln Crow Coleman, Gen. Asa Danforth Chapter, D.A.R., Syracuse, NY | Source (S1571)
|
| 7138 |
Mirón / Miró de Barcelona (later Miró II "el Joven" Comte de Cerdanya, Conflent i Berga) was born in about 888 and was the fifth child of Guifré "el Pilós, Comte de Urgell, Cerdanya, Conflent i Barcelona and his wife whose name was Guinidilda / Winidilda. [1] [2]
Parents and Spouse
While Mirón's father is clearly identified, there are uncertainties pertaining to his mother and to his spouse's family:
NOTE re Mother of Miró(n):
Miró's mother, referred to as Guinidilda or WInidilda, was known to be the daughter of a man named Seniofredo. Some earlier suggestions that she was Gunhild - who was the daughter of Baudouin I Count of Flanders - appear to be controverted by evidence or at least not certain. Accordingly, the link to her remains but her status as Miro's mother and Guifré's wife are considered uncertain. [1]
NOTE re Spouse of Miró(n):
Mirón married a woman named Ava [3] - and research in Catalan suggests that she was the daughter of a local aristocrat who was a member of the Ribagorça (Ribagorza) family. [4] [5]
However, there is uncertainty regarding the names of her parents. Previously-suggested connections to Bernard de Ribagorza and Tota Galindónez do not match the potential parents noted, and the proposed mother was born too late. Accordingly, they have been disconnected as her parents.
Family
Ava and Mirón had four children: [3]
Seniofredo
Guifré
Oliba
Miró(n)
Mirón also had five children with a mistress named Vigilia, including Gotruda, who married Lope I, Comte de Pallars. [3]
Death and Succession
Mirón died in October 927 and was buried at the Ripoll Monastery. He was succeeded jointly by his two eldest sons - Seniofredo and Guifré - each as Comte de Cerdanya, Besalú, Conflent i Berga. [2] [3]
HIs spouse Ava lived for about three decades more, dying sometime between about 955 and 26 Feb 961. [3] [4]
Second son Guifré was murdered in about 960, and eldest son Seniofredo died in about 966, following which Oliba "Cabreta" succeeded as Comte de Cerdanya i Besalú. [2] [3] [6]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024: Comtes de Barcelona. (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wikipedia - Miró II of Cerdanya
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024: Comtes de Cerdanya. (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 4.0 4.1 Viquipèdia / Wikipedia (Catalan) - Ava de Cerdanya
↑ Abadal i de Vinyals, Ramon d' (1955). Els comtats de Pallars i Ribagorça. Barcelona: Institut d'Estudis Catalans.
↑ Wikipedia - Oliba Cabreta, Count of Cerdanya and Besalú | BARCELONA Mirón (I59682)
|
| 7139 |
Mistress | PERRERS Alice (I22813)
|
| 7140 |
Mizislaus Mieceslas Mistuisson Prinz der was born in 919.
Mizislaus Mieceslas Mistuisson Prinz der died at the age of about 80 in 999 in Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden.
Alternate Names
There are alternate names for this person:
Mieceslas Prince of the Obotrites. Prince of the Obotrites
Mizislaus "Mieceslas Mistuisson" III, Prinz der Abodriten Obotrites 1 | der OBOTRITES Mizislaus Mieceslas Mistuisson Prinz (I58659)
|
| 7141 |
Moalda the Stout is said to been the mother of Ivar Vidfane. Her nephew, Olaf, son of Kinrik was left by Sigurd Hring as tax-king of Northumberland [1][2] Reading the only source currently available it seems that her nephew, Olaf, had a father Kinrik who was Moalda's brother or brother-in-law. She was not therefore a daughter of a man called Kinrik and so her patronymic is not known. Removing her as daughter of Cynric of Denmark who is actually Cynric of Wessex.
The closest to determine who this profile might represent and her origin is that she is wife of Halvdan Snälle, she might be an aunt of of the Anglo-Saxon aristocrat Kinrik (Cynric)[3]
However, none of these even[4] seem to mention her, only [5];
Før Kong Ring igjen drog med sin Hær bort fra England, satte han en Skattekonge over Nordhumberland; han hed Olaf, og var en Søn af den Kinrik, som skal have været en Brodersøn af Ivar Vidfadmes Moder Moald hin Digre eller Tykke.
Norrönt[6]
70. Þar var fra horfit konunga tali er þeir redu firir Danmork Sigrfrode ok Halfdan. eftir þa red sa konungr firir Danmork er Helgi het. hann atti bardaga vid Olaf Suiakonung ok fell Helgi þar en Olafr red leinge sidan firir Danmork ok Suiþiod ok vard sottdaudr. eftir hann tok riki j Danmork Gyrdr ok Knutr. en eftir þa Siggæirr. en eftir hann tok Olafr Kynriksson. sa var brodurson Moalldar digru modur Juars vidfamna(!) hann var læinge konungr yfir Jotlande. hann var kalladr Olafr enski. hans son var Grimr gaue er konungdom tok eftir fỏdur sinn.
Research notes
No person of this name appears in Ynglinga Saga. The only wife given for Ingjald the Bad is Gauthild Algautsdotter. Solveig was daughter of Halfdan Guldtand. No mother is named for Solveig. Removed as mother of Solveig
Changing her LNAB to "Unknown" and detaching her from Götrik.Lenover-1 04:41, 9 December 2020 (UTC)
Removed as wife of Ingjald the Bad. He appears to have had only one wife, not this one.
Sources
↑ The viking age: the early history, manners, and customs of the ancestors of the English speaking nations. Page 434
↑ http://www.germanicmythology.com/works/sagacollections.html
↑ Saga Ólafs Konúngs Tryggvasonar, Vol. 1 (1825). Copenhagen: Popp, Chapter 61, p. 110-1.
↑ https://heimskringla.no/wiki/Olaf_Tryggvess%C3%B8ns_Saga
↑ Kongesagaer, Oldnordiske Sagaer Bind 1 - 3 - Den store saga om Olaf Tryggvesøn, Paa Dansk ved C. C. Rafn, København, 1826-1827
↑ Ólafs saga Tryggvasonar (Den store saga) | UNKNOWN Moald Digra (I58768)
|
| 7142 |
Mogha-Lamha, son of Space:Lugaid_Alldathach_(Ui_Eremoin)_mac_Cairpre[1]
Spouse: Eithne, sister to Mac Niad, son of Lugha (possibly Lughaidh), of the race of Ith[2]
Brother to Space:Crimthann_Nia_Náir
Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286
Notes
note : dates attached to this profile - there is a gap of one hundred years of the estimated dates between this & the next generations
Conaire's sons are often referred to as "the three Cairbres". They fought alongside the sons of Oilioll Olum at the battle of Caennfeabhrat in 186.
Sources
↑ Tóruigheacht Dhiarmuda Agus Gráinne, p. 89, Volume 2, By Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, added 2014-07-25, amb
↑ O'Halloran, p.p. 234, 241, added 2014-07-25, amb
Alan O. Anderson, Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286 . Published 1908 by D.N. Nutt in London .
Sylvester O'Halloran, A general history of Ireland: from the earliet accounts to the close of the twelfth century, collected from the most authentic records. In which new and interesting lights are thrown on the remote histories of other nations as well as of both Britains, Volume 1 (Google eBook). Printed for the author, by A. Hamilton, 1778 - Ireland | LUGHAID Mogha Lamha (I59374)
|
| 7143 |
Molly and her sister, Abigail and their husbands, who were also brothers, settled in Winchendon, Massachusetts near the New Hampsire border. | Brown Mary (Molly) (I51051)
|
| 7144 |
Mongfinn was the first wife of Eochaid Mugmedon [1]
four sons - "the Connachta"
Brian (Brion)
Fiachra (Fiachrae)
Oilill (Ailill )
Feargus Caech (may be a legendary insertion)
Sources
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 7 June 2015), "Mongfind," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongfind.
: Mongfind | FIODHAIG Mong Finn (I59347)
|
| 7145 |
More About ASA FREEMAN:
Fact 1: May 05, 1885, bapt. Hemmingford Methodist records, Huntingdon
Co., Que. | FREEMAN Asa (I3019)
|
| 7146 |
More About CHARLES FREEMAN:
Fact 1: January 06, 1849, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon
Co., Que. | FREEMAN Charles (I3036)
|
| 7147 |
More About DELILAH HILL:
Fact 1: May 23, 1847, 81 years old at time of death | HILL Delilah (I4010)
|
| 7148 |
More About EDWIN B FREEMAN:
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY | FREEMAN Edwin B. (I3070)
|
| 7149 |
More About ELIZABETH CLARK:
Fact 1: September 22, 1771, intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA. | CLARK Elizabeth (I2006)
|
| 7150 |
More About ELIZABETH FREEMAN:
Fact 1: May 19, 1848, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon Co.,
Que. | FREEMAN Elizabeth (I3075)
|
| 7151 |
More About EZRA FREEMAN:
Fact 1: November 02, 1886, bapt. Hemmingford Methodist Records ,
Huntingdon Co., Que. | FREEMAN Ezra (I3085)
|
| 7152 |
More About GEORGE FREEMAN:
Burial: Oak Hill Cemetery sec 13 Ave.L | FREEMAN George (I3092)
|
| 7153 |
More About JEMINA FREEMAN:
Fact 1: August 04, 1753, INTENTION OF MARRIAGE, ATTLEBORO. | Family: SWEET John / FREEMAN Jemina (F9394)
|
| 7154 |
More About JOHN SWEET, JR.:
Fact 1: August 04, 1753, Intention of marriage listed as of Attleboro | SWEET John (I9394)
|
| 7155 |
More About JOSEPH FREEMAN:
Fact 1: buried G.R.13 a2m, Attleboro, Bristol Co., MA | FREEMAN Joseph (I3131)
|
| 7156 |
More About LUCY STANLEY:
Fact 1: May 1866, Age 85 years at death | STANLEY Lucy (I9242)
|
| 7157 |
More About MARY ANN MCCONNELL:
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY | MCCONNELL Mary Ann (I5544)
|
| 7158 |
More About MARY JANE FREEMAN:
Fact 1: September 13, 1851, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon
Co., Que. | FREEMAN Mary Jane (I3156)
|
| 7159 |
More About MATILDA ROCK:
Burial: Prot. Cem. Cadyville, NY | FREEMAN Amasa (I3011)
|
| 7160 |
More About NATHAN FREEMAN:
Fact 1: nearly 100 years old at death. | FREEMAN Nathan (I3164)
|
| 7161 |
More About PHEBE THOMPSON:
Fact 1: November 11, 1764, intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA. | THOMPSON Phebe (I9511)
|
| 7162 |
More About RACHEL FREEMAN:
Fact 1: buried G.R.13 a7w Attleboro, Bristol Co., MA | FREEMAN Rachel (I3182)
|
| 7163 |
More About RACHEL FULLER:
Fact 1: buried G.R.13 a7w Attleboro, Bristol Co., MA | FULLER Rachel (I3292)
|
| 7164 |
More About RACHEL I. DUDLEY:
Fact 1: Buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY | DUDLEY Rachel I. (I2527)
|
| 7165 |
More About SALLY FREEMAN:
Fact 1: May 10, 1791, Marriage IGI Index | FREEMAN Sally (I3201)
|
| 7166 |
More About SAMUEL FREEMAN:
Fact 1: DIED YOUNG | FREEMAN Samuel (I3205)
|
| 7167 |
More About SAMUEL FREEMAN:
Fact 1: September 22, 1771, intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA. | FREEMAN Samuel (I3206)
|
| 7168 |
More About SARAH ANN FREEMAN:
Fact 1: July 03, 1846, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon Co.,
Que. | FREEMAN Sarah Ann (I3215)
|
| 7169 |
More About SARAH ANN FREEMAN:
Fact 1: September 27, 1843, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon
Co., Que.
Fact 2: October 07, 1843, buried 8mths 20 days | FREEMAN Sarah Ann (I3214)
|
| 7170 |
More About SARAH FREEMAN:
Fact 1: died at 18 years old. | FREEMAN Sarah (I3212)
|
| 7171 |
More About SARAH FREEMAN:
Fact 1: DIED YOUNG | FREEMAN Sarah (I3211)
|
| 7172 |
More About STEPHEN DUDLEY:
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY | DUDLEY Stephen (I2529)
|
| 7173 |
More About THOMAS WILLIAM FREEMAN:
Fact 1: December 03, 1841, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon
Co., Que. | FREEMAN Thomas William (I3224)
|
| 7174 |
MOSES E. DAVISSON was born in Clark County, Ohio, September 30, 1812, and is one of the four children born to Hezekiah and Phebe (Ellsworth) Davisson, named in order of birth, Solomon, Isabel, Mary and Moses. Of these, our subject is the only one living. The father was born in West Virginia. He helped to build Fort Meigs during the war of 1812, pursued farming as an occupation, and died in Jasper County, Ind., at the age of seventy-one. The grandfather was a soldier in the Revolutionary war. When Moses E. was six years of age, he came with his father to what is now Johnson County, Ind.; in 1847, he moved to Jasper County; lived there about eight years, and thence moved to Francesville, where he was engaged for four years in mercantile business; during the late war, he resided in Jasper County; since 1873, he has made Medarysville his home. He was married, January 28, 1832, to Mahala Earlywine, celebrating his golden wedding, or, as he terms it, family reunion, January 28, 1882. This couple have had born to them eleven children, of whom there are still living the following: Thomas, Sarah, Moses and Martha. During the Mexican war, Mr. Davisson was appointed Sheriff of Johnson County. He has served as Justice of the Peace in Jasper County and in Francesville, and is now filling that office in Medarysville, having been elected in 1876. In 1840, he began as a local preacher in the Methodist Episcopal Church; in the fall of 1866, he joined the Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church, and has been a member ever since; he was also a circuit rider in Northern Indiana about twelve years. He is a Freemason, and a highly respected citizen.
“Counties of White and Pulaski Counties, Indiana - White Post Township” by F.A. Battey & Co. - published in 1883 | DAVISSON Moses E. (I36670)
|
| 7175 |
Mother of Elizabeth and Horace Annabel. In 1810 withdrew from 1st Baptist Church of Providence to form 2nd Baptist Ch. of Providence. Listed in the 1850 Providence census as aged 60 years.
In the 1860 census for Saratoga, she is living with Sylvester Barton, age, 36, farmer; Alice Barton, age, 28, domestic; Martha Ann, 9; Charles, 2. | Hall Charlotte Anna (I53597)
|
| 7176 |
Mother of Marie Madeleine Thibierge [1]
Marguerite was born about 1620. She passed away about 1716.
Sources
↑ THIBIERGE Marie-Madeleine : Fille de feu Jacques et de feue Marguerite Lehouet, de la paroisse St-Honoré. ville de Blois, 41000; Loir-et-Cher; http://www.migrations.fr/700fillesduroy_4.htm
PRDH: Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (membership): Famille: 3297 Jacques Thibierge & Marguerite Lehouet
This person was created on 12 September 2010 through the import of 104-B.ged.
FTDNA – Quebec mtDNA Project | LEHOUET Marguerite (I60302)
|
| 7177 |
Mother was Irish | CURTIS Hattie Teresa (I47623)
|
| 7178 |
Mother: Julia?
Some genealogies show Julia as the mother of the following children. Since there is no record that she married or had children, and most likely died with her mother, the following have been disconnected as her children:
Coel ap Meurig
Coellus (Britain) ap Meurig
Gladys (Britain) Maurius
Eurgen (Meric) Britain
Parents
Daughter of Marius/Maurius/Meric Britain-34[1] and Julia of the Iceni [2]
I have found no sources for parents of mother - using what was provided by other members of Wikitree. amb
Marriage
Siarklotus-1[3]
Children
Gladys Siluria-7, wife of Lucius/Llewfer Mawr[4]
Sources
↑ National CV of Britain, amb
↑ Starr, Blessings of Knighthood, amb
↑ Starr, Laws of Nobility, amb
↑ National CV of Britain, amb
The National CV of Britain, accessed 2014-04-25, amb
Starr, Brian Daniel, Laws of Nobility (Google eBook). Xlibris Corporation - Religion
Starr, Brian Daniel, Blessings of Knighthood
https://www.geni.com/people/Eurgen-Ap-Marius/6000000000914299581 | MERIC Eurgen (I59277)
|
| 7179 |
Mount Carmel Hospital | SELLERS Hayes (I38613)
|
| 7180 |
Mountain View Cem. | PHELPS Betsey (I6484)
|
| 7181 |
Mountain View Cem. | PULSIFER Nathan (I7750)
|
| 7182 |
Move to New York from Ireland between 1843 and 1849. | MCDONOUGH Mary (I5570)
|
| 7183 |
Moved from Ireland to Ontario, Canada in 1871. | WAMSLEY Edward J. (I9905)
|
| 7184 |
Moved to Beecher Falls VT after Marriage
worked as Railroad Telegrapher
Moved to Colrado Springs for short while then back to Beecher Falls,
Moved to Calgary, AB in 1911 | Gleason Michael (I55936)
|
| 7185 |
Moved to Birch Cooley, Renville, MN in 1868 | GOGGIN Mary Anne (I3454)
|
| 7186 |
Moved to New York after 1860. In 1880 the family lived in Westport
town in Essex County.
Was an ore miner.
More About GEORGE HENRY FREEMAN:
Fact 1: June 03, 1841, Bapt. Hemmingford E.Anglican, Huntingdon Co.,
Que. | FREEMAN George Henry (I3097)
|
| 7187 |
Moved to Philadelphia, Pa in 1848. | Anable Frances Alma (I53802)
|
| 7188 |
Moved to Pope County, MN in the spring of 1869, lived in Reno
township for 3 or 4 years then moved to Leven township. He owned 300
acres of land where he farmed and raised cattle. | WAMSLEY James (I9908)
|
| 7189 |
Moved to VT | GOGGIN Joanna (I3451)
|
| 7190 |
Mr. Harrison Kimball Davison, Jr. of Ozark, Alabama, formerly of Fort Myers Beach, Florida, passed away peacefully at home Tuesday, July 15, 2008, at the age of 92. He was surrounded throughout the week by his children, grandchildren, and close family friends.
A memorial service will be held Friday, July 18, 2008, 5 p.m., in the chapel of Fuqua-Bankston Funeral Home in Ozark with The Rev. Dr. Thomas Nixon officiating and Fuqua-Bankston Funeral Home directing. Flowers will be accepted or memorial contributions can be made to the Lions Club eye bank, your local food bank, or Ozark-Dale County Humane Society.
Survivors include his loving wife of 64 years, Sue Davison; two daughters, Suelynn "Lindy" Williams & husband, DeWayne, of Boise ID; Melanie Simpson & husband, John, of Ozark; one son, Harrison Kimball Davison, III, of Fort Myers, FL; grandchildren: Regan, Rani, Dawson, Jacob, Charley, Gordy, Morgan, & Phillip; great- grandchildren: West, Torin, Dulcie, Musashi, Arashi, & Paxson; and his sister, Helen Sanders, of Fort Myers, FL.
Jacob Simpson | Jr. Harrison Kimball DAVISON (I55301)
|
| 7191 |
MR. Rest Cemetery | TAPLEY Timothy (I37936)
|
| 7192 |
Mr. Thomas Allyn was one of the first settlers in Barnstable. We do not know the date of his coming to New England, but he speaks, in Mar. 1654, of a visit that he made to England in 1649 on business of his own and as the agent of 'divers friends' as 'at my last being in Ould England.'
His name was proposed as a freeman of Plymouth Colony,1 Mar.1641/42, but he was not admitted as such until 1652. In 1644, 1651 and 1658, he was Surveyor of Highways; in 1648, 1658 and 1670 Constable; in 1653 Juryman.
"Mr. Allyn was one of the wealthiest of the early settlers of Barnstable. His house lots were in the central part of the village as it was first laid out. The records of the laying out of land in Barnstable are all lost, and the records of Mr. Allyn furnish the best information that we have. In 1654 Mr. Allyn owned six of the original house lots, containing from six to twelve acres each, laid out on the north side of the highway, west of Rendez-vous Lane, and the part of this land was still, in 1936, owned by his descendants.
He also owned meadowland at Sandy Neck and in 1647, he owned the land on the north of the Hallett Farm, adjoining the bounds of Yarmouth. Besides these he had rights in the common land and other large tracts" | Allyn Thomas (I53354)
|
| 7193 |
Mudered by son Cloderic | of COLOGNE Sigebert I "The Lame" King (I23513)
|
| 7194 |
Mugain, daughter of Failbe mac Domnaill meic Cormaic meic Díarmata of the Uí Bairrche and Eithne, daughter of Crundmáel mac Rónaín[1]
In the seventh century, a King of Uí Bairrche was Suibne mac Domnaill (grandson of Cormac mac Diarmata). In the Life of Munnu of Taghmon ( 635 AD), it would appear that he controlled the area of Leighlin at the time of the synod over the ordering of Easter (630 AD). It is stated that Munnu, as a result of being insulted by Suibne, prophesised that his head would be cut off by his brother’s son (Cind Faílad?) and would be thrown into the Barrow, near the Blathach stream (Madlin River?). His brother Faílbe married Eithne daughter of Crundmael mac Rónáin ( 656 AD) king of Uí Cheinnselaig and Lagen Desgabair (South Leinster) and Mugain, the daughter of Faílbe, married Cellaig Cualand, King of Leinster ( 715 AD) from whom are the Uí Cellaig Cualand. There is an entry in the Annals of Ulster recording the death in 766 AD Cernach son of Flann who is also thought to be of this line.[2]
Name
Name: Mugain /ingen Failbe/
Sources
↑ T. M. Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland, p. 94, retrieved 2014-06-23, amb
↑ Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, retrieved 2014-06-23, amb
T. M. Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland. Edition illustrated, reprint. Publisher Cambridge University Press, 2000
Do it Anmann
Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, taken from Rawlinson B502, Book of Leinster, Book of Lecan, Book of Ballymote, hagiography and the Annals.
This person was created through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011.
This person was created through the import of David Rentschler Family Tree_2010-09-30.ged on 01 October 2010.
Source S48: Author: Ancestry.com: Title: Public Member Trees: Publication: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date:2006; | FAILBE Mugain (I58465)
|
| 7195 |
Muireadach Tireach, the son of Fiacha Srabhteine was a 4th C. Irish king who regained his father's throne as a High King of Ireland, having defeated his nephew Cairell Colla Uais one of the three Colla brothers. [1] [2] [3]
Muireadach Tireach banished the three Colla brothers to Scotland, and ruled his people in Ireland for 30 years.
Muireadach Tireach is listed as the 122nd monarch in the line of Heremon of Irish Kings in Irish Pedigrees; the Stem of the Irish Nation by John O'Hart [4] [5]
A date of death for Muireadach Tireach is variously cited as 326, 343, 356 or 357.[6].
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Muiredach Tirech
↑ Carbry Liffechar, Ard-righ .. had two sons Eochaidh Doimhlein (or Dubhlein) & Fiacha Strabhteine Ulster Journal of Archaeology (Google eBook). Ulster Archaeological Society, 1897 - Ulster (Northern Ireland and Ireland.
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 6 June 2015), "Fíacha Sroiptine," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%ADacha_Sroiptine.
↑ Library Ireland - Irish Pedigrees : O'Neill No:1 : No:85 Muireadach Tireach
↑ John O'Hart, Irish Pedigrees: Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation (Dublin:M. H. Gill and Son, 1881), p. 370, digital images, https://books.google.com/books?id=STYbAAAAYAAJ&lpg=PA370. Google Books (http://books.google.com : accessed 31 May 2015).
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 31 May 2015), "Muiredach Tirech,", https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muiredach_Tirech.
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-1 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
Wikipedia-Muiredach. Ruled 310-343 (FFE) or 326-356 (AFM). Both of these reigns ended after his listed DOD on this profile. No wife is mentioned.
Irish Monarchs of the line of Heremon, Library Ireland | FIACHA Muireadach Tireach (I59349)
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| 7196 |
Munio Gómez MP
Spanish: Munio Nunes de Roa
Son of Gómez Núñez Díaz, señor de Mixancas y Álava and N.N. Rodríguez de Castilla
Husband of N.N. Guterres de Coimbra
Father of Diego Muñoz, 1er. Conde de Saldaña; Osorio Muñoz and Cde. Gómez Muñoz
Brother of Diego Gómez; Rodrigo Núñez and Controle Nuñez de Castrogeriz
Research Notes
Torres suggests that he was the same person as “Abolmondar Albo”[1], however “Abolmondar Albo” is more likely identified as Rodrigo Díaz, son of Diego Rodríguez “Porcelos”. [2]
Sources
↑ Torres Sevilla-Quiñones de León, M. (1999) Linajes nobiliarios de León y Castilla (siglos IX-XIII) (Consejería de Educación y Cultura de la Junta de Castilla y León, Valladolid), p. 238.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Gómez Family.
https://www.geni.com/people/Munio-G%C3%B3mez/6000000016171106045
https://gw.geneanet.org/alaindufour11?lang=fr&pz=aude+ariane+marie+claudette&nz=gabriel&p=munio+gomez+abolmondar+albo&n=de+saldana
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abolmondar_Albo | GÓMEZ Munio Gómez (I59767)
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| 7197 |
Murchad was a King of Leinster from the Uí Dúnlainge branch of the Laigin. He was the son of Bran Mut mac Conaill (died 696), a previous king. Murchad ruled from 715 to 727.[1]
Wives and Children
One of Murchad's wives was Conchenn ingen Cellaig (died 743) of the Uí Máil; she was the mother of Fáelán mac Murchado (died 738) and Muiredach mac Murchado (died 760 in Ireland), who were kings of Leinster. Other sons included Dúnchad mac Murchado (died 728) and Bran Becc mac Murchado (died 738), also kings of Leinster.
Sources
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 22 August 2015), "Murchad mac Brain Mut," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murchad_mac_Brain_Mut.
CELT Annals of Ulster AU 715.4 The hosting by Murchad son of Bran to Cashel.
Annals of Tigernach AT 719.7
Annals of Ulster AU 721.6 The wasting of Mag Breg by Cathal son of Finnguine, and by Murchad son of Bran.
Annals of Ulster AU 721.8 An invasion of the Laigin by Fergal, and the cattletribute was imposed and the hostages of the Laigin secured for Fergal son of Mael Dúin.
Annals of Ulster AU 722.8 The battle of Almain on the third of the Ides 11th of December, the sixth feria, in which fell Fergal son of Mael Dúin, son of Mael Fithrich son of Aed Uairidnach, i.e. by Murchadh son of Bran; and Conall Menn king of Cenél Cairpri; Clothgna son of Colgu; Dub dá Crích; Flann son of Rogallach; Aed Laigen son of Fithchellach, king of Uí Maine; the sons of Muirgius; Nuada son of Dúnchad; Éicnech son of Colgu, king of Airthir; Fergal grandson of Aithechda.
Wikidata: Item Q6937505, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Murchad mac_Brain_Mut
DICTIONARY OF IRISH BIOGRAPHY - Murchad
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 | O’Dunlainge Murchad (I58464)
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| 7198 |
Murdered | MARCHE Almodis De La HAUTE (I23798)
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| 7199 |
Murdered | of BARCELON Raimund Berenger II Count (I23800)
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| 7200 |
Murdered by agents of Clovis I King of Franks | of COLOGNE Cloderic I "The Parricide" King (I23342)
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