Matches 7,401 to 7,600 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 7401 |
Name: UNKNOWN
Alias: Basina (Lady) of Thuringian; "Menia"[2][1]
b. c. 438[3]
d. abt. 477[4]
Parents
UNKNOWN[5][2]
Note: She's *NOT* the daughter of the fictional Wedelphus.
Marriage
m.1 Pisen (Bisinus), King of the Thuringi.[6][7].
m.2 (abt 464) Childeric I, King of the Franks.[8] Issue: 4[9][10]
Chlodovech (Clovis I), King of the Franks (464/67 -27 Nov 511 Paris; bur. Basilique des Saints-Apôtres ... later église de Sainte-Geneviève, Paris).[11][3]
Landechildis (Lantilde)[12][3]
Audofledis[13][3]
m. Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths (454 - 30 Aug 526)
(p. Theodemir and concubine Ereleuva)[4]
(dau.) Albofledis (d. after 496)[14][3]
Sources
↑ see also: Royal Line, The. Albert F Schmuhl. Mar 1929 NYC, NY - Mar 1980; Wikipedia: Thuringia#History
↑ Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage:
Wikipedia -- "Basina was a daughter of a Thuringian king Basin and a Saxon princess," respectively titled, basin (lord) and basina (lady).
Basin and Basina, mean "Lord" and "Lady."
Parents edited in accordance with European Aristocrats project. Medieval genealogy is not exact science, and collaboration calls for occasional choices where 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.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Gregory of Tours
↑ Jordanes
Cawley, C. (2006). "Early dukes of Thuringia."Medieval Lands v.3. [15]
Gregory of Tours
Wikipedia: Basina of Thuringia | THÜRINGEN Basina (I58171)
|
| 7402 |
Name: UNKNOWN.[2][1][2]
Parents
UNKNOWN[3][1]
Marriage
m. Udo (d. 879 or later).[4][5] Issue: 0 - 4 possible.[6]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Jackman, thinks she's "Judith," daughter of Konrad Graf im Linz- und Argengau (Cawley, 2006)[1]
↑ GEDCOM: Welfin was born about 0832. Welfin van de Lahngau ... She passed away about 0879 -- by Steve VanderLeest, Jun 30, 2013
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. | van LAHNGAU Unknown (I58262)
|
| 7403 |
Name: Unknown[1]
Birth: About 0780 CE in Neustria (based on births of his 2 sons: 0800 CE and 0810 CE).
Death: After 0820 CE in Neustria (based on births of 2 sons and 40-year-life expectancy for this period).
Spouse: Unknown.
Issue: 2 sons [2]
Vulgrin, Comte d'Angoulême et de Périgord, b: ca. 0800 CE
Vulfard, Comte de Flavigny, b: 0810 CE [3]
Sources
↑ Medieval Lands: Frankish Nobility
↑ Medieval Lands: Frankish Nobility
↑ Medieval Lands: Frankish Nobility | van Angoulême-Perigord Unknow (I58196)
|
| 7404 |
Name: UNKNOWN[4][1]
b. unknown [5]
d. unknown or c.493[6][7][2]
Marriage
m. Chilperic (d. 486) Issue:[8] 4[9]
(eldest dau) Sedeleube "Chroma; Chrona" (b. 481)[10][11]
m. UNKNOWN (king)[12]
Chrotechildis "Clotilde; Rotilde" (480 - 544/8)[13][14] -- orphan niece of Gundobad
m. (c.492/3) Clovis I, King of the Franks[15]
son[16] (d. 486)[17]
son[18] (d. 486)[19]
Sources
↑ alias: Caretene; Agrippina (Hodgkins, 1875; Rudd, 1905)[1] [2]
↑ allegedly died in the Rhone river, but location is unknown.[3]
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.3 fmg.ac[20]
Sidonius[21] | SUEVIA Agrippine (I58189)
|
| 7405 |
Name: Uralon /DeVergy/[1][2][3]
Sources
WikiTree profile DeVergy-3 created through the import of WILLIAMS 2011.GED on Jun 22, 2011 by Ted Williams. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Ted and others.
Source: S004444 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: #NS044441 Repository: Note: #NS044443
No NOTE record found with id NS044441.
Note NS044443
NAME Ancestry.com
ADDR http://www.Ancestry.com
NOTE
↑ Source: #S004444 Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=13078823&pid=318383627
↑ Source: #S004444 Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=13078823&pid=318383627
↑ Source: #S004444 Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=13078823&pid=318383627 | DEVERGY Uralon (I59829)
|
| 7406 |
Name: Urb /mac Aed/
Source: #S5
Page: Ancestry Family Trees
Data:
Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6835128/person/-883098648/facts
Note: #N710
Sources
Source S5
Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;
NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. | mac AED Urb (I59337)
|
| 7407 |
Name: Vivien /JEAN/
Given Name: Vivien
Surname: JEAN[1]
Death
Death:
Date: 8 JUN 1708
Place: Beaumont, Bellechasse Quebec[2]
Sources
↑ Source: #S188 TMPLT FIELD Name: Page Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=drouinvitals&h=14968318&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Data: Text: Death date: 1692-1796 Death place: Beaumont, Québec
↑ Source: #S188 TMPLT FIELD Name: Page Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=drouinvitals&h=14968318&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Data: Text: Death date: 1692-1796 Death place: Beaumont, Québec
See also:
Source: S188 Abbreviation: Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967 Title: Ancestry.com, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967 (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.Original data - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin.Original data: Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec,) Subsequent Source Citation Format: Ancestry.com, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967 BIBL Ancestry.com. Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.Original data - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin.Original data: Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec,. TMPLT TID 0 FIELD Name: Footnote VALUE Ancestry.com, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967 (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.Original data - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin.Original data: Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec,) FIELD Name: ShortFootnote VALUE Ancestry.com, Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967 FIELD Name: Bibliography VALUE Ancestry.com. Quebec Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1967. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2008.Original data - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin.Original data: Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec,. Repository: #R1
Repository: R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Address 1: http://www.Ancestry.com
Source: S199 Abbreviation: Ancestry Family Trees Title: Ancestry Family Trees (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.) Subsequent Source Citation Format: Ancestry Family Trees BIBL Ancestry Family Trees. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. TMPLT TID 0 FIELD Name: Footnote VALUE Ancestry Family Trees (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.) FIELD Name: ShortFootnote VALUE Ancestry Family Trees FIELD Name: Bibliography VALUE Ancestry Family Trees. Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Repository: #R1 Page: Ancestry Family Trees TMPLT FIELD Name: Page VALUE Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=13245745&pid=487
http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Vivien_Jean&pid=30537&lng=en&partID=30538
PRDH Pionnier https://www.prdh-igd.com/fr/pionnier/35044
Berlin Historical Society documents
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/147128817/vivien-jean | VEIN Vivien Jean-Dit (I54488)
|
| 7408 |
Name: Wilibirg /Von Dachau/ | Von DACHAU Wilibirg (I59051)
|
| 7409 |
Name: Wilibirg /Von Lurngau/ | Von LURNGAU Wilibirg (I59053)
|
| 7410 |
Named in land sale with her husband in Kankakee Co., IL on 5 Oct 1854 (sold
land to Erasmus D. Brown).
Also went by Angeline R. Davis | SIPES Rachel A. (I52991)
|
| 7411 |
Names and Titles
Charles "the Bald"
Charles II "le Chauve" (13 Jun 823 - 06 Oct 87). [1]
King of the West Franks. [1]
823 Birth and Parents
Charles the Bald was born 13 June 823.[2] He was the youngest son of the Emperor Louis the Pious (Hludowic) by his second wife Judith. [2] His father was Louis I "le Pieux"[1] and his mother was Judith Welf.[1]
Timeline Between Birth and First Marriage
829: granted Alemannia, Rhaetia and part of Burgundy.[3].
837: Father Louis I "Le Debonnaire", by arrangement with Louis the German and Pepin gave Charles the land West of the Meuse, Burgundy, Chartres and Paris together with all the bishops, abbots and counts who held benefices in these territories. A portion of Neustria was added in 838, and upon Pepin's death, Louis Le Pieux made Charles King of Aquitaine. [3]
24 Jul 840: emperor Lothar, in Strasburg, refuses to support land claims of Charles (from agreement of Worms on 30 May 839). The two brothers, Louis and Charles, unite against Lothar and the War of the Three Brothers begins. [3]
24 June 841 Fontenoy-en-Puisaye: defeats brothers Lothar in spite of arrival of the Army of Aquitaine in the Imperial ranks -- and loss of 40,000 lives) and Louis Le Germanique. [3]
14 Feb 842 Strasbourg: Charles and Louis sign alliance. Leaving Strasbourg, the two brothers defeat the imperial army of Lothar just West of Comblence. Lothar leaves Aix-le-Chapelle precipitously, pursued by the two brothers. In Mellecey, not far from Chalon-sur-Saone, Lothar proposes a plan to establish perpetual peace which is acceptable to both Louis and Charles. On 15 June, they sign the preliminary peace document. [3]
01 Oct 842: each of them sends 40 commissioners to Metz to forge the official document. Prudence, the Bishop of Troyes, notes that Louis regained Germania in the East, Lothar gets the middle part of the Franc Kingdom, including Italy, and Charles obtains the Western lands (West of the Rhone, including Soissons). After that Charles goes to the Palace in Quierzy, where he marries Ermentrude.[3]
842 First Marriage to Ermentrudis
He married first on 13 Dec 842 in Quierzy, Aisne (867 separated) Ermentrudis d'Orleans (27 Sep 830 - 06 Oct 869; p. Eudes, Comte d'Orleans and Engeltrudis). [4]
Timeline between First Marriage and Second Marriage
843: Charles signs Treaty of Verdun ... splits Kingdom of Charlemagne. ... destiny of Occidental Europe heavily influenced to this day. Louis obtains all lands East of the Rhine, including cities of Spire, Worms, Mayence. Lothar gets all the lands extending between Rhine and Escaut, Cambresis, Hainaut, country of Mezieres, and all countships neighboring the Meuse, through Saone and Rhone, Artois and Italy. Charles got all the lands East all the way to Spain. Kingdom of Charlemagne split forever, with serious rift between germanic lands of Louis, and French lands of Charles. Intervening lands extending from Frisia to Rome, from North Sea to Mediterranean including what would become Holland, Belgium, Lorraine and Switzerland a sore point between these two. The only thing that mattered to Lothar was the fact that both capitals (Aix and Rome) were located in his territory, thus legitimizing the title of Emperor.[3]
845-851: fought Brittany (Bretagne) -- victorious. [3]
6 June 848: King of Aquitaine, though he could not defend his kingdom against the Normands. [3]
849 Corbie: had Charles of Aquitaine jailed [3]
850: attacks Bretagne and leaves a garrison in Rennes. No sooner does he leave, that Nomenoe takes the city and then takes Nantes as well. [3]
860: Nomenoe ravages Maine ... King of Bretagne dies suddenly on 7 March in Vendome. [3]
852: Charles has Pepin II locked in the Monastery of Saint-Medard de Soissons. The Normands under Godfrid pillage Tours and Angers and penetrate via the Valley of Escaut all the way to the Seine. [3]
853: loyalty of Aquitaine shifts, and Louis the German called in to help against Charles le Chauve ... defeats Louis and offers Aquitaine his son by Ermentrude, Charles, who would be crowned sovereign in Limoges in October 855. Both Pepin II and Charles d'Aquitaine escape raise armies against Charles le Chauve. [3]
859, 870 [Treaty of Mersen] and 875: Charles fights Louis for Lorraine[3]
9 Sep 869 Metz: Charles annoints himself King of Lorraine by the Bishop Hincmar.[3]
Mar 867: Charles d'Aquitaine dies, and his father Charles le Chauve is recognized as King by the Assembly in Pouilly-sur-Loire. Upon the death of his nephew, Lothar II on 8 August 869, Charles sped to Lotharingia and had himself crowned King of Lotharingia annointed on 9 Sep in the cathedral at Metz by Bishop Adventius of Metz and Archbishop Hincmar of Rheims. In 9 August 870, through the Treaty of Meerseen, Louis "Le Germanique" and Charles "Le Chauve" reach an agreeable compromise whereby they divide the lands of Lothar II between themselves, leaving Louis II no part of the inheritance. As soon as Louis II died on 12 August 875, Charles rushed to Italy and received the imperial crown and is annointed by Pope John VIII on 25 December 875. In Pavia on 5 January 876, by acclamation of the counts and nobles of Italy, Charles becomes King of Italy. On 31 January 876, the Archbishop of Milan proclaims Charles as Emperor. The French ecclesiasticals and nobles, having some misgivings about Charles' ability to take care of his Kingdom meet in Ponthion. Charles joins them dressed in the attire of the Frankish King. As soon as they declare him elected and recognize his imperial authority, Charles donned the Byzantine crown, and purple vestment of emperor. When Louis le Germanique dies on 28 August 876, Charles claims Lorraine as his own. [3]
870 Second Marriage to Richildis
He married secondly on 22 Jan 870 in Aix-la-Chapelle) Richildis. She died 30 Jan in 910 or later; p. Buvinus "Bouvin" and UNKNOWN of Arles). [4]
877 Death
Charles the Bald died 6 October 877. [2]
While on an expedition in Italy against the Sarrasins, through the specific request of Pope Jean VIII, Charles le Chauve dies at the foot of Mount Cenis.[3]
Died while ill and traveling through the pass of Mont Cenis at Brides-les-Bain, while on his way to Gaul.
Buried at the abbey of Nantua, Burgundy.
Issue
Issue of Charles and Ermentrude
Charles II & his first wife Ermentrude had nine children:[5]
Judith, born 844 [1] [6]
Louis "le begue", King of the West Franks, born 846. [7]
Charles, born 847/848 [7]
Carloman, born 845 [8] [7]
Lothaire. [7]
Hildegarde, born 856[8] Hildegardis. [6]
Ermentrude. born 854[8] Ermentrudis. [6]
Gisela, born 858[8] Gisela. [6]
Rotrud, born 852[8] Cawley has Rotrudis, born 850. [1] Cawley observes that Settipani names Rotrudis as the daughter of King Charles II apparently based on her being named as such in the Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis, but Cawley states taht this does not appear to be the case. Cawley reports that Flodoard names "Rotrudi" when recording her election as abbess of "monasterii Sanctæ Crucis et Sanctæ Radegundis" but does not give her parentage. [1]
Issue of Charles and Richildis
Charles and Richildis had five children:[9]
Rothilde or Rothildis, born 871[9] [10]
Drogo, born 872/3 and died a year later. He was buried in the Abbaye de Saint-Amand, Flanders). (Cawley reports that the Chronico Floriacensi records the birth and death of "de Caroli Carolus…rex…Pippinus…simulque Drogo"[284]. Twin with Pépin.) [9]
Pippin or Pepin, born 872/873 and died a year later. Buried with his brother. [9]
Cawley reports an additional son, born 23 Mar 875 and died soon after. [11]
Charles was born 10 Oct 876 and died before 7 April 877; buried in the église de l'abbaye royale de Saint-Denis). [12]
Children linked in WikiTree but not named in Cawley/FMG
Bertha, born 850[8]
Godehilde, born 864[8]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref235. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wikipedia. Charles the Bald. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_the_Bald. Accessed Jan 11, 2017
↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 Don Webster. Families of Webster, Bachman, Van Valkenburg, McCall. Charles II "the Bald", Holy Roman Emperor. Sources employed include Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, Rosamond, Frankish kingdom under Carolingians, Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel, Andre Roux. https://xpda.com/family/Charles-ind00237.htm. Accessed Jan 11, 2017
↑ 4.0 4.1 Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref241. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref249. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Cawley reports that the Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Iudith et Hildegardim, Hirmintrudim et Gislam" as the four daughters of "Karolus imperator…ex Hyrmentrudi regina", specifying that she married "Balduinus comes". Cited at Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref235. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 The Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Hludovicum Karolum Karlomannum et Hlotharium" as the four sons of "Karolus imperator…ex Hyrmentrudi regina". Cited at Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref235. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 Current WikiTree Profile Birth Year Data
↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref276. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ Cawley reports that Charles III "le Simple" King of the West Franks confirmed donations of property "in comitatu quoque Cœnomannico" made by "Hugo comes et mater sua Rothildis", at the request of "genitrix nostra Adeleidis et…comes Hugo consanguineus, necnon et…comes Ecfridus" by charter dated 1 Nov 900[277]. Cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref276. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ The Annales Bertiniani record that in 875 "Richildis uxor eius [=Karoli]" gave birth to a child "noctu ante quartam feriam paschæ" which died immediately after being baptised. Cited by Cawley.
↑ Recorded in the Annales Bertiniani as cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref276. Accessed January 10, 2017
See also:
Franks, Carolingian Kings
1. Tab. Gen. Souv., France 22, Tab. IV
2. Die Nachkomen Karls des. Grossen
3. Carm. Pub. BT, v. 11, p. 3
4. Ahnen Zu Karl der Grossen, Germ FH 694, p. 103
5. Americana AM Pub. f, v. 32, p. 585
6. Burke's Peerage, Eng. P, 1949, p. ccli
7. Anderson's Royal Genealogy, Eng. 132, p. 451, 616
8. Plantagenet Ancestry, Eng. 116, p. 171
9. Keiser und Koenig Hist., Gen. Hist., 25, pt. 1, p. 6, 7, 9
10. Betham's Gen. Tab., Eng. 133, Tab. 253 | CAROLINGIAN Charles (I58198)
|
| 7412 |
Names by which Person may be found in sources
Ivo comes Bellomontensis [1] Ivo is Latin for Beaumont and Ivo for Yves, so records for the same person may exist under the name Yves de Beaumont.
Ives (I), Comte de Beaumont [2]
990 Birth Year Estimation
He birth year is unknown.
A popular genealogy on ancestry gives his birth the year 975.[3].
Since his death year is known -- 1059 -- and his earliest appearance in the records is 1022, estimate his age at around 30 when he is called to be a witness and place his birth at, say, 990, with his age at death then being 69.
Parents
Cawley does not find primary sources giving the parents of Ivo. A popular genealogy makes him the son of an earlier Ivo I (Yves) de Beaumont sur l'Oise [4], born 940 in Beaumont sur l'Oise, and died 1002 in Normandy. That genealogy gives his mother was Gisele Wigeric-Ardennes of Lotharingiam, born 954, daughter of Gilbert Wigeric-Ardennes of Lotharingia, Count of the Ardennes. [4] This information is provided for reference only and is not sufficient to justify creation of a profile for these persons.
Background on Beaumont-sur-Oise
The county of Beaumont-sur-Oise lay to the north of Paris, south of the county of Beauvais, east of the Vexin and west of the county of Valois, although its precise geographical boundaries are uncertain. Lépinois suggests that the county corresponded to the pagus Camliacensis [le Chambliois] and le pays de Thelle, which together became the ecclesiastical doyenné of Beaumont. The first mention of a count of Beaumont-sur-Oise is dated to 1022, although it is not known when the county was formed. Douet-d’Arcq suggests that it represented a partition of the county of Beauvais, which was granted by Eudes II Comte de Blois to Roger Bishop of Beauvais in exchange for the county of Sancerre in [1013] not long before the appearance of the first comte de Beaumont in the primary sources. Earlier charters dated between 627 and 861 name the pagus Camliacensis, and its main town Chambly, located in the southern part of the future county of Beaumont. Among these charters, “Theudaldus comes” donated property “sitas in pago Camliacense” to the abbey of Saint-Denis by charter dated 799. [2]
1010 Marriage to Emma
He married Emma, whose parents are unknown, and who died on 21 July of an unknown year. [2] Emma is named in 1039 donation of a castle quoted below, "cum mea propria conjuge Emma." Casley notes that they had five children and adds that "The Necrologium Bellimontense records the death “XII Kal Aug” of “Emma comitissa”. [2]
The Ancestry popular genealogy records that Ivo married Gisele de Chevreuse, born 980 in Beaumont, Normandy. No factual basis for this has been found and she has been delinked.
1022 Witnessed Charter for Abbeyis of Coulombs
“Comes Ivo de Bello monte, Ebo miles, Guarinus miles Parisius, Almaricus miles de Monteforte” witnessed the charter dated 1022 under which Robert II King of France confirmed the possessions of the abbey of Coulombs. [2]
1027 Donation of Property to Trinité de Fécamp
“Ivo...Belmontensis castri comes” donated property to la Trinité de Fécamp by charter dated to after 1027, subscribed by “Ivonis comitis, [J]osfredi filii eius, Ivonis clerici eius filii sui fratris, Alberici eius filii”. [2]
1028 Witnessed Charfter to Abbey of Saint Mesmin de Micy
“…Ivonis comitis…” witnessed the charter dated 1028 under which Robert II King of France confirmed the possessions of the abbey of Saint-Mesmin de Micy[8]. He founded Saint-Léonor de Beaumont 12 Oct 1029. [2]
1039 Donated Castle Confluentie with wife and son
"Comes Ivo cum filio meo simili nomine…clerico et canonico…cum mea propria conjuge Emma et ceteris omnibus meis liberis" donated "castrum Confluentie" to Saint-Wandrigisel by charter dated 1039, signed by "Ivo…comes…Ivo clericus…comes Goffredus, Albericus, Gelduini vicecomitis…Odonis filii supradicti comitis, Gosberti fratris eiusdem Odonis". [2]
1043 Witnessed Charter to Abbey of Saint Maur des Fosses
“…Yvonis Comitis Bellomontis…” witnessed the charter dated 20 May 1043 under which Henri I King of France confirmed the possessions of the abbey of Saint-Maur-des-Fossés. [2]
1053 Saint-Denis Reliquary
“…Walterius comes Pontisariensis, Willelmus comes Corboilensis, Ivo comes Bellomontensis, Walerannus comes Melledensis” are named among those present at the opening of the reliquary of Saint-Denis, dated 9 Jun 1053. [2][1]
12 April 1059 Death
He died 12 April 1059. The Necrologium Bellimontense records the death “II Id Apr” of “Ivo comes fundator ecclesie S. Leonorii”. [2]
Issue
Ives [I] & his wife had [five] children: [2]
Geoffroy, died 10 Jan 1068-1070[2]
Ivo III (Yves) de Beaumont or Ives (II) de Beaumont, died 22 May 1083-91[2]
Aubrey[2]
Eudes died 1088 or later[2]
Gosbert died after 1039[2]
The popular genealogy reports a daughter, Ermengarde, born 1000, Countess of Mello, as a daughter of Ives and Gisele. She has been de-linked from Ives but retained as a daughter of Gisele pending further research.
Research Notes
Unsourced Information from popular genealogies is provided below only to facilitate further research and should not be relied upon. The information provided below is not sufficient to justify creation of additional profiles that do not already exist on WikiTree.
Disambiguation: Early Ivo's and Wives
There are several early Ivos on WikiTree who can be confused.
Ivo born ca 990 Beaumont sur l'OilesRoches, France, died 22 May 1059. Married Emma, son Ivo. Documented with FMG. De-linked from wife Giselle
Giselle de Chevreuse, born 980, delinked from [[Bellomontenis-1|Ivo Bellomontensis but still linked as wife to Beaumont-281 and St Sauveur-7.
Yves Beaumont LInked to Giselle as husband. He appears to be part of a line of descent, all members of which are unsourced.
Ivo II, born ca 1026, son of [[Bellomontenis-1|Ivo I]. This Ivo had been conflated with persons located in Cotentin, but no basis in fact has appeared to justify that.
Ivo born 1005. No reliable evidence has been found of his existence. Allegedly son of Neel de St Sauveur and [[Brionne-23|Adele de Brionne. Married Emme de Bretagne and Gisele de Beaumont. Parents of Nine.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Avranches Guillaume de Corbeil Accessed Sept 19, 2018 jhd
↑ 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 2.16 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Paris Region -- Beaumont and Beauvasis Ives I Comte de Beaumont Accessed Sept 21, 2018 jhd
↑ Ancestry.com. Krasznavolgyi Family, not otherwise sourced. Paid access site. Ivo II de Beamont Accessed Sept 21, 2018 jhd
↑ 4.0 4.1 Ancestry.com. Krasznavolgyi Family, not otherwise sourced. Paid access site. Ivo I de Beamont Accessed Sept 21, 2018 jhd | BELLOMONTENSIS Ivo (I60130)
|
| 7413 |
Nancy married her cousin, George Santee. They moved to New Oberlin, Lorraine County, Ohio where they resided. Her children Joseph, James, Mary and Susan were named in the will of her father, Joseph Leander Loghry as heirs. She was deceased by the time of probate so her legacy went to her children. Probate filed 1 Apr. 1844. | Loghry Nancy (I54135)
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| 7414 |
Nancy, first wife of Isaac Santee was named for her maternal grandmother, Nancy Purdy Loghry. It is unknown where she was born and where they were married. She was 46 years old at the time of her death. | Moore Nancy (I54106)
|
| 7415 |
Nancy, wife of William Loghry lived to be 80 years old. It is tradition that she was from Ireland, and possibly from Clones, County Monaghan. A descendant of the same Purdy family from Belfast got in touch with me via email and was interested in her descendants. She was a descendant from the same family as his mother's. This fellow said the Purdys originated about 800 years ago from Normandy. Many of them in Ireland came over from Yorkshire, England. There were many Purdys in clones in the 18th and 19th century. ( Information from John Caughey of Londonderry, Ireland whose mother was a Purdy and related to ours.)
According to Revolutionary War records from the state of Pennsylvania, there was a James Purdy, Lt. Col. in the Cumberland Militia who could be Nancy's father. Certificate 11, 221, was paid 49 lbs. Register, vol. B, p. 48 Issued 18 March, 1786. On 31 Mar, 1790, he was paid 40.5.9, Certificate 16680
There also is a James Purdy at Lancaster County, in the 6th Battn. 7th Company, Class 7th, who enrolled Oct. 20, 1781 under the command of Capt. John Patton, Militia. He was on tour of duty in Lancaster. Muster Roll, 1781. A (5), VII, 592-595 also A (5) VII 617-620.
It appears there was another James Purdy,(Purdie) Jr. who was in Cumberland, 7th Battn. 5th Class under the command of Captain McAlister.
He had an appeal to be excused until the next call because he and his brother were building a mill. It was granted.
The appeal return was on Aug. 26, 1780.
Pvt. Robert, who lived in Lancaster; Pvt. William served in the 2nd Battn. 1st Company, 3rd Class, Duty "M". Return of 3d class on 22 July, 1782. Robert Purdie was in Philadelphia City with the 1st Battn. 4th Company, 2nd Class, under the command of Capt. John Byrn.
He was called in July, 1777. Gen. Ret. Bk. No. 1, p. 8. P. A. (6) 1, p. 41.
William Purdy, Private, served at Cumberland in the 7th Battn., 4th Class under the command of Capt. William Blain. Remarks on his card were "Abt" Order of Council, July 14, 1778. Fine Book of John Carothers, Cnty, Lt., p. 355. 2nd Tour, 3rd and 4th Classes-300 man to Ye Standing Stone. He had a Muster Fine of 80Lbs. (60 paid)
Another William Purdy, Pvt. at Cumberland, possibly the same person as above, served in the 5th Battn. 4th Class, Company 8...Published A (5) Vol. 1, 365-366. These could all be brothers to Nancy except for James, sr. | Purdy Nancy (I54001)
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| 7416 |
Naomi and husband were in Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY in 1790 and later moved to Sempronius, NY as did Joseph Newland, her brother and his family. | Newland Naomi (I52386)
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| 7417 |
Nasceu cerca de 0880
1.º Conde de celanova;
1.º Conde do Emineu;
Governador da Fronteira do Porto de Águeda;
Rico-homem, governador da Galiza, conde dos Gascos (Vascos) da Galiza, etc.
Nascido cerca 865
Falecido em 933
Com a idade de possivelmente 68 anos
Research Notes
Source indicates this person died in 0933 CE in Asturias, Hispania (became "Castile y Leon," Spain by 12th Century).
Ancestor of Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward I.
Sources
A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques - pg. 293
Penrose.org
http://roglo.eu/roglo?lang=pt;i=3391191
Project Medieval Lands, Cawley | MENÉNDEZ Gutierre (I59847)
|
| 7418 |
Nasceu cerca de 0880
Doña Ildaura Ériz de Lugo, Santa MP
Spanish: Aldara Eriz de Lugo, Santa, Portuguese: Dna. Aldara Ériz de Lugo Santa
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 908
Lugo, Galicia, España (Spain)
Death: 948 (35-44)
Lugo, Galicia, España (Spain)
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Froila Fernández de Lugo, Conde de Lugo and Adosinda Romanez Romanez de Monterroso
Wife of Conde Don Gutierre Arias de Menéndez, II conde del Sobrado
Mother of Don Froila Gutiérrez, III conde de Trastámara, Conde de Astorga; San Rosendo and Munio Guterres de Celanova, III Conde del Sobrado
Sister of Gudesindo Eriz de Lugo, Conde de Lugo; Dna. Ermesenda Eris do Lugo; Gugina Eriz; Santa Godiña and Teresa Eriz
Sources
A Herança Genética de D. Afonso Henriques - pg. 293
Penrose.org
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-den-hollander-en-van-dueren-den-hollander/I6000000003273921067.php
https://www.geni.com/people/Do%C3%B1a-Ildaura-%C3%89riz-de-Lugo-Santa/6000000003273921067?through=6000000001412968233 | ERIS Ilduara (I59846)
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| 7419 |
Nath Í mac Crimthainn was the son of Crimthann mac Énnai. [1]
He was from the Uí Ceinnselaig (Kinsella) sept of Leinster.
His place in the genealogy of the ÚA Ceinselaig is recorded in Genealogies from Rawlinson; between Éogain Cáech and Crimthaind [2]
children of Nath Í Mac Crimthainn - [3]
Éogan Cáech
Cormacc
Ailill
Bríg, daughter of Chobtaig, son of Ailill, son of Nath Í, son of Crimthann mac Énnai son of Énnae Cennsalach of the Uí Ceinnselaig dynasty from Leinster[4]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 22 August 2015), Crimthann mac Énnai," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimthann_mac_%C3%89nnai.
↑ Éogain Cáech m. Nath Í m. Crimthaind m. Énnai Ceinnselaig m. Labrada m. Bresail Bélaig m. Fiachach Ba Aiccid m. Cathaír Máir. in Celt : Genealogies from Rawlinson B 502 : GENELACH ÚA CEINSELAIG Section 2 (author unknown) Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
↑ Wikipedia : Crimthann Mac Énnai
↑ 'Corpus Genealogiarum Sanctorum Hiberniae', Ó Riain, Pádraig, ed., Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1985, §380.1.
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38, 42 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 10, 14-15, 341, 343-345. 429-431.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT
OClery The O Clery Book of Genealogies ed. S,Pender, Analecto Hibernica, 18 (Dublin 1951) - 1778
O'Corrain, D, Irish regnal succession - a reappraisal, Studia Hibernica 11 (1971) 7-39 | Mac Crimthaind I Nath Í (I58473)
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| 7420 |
Nathan and his wife moved to Whitingham, Vt shortly after the birth of their son, Nathan in 1807. | Brown Nathan (I51343)
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| 7421 |
Nathan Olney removed with his family from Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island to Stillwater, then Albany county, NY about 1756. He took part in the Revolutionary War as follows: First Lieutenant Nathan Olney was in the 2nd Battalion, 1777, under Colonel Angell. Captain Olney was in the 1st Battalion, in February, 1777, under Colonel Archibald Crary, also in February, 1778/1779.
Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army during rhe War of the Revolution. Fifteenth Virginia, page 420:
Olney, Nathan (R. I.) Ensign 11th Continental Infantry, 1st January, 1776; 2nd Lieutenant, 10th August to 31st, December 1776. | Olney Nathan (I52532)
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| 7422 |
Nathaniel was a bookkeeper, then schoolmaster. Lived in Portsmouth, N.H. and York, ME. Banks' History of York, concludes that Nathaniel "was probably the son of Ralph Freeman of Dedham..."
Nathaniel was one of the first settlers of Brooksville, ME, moving there about 1762. His will mentions his grandson, James Stover. | STOVER Nathaniel (I37907)
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| 7423 |
Nealy as he was called, was given to his aunt, Sarah Brown Beard to raise when his mother became too ill to care for him. His mother, Justina Brown Elting, died nine days after he was born according to the family bible in possession of Marjelia Chubb. His father left the area and his death and burial are unknown.
In the 1900 census, he was living in Jerusalem, Yates co. NY with cousin, Louis V. Gelder and wife.
In 1930, Cornelius, age 51, was living in Corning, Steueben county, NY with his wife, Carrie, age 47, who was born in PA. They had married in 1920 and this was their first marriage for each of them. He was 41 and she, 37, at the time of their marriage. | Elting Cornelius Wright (I52725)
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| 7424 |
near Buckhannon | POST Virginia Columbia (I38729)
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| 7425 |
Near Mohler, Oregon at Camp #4 of Brighton Mills Co. | Family: PULSIFER Frederick William / STEVENS Lucy M. (F7261)
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| 7426 |
Nellie died at age 46, of Cerebral Hemorrhage and chronic interstitial nephritis, at Lawrence General Hospital.
Burial:
Elmwood Cemetery
Methuen
Essex County
Massachusetts, USA
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/176123691/nellie-eva-chandler | COLBY Nellie Eva (I28135)
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| 7427 |
Nerses I the Great (Armenian: Սուրբ Ներսես Ա. Մեծ ) was an Armenian Catholicos (or Patriarch) who lived in the fourth century. He was the son of At'anagenes and his mother was the Arsacid Princess Bambish, a sister of King Tigranes VII (Tiran)[2] and a daughter of King Khosrov III. His paternal grandfather was St. Husik I whose paternal grandfather was Saint Gregory the Illuminator.
Sources
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Nerses_I
Geni
http://www.geni.com/people/Saint-Nerses-I-the-Great/6000000008630624019?through=6000000008630617453
Jackson Ancestors http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jackson%5Fanc&id=I6000000008630624019
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s008/f042519.htm
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Nerses_I | Great I Nerses the (I57931)
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| 7428 |
never married | GUMELIOUS Carl Arvid (I3636)
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| 7429 |
never married | PULSIFER Grant (I7306)
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| 7430 |
Never married. | Brown Frances Allen (I51253)
|
| 7431 |
Never married. | Moore James (I54161)
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| 7432 |
Never married. Died in her 40's. | HERMANSON Esther Louise (I3971)
|
| 7433 |
Never married. He died in his 30's. | HERMANSON John Robert (I3973)
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| 7434 |
Newspaper clipping found on Ancestry in database called Kugelberg:
Fröken Aurora Elisabeth Hoffmans Jordfâstning eger rum i Stora grafkoret å Nya Kirkogården Torsdagen den 15 Januari 1903 kl. 2 e.m. | HOFFMAN Aurora Elisabeth (I49345)
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| 7435 |
Nia was born about 0420 the son of Brion mac Eogan Brecc [1] [2]
In descent from Art Corp, the legendary ancestor of the Déisi there is a line from Brecc to Eogan to Brian to Nia to Ernbrand. [3]
Sources
↑ entered by Sue Howard, Monday, March 24, 2014.
↑ rootsweb : Selected Families and Individuals quoting : Kelley, David H., "The Ancestry of Eve of Leinster," The Genealogist 1:1 (Spring 1980) (The American Society of Genealogists.), p. 21, Los Angeles Public Library.
↑ Kings, Chronologies, and Genealogies: Studies in the Political History of Early Medieval Ireland and Wales page 150: Kings, Chronologies and Genealogies - by David E. Thornton pub: Occasional Publications UPR, 2003 | Mac BRION Nia (I58477)
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| 7436 |
Nicholas emigrated from Northern Ireland in 1740, along with two brothers, William and James. He settled in Northampton, Luzernne county, PA. | Funston Nicholas (I54230)
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| 7437 |
Nicholas, born in England, lived to be 77 years old. He came to New England on the "Anne" in 1623 leaving from Southampton. He settled in Plymouth and became a freeman in 1633. He worked during his life as a carpenter.
His wife, Constance Hopkins Snow came over on the "Mayflower" with her father, step-mother and other siblings.
Crossing the Atlantic in the same boat was Anthony Annable, his wife, Jane Momford and small daughter, Sarah. Descendants of these two families would
join together three generations later.
One source says he was born in Shoreditch, London, Enlgand (Laurie McDaniel Howland/http://www.ilos.net/~lhowland/html-ne/dat280.htm)
Nicholas was made a freeman at Plymouth in 1633, ten years after his arrival in New England. He was named in 1634 to lay out highways at Plymouth, and he served there as arbitrator, surveyor of highways and on juries. By 165 he had settled at Eastham where he served as clerk, selectman, deputy, constable, highway surveyor, excise collector and on court committees.
The will of Nicholas Snow of Eastham, dated 14 November, 1676 and proved 5 March 1676/77, left livestock and household goods to wife Constant for life use and then to son, Jabez, and devised various parcels of land to sons, Mark, Joseph, Steven, John and Jabez. The description of land near the testator's house mentioned "son Thomas Paine" (actually son-in-law) as an abutting owner. Nicholas also gave, after the death of his wife, the sum of ten shillings "to the Church of Eastham for the furniture of the Table of the Lord, with pewter or other necessaries." He named Deacon Samuel Freeman and John Mayo as executors. Letters of administration were granted to Constan, Mark and John Snow on 6 March 1676/77. A lengthy inventory, including many cooper's and carpenter's tools, was sworn to by widow Constant on 22 March 1676/77.
Governor Bradford wrote between 6 March and 3 April 1651 that "Constanta is also maried, and hath 12 children all of them living, and one of them married.
Note:The last three children, alive in 1651 as per Governor Bradford's account, may be sons who predeceased their father,Nicholas Snow without issue, thus not mentioned in his will; or may be daughters. Note that Nicholas did not specifcally name his daughters in his will. Josiah Paine, town clerk and historian of Harwich, wrote that Nicholas and Constance had a daughter named for her mother who was the first wife of Daniel Doane of Eashtam. Daniel was born probably in Plymouth, ca 1636; d. Eastham 29 Dec. 1712 in the 76th year of his life. | Snow Nicholas (I53569)
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| 7438 |
Nicolas Basile Hudon dit Beauleu (son of Nicolas Hudon Beauleu and
Madeleine Miville dit Deshesnes) married Josette Miville, Noveber 18,
1782 at Riviere Ouelle, P.Q. Canada (daughter of Jean Miville and
Isabelle Baudet). His second marriage to Madeleine Dupuis January 18,
1802 at Maskinonge, P.Q. Canada.
Nicolas Basile was born in 1759, son of Nicolas Hudon dit Beaulieu and Madeleine Miville dite Deschênes.
He married his second cousin, Marie Josephe Miville dite Deschênes in Rivière-Ouelle on 18 Nov 1782. Note: A dispensation was granted for their marriage from the Catholic Church due to 3rd degree of consanguinity.
His first wife passed away in 1801.
On 18 Jan 1802 in Maskinongé, he remarried to Madeleine Étiennette Dupuis dite Dunord, daughter of Pierre Dupuit dit Dunord and Marie Louise Peltier. They had 7 known children together, of which 2 are known to die young and 4 to marry.
He passed away in 1829, aged 70. His wife, Madeleine, died on 9 Jan 1857 in St-Valentin (St-Jean) in southern Richelieu valley.
Sources
Baptism: "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch, Rivière-Ouelle > Notre-Dame-de-Liesse > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1751-1796 > image 132 of 739; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal, Baptism #17
Marriage to Marie Josephe Miville: Notre-Dame-de-Liesse, 1690-1919, BAnQ Rimouski, Fonds Cour supérieure. District judiciaire de Kamouraska. État civil, (01R,CE104,S1), Hudon/Miville Marriage
Marriage to Marie Madeleine Dupuis: Saint-Joseph-de-Maskinongé, 1728-1919, BAnQ Trois-Rivières, Fonds Cour supérieure. District judiciaire de Trois-Rivières. État civil, (04T,CE401,S10), Udon/Dupuis dite Dunord Marriage
Death and Burial: Saint-Joseph-de-Maskinongé, 1728-1919, BAnQ Trois-Rivières, Fonds Cour supérieure. District judiciaire de Trois-Rivières. État civil, (04T,CE401,S10), Burial #11
Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1997
PRDH-IGD #86464 | BEAULIEU Nicolas Basil Hudon Dit (I780)
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| 7439 |
Nicolas Mignault 1 (1572 - 1635) aussi connu sous le nom de MIGNAU 2.
Jean Mignault dit Châtillon (1622 - 1680)
Le 20 avril 1622, Jean Mignault est baptisé à l'église St-Philippe-et-St-Jacques, Châtillon-sous-Bagneux, en Île-de-France (auj. Châtillon, Hauts-de-Seine), France.[1][2]
Mariage: Il épouse Madeleine de Brie en France 3.
Décès: Il décède 29 Avril 1635 et a été enterré le lendemain dans Châtillon-sous-Bagneux[3] ( aussi 10 novembre 1648 mariage de son fils Jean où il est cité défunt)
Liste des enfants connus de Madeleine de Brie et de Nicolas Mignault: (baptisé à l'église St-Philippe-et-St-Jacques, Châtillon-sous-Bagneux, en Île-de-France (auj. Châtillon, Hauts-de-Seine), France)
Marie Migneault (1618-)
Nicole Migneault (1619-)
Simone Migneault (1621-)
Jean (Mignot) Migneault dit Châtillon (1622-bef.1681) (Pionnier)[4]
Claire Migneault (1624-)
Nicolas Migneault (1625-)
Claude Migneault (1627-)
Pierre Migneault (1630-)
Nicolas Migneault (1633-)
Research Notes
Jehan Mignot (1572-1649) and Anna Marie Resling (1578-1640) have been removed as parents of Nicolas Mignot (1608-bef.1648), there is no known document naming his parents. See G2G on this.
DOB is based on age-at-death (63). (flagged uncertain)
Place of birth is asummed to be place of marriage and first known child.(flagged uncertain)
Sources
↑ Bapt. image Fichier
↑ Fichier Jean Mignault 2018 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies
↑ 1635 Burial Record Archives de hauts-de-seine, Actes d'état-civil : Chatillon et Décès, Actes de la paroisse Saint Jacques Saint Philippe de Chatillon, Image 272/321 (Document E_NUM_CHT_BMS_1 1605-1671) (Image: FRAD092_1MI_CHT_1_0005_P.jpg)
↑ Fichier Jean Mignault 2018 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies
1. Tanguay - Volume 1, p. 432
Généalogie Québec site de François Marchi- http://genealogiequebec.info/testphp/info.php?no=15802
Tree: Nos Origines | MIGNOT Nicolas (I60272)
|
| 7440 |
Nicolas Thibauld [1]
Mariage:
Le 28 juillet 1609, à Rouen (St-Candé-le-Jeune) (Seine-Maritime), France, Nicolas Thibauld âgé de ~19 ans épouse Ysabeau Anthiaume âgée de 21 ans.[2]
Enfants connus / Known children: Ysabeau Anthiaume & Nicolas Thibauld Tous baptisés à Rouen (St-Candé-le-Jeune)
Hugues, 21-11-1609;
Pierre, 06-10-1610;
Françoise, 20-10-1612;
Marie, 29-03-1614;
Jeanne, 30-06-1615;
Nicolas, 01-01-1617;
Guillaume Tibault 22-12-1617
Jacques, 29-09-1619;
Catherine, 23-12-1620;
Robert, 28-08-1626 et
Amant, 14-02-1629.
Décès: Il décède avant le 11 janvier 1655, date du mariage de son fils Guillaume.
Biography
Nicolas Thibauld was born about 1590 in Rouen, Normandie, France.
Aged ~19. Nicolas Thibauld marries Ysabeau Anthiaume aged 21, on July 28, 1609 in Rouen (St-Candé-le-Jeune) and together they had 11 children. [3]
He died before 11 Jan 1655, date of his son Guillaume's wedding. [4] in Rouen, Normandie, France. | THIBAULD NIcolas (Thibault) (I57771)
|
| 7441 |
Nicolas was born 26 Mar 1732, and christened 31 March at St. Jean-Baptiste, Deschaillons, Lotbiniere, Quebec [1]
Married 17 Apr 1752 at St-Pierre-les-Becquets (St-Pierre-Apôtre) to Marie Clotilde Brisson. Children:
Charles ( 1753-1753 )
Nicolas Bozire/Beausire (1754 Lotbinière - 1830 Ste Genevieve, Missouri)[2]
Jean Baptiste ( 1755-1755 )
Marie Clothilde ( 1757-1786 )
Eustache ( 1759-1839 )
Marie Catherine ( 1761-1833 )
Marie Cecile ( 1763-1824 )
Genevieve I ( ?-1786 )
Brigitte ( 1767-1824 )
Genevieve II ( 1769-1770 )
Marie Claire ( 1771-1848 )
He died in 1808, at age 76, and was buried 22 March 1784 St. Jean-Baptiste, Deschaillons, Lotbiniere, Quebec.[3]
Sources
↑ Drouin Baptism Record
↑ FamilySearch Person: KHNQ-WFB, Nicolas (1754-1830)
↑ Drouin Burial Record, no spouse or parents listed.
Genealogical Dictionary of Canadian Families (Tanguay Collection), vol. 5, sec. 2, page 465: Nicolas, b 23 Apr 1754, son of Nicolas Maillot and Clotilde Brisson, who were married 17 Apr 1752 at St-Pierre-les-Becquets. Ancestry Record 2177 #180579,
1752 Marriage to Marie Clothilde Brisson, Quebec, Genealogical Dictionary of Canadian Families (Tanguay Collection), 1608-1890, Vol. 2, Sect. 2, p. 476, image attached, https://www.ancestrylibrary.com/imageviewer/collections/2177/images/32746_238403-00174?treeid=&personid=&hintid=&queryId=0c8f8aaa3c44f2d65edb1159c43ec9c9&usePUB=true&_phsrc=uVt1083&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&pId=349621
1752, Nicolas Maillot in the Quebec, Canada, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1968, indexed info above, https://www.ancestrylibrary.com/discoveryui-content/view/31083127:1091?tid=&pid=&queryId=0c8f8aaa3c44f2d65edb1159c43ec9c9&_phsrc=uVt1084&_phstart=successSource
Genealogy of Canada, Copyright © NosOrigines.qc.ca 2022 https://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogie=Maillot_Nicolas&pid=13274 Genealogy of Canada]
Jutras Genealogical Data Site; entry for family of Nicolas Maillot and Marie Clothilde Brisson: Name: Nicolas Maillot Event Type: Mariage (Marriage) Marriage Date: 1748-1752 Marriage Place: St-Pierre-les-Becquets, Québec, Canada Spouse: Clotilde Brisson
PRDH: Research Programme in Historical Demography (membership): Individu: 148207
FamilySearch Person: LK49-MTX | MAILLOT Nicolas (I5332)
|
| 7442 |
Nicole des Ancherins, dame de Cierges et de Bantheville en partie, était la fille de Jean des Ancherins, dit de Bouligny, seigneur de Primat (ou Primant) et de Marguerite de Monthois[1]
Elle épousa en janvier 1563 Jean de Joyeuse, seigneur de Champigneulle, fils de François de Joyeuse et Nicole de Beauvais[1], dont:
Jean de Joyeuse de Champigneulle, seigneur de Sivry-lès-Buzancy, marié à Marie de Query, sans enfant
Élisabeth de Joyeuse, dite des Ancherins, femme de Jean de Gillet sieur de Mairy
Louise de Joyeuse, femme de Charles de Longueval
Claude de Joyeuse, femme de Claude de Pregny
Marie de Joyeuse, mariée à Jean Le Fauconnier, écuyer, seigneur de Chevièvres (veuf en 1609)
Pierre de Joyeuse de Champigneulle (descendance)[1]
Biography
Wife of Jean De Joyeuse de Joyeuse, Seigneur des Champigneulle
Children
Mother of Louise de Joyeuse
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Roland-Yves Gagné and Laurent Kokanosky, Les origines de Philippe Amiot (Hameau), de son épouse Anne Couvent et de leur neveu Toussaint Ledran, (Montréal: MSGCF), vol. 58, no. 1, p. 17-58, English translation provided by the French-Canadian Heritage Society of Michigan, vol. 42, nos. 1-4, 2021.
See Also
francogene.com
findagrave.com | des ANCHERINS Nicole (I60358)
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| 7443 |
Nicole Issenart était la fille de Geoffroy Issenart, seigneur de Landres en Lorraine, et de Béatrix de Grandpré, dame de Sivry (fille de Gobert de Grandpré et Elisabeth de Roucy)[1]
Elle était mariée à Geoffroy de Monthois, dont:
Nicole de Monthois, mariée à Claude de Bouligny des Ancherins, seigneur de Primat
Marguerite de Monthois, mariée à Jean des Ancherins dit de Bouligny, seigneur de Primat (frère de Claude)[1]
Elle est mentionnée avec son mari Jean de Monthois dans un acte du 12 mars 1551.[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Roland-Yves Gagné and Laurent Kokanosky, Les origines de Philippe Amiot (Hameau), de son épouse Anne Couvent et de leur neveu Toussaint Ledran, (Montréal: MSGCF), vol. 58, no. 1, p. 17-58, English translation provided by the French-Canadian Heritage Society of Michigan, vol. 42, nos. 1-4, 2021.
See also:
http://www.francogene.com/genealogie-quebec-genealogy/196/196471.php | ISSENART Nicole (I60364)
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| 7444 |
Nikola (Nikolaos, or Nicholas or Никола in modern Bulgarian) and his wife Rypsimia are named in two inscriptions from the late 10th and early 11th centuries.
In the Samuil's Inscription dated to about 992 or 993 and written on a marble slab (tombstone?) at the order of their son Samuel Comitopuli, later Tsar of Bulgaria, commemorating his parents and his brother David.
The Bitola inscription is believed to date from about circa 1015 and this time written at the command of Tsar Ivan Vladislav of Bulgaria, "grandson of the pious Nikola and Ripsimia, son of Aaron, who was brother of Samuil, Tsar of Bulgaria".
Little else is known about Nikola or his ancestry and the various theories often conflict. He is thought by some to be Armenian, and brought to Macedonia as a mercenary by the Byzantine Emperor Basilieos to fight the Bulgarian troops but then he defected. However if Nikola was his original first name and not one adopted later, it is not an Armenian name, though the name of his wife; Ripsimia (or Ripsimija) is Armenian.[1] Other theories are that he is from a Slavonic tribe, or Bulgarian.[2]
He appears to have been a Komit (local ruler) in Bulgaria but again there are no indications as to where, and some possibilities include Sredets, or the area around Lake Ohrid and Prespa Lakes.[2]
Marriage and children
As mentioned above, his wife's name was Ripsimia (Rimsimija or Ripsime), which is an Armenian name. However it seems highly unlikely that she was the daughter of Ashot II Bagratuni, King of Armenia as given in the English Wikipedia article. (See the discussion about this on the soc.genealogy.medieval site)
There is also some dispute over whether all four of the sons known as the Cometopuli or Kometopouloi, (Κομητόπουλοι in Byzantine Greek, or комитопулите in Bulgarian) were the sons of Nikola. Sometimes Aron (Aaron) and Moisei (Moses) are thought to be the sons of an unidentified Bulgarian, perhaps still with Ripsamia, as their mother.[3] but the Bitola inscription referred to above would seem to discount this theory.
Based on the Samuil inscription, Samuil and David are thought to definitely be the sons of Nikola and Ripsimia. See Cawley's database for more discussion on this issue.
Death
Nikola isn't mentioned in any of the sources as being involved in any of the events in 969-971 surrounding the invasion of Bulgaria by first the Russians, and then the Byzantines and the consequent insurrection led by his sons in 976, and it is thought that he probably died before these took place.[2]
Research Notes
Disputed Ancestry
Some online genealogies such as FabPedigree connect Nikola to the older Bulgarian line, but this is not supported by any medieval sources, and would surely have been noted by his descendants in the various inscriptions if it had been true.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. 'Bulgaria: Chapter 1C-Tsars of the Bulgarians 997-1018 and 1040-1041 (Kometopouloi)' version 3.1-23 March 2016 in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Foundation of Medieval Genealogy http://fmg.ac/ : viewed 5 July 2017.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Editors of Wikipedia, "Nicolas (commit)," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia (Bulgarian version), https://bg.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=%D0%9D%D0%B8%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%B0_(%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BC%D0%B8%D1%82) : viewed 5 July 2017.
↑ Schwennicke, Detlev, (ed.). 1984. Europäische Stammtafeln, Neue folge. Band II - Die ausserdeutschen Staaten: Die regierenden Häuser der übrigen Staaten Europas, Marburg : J.A. Stargardt. Tafel 168- Die Zaren des ersten Bulgarischen Kaiserreiches in Ochrida.
See also:
Wikipedia contributors, "Nicholas (komes)," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nicholas_(komes)&oldid=787673494 (accessed 5 July 2017) | UNKNOWN Никола Nikola (I59441)
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| 7445 |
Nikolai kykogård, Örebro, Behmers family grave. | BEHMER Carolina Fredrika (I838)
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| 7446 |
Nikolai kykogård, Örebro, Behmers family grave. | UTTERSTROM John (I9774)
|
| 7447 |
Nils-Gustav, also known as Ned Guy Wilson changed his name upon arriving in America. He was born on the Island of Oland near Smaland, Sweden on Feb. 15, 1845 and was the son of a merchant seaman. At the age of 15 years, he became a sailor and immigrated to America in 1860, seeing many of the great seaports of the word and later helping to bring supplies to the Union Army during the Civil War. He later settled in Chicago, Illinois where he became a tiller of the soil, farming a few years near Momence, IL but moved to Grant Township, Boone County, IA in 1869. He was 24 years of age when he came to Grant Township and with the money he had saved during his life's labors, he purchased 160 acres (SW 1/4) of virgin prairie in Section 3. This land was purchased on August 28, 1860 for $1200. ($7.50 per acre.) He later made several other land purchases in Grant Township over the years, eventually owning over 500 acres of good farmland about two miles north of Boxholm where he later became the town's mayor.
Besides being a successful farmer of Grant Township, Nils was also a member of the ogen community from about 1880 to about 1886. There he was at first engaged in farming but later became manager of the Scandinavian Cooperative Company of Ogden. Still later he was engaged in the mercantile business, being in partnership with a Mr. J. H. Eversoll in the operation of a general merchandise store in Ogden. This partnership was dissolved in September of 1885 and Nils returned to his homestead near Boxholm about 1886. He was a resident of Dayton for a short time, but spent most of his active life farming in Grant Township.
He spent the rest of his life in Boxholm and is buried in Prairie Lawn Cemetery. He married twice. He married first wife, Louisa Chalotte Anderson from Horn, Sweden, on 20 June, 1848. She died on 30 Nov. 1894. They had eleven children, seven of whom died in their youth. Four grew to adulthood but two never married. All are buried in Prairie Lawn Cemetery, Dayton, IA.
About five years after the death of his first wife, he remarried. His second wife was Clara Beckstrom whom he married on 24 Sept. 1899. She was born in Chicago, Illinois on Jan. 19, 1860 the daughter of Gustaf and Louisa Beckstrom. By 1908, Nils and Clara retired from active farm life and moved into their brand new house he had built just north of the Methodist Church, of which he was a member.
Nils was always held in high esteem by his fellow citizens and served as justice of the peace for Grant Township in 1879, and also in 1905-06 and again in 1913-14. When the town of Borxholm was incorporated, he was elected as the first mayor, serving from 1913 to 1917.
He died on March 12, 1926 in Boxholm, aged 81 years and is buried next to his first wife and their infant children.
The second Mrs. Wilson, (Clara Beckstrom) died on Sept 14, 1927, aged 67 years and is buried in Prairie Lawn Cemetery at Boxholm beside her mother, Louisa Beckstrom (1833- 1912).
The only descendant still residing within Grant Township is a granddaughter, Mrs. John (Delores) Shepard, Jr.
Nils-Gustaf was also an uncle of Louis and N. P. Wlson, also early Grant Township settlers.
History taken from "History of Boxholm and Grant Township, 1986" by David C. Peterson. | Olofsson (Wilson) Nils-Gustav (I54360)
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| 7448 |
no children
World War I Veteran
518 Michigan Ave.
Pressman for Louis F. Flow Co. | SMITH Warren LeRoy (Roy) (I9089)
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| 7449 |
No children | PULSIFER Carl William (I6917)
|
| 7450 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: COMER Robert / Living (F2070)
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| 7451 |
no children | Family: PULSIFER Robert / Flossie, (F7839)
|
| 7452 |
No further information available on William. It is likely he died
young. | PULSIFER William (I8025)
|
| 7453 |
No mother or spouses are reliably attested for Ceawlin. Any linking of a mother or a spouse without the express agreement of the EuroAristo project in the G2G forum will be disconnected.
Parentage
The Anglo Saxon Chronicle names Ceawlin as son of Cynric, in its recitation of the ancestry of Æthelwulf King of Wessex. This leaves the impression of an after-thought, as none of the passages in the earlier parts of the Chronicle which record Ceawlin’s activity state that he was Cynric’s son. [1]
Ceawlin, king of the West-Saxons
Listing the first eight kings who were Bretwalda (a ruler whose authority was recognized by other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms), the Anglo Saxon Chronicles record that second Bretwalda was Ceawlin king of the West- Saxons. [2]
560 Reign
He succeeded in 560 as Ceawlin, King of Wessex. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Ceawlin" succeeded to the kingdom of Wessex in 560. [1] [3]
In a series of battles, Ceawlin won a great deal of territory in the expansion of his kingdom
556 Battle of Beranburh
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Cynric and Ceawlin" defeated the Britons in 556 in battle at "Beranburh" (Beran Byrig); Barbury castle, Wiltshire. [1] [4]
568 War with Kent
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Ceawlin and Cutha" fought against "Æthelberht" [King of Kent] in 568 and "drove him into Kent", and "slew two ealdormen, Oslaf and Cnebba at Wibbandun". [1] [5]
577 War with Britons
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Cuthwine and Ceawlin" fought against "the Britons" in 577 and "slew three kings, Coinmail, Condidan and Farinmail" at and captured "three cities Gloucester, Cirencester and Bath". [1] [6]
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Ceawlin and Cutha" fought against "the Britons" in 584 at "Fethanleag", where Cutha was killed, and captured "many villages and countless booty". Stenton suggests that this place was near Stoke Lyne in north Oxfordshire, and that Ceawlin was defeated in the battle, based on the Chronicle stating that he "departed in anger to his own [territories]", as well as the lack of records of any further advance during his reign. [1] [7]
Accession of South Saxons (Sussex)
Roger of Wendover records the death of "Cissa rege australium Saxonum" in 590, adding that "regem occidentalium Saxonum Ceaulinum" acquired his kingdom. Bede names "Caelin rex Occidentalium Saxonum" as second of the kings who had authority over the southern provinces, south of the river Humber. Presumably this is based on his victories as reported in the Chronicle, although the reports do not suggest that his authority extended so far north in England. Whatever the truth of the matter, King Ceawlin suffered reverses towards the end of his life as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records in 592 that "there was great slaughter at Adam’s Grave" [in Alton Priors] and "Ceawlin was expelled", although it is unclear from the text whether the two events were linked. William of Malmesbury records that he was banished from the kingdom after being defeated at Wodnesbeorh, presumably by Ceol who is recorded in 591 as King of Wessex. [1] [8]
593 Death
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records the death in 593 of "Ceawlin and Cwichelm and Crida". Kirby points out that Ceawlin's reign is much shorter according to the West Saxon Genealogical Regnal List. [1] [9]
Issue
Ceawlin had two children:
Cutha, III, was killed in the battle of Fethanleag in 584. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Ceawlin and Cutha" fought against "the Britons" in 584 at "Fethanleag", where Cutha was killed, and captured "many villages and countless booty"[1278]. Florence of Worcester names "Ceaulin rex Occidentalium Saxonum et filius eius Cutha" when recording the same event[1279]. William of Malmesbury also records that King Ceawlin had a son named Cutha "cut off in battle"[1280]. Cutha, son of King Ceawlin, is added in later paragraphs of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle only as the ancestor of later kings, which suggests that the relationship with Ceawlin was added only by the later chroniclers. Cutha was allegedly the ancestor of Cædwalla King of Wessex: The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Cædwalla began to contend for the throne" in 685, adding that he was "son of Cœnberht, son of Cadda, son of Cutha, son of Ceawlin, son of Cynric, son of Cerdic"[1281].] [1]
Cuthwine Wessex, born 556. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Cuthwine and Ceawlin" (no relationship specified between the two) fought against "the Britons" in 577 and "slew three kings, Coinmail, Condidan and Farinmail" at "Dyrham", and captured "three cities Gloucester, Cirencester and Bath"[1282]. Florence of Worcester names "rex Occidentalium Saxonum Ceaulin et filius suus Cuthwine" when recording the same event[1283]. Cuthwine is shown in subsequent paragraphs of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the ancestor of several later kings, these lines of descent providing examples of the dubious genealogies which link the later kings of Wessex into one family, as discussed in the introduction to this chapter. Cuthwine was allegedly the father of Cynegils King of Wessex: the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, under 688, outlining the descent of King Ine, says that "Cynegils" was the son of "Cuthwine, the son of Ceawlin, the son of Cynric"[1284]. However, this is contradicted by an earlier paragraph in the chronicle which states that Ceol King of Wessex was Cynegils’s ancestor: an addition in manuscript A of the Chronicle, under 611 notes that "that Cynegils was the son of Ceol, the son of Cutha, the son of Cynric"[1285], although it is not clear whether this was contemporary with the main part of the paragraph or a later addition. Cuthwine was allegedly also the ancestor both of ætheling Oswald (the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names Cuthwine as son of Ceawlin, but only in a later passage which records the ancestry of ætheling Oswald[1286]) and of Ine King of Wessex (manuscript A of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Ine succeeded to the kingdom of Wessex" in 688 and ruled thirty-seven years, adding that he was "the son of Cenred, son of Ceolwald…brother of Cynegils…sons of Cuthwine, son of Ceawlin, son of Cynric, son of Cerdic"[1287], although according to William of Malmesbury King Ine descended from Cuthbald, supposedly brother of King Cynegils[1288]).][1]
Issue that may be a generation off
# Cutha Cathwulf, born 592.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medeival Lands Database. Anglo Saxon and Danish Kings. Ceawlin Accessed July 14, 2018 jhd
↑ explore pages from the original manuscripts at British Library: Anglo Saxon Chronicle
↑ A. 560. This year Ceawlin succeeded to the kingdom of the West-Saxons, and Ida being dead, Alia succeeded to the kingdom of Northhumbria, each of whom reigned thirty The AngloSaxon Chronicle a.d. 535-560
↑ A. 556. This year Cynric and Ceawlin fought against the Britons at Berin-Byrig The AngloSaxon Chronicle a.d. 535-560
↑ The AngloSaxon Chronicle A. 566. 567
↑ The AngloSaxon Chronicle A. 572.-576
↑ The AngloSaxon Chronicle A. 572.-576
↑ 591- This year in Britain was a great slaughter in battle at Woddesbeorg and Ceawlin was expelled. The AngloSaxon Chronicle A. 572.-576
↑ A. 593. This year Ceawlin, and Cwichelm, and Crida perished; and Ethelfrith succeeded to the kingdom of the Northumbrians; he was the son of Ethelric; Ethelric of Ida. The AngloSaxon Chronicle A. 572.-576
See also:
Source: Wikipedia profile: Ceawlin of Wessex
FMG's Medieval Lands entry for Cerdic and his sons | WESSEX Ceawlin (I58630)
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| 7454 |
No name given by Cawley see: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TOULOUSE%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc496685200
According to https://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_de_Magalona he was the son of Amic de Maguelone.
Birth: ABT 850
Occupation: Count of Maguelone | MAGEULONE Robert (I59595)
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| 7455 |
No parents are named for Gefion in the Ynglinga Saga. Odin sent her to find new lands and she was given a ploughgate of land by King Gylve (discussed in the Prose Edda). She was married to Odin's son Skjold and they settled in Leidre [1]
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglinga Saga Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 10 | de HLEITHRA Gefion (I58802)
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| 7456 |
No reliable facts have been found to support this person's existence.
Cúige Mumhan is the Irish name for the province of Munster, Ireland. [1]
Research Notes
Geni Account
Fafertach of Mumhan was born circa 626 in Wessex. [2]
She was the daughter of Finguine of Mumhan.[2]
She died about 644.[2]
Fictional Account
An entertaining version of the story of Fafertach and Ceolwald in which they are named Fay and Colin, may be found in the book Conflict and Whores by W. B. Baker pub: 2014.
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Munster
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Geni. www.geni.com/people/Fafertach-of-Mumhan/6000000000452190388 (broken link not on archive.org 20 January 2024) Fafertach of Mumhan Added by: Ingvar Ejdfors on July 15, 2007. Managed by: Rolf Klaus Mueller and 34 others. Accessed 10/5/2019 jhd This Geni profile is not supported by any documentation and this citation should be replaced when better sourcing is found. | of MUMHAN Fafertach (I58616)
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| 7457 |
Nobilia Lodeve was born about 1009, in Lodeve, Septimania, France, she died about 1098, in France. | LODEVE Nobilie (I59667)
|
| 7458 |
Noble family House of Ivrea
Titles: Gisela of Burgundy, Countess of Savoy and Marchioness of Montferrat
Father: William I, Count of Burgundy
Mother: Stephanie
Marriage
Marriage 1 Humbert II, Count of Savoy ? - 1103
Children:
Amadeus III, Count of Savoy ? - 1148
Adelaide of Savoy (wife of Louis VI of France) 1092 - 18 Nov 1154
William, Bishop of Liège
Agnes, (d. 1127), wife of Arcimboldo VI, lord of Bourbon
Humbert
Reginald
Guy, abbott of Namur
Marriage 2: Rainier, Marquess of Montferrat About 1084 - May 1135
1105 His Age: 21 Her Age: Unknown
Children
Joan of Montferrat (2nd wife of William the Clito) Unknown birth/death dates
William V of Montferrat
Matilda, wife of Alberto of Parodi, Margrave of Parodi
, a nun
Isabella, wife of Guido, Count of Biandrate
Sources
“The Lives of the Kings and Queens of England“, Revised and Updated [Paperback] by Antonia Fraser | BOURGOGNE Gisela (I58329)
|
| 7459 |
Nocher was born about 949[1] and died after 1011[2].
Name
Name: Nocher I Comte /de Bar-sur-Aube/
Source: #S5
Sources
↑ Unsourced.
↑ https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/chambarsein.htm#NocherIBarAubediedafter1011
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands: Campagne nobility. Nocher I de la Ferté-sur-Aube
Source: S-1965762195 Ancestry Family Trees http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=25804043&pid=1819
Source S5Ancestry Family Trees http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-963283398 | Bar-Sur-Aube Nocher (I59074)
|
| 7460 |
Nom et baptême
Marie Charlotte Mignot est né le 8 mars 1674 et baptisé le 11 mars 1674 au Notre-Dame-de-la-Nativité de Beauport, Canada, Nouvelle-France.[1] Elle est la fille de Jean Mignot dit Châtillon et de Marie-Louise Cloutier
Mariage et ses enfants
Jean Dionne et Marie Mignot se sont mariés le 2 août 1694 à La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame, Château Richer, Canada, Nouvelle-France.[2]
Family Jean Dionne-Sansoucy Guyon / Marie Charlotte Migneault Chatillon in full (8 children)
Liste de ses enfants connus:
Marie-Anne Dionne (1709 - )
Joseph Dionne ( - 1779)
Louis Dionne (1695 - 1695)
Jean-Baptiste Dionne (1696 - 1696)
Marie Dionne (1697 - )
Jean Dionne (1700 - )
Augustin Dionne (1702 - )
Antoine Dionne (1707 - )
Décès
Marie Charlotte Migneau décédé et et a été inhume le 9 octobre 1747 à Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, Canada, Nouvelle-France.[3] Elle âgée d'environ 74 ans, femme de Jean Dionne.
Sources
↑ Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979, Beauport > Notre-Dame-de-la-Nativité-de-Beauport > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1673-1674, 1678-1682, 1686, 1690, 1693-1719, 1740-1751 > image 25 of 600; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal. FamilySearch
↑ Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979, Château Richer > La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1679-1717, 1780-1790 > image 91 of 283; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal. FamilySearch
↑ Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979, La Pocatière > Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1737-1816 Confirmations 1816 > image 39 of 705; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal. FamilySearch
Tanguay, Cyprien; Armand H Demers. Searching through the old records of New France : for all of those precious genealogical details : a translation of Cyprien Tanguay's A travers les registres : (notes recueilliés par Cyprien Tanguay). (Pawtucket, R.I. : Quintin Publications, ©1998), vol.1, pp196, 432 | MIGNOT Marie Charlotte (I60259)
|
| 7461 |
Non-existent person? Research suggests that this person may never have existed. See narrative for details Relationships between historical figures could have been simplified or even fabricated in the text to give the impression that succession remained within the same family….Precise chronology is also difficult to assess from the Sagas….The conclusion must be that the tight family network described in the Sagas is unlikely to be correct and that the relationships shown below should be treated with considerable caution.
Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORWEGIAN%20NOBILITY.htm click here for [1] Sweden Royalty on wikitree
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CONTENTS.htm | HALFDANSDOTTIR Hilde (I58586)
|
| 7462 |
NONE OF THE CHILDREN BELOW ARE BORN FROM THE FIRST WIFE, ALL LISTED HAVE LOUISE MARIE BOUCHER AS THEIR BIRTH MOTHER
Spouse 2 Marie Louise Boucher Born: 1855 Died: 1912 Marriage: 31 May 1875
Children Sex Birth Louis Gendron M 1878 Odina Gendron F 1880 Isaac Auguste Gendron M 1882 Louise Gendron F 1888 Anges Marie Gendron F 1892 Joséphine Gendron F 1895 | BOUCHER Louisa (I55174)
|
| 7463 |
Not a king, but probably a powerful man in the Roman administration, Donaut (Dynod) was brother of Caradoc of Dumnonia and appears to have inherited his influence in the Civitas Dumnoniorum. [1]
Sources
↑ Early British Kingdons: Donaut 'King' of Dumnonia.
Ancestry Profile: #887069021. | DUMNONIA Donaut (I59271)
|
| 7464 |
Not married | Family: HAZEN Abraham N. / COOKE Rebecca (F25507)
|
| 7465 |
not mentioned in his fathers will dated 19 Dec. 1710;
so probably died young. | PULSIFER Joseph (I7527)
|
| 7466 |
Not mentioned on sale of land of Ahaz Freeman, her father, with the
other children in 1853. | FREEMAN Sarah (I3213)
|
| 7467 |
Not much is known about the person Estrid. Snorre Sturlasson wrote that Estrid was arrogant and not kind towards her stepchildren and a lover of pomp and luxury, and as hard and strict towards her servants.
She was christened together with her husband and children in 1008.
Name
Estrid was probably her original name, in Swedish sources sometimes called Astrid.
In MedLands[1] she is listed as "Estred of the Obotrites", daughter of ---. Adam of Bremen names "filiamque Sclavorum Estred nomine de Obodritis" as wife of "Olaph rex Sueonum".
Birth
We do not know when Estrid was born. It is however estimated that she was born about 979.
Parents and siblings
The names of her parents are not known by any reliable sources.
Different sources tell us she is said to been a Slavic princess, or the daughter of daughter of a Obotrik prince and native of Mecklenburg., or daughter of tribal chief of the Polabian Obotrites.
We do not know anything about her family orwhere she came, but we can, on good grounds, assume that she was the Wikipedia:
She was most likely given by her father, a tribal chief of the Polabian Obotrites, as a peace offering in a marriage to seal the peace, and she is thought to have brought with her a great dowry, as a great Slavic influence is represented in Sweden from her time, mainly among craftsmen.
Marriage and Children
Estrid was married to the Swedish ruler Olof Skötkonung, presumably around 1000. She became a widow in 1022.
They seem to have had at least two children, the son Anund Jakob and the daughter Ingegerd (who married Jaroslav Vladimirovitj, Yaroslav the wise, Grand Prince of Kiev and Novgorod).
(When Estrid married Olof, her husband already had a mistress, Edla, with whom he had at least three children, they were Emund, Astrid and Holmfrid. Olof is said to have treated Edla and Estrid the same way and gave his son and his two daughters with Edla the same privileges as the children he had with Estrid.)
Death and Burial
It is thought she died about 1035. Her burial place is not known.
Sources
↑ https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWEDEN.htm#_ftnref43
See also
Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estrid_of_the_Obotrites
Book: Alla Sveriges drottningar by Åke Ohlmarks
Geni, http://www.geni.com/people/Estrid-Astrid-of-the-Obotrites/6000000004827276873?through=6000000003219686363
Fabpedigree, http://fabpedigree.com/s071/f035040.htm | OBOTRITES Estrid (I58657)
|
| 7468 |
Not proved that they were the Benj and Sally that m. in Charlestown, NH
Not proved that they were the Benj and Sally that m. in Charlestown, NH | Brown Benjamin (I51092)
|
| 7469 |
Not sure if Helen and George ever got a divorced.
He left her in the boondocks when the two boys were very young without a car or very much food.
George was a chef
George died from a stroke | LEAVENS George (I57386)
|
| 7470 |
Not sure if Helen and George ever got a divorced.
He left her in the boondocks when the two boys were very young without a car or very much food. | PULCIPHER Helen Edna (I7352)
|
| 7471 |
Not sure of sex | Crane) Waub-uj-e-Jauk (White (I39531)
|
| 7472 |
Not the daughter of Dru de Ballon
No evidence has been found that she was the daughter of Dru de Ballon and she has been disconnected from that profile.
Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
"Walter of Gloucester married Berthe, daughter of . . . "Walterus de Gloucestria, assensu Milonis filii mei et Berthæ uxoris meæ" donated "ecclesiam de Cernay…ecclesiam… Sanctæ Helenæ de Halgestane…terram…de Westwode in Herchenefelde" to Gloucester St Peter by undated charter[328]. The Complete Peerage suggests that Berthe was a relative of Hamelin de Ballon Lord of Abergavenny, citing the passage from the Historia fundationis cum fundatoris genealogia of the priory of Abergavenny quoted above[329]. However, there are two difficulties with this hypothesis. Firstly, it is Walter, not his son, who is described as “consanguineo” of Brien FitzCount, suggesting that the relationship must have been through Walter’s parents not his wife. Secondly, doubt exists about the relationship between Brien FitzCount (generally identified as the illegitimate son of Alain IV Duke of Brittany, although the primary source which confirms that this affiliation is correct has not yet been traced) and Hamelin de Ballon, as discussed more fully in the document WALES (Lords of Abergavenny). The Complete Peerage also cites[330] the undated charter under which “Willielmus de Braosa” confirmed donations to Abergavenny Priory by “Hamelinus de Balon et Brientius comitis filius et Walterus de Herefort et Henricus de Herefort”[331]. This document does suggest a close relationship between the two families. However, a family connection through the mother of Miles of Gloucester is not the only possibility. Walter & his wife had [three] children[1]:
Miles of Gloucester, Earl of Hereford (d 24 Dec 1143)
Matilda (m. Richard FitzPons)
_ _ _ _ _. (Had child Renaud, d 25 Aug 1149)
Did Walter marry Emma instead?
Some modern sources make the spurious claim that Walter married Emma, sister of Hamelin de Balun.
This was put forward by the herald Robert Glover, apparently in an attempt to explain the association with the lordship of Abergavenny. Brian fitz Count granted the honour of Abergavenny to Miles of Gloucester between July 1141 and December 1142, Empress Matilda issuing a charter confirming the deed. Abergavenny bordered Miles’s honour of Brecknock, solidifying his base in the region. [2]
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL.htm
↑ Reed, Paul C. "The Seymour Family of Hatch, Somerset, and de la Mare Family of Little Hereford" (2010) p. 229, footnote 76.
Weber, Jim. "The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest," RootsWeb.
Wikipedia:Walter_of_Gloucester. | BALLON Berthe (I60215)
|
| 7473 |
Not the founder of the Kingdom of Asturias and the beginning of the Reconquest of Spain. Also called Pelagius.
Conde de Deza 885-959
Sources
Colaboradores de Wikipedia, "Pelayo González," Wikipedia, La enciclopedia libre, https://es.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pelayo_Gonz%C3%A1lez&oldid=138190591 (descargado 19 de marzo de 2023). | GONZÁLEZ Pelayo (I59888)
|
| 7474 |
Not to be confused with Enna Cennsealach. the of son of Labraid Laidech mac Bressal Bélach (abt.0390-abt.0450)
This profile is based on Jaski's table 38
Clann Name: Dál Niad Cuirp
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[1]
AU - No entries found
Annals of the Four Masters[2]
FM478 After Oilioll Molt, son of Dathi, son of Fiachra, p.151 had been twenty years in the sovereignty of Ireland, he was slain in the battle of Ocha, by Lughaidh, son of Laeghaire, Muircheartach Mac Earca, Fearghus Cerrbhel, son of Conall Cremththainne, Fiachra, son of Laeghaire, King of Dal Araidhe, and Cremhthann, son of Enna Cennsealach, King of Leinster. It was on this occasion that the Lee and Cairloegh were given to Fiachra as a territorial reward for the battle.[3] NOTE: this is a reference to his nephew
Sources
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
↑ Annals of the Four Masters - CELT
↑ CELT - Annals of the Four Masters
Ancestry family trees - http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-11395193
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 | BELACH Enna Niadh mac Bressal (I58544)
|
| 7475 |
NOTE
Also called Matilda of Leuven.
Sources
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. I. page 464
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 8 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00092013&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BRABANT,%20LOUVAIN.htm#MathildeLouvainMEustacheIBoulogne
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. | LOUVAIN Mathilde (I58938)
|
| 7476 |
Note
Also called Elvira Mayor, she was originally called Muniadona (or Muñadona) and is variously called Munia (or Muña) Mayor (or just Munia or Muña).
Ancestor of Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward I.
Reina consorte de Pamplona (1010 - 1035), Condesa de Ribagorza (1017 - 1035)
Condesa de Castilla (1028 - 1035).
Sources
Sherri Harder, firsthand knowledge. Click the Changes tab for the details of edits by Sherri and others. | CASTILLA Munia Elvira (I59836)
|
| 7477 |
Note
Ancestor of Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward IAncestor of the Queens of England, France, and Sicily, and Queen of the Romans, daughters of Raymond Berengar IV of Provence and Beatrice of Savoy.
Married #1 Isabel of Narbonne, #2 Blanca. Murdered by his brother Berengar Raymond II.
Ramon Berenguer I, Count of Barcelona From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Ramon Berenguer I and his wife, Almodis de la Marche, counting out 2000 ounces of gold coins as payment to William Raymond and Adelaide, count and countess of Cerdagne, in return for their rights over Carcassonne in 1067.[1]
Ramon Berenguer I the Old (née in French: Ramond Berenger LeVieux, in Catalan: el Vell) (1023–1076 AD) was Count of Barcelona in 1035–1076. He promulgated the earliest versions of a written code of Catalan law, the Usages of Barcelona.
Born in 1024, he succeeded his father, Berenguer Ramon the Crooked in 1035. It is during his reign that the dominant position of Barcelona among other Catalan counties became evident.
Ramon Berenguer campaigned against the Moors, extending his dominions as far west as Barbastro and imposing heavy tributes (parias) on other Moorish cities. Historians claim that those tributes helped create the first wave of prosperity in Catalan history. During his reign Catalan maritime power started to be felt in Western Mediterranean. Ramon Berenguer the Old was also the first count of Catalonia to acquire lands (counties of Carcassonne and Razés) and influence north of the Pyrenees.
Another major achievement of his was beginning of codification of Catalan law in the written Usatges or Usatici of Barcelona which was to become the first full compilation of feudal law in Western Europe. Legal codification was part of the count's efforts to forward and somehow control the process of feudalization which started during the reign of his weak father, Berenger Ramon. Another major contributor was the Church acting through the institution of the Peace and Truce of God. This established a general truce among warring factions and lords in a given region for a given time. The earliest extant date for introducing the Truce of God in Western Europe is 1027 in Catalonia, during the reign of Ramon Berenguer the Old.
Ramon Berenguer I together with his third wife Almodis also founded the Romanesque cathedral of Barcelona, to replace the older basilica presumably destroyed by Almanzor. Their velvet and brass bound wooden coffins are still shown in the Gothic cathedral which replaced Ramon Berenguer's building.
He was succeeded by his twin sons Ramon Berenguer II and Berenguer Ramon II. [edit] Family and issue Sepulchers of Ramon Berenguer I and Almodis de la Marche. Cathedral of Barcelona.
* First wife, Isabel/Elisabeth of Narbonne or of Béziers o Berenguer (died young) o Arnau (died young) o Pere Ramon (1050-1073?), murdered his father's wife, Almodis, and was exiled * Second wife, Blanca de Narbonne , daughter of Wolf Ato Zuberoa and Ermengarda of Narbonne. * Third wife, Almodis de La Marche, countess of Limoges o Berenguer Ramon II, Count of Barcelona the Fratricide (1053/54-1097) o Ramon Berenguer II, Count of Barcelona the Towhead (1053/54-1082) o Agnes, married Guigues II of Albon o Sancha, married William Raymond, count of Cerdanya
Sources
1. ^ Charles Julian Bishko (1968–9), "Fernando I and the Origins of the Leonese-Castilian Alliance with Cluny," Studies in Medieval Spanish Frontier History (Variorum Reprints), 40. | BERENGUER Raimund (I59713)
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| 7478 |
note
currently born 13 YEARs after her son; her son's father shows living 116 years
ALTERNATE DEATH: 960
Name
Cecilie Mrs /BJORNSSON/ [1][2][3]
Birth
ABT 0936 Of, Norway[4]
0936 Norway[5]
Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=owt&h=3449372&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
Text: Birth date: 936Birth place: NorwayDeath date: 957Death place: YMarriage date: 959Marriage place: Norway
Marriage
Husband: Gudrod Bjornsson
Wife: Cecilie Mrs Bjornsson
Child: Harald 'Graenske' Gudrodsson
Place: Norway[6]
Death
0960
Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=owt&h=3449372&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt
Text: Birth date: 936Birth place: NorwayDeath date: 957Death place: YMarriage date: 959Marriage place: Norway [7]
Sources
↑ Source: #S2
↑ Source: #S3
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Cited in the family tree "Hillman Family Tree" created by "jillhillman" http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/1261490/person/-1669029319 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=23901104&pid=1688259436
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Cited in the family tree "Hillman Family Tree" created by "jillhillman" http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/1261490/person/-1669029319 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=23901104&pid=1688259436
Ancestry Family Trees http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6601291&pid=1495596463 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=27418815&pid=1845 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=23901104&pid=1859166800 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=21525863&pid=1514182095 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=21525863&pid=1564551266 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=27418815&pid=1051
Source: S2 Title: Pedigree Resource File CD 49 Abbreviation: Pedigree Resource File CD 49 Publication: (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2002)
Source: S2256 Title: Type: Ancestral File Number Abbreviation: Type: Ancestral File Number
Source: S3 Title: Ancestral File (TM) Abbreviation: Ancestral File (TM) Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SAINTS Publication: June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
Source: S4 Title: hofundssonAnces.ged Abbreviation: hofundssonAnces.ged | BJORNSDOTTIR Cecile (I59474)
|
| 7479 |
Note
Escudo Saldaña heraldry - http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=589654e1-cef6-4fd7-b3ee-7418c8c4e2bd&tid=27418815&pid=5285
Saldana-Andalusia heraldry - http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=01d29547-6891-447c-97fa-a2176b2d0c48&tid=27418815&pid=5285 | SALDAÑA Gómez Díaz (I59764)
|
| 7480 |
Note
Given a death date of 995, some of the children attributed to him cannot be correct. ALTERNATE DEATH bet 1010 and 1040
Birth
ABT 0960 Of, Vestfold, Norway[1]ALTERNATE BIRTH: 940, 947, 952, 968, raised in Greenland
Occupation
Occupation: King of Vestfold and Agder; Onderkoning van Westfold; House of Fairhair
Harald Grenske, King of Westfold d. 995 Harald Grenske, King of Westfold was the son of Gudroed Bjornsson and Cecilie (?). He died in 995. He gained the title of King of Westfold. Child of Harald Grenske, King of Westfold and Asta Gudbransdotter Saint Olav II Haraldsson, King of Norway+ b. 995, d. 1030 [2] --- Harald Grenske (10th century) was a petty king in Vestfold in Norway. Harald Grenske was the son of Gudrød Bjørnsson. Gudrød was a grandson of Harald Fairhair and the king of Vestfold. Harald's cognomen Grenske is due to his being raised in the district of Grenland, Norway. When Harald was only 11 years old, his father was slain by the sons of Gunnhild Gormsdóttir (i.e. Harald Greyhide and his brothers). Harald fled to Oppland and from there to Sweden, where he stayed with the powerful strongman Skagul Toste. [3]
Note
Note: Harald Grenski of Grenland Norway
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=52c265cf-c2c1-4138-b895-aed350562499&tid=27418815&pid=1048
Note: King Harald Gudrodsson #1949
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=2dba78c8-68e5-4ede-87ac-5ec66c01fe46&tid=23901104&pid=1859099205
Source S2295565934
Repository: #R2295565933
Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Repository R2295565933
Name: Ancestry.com
Name: Harald 'Graenske' /GUDRODSSON/ [4][5][6]
Harald Yngling ...
Marriage
Husband: Gudrod Bjornsson
Wife: Cecilie Mrs Bjornsson
Child: Harald 'Graenske' Gudrodsson
Marriage:
Place: Norway[7]
Sources
↑ Source: #S4
↑ http://www.thepeerage.com/p4289.htm#i42885
↑ http://en.cyclopaedia.net/wiki/Harald-Gudrodsson-Grenske
↑ Source: #S2
↑ Source: #S3
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S4 | GUDRODSSON Harald Grenske (I59473)
|
| 7481 |
Note
Married Emilde or Ermengarde. | GÉVAUDAN Bertrand (I59963)
|
| 7482 |
Note
Married Goda. | GÉVAUDAN Heracle (I59964)
|
| 7483 |
Note
Note: 1er Rey Polaco
Note: Mieszko I. (* 922/945 25. Mai 992)
Name
Name: Mieszko I //
Given Name: Mieszko I
Name Prefix: Dagon of Poland
Event
Mieszko I (bc 922, died May 25 992) was prince of Poland from 963 and adopted Christianity 966. He belonged to Piastdynastin. Mieszko preceded incorporation under Polish descendants of the chiefs Siemomysl (died around 960), Lestko (d. about 930), Siemowit (d. about 900), and the ancestor of the dynasty, Piast Hjulmakaren who lived in the second half of the 800s. Mieszko I often counted as Poland's founder. He was married to Princess Dubrawka of Bohemia (Polish Dabrówka) from 965 and this is believed to have accelerated the Christianization of Poland, which took place 966th He was the father of King Boleslaw I of Poland and Swietoslawa (wife of Sweyn of Denmark).
wife: Dobravy of Bohemia; Born: ABT 922, Poznan, Poland Acceded: ABT 960 Died: 25 MAY 992 Notes: It is not clear from sources which wife sired which child, hence the multiplicity of unknown spouses. AKA Burislaf of Wendland. Father: , Ziemonislaw of Poland, Duke of Poland Mother: , Gorka Married to Haraldsdottir, Thyra
Child 1: , Boleslaw I the Brave of Poland, King of Poland, b. ABT 967 Married to , Dobravy of Bohemia Child 2: , Vladivoj of Bohemia, Duke of Bohemia Child 3: , Gunhilda of Poland
Married #2 Oda of Haldensleben. Also called Miseconus.
Death
25 May, Place: Poznan, Lubelskie, Poland
Burial
Cathedral Basilica St Peter St Paul, Poznan, Poland
see biography here:Medieval Lands
Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mieszko_I_of_Poland
Medieval Lands - Poland - Mieszko I Piast | PIAST Mieszko (I58073)
|
| 7484 |
Note
Note: @N915@
@N915@ NOTE
She married #1 Hugo, Count of Egisheim, by whom she became the mother of Pope Leo IX.
Source: #S994
@S994@ SOUR
Text: This individual (or object) is the subject of an article or stub at Wikipedia.
User ID
User ID: 053CED7BB0464BA0AF8FA2F7328714C5F323
Data Changed
Data Changed:
Date: 23 DEC 2009
Prior to import, this record was last changed 23 DEC 2009. | SCHWABEN Dietbirg (I58022)
|
| 7485 |
Note
Note: Guindomar d'ALâEMANIE
Birth in 292
Died in 356 , age at death: 64 years old
Roi Alemanie
Parents
Wadomaire d'ALâEMANIE 270-342
Ne de BURGONDIE 270
Spouse(s) and child(ren)
Married to Ne de TOXANDRIE 300,
Chlodomar d'ALâEMANIE 320-358
Sources
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27418815/family
Source: S4 Record ID Number: MH:S4 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Repository: #R1 Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/22373421/person/1325431621/facts
Repository: R1 Record ID Number: MH:R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com | ALLEMANIE Guindomar (I59145)
|
| 7486 |
Note
Note: ref: Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org) (16 May 10) -
Rudolf II de Warenne, son of Rudolf I of Warenne, was a Norman aristocrat and progenitor of the Earl of Surrey family line.
He is known only from his subscriptions to two charters of his father for the Holy Trinity of Rouen. As his father's lands near Rouen and in the Pays de Caux did not pass to his son William or William's descendants, it is likely that Rodulf succeeded to them on his father's death.
The de Warenne family originated from Normandy, France. The de Warenne surname derives from the castle of that name on the Varenne River, which flows through the territory William acquired in Upper Normandy.
He married Emma in or before 1059 - both were still living in 1074, and had several children including;
? Rudolf III de Warenne - who inherited most of the family lands in Normandy.
? William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey - who fought with William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings and was rewarded with vast land holdings as the Earl of Surrey.
? possibly Frederick de Warenne - who was killed by Hereward the Wake. He is listed in the Domesday book holding lands in Cambridgeshire and Norfolk. (Domesday, ff.196, ii.465b, 170b, 172b). Another source lists Frederick as the brother of William's wife, Gundred.
Research notes
There seem to be some problems with the early de Warennes. (Wikitree is following the proposals of Keats-Rohan, not earlier works.[1]
The Complete Peerage[2] has the following:
Rodulfus/Radulfus/Ralph de Warenne, parentage unknown, birth not stated. Married (1) Beatrice whose mother was almost certainly a sister of Gunnor, 2nd wife of Richard I, Duke of Normandy. She was living about 1053. Married (2) Emma, parentage unknown. He and his second wife were living in 1074. Rudolf de Warenne II is described as by the first wife of Rodulfus (above) and eldest son and heir. States that he likely married and left issue but they are not mentioned.
William de Warenne 1st Earl of Surrey, was a younger son of Rudolf and his first wife, and brother of Ruldof de Warenne II. He was born well before his father married his second wife Emma. Married (1) Gundred, sister of Gerbod the Fleming, Earl of Chester. She died 27 May 1085 Castle Acre, Norfolk. Married (2) unnamed sister of Richard Guet (possibly Marie as noted by Medlands[3]).
Sources
↑ K. S. B. Keats-Rohan, Aspects of Robert of Torigny's genealogies revisited", Nottingham Medieval Studies, 37 (1993) p.21. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/285148810_Aspects_of_Robert_of_Torigny's_Genealogies_Revisited
↑ Cokayne, George E. The Complete Peerage of England… London: St. Catherine Press, 1910, Vol. XII, pp.491-94
↑ Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands" http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL.htm#_Toc388773409
L.C. Loyd, "The Origin of the Family of Warenne" in Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, vol. xxxi, pp. 97-113. https://archive.org/details/YAJ0311934/page/106/mode/2up
Geneajourney.com - accessed 7 Aug 2014 - http://www.geneajourney.com/wrrene1.html
Royal and Noble Genealogical Data, by Brian Tompsett, Copyright 1994-2001, Version March 25, 2001
http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/GEDCOM.html, Department of Computer Science, University of Hull, Hull, UK, HU6 7RX,
MedLands. [link does not work] | WARENNE Radulph (I59171)
|
| 7487 |
Note
Note: Thierry de PONTHIEU
Individual
Birth in 605
Died
Comte de Ponthieu
Parents
Sigebert de PONTHIEU 560
Ne N
Spouse(s) and child(ren)
Married to Ne N,
Ne de PONTHIEU
Data Changed
Data Changed:
Date: 24 JUL 2008
Time: 21:43:58
Prior to import, this record was last changed 21:43:58 24 JUL 2008.
Sources
WikiTree profile De Ponthieu-67 created through the import of familytree.ged on Jul 14, 2011 by Ryan James VandenBerg. See the Ponthieu-67 Changes page for the details of edits by Ryan James and others. | De PONTHIEU Thierry I (I59102)
|
| 7488 |
Note
Wikipedia: The identity of García's wife or wives is poorly documented, and has been subject to much speculation. An undated confirmation of an earlier lost charter refers to King García and Queen Urraca Mayor, and this is thought by some to refer to García Íñiguez and an otherwise unknown wife. Based on her name alone, it has been suggested that she was of the Banu Qasi, but other historians have given her different parentage, or even a different king as husband. Likewise, royal princess Leodegundia Ordoñez of Asturias, daughter of Ordoño I of Asturias, is known to have married a ruler of Pamplona, and García Íñiguez is one of those speculated to have been this prince.
Sources
Family records
Source: S4 Record ID Number: MH:S4 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Repository: #R1 Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=22373421&pid=1300861502
WikiTree profile De Gascoña-1 created through the import of 20110708.ged on Jul 8, 2011 by Carlos Molina. See the Gascoña-1 Changes page for the details of edits by Carlos and others. | GASCOÑA Urraca (I59756)
|
| 7489 |
Note - much of genealogy for this period in history consists of separate Liuthard, Comte de Fézensac (d. 03 Jan 813 or later)[1]
Parents
UNKNOWN[2]
Marriage
m. Grimhild UNKNOWN[3]Issue: 3
Gerard II, Comte de Vienne[4]
Aldahard III[5]
Engeltrudis[6]
Sources
Cawley, Charles. Liuthard in"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. | FÉZENSAC Luithard (I58203)
|
| 7490 |
Note 1: There is a separate profile now for Waleran II of Arlon, sometimes equated to Udon. See Arlon-2. This is following Kupper (2007).
Note 2: Profile had 998 as date of birth, which is very unlikely given the date of death, the estimate 1030 [1] is more acceptable.
Note 3. It is possible that Udon was simply Judith's brother, and that her son was his heir in that way. In other words, Judith might have had a different husband.
Kupper writes:
Penchons-nous à présent sur une charte, plus précisément une notice (70), qu'il convient sans doute de placer à l'année 1064 (71). Ce document nous est parvenu sous la forme d'une copie, mais le chanoine S. -P. Ernst, voici deux siècles, a pu consulter l'original qu'il a d'ailleurs publié (72). Dans cet acte il est fait mention d'un comte Udon de Limbourg (73) qui donne une serve à l'église Saint-Adalbert d'Aix-la-Chapelle. Ici encore il est bel et bien question de Limbourg-sur- Vesdre comme l'indique tout d'abord le bénéficiaire : un chapitre aixois proche de « notre » Limbourg ; comme l'indique aussi la présence, parmi les témoins, d'un Everelm de Soumagne près de Liège (74).
(70) II s'agit effectivement d'une notice : l'acte est rédigé en forme impersonnelle et de manière objective ; il comporte la formule traditionnelle de notification (Notum facimus [...] quod). Observons que la notice connut un très grand succès, au XIe siècle précisément.
(71) Wisplinghoff, Rheinisches Urkundenbuch, Alt. Urt, Erste Lief., n° 8, p. 11-13 (avec note critique). - Le document est daté de 1061 indiction 2 ; or en 1061 l'indiction est 14 et en 1064 l'indiction est effectivement 2. Paléographiquement, c'est l'erreur du millésime qui est la plus facile à comprendre : MLXI pour MLXIV - Sur ce document, voir les observations de M. Margue, Autorité publique et conscience dynastique. Etudes sur les représentations du pouvoir princier entre Meuse et Moselle. Les origines du comté de Luxembourg (Xe - début du XIIe siècle), thèse de doctorat dactyl., t. II, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 1998-1999, p. 307-308.
(72) Dans son Codex diplomaticus Limburgensis : Ernst, Histoire du Limbourg, t. VI, Liège, 1847, n°21, p. 106.
(73) Egregius cornes Udo de Lemburc (p. 12).
Il est hautement probable que ce « comte Udon de Limbourg » soit identique au « seigneur Udon » mentionné dans un acte de 1065 comme successeur de Frédéric de Luxembourg en tant qu'avoué de l'abbaye de Saint-Trond (75). Il apparaît donc que cet Udon serait doublement l' « héritier » de Frédéric : et dans le comté de Limbourg et dans l'avouerie de Saint-Trond. Enfin, il est vraisemblable que ce seigneur ou comte Udon soit décédé en 1078 : à cette date, en effet, le Nécrologe de l'abbaye de Priim dans l'Eifel (76) mentionne un « comte Udon » qui serait effectivement notre Udon de Limbourg, avoué de Saint-Trond (77)
(75) Presente domno Vdone fratris mei successore eandem advocatiam in beneficio a nobis habente : acte de l'évêque Albéron III de Metz, frère de Frédéric de Luxembourg, délivré en 1065, ed. Gysseling et Koch, Diplomata Belgica, t. I, n° 217, p. 365-367 (voir ci-dessus, n. 20). Notons qu'à la mort de Frédéric de Luxembourg (1065) l'avouerie de Stavelot-Malmedy échappa à son lignage et fut confiée par l'empereur Henri IV au nouveau duc de Basse-Lotharingie Godefroid le Barbu ; elle passera ensuite aux mains du comte Albert III de Namur (1070) : Petit, « L'avouerie de l'abbaye de Stavelot », p. 143.
(76) Prüm : Allemagne, Rhénanie-Palatinat.
(77) Udo comes : Annales necrologici Prumienses, éd. G. Waitz, M. G. H., SS., t. XIII, p. 222 [1078] (extrait du Liber aureus Prumiensis, rédigé à partir de l'année 1039). Ed. en fac-similé par Reiner Noldf.n, Das « Goldene Buch » von Prüm (Liber aureus Prumiensis), Prüm, 1997, p. 240 (= f° 113 v°). Nous remercions notre collègue Ludwig Falkenstein d'avoir mis cette dernière édition à notre disposition
Sources
↑ http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00050319&tree=LEO
Jean-Louis Kupper (2007) Les origines du duché de Limbourg-sur-Vesdre", Revue belge de Philologie et d'Histoire Année 85-3-4 pp. 609-637 [1]
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). VI 26 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00050319&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LOTHARINGIAN%20(UPPER)%20NOBILITY.htm#WaleranIIdied1081A
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. | LIMBURG Udon (I58932)
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| 7491 |
note : no dates attached to this profile - there is a gap of one hundred years of the estimated dates between this & the next generations
Eithne, sister to Mac Niad, son of Lugha, (possibly Lughaid), of the race of Ith[1]
Spouse: Mogha-Lamha, son of Lughaid Allathach (Allathain)[2]
Eithne was born in 0040. Eithne Lugdach ... [3]
Name
Name: Eithne
Sources
↑ O'Halloran, p.p. 234, 241, added 2014-07-25, amb
↑ Tóruigheacht Dhiarmuda Agus Gráinne, p. 89, Volume 2, By Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, added 2014-07-25, amb
↑ Entered by Katherine Wall, Wednesday, October 23, 2013.
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
Lugdach-1 created by Katherine Wall for on 23 Oct 13.
Eithne-1 created through the import of O'Bryan Family tree.ged on Sep 6, 2011 by Tim Tropeck. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Tim and others. | LUGDACH Eithne Ingen (I59373)
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| 7492 |
Note from Margaret Sargent Kane:
We had been lead to believe that the birth of my grandfather, Bert Malcolm
Sargent, was either illigitiment or that the marriage of his parents was a
"shotgun" arrangement. This was until we found the marriage license ofhis
parents, C. C. Sargent (AKA Charles C and Chester C.) and Emma Hald,
showing their marriage by the Justice of the Peace on February 12, 1871 at
the home of her father H. C. Hald (the Logcabin Ranch, Wasco Co, near
Mitchell, Or.) Bert's death Certificate lists his date of birth asFebruary
14, 1874 in Nevada, three years after the marriage.
We've searched in Nevada, Idaho, and Oregon for Bert's place of birth or a
divorce record of Chester and Emma to no avail.
Emma, born Jan. 11, 1855, Oregon Territory, and Chester apparently hadjust
the one child. Emma later married James Cate of Baker, OR. (dateunknown).
They had four children; May Emma Cate, married Edward Strum, Anna Clara
Cate, unmarried, school teacher, Roy E. Cate, a dentists, married Hazel
McClellend, and James, Cate, Jr. All of the Cates apparently lived in or
around Baker, OR.
Chester was a freighter, restaurant proprietor and store clerk in The
Dalles, OR.
Chester's father, Isaac, was quite a successful person. He arrived in
Oregon in 1862 where he homesteaded and founded the town of Mitchell, Or.
(now almost a goust town) where he operated a store. He freighted to the
mines in Canyon City, OR and was a merchant and a leading civic leader in
The Dalles, and a successful farmer in Wasco, Co. OR. just outside The
Dalles. (Which is now an important fruit growing area.)
From the HISTORY OF CENTRAL OREGON, Frederick A. Sargent remained on the 5
Mile farm in Wasco Co., Frank was a miner in Baker, OR. Frances died in
The Dalles, and Harriet lived in Portland.
While the families of Isaac and Chester prospered, Bert Sargent wasalways a
poor outcast of the Sargents of The Dalles. He was a shepherd, minor, and
town marshal, around Baker, OR. and a janitor and security guard for a
department store in Portland, OR.
Bert married Margaret Forhan of Emmett, ID on Dec. 7, 1898 in Caldwell,ID.
They had two sons, William Bert, my father, and Melvin, who died at age 4.
While The Dalles Sargents are buried in an elaborate mausoleum in the Odd
Fellows Cemetery in The Dalles, Melvin is buried in a barely marked,paupers
grave several hundred feet away in the same
cemetery.
Bert died Sep. 17, 1933 in Portland, OR.
Note from Margaret Sargent Kane:
We had been lead to believe that the birth of my grandfather, Bert Malcolm
Sargent, was either illigitiment or that the marriage of his parents was a
"shotgun" arrangement. This was until we found the marriage license ofhis
parents, C. C. Sargent (AKA Charles C and Chester C.) and Emma Hald,
showing their marriage by the Justice of the Peace on February 12, 1871 at
the home of her father H. C. Hald (the Logcabin Ranch, Wasco Co, near
Mitchell, Or.) Bert's death Certificate lists his date of birth asFebruary
14, 1874 in Nevada, three years after the marriage.
We've searched in Nevada, Idaho, and Oregon for Bert's place of birth or a
divorce record of Chester and Emma to no avail.
Emma, born Jan. 11, 1855, Oregon Territory, and Chester apparently hadjust
the one child. Emma later married James Cate of Baker, OR. (dateunknown).
They had four children; May Emma Cate, married Edward Strum, Anna Clara
Cate, unmarried, school teacher, Roy E. Cate, a dentists, married Hazel
McClellend, and James, Cate, Jr. All of the Cates apparently lived in or
around Baker, OR.
Chester was a freighter, restaurant proprietor and store clerk in The
Dalles, OR.
Chester's father, Isaac, was quite a successful person. He arrived in
Oregon in 1862 where he homesteaded and founded the town of Mitchell, Or.
(now almost a goust town) where he operated a store. He freighted to the
mines in Canyon City, OR and was a merchant and a leading civic leader in
The Dalles, and a successful farmer in Wasco, Co. OR. just outside The
Dalles. (Which is now an important fruit growing area.)
From the HISTORY OF CENTRAL OREGON, Frederick A. Sargent remained on the 5
Mile farm in Wasco Co., Frank was a miner in Baker, OR. Frances died in
The Dalles, and Harriet lived in Portland.
While the families of Isaac and Chester prospered, Bert Sargent wasalways a
poor outcast of the Sargents of The Dalles. He was a shepherd, minor, and
town marshal, around Baker, OR. and a janitor and security guard for a
department store in Portland, OR.
Bert married Margaret Forhan of Emmett, ID on Dec. 7, 1898 in Caldwell,ID.
They had two sons, William Bert, my father, and Melvin, who died at age 4.
While The Dalles Sargents are buried in an elaborate mausoleum in the Odd
Fellows Cemetery in The Dalles, Melvin is buried in a barely marked,paupers
grave several hundred feet away in the same
cemetery.
Bert died Sep. 17, 1933 in Portland, OR. | Hald Emma (I51136)
|
| 7493 |
Note on name: Luxembourg is often used to name Frederik, although this place was not specifically associated with him in his own lifetime.
Baldwin's summary on Frederik's father's profile page:
Frédéric, d. 1065 [Sigebert de Gembloux, Chronica, MGH SS 6: 361], advocate of Stavelot-Malmedy; duke of Lower Lorraine 1046-1065; m. (1) Gerberge, daughter of Eustache I, count of Boulogne ["Mathildis filia Gerberge, genuit Eustachium comitem Buloiensem et Gerbergam, Friderici ducis uxorem." Genealogia ex stirpe sancti Arnulfi, c. 4, MGH SS 25: 383]; m. (2) Ide (or Raelendis), who later m. (2) Albert, count of Namur ["Hiis probatis Albertus comes Namucensis cum in Arduenna silva moraretur gratia venandi, et veneratione loci diverteret cum uxore sua Ida, quem prius fuerat uxor ducis Frederici, ..." Chronicon S. Hubert Andaginensis, c. 17 (24), MGH SS 8: 577; "Huius Frederici relictam nomine Raelendem duxit comes Namurcensis Albertus et genuit comitem Godefridum." Aubri de Troisfontaines, s.a. 1065, MGH SS 23: 795; "Comes vero Namucensis Albertus per aliam Idam uxorem suam dictum Bullonium reclamabat." ibid., s.a. 1075, p. 798]. For Frédéric as advocate of Stavelot-Malmedy, see above under his brother Heinrich. In 1048, Frédéric was named duke of Lower Lorraine, at the same time that Gerard d'Alsace was named duke of Upper Lorraine ["Ducatum eius Gerardus de Alsatia, alterum ver ducatum Fridericus optinet." Sigebert de Gembloux, Chronica, s.a. 1048, MGH SS 6: 359]. On his death in 1065, he was succeeded by Godefroid "the Bearded" ["Friderico duce mortuo, Godefridus ducatum recepit." ibid., s.a. 1065, p. 361]
Kupper writes:
Frédéric était le fils d'un autre Frédéric, comte dans le Moselgau, décédé en 1019 ; il était le frère des comtes Henri (f1047) et Giselbert (f1059) « de Luxembourg » (13) ; le frère aussi de l'évêque Albéron III de Metz (1047 - 1072) dont nous reparlerons. Retenons enfin que le comte Henri, frère de Frédéric, exercera, de 1042 à 1047, les fonctions de duc de Bavière (14). Frédéric « de Luxembourg », cadet de famille, fils de cadet de famille, mena sa barque avec beaucoup d'intelligence ou de chance politique. Il est vrai qu'il était né sous des auspices plutôt favorables puisqu'il appartenait à la puissante et envahissante parentèle connue sous le nom de Maison d'Ardenne - Luxembourg (15).
C'est à l'influence de son lignage, sans doute, que Frédéric doit d'avoir un jour obtenu du souverain l'une ou l'autre fonction comtale (16). Dès 1033, le comte Frédéric détient également l'avouerie de l'abbaye de Stavelot-Malmedy : protecteur laïc de ce riche monastère, il exerce donc, au nom du roi et de l'abbé, l'autorité publique sur un domaine foncier considérable qui s'étire, d'est en ouest, depuis la vallée de l'Amblève jusqu'aux méandres de l'Ourthe (17).
En 1046, il devient duc de Basse-Lotharingie ou de Lothier, ce qui revient à dire qu'il a désormais pour mission, toujours au nom du roi, de maintenir l'ordre et la paix sur une vaste portion du royaume germanique, comprise grosso modo entre l'Escaut - frontière avec la France - et le Rhin (18).
En 1060, ou peu avant cette date, Frédéric met la main sur l'avouerie de l'abbaye de Saint-Trond en Hesbaye (19) : il la tiendra en bénéfice de son propre frère l'évêque Albéron III de Metz. Cette riche abbaye était effectivement une possession de l'église messine (20). On le voit bien : la maison d'Ardenne-Luxembourg se montrait fort habile à pousser ses pions (21). Le duc de Basse-Lotharingie impose désormais sa prépondérance au-delà de la Meuse, dans un secteur situé au nord-ouest de la principauté épiscopale de Liège qui, à l'époque, est déjà une puissante réalité politique (22).
Sources
Jean-Louis Kupper (2007) Les origines du duché de Limbourg-sur-Vesdre", Revue belge de Philologie et d'Histoire Année 85-3-4 pp. 609-637 [1]
Stewart Baldwin (compiler) Father's Profile on Henry II project: http://home.earthlink.net/~henryproject/hproject/prov/frede000.htm
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band III, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1976, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. Page 106 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00091990&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LUXEMBOURG.htm#Fredericdied1065 | LUXEMBOURG Frederick (I58935)
|
| 7494 |
NOTE. Death year is only intended indication. This person also had no known surname.
Contents
[HIDE]
1 Biography
1.1 1008 Birth
1.2 Parents
1.3 First Marriage, Spouse Unknown
1.4 Marriage
1.5 1030 Witnessed Charter of Robert II to Mont-Saint-Michel
1.6 1042 Witnessed Charter of William II to Mont-Saint-Michel
1.7 1045 Banished
1.8 1047 Supported Rebellion
1.9 1054 Witnesses Charter of William II to Mont-Saint-Michel
1.10 Donation of Churches on Guernsey to Abbery of Marmoutier
1.11 1060 Marriage to Adelle of Brionne
1.12 1066 Battle of Hastings
1.13 Abbey of Saint-Sauveur
1.14 1073 Death and Grants
1.15 Death
1.16 Issue
2 Research Notes
2.1 Undocumented Children'
2.2 Disconnected Relationship
2.3 Disproven Existence of Yves St Sauveur
3 Sources
Biography
Néel [1]
Nielli, Nigellum (Latin forms of namne) [1]
Niel (Nigel) IV Vicomte de St. Sauveur [2]
Neel I Vicomte de /Cotentin/ [2]
Note: Cawley refers to Néel as "Néel II" because he is the second Néel in the line that Cawley (FMG) has documented. Some popular genealogies refer to him as Néel III, because these genealogies show an earlier Néel as well.
1008 Birth
He was born about 1008 in St Sauveur, Cotentin/Manche, Normandy. [2]
Parents
Néel (II) was the son of Néel (I), Vicomte de Contentin.[1]
Father: Niel (Nigel) III Vicomte de ST. SAUVEUR b: ABT 985 in St Sauveur, Cotentin/Manche, Normandy [2]
Mother: Adela d' EU b: ABT 985 in Eu, Dieppe, Seine-Inferieure, Normandy. [2]
First Marriage, Spouse Unknown
Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown[2] Children
Has Children Ivo Vicomte de COTENTIN b: ABT 1023 in Cotentin Penninsula, Manche, Normandy, France[2]
Has Children Niel V (Eudes) Vicomte de ST. SAUVEUR b: ABT 1035 in St Sauveur, Cotentin/Manche, Normandy, France[2]
Has Children daughter de ST. SAUVEUR b: ABT 1036 in St Sauveur, Manche, Normandy, France[2]
Marriage
Paul Reed, citing Rev. Statham's "The Descent of the family of Statham" (London, 1925), only mentions Adele, daughter of William de Vernon as a wife of Niel. However, the charter witnessed by Niel and his wife Adele, along with nearly all of their children, took place after all of the children were born. Thus any prior wife would not be indicated. The dates of Niel's 1st children would indicate an earlier wife. The charter did not mention the son Ivo (only sons Roger, William, another William, and Gerard), but did mention two other daughters besides Bilelde (Emma and Mahildis, either one of which could be the daughter that married Robert Bigod). [2]
1030 Witnessed Charter of Robert II to Mont-Saint-Michel
"…Nielli vicecomitis, Nielli filii eius…" witnessed the charter dated to [1030] under which Robert II Duke of Normandy donated "in comitatu Abrincatensi villam…Sancti Johannis" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel. [1]
1042 Witnessed Charter of William II to Mont-Saint-Michel
"…Willelmus filius Guillelmi, Niellis juvenis, Hatuardus Rex, Hunfredus Namo, Guillelmus filius Ranoldi, Rogerius filius Hunfredi, Joffredus vicecomes, Hugo filius Huberti, Hunfredus Parvus" witnessed the charter dated to [1042] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy donated "nostras insulas Serc et Aurrene, propter medietatem Grenere" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel, supported by "Rannulfo filio Anschitilli". [1]
1045 Banished
He quarrelled with Ranulph, Count of Bayeux, about the Isles of La Marche. Banished 1045. [3]
1047 Supported Rebellion
Guillaume de Poitou records that "Nigellum præsidem Constantini pagi" supported "Guido filius Burgundionum comitis" in his rebellion, dated to [1047]. Guillaume of Jumièges records that Guillaume II Duke of Normandy granted “castrum Brioci” to “Widonem...filium Rainaldi Burgundionem comitis” who rebelled against the duke with “Nigellum Constantiniensem præsidem” but was defeated at “Valedunas” in 1047. Orderic Vitalis records that "Ranulfum Bajocensem ac Haymonem Dentatum et Nigellum de Constantino" rebelled against Guillaume II Duke of Normandy at the battle "apud Vallesdunas". [1]
1054 Witnesses Charter of William II to Mont-Saint-Michel
"…Nielli vicecomitis…" witnessed the charter dated 1054 under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy confirmed the donation of "terram…Sancta Columba…dedit Niellus clericus" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel. [1]
Donation of Churches on Guernsey to Abbery of Marmoutier
"Niellus vicecomes" donated six churches on Guernsey to the abbey of Marmoutier, for the souls of and with the consent of "uxore mea Adila…filiis nostris Rotgerio…et Willelmo, alteroque Willelmo et Girardo…cum sororibus eorum Emma, Bilelde atque Mahelde", by charter dated to [1060], witnessed by "…Ingulfus dapifer, Rogerius filius Toraldi, Unfredus filius Ansquitilli, Rainaldus Foliot, Ricardus de Sturavilla, Gosfridus filius Rotberti Venatoris, Nigellus de Glanvilla, Rodulfus camerarius…Serlus filius Alveredi, Ricardus Britesonis filius". [1]
"There are still extant proofs of the charter of Duke William, by which he gave to the Abbey of Marmoutier the several churches which had belonged to the Vicomtes of St. Sauveur, and which were situated in the Island of Guernsey (Greneroy), one of the Isles of La Manche. Copies of this charter are to be found in the Bibl. National of France, MS. Latin, 3441, t. 1, p. 194; 12,878, f. 150; and 12,880, fol. 15; and in vol. 77 of Baluze's Coll., f. 43. [3]
"This grant included the churches of St. Peter de Portu, St. Andrew de Patenti Pomerio, St. Sanson Episcopi, St. Martin de la Berlosa, St. Mary de Tortevalle, and St. Trinity, with all their tithes of fruits as well as of animals. It was made in the presence of himself, signing as Earl (Comitis), Meheldis, his wife, Robert, his son, Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Geoffrey, Bishop of Constantine, Ralf the Chamberlain, William Fitz Osborn, William de Durvilla (Clinevilla), Ralf Taison, Roger Montgomery, Richard de Belfo, Richard, Vicomte, Gauteu Vifardi, Roger de Bellainonte, and certain clerics. [3]
Earl William described himself as holding this property in dominion, but the true owner, the Vicomte of St. Sauveur, was still a person of consequence out of Normandy, and his family were ancient benefactors of the Abbey of Marmoutier. About the same time (therefore probably in 1048) the monks obtained from the Vicomte of St. Sauveur for a consideration a charter which would be of interest under any circumstances, but which is especially important to this inquiry. Copies are to be found in the Bibl. Natl., MS. Latin, 3441, t. 1, p. 196; Coll. Baluze, vol. 77, f. 58. It is in these words:- "Noverint cuncti futuris nobis temporibus successuri Niellum quondam Vicecomitem Normannensis patriae, auctirizasse Sancto Martino ejusque monachis Majoris Monasterii quicquid comes ejusdem patriae donaverat eis in insula que Grenerolium nominatur, ita ut, si aliquando, favente Deo, reverteretur in supradictam patriam atque in honorem pristinum, unde ejectus erat quando istud fecit auctoramentum, partem quan- dam ex eisdem rebus quam ipse Canonicis Sancti Salvatoris donaverat, et monachis supradictis auctorizare non potestat (?), eosdem canonicis habere permitteret, et tertiam partem quadraginta libraram quas pro prefato acceperat auctoramento monarchis redderet, nisi ejectis canonicis, locum illum ipsi susceperunt, atque aliquos ex se ad habitandum ibidem constituerunt, quod si facere vellent, ipse canonicos expelleret, locumque monachis omni modis liberum traderet, ut in perpetuum. deinceps possiderent et locum et illarum partem rerum et universa postremo que ad eundem pertinent locum." [3]
"To this document were the following witnesses on the part of Nigel's family (de familia mea):-- Ingono senescal, Rainald Foliot, Richard de Sturgavilla, Gaufredi fil. Robert Venator, NIEILLO DE GLANVILLA, and Rudolf Cammerlengo, and a certain number of witnesses on the part of the Abbey. [3]
"There appears to be another charter, made before the same witnesses, in very similar terms, copies of which are also to be found in the Bibl. Natl. Collection; Moreau, vol. Xl., f. 202; Baluze, vol. 77, f. 46; MS. Latin, 5441, iv., p. 125. [3]
"Nigel de St. Sauveur was shortly afterwards restored to his possessions and honours, and by a charter, which is also copied in Latin (MS. 5441, t. 1, p. 195; Coll. Baluze, vol. 77, f. 36; and MS. Latin, 12,878, f. 131, and 12,880, f. 14), he confirmed the possessions of the same six churches to Marmoutier in the presence of Adela, his wife, Roger and William, his sons, Ingulfus dapifer, Rogerus fil. Toraldi, Unfredus filius Anquilli, Rainaldus, Foliot, Richard de Sturevilla (Sturgavilla), Gosfred fil. Robert Venator, NIGELLUS DE GLANVILLA, Rodulphus cameraria (9), Ranulfus Capellanus, Serlus filius Alveredi, Ricardus Britesonis filius, very nearly the same witnesses who attested the former charters made whilst the Albini family was in exile, therefore evidently closely connected with them, as indeed the Christian name of Nigel, in the case of Glanville, would seem to testify." [3]
1060 Marriage to Adelle of Brionne
He married Adela de Brionne, daughter of Gilbert de Brionne "Crespin" Comte d'Eu & his wife ---. "Niellus vicecomes" donated six churches on Guernsey to the abbey of Marmoutier, for the souls of and with the consent of "uxore mea Adila…filiis nostris Rotgerio…et Willelmo, alteroque Willelmo et Girardo…cum sororibus eorum Emma, Bilelde atque Mahelde", by charter dated to [1060]. Her parentage and marriage are confirmed by the charter dated 29 Aug 1060 under which "milite…Richardo…fratribus Willelmo…atque Balduino" donated "Gausberti Villa" to Chartres Saint-Père, which states that "Nigello" married "sororem suam", witnessed by "Willelmus filius Osberti, Walterius Giffardus…Rodbertus Bertrannus, Willelmo Marmio…Willelmus Corbucionis filius…Raberius et Willelmus de Vernone…Bernardus filius Vulmari". [1]
Probably Neel II, vicomte de Cotentin, who married Adela de Brionne and whose children include son Roger[4].
1066 Battle of Hastings
The Chronique de Normandie, based on le Roman de Rou, names "Noel de S. Sauveur le Viconte" among those who took part in the conquest of England in 1066. [1]
Abbey of Saint-Sauveur
"Nigellus vicecomes" founded the abbey of Saint-Sauveur by undated charter, dated to [1080] in the compilation. The charter of his brother Eudes (see above) clarifies that Néel [II] was the founder of Saint-Sauveur. However, the charter dated to [1073], under which William I King of England confirmed the donation by "Nielli filii alterius Nielli", previously made by "suus pater", of six churches on Guernsey to the abbey of Marmoutier[708] suggests that Néel [II] had died before this date. If this is correct, the foundation charter of Saint-Sauveur must be dated to before [1073]. [1]
Founded the Monastery of St. Sauveur in 1080. Nigel de Glanville witnessed his charter as "de familia mea" to Marmoutier in 1042, and again in 1060. [3]
He founded the abbey of Saint-Sauveur by undated charter, dated to [1080] in the compilation. The charter of his brother Eudes clarifies that Néel [II] was the founder of Saint-Sauveur. However, the charter dated to [1073], under which William I King of England confirmed the donation by "Nielli filii alterius Nielli", previously made by "suus pater", of six churches on Guernsey to the abbey of Marmoutier suggests that Néel [II] had died before this date. If this is correct, the foundation charter of Saint-Sauveur must be dated to before [1073]. [1]
1073 Death and Grants
He died 1 August, before 1073 or 1092.[1]
He died before 1073. [2]
A manuscript at Caen, which commemorates the death of Abbess Mathilde, daughter of William I King of England, names "Nigello vicecomite, Eudone vicecomite" among the deceased at "sancti Salvatoris de Constantino". The necrology of Saint-Sauveur records the death "pridie Id Aug" of "Nigellus vicecomes qui monachos hic constituit". [1]
A charter dated 1075 records that "comitissa Adeliz, Ricardi comitis filia, Roberti comitis soror" held "castrum…Hulme in Constantino" and that "Guido filius suus" (Guy Comte Palatin de Bourgogne) later granted it to "Nigello vicecomiti". "…Nielli vicecomitis…" witnessed the charter dated to [1047 or before] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy confirmed the donation by "Adelelmi…Beatricis uxor eius…Rotberti filius eius" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel. Delisle suggests that Guillaume II Duke of Normandy confiscated his assets after the battle of Val des Dunes. However, the subsequent references in primary sources to Vicomte Néel suggest that this confiscation, if it took place, must have been reversed. [1]
Death
Néel died before 1073. [5]
The charter dated to about 1073, under which William I King of England confirmed the donation by "Nielli filii alterius Nielli", previously made by suus pater, of six churches on Guernsey to the abbey of Marmoutier[6] suggests that he had died before this date.
Issue
Néel & his wife had eight children: [1]
Néel [III]. [1] Niel (St Sauveur) de St Sauveur, Currently shown as b. Manche, 1008
Roger[1] Roger de St. Sauveur, Currently shown as b. 1060
Guillaume[1]Guillaume (Aubigny) d'Aubigny , Currently shown as b. Normandy 1010
Gerard[1]
Emma[1]
Bileldis[1]Billeheude (St Sauveur) de Bohun, Currently shown as b. St Sauveur 1012
Mathilde[1]
Research Notes
Undocumented Children'
Yves (St Sauveur) de Cotentin, Currently shown as b. Cotentin 1005
Ivo St Sauveur, Currently shown as b. 1026
While popular genealogies cite Néel (II) Vicomte de Cotentin and his wife Adele de Brion as the parents for Ivo, Cawley cites only Neel, Roger, Guillaume, Gerard, Emma, Bileldis, and Mathilde as their children.
Disconnected Relationship
Guillaume d'Aubigny was at one time shown as the son of Néel de St. Sauveur II (abt. 0985 - aft. 1066) and his wife Adele Brionne. No basis for this relationship has been found, and the relationship has been disconnected.
Disproven Existence of Yves St Sauveur
It has become clear that Ivo or Yves St Sauveur de Cotentin, who appears in some popular genealogies[7] never in fact existed, and his existence is considered disproven. As a result, he has been de-linked from the following other profiles, which themselves may need further research:
Parents: He has been shown as the son of Néel (II) de St Sauveur, Vicomte de Cotentin and his wife Adele de Brionne. However, Cawley cites only Leticie, Roger, Guillaume, Gerard, Emma, Bileldis, and Mathilde, but not Yves, as their children. [1]
Marriages. He has been shown as the husband of Emme de Bretagne and Gisele de Beaumont, but as someone who never existed, he cannot have had wives.
Children. He has been shown as the father of the following children, but as someone who never existed, he cannot have children, and therefore the link as parent and child has been broken. Further research regarding the parenthood of these persons is required:
Nigel (Cotentin) de Cotentin, born Cotentin 1043. Niel /Nigel de Cotentin, Lord of Halton, Constable of Chester; [7] Nigel (Cotentin) de Cotentin, born Cotentin 1043 [8] Nigel (B. Halton)[9] Weber reports that Kay Allen referred to Ivo as father (with Emma of Brittany) of Neel/Nigel and Odard [2]Neel (Nigel) Constable of CHESTER , of Halton b: ABT 1043 in Cotentin Penninsula, Manche, Normandy, France (has children) Weber reports that Kay Allen, probably giving the "classic" view of Ivo's issue, states that Ivo was father of Nigel and alleged father of Odard. There are a lot of people that do not accept this due to a lack of evidence.[2]
Odard Cotentin, born Normandy 1046. Odard, 1st Lord of Dutton; [7] Odard Cotentin, born Normandy 1046 [8] Odard (Lord of Dutton)[9] Weber reports that Kay Allen referred to Ivo as father (with Emma of Brittany) of Neel/Nigel and Odard [2]Odard Lord of DUTTON b: ABT 1046 in Cotentin Penninsula, Manche, Normandy, France (has children) Weber reports that Kay Allen, probably giving the "classic" view of Ivo's issue, states that Ivo was father of Nigel and alleged father of Odard. There are a lot of people that do not accept this due to a lack of evidence.[2]
Edward Lord Hasewall , born Normandy 1048. Edard, Lord of Heswall and 3 others [7]
Waltheof Stockport, born Stockport 1053.
Wolfric Hatton, born Normandy 1054. Wolfrid, Lord of Hatton; [7]
Wolfaith (St Sauveur) de Hatton, born Cheshire 1054. [8]Wolfaith de HATTON b: ABT 1054 in Cotentin Penninsula, Manche, Normandy, France (has children) Weber reports that Adrian Channing referred to Ivo as father of Wolfaith and ancestor of the FitzNigel family. [2]
Hooswyne (Horswine) Shrigley, born Normandy 1055.
Walmere de Hazelwall, born Hazelwall, 1057.
The different generations named Néel St. Sauveur, as well as their associated charters, are sometimes conflated.
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.23 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Normandy, Avranches Néel (II) Vicomte de Cotentin Accessed Sept 19, 2018 jhd
↑ 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 Jim Weber. The Phillips, Weber, Kirk, & Staggs families of the Pacific Northwest Niel (Nigel) IV Updated June 11, 2015. Weber cites a note from Paul Reed (8 July 1998) at the Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval (at groups - google.com) for some of his material. Accessed Sept 15, 2018 jhd
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 "Records of the Anglo-Norman House of Glanville from A.D. 1050 to 1880", by WM. URMSTON S. GLANVILLE-RICHARDS, Esq., publ. 1882 by Mitchell and Hughes, London, England
↑ Neel II Saint Sauveur], Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families. Normandy, Cotentin, 3A Vicomtes de Cotentin, Seigneurs de St Sauveur. accessed May 2018
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, [https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/normabc.htm#NeelIISaintSauvedied1092 Vicomtes de Cotentin, Seigneurs de Saint-Sauveur.
↑ Delisle (1867) Pièces justificatives, 33, p. 36.
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Geni. Ivo Yvron de Contentin not Vicomte de Contentin Added by:Tompkins on March 30, 2007; Managed by: Margaret (C) and 76 others; Curated by: Angus Wood-Salomon. Accessed Sept 15 2018 jhd
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Wikitree Data Field, Not Otherwise Sourced
↑ 9.0 9.1 Jorge H. Castelli. Tudor Place. Eure Family Accessed Sept 15, 2018 jhd
See also:
Van Torhoudt, Eric, (2006) "Les Sièges du Pouvoir des Néel, Vicomtes dans le Cotentin" in Flambard Héricher ed. Les lieux de pouvoir au Moyen Âge en Normandie et sur ses marges (Places of power in the Middle Ages in Normandy and its margins by Anne-Marie Flambard Héricher, publ. by CRAHM publications , 2006) - https://books.google.be/books?id=ckI5XFb4WhoC | St SAUVEUR Néel (I60056)
|
| 7495 |
Note: Also called Wulfhilde.
Name
Name: Ulfhide (Wolfhildis) // [1][2][3]
Name: Ulfhide /Saxony/[4]
Birth
Birth: ABT 1079, Saxe, Prussia[5]
Death
Death: 29 DEC 1126, Altdorf, Uri, Switzerland[6]
Burial
Burial: AFT 29 DEC 1126, Altdorf, Uri, Switzerland[7]
Marriage
Husband: Magnus UNKNOWN
Wife: Zsofia UNKNOWN
Child: Ulfhide (Wolfhildis) UNKNOWN
Child: Eilika UNKNOWN
Marriage: 1071[8]
Sources
↑ Source: #S2
↑ Source: #S3
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S004444
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S4
↑ Source: #S4
Source: S2 Pedigree Resource File
Source: S3 Ancestral File
Source: S4 ThofundssonAnces.ged
Source: S004444 Ancestry.
Source S2295565934Ancestry. | BILLUNG Wulfhild (I59433)
|
| 7496 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I56202)
|
| 7497 |
Note: DOB of 100 is impossilbe. It was changed to c390 to agree with his wife.
Sources
SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestral File # (familysearch.org) For this family group: Sources: - person: F. Veillon - family: Y.Gazagnes-Gazanhe; F.Veillon Cites: d'Alamenie | De RUTHENES Walmar (I59139)
|
| 7498 |
NOTE: From email from edith.bartley@worldnet.att.net 11/27/97: "There has been a lot of confusion as the date that Ralph and family left England. There was more than one ship in 1635 named the James. Ralph was not on the April ship, he was the ship of the same name which sailed in the summer. Hotten has it right. The passengers were certified as eligible to leave England on July 13, 1635, and the ship would have left soon after, depending on the winds and whatever. I think they arrived in Boston in September, but I don't have that documented. Planters of the Commonwealth by Charles Edward Banks states that the James sailed for New England the latter part of July and arrived in Boston the last week in September. Included in the passenger lists are Ralph Farnham, age 32, barber, destination Ipswich; Mrs. Alice Farnham, 28; Mary Farnham, 7; Thomas Farnham, 4; and Ralph Farnham, 2.
Also on the same ship was Solomon Martin, age 16, shipwright, destination Gloucester. I have assumed this is the same Solomon Martin who later married Alice Farnham after they both were widowed. She would have been about twelve years older than he. Is this a correct assumption?"
They settled in Ipswich where Ralph became the first town crier. | FARNHAM Ralph (I38188)
|
| 7499 |
Note: Geni [1] l'identifie comme étant Perrine Rousseau (Cloutier), née vers 1576 St. Jean-Baptiste, Mortagne-au-Perche, Orne, Normandie, France, décédée le 5 Mai 1659 (78-87 ans) en Champagne, (Dordogne), Aquitaine, France, Famille proche : Fille de Nicolas Cloutier et de Marie Anne Cloutier. Épouse de Paul-Michel Dupont avant 1696. Mère de Sainte Dupont; Renée Dupont; Guillaume Dupont; Femelle Dupont et Guillaume DuPont. Sœur de Denis Cloutier et Raoullin Cloutier. Toutes les sources mentionnées réfèrent à Perrine «inconnue». Aucune source fiable identifiée.
Contents
[HIDE]
1 Biographie
1.1 Enfants connus / Known children
2 Sources
3 Voir aussi / See also
Biographie
Perrine Unknown (~1571 - )
Père et mère: Inconnus.
Naissance: Elle serait néet vers 1571 à Notre-Dame, Mortagne, France.
Mariage: Elle épouse Paul-Michel DuPont vers 1595 en France.
Décès: Elle serait décède en France.
Enfants connus / Known children
of Paul-Michel duPont & Perrine Unknown?
Sainte Dupont (~1596 to 13 Jul 1680) m1. Michel Lemusier 26 Feb 1612, m2. Zacharie Cloutier 18 Jul 1616
Renée Dupont (1602 to ) m. Germain Villette
Sources
↑ Perrine Rousseau
Fichier origine - Sainte Dupont.
Voir aussi / See also
tree Nos origines
Généalogie Québec
Geneanet Xainte Dupont | UNKNOWN Perrine (I60278)
|
| 7500 |
NOTE: Grace Limeburner in "Stories of Brooksville" lists Joseph b.Oct. 23, 1792, but omits Simeon as children of Matthew and Martha.
Matthew served in the Revolutionary War as a Private in Capt. Nathaniel Fales's Co., Col. Samuel McCobb's Regt., Aug. 1, 1779-Aug. 15, 1779 as part of the Penobscot Expedition. | FARNHAM Matthew (I38149)
|
| 7501 |
Note: He and his brother Bardas Skleros belonged to the great Skleros family, which owned enormous estates at the eastern outskirts of asia Minor. His mother Gregoria descended from Basil I's brother Bardas. | SKLEROS Konstantinos (I57900)
|
| 7502 |
Note: Job was a caulker by trade. | TAPLEY Job (I38043)
|
| 7503 |
Note: Married Gavisla, also called Guisle. | MELGUEIL Berengar (I59588)
|
| 7504 |
NOTE: Not the same person Eithne Ollamhdha (0533-)
"The wife of the illustrious Cormac, King of Ireland, was Eithne Ollanhdha, daughter of Dunluing, who was the son of Eana Niadh." [1] (NOTE: Dates don't match up. More research required)
Geoffrey Keating, in his General History of Ireland, tells of the way in which Eithne dealt with her husband's mistress, Ciarnuit, forcing her to grind large quantities of corn (wheat) everyday. [2]
Sources
↑ The hermit of Glenconella page: 107 by G. Cowie, pub: Ireland 1820
↑ The General History of Ireland page 275-5; by Geoffrey Keating pub: 1732 | OLLAMHDHA Eithne (I58518)
|
| 7505 |
Note: Or Edith of Parneck, daughter of Seigfried, or Hedwige of Eppenstein, daughter of Markwart III, Duke of Carinthia, and his wife, Luitburg.
Death: 17 JUL 1112, Germany. Age: 64-65 | FLINSBACH Hedwig (I58058)
|
| 7506 |
Note: Original profile DOB was 130. But his father was born c065, so this is very unlikely. There is another profile, to be merged with this one, with DOB of c100, which is a more reasonably estimate.
His original DOD is 142, but his is before the birth of his son Meirchion in 150, so the DOD has been changed to after 150.
Sources
Historical Traditions and Facts relating to Newport and Caerleon, by a member of the Caerleon and Monmouthshire antiquarian society by Charles Octavius S. Morgan 1880, p. 7. This shows the despondency from Cyllin, son of Caradog, to Owain, to Merchion....and farther. | CYLLIN Owain (I59278)
|
| 7507 |
NOTE: Ralph II died just before the witch trials commended and his sons Ralph III and John were summoned as witnesses.-- per Russell C. Farnham | FARNHAM Ralph (I38185)
|
| 7508 |
Note: ref: Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org) (25 Apr 10) -
Thored (Old English: Ðoreð or Þoreð; fl. 979-992) was a 10th century ealdorman of York, ruler of the southern half of the old Kingdom of Northumbria on behalf of the king of England. He was the son of either Gunnar or Oslac, northern ealdormen. If he was the former, he may had attained adulthood by the 960s, when a man of his name raided Westmorland. Other potential appearances in the records are likewise uncertain until 979, the point from which Thored's period as ealdorman can be accurately dated.
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Thored, son of Gunner" ravaged Westmoreland in 966.[1]
There are speculations that "Thored was Earl of the part of Northumbria which was previously called Deira, maybe Yorkshire, the territory being different from Northumbria which Ælfric "ealdorman" ruled around the same time" [2][3]
Married HILDA, daughter of ---.
Thored & his wife had one child: Gunner aka: Gunnar
Thorad is probably "UNCONNECTED NOBILITY OF DANISH ORIGIN" [4]
Although historians differ in their opinions about his relationship, if any, to Kings Edgar the Peaceable and Edward the Martyr, it is generally thought that he enjoyed a good relationship with King Æthelred II. His daughter Ælfgifu married Æthelred. Thored was ealdorman in Northumbria for much of Æthelstan's reign, disappearing from the sources in 992 after being appointed by Æthelred to lead an expedition against the Vikings.
Two accounts of Thored's origins have been offered by modern historians. The first is that he was a son of Oslac, ealdorman of York from 966 until his exile in 975. This argument is partly based on the assertion by the Historia Eliensis, that Oslac had a son named Thorth (i.e. "Thored"). The other suggestion, favored by most historians, is that he was the son of a man named Gunnar. This Gunnar is known to have held land in the East and North Ridings of Yorkshire.
All in all, the combined evidence suggests that Æthelred's first wife was Ælfgifu, the daughter of Earl Thored. This magnate is likely to have been the Thored who was a son of Gunnar and earl of (southern) Northumbria.
Sources
↑ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
↑ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, E, 991
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20nobility.htm#_ftn814
↑ MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | GUNNARSSON Thored (I59211)
|
| 7509 |
Note: Sister of Oleg of Novgorod.
According to Yoakimovski Chronicle, Efanda was a Norwegian (Urmanian) princess and the wife of prince Rurik of Novgorod.
Research Notes
Some online family trees list her as the mother of Askold, oldest known ruler of Kyiv.
Name: Edvina of Novgorod, Grand Duchess
Birth: ABT 850
Sources
See also:
https://www.geni.com/people/Efanda-Grand-Duchess-of-Novgorod/6000000014811838066 accessed 9 May 2024
Ancestry family trees | UNKNOWN Effenda (I58815)
|
| 7510 |
NOTE: The info below is a hypothesis only - it is not based on proven facts
Konrad [Kuno] von Öhningen[1]
Conrad/Konrad Kuno I, Duke of Swabia. His appointment as duke marked the return of Conradian rule over Swabia for the first time since 948.[2]
From Wikipedia:[2]
There is considerable confusion about Conrad and his family. He is often identified with Cuno of Öhningen. The identities of his parents are not known for certain. His father is sometimes said to be Count Udo from the Wetterau, and his mother an unknown daughter of Herbert I, Count of Vermandois.
When Duke Otto I unexpectedly died during the Imperial campaign in Italy of 981-982, he left no heirs. To fill the vacancy, Emperor Otto II (who may have been Conrad's brother-in-law) appointed Conrad as Duke of Swabia. Conrad is notable for being the first Swabian duke to keep the title in the family; after his death in 997 he was succeeded by his son Hermann II.
Uncertain Wife
According to Wikipedia, the identity of his wife is debated as either Judith, daughter of Adalbert of Marchtal or Reglint (or Richlind), daughter of Liudolf, Duke of Swabia.[2]
According to Medlands, his wife is either Richlind, daughter of Emperor Otto I King of Germany & his second wife Adelais of Burgundy or the daughter of Liudolf, Duke of Swabia, son of Emperor Otto I.[1]
Children
With his wife, Conrad had at least six children, including:
Hermann II, who succeeded his father,[2] died 2/3 May 1003, married Gerberga of Burgundy, widow of Hermann Graf von Werl, daughter of Conrad I "le Pacifique" King of Burgundy [Welf] & his second wife Mathilde de France [Carolingian]; had issue[1]
possibly Ekbert[1]
possibly Liutpold[1]
possibly Liutold[1][2]
possibly C/Konrad[1][2]
possibly Ita, married Rudolf II, Count of Altdorf[2]
an unnamed daughter/perhaps Adelia, married Vladimir the Great[1][2]
unknown (possibly Judith), married (1) an unnamed husband from Rheinfelden,[1] and (2) Adalbert II, Count of Metz (died 1033)[2]
Kunigarde/Kunizza "Hemma", died 6 Mar 1020, married Friedrich I, probably count of Dießen[1][2]
Research Note
Unsourced/uncertain parents Eberhard II Lahngau and Judith Vermandois were detached 4 March 2021 until adequate sourcing is found.
This family is a complete mess. The death date "20 AUG" appears to correspond with Konrad von Öhningen, Duke of Swabia (therefore a duplicate of Schwaben-31), of unknown or very uncertain parentage. Conrad died Aug 20, 997. See Konrad I, duke of Swabia and Franconia Nobility - Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed Mar 2021 Swabia
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Wikipedia: Conrad I, Duke of Swabia
SGM thread
SGM thread
Wikiwand: Konrad I (Schwaben)
FMG: Franconia
Konrad Herzog von Schwaben, Graf von Oenningen, manfred-hiebl.de/genealogie
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021. [1] | SCHWABEN Konrad (I58257)
|
| 7511 |
Note: The wife of Eystein Hardråde is often said to have been a Solveig Halvdansdotter, but this is an undocumented claim. She would not have been the same person as Solva, mother of Halvdan Kvitbein.
Asa Eysteinsdottir was born to King Eystein Trondsson "the Severe" and Solveig Halfdansdotter c.0708 in Oppland, Norway.[1]
She married Hálfdan "hvítbeinn," ("Whiteshanks"), King of Norway, in Vestfold, Norway.
Children of the marriage:
Eystein "Fretr" or "Fjert" Halfdansson
Gudrød Halfdansson
Ynglingasaga
Aasa Eysteinsdatter, daughter of Eystein the Severe king of the Upland people, ruler of Hedemark. Married Halfdan Hvietbein Olafsson. Two sons, Eystein and Gudrod [2] No other husbands for Aasa are mentioned in Ynglinga Saga.
Notes
Aasa Eysteinsdatter only has one husband named in Ynglinga Saga, Halfdan Hvitbein. Removing her as wife of Ingjald the Bad (who only had one named wife, Gauthild) and as mother of his son Eirik Ingjaldsson. Removing her as wife of Thrand Haraldsson.C 17 August 2018
- based on profile history, the relationships removed above were due to conflation with Gauthild Algautsdotter. Østenstad-1 07:45, 12 March 2023 (UTC)
Sources
↑ [[#click here for family history MedLands] Database online. Record for Halfdan "Hvitbein" 'White Legs' Olafsson, King In Uppsala; http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORWAY.htm#_Toc360005216 This links to Halfdan the Mild
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglinga saga: Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 39
Wikipedia: Halfdan_Hvitbeinn
Albert F. Schmuhl, "Title: "Royal Lines & Adamic Genealogy: Genealogical Research | EYSTEINSDOTTIR Åsa (I58717)
|
| 7512 |
Note: Vanhemmat
Berthold II von Diessen ca 995
N.N. von Hohenwart ca 1000
Aviopuoliso(t) ja lapset
Puoliso noin 1062 Justizia von Östereich ca 1035
Puoliso noin 1083 Adelheid von Regensburg ca 1064, lapset
Adelheid von Diessen ca 1086-1126
Sources
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands, Bavarian Nobility: Otto II von Diessen | WOLFRATSHAUSEN Otto (I58958)
|
| 7513 |
NOTE:from a 2002 email from Lloyd E. Shelleman, his g-grandson, quoted section from his grandfather Alton Townsend.--"When shipbuilding went down my grandfather Farnham [Benjamin] went up to Aroostook and took up a lot of wildland for a farm. I have understood that he walked up and back a couple of times, it was about 150 miles from Castine, and a good part of the way through the woods. His first lot of land was near Presque Isle and is now (1955) known as the Hayden Farm. He hadn't cleared away land but built a log cabin on it and was working away hewing timber, as he was an expert axman, and when he came home he found his cabin burned down. Then he went back to Castine to work in the shipyard again. The later he went back again and took up another lot in the town of Easton, and lived there until he died at the age of 86." List of Gersham children and dates from Bevery Farnham Henry, sent in same email from Lloyd. | FARNHAM Gersham (I38022)
|
| 7514 |
Notes
N1. GEDCOM: Waudbert VIII Comte /de Lommois/ Birth: ABT 725; Count of Lommois
N2. This original profile had DOB of 695 and DOD of 18Feb762. These dates are impossible, and appear to be a transposition of his father's DOB/DOD. The above note N1 suggests that his actual DOB is c725, and it has been changed accordingly. DOD has been removed. | LOMMOIS Waudbert (I59098)
|
| 7515 |
Notes
Note N2828
http://fjaunais.free.fr/h0ponthieu.htm
Note: @N11940@
@N11940@ NOTE
Ancestor of Eleanor of Castile, Queen of King Edward I, and of Richard of York (Philip Nelson, David Dickinson). Ancestor of the Queens of England, France, and Sicily, and Queen of the Romans, daughters of Raymond Berengar IV of Provence and Beatrice of Savoy.
Name
Name: Thierry II Comte /de Ponthieu/
Source: #S5
Note: #N2828
Sources
↑ Entered by Paula Johnson, Tuesday, August 27, 2013.
Source S5 Ancestry Family Trees http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-653748138
http://fjaunais.free.fr/h0ponthieu.htm | PONTHIEU Thierry (I59099)
|
| 7516 |
Notes
Note: Graaf in de Oberen Rheingau en Wetterau
Jackman speculates that Gebhard's wife was named HIDDA [Ida], and the last three with the family of Gebhard's wife. Jackman speculates that the wife of Duke Gebhard may have been a sister of Hermann Archbishop of Köln, and descended from Christian [I] Graf von Grabfeld, possibly the daughter of Christian [II] Graf im Grabfeld.
Sources
Ancestry.com family trees | WETTERAU Gebhard (I58234)
|
| 7517 |
Notes
Per Wikipedia: "Henry of Schweinfurt (de Suinvorde; c. 970 – 18 September 1017) was the Margrave of the Nordgau from 994 until 1004. He was called the "glory of eastern Franconia" by his own cousin, the chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg.
"Henry was the son of Berthold and Eilika (Eiliswintha or Eila) of Walbeck. His father's parentage is not known with certainty, but he may have been a son of Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria. Henry was Bavarian, whoever his grandfather.
"Henry held a succession of countships after his father's death in 980. He was appointed marchio, like his father, of the Bavarian Nordgau in 994. In 1003, he revolted against Henry II of Germany claiming that he had been promised the Duchy of Bavaria in return for his support. The king said that the Bavarians had a right to elect their own duke. Henry allied with Boleslaus I of Poland and Boleslaus III of Bohemia. Nevertheless, his rebellion was quashed and he himself was briefly captive. The king established the Diocese of Bamberg to prevent any further uprisings in the region. The new diocese took over the secular authority of the margrave in the region of the Bavarian Nordgau.
"Finally, it was only the joint persuasion of both his saecular and ecclesiastical overlords, Bernard I, Duke of Saxony, and Tagino, Archbishop of Magdeburg, that reconciled him to Henry in 1004. Henry of Schweinfurt did subsequently gain new and old countships before his death in 1017. He was buried at Schweinfurt."
Family
Henry married a woman named Gerberga, the daughter of an Otto whose identity is disputed. They had three sons and two daughters:
Otto, who later became Duke of Swabia
Eilika or Eilica, married Bernard II, Duke of Saxony
Judith of Schweinfurt (died 2 August 1058), married Bretislaus I of Bohemia
Burchard II, Bishop of Halberstadt, chancellor of the Emperor Conrad II
Henry, a count in the Nordgau
Sources
Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_of_Schweinfurt | SCHWEINFURT Heinrich (I58237)
|
| 7518 |
Notes by grandaughter, Rose Higgens. | Van Siclen Emma Calista (I53337)
|
| 7519 |
Notes for ADALINE HOLBROOK:
Adaline and her family lived in Brooklyn, NY. The three youngest
children died young. | HOLBROOK Adaline (I4069)
|
| 7520 |
Notes for AHAZ FREEMAN:
THE FREEMAN FAMILY of Clinton County, New York
The American government established a Military Land Grant in
Northern New York, called the "Canadian-Nova Scotia Refugee Tract".
This land was for the Canadian veterans of the Revolutionary War
which were led by Moses Hazen. Much of the land was bought by land
speculators from the veterans who did not want their land.
In 1805 this frontier was called an "ungodly place where
religion and education were neglected." There was reported," poverty
and primitive living conditions"
Mooers is located on the northern border of Clinton County, New
York and Huntingdon County, Quebec, Canada. The surface of the
area is quite level with a slight inclination to the northeast.
There are two main rivers in Mooers, the Great Chazy and the
English. The fine water privileges of these rivers provided various
manufacturing enterprises in the early days of Mooers. Prior to 1796
this area was one vast wilderness.
In 1812, the area was overwhelmingly rural and the population
was scarce, 8,000 people in the whole of Clinton County. There were
5 towns all but one bordering on Lake Champlain. Plattsburg was a
bustling lake port town for travel between the American States and
Quebec, Canada. When war broke out in 1812 between the Americans and
Britain, many families left the area near the border and lost their
crops and belongings. These American families were terrified of
attack by the Canadian Indians. The stories of the " French Indian
Wars" still very much on their minds. The American Militia was the
only defense along the whole border and some Militia Officers said
their men refused to fight across the border into Canada, due to
having many friends and family living there.
The war lasted until 1814 when the British were defeated on Lake
Champlain. By 1817 construction of the new Erie Canal began from the
Hudson River to Buffalo. It was finished in 1825 and opened up the
vast western territories filled with excellent land for settlers. It
led to the development of such towns as Rochester, Buffalo,
Syracuse and Utica. The Canal provided cheap transportation for the
westward bound settlers.
On page 329 of "History of Clinton and Franklin Counties" by
Hurd in 1880 states:
"Asa Freeman came in early, resided in the northeast part of town
and raised a large family, all of whom afterwards moved away."
On page 332 of the same book:
"The town was originally comprised in a single school district, and
the first school-house was the old building now used as a woodshed by
the Widow of Asa Corbin. Cariarty Huntley was a early teacher in
this building, also Martha Bosworth ( afterwards Mrs. Samuel
Churchill ) Asa Freeman and Jabez Fitch."
At the Plattsburg, New York, County Clerks office, there is
land Deed:
"28 January 1807 Asa Freeman purchased from Benjamin Mooers 105 acres
in lot #18 for $350.00. On 05 January 1823 Asa Freeman is clearing
the title for this land from Gilead Speery."
Asa Freeman was listed on the 1810 and 1820 U.S. census for
Mooers, Clinton County, New York. Asa and Thankful Freeman's oldest
son, Ahaz was listed on the 1820 U.S. census for Mooers, as well.
On a land Deed dated 16.02.1833, Plattsburg County Clerks
office:
"Asa Freeman and his wife Thankful sold land in lot #18, Mooers,,
Clinton County, New York to Thomas Caldwell of Walworth, Wayne
County, New York for $500.00 for 67 acres. Asa Freeman and Thankful
were living in Williamson, Wayne County, New York."
On the 1830 U.S. census for Marion, Wayne County, New York was
listed a Asa Freeman and his wife. The age of the couple match that
of Asa and Thankful Freeman which were our line, in Mooers, Clinton
County, New York. There were a number of Freeman families living in
the area, including one Benjamin Freeman born in 1792 in New York,
possibly Asa's second son.
On land Deeds, Plattsburg's County Clerks office:
Ahaz Freeman bought land in lot #39 in 1825 and later lot #92 in
Mooers, Clinton County, New York , which his Heirs sold on 29 April
1853. Lot #92 was sold to William Pratt for $600.00 by Loren E.
Freeman, Rufus Freeman, Amasa Freeman, Martha Freeman, Lauretta
(Freeman) McConnell, Charles Freeman, (our line), Jerry Freeman,
Elizabeth Freeman, Hannah Freeman, Phebe Freeman, and Dolly
Philander (Freeman) Williams.
Ahaz Freeman died 01 October 1848, at 56 years, cause of death
listed as being run over by a loaded wagon. He was buried in Old
Riverside Cemetery, Mooers, Clinton County, New York and his
gravestone is still standing there in 1997. It is located in the
extreme southeast corner of the cemetery, under a large old tree,
next to the Chazy River. Nearby to Ahaz Freeman's grave are the
gravestone markers of his children Loren E., Martha, Benjamin,
William, and Lauretta. There was an unmarked grave next to Ahaz and
perhaps this is where his wife Louisa is buried.
_________________________________________
_________________________________ ____
In the "Letters of Probate" for Ahaz Freeman submitted by his
wife Louisa on 30 May 1849 (located at County Clerks office,
Plattsburg), which Louisa signed with her mark X, was a list of
articles inventoried from the personal estate of Ahaz Freeman:
1 eighteen year old horse
1 pair five year old stags
1 old double wagon with binding chains
1 spotted cow
1 line back cow
1 three year old cow
1 old plow and ?
1 old harrow
1 pair sleds
1 set double hornef and wiffer trees
1 ox yoke
1 hoe
1 axe
1 hand saw
2 augers
1 buck saw
1 butle
The value of his personal Estate as such was $132.64. This did not
include his land or buildings.
On the Old Riverside Cemetery records, Mooers, Clinton County, New
York:
"Ahaz Freeman who died 01 October 1848, 56 years, 11 months. His
Widow, Louisa Freeman, purchased and had the stone mounted. The
children headstones were of Benjamin H.Freeman, born 09 October
1842, died 14 November 1842, 1 month and 5 days and William
W.Freeman, born 11 October 1847, died 21 August 1848."
On a visit to Mooers, Clinton County, New York in July 1997,
the Freeman original land lots were still being farmed.
________________________________________________
__________________________ ____
MOOERS, CLINTON COUNTY, NEW YORK
Village of Hemmingford Roxham
X X
Fisher Street Huntingdon County, Quebec X
Charles Freeman
U.S./Canada border Old Roxham Road
______________________________________________________________________
____ ____
lot # 39 X
Blackmun Corners wooded area Ahaz Freeman to Perry's
Mill
lot # 18 Asa Freeman
to Champlain,
X Old Mooers Railroad Junction farmland
X X
Old Riverside Cemetery Mooers Village
Chazy River farmland
to Plattsburg, N.Y.
More About AHAZ FREEMAN:
Cause of Death: Run over by a loaded wagon.
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY
On land Deeds, Plattsburgâ®s County Clerks office:
book 23 page 368-69, 29 April 1853
" This Indenture made the 29 day of April in the year of our Lord one
thousand eight hundred and fifty three between the undersigned heirs
of Ahaz Freeman of the first part and William ( ) Pratt of the second
part ...forth that the said parties of the first part ... in
consideration of the sum of 6 hundred dollars to them in hand paid by
the said party of the (page 369) second part at or before the ...
and delivery of these presents .... where of is hereby ... with
acknowledged have... released and forever quit ... and by these
presents do ... release and forever quit ... to the said party of
the second part and his heirs and assigns forever. All that certain
piece or parcel of land lying and being in the town of Mooers and
known as the school lot it being a part of large lot no. 92 viz to ..
the north west quarter together with all ..... there unto belong or
is assigned is appertaining and the ... and ... unto issues and
profits there of used all the estate right title interest use said
property ... and demand whatsoever of the said parties of the first
part itherwise law or equity of is and to the above bargained
premises with the said ... and .... To have and to hold the said
above bargained and described premises with their and every of their
right members and ... to the said party of the second part his heirs
and assigns and to the sale ... benefit and behoof of the said party
of the second part his heirs and assigns forever . In witness
whereof the said parties of the first part have hereonto set their
hands and seal the day and year above written
Signed, Sealed and Delivered
in the presence of ...State of New York
Clinton County on this 30 day
of April 1853 before me personally came Loren Freeman, Rufus Freeman,
Lauretta McConnel, Charles Freeman, Dolly P. Freeman, Amasa Freeman,
Martha Freeman, Phebe Freeman, Jerry Freeman, Elizabeth Freeman,and
Hannah Freeman and to me known to be the individuals described is
and ..
... deed and sincerely acknowledged ........ for the persons therein
described.
J.G.Young Justice of Peace
I further certify that I ... Dolly Philander Williams and Loretta
McConnel separate and apart from their husbands and they acknowledged
the execution of the written instrument to be of their own free will
without any fear or ... of their said husbands.
J.G.Young Justice Peace Recorded December 27yh 1853 D.T.T. Parsons
Clerk The following is how there names were written
Loren E Freeman Charles X his mark Freeman
Rufus X his mark Freeman Jerry X his mark Freeman
Dolly Philander Williams Elizabeth Freeman
Amasa X his mark Freeman Hannah Freeman
Martha X her mark Freeman Phebe X her mark Freeman
Lauretta McConnell | FREEMAN Ahaz (I3004)
|
| 7521 |
Notes for ALBERT E. LINDSAY:
Bert was a radio operator. | LINDSAY Albert E. (I5187)
|
| 7522 |
Notes for ALPHEUS CAPRON:
"History of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by William
Bassett, 1884
"Alpheus bought in 1818 the Cloth-dressing Works of North Richmond."
Alpheus fought as a Patriot in the American Revolution. He settled
in Swanzey between 177-1793 as by Swanzey Tax Records.
More About ALPHEUS CAPRON:
Fact 1: 1822, 52 years old at death | CAPRON Alpheus (I1764)
|
| 7523 |
Notes for AMOS FREEMAN:
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co.,NH, before July 1807.
Information on family from Putney Vital Records.
More About AMOS FREEMAN:
Fact 1: December 03, 1813, 48 years old at time of death | FREEMAN Amos (I3013)
|
| 7524 |
Notes for BENJAMIN FREEMAN:
Intention of marriage 02 21 1756 in Bellingham, Norfolk Co., MA.
Moved to Winchester, Cheshire Co., NH between 1761-1764, and then
onto Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH.
The home farm of 29 1/2 acres ajoined the land of Thomas Applin,
possible father-in-law of youngest son Asa Freeman.
On October 12,1807, notice of probate for Benjamin, was published in
the New Hampshire Sentinal, newspaper, looking for hiers, for 3
weeks.Benjamin was 73 years old at time of death, July 1807.
Probate Records at Keene, Cheshire Co., NH.
The Family of Benjamin Freeman
Ralph and Sarah (Capon) Freeman's son, Benjamin, our line,
moved his family from Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire,
around 1768 to the town of Swanzy, Cheshire County, New Hampshire
on the Ashulot River Valley. In the "History of Swanky, New
Hampshire from 1734 to
1890" by Benjamin Ried, on page 342: "Amos Freeman, married 12
September 1786, Delilah Hill. Asa Freeman (our line) married 30
December 1790, Thankful (born 19 January 1767) daughter of Thomas
Applin. Child: Ahaz born 03 November 1791. Asa Freeman, a
resident of East Swanzy, removed to New York. Ebenezer Freeman
married 07 February, Betty Wilson."
Margaret Freeman's Dower in the Estate of Benjamin Freeman
Recorded in Books of Dowers No.1 pages 101 & 102
To the Hon. Able Parker, Judge of Probate and Wills. Agreeable
to a Warrant from under your hand and seal appointing us the
undersigned a Committee to appraise all the Real Estate where of
Benjamin Freeman late of Swanzey did ? and possessed.
We have attended upon the business and report as follows vis-
the home farm containing twenty nine acres and an half of land with
the buildings on the premises at three hundred dollars.
Also we have set off to Margaret the said deceased Widow one
full third part of the said Estate and it is bounded as follows vis-
beginning at a pine stump and a heap of stones standing the west side
of the road it being a corner of land belonging to Thomas Applin
thence East 40 degrees North 22 rods to a stake and stones bounding
on next on said Applin land thence East 8 degrees South bounding with
? land 25 æ rods to a stake and stones. Thence West 40 degrees
South 32 rods to a stake and stones thence West 27 degrees North 30
rods to the corner first mentioned.
Also one acre of wood land at the Northeast corner of said farm
bounded as follows vis- beginning at the North East corner it being
a corner of Samuel Lanes land thence South 1 degree East 20 rods
bounding with said Lanes land. Thence West 8 degrees North 8 rods to
a stake and stones. Thence North 1 degree West 20 rods to a stake
and stones standing in the line of land belonging to Thomas Applin
thence East 8 degrees South 8 rods to the corner first mentioned.
Also the whole of the buildings standing on the first described
piece of land.
Swanzey December 5th 1807
Elisha Whitecomb
Nathan Whitecomb
Thomas Applin
Elijah Belding Jr.
Joel Mellen
Division of Benjamin Freeman's Estate amongst Heirs
State of New Hampshire, Cheshire County
To the Hon. Judge of the Probate of Wills in said county in
Ordinance to a warrant given under your hand and seal appointing us
the undersigned a Committee to appraise all the Real Estate where of
Benjamin Freeman late of Swanzey in said county, died secured and
possessed.
After paying due attention to the promises we report as follows
vis- we have appraised the home farm containing twenty nine acres
and an half with the buildings on the premises at three hundred
dollars- After dividing one full third of the said Estate which was
set off to the said deceased Widow, we have divided and made
partition of the said estate among the children or heirs as follows
vis- to
Ezra Freeman
four acres appraised at thirty three dollars and thirty three cents
bound as follows vis- beginning at the South West corner of the
said farm at a stake and stones thence North 42 degrees East 12 rods
to a stake and stones it being a corner of the Widows third thence
East 27 degrees South 32 rods to a stake and stones thence southerly
bounding with the second share 12 rods to a stake and stones thence
West 35 æ degrees North 10 rods to a stake and stones thence South 34
degrees West 23 rods to a stake and stones thence North 40 degrees
West 35 æ rods to the corner first mentioned.
To Ebenezer Freeman
3 æ acres appraised at thirty three dollars and thirty three cents
and bounded as follows vis- beginning at a stake and stones in the
North line of said lot it having a corner at the Widows third thence
East 8 degrees South 6 æ rods to a stake and stones thence South 1
degrees East 44 rods to a stake and stones thence West 35 æ degrees
North 24 rods to a stake and stones thence northerly bounding with
the first share 12 rods to a stake and stones thence East 44 degrees
North 20 rods to the corner first mentioned.
To Amos Freeman
4 acres and 26 rods appraised at thirty three dollars and thirty
three cents and bounds as follows vis- beginning at a stake and
stones it being the North East corner of the last mentioned share
thence East 8 degrees South 15 rods to a stake and stones thence
South 1 degree East 44 rods to a stake and stones thence West 8
degrees North 15 rods to a stake and stones thence North 1 degree
West 44 rods to the corner first mentioned.
To Asa Freeman (our line)
4 acres 46 rods appraised at thirty three dollar and thirty three
cents and bounded as follows beginning at the North East corner of
the last mentioned share thence East 8 degrees South 15 æ rods to a
stake and stones thence South 1 degree East 44 rods to a stake and
stones thence West 8 degrees North 15 æ rods to a stake and stones
thence North 1 degree West 44 rods to the corner first mentioned.
To Samuel Green in right of his wife Esther,
4 acres and 20 rods appraised at thirty three dollars and thirty
three cents and bounded as follows vis- beginning at the North East
corner of the last mentioned share thence East 8 degrees South 15
rods to a stake and stones thence South 1 degree East 44 rods to a
stake and stones thence West 8 degrees North 15 rods to a stake and
stones thence North 1 degree West 44 rods to the corner first
mentioned.
To Benjamin Wilson Jr. in right of his wife Rachel,
4 acres appraised at thirty three dollars and thirty three cents
bounded as follows vis- beginning at the North East corner of the
last mentioned share thence East 8 degrees South 11 rods to a stake
and stones East 8 degrees South 11 rods to a stake and stones it
being a corner of the Widows Woodland thence South 1 degree East 20
rods thence East 8 degrees South 8 rods to a stake and stones thence
South 1 degree East 24 rods to a stake and stones thence West 8
degrees 19 rods to a stake and stones thence North 1 degree 44 rods
to the first mentioned corner.
Elisha Whitecomb
Nathan Whitecomb The Committee Members
Thomas Applin
Elijah Belding Jr.
Joel Mellen
Nehemiah Cuming (agent for the Heirs)
Inventory of articles sold at venue on this 14th day of December 1807
that belong to the Estate of Mr. Benjamin Freeman, late of Swanzey,
Deceased.
Name: Item Cost Name Item Cost
1.Enoch Starkey 1 bag $ .40 13.Amasa Aldrich 1 green
gown $ 1.06
2.Sabin Starkey 1 sieve .10 1 table cloth
1.12
3 traps .13 1 pitch fork .34
1 candle stick .15 14. Joel Mellon ( a Committee
Member)
5 bushels of 1 tea kettle .50
potatoes .75 15. Joseph Emerson
3.Asa Hill æ bushel .30 1 fire shovel
.83
some iron .35 16. Nathan Whitecomb
1 tub .20 (clerk of venue and
Committee
1 pair stockings .20 member)1 skimmer
.31
4. Isrel Sawyer 2 æ bushels rye 1.87 1 chopping
knife .26
1 table .10 1 axe .60
5. Rufus Randall (Administrator of Estate) 1 coverlid
.65
2 bushels rye 1 table cloth .67
@$.66 1.32 1 pair shoes
.86
1 mortor .26 1 pair trousers .13
elive and burning leather 1.00
iron .26 17. Elijsha Whitecomb
1 pair breeches 1.05 (member of Committee)
1 hoe .26 1 crane and 3 hooks
6. Aquilla Rumsdill 1.27
1 pot 18. Joseph Whitecomb
1 kettle .87 1 iron porringer .40
1 warming pan .93 19. Gabias Biship
8 bushels corn 5.71 1 looking glass .56
1 sive .31 3 bottles .50
some hay sold by the 1 basket .15
Widow 15.01 1 basket .14
7.Jesse Thompson 1 meat tub 1.14
1 stew pot .40 1 pabe and trof .08
1 tunnel .10 20. Moses Herremon
1 table .75 1 hitchel .19
1 bed and bedding 21. Thomas Applin
8.25 (member
of Committee
1 pot of soap .35 and Benjamin's neighbor)
1 chest .17 1 pitcher .10
1 towel .18 22. John Applin 1 shirt .53
1 table cloth .26 1 shirt .91
100 æ of boards .75 few beans .17
200 æ of stitwork 1.20 23. Joel Read 1 pair of
shears .15
8. Amasa Aldrich 1 chest
.75
flat iron and box iron 24. Peter Holbrook
.57 1 wine glass and salt cellar
.13
1 shovel .76 25. James Wheelock Jr. 1 hat
.16
26. Silas Parsons knives and fork .33
9.Richard Gale 3 spoons .17 27. Ezekel Thompson 1 scythe
& smooth .75
10.David Eddy 1 cag .37 28. John Wilson 1 foot
wheel 1.73
11.Simon Cook 2 chairs .34 29. Levi Blake 1 towel .20
.
12.Berzilla Streater wood by door .80 1 hammer .13
The Administration Account of Amasa Aldrich and Rufus Randall -
administrators of the estate of Benjamin Freeman, late of Swanzey in
said county, deceased. Wherein the said administrators charge
themselves with the whole of the personal estate of said deceased as
sold by license from the Judge of Probate as follows, those articles
decreed to the Widow excepted, together with the next accounts -
for the part sold to Sundry persons
$ 5.61
for money owed to Thomas Applin
57.01
for soap sold 1.00
for part of the wearing apparel sold to Amos Freeman 6.40
for 2 bushels of rye 1.67
for 1 bushel Indian corn .83
Also for money's owed further upon Thomas Applin's note 40.00
Also for proceeds of a number of articles sold at venue according to
the schedule here with exhibited to be put in file signed by Nathan
Whitecomb as clerk 69.98
______
$182.50
And the said administrators pray an allowance for the following
charges and unto ? parcel the Widow Margaret Freeman for her third of
the hay sold at auction and mentioned in the afore said schedule.
$ 5.00
The following are the charges exhobated by Amos Aldrich Esq.
July 22 1807 for a journey to Jaffrey to take administration $ 2.00
for money paid the Judge 1.60
for one day cutting the grain on the ground at the time of
said
Benjamin deceased .83
for my time attending the appraisers
2.00
Oct 6,1807 for a journey to Jaffrey
2.00
for money paid the Judge 1.68
______
$14.57
To one day of myself gathering in the harvest, my son,
oxen and cart 2.00
Oct.29,1807 for a journey to Keene to see the Judge 1.00
Nov.02,1807 for one day to Keene to see the Judge 1.00
money paid the Judge .75
for money paid the printer for advertisement 1.00
for 1 æ day husking corn 1.00
for 2 æ day attending the Committee dividing the real
estate 2.00
for expenses paid for the Committee
.50
for notifying the venue .50
for one day attending the venue
1.00
for one day going to Keene to return the doings of the
Committee 1.00
Oct.1808 for moneys paid the Judge
3.13
for æ days work on the farm .50
for æ day settling with Mr. Applin
.50
for moneys paid Nathan Whitecomb 8.50
for moneys paid Col.E Whitecomb
5.00
for moneys paid E.Belding as surveyor
3.00
for money paid Esq. Cumings 1.00
for moneys paid Barret and Emerson 2.95
for moneys paid Dr. Sawyer on account
1.00
for taxes paid Elijah Belding .41
(Administration account for Benjamin Freeman's Estate, Continued)
Oct.1808 paid the printer for an advertisement to notify the
Heirs for this settlement $
1.25
for one day preparing for settlement
1.00
for my time and expenses making settlement
4.00
The Rufus Randal Account
July 22,1807 for a journey to Jaffrey to take administration 2.00
for money paid the Judge 1.06
for æ day with appraisers
1.50
for æ day work on the farm of said deceased .50
for 2 days my son getting hay 1.50
for 2 days myself getting hay 1.67
Oct. for a journey to Jaffrey with the Widow
3.00
for money paid the Judge 1.50
_______
$71.79
for 2 days getting in the harvest
1.67
for one day attending the Committee .87
for one other day attending the Committee 1.00
for other day on business 1.00
Dec.10 for a journey to Jaffrey to see the Judge 2.00
for money paid the Judge
2.70
Dec.14 for one day attending the venue 1.00
for money paid for the expense of the venue 2.10
for æ day attending the Commissioners .50
for expenses .50
Oct.1808 for going to Keene to see the Judge 1.00
for one day settling with Mr. Applin 1.00
for money paid Thos. Applin on interest 23.89
for money paid Mr.Thos. Applin an interest as appraised
4.50
for money paid Joel Mellen
1.50
" " Josiah Read 1.83
" " Esq. Frink 1.00
Paid Jesse Thompson for a coffin 1.67
for one day preparing for settlement 1.00
Paid Nathan Whitecomb for going to be sworn ..67
for my time and expenses on settlement 4.00
for collecting æ of the money the estate sold for 1.50
Further Charges of Esq. Aldrich
For collecting æ of the money this estate sold for 1.50
Paid the Widow .41
Paid Silas Parsons on account
2.43
" Elisha Rumsdill on account 1.45
for Esq. Cumings for an oath
.47
for paid on settlement
5.00
________
Amount of the Administrators account
$142.65
Charges against the Administrators 182.40
(Administrators Account of Benjamin Freeman's Estate, Continued)
Balance in the hand of the Administrator
$ 39.85
Amasa Aldrich
Rufus Randall
At a court of Probate for the county of Cheshire held at Jaffrey
In said county on the twentieth day of December Amos Dormice 1808
then the above named Amasa Aldrich and Rufus Randall administrators
of the Estate of afore named Benjamin Freeman late of Swanky,
deceased, personally appeared and made Solomon oath to the truth of
the forgoing account of their administration of said estate. The
same having been first examined by me the Sub. Judge of the Probate
of Wills for said county, where-upon I do deem that the same be and
hereby is allowed and ordered to be recorded. And whereas there is a
balance in the hand of the said administrator of the sum of thirty-
nine dollars and eighty five cents, I do deem they pay and
distribute the same to and among the heirs of said deceased in equal
proportions that is to say Ezra Freeman, Amos Freeman, Ebenezer
Freeman, and Asa Freeman, Samuel Green in right of his wife Esther
and Benjamin Wilson Jr. in right of his wife Rachel, six dollars and
sixty four cents each.
Able Parker- Judge
Benjamin Freeman (1734-1807)
The following is from the letters of Probate for the estate of
Benjamin Freeman of Swanzey, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, who died
in July 1807. Inventory of the personal and real estate;
1 hat, 1hat 1 woollen wheel, 1 linin wheel 1 coat
1 pair breeches 1 half full soap, 1 scalding tub,
6 old bins
knee buckles 1 woollen wheel, 1 linin wheel
1 waistcoat calfskin and foal leathers
1 waistcoat 6 pewter plates, 4 pewter basins
1 grey coat 4 pewter porringers, 1 blocktin teapot
3 tow shirts 1 funnel, 3 tablespoons
2 linin and wool shirts 1 chopping knife, 1 earthen
pitcher
1 pair shoes 3 earthen bowls, 1 pint mug,
1 small
1 pair deep blue stockings pitcher
1 pair pale blue stockings 1 suger bowl, 1 creamer, 6
cups and saucers
1 pair tow stockings and 4 spoons
2 pair footins 1 glass bottle, 1 small bottle
1 pair leggins and one pair mittens 10 earthen plates, 1
large creamer
1 green baige gown 1 saltmorter and 1 salt cellar
1 bed and bedding 1 vinegar crane, 2 wine glasses
1 bed and bedding 1 baker blass, 1 looking glass
1 birds eye coverlid 1 clothes
basket and cheese basket
1 checked coverlid 1 hammer and 1 pair shears
1 bed quilt, 1 woollen blanket, 1bed pan 1 ton of hay,
1 pitchfork
1 pair tow trousers,2 pair tow shirts 1 corn basket and 1
flail, 1 earthen
3 pillow cases, 3 lacey tablecloths pot of soap
2 new towels, 2 old towels, 1 raq coverlid 2 bushels of rue, 1 1/2
bushel of corn
1 fire shovel, 1 crane and 3 hooks a half basket, 150 feet inch
boards
1 trap skimmer, 1 candle stick, 1 axe 243 feet oak stitwork, 5
knives and
1 iron shovel, 1 hoe, 1 box iron 6 forks
1 cuthe and tacklin, 1 flat iron, 1 tobacco box, 1 cord wood by
door
1 dip kettle, 1 teq kettle, 1 stew pan 8 yards tow cloth, 1
cheese
1 iron pot, 1 spail kettle 1 churn and one small basket
53/4 lbs. old iron, 50 lbs. pork and meat tub 1 cow, 1 swine
1 table, 1 great chair, 6 kitchen chairs 29 or 30 acres land
witha house and barn
1 chest, 2 sives, 3 firkins
total on August 15th 1807 $514.38
Benjamin Freeman's wife Margaret, received a third of the estate
and the rest was divided between his children; Rachel (the wife of
Benjamin Wilson), Ezra Freeman, Esther (the wife of Samuel Green),
Amos Freeman, Ebenezer Freeman, and Asa Freeman (our line).
More About BENJAMIN FREEMAN:
Fact 1: February 21, 1756, intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA. | FREEMAN Benjamin (I3021)
|
| 7525 |
Notes for CARROLL F CAPRON:
Information from "The History Of Swanzey" by Benjamin Read, 1892,
page 515 | CAPRON Carroll F. (I1773)
|
| 7526 |
Notes for DAN FREEMAN:
In "History of the Town of Richmond, Cheshire Co., New Hampshire,
from its first settlement, to 1882" by William Bassett, it states
"Dan. Freeman, son of Ralph Freeman and Sarah Capron, lived near
Aaron Kelton place; b.June 16,1745. He removed quite early to
Winchester. Had five children."
This family line information came from the LDS Ancestral file (TM) -
ver 4.17, DESCENDANCY CHART, 19 JAN 1998. I haven't checked it yet
for errors.
Dan and Jemima evidently lived at first at Cumberland; Dan was on Otis Whipple's road repair district list as of june 25, 1770. But they were not there long, as on January 1, 1771 "Dan Freeman & Jemima Freeman His Wife & Levina Freeman Daughter to Said Dan and Jemima" were warned out of town of Winchester, New Hampshire. | FREEMAN Dan (I3049)
|
| 7527 |
Notes for DANIEL MCCONNELL:
Daniel McConell was listed on the 1850 census for Mooers as a
Cabinetmaker. On the 1867 map of Mooers, the family was living on lot
#39 Mooers, previouly owned by Lauretta's father, Ahaz Freeman.
More About DANIEL MCCONNELL:
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY | MCCONNELL Daniel (I5537)
|
| 7528 |
Notes for DAVID FREEMAN:
From 3 generation New Englander, book, page 203
Freeman, David, of Rehoboth married 04 April 1684, Margaret Ingraham
of Swanzey.
David was on the New England Farmer's Register.
David Freeman was very active in the Town of Attleboro (Attleborough)
affairs by the Records. | FREEMAN David C. (I3052)
|
| 7529 |
Notes for DELL FREEMAN:
Moved to Hudson Falls. | FREEMAN Dell (I3056)
|
| 7530 |
Notes for EBENEZER FREEMAN:
Ebenezer on Ancestral file LDS- BVCB-6N. | FREEMAN Ebenezer (I3062)
|
| 7531 |
Notes for EBENEZER FREEMAN:
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH before July 1807. | FREEMAN Ebenezer (I3063)
|
| 7532 |
Notes for EDWARD FREEMAN:
In 1811 there was a warning out for Edward in Putney, Windham Co.,
VT.
More About EDWARD FREEMAN:
Fact 1: August 29, 1830, 36 years old at time of death | FREEMAN Edward (I3068)
|
| 7533 |
Notes for ELON CAPRON:
"History of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by William
Bassett, 1884
"Elon Capron's Widoe resided in Winchester, Cheshire County, New
Hampshire after his death."
They had lived in Richmond and Peterboro.
More About ELON CAPRON:
Fact 1: May 07, 1855, age 45 years at death | CAPRON Elon (I1782)
|
| 7534 |
Notes for EMELINE ARNOLD:
Married and had a child. | ARNOLD Emeline (I426)
|
| 7535 |
Notes for ESTHER FREEMAN:
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH before July 1807. | FREEMAN Esther (I3082)
|
| 7536 |
Notes for ETTA ELLA WILSON:
Etta was William Freeman's first wife Fanny McGrath, nurse. Etta was
31 years younger than William. William left her his whole estate in
his Will. | WILSON Etta Ella (I10171)
|
| 7537 |
Notes for EZRA FREEMAN:
Ezra Freeman fought in the American Revolution as a private, for 8
months. He faught at the Battle of Bennington, Vermont. In the
Swanzey Town Records, Benjamin, claimed for reinbursement for Ezra
being gone from the farm.
REVOLUTIONARY WAR ROLLS: New Hampshire Archives
_______________________________________
___________________________________ ____
A return of non-commissioned officers and Privates Who now are or
that have Ever Been In Capt Nicolas Gilmans Company from 1st January
1777 up to the first of January 1780 Shewing the times of their
Inlistment, discharges and the time of the Sev. desertions
NAME TIMES OF INLISTMENTS AND TERMS REMARKS
Privates Non Effectives
Ezra Freeman May 1st 1777 8 months discharged Jan.
10th 1778
I do Certify Upon my Honour that the within is a true state of
the Company afforesaid as Specefyed In the Preamble hereof without
fraud to the State or any Individual according to my Best knowledge
Arch Stark Com
of Capt Gilmans Comp
I do Certify that the within Is a true State of the Company
Afforesaid according To my Best Knowledge
Capt Commanding
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH, before July 1807.
_______________________________________________________
___________________ ____
CAPTAIN JOHN GRIGG'S Co.:
A Muster Roll and Pay Roll of Capt John Griggs Company in Col
Alexander Scammels Reg We whose names are underwritten do ackonledge
to have received of Thomas Sparhawk one of the muster masters for the
Continental Troops the several Sums prefixed to our Names.
Mens Name Title Age Place of Abode Travel Bounty
MilageTotal
Ezra Freeman May 26,1777 Private 17 Winchester 43 7.
2 7.2 | FREEMAN Ezra (I3084)
|
| 7538 |
Notes for GEORGE O. CAPRON:
Information from "The History of Swanzey" by Benjamin Read, 1892,
Page 515. All the children were born in Swanzey. | CAPRON George O. (I1783)
|
| 7539 |
Notes for GILBERT LELAND:
Gilbert was from Holliston, MA. | LELAND Gilbert (I5049)
|
| 7540 |
Notes for HENRY W. CAPRON:
Information from "History of Swanzey" by Benjamin Read, 1892, page
515. Children born in Swanzey. | CAPRON Henry W. (I1788)
|
| 7541 |
Notes for HIPSYLANTE FREEMAN:
Intention of marriage Dec.12,1819 Bellingham, MA. | FREEMAN Hipsylante (I3108)
|
| 7542 |
Notes for IDA JANE FREEMAN:
Moved to Wtby Ct in 1918-19 and lived with us until her death, I was
only 5 when she died. Rose Myrtle Hanson Griffin | FREEMAN Ida Jane (I3109)
|
| 7543 |
Notes for JEREMIAH FREEMAN:
I believe this family may have moved to Maine, USA.
Jeremiah was mentioned in his father's will:
RALPH FREEMAN's WILL
Bristol County Probate Record, September 29th 1724,
In Ralph Freeman's Will, August 14,1725 describes himself as a
Cooper, Registered September 29, 1929 in 5th book of wills 170: 171:
172 by Stephen Paine, Register for Bristol County.
In the Name of God, Amen, the fourteenth Day of August 1725 I Ralph
Freeman of the Town of Attleborough in ye County of Bristol, Cooper
being Sick and Weak in Body but of perfect Mind and memory, Thanks be
given to God: Therefore calling to mind the mortality of my Body, and
knowing that it is appointed for all men once to dye, do make and
Ordain This My Last Will & Testament. That is to Say, Principally,
and first of all, I give and Recommend my Soul into the hands of God
that gave it; and my Body I Recommend to the Earth, to be Buried in
Decent Christian Burial at the discretion of my Executors; Nothing
doubting, but at the General Resurrection I shall Receive the Same
again by the Almighty Power of God. And as Touching Such Worldly
Estate wherewith it hath Pleased God to Bless me in this Life, I
give, Demise and Dispose of the Same in the following Manner & Form
Imprimis, I give and bequeath to My Dearly beloved Wife, a Third
Part of my whole Estate in Lands Measuages and Tenements, by her
freely to be Possessed and Enjoyed, during The Time She Remains my
Widdow; and at the Time of Her marrying again, or Deceased without
marrying; I Will that the aforesaid Third part of my Estate in Lands
Measuages and Tenements, be Returned to my Beloved Son Ralph Freeman,
to be By him & his Heirs and Asigns Frely Possessed and enjoyed for
ever, without Let or hinderance. I Likewise give and Bequeath to my
Dearly Beloved Wife all my Household Goods to be by her Possessed and
Enjoyed during ye Term of her Life and at her Deceased, I eill that
they be Returned to my Well Beloved Daughters Sarah and Hannah. I
also give and Bequeath unto my Well Beloved Wife Ten Sheep and a
horse to be by her Received of my Executors imediately after my
Decease, by her freely to be possessed and Enjoyed for ever to her
Disposing.
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto My well Beloved Son Jeremiah
Freeman, Five Shillings to be paid ( after my Deceased ) by my
Executor, to be Raised and Levied out of my Estate.
.Turn Over. Imprimis (page 1)
_________________________________________________________________
_________ ____
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto My Well-beloved Son Ralph Freeman
whome I Likewise Constit & make and Ordain My Sol Executrix of this
my Last Will and Testament (to Receive all Debts which is in any ways
Due to me, and to say all Lawfull Debts and demands which is owing by
me.) All and Singular my Lands measuage and Tenaments as also My
Stock of Cattle, Sheep, Cart and all my Husbandry Tools, to him his
Heirs and Asigns for Ever to Possess and Enjoy.
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto my Well-beloved Daughters Sarah
and Hannah all my household Goods to be Equally Divided between Both
Saving only a Bead which I Will to my Daughter Hannah over and above
to be by them Received of my Executrix imediately after my Wife's
Deceased. Also I give & Bequeath to my Daughter, Hannah one cow (out
of My Stock of Cattle) to be by her Received of My Executrix one year
after my Deceased.
Imprimis, I give and Bequeath unto my Well-beloved Grand Children
Samuel and John Freeman Ten Pounds to Each, Current Money to be Payed
to them when they Come of Age, by my Executrix to be Raised and
Levyed out of my Estate but if they Dye before they Come to Age it is
not to Return to their Executors but to my Executor againe. And I do
hereby Disalow, revolk and ? all and every other formmer Testaments,
Wills, Legacies and Bequests, and Executors, by me in any ways before
Named, Willed and Bequeathed, Ratifying and Confirming This and no
other to be my Last Will and Testament. In Witness where I have here
unto Set My hand and Seal the Day and Year above Written
Signed, Sealed, Published, Ralph Freeman Sen'r
Pronounced and Declared by ye Said Ralph Freeman as his Last Will and
Testament in the Presents of us the Subscribers
Pentecost Blackmon
Abigail X Maxcey
(her Mark)
George Allen | FREEMAN Jeremiah (I3119)
|
| 7544 |
Notes for JONATHAN FREEMAN:
All dates from Dedham, MA, Town Vital Records.
From 3 Generation,s New Englander, book, page 204
Freeman, Jonathan, of Dedham, freeman 1684, was a soldier in
Moseley's company for the Narraganst expedition December 1675, also
called the King Philip's War. Captain Moseley was described as " an
Old Cromwellian Privateer, at Jamaica, an excellent soldier."
In 1684 Jonathan was voted a "Freeman" in Dedham. Each person who
wished to be a member of a town with voting rights, had to apply to
the Town Leaders for approval, and the person had to agree to work
for the good of the Town and Church (which were one then), and
believe in the Puritan ideals and faith.
He was a soldier in King Philip's war in Woodcock's Garrison– on the road from Dedham to Rohoboth, September 3, 1675. He was of Captain Moseley's famous company of Rangers of Dedham October 9, 1675. His brother David, then of Dedja,. was also in this war and is on a payroll dated August 24, 1676, for one pound, three shillings, sixpence.
Jonathon married, at Rehoboth, Jul 1 1689, Mary Woodcock, daughter of John Woodcock, one of the interesting men of that section in the pioneer days. Mary died at Attleborough, March 4, 1762, aged one hundred years, making her birth year 1662. John Woodcock, of Wrentham and Rehoboth, was first as Springfield, Massachusetts, in 1638, where he was largely in trade. He is probably the same man who came from Weymouth, England, before March 20,1635, and who sold land with houses at Roxbury, one to Joseph Holmes, Jun 6, 1651, the other to John Gore, March 25, 1651. He removed to Dedham in 1642 and thence to Rehoboth before 1673, living much at Wrentham. In King Philip's war his house was the only one on the road from Dedham to Rehoboth and was well garrisoned and fortified. It was perhaps within the bounds of Attleborough, near the Wrentham line. Jonathan Freeman was one of this garrison and probably met his future wife when he was a soldier fighting Indians. Woodcock had two of his family slain April 26, 1676, and another son wounded by Indians. He was deputy to the general court in 1691. Besided Mary he had a daugter Sarah, who married Alexander Balcom, and a son John Jr., who became prominent citizen of Rehoboth and Attleborough, married, February 26, 1674, Sarah Smith; a son Nathaniel killed April 28, 1676. | FREEMAN Jonathan (I3127)
|
| 7545 |
Notes for JONATHAN W. CAPRON:
Information from "The History of Swanzey", by Benjamin Read, 1892,
Page 515. | CAPRON Johathan W. (I1790)
|
| 7546 |
Notes for KATHERINE LYON:
It is believed that Katherine was the daughter of William Lyon and
Anne Carter, his wife, who lived in July 17,1615 in Harrow on the
Hill (Heston), Middlesex County, England, and moved his family to
Roxbury, MA. | LYON Katherine (I5310)
|
| 7547 |
Notes for LYDIA ARNOLD:
Died young. | ARNOLD Lydia (I431)
|
| 7548 |
Notes for LYDIA FREEMAN:
Intention of marriage published Nov.05,1788, in Bellingham, MA. | FREEMAN Lydia (I3142)
|
| 7549 |
Notes for MARGARET FREEMAN:
From the Records of the Town of Attleboro (Attleborough) MA:
Marriage of Margaret Freeman: "Mr Mathew Short and Mrs Margaret
Freeman was Married by Justice Leonard on the 27th Day of December"
Ano. Dom. 1711 | FREEMAN Margaret (I3144)
|
| 7550 |
Notes for MARGARET INGRAHAM:
From 3 Generations New Englander Book, page 523,
Ingram, or Ingraham, Jared, of Boston, married 28 May 1662, Rebecca,
daughter of Edward Searle or Seale, had Margaret born 17 January
1663; removed to Swanzey, I suppose, and there had Hannah 29 December
1673. His daughter Mary was buried 25 May 1673; and by the same wife
had Jeremiah born 12 July 1683. Probably it was his daughter
Margaret who married 04 April 1684 David Freeman of Rehoboth. | INGRAHAM Margaret (I4258)
|
| 7551 |
Notes for MARTHA FREEMAN:
Martha was living with her bother Amasa Freeman on the 1850 Census
for Mooers. She was living in December 1853 and not married yet.
More About MARTHA FREEMAN:
Fact 1: buried Riverside Cem., Mooers, Clinton Co., NY
b. about 1832 Mooers, living with her brother Amasa with the family
of Allen and Harriet Vaughn on 1850 Census for Mooers. Martha is
listed as 18 years old and a helper with the family. | FREEMAN Martha (I3148)
|
| 7552 |
Notes for MARY HEALY:
Mary is described as of Wrentham on Vital Records.
More About MARY HEALY:
Fact 1: February 21, 1756, Intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA.
Benjamin Freeman's wife Mary, received a third of the estate and
the rest was divided between his children; Rachel (the wife of
Benjamin Wilson), Ezra Freeman, Esther (the wife of Samuel Green),
Amos Freeman, Ebenezer Freeman, and Asa Freeman (our line). | HEALY Mary (I3921)
|
| 7553 |
Notes for NAHUM L HOLBROOK:
He resides in Milford, MA. His wife Laura is of Holliston, MA. | HOLBROOK Nahum L. (I4072)
|
| 7554 |
Notes for NANCY MARIE FREEMAN:
Family moved to Nebraska, USA | FREEMAN Nancy Marie (I3163)
|
| 7555 |
Notes for NATHAN CAPRON:
"History of Swanzey, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by Benjamin
Read, 1892
Page 305-306
"History of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by William
Bassett, 1884
Nathan fought in the Revolutionary War and also paid the Town of
Swanzey's Taxes after the was when the Town didn't have any funds.
Nathan settled in Swanzey after 1777 by the Tax Records. | CAPRON Nathan (I1802)
|
| 7556 |
Notes for OLIVER CAPRON:
"History of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by William
Bassett, 1884
Page 353 - 354:
"Capt. Oliver Capron, son of Banfield Capron, of Cumberland, b. July
1,1736, m. Esther Freeman, came into town 1765. He was f. s. (first
settler) on the Cheney farm, now owned by St,Clair, lot 24 range 12,
next to the Warwick line, was Captain of a Company that marched to
Cambridge soon after the Concord fight and was at the Battle of
Bunker Hill; and was also captain of a company that went to the
relief of troops at Ticonderoga in 1777, Colonel of the Militia,
first Representive at the General Court after the American Revolution
for Richmond, and Jutice of the Peace in Richmond. He sold his farm
and moved to Canada but returned to Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH, and
died there in 1816, while living with his daughter who married Calvin
Wright, at age 80 years. Had seven children, vis.: Nathan, Otis,
Oliver, m. Hannah York; Thaddeus, b. Dec.6,1764, Alpheus, b.
July21,1770; Hannah, b. April 6,1776; and Elizabeth."
Page 11: "We may safely assume that those who located on the old
road leading from Winchester to Royalston were among the first that
came, vis Oliver Capron," "and many others who came before 1765.
These came from Smithfield and Cumberland, R.I., and from Rehoboth
and Attleboro, MA, as did the others that followed these".
Page 26: "The lands were rapidly taken up after the close of the
French and Indian War at prices varying from .25 to .75 cents per
acre."
Page 27: "The first settlers drew their supplies of provisions at
first mostly from Northfield, MA. The old road leading from
Northfield to Lunenburg, and thence to Boston"
Page 544:
"Capt. Oliver Capron occupied a position of the first rank among the
early settlers; he evidently was a leader in political, as well as in
military affairs; he shared largely the confidence of his townsmen;
he was entrusted with the most weighty responsibities, as his
repeated leadership of the Rihmond soldiers, in the war of the
Revolution, most conclusively attests. While he was active and
zealous in defence of the right, his activity and zeal was tempered
with wisdom and prudence. He stands at the head of the list of
representatives of the town, having been the first to represent the
town in the General Assembly of the State. We are informed by
tradition that he devoted so much of his time and attention to
military and political affairs, to the neglect of his personal
interests, that he became poor, and was obliged to sell his farm to
pay his debts. It is a melancholy reflection surely, that one who
had contributed so much to the public weal should, in his last days,
be deprived of the means of a cofortable subsistence; but his was
not, perhaps, an isolated and exceptional case in this respect."
Page 95 - 96:
"Petition for Oliver Capron. State of New Hampshire. (for Justice of
Peace, in Richmond)
To the Honorable Council and House of Representatives in General
Court Assembled:
The Prayer of us, the subscribers, Inhabitants of the town of
Richmond in said State, Humbly shows, that since the difficulties
subsisted on account of a Number of People calling themselves a new
State called Vermont, the town of Richmond hath laboured under many
inconveniences by reason of having no Justice of the Peace in Town.
These are therefore Humbly to inform the Honourable Court that Major
Oliver Capron is a man of an established good character in this and
the Towns Round where he is acquainted and that he is a man that has
ever been firm for the Government of New Hampshire against the
Userpation of Vermont, and we Humbly Conceived a man every way
accomplished and Capable of performing the business and trust of a
Justice of the Peace, and that it will be to a public benefit that he
may be appointed accordingly. These are therefore Humbly to pray the
Honourable Court to in quire into the affair and act thereon as you
in your Wisdom shall think proper and in Duty bound shall ever pray.
September the third, 1782
Barnabas Threesher, Moses Cooley,
Benjamin Threesher, James Kingsley,
Thomas Dillingham, William Goddard,
Jeremiah Thayer, Jona. Atherton,
Jeremiah Thayer, Jun'r, Peter Holbrook,
Nehemiah Thayer, Othniel Day
"The History of Swanzey, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by Benjamin
Read, 1892
Page 515:
"The Capron's have principally been farmers and identified with
interests of West Swanzey. Oliver (a granson of Col. Oliver who
lived in Richmond and died in Swanzey) and Jonathan W. who was a shoe
maker, lived where their sons, Geo.O. and Henry W., now reside.
Oliver W. is a clerk for the Goodnows in their store."
More About OLIVER CAPRON:
Fact 1: August 21, 1757, intention of marriage in Bellingham, Norfolk
Co., MA.
Fact 2: cousins
Fact 3: 1772 and 1773 selectman for Richmond
Fact 4: March 24, 1775, on first school district for Richmond
Oliver Capron moved to at Richmond, Cheshire, New Hampshire, in circa 1765; First Settler on Lot 24 Range 12 next to the Warwick line.5 He was a Representative of Richmond to the General Court. in 1785.6 During his Military Service he: Captain of a company that marched to Cambridge soon after the Concord fight, and was at the battle of Bunker Hill; Captain of a company of New Hampshire troops that marched to the relief of Fort Ticonderoga; Served as a Colonel in a NH Militia Regiment.6 | CAPRON Oliver (I1803)
|
| 7557 |
Notes for OLIVER CAPRON:
Information on this family from "The History of Richmond" by William
Bassett, 1884, and "The history of Swanzey" by Benjamin Read, 1892,
Page 515. | CAPRON Oliver (I1804)
|
| 7558 |
Notes for OLIVER W. CAPRON:
Information from "The History of Swanzey" by Benjamin Read, 1892,
page 515. | CAPRON Oliver W. (I1805)
|
| 7559 |
Notes for OTIS CAPRON:
"History of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire" by William
Bassett, 1884
"Otis Capron lived on the Caleb Curtis place, Richmond. Resided also
a longer time in Winchester, where he died."
Otis settled in Swanzey between 1777-1793 as by the Tax Records of
Swanzey.
Otis Capron fought in the American Revolution as a Patriot.
EVOLUTIONARY WAR ROLLS: New Hampshire Archives
______________________________________
____________________________________ ____
A return of non-commissioned officers and Privates Who now are or
that have Ever Been In Capt Nicolas Gilmans Company from 1st January
1777 up to the first of January 1780 Shewing the times of their
Inlistment, discharges and the time of the Sev. desertions
NAME TIMES OF INLISTMENTS AND TERMS REMARKS
Privates Non Effectives
Otis Capron May 9th 1777 8 months discharged Jan.
10th 1778
I do Certify Upon my Honour that the within is a true state of
the Company afforesaid as Specefyed In the Preamble hereof without
fraud to the State or any Individual according to my Best knowledge
Arch Stark Com
of Capt Gilmans Comp
I do Certify that the within Is a true State of the Company
Afforesaid according To my Best Knowledge
Capt Commanding
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH, before July 1807.
_______________________________________________________
___________________ ____
CAPTAIN JOHN GRIGG'S Co.:
A Muster Roll and Pay Roll of Capt John Griggs Company in Col
Alexander Scammels Reg We whose names are underwritten do ackonledge
to have received of Thomas Sparhawk one of the muster masters for the
Continental Troops the several Sums prefixed to our Names.
Mens Name Title Age Place of Abode Travel Bounty Milage
Total
Otis Capron June 4 Private 17 Richmond 38 6 4 6 4 | CAPRON Otis (I1806)
|
| 7560 |
Notes for OTIS FREEMAN:
Intention of Marriage May 05, 1788 in Bellingham, MA, Vital Records. | FREEMAN Otis (I3169)
|
| 7561 |
Notes for PATIENCE SCOTT:
married twice. | SCOTT Patience (I8478)
|
| 7562 |
Notes for PETER FREEMAN:
In 1811, there was a warning out for Peter in Putney, Windham Co.,
VT. | FREEMAN Peter (I3175)
|
| 7563 |
Notes for PHEBE FREEMAN:
Living in December 1853. | FREEMAN Phebe (I3177)
|
| 7564 |
Notes for PHILATY THAYER FREEMAN:
intention of marriage to Lt. Joseph Wood August 09, 1830 in
Bellingham, MA Records. | FREEMAN Philaty Thayer (I3180)
|
| 7565 |
Notes for RACHEL FREEMAN:
Moved away from Swanzey, Cheshire Co., NH before July 1807. | FREEMAN Rachel (I3184)
|
| 7566 |
Notes for RALPH FREEMAN, SR.:
.First Generation American
The Freeman family in North America begins with Sir Ralph
Freeman, who was born December 14,1629 and baptized in St.Peter's
Church, Cornhill, London County, London, England, in 1630. His
father was Sanford Myron Freeman. Ralph immigrated to New England
and was next located at Dedham, Norfolk County, MASS., when he was
admitted as a Townsman in 1651 as by "Dedham Town Records, Page 135".
Ralph was the 106th person to sign the town Couenant of Dedham, and
his marriage to Katherine Lyon, on 21 October 1652, also from
the"Dedham Town Records of Vital Records". Ralph received lot "29 of
ye 10" in 1653, " the south end of the East Street between the drawn
way there and the swamp", Page 217, Dedham Town Records. Ralph was
active in the town of Dedham affairs until 1656 as mentioned in the
town records. Mentioned on page 144 land grants, 146 sheep commons,
184 tax rate, 190 general town meeting, 192 voted in as townman, 198
town tax rate, 203 highway work, 205 town tax rate, 212 land grants,
214 town tax rate, and on page 216 for his school rate. (These
records are at the DEDHAM HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Dedham, MA.,USA.)
Dedham in 1649, was the farthest colony in-land. It was
located above the water falls on the Charles River, which originates
in the harbor, at Boston, MASS. The choice of river valleys for
settlement was dictated by the need to bring out valuable timber from
the interior forests. The river also provided an easy means of
transporting people and supplies to and from the frontier. The
colony of Boston had become exceedingly overpopulated with the mass
immigration of Puritans from a hostile England, during its first 20
years of existence. The later arrivals, as well as, the colony's
young men, moved up these river valleys to obtain their own land.
The original land grant for Dedham in 1636 was comprised of 200
square miles, one of the largest grants given. Many of its
inhabitants had previously lived nearby. They went to the site
almost daily between the spring of 1637 and the summer of 1638. They
fell the trees, hewed them into beams, framed and clapboard their
new dwellings, before they actually moved into them. The vast
majority of these houses were one story cottages with thatched roofs.
In 1638 the Meeting House (church) in Dedham measured 38' by 20'
and 12' in height but wasn't finished inside until 1649, just 3
years before Ralph and Katherine were married here.
Dedham was a replica of other Puritan towns based on a central
village common and Meeting House with many small farms, called
"freeholds". The size of individual house lots varied among the
towns, although 4-6 acres seems to be the average. Social status and
wealth were important in determining the size of a family's lot. The
shape of an individual lot was usually rectangular and designed to
keep the settlers closely supervised by the town selectmen and
defense against attack. Normally, an acre within the town center
was reserved for public use, i.e. grazing animals, church, school
and a jail. A settler would find his land spread in several parcels
around the village plot, which assured each family meadow for
pasture, fields for crops, and a wood lot for timber.
As many of the settlers were educated, and Puritans believed
everyone should be able to read the bible, education of their
children was an early concern. A school was erected in Dedham in
1649, at the public expense. It measured 18'x15'. It had a
fireplace 4' wide, 2 windows for light, boarded walls and a plank
floor. Stairs led up to the Master's study chamber. Two years later
the school was shingled and the old chimney replaced by a brick one.
Scholars from Dedham, could become adequately prepared for entrance
to Harvard University.
Most of the settlers found the system of outlying fields an
inconvenience and would move their families to these areas. When
enough settlers had moved to a district, a new community, with the
permission of the parent village, separated to begin a parish of the
original town.
By 1713, the vast stretches of forests and meadows, which had
first attracted settlers to Dedham, were all divided. The
population of Dedham had so increased that the average holding shrank
to about a hundred acres, adequate to support a single family in
comfort but not enough to support the addition of the son's and their
families.
The rising generation in Dedham must have sensed that their
lives would be different from those of their parents and
grandparents. For some, it meant leaving Dedham, for opportunities
elsewhere.
Ralph and Katherine Freeman, had 5 known children, all born
in Dedham, Norfolk Co., MASS.
More About RALPH FREEMAN, SR.:
Fact 1: October 21, 1652, Marriage, Vital Records, Dedham, MA
Fact 2: 1656, Active in Dedham, Town Records Dedham | FREEMAN Ralph Sr. (I3190)
|
| 7567 |
Notes for RALPH FREEMAN:
History of the Town of Richmond, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, from
its first Settlement, to 1882. by William Bassett (1884)
Dan Freeman, son of Ralph Freeman and Sarah Capron, lived near the
Aaron Kelton place; born June 16 1745. He removed quite early to
Winchester. Had five children.
Yankee Freeman's
The ability to purchase land became a major factor in the
Freeman's migration movements. Few people wished to risk settlement
in a new area of the wilderness, until a town was laid out.
Particularly in New Hampshire where the raids on newly settled areas,
by the French and Indians, continued until 1765. Massachusetts was
active in Granting of these new settlements in New Hampshire, in
hopes of claiming more land. They issued Land Grants to the Veteran's
of the "Indian Wars", whom they owed a debt too. These Grants
created towns in the Upper Connecticut River Valley, on both sides
of the river.
Ralph Freeman III, our line, the grandson of the first "Ralph
Freeman of Dedham", was one of these settlers to New Hampshire. The
extremely rough hills of northern New England, contained only small
pockets of fertile land , along the river valleys, on which to grow
crops. The climate was more severe with a shorter growing season,
with intense winters filled with heavy snowfalls. Only the very
hardy could survive the difficult living conditions. The men and
women who settled this area were Americans in true pioneer spirit.
Ralph Freeman III settled his family in the town of Richmond,
Cheshire County, New Hampshire. Richmond was Granted by
Massachusetts, on 20 June 1735, to Captain Joseph Sylverster's men,
called Sylvester-Canada Grant. It was later Granted to Joseph
Blanchard and others, by the governor of New Hampshire , on 28
February 1752. A triangular tract in the north part of Richmond was
annexed to Swanzey Township on 11 December 1762.
The townships were divided into 70 different shares about 6
miles square in size. The settlers were responsible for setting up
the township, clearing land for roads and erecting a grist and saw
mill. They assume the rights of self government, church and school.
Ralph Freeman III, moved his family from Richmond to
Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire, the next westerly
township, on the Upper Connecticut River.
In the book, "The History of the Town of Richmond, Cheshire
County, New Hampshire, From its First Settlement, to 1882" by
William Basset, 1884, it states, "Dan Freeman, son of Ralph
Freeman and Sarah Capron, lived near the Aaron Kelton place, born
June 16, 1745. He removed quite early to Winchester. Had 5
children." page 389.
The township of Winchester, Cheshire County, New Hampshire,
was Granted to Col. Josiah Willard and 63 others, on 11 February
1952. He had the proprietary rights to distribute land and assumed
responsibility for setting up the township. Winchester is located on
the Ashulot River in the south-west corner of New Hampshire. During
the "King George War" in the early 1750's, troops were constantly
moving to and from the Connecticut River Valley region, and many
people became interested in this previously unexplored land. They
saw it not only as rich farm land, but as a valuable area for
speculation.
Settlers had to locate near rivers for their connections to the
New England Markets. But links to markets were only one aspect of
the problems facing the new settlers. The frontier itself was nearly
self-sufficient in foodstuff supply, thus, local markets were
almost non existent for a pioneer family. Unable to produce large
amounts of marketable agricultural surplus, encumbered by transport
problems, burdened by high land costs, the aftermath of War time
financial policies, new settlements in the 1750's were not as
quickly absorbed by the commercial system of the region as most new
settlements had been in the 1600's and in such, living conditions
changed rapidly within large families. Each son had to carve himself
out a new settlement, in the wilderness and begin a new farm,
without the financial aid of his parents. Such was the life of the
Freeman's. | FREEMAN Ralph (I3186)
|
| 7568 |
Notes for RALPH FREEMAN:
Moved his family to New Hampshire. | FREEMAN Ralph (I3187)
|
| 7569 |
Notes for RALPH JR. FREEMAN:
The FIRST FREEMAN'S of ATTLEBOROUGH, BRISTOL COUNTY, MA., USA
In the 17th century, when Europeans arrived in the area, Native
Americans from two tribes, the Wampanoag and the Narragansett lived
on opposite banks of the Ten Mile River. The Naragansetts carried
out numerous raids on their neighbours before the English aquired
waterfront land from the Wampanoags which served to separate the two
tribes.
Captain Thomas Willett, who succeeded Miles Standish as head of
Plymouth's Colonial Militia, negotiated the Rehoboth "North Purchase"
from the Wampanoag leader, "Wamsutta", Massasoit's son. This purchse
included today's Attleborough and North Attleborough and the upper
Ten Mile River area. Captain Willett later became the first English
Mayor of New York.
The Ten Mile River area has rocky edges, deeply shaded pine
woods, open hardwood forests, fields, streams, swamps and bogs. The
English built the first grain and saw mills here as did David
Freeman, son of Ralph Freeman of Dedham, Ma. (Attleboro Town Records)
Later, the Naragansett leader resented the movement of the
English into these areas and this led to "King Philip's War" in 1675.
This area suffured greatly with many communities been attacked and
burned, including Rehoboth. The Narragansett's were totally wiped
out and it was a number of years before the Colonies recovered from
the war.
RALPH FREEMAN's WILL
Bristol County Probate Record, September 29th 1724,
In Ralph Freeman's Will, August 14,1725 describes himself as a
Cooper, Registered September 29, 1929 in 5th book of wills 170: 171:
172 by Stephen Paine, Register for Bristol County.
In the Name of God, Amen, the fourteenth Day of August 1725 I Ralph
Freeman of the Town of Attleborough in ye County of Bristol, Cooper
being Sick and Weak in Body but of perfect Mind and memory, Thanks be
given to God: Therefore calling to mind the mortality of my Body, and
knowing that it is appointed for all men once to dye, do make and
Ordain This My Last Will & Testament. That is to Say, Principally,
and first of all, I give and Recommend my Soul into the hands of God
that gave it; and my Body I Recommend to the Earth, to be Buried in
Decent Christian Burial at the discretion of my Executors; Nothing
doubting, but at the General Resurrection I shall Receive the Same
again by the Almighty Power of God. And as Touching Such Worldly
Estate wherewith it hath Pleased God to Bless me in this Life, I
give, Demise and Dispose of the Same in the following Manner & Form
Imprimis, I give and bequeath to My Dearly beloved Wife, a Third
Part of my whole Estate in Lands Measuages and Tenements, by her
freely to be Possessed and Enjoyed, during The Time She Remains my
Widdow; and at the Time of Her marrying again, or Deceased without
marrying; I Will that the aforesaid Third part of my Estate in Lands
Measuages and Tenements, be Returned to my Beloved Son Ralph Freeman,
to be By him & his Heirs and Asigns Frely Possessed and enjoyed for
ever, without Let or hinderance. I Likewise give and Bequeath to my
Dearly Beloved Wife all my Household Goods to be by her Possessed and
Enjoyed during ye Term of her Life and at her Deceased, I eill that
they be Returned to my Well Beloved Daughters Sarah and Hannah. I
also give and Bequeath unto my Well Beloved Wife Ten Sheep and a
horse to be by her Received of my Executors imediately after my
Decease, by her freely to be possessed and Enjoyed for ever to her
Disposing.
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto My well Beloved Son Jeremiah
Freeman, Five Shillings to be paid ( after my Deceased ) by my
Executor, to be Raised and Levied out of my Estate.
.Turn Over. Imprimis (page 1)
_________________________________________________________________
_________ ____
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto My Well-beloved Son Ralph Freeman
whome I Likewise Constit & make and Ordain My Sol Executrix of this
my Last Will and Testament (to Receive all Debts which is in any ways
Due to me, and to say all Lawfull Debts and demands which is owing by
me.) All and Singular my Lands measuage and Tenaments as also My
Stock of Cattle, Sheep, Cart and all my Husbandry Tools, to him his
Heirs and Asigns for Ever to Possess and Enjoy.
Imprimis I give and Bequeath unto my Well-beloved Daughters Sarah
and Hannah all my household Goods to be Equally Divided between Both
Saving only a Bead which I Will to my Daughter Hannah over and above
to be by them Received of my Executrix imediately after my Wife's
Deceased. Also I give & Bequeath to my Daughter, Hannah one cow (out
of My Stock of Cattle) to be by her Received of My Executrix one year
after my Deceased.
Imprimis, I give and Bequeath unto my Well-beloved Grand Children
Samuel and John Freeman Ten Pounds to Each, Current Money to be Payed
to them when they Come of Age, by my Executrix to be Raised and
Levyed out of my Estate but if they Dye before they Come to Age it is
not to Return to their Executors but to my Executor againe. And I do
hereby Disalow, revolk and ? all and every other formmer Testaments,
Wills, Legacies and Bequests, and Executors, by me in any ways before
Named, Willed and Bequeathed, Ratifying and Confirming This and no
other to be my Last Will and Testament. In Witness where I have here
unto Set My hand and Seal the Day and Year above Written
Signed, Sealed, Published, Ralph Freeman Sen'r
Pronounced and Declared by ye Said Ralph Freeman as his Last Will and
Testament in the Presents of us the Subscribers
Pentecost Blackmon
Abigail X Maxcey
(her Mark)
George Allen
_______
___________________________________________________________________
____
RALPH FREEMAN'S INVENTORY ( as of July 19th, 1726 by son Ralph
Freeman, Jr.)
We the subscribers who ware Chosen and Appointed to praise the Estate
of Ralph Freeman of Attleborough in the County of Bristol Lat
Deceased have praised sd Estate as
imprimis to his house and Land 350-50-00
item to his money 18-12-00
item to money owed by bonds and / 22-00-00
item to his wareing Aparil 6-5-00
item to three Cows 13-00-00
to one grove of Sheep 8-00-00
his Cart and Whels- 4-10 his plow and horse--- 5-12-00
his Coopers tools 2-17-6 his grindstone 3-1-06
item to his falling axes and long 00-14-00
item to his Barels tubs and milk vesels 4-6-00
Chests and tables 1-10-chairs and Whels 1-11-6 3-1-06
his best Bed and furniture 13-10 his Books 2-0 15-10-00
item to another Bed and furniture 12-10-00
to sheeps wool and one pare of sheep shears 3-17-00
Box iron heaters and lamp 0-12 Bag sive cord 8- 01-00-00
Table Lining 2-10: puter and earthen vesels 4-16-00
item to one hors and furniture (2 6) 10-00-00
to two swine 2-10: to pots Ketles & trumels 2-14 5-4-00
item to his warming pan 00-16-00
item to bels locks and chees fats 00-18-00
to one sithe and siths tacklin for two sithes 00-16-00
-----------------
490-16-06
Thomas Wilmouth
Hezekiah Peck
Edward Capron
________________________________
__________________________________________ ____
Attleborough Town Records, 1699-1789
"A stray Horse taken up by Ralph Freeman of Attleborough the 9th of
Jan 1722/23 of a dark bay colour with a star on his forhead & his
near feet are white. Branded on the near Butock with an uncertain
Brand,"
More About RALPH JR. FREEMAN:
Fact 1: August 14, 1725, Will, at Taunton, MA | FREEMAN Ralph Gershon Jr. (I3188)
|
| 7570 |
Notes for RALPH JR. FREEMAN:
Ralph and his wife Phebe are both descendents of Banfield Capron.
The intention of their marriage is recorded November 08,1764
Bellingham, Norfolk Co., MA. They were married by Uriah Jillson,
Jus. of Peace, Mendon, Worcester Co., MA
More About RALPH JR. FREEMAN:
Fact 1: November 11, 1764, intention of marriage in Bellingham,
Norfolk Co., MA. | FREEMAN Ralph Jr. (I3189)
|
| 7571 |
Notes for RUTH HARRINGTON:
Of Cumberland, RI. | HARRINGTON Ruth (I3760)
|
| 7572 |
Notes for SALISBURY FREEMAN:
Salisbury was a revolutionary pensioner. Thier intention to marry was
10 16 1784 in Bellingham, MA. | FREEMAN Salisbury (I3200)
|
| 7573 |
Notes for SAMUEL ARMSBEE OR ARMESBEY OR AMSBURY:
From 3 Generations New Englander, book page 63,
Arsmbee, or Armesbey, sometime, as in Baylies, Amsbury, Thomas, of
Taunton in 1668, had Thomas born 23 February 1669; Mary 03 October
1671; Rebecca 26 May 1672 (if we believe the records); and Judith 08
January 1674. | ARMESBEY Samuel Ormsbee or (I416)
|
| 7574 |
Notes for SAMUEL FREEMAN:
Samuel Freeman was the son of Benjamin Freeman and Rachel Peck.
Thomas Wilmouth of Attleborough was appointed as his guardian and on
16 May 1732 in Attleborough, MA, Samuel Freeman was listed as "under
14" and the son of Benjamin Freeman, deceased. He served as a
Lieutenant of the MA troops in the French and Indian Wars in 1763.
After the death of his son, Samuel, he was appointed guardian of his
grandson, Chester, only two months before his own death. Benjamin
and Comfort Freeman were sureties under a bond of L200 on 31 October
1772 at Sturbridge, MA. Upon the death of Samuel Freeman, his sons
Benjamin and Comfort Freeman were appointed Administrators of his
estate on 20 January 1773 at Sturbridge, MA. The inventory of his
estate showed a value of L1203 on 21 February 1773 at Sturbridge, Ma.
The probate court ordered the distribution of his estate to his
heirs. Receipts were given by Silas and Rachel Hodges, Mary Freeman
as guardian for Urania, Jared Freeman, Comfort Freeman, Daniel
Plimpton and Moses Wild on 28 March 1774 at Sturbridge, MA.
Samuel Freeman was descended from Ralph Freeman of Dedham and
Attleborough, MA. A blacksmith, he settled in Sturbridge, where he
was the first resident of the area that is now Southbridge, MA. He
built the first house in what is now the center of Southbridge. He
and Col.Moses Marcy of Dudley owned a large part of the land in
Southbridge.
His death in 1772, proceded by the deaths of his son Samuel, and
daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Cheney Freeman, only three months earlier
created havoc in this family. Both Samuels had minor children for
whom guardians were appointed. Chester Freeman, son of the younger
Samuel, came under the guardianship of his grandfather, only to have
his grandfather die and have another guardian appointed. A third
generation Samuel, born in 1772, died as an infant in the summer of
1773. Although there is no record as to what brought on this
catastrophe, it is possible that a sickness went through the family,
or even that there was an epidemic at Sturbridge at the time.
Thanks go to Robert Freeman for this information on the Freeman
Family.
Sources:
1.Abstracts of Bristol County, MA, Probate Records, 1687-1745, p.203
(book 7, pp335-336)
2.Freeman Genealogy, p. 377, n 77
3 Genealogical Memorial and Family Records of the Ammidown Family,
and a Partial Record of some other Families of Sturbridge,Ma, p.36
4.Massachusetts Commonwealth: Worcester County Probate Records, 1731-
1881, v 19, pp 249, 277, 433; dockets 22345, 22407, 22408 | FREEMAN Samuel (I3204)
|
| 7575 |
Notes for SARAH CAPRON:
Sarah married Ralph Freeman of Attleboro. They afterwards lived in
Bellingham, and from there moved to Richmond, New Hampshire, where
they lived to their deaths. She was a very old woman when she died. | CAPRON Sarah (I1809)
|
| 7576 |
Notes for SUSAN FREEMAN:
Susan died young | FREEMAN Susan (I3218)
|
| 7577 |
Notes for SYLVIA FREEMAN:
Sylvia and her husband lived in Attleboro, MA. Their daughter Adelia
died young, and their son Joseph married a Miss Tucker. | FREEMAN Sylvia (I3220)
|
| 7578 |
Notes for VIENNA BALLOU:
Intention of second marriage June 22, 1796. | BALLOU Vienna (I571)
|
| 7579 |
Notes for WILLARD FREEMAN:
married by Ariel Cooke, Jus. of Peace. | FREEMAN Willard (I3238)
|
| 7580 |
Notes for WILLIAM FREEMAN:
William was a Conductor on the Canadian Pacific Railroad when he died
in 1899.
William Freeman Sr., moved his family from Hemmingford,
Huntingdon County, Quebec to Prescott, Grenville County, Ontario
around 1880. He was a conductor on the CPR railways. Prescott is a
small town located on the St. Lawrence River between Brockville and
Cornwall. It is situated at the head of the rapids and the lowest
point that large ships could safely unload cargo, in the 1800's.
The stage coach followed the river shore between Montreal and
Prescott, which made Prescott a transportation point for embarking
larger lake ships, to Toronto. Prosperity came to Prescott during
the Railroad times. The Prescott-Byway Railway necessitated the
building of large storage yards at the waterfront in Prescott, to
connect the Railway by ferry to the Champlain Railway from
Ogdensburg, New York to Boston, MASS. but gradually, Prescott
became only a intermediate point on this transportation system.
The Grand Trunk Railway pushed west from Montreal, Quebec to
Toronto, Ontario. In 1889 Prescott had electric street lights
although private homes used kerosene lamps until the early 1900's.
In 1899 a water tank was erected and Prescott homes had a water and
sewage system!
William and Fanny were listed on the 1880 census for Prescott,
William was 50 years old and working as a Railway Conductor for CPR.,
Richard was 20 years old and working as a Commercial Traveler.
William Henry was 17 years old and working as a clerk in a store.
Robert George was 15 years old and attending school. Adelaide was
listed as 21 years old and living at home. The Freeman family had a
maid who was Josephine Hornby, 20 years old, born in Ontario,
Anglican of Irish origins.
William Freeman Sr.'s Will dated 1898, he was living on lot
#15, now number 235 Dibble Street, Prescott, on the south side of
the street. He was a Public School Trustee in Prescott. The family
attended St. Paul's Wes. Methodist Church, in Prescott. William
Freeman Sr.'s wife, Fanny McGrath, died in Prescott on the 07
February 1897, from Congestion of the brain for 4 days. She was
buried in Sandy Hill Cemetery, Prescott. William Freeman Sr.
remarried on 09 July 1898, Ella Etta Wilson, Fanny's nurse, at St.
James Methodist Church, St. Catherines Street, Montreal, Quebec.
Ella was born in Messina, New York on 27 June 1865, she was 31
years younger than William Sr.
William Freeman Sr., died 08 October 1899 in Prescott from
gangrene. He was buried with his first wife, Fanny McGrath in Sandy
Hill Cemetery, Prescott. In his Will, which is at the County
Clerks Office in Prescott, he left his entire estate to Ella Etta
(Wilson) Freeman, valued at $2,487.00. | FREEMAN William (I3241)
|
| 7581 |
Notes for William Parmenter
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From "Genealogical Research in England - Parmenter" French NEHGR V68
1914 pp262-273:
"William Parmenter (George) of Little Yeldham, co. Essex, husbandman, the
testator of 1613, b. probably about 1560, was buried at Little Yeldham 4
Dec. 1617. He married, about 1585, Margery _____. He inherited various
lands in Little Yeldham from his father and copyhold lands called Cowell
or Gouldwell by the will of his brother George, which he mentioned in his
own will, dated 12 Oct 1613 and proved 19 Jan 1617/18. As only two of
his children were elsewhere; and therefore he was probably the William
Parmenter who was assessed in the subsidy of 1596-7 in the adjacent
parish of Sible Hedingham, the registers of which prior to 1680 are lost." | Parmenter Richard (I51952)
|
| 7582 |
Notes from St. James Episcopal Church, Manitowoc, Manitowoc Co., WI. | Hall Samuel (I52633)
|
| 7583 |
Notes left on Steuben County Website by his granddaugher, Rose Higgens.
He left Stueben county, NY for Hillsdale county, MI about 1865, then to Springvale township, Charlevoix County, MI in 1874. HIs final move to Ann Arbor, MI was about 1905.
Cornelius served in the military between 1862 and 1863, being discharged with a disability.
He served under Captain George W. Bullock's Company G, 18th Michigan Infantry, mustered in 24th day of December 1862, to serve three years and was discharged from teh service of the united Stateds, 8th day of June 1863 by reason of " a Surgeon's certificate of disability."
According to Homestead file, Serial Patent Number MI NO S/N MI2520 478 received from National Archives, Nov. 2000, a statement from a Oliver P. Stone, "The letter "J" in his name was adopted by himself since his discharge from the Army:, dated Sept. 1877 as statement of verification of Cornelius J. Annable.
"Said Cornelius Annable was born in Steuben Co. in the State of New York." Statement from discharge file contained in Homestead file obtained from the National Archives. (Rose Higgens)
Cornelius purchased 160 acres, for $18.00 under the Soldiers' and Sailors' Homestead act of June 8, 1872.
Deed recorded in No. 4 of Deeds on Page 26.3-Ref. A. R. Elfrighe, Registaer. Traverse City, MI.
Section 2 in Township 32 W of Range 4 W containing 162.91 acres, under section 2291 of the revised Statues of the Unites States, dated 1878. | Annable Cornelius J. (I53641)
|
| 7584 |
Notes were handwritten by Sophronia Rice Brown about her children, grandchildren and in-laws. Passed down to her great granddaughter. | Source (S1119)
|
| 7585 |
NOTES: Moved from Andover, MA to York, ME.
York County Court lists David Farnham PLT for Ejectment 1731, 1 Boston MA index #602234 Vol 9 p.3, box 41 file 3. Jonathan Farnham DEF Debt 1751, 4 York index #601659 vol14, p.331, box 124 file 67. | FARNHAM Ralph (I38169)
|
| 7586 |
NOTES: Peter Lewis is listed in the York County Court Index in the following cases: 1695, def. for Nonapperance; 1695 Fine Remitted; 1715 Def. cause unlisted. Morgan Lewis Def. 1706 for Fornication. Andrew Lewis Def. 1715 cause not listed; Plt 1739 Debt; PLT 1741 Debt. | LEWIS Peter (I38060)
|
| 7587 |
Nothing is known of his wife.
In 1277 Eustacius de Whytene presented John de Chaundos to the church of Pencombe.
On 8 Dec 12 Edward I (1283) at Leominster, the following was issued "Grant to Eustace de Whyteneye, and his heirs, of free warren in all his demesne lands in Penecumbe, Whyteneye and Caldewell, со. Hereford."
He was of Whitney, etc., Knight. About 1280 gave deed to monastery of St. Peter in Gloucester, referring to and confirming deed of his ancestors above mentioned. Lord of Pencombe, Little Cowarn, and Whitney in 1281. Granted Free Warren by Edward I. in 1284. Summoned to military service beyond the seas in 1297. Tenant of a part of the Manor of Huntington in 1299. Summoned to the Scotch War in 1301. Possibly grandson instead of son of Sir Robert.
Melville (Melville, Henry, A.M., LL.B., The Ancestry of John Whitney: Who, with His Wife Elinor, and Sons John, Richard, Nathaniel, Thomas, and Jonathan, Emigrated from London, England, in the Year 1635, and Settled in Watertown, Massachusetts; the First of the Name in America, and the One from Whom a Great Majority of the Whitneys Now Living in the United States Are Descended (New York, NY: The De Vinne Press, 1896) says the following:
"Robert appears to have been succeeded by the Sir Eustace who, about 1280, gave the deed of confirmation to the monastery of St. Peter, and in 1277 nominated John de Chaundos, and in 1280 Roger de Wytteneye as rectors of Pencombe. There are no less than five other records relating to him, all of great interest. The first is in a return of the names of lords of manors and townships for the purpose of making up the military levies ordered by the Parliament at Lincoln, in the ninth year of King Edward I. (1281). He is there described as "Eustachius de Wyteney, Lord of Pencumbe, Little Cowarne and Wyteney." [Harleian Manuscript No. 6281, in British Museum.] The second is a grant of "Free Warren" made in the twelfth year of Edward I. (1284), and consists of an abstract of the Royal Patent contained in the Great Charter Roll preserved in the Record Office. A photograph of the original is given, which may be translated as follows: Charter Roll 12 Edward I. (1284), No.58. THE KING to Archbishops, etc., greeting. Know ye that we have granted and by this our Charter do confirm to our dearly beloved & faithful EUSTACE DE WHYTENEYE that he and his heirs have forever Free Warren in all their demesne lands of Pencumbe [Pencombe and Caldewell were in the County of Hereford. Whyteneye, and that neighborhood, in the opinion of the Lords Marchers, was not, and they succeeded in maintaining their views till the statute of Henry VIII.], Whyteneye and Caldewell in the County of Hereford, so that these lands shall not be within the metes of our forest. Nevertheless none shall enter these lands to hunt in them or take any beast pertaining to free warren without license and will of the said Eustace or his heirs upon pain of forfeiting to us ten pounds. Wherefore we will and firmly command that the aforesaid Eustace and his heirs forever have free warren in all their demesne lands aforesaid, so that these lands shall not be within the metes of our forest, and no one shall enter these lands to hunt, etc., without license, etc., of the said Eustace or his heirs on pain of forfeiture to us of ten pounds as aforesaid. These being witnesses. G. Wygorn, R. Bathen & Wellen, Bishops; Galfrido de Geynvill, Ottone de Grandisone, Robto Tibetot, Rico de Brus, Petro de Chaumpuent, Rico de Bosco, Walto de Everest, and others. Given under our hand at Leominster the 8th day of December in the year of our reign the 12th. The third is a summons to him as a knight to perform military service in tho King's behalf "in parts beyond the seas." Muster at London on Sunday next after the Octave of St. John the Baptist (8th July, 1297). [Parliamentary, etc., writs, 12 Edward I., in Record Office.] The destination was probably Flanders, where war was then going on. The fourth is an inquisition, taken in 1299, giving, among other things, the names of the free tenants of the Manor of Huntington, which included the parishes of Huntington, Kington, and Brilley, in the Marches of Wales, near Whitney. Eustachius de Wytteneye is named as holding a, messuage and two hundred acres of land by the service of "one foot-soldier with a bow and arrow, at the Castle of Huntington, in time of war, for forty days at his own expense." This is an excellent illustration of a military tenure. [See Notes on the Early History of the Manor of Huntington, published in the "Archaeologia Cambrensis," 3d series, vol. xv, p. 229. The inquisition was taken on the death of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl of Hereford.] The fifth and last, for it possibly led to his death, is a summons to the Scottish war. Edward I., who reigned from 1272 to 1307, was among the greatest of the English Kings. It was he who first reduced Wales to anything like subjection by defeating Llewellyn, in 1282, at the fords of the Wye, above Whitney, in a great battle in which Sir Eustace undoubtedly took part, though we can find no record of who composed the forces engaged. In commemoration of this victory the King presented his infant son to the army as the "Prince of Wales," a title ever since borne by the heir apparent. Later he conquered Scotland, in the days of William Wallace, whose exploits form the subject of Jane Porter's famous novel, "The Scottish Chiefs." The following is a translation of the King's Writ, as served upon De Whitney. Close Roll 29, Edward I. (1301), No.123, m13d and 12d THE KING to his beloved & trusty EUSTACE DE WYTENEY, greeting. Because we intend to proceed manfully and mightily, by God's help, against our rebels and traitors the Scots, notoriously persevering in preconceived malice and knavery of ill will, in order to repress their rebellion and insolence, after the feast of Pentecost next to come, in which feast the truce lately granted to the said Scots at the request of the King of France will be ended, we ask you that you do be with us at Berwick on Tweed at the feast of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist next following, decently prepared with horses and arms to depart from thence with us, at our expense, against the Scots our rebels aforesaid, that, by the help of you and of other our trusty subjects, to whom we have commanded the same thing, the unbridled pride and obstinate rebellion of the aforesaid traitors may be suppressed, by such your labors and assistance, that profit and the advantages which we hope for may come to us and to our kingdom and crown of England with the establishment of peace and lasting honor. Witness the King at Northampton the 12th day of March. A reason for supposing that the old knight did not return home is that we find that a young Sir Eustace was knighted, at the same time with his neighbors, De Lacy, Corbet, and Marmyon, in 1306."
Tim Powys-Lybbe wrote: "I have found a Eustace de Whitney in Bodine and Spalding super- compendium of Dorothea Poyntz' ancestors, p. 215. This Eustace is of the same generation as Henry Willington and Margaret Freville, but it does not show who Eustace's wife was. They reference Gerald Paget's "Official Genealogical and Heraldic Baronage of England", 90. Anyhow this Eustace had a daughter Maud who married Giles de Braose of Knolton, Dorset and they had a daughter Elizabeth who m. Wm. Frome."
Sources
26 Oct 2003 posting of Tim Powys-Lybbe re: Marriage of Eustace de Whitney - http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/gen-medieval/2003-10/1067178689
http://wiki.whitneygen.org/wrg/index.php/Family:Whitney,_Eustace_de_(b1256-a1301)
See also:
Geni: http://www.geni.com/people/Eustace-de-Wytteneye/6000000006190911621
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ancestorsearch&id=I16905 | WYTTENEYE Eustace (I60224)
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| 7588 |
Nothing is known of his wife.
In 1353 Robert de Whytene presented Baldwyn de Whytene to the church of Pencomb. Robert Whitney was also sheriff of Herefordshire 1 Richard II [1377-1378].[4] While this Baldwin de Whitney, a priest, must have been a relative, it is not at all clear how. This is the only known reference to him. Perhaps he was a younger brother.[5]
Feb 1, 1356, "Licence, for 100s. to be paid to the king by John son of Edward de Penebrugge, for him to enfeoff Robert Whiteney and Thomas de Hampton of the manors of Bouthrede and Eton, co. Hereford, held of the king in chief, and for them to grant the same to him and Elizabeth, his wife, and his heirs."[6]
In 1358, Robert de Whitney purchased land in Boughrood & Eton.[7]
On 12 Feb 1368, Robert de Whiteneye named Baldwin de Whitneye, clerk and Richard de Hortesleye, clerk to look over his affairs as he attended the marriage of the Duke of Clarence in Milan. "A.D. 1368 - Robertus de Whiteneye, qui in Obsequium Regis, in Comitiva Leonelli Ducis Clarenciae, ad partes Melaniae prosecturus est, habet Literas Regis de Generali Attornatu, sub Nominibus Baldewini de Whiteneye Clerici & Ricardi de Hortesleye Clerici, sub alternatione, ad lucrandum &c. in quibuscumque Curiis Anglie, per unum Annum Duraturas. Praesentibus &c. Teste Rege apud Westmonasterium decimo die Februarii." - Foedera, conventiones, literae et cujuscunque generis acta publica inter. He was of Whitney, etc., Knight. One of 200 gentlemen who in 1368 went to Milan in the retinue of the Duke of Clarence on the occastion of the latter's marriage. Member of Parliament for Herefordshire in 1376, 1379, and 1380; Sheriff of Herefordshire in 1377.[8]
References:
4.^ Henry Austin Whitney, The First Known Use of Whitney as a Surname: Its Probable Signification, and Other Data (Boston, MA: Henry Austin Whitney, 1875), p. viii.
5.^ Supposition.
6.^ Calendar of Patent Rolls, Edward III, vol. 10, p. 344.
7.^ Morgan George Watkins, Collections towards the history and antiquities of the county of Hereford. In continuation of Duncumb’s history. Hundred of Huntington ... (Hereford: 1898), pp. 77-95.
8.^ Melville, Henry, A.M., LL.B., The Ancestry of John Whitney: Who, with His Wife Elinor, and Sons John, Richard, Nathaniel, Thomas, and Jonathan, Emigrated from London, England, in the Year 1635, and Settled in Watertown, Massachusetts; the First of the Name in America, and the One from Whom a Great Majority of the Whitneys Now Living in the United States Are Descended (New York, NY: The De Vinne Press, 1896), p. 216.
Sources
http://wiki.whitneygen.org/wrg/index.php/Family:Whitney,_Robert_de_(1318-c1380)
15 July 2006 posting of Douglas Richardson on Gen-Medieval re: Early Frevilles - https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/gEGDKpwAF9I/m/D2CcOMvezOsJ | WHITNEY Robert (I60145)
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| 7589 |
Nothing is known of the wife of Alalhard, Count Palatin & 8th Count of Paris. They married about 0845 and she died about 0860 at around 30 years old. They had 2 children.
Parents
Unknown[1]
Spouse
Adalhard, Comte Palatin et de Paris (830 - after 890). Issue: 2: [2]
Wulfard (855 - 06 Sep 880/93). No known spouse or issue.
Adelais (Paris) Angoulême (855/60 - 18 Nov 901) - married Louis II, King France; had 2 children by Louis II. | Van PARIJS Unknown (I58137)
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| 7590 |
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. There is, in particular, NO EVIDENCE AT ALL OF ANY DESCENT FROM THE KINGS OF DENMARK.
Extract from Wikipedia Gunnora
Gunnora (or Gunnor) (c. 936 – 1031) was the wife and consort of Richard I of Normandy. Her parentage is unknown, earliest sources reporting solely that she was of Danish ancestry and naming siblings INCLUDING BROTHER HERFAST DE CREPON WHO IS SOMETIMES ERRONEOUSLY GIVEN AS HER FATHER.
Gunnora long acted as Richard's mistress or wife by "more danico", but when Richard was prevented from nominating their son Robert to be Archbishop of Rouen, the two were married, making their children legitimate in the eyes of the church. As duchess, was able to use her influence to see her kin favored, and several of the most prominent Conquest-era Norman magnates, including the Montgomery, Warenne, Mortimer, Vernon/Redvers, and Fitz Osbern families, were descendants of her brother and sisters.
Richard and Gunnora were parents to several children:
Richard II "the Good", Duke of Normandy (966)
Robert, Archbishop of Rouen, Count of Evreux, died 1037.
Mauger, Earl of Corbeil[disambiguation needed ], died after 1033.
Robert Danus, died between 985 and 989
Emma of Normandy (c. 985–1052) wife of two kings of England.
Maud of Normandy, wife of Odo II of Blois, Count of Blois, Champagne and Chartres
Hawise of Normandy, wife of Geoffrey I of Brittany
Sources
See the link to the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page for our documented knowledge of this person. There is in particular no evidence at all of descent from the Kings of Denmark: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm
http://scangen.se/medieval/gunnor.htm
Newberry genealogy : the ancestors and descendants of Thomas Newberry of Dorchester, Mass., 1634, 920-1914 Author: Ancestry.com Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT: The Generations Network, Inc., 2005.Original data - Bartlett, J. Gardner. Newberry genealogy: the ancestors and descendants of Thomas Newberry of Dorchester, Mass., 1634, 920-1914. Boston: Published by the author for John S Note: Includes index. | UNKNOWN Gunnora (I58388)
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| 7591 |
Notice was from BCM...church of Dartmouth?
In the 1840 census for Nichols, Tioga County,NY a Lydia Annable is listed.
Will of Jonathon Delano, Jr. Dartmouth, Bristol County, MA
In the name of God, Amen.
I, Jonahton Delano, Junior of Dartmouth in the county of Bristol and province of the Massachusetts Bay in New England, Marriner, being weak in body but sound and disposing mind and in memory, thanks be to God. Therefore I do make and devise this my last will and testament in manner and form following vs first and principally, I commend my soul into the honor of God that gave it: and my body I commit to the Earth to be decently buried therein at the direction of my Executor. Herein after named and touching my temporal Estate wherewith God hath blessed , I give and dispose thereof as followeth. I will that all my last debts and funeral charges be paid out of my personal estate by my Executor.
Item: I give and bequeath unto my well beloved wife, Lydia Delano, all my personal estate that I have after my just debts and funeral charges are paid to be her and hereafter heirs and assigns for ever. I also give her the profit and improvement on one half of my farm where on my Honoured father and mother now live during the time she remains my widow. All which give her in lue of the right of dowry and prower of thirds and to inable her to bring the chld if she have one born of her body in nine month after a date of these ---?
Item: I give unto my Honoured father and mother: Jonathon Delano and Abigail Delano a profit and improvement of the other half of my farm aforesaid during their natural lives and they allowing my brother, Amasa to live with them.
Item: I give unto my child if my wife hath one born of her body in the nine months after the date of those present all my real estate in the township of Dartmouth to be to said child and to said heirs and ofsprings of the child forever excepting to profit and improvements as above expressed.
Item: Further my will is that if the child before expressed should have no lawful heir before it arrive to the age of twenty one years, not live it self to the age of twenty one years therefor my two brothers Amasa Delano and Stephen Delano to have the aforesaid real estae as the child was to have if it had lived to go to them, their heirs and assigns forever.
Lastly, I do hereby nominate, constitute and appoint my Honoured father, Jonathon Delano of Dartmouth to be my Executor of this my last will and testament: Hereby revoking, disallowing and making void all former Will or Wills by me hereto fore made.
Ratifying and allowing this and no other to be my last Will and Testament in witness Whereof I have there unto set my hand and seal this twenty second day of July in the seventh year of His Majesties Reign, George, the third, King of Great Britten. 22nd of Domini 1767. Signed, Jonathon Delano, Jr.
Signed and Sealed, Published and Declared by the Testator to be his last Will and Testament in the presence of
Signed:
James Smith
Job, Jab or Jabez Moffet ?
Abrham Shearman
At the bottom of the will is written " April 25th 1768 Proved" | Peckham Lydia (I53816)
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| 7592 |
Notre-Dame | Family: NORMAND Jean / LE LABOUREUR Anne (F19547)
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| 7593 |
Nov 18 | SVENDSDOTTER Anna Lovisa (I54798)
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| 7594 |
November 3, 2010
Norman W. Trombly
Press-Republican
PLATTSBURGH — Mr. Norman W. Trombly, 90, of Domingo Bay, Boynton Beach, Fla., passed away Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010, at Bethesda Hospital under the care of Hospice.
He was born in Sciota, N.Y., on Sept. 27, 1920, the son of Frank and Harriett (Fisher) Trombly.
Norman graduated from Mooers High School in 1938. He was employed at a farm in Willsboro for 10 years and later was employed by Abelene Pest Control in Plattsburgh for 20 years, retiring in 1975. He later worked for 10 years at a window company in Florida. He was a member of St. Matthew's Church in Florida, St. Peter's Church in Plattsburgh and the Civil Air Patrol in Florida. He also enjoyed floral gardening.
He is survived by his wife, the former Annabelle Pulsifer, whom he married in Essex on Oct. 19, 1946; a son and daughter-in-law, William and Judy Trombly of Sebring, Fla.; a daughter and son-in-law, Beverly and Ryon Duquette Jr. of Plattsburgh; two brothers and one sister-in-law, Daylord and Doris Trombly of Mooers, Ronald Trombly of Mooers; three grandchildren, Jason Trombly and his wife, Nissy, Yvonne Burley and her husband, William, and Christopher Duquette; seven great-grandchildren, Tyler, Todd, Troy and Nicole Burley, Lily, Jack Trombly and Damian Vandish; and many nieces and nephews.
Calling hours will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday at the Brown Funeral Home, 29 Broad St. in Plattsburgh. A Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Saturday from St. Peter's Church. Interment will follow in the parish cemetery.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be offered to Hospice of Palm Beach County, 5300 East Ave., West Palm Beach, FL 33407; or online, at www.hpbc.com.
Arrangements are entrusted to Brown Funeral Home, 29 Broad S., Plattsburgh, N.Y.; 561-3980.
Online condolences and memorial candles may be offered at www.brownfuneralhomeinc.com. | TROMBLY Norman W. (I50099)
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| 7595 |
now resides at Holland, Mass. | PELKEY Eunice Sarah (I6376)
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| 7596 |
Nuño Ordóñez married Asura. [1]
Vela.
Oveco.
Suero.
Munio.
Vermudo.
Nuño.
Gontroda.
Estudios genealógicos y heráldicos: [2]
Nuño
Vela Núñez Vermudo Núñez
Fruela Velaz Jimena Vélaz
c. ¿Piniolo
Gundemáriz Vela Vermúdez
Anderquina
c. con
Munió
Rodriguez Aragonta
c. con
Jimeno
Jiménez Elvira
Pinioliz c. con Vermudo Vélaz
Aldonza
Muñoz c. con Piniolo Jiménez
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2024, Family of Vermudo Núñez.
↑ http://books.google.com.br/books?id=dgfx-OnMheYC&pg=PA32 | ASTURIAS Nuño Ordóñez (I59917)
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| 7597 |
Numabela appears in many online genealogies and other unreliable sources, mostly as the daughter of Fruela Perez de Cantabria, the son of Pedro, Duque de Cantabria, and brother of Alfonso I, King of Asturias 739-757, but sometimes as the daughter of Pedro, Duke of Cantabria
Numabela's marriage or marriages vary somewhat but she is often linked as the wife of Loup II, Duke of Gascony
Numabela Froilaz Cantabria was born in 755 in Cantabria, España, daughter of Fruela Perez Cantabria (~0710–~0765) and Gosendes Cantabria (0730–0767).
Numabela married Centule Gascoña (born in 735 in Midi-Pyrenees, France; son of Adelrico (Gascogne) de Gascogne).
Numabela died in 785 in Gascogne, France.
Numabela de Cantabria[1]
Parents
(unproven) Father: Fruela de Cantabria.[1]
(unproven) Mother: Menina Gosendes
Wikipedia:es: Numabela de Cantabria (unsourced stub citing "Numabela de Cantabria." www.sologenealogia.com).[2]
Note: wife of Loup of Gascony (d. 775) is UNKNOWN.[3]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia ES unsourced stub translation: "Numabela of Cantabria born around the year 755 . Possible daughter of Fruela Perez de Cantabria and Menina Gosendes and therefore granddaughter of Pedro , Duke of Cantabria. He married towards 770 with Lupo II , Duke of Gascony . Centulus had as children Lopiz of Gascony and the Duke Sánctulus Lopis of Gascony and allegedly Munia Alava ."
Book: Flavio Rivera Montealegre, Genealogy of the Montealegre Family: Your Ancestors In Europe And Your Descendants In America
Google Books (accessed 28 February 2024)
See also:
https://gw.geneanet.org/frebault?lang=en&pz=henri&nz=frebault&ocz=0&p=numabela&n=de+cantabrie | CANTABRIA Numabela Froilaz (I59553)
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| 7598 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55882)
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| 7599 |
NY | Chisholm Phebe Ann (I54232)
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| 7600 |
Oakland Cemetery, St. Paul, MN | ESPENMILLER Jannette Anna (I56139)
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