Matches 8,601 to 8,800 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 8601 |
See http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html
Biography
Family line (Male)
Grat —Gratian
Urban — Urbanus
Telpuil — Telpwyll
Teuhant — Deheuwaint/Tegfan or Tasciovanus, (#4 & # 5, duplicate generations)
Tecmant —
Coyl Hen Guotepauc — Coel Hen (the Old)
It is similarly recorded in the pedigree of the Kings of South Rheged in the Achau Brenhinoedd a Thywysogion Cymru.
Name
Name: Telpwyll "Telpuil" /ap Erb/
Name: Deheuwaint ap /Telpwyll/
Birth
Birth:
Date: 300
Place: Powys, Wales
Death
Place: Northumberland, England
Sources
An essay on the Welsh Saints
Early British Kingdoms
This person was created through the import of Farmer Meanderings.ged on 31 January 2011.
Tudbwyll was born about 0270. Tudbwyll Ap Tudbwyll ... [1]
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Jessica Dunn, Friday, January 2, 2015. Replace this citation if there is another source.
See also:
Add sources here. | ap URBANAS Telpuil (I59287)
|
| 8602 |
See https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_de_Melgueil#Comtes_nomm%C3%A9s_par_les_rois_des_Francs
Occupation: Count of Substantion | MAGEULONE Aigulf (I59599)
|
| 8603 |
see more | STROTHEIDE Corky Brown (I9331)
|
| 8604 |
See the link to the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page for our documented knowledge of this person.
Research Notes
Note: ref: Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org) (20 Apr 10) -
Sprota was a Breton concubine captured in war and bound to William by a Danish marriage. There is no evidence that Sprota and William were ever married. After William died, Sprota became the wife of Esperleng, a wealthy miller; Rodulf of Ivry was a half-brother to Richard I.
Note: I can't say if Sprota was the mother of Richard I. Weis isn't clear and mistresses at this time were common. She may have been from Brittany, but Weis calls her a "Danish wife," which may come from William of Jumiáeges who states that she was bound to William by the Danish custom, "Danico more iuncta, nomine Sprota." The evidence that she was from Brittany is from Flodoard: "Rex Ludowicus filio ipsius Willelmi, nato de concubina Britanna, terram Nortmannorum dedit; ..." Flodoard is identifying Sprota as mother of Richard (Ludowicus) and calls Sprota a concubine from Brittany.
Sources
Flodoard of Reims. Flodoardi Chronicon (Reims : Regnier, 1855) See the year 943.
The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy's Mideieval Lands Index:
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMANDY.htm
Guillaume of Jumièges records that, after the rebel “Riulfus” was defeated at the battle of "Pratum-belli", a messenger arrived “a...Fiscannensis castri” and reported to Guillaume the birth of his son to “nobilissima puella Danico more sibi iuncta...Sprota”
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis and Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr, ed. by William R. Beall & Kaleen E. Beall (Baltimore, 2008), line 121E-18 (Ganger Rolf). | BRETAGNE Sprote (I58391)
|
| 8605 |
See: Gen. and Fam. His. of N.H. pg. 1654 | PRESCOTT Jonathan (I6708)
|
| 8606 |
See: Stearns His. of Plymouth, N.H. | FLETCHER Joshua (I2896)
|
| 8607 |
Seigneur de la Bouteillerie, de Roquemont, de Vaux-sur-Orge et de la Boissière, Jean was deceased before January 1513 when Marie de Venois is designated as his widow. In May 1514 their son Jean is noted as seigneur de La Bouteillerie and of Vaux-sur-Orge. When their daughter Bénigne marries in 1516 she was dame de La Boissière, as well as Boise at Vaux-sur-Orge. A son Guy and a daughter Catherine are also known for this couple.
Research notes
Jean’s parents have been established by tracking the path of the estates which he inherited from his LeBouteillier and Morhier antecedents.[1][2]
Sources
↑ Jetté, René et al., Table d’ascendance de Catherine de Baillon, Montréal, Société généalogique canadienne-française, 2001. -en français.
↑ The American-Canadian Genealogist, Issue #82, Volume 25, Number 4, 1999. -in English. | Le BOUTEILLIER Jean (I57842)
|
| 8608 |
Seignuer of Alençon[1]
Sources
↑ Entered by Barbara White.
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands, Normandy: Guillaume I de Bellême
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_II_Talvas_de_Bell%C3%AAme
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6676093/person/-1236861723/facts
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13248593/person/1465506769/facts | BELLÊME William (I60004)
|
| 8609 |
Selectman at Waltham, Mass. Will adm. by
Jonas Dix | SMITH Jonas (I8970)
|
| 8610 |
Selon Cyrille Toumanoff, Moušeł II Mamikonian est père de Vahan le Loup ( 606) [...] De son côté Christian Settipani considère Vahan le Loup comme un personnage fictif et attribue à Moušeł un fils hypothétique, Hamazasp, cité comme naxarar en 594[1]. | MAMIKONIAN Vahan "The Wolf" (I57922)
|
| 8611 |
Senach Díbech was born about 450. He was the son of Carthenn mac Eterscél. He passed away about 520.
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 38
Clann Name: Uí Máil
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[1]
AU633.2 The battle of Áth Goan in western Life, in which Cremthann son of Aed son of Senach, king of Laigin, fell.
Rawlinson B 502[2]
¶348] Trí mc Seanaich mc Cáirtind Muaich mc Etersceóil mc Áengusa Ailchi mc Fheargusa Forcraid mc Thuathail Tigich mc Maine Máil .i.{facsimile page & column 125a} Áed, Erníne, Cillíne. Eirníne a quo Úi Sluagdae, Úi Máele, Úi Émíne
Sources
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
↑ MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT
Seanach Diodhach mac Carthann Muadh was the father of Áed Dibchine, King of Leinster 592–595 Wikipedia : Kings of Leinster
Francis J.Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, Table 8
http://fabpedigree.com/s072/f954286.htm (Un sourced no dates) | mac CARTHENN Senach Díbech (I58489)
|
| 8612 |
Senchormac (Old Cormac) was the son of Cruitlinde and father of Fedelimid Ruamnach. [1][2]
detail showing Senchormac's place in de Diceto's genealogy
Sources
↑ William F. Skene, Chronicles of the Picts, Chronicles of the Scots (Edinburgh: H. M. General Register House, 1867), p. 316, digital images, https://books.google.com/books?id=XVkJAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA316, Google Books (http://books.google.com : accessed 8 June 2015).
↑ Alan O. Anderson, Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286 (London: D. N. Nutt, 1908), p. 20, https://archive.org/stream/scottishannalsfr00ande#page/n20/mode/1up, digital images, Open Library (https://openlibrary.org : accessed 8 June 2015). | CRUITLINDE Senchormaich (I59364)
|
| 8613 |
Senegonde (Latin: Senegundis) de Béziers was born in about 977 and was the daughter of Guilhèm (Guillaume) II, Vicomte de Béziers and his wife Ermentrude. [1]
Senegonde married Richard I, Vicomte de Millau. [1] [2]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024: Vicomtes de Béziers - Rainard III. (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024: Comtes de Vicomtes de Millau. (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands) | BEZIERS Senegonde (I59674)
|
| 8614 |
Seniofredo (lat: Sunicfredus, es: Sunifredo) aka "Sunifred" de Urgell, later Count and Marquis in the Marca Hispánica (Spanish March) was the son (or potentially son-in-law) of the Visigothic count Bosrello / Borrell / Bello(n), the founder of the Bellonid Dynasty who controlled territories in the regions of Narbonensis (Septimania) and south across the Pyrenees into what was called the Marca Hispánica (the Spanish March region that would later become Catalunya / Catalonia). Seniofredo / Sunifred is considered to have been born in the Comtat d'Urgell (County of Urgell), an historic region in the Marca Hispanica situated between Barcelona and Lleida, by about 800 - based on records of a donation at Urgell in 819: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
Sunicfredus donated property to the church of Urgell by charter dated 819. Emperor Louis I granted "villam…in pago Narbonensis…Fons-coopertus" to "fideli nostro Sunicfredo" by charter dated 829, which states that "Bosrello patri suo" had previously held the property.
Marca Hispánica / The Spanish March
Marca Hispánica 814
The Marca Hispánica (Spanish March) extended across the Pyrenees from Pamplona to Narbonne and Barcelona. The territory was established in about 795 by Emperor Charlemagne and was intended to form a militarized buffer zone to protect the Carolingian Empire from the Muslim Umayyad Emirate based in Cordoba that had gained control of much of the Iberian Peninsula, known as al-Andalus. [1] [6]
Sunifred's father (or potentially father-in-law) Bosrello / Borrell / Bello(n) was apparently of Visigothic origin and was one of the principal counts controlling territory in the region, which was later expanded upon. Sunifred apparently led a revolt of the indigenous [Visigothic] population against Bernard de Septimania - to become the Marquis - and in the 830s conquered Cerdanya and Urgell, effectively checking the Moorish expansion into the Northeastern portion of the Iberian Peninsula. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
Honors de Sunifred (844-848)
Sunifred initially became the Count of Urgell and of Cerdanya and later controlled additional counties within the Marca Hispánica. These included territories north of the Pyrenees that would eventually become part of France (including Carcassonne, Béziers, Narbonne and Nimes) and territories south of the Pyrenees that would eventually become part of Catalonia and later Spain (including not only Urgell and Cerdanya, but Barcelona and Gerona). He would eventually be considered Marquis. [2] [4] [5]
Conde Sunifredo: conde de Urgel y Cerdaña: hacia 834-848; conde de Barcelona y Gerona, conde de Narbona, Carcasona, Beziers y Nimes; titulado marqués (Suniefrido etiam marchioni): 844-848 [3]
Family and Succession
Sunifred married a woman named Ermesinda / Ermesenda (whose parents remain unknown) in about 834 and the couple had seven or eight children, including five sons - the three eldest becoming counts within the Marca Hispánica - and the two younger joining the clergy to become an abbot and a bishop: [2] [3]
Sesenanda, who was born in about 835 and was still living in 902 as the widow of a man named Guadaldo, with descendants (cf. Salazar y Acha)
Guifré / Wilfredo (Guifred / Wilfredus), who succeeded his father as the Comte d'Urgell i Cerdanya and later as Comte de Barcelona
Rodolf, who became a count within the Marca Hispánica, potentially as Comte de Besalú
Miró / Miron, who was initially associated with the counties of Cerdanya and Conlflent and later became the Comte de Rosselló (fr: Roussillon)
Seniofredo / Sunifredo, who became the Abbot of Arles in 881
Ermesinda, who is not known to have married and who died in 898
Riculf, who became the Bishop of Elna (885-915)
Possibly an additional daughter named Cixilona / Quixilo
Sunifred was killed in battle in 849, in a counter-attack waged by the son of Bernard of Septimania. Various territories he controlled within the Marca Hispánica were later controlled by his three eldest sons. [2] [3]
Four of their sons and eldest daughter Sesenanda were reflected in a subsequent donation to the historic Abadiá Santa Maria de La Grassa located southeast of Carcassonne: [2]
Sesenanda, Sunicfredus, Wifredus comes, Radulfus comes, Miro comes donated property for the souls of Sunicfredi genitoris nostri vel domnæ Ermesinde genititricis nostrae to the abbey of Lagrasse by charter dated Apr or May [878].
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 March of Spain by Cawley, Charles in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2025: (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Comtes de Barcelona by Cawley, Charles in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2025: (See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Salazar y Acha, Jaime. Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media. (Madrid : Real Academia de la Historia, 2021). Electronic edition, Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado, PDF available online at: Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media. Cf. Capítulo VII, Los Condes de Barcelona, Reyes de Aragón - II. Conde Sunifredo, p 138
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Wikipedia (ca) - Sunifred I d'Urgell-Cerdanya
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Wikipedia (en) - Sunifred, Count of Barcelona
↑ Wikipedia (en) - Spanish March | URGELL Seniofredo (I59687)
|
| 8615 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I35710)
|
| 8616 |
Sep/Oct 1608
abt Sep | Family: Frauncis John / Noyse Anne (F23766)
|
| 8617 |
Served from May 1 to Jun. 30 1814 Capt.
Haig's Corps of Light Dragoons. Ref. R.& L,
page 20 AGO. Discharged from service 11 Feb. 1818
served 5 years; Capt. Churchill's Artillery. Discription given
as dark complexion,dark eyes, black hair; 5 feet, 7 inches tall aged 43.
He was a goldsmith by trade before his enlistment. | PULSIFER Gerrish (I7295)
|
| 8618 |
Served in Army in WWI - 42nd Rainbow Division | MCCLAIN Harold Banks Middleton (I5504)
|
| 8619 |
Served in Civ. War 106th Inf. Co. E; Capt.
Luther Priest's Regt. Enlisted at Hopkinton,
N.Y. 11 Aug. 1862. Not in his fathers house on
1870 census, nor is his name metioned as heirs
on forclosure notce against Edytha Pulsifer and
others. | PULSIFER Henry Albert (I7357)
|
| 8620 |
Served in civil war, Company I, Fifteenth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, was wounded in the battles of Antietam and Gettysburg; his death was caused by an elevator accident in Boston, 1899. | FREEMAN Daniel (I37806)
|
| 8621 |
Served in Co. H; Mich. Calvary | TEACHOUT Wolcott (I9460)
|
| 8622 |
Served in the Civ. War; 2nd Co. E; enlisted
19 Aug. 1864; disc. 12 Jun. 1865. Faught in
Battles of Cedar Creek and Lacey Springs. | PULSIFER Charles Orville (I6953)
|
| 8623 |
Seth died young.
Seth died young. | Peckham Seth (I53922)
|
| 8624 |
Seth moved from Taunton to Eason in about 1715 and made his home in the extreme southwest part of town. In the town records, he died at the age of 59 years and " left this life for a better place."
He was the son of Edward, who was the son of Edward, all of Taunton. His brother, Erasmus, settled in Easton about the same time though probably a bit later, according to the History of Easton. He owned land north and west of his brother, Seth.
In his will, his wife, Sarah is named Executrix with her son, Erasmas. Dated 31 Aug. 1751.
Bristol County, MA Wills and Probates 12:635/6. Probated 31 Sept. 1751. | Babbitt Seth (I52465)
|
| 8625 |
Seven children | POSSANT Annie (I6650)
|
| 8626 |
Several children
Lived in Cloquet | BISSON Lillie (I1085)
|
| 8627 |
She and her brother, Benno, Jr. spent their adult lives working in their hardware store. She was the last of the three children to survive. She past away at the age of 90 in November of 1994, a wealthy woman.
*In Lucille's will, a clock that was in the Ruae Hardware store, was given to the City of Crystal Lake. It is now displayed in the lobby of the Municipal Complex. Lucille's house was donated to the Crystal Lake Main Street program and a significant donation was made through her will to the Crystal Lake Civic Center Authority to aid in the development of hwat is now called the Raue Center for the Arts.
*(This information was furnished by Greg Fettes, Assistant City Manager of the City of Crystal Lake, McHenry County, IL.) | Raue Lucile (I52980)
|
| 8628 |
She and her husband, Eliphalet Nott Anable are buried in the Schenck family plot in Easton Cemetery, Easton, PA. She was the widow of Nathaniel Horton. | Schenck Annie Housel (I53451)
|
| 8629 |
She answered that she was 10 in 1666, 11 in 1667 and 25 in 1681.
Francoise, confirmed with her sister Marie, at Chateau-Richer on 21
February 1666, met Philippe Paquet, son of Antoine and of Renee
Fouyart, from St- Martin
-la-Riviere, in Poitou. On 12 June 1669, they signed a marriage
contract. They settled on the island in the parish of Ste-Famille,
then went to the parish of St-Jean,
where eight sons and two daughters were born. Francoise Gobeil died
on 24 February 1716. | GOBEIL Francoise (I3432)
|
| 8630 |
She answered that she was 32 at the 1666 and 1667 recordings, and
that she was 47 in 1681. | (Guiet) Jeanne Guyet (I238)
|
| 8631 |
She became a school teacher in Clary but never married. She came with her parents when they moved to Crystal Lake. She lived in Michigan for a time. It is unknown if she came back to Crystal Lake before she died. Her Social Security number was 381-384152. | Raue Ethel (I53078)
|
| 8632 |
She came to America in 1874 and lived in Chicago for 15 years. | Larson Bertha (I54376)
|
| 8633 |
She commited suicide over the break up of
a man (William A. Douglass) whom she had
been living with as his wife but they were
probably not married. He was married to
someone else. She went to the Wilbur House
in Seymour and asked for a room for the
night. The next day they found her ill and
discovered an empty ounce vial of Laudanum
in her bag. Doctors were called but could not save her.
They found a letter among her things writted
in pathetic strain, unbraiding Mr. Douglass
for his desertion of her. It is believed this
10 Mar 1885
was her reason for taking her life.N.Y. times | PULSIFER Alameda (I6769)
|
| 8634 |
She died at age 17 years, 7 months and 14 days, of General Septicaemia and osteo myelitis of pelvic bones. | CHANDLER Mildred Tewksbury (I56407)
|
| 8635 |
She died at the age of 15 or 16 and is buried with her parents in Nebraska. | Annable Ruth Jane (I52382)
|
| 8636 |
She died at the age of 26 years in 1860. | Root Emily J. (I52307)
|
| 8637 |
She died at the age of 52 yrs. | Foster Patience (I51113)
|
| 8638 |
She died at the age of 54.
She died at the age of 54. | Paine Sarah (I53464)
|
| 8639 |
She died at Winchester House in Libertyville, Lake County, IL. | Boehmer Louise Alma (I52779)
|
| 8640 |
She died in the late 1940's. | GIROUX Lenore (I3407)
|
| 8641 |
She died sometime before the division of cattle in Plymouth, 1627. | Hopkins Damaris (I53796)
|
| 8642 |
She died unmarried; leaving her property to her brother, Bickford,
will dated May 23, 1787 | PULSIFER Sarah (I7904)
|
| 8643 |
She had been previously married and brought three children to this marriage. | Reardon Ellen (I53015)
|
| 8644 |
She had Social Security Number 137-54-9445. | NEWLAND Susan Caroline (I57156)
|
| 8645 |
She inherited one quarter of the old barony of Tarrington, which increased to one third when her sister Alice died without issue.
She married (1), before 1208, Ralph Belet, and (2) before 18 March 1217, Hugh Giffard.
Her children include:
Walter Giffard, archbishop of York. d. 1279. Heir to his mother.
Godfrey, bishop of Worcester. Heir to his older brother.
William, who was granted the Tarrington share by Godfrey. In 1289 he granted it in turn to Alfred de la Northgrove.
Maud (or Mathilda). She was granted a different part of the Tarrington barony by a cousin, Thomas de Solers. She married William de Evreux (Ebroicis).
Sources
Sanders, English Baronies, pp.86-87. | CORMEILLES Sibyl (I60200)
|
| 8646 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I9144)
|
| 8647 |
She is believed to have been a niece of Duchess Gunnora, wife of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, perhaps daughter of Senfria.
Sources
Geneajourney.com - http://www.geneajourney.com/talvas.html
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners"
Genealogy (http://familypedia.wikia.com/wiki/Josceline_Torfulus_de_Pont-Audemer_%281000-1068%29/descendants) accessed Feb 24, 2015, states Josceline's first husband was Hugues [Roger] de Montgomery (c975-c1050). Josceline's second husband was Hugh de Courtenay (c985-?). Roger [II] Montgomery (c1022-1094) was the child of Hugues and Josceline. | UNKNOWN Josceline (I60010)
|
| 8648 |
She is buried in Collamer Cemetery, Collamer, Onondaga County, NY | Jerome Polly Marie (I53592)
|
| 8649 |
She is mentioned in the will of her father that her married name was Rice. | Family: Rice Aaron / Wright Hannah (F23731)
|
| 8650 |
She is named as the wife of Vermudo Núñez in the 16 MAR 946 royal grant to her husband of land next to the river Cea. [1]
Argilo married Bermudo Núñez. [2]
Fernando.
Piñola.
Jimena.
Froiloba.
Vela.
Álvaro.
Oveco.
Tructino.
Gonzalo.
Sources
↑ Mínguez Fernández, J. M. (ed.) (1976) Colección diplomatica del Monasterio de Sahagún, Siglos IX y X (León) Tomo I, 104.
↑ 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, Conde in Cea. | de CASTILLA Argilo (I59914)
|
| 8651 |
She is named in secondary sources as Adela von Dachsburg, daughter of Hugo [V] Graf von Dachsburg und Egisheim [Alsace] & his wife Hildegard ---, but the primary source which confirms that this is correct has not yet been identified. [1]
Her first name and death year are given in Jabob de Guisia, Annales Hanoniae, Book 14. (MGH edition p.183)[2]
Disputed Parentage
See G2G discussion. MEDLANDS has the following:[3]
She is named in secondary sources as Adela von Dachsburg, daughter of Hugo [V] Graf von Dachsburg und Egisheim [Alsace] & his wife Hildegard ---, but the primary source which confirms that this is correct has not yet been identified.
A search for the origins of the proposal traces back to David Blondel (Blondellus) in the 17th century who describes her and her husband simply as "Rainerius III Adela Dasburg maritus". [4]
Two points about this:
On its own this information implies she was NOT a daughter of Hugo V, because Hugo V's "Etichonid" family did not have Dagsberg until a later generation - approximately contemporary with Adela.
The proposal might have been made in order to explain the relationship between Countess Richilde and Pope Leo IX, who was described as her avunculus (uncle, and most likely a maternal uncle). Pope Leo IX was also described as a son of a count Hugo but also a grandson of "Ludovico comite de Dagesburg". So according to MEDLANDS this would make his father Hugo VIII, great grandson of Hugo V.[5] So logically this can best be explained simply by Richilde's mother being a sister of Leo IX.
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HAINAUT.htm#ReginarIIIdied973
↑ https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_30_1/index.htm#page/183
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HAINAUT.htm#ReginarIIIdied973
↑ https://books.google.be/books?id=0QJYAAAAcAAJ&pg=PT18 The search as discussed on G2G went:
Carl Knetsch's Das Haus Brabant (go to p. 14, image 26) http://archiv.ub.uni-marburg.de/eb/2015/0060/view.html cites Ernst p.471 as a source to say this proposal originated with Blondel, and that he was followed by Tollner and Mallet. Knetsch adds that Behr follows them.
Ernst should be p.473. https://www.persee.fr/doc/bcrh_0770-6707_1857_num_25_9_2939 Ernst actually pointed out that Mallet calls her Alix, and makes her the daughter of Hugh count of Eguisheim and Dagsburg. For Mallet he cites only indirectly to L'Art de vérifier les dates, p.631. Ernst did not feel confident about Mallet, because he was only quoting a recent history of Toul cited by someone else (Wassebourg, fol.260, alias 216)?
↑ https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#_Toc508299226
See also:
Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Fürstliche Häuser . 1961 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020426&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#AdelaDachsburgdied961
Anderson, James. A Genealogical History of The House of Yvery (H. Woodfall, 1742) Vol. 2, Page 63 | UNKNOWN Adela (I58944)
|
| 8652 |
She is the daughter of Gauthier Rethel and Beatrix Billung.
Gilbert of Mons: the countess of Rethel had another daughter who wed the nobleman Hugh of Pierrepont, and from her Hugh had sons who were knights, one of whom was Robert, a virtuous knight of great name, and Hugh the clerk, sufficiently learned and outstanding, greater provost of the church of Liege, archdeacon, abbot and afterwards bishop. [1]
Hugh Pierrepont was born c1129 in Hurst, Sussex, England and died c1188 married Clemence Rethel (Vitre) born c1133 in Reims, France their children (verified) were Lady Beatrix d. 1203, Lord Gautier Lord of Vanault d. 1191, Lady Marguerite d. 1230, Lord Robert Lord of Pierrepont d. 1209 and Bishop Robert Bishop of Luttich d. 1229. (A son William born c1160 was unverified). Hugh’s father was Lord Robert Lord of Montaigu c1110 - c1147 and mother Lady Elisabeth Mareuil d. 1207. [2]
Sources
↑ Chronicles of Hainaut, 1196.
↑ Europäische Stammtafeln, Vol. III, 1935, pp. 626, 678. | RETHEL Clemence (I60081)
|
| 8653 |
She is the daughter of Guillaume II "le Grand" Comte Palatin de Bourgogne & his wife Etiennette.[1][2]
She married Eudes de Bourgogne 1103[1][2]
She was incorrectly named Sybille by Orderic Vitalis.[2]
Nun at the abbey of Fontevraud.[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Dukes of Burgundy, entry in the database, Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2000-2021 (Accessed November 15, 2025).
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, des pairs, grands officiers de la Couronne, de la Maison du Roy et des anciens barons du royaume, Tome Premier, par le Père Anselme de Sainte-Marie, continuée par Honoré du Fourny, ed. la compagnie des libraires (Paris) 1726-1733. Page 538. | BOURGOGNE Mathilda (I59984)
|
| 8654 |
She is the daughter of Theodemir De Toxandrie and Blesinde De Cologne. [1]
Note
Note: Blâesinde de THâEROUANNE
Consanguinity : 0.39%
Parents
Theodemir de TOXANDRIE 374-414
Blesinde de COLOGNE 375-418
Spouse(s) and child(ren)
Married to Walmer de BOULOGNE,
Theudria de BOULOGNE 420
Siblings
Clodion le Chevelu MâEROVINGIEN 455
Blâesinde de THâEROUANNE
Sources
↑ Entered by Janice Hardin, Jun 20, 2012 | De THEROUANNE Blesinde (I59138)
|
| 8655 |
She is the daughter of Walmer Des Ruthenes and Blesinde De Toxandrie-Therouanne. [1]
Sources
SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestral File # (familysearch.org) For this family group: Sources: - person: F. Veillon - family: Y.Gazagnes-Gazanhe; F.Veillon Cites: > Geneanet
↑ Entered by Janice Hardin, Jun 20, 2012 | De BOULOGNE Theudria (I59137)
|
| 8656 |
She lived in IL, MI and OH. and was a mother and homemaker. | Dumke Mildred Anna (I53055)
|
| 8657 |
She lived in Iowa.
Taken from The Kankakee Gazette, February 1, 1877
Guardianship of Henry W., Coloni D. and Alice A. Hanen. Ordered that Sarah
J. Sutton and J. N. Orr her attorney show cause by the first day of next
term why the note of Alexander McKay should not be turned over to the clerk of
this court for the benefit of all minors entitled thereto. | Hanen Alice A. (I54260)
|
| 8658 |
She lived to be 57 years old. | Ridley Elizabeth (I53586)
|
| 8659 |
She lived to be 70 years old. All of her children survived to adulthood.
In the Mayflower Passenger List by William Bradford, he called her "Constanta". He said she and her husband lived twenty years in Plymouth Plantation. William Bradford wrote "Of Plymouth Plantation" between the years of 1630-1654.
Constance came on the Mayflower with her family. Nicholas Snow came on the Anne in 1623 and was made a freeman at Plymouth in 1633.
In the will of Nicholas, a lengthy inventory, including many cooper's and carpenter's tools, was sworn to by widow Constant on 22 March,1676/77.
Govenor 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. | Hopkins Constance (I53360)
|
| 8660 |
She lived to be ninety years old. | Annable Sarah Ann (I52159)
|
| 8661 |
She married 2nd; at Boston, 5 Sept. 1738 to
Powning Brigham. Adm. of her estate granted
24 Jul 1750 to her brother Dr. Belcher Noyes | NOYES Sarah (I5975)
|
| 8662 |
She married #1 Caliph Abdullah ibn Muhammad.
This profile was examined in the July 2019 C-a-T because the subject is linked (as a wife) to 'Abd Allah or Abdallah ibn Muhammad, who is the base for connecting several new profiles that are being added in the Connect-a-Thon. Changes have been made over the profile (see below). There are discussions over her birth and death dates, 0848 and 0890 have been used arbitrarily, based on the information found in two sources. [1] [2] Her birth and death places are not known. One source gives Córdoba tentatively [3] but given her father's position ( Fortún Garcés, the then heir to the throne of Pamplona), it is likely she was born in or near Pamplona, which has been kept in the profile. It is known that she lived in Córdoba during her father's exile (abt 0860-0882), where she was married off by her father around 0862/0863, but she either separated from, or had been repudiated by, her husband, and had left Córdoba before 'Abd Allah or Abdallah ibn Muhammad was named Emir of Córdoba after his father's death in 0888, so it is unlikely she died there as originally posted in WT. Córdoba has been changed for Pamplona. [1] Note that while some sources consider her marriage to Aznar Sánchez de Laraún was prior to her marriage to the future Emir of Córdoba (based on the Genealogies that appear in the Roda Codex), it is unlikely, given the dates her children were born and other events occurred. It is widely accepted that this is a mistake in the chronicles and that her marriage to the Emir occurred first, around 0862, the second taking place around 0882,when her father was released from captivity in Andalusia. [1]
Changes:
ProFN: Ónneca (was Oneca)
PreFN: Ónneca (was Oneca)
OtherNick: Iñiga, Durr, Dorr, Infanta de Pamplona (was Iñiga)
MidN: --- (was Fortúnez)
LNAB: Pamplona (left as is)
CLN: Fortúnez (was de Aragón)
OTHERLN: --- (left as is)
SUFFIX: --- (left as is)
BDATE: abt 0848 (was abt 0855)
BPLACE: Pamplona, Al-Ándalus (was Pamplona, Navarra, Spain)
DDATE: aft 0890 (was abt 0900)
DPLACE: Pamplona, Al-Ándalus (was Córdoba, España)
REASONS: name, place and date changes
Research Notes
In WikiTree, Ónneca and 'Abd Allah originally appeared as the parents of Zayd Ibn Abdallah. Even though documents were not located for Zayd, he has been left, as is, connected to his father. However, he has been unlinked from his mother, Ónneca Fortúnez. Investigating her, it has been ascertained that he was NOT one of her children, either with 'Abd Allah or her second husband, Aznar Sánchez de Laraún). Note that a request has been made to change the LNAB of his father from "Ibn Muhammed" to the name of the dynasty the family belonged to, "Umayyad".
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 _ Website Historia del Condado de Castilla (www.condadodecastilla.es): Iglesia Aparicio, Javier, "Onneca Fortúnez, infanta de Pamplona y abuela de ‘Abd al-Rahmán III", 20 Jun 2018
↑ _ WIKIPEDIA: "Ónneca Fortúnez"
↑ _ Real Academia de la Historia, Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (www.rah.es): Martín Duque, Ángel, "Ónneca (II)"
See also,
[1] Dialnet: Cañada Juste, Alberto, Publication Principe de Viana (Gobierno de Navarra), "Doña Onneca, una princesa vascona en la corte de los emires cordobeses", No 258, 2013.
Source: S-2087525741 Repository: #R-2142232775 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=27418815&pid=1627
Repository: R-2142232775 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note: | PAMPLONA Ónneca (I59741)
|
| 8663 |
She married Árpád. [1]
Liüntika.
Tarkatzus.
Jelekh.
Jutotzas.
Zoltan.
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, Origins of Hungary.
Wikipedia:Árpád. | UNKNOWN Unknown (I58667)
|
| 8664 |
She married first to Cecil N. Pulcifur as Nettie Payson. | PULSIFER Nettie (I7769)
|
| 8665 |
She married Hmayeak. [1]
She is a daughter of Leon. [2]
Research Notes
Settipani refers to the theory that her father, Leon, was the same person as Leon V, a hypothesis originally proposed by Adontz. [3] This is chronolgically improbable, however it is possible that she was a daughter of Leo IV.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Emperors (Macedonian Dynasty).
↑ Migne, J. P. Georgius Cedrenus Tomus Prior, Patrologiæ cursus completus, Series Græca Tomus CXXI (Paris, 1894) col. 1070.
↑ Adontz, N. Byzantion 8 (1933), pp. 473-500 and 9 (1934), pp. 223-60 [MB]. | Unknown (I57913)
|
| 8666 |
She married Thomas Gray, son of Edward and Dorothy (Lettice) Gray of Little Compton, R. I. They had no children.
She married Thomas Gray, son of Edward and Dorothy (Lettice) Gray of Little Compton, R. I. They had no children. | Peckham Phoebe (I53878)
|
| 8667 |
She named her second and third children Benjamin and Sarah (after her
great grandparents?) | PULSIFER Sally (I7871)
|
| 8668 |
She passed away after 1036. She was the mother of Judith[1].
The other version has two generations of Heinrichs, making Kuno her grandchild.
Sources
↑ Wikipedia "Judith of Schweinfurt"
Ancestry.com family trees
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands: Franconia. Gerberga
Wikidata: Item Q3198477 help.gif | GLEIBERG Gerberga (I58126)
|
| 8669 |
She passed away after 1121.
Sources
Ada de Ramerupt, entry in the database Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2000-2017. | RAMERUPT Ada (I60134)
|
| 8670 |
She passed away before 1725. | de AUSTRASIA Choldoswintha (I59876)
|
| 8671 |
She passed away before 1725. | de CARTAGENA Theodosia (I59879)
|
| 8672 |
She used to dye her hair jet black, unlike her blonde daughter.
The Saratogian newspaper, Saturday, June 8, 1912. Maple Shade.June 8. - The marriage of Wallace Brown to Miss Jennie Strang on Tuesday, June 4, met with hearty congratulations by their many friends. They are now on their honeymoon trip, which includes a visit to New York, Philadelphia and Washington. | Strang Jennie Isabelle (I52676)
|
| 8673 |
She was "of Newbury" on marriage record. | PLUMMER Joanna (I6601)
|
| 8674 |
She was "of Topsfield" when she married. | PEABODY Allice (I6245)
|
| 8675 |
She was 21 years old and a Waitress. | CHANDLER Maude Colby (I56408)
|
| 8676 |
She was 31 years old when she died according to her tombstone. | Newland Lydia M. (I52345)
|
| 8677 |
She was a daughter of Urso d'Abitot, constable of the castle of Worcester and hereditary sheriff of Worcestershire (who was brother of Robert le Despenser, steward to the Conqueror).[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]
That her name was Emmeline was first noted by Dugdale in his work of the 17th century.[1] There are, however, no primary sources which verify her name was Emmeline.
Her year of birth is unknown and is guesstimated as c 1080.
She married Walter de Beauchamp.[1][2][3][4][5][6][8]
Children:
William de Beauchamp/de Bellocampo[1][2][3][4][5][7][8][9] (may have married Berta or Maud, daughter of William Braose[3][4]; succeeded his father as dispencer before 1133[8])
[uncertain] Walter de Beauchamp[8]
Regrading her son William:
Willelmus de Bello campo omnibus ministris suis et ballivis de Wirecestre scira salutem, Sciatis me concessise et confirmasse donationem illam, quam pater meus Walterus fecit Priori et Monachis de Wirecestria de una virgata terrae quam Elfredus capellanus Ursonis de Abbetot avi mei tenuit. Et volo, ut teneant eam liberam et quietam de geldis et omnibus secularibus exactionibus, sicut elemosinam patris mei et matris meae. [Confirmation by William de Bellocampo of a gift made by his father Walter of land held by William's grandfather Urso Abbitot].[10]
Regarding Walter:
In 1166 a Walter de Bellocampo held half a fee in Worcestershire of the Abbey of Westminster.[9]
Lands
Elmley Castle was the caput of the Worcestershire honour of the Beauchamps. The chief part of the honour descended to them from Urse the Sheriff, but Elmley Castle came to them from Robert, Urse's brother. The honour seems to have consisted of the land which Urse held of the Bishop of Worcester in 1086, and was held in 1166 and in the 13th century by the Beauchamps for fifteen knights' fees.[7]
The manors of Wick, Holt and Little Witley, in Worcestershire, were held by Urso D'Abitot and passed to the Beauchamps.[11]
Urso D'Abitot's lands at Redmarley, Worcestershire, passed to his descendants the Beauchamps, who continued as mesne lords until they acquired the manor at the beginning of the 15th century.[12]
Death
Her year of death is unknown.
Her husband died between 1130 and 1133.[9]
Research Notes
According to Baker[3] Walter de Beauchamp had a son Stephen de Beauchamp who married Isolde, daughter of Robert Ferrers. However, Isolde was said to be a widow in 1185, with a son aged four and five daughters.[13] Cawley[8], places Stephen as a son of a Richard de Beauchamp.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Dugdale, W. The Baronage of England. Published London, 1675-1676, p 226 Link.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Clutterbuck, R. The History and Antiquities of the County of Hertford. Vol 1, 1815, p 358 Beauchamp Pedigree Family Search.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Baker, G. History and Antiquities of The County of Northampton. Vol. II, 1844, pp 218-219 Internet Archive.
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Burke, Bernard. A Genealogical History of the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British Empire. 1866, pp 29-30 Google Books.
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Bund, J W W. The Inquisitiones Post Mortem for the County of Worcester: From their commencement in 1242 to the end of the 13th century. The Worcestershire Historical Society. 1894, p viii Google Books.
↑ 6.0 6.1 Ellis, A S. On the Landholders of Gloucestershire named in Domesday Book. Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society. Vol IV, 1879-1880, pp 86-198 (see pp 183-184) Internet Archive.
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 'Parishes: Elmley Castle', in A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 3 (London, 1913), pp. 338-346. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol3/pp338-346 [accessed 24 January 2024].
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Cawley, C. Beauchamp of Elmley, Worcestershire. Medieval Lands. A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families FMG.
↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Keats-Rohan, K S B. Domesday Descendants. A Prosopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents, 1066-1166. II. Pipe Rolls to Cartae Baronum. 2002, p 315.
↑ Hale, W H. Registrum sive Liber Irrotularius et Consuetudinarius Prioratus Beatae Mariae Wigorniensis. 1865, 92a Internet Archive.
↑ 'Parishes: Holt', in A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 3 (London, 1913), pp. 401-408. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol3/pp401-408 [accessed 28 January 2024].
↑ 'Parishes: Redmarley d'Abitot', in A History of the County of Worcester: Volume 3 (London, 1913), pp. 481-486. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/worcs/vol3/pp481-486 [accessed 29 January 2024].
↑ 'Parishes: Barnwell All Saints', in A History of the County of Northampton: Volume 3, ed. William Page (London, 1930), pp. 173-176. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/northants/vol3/pp173-176 [accessed 24 January 2024]. | ABITOT Emmeline (I60171)
|
| 8678 |
She was a handmaiden to the Queen of France. | Hahn (I54196)
|
| 8679 |
She was a nun. Joined Sisters of Charity; Mount St. Jospeh 7 Sept.
1933. Called Sister Bernice Mariam. | LEUTZ Bernice (I5087)
|
| 8680 |
She was a twin of Isabella. Both died in infancy. | Annable Remember (I53811)
|
| 8681 |
She was a twin of Remember and both died in infancy. | Annable Isabella S. (I53521)
|
| 8682 |
She was a twin of Samuel Joseph Anable. | Anable Sarah Alma (I53812)
|
| 8683 |
She was also known as aka May Newland. Mary has
reference number 243. Also known as May | NEWLAND Mary Veronica (I57160)
|
| 8684 |
She was also known as Nancy. | PULSIFER Anna Ober (I6819)
|
| 8685 |
She was born in Indian lands, Michigan Territo. | Okunzhewug (I39528)
|
| 8686 |
She was born on a farm near Crystal Lake in Cary. | Brown Dora (I52869)
|
| 8687 |
She was buried in Columbus Cemetery, Columbus, Platte, NE. | HAWKS Susan M. (I56611)
|
| 8688 |
She was buried in North Fairfield Cemetery (New), North Fairfield, Huron Co, OH | SUTLIFF Emma L. (I56729)
|
| 8689 |
She was buried in North River Cemetery, Colrain, Franklin, MA | BOOTH Olive Tryphena (Zoyphena) (I56632)
|
| 8690 |
She was buried in Old Kirk Burial Ground, Attleboro, Bristol, Massachusetts | MORSE Rebecca (I39878)
|
| 8691 |
She was buried in Sand Hill Cemetery, Unadilla, Otsego, NY | BUCKLEY Phebe (I56692)
|
| 8692 |
She was buried in Scotch Ridge Cemetery, NB, Canada | BLANEY Catherine (I55284)
|
| 8693 |
She was buried in StFrancis Assisi, Crow Wing, Crow Wing, Minnesota. She has reference number 813sx.
O Gii Maa Gee Zhi Go Ikwe is buried in a hillside with no marker and the area is not taken care of. There is a well kept cemetery by where she is suppose to be buried by. It is believed that Hole in the Day is also buried in that hill side. Hole in the Day shot and killed O Gii Maa Gee Zhi Go Ikwe's daughter in law's Maria Margaret Fairbanks Beaulieu's brother. It is also rumored that O Gii Maa Gee Zhi Go Ikwe's grandson Colonel Clement Hudon Beaulieu killed Hole in the Day as retaliation but stories are that Hole in the Day's band members killed him. It will never be known who really killed Hole in the Day.
Julie Beaulieu | Skies) Margaret Racine (O-ge-mau-gee-shi-go-quay) (Queen of the (I8863)
|
| 8694 |
She was buried on 2
Oct 1840 at Miller Cemetery in Greenfield, New York, United States. Mary has reference number 646. | A. Mary (I52306)
|
| 8695 |
She was buried on 8
Jan 1905 at Holy Cross Cemetery in 3620 Tilden Ave, Brooklyn, NY. Irene has reference number 242.
Burial:
Holy Cross Cemetery
Brooklyn
Kings County
New York, USA
Find A Grave Memorial# 93252849 | NEWLAND Irene (I57161)
|
| 8696 |
She was from St. Etienne des Gres, eveche de Paris, France. | FRO Louise (I3272)
|
| 8697 |
She was known as "Lou". | Annable Louisa E. (I52428)
|
| 8698 |
She was living in 1903 at Mattapan, Suffolk County, Massachusetts. | LITTLEJOHN Bessie Viola (I40290)
|
| 8699 |
She was named after her recently deceased one year old sister Sarah who died one week before her birth. Sarah appears on the 1850 Portland, Maine census as "Sarah M. Nason" age 7, living with her father John Nason and his second wife Ann Follette along with her brothers David and William." Sadie" Militia Nason married Charles Dixon in Portland , Maine . | NASON Sarah Militia (I57613)
|
| 8700 |
She was named Marguerite Normand (Scorman) on her daughter Jeanne Marguerite's marriage to Francois Deschamps. She was named Marguerite Scorman on the daughter's marriage to Robert Levesque, and was named Scorman or Scorban on daughter's marriage to Guillaume[1](source has original records)
Marguerite Scorinan-Romian Scorman:
Birth: 1624 in Normandie France
Parents & siblings unknown
Spouse: Jacques Chevalier 1624 –
Daughter: Jeanne-Marguerite Chevalier Birth 1645 in Normandie France Death 24 nov 1716 in Rivière-Ouelle Qc< | SCORINAN Marguerite (Scorban) (I57779)
|
| 8701 |
She was of Chicago, IL. | Kilverling Kernie (I53172)
|
| 8702 |
She was of Sandwich, Barnstable County, MA at the time of her marriage to William Annable. | Pike Tabitha (I53701)
|
| 8703 |
She was refered to at marriage as "youngest daughter of William and
Margaret
Lakeman. | LAKEMAN Sarah (I4793)
|
| 8704 |
she was residing in Chaffee, N.Y. in 1899 at the time of her sister
Prudence's death. | SILLOWAY Susan (I8808)
|
| 8705 |
She was residing in Seneca, N.Y. in 1899 at the time of her sister,
Prudence's death. | SILLOWAY Mahala (I8777)
|
| 8706 |
she was residing in the town of Chaffee, N.Y. in 1899 at the time of
her sister Prudence's death. | SILLOWAY Nancy (I8788)
|
| 8707 |
She was still living in 1794. | BURGEN Mary (I1684)
|
| 8708 |
She was the daughter of Pierre Courteau and Marie-Madeleine St-Denis.
Notes
Family Search profile ID: LH2Y-L1H
Sources
Cyprien Tanguay. Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu'à nos jours (Montréal: Eusèbe Senécal, 1871-1890), vol. 2, page 476, image attached, 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=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&pId=54484 | COURTEAU Marie Catherine (I60289)
|
| 8709 |
She was the first white child born in Hinckley | DAWSON Nellie (I36886)
|
| 8710 |
She was the heir of Zutphen - family name should be Zutphen. Mentioned in 1059.
Sources
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). VI 1 ; XVIII 24b http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00312984&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#AdelheidZutphenMGottschalk
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. | LOTHARINGIA Adelheid (I59520)
|
| 8711 |
She was the only one of David's children to remain in Mass., while
the rest of the family removed to Poland, Maine. | PULSIFER Hannah (I7311)
|
| 8712 |
She was the widow of Pierre Mailhot. He was buried on May 21, 1875 in St. Jean. | Brisson MARIE Elisabeth (I50010)
|
| 8713 |
She was the wife (family name unknown) of the younger son of Eberhard, Graaf van Drethe en Salland and his wife Amalrada. Her husband, potentially named Eberhard, was the brother of Dietrich the Bishop of Metz and the father of five children including the future Graven van Teisterban(d/t) [1]
Little is known of her husband or herself, although she may have been a relative of the Comte de Huy:
His existence and parentage is confirmed by the Vita Deoderici Episcopi which names "Everardi fratruelis sui [=Dietrich Bishop of Metz]…infans…ex cuius fratre fuit genitus", when recording his son's death in Sep 978. [1]
His wife was possibly a relative of Ansfrid III, Comte de Huy who later became the Bishop of Utrecht. [1]
The couple reportedely had five children as reflected in Europäische Stammtafeln although primary sources confirming parentage remain to be identified: [1]
Eberhard, who died young in Sep 978
Fretherhard, who became Graaf van Teisterband
Adelbold, who became the Bishop Utrecht
Unruoch, who succeeded his elder brother as Graaf van Teisterband
Godizo, who became the Graaf van Betuwe (Batavia)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Graven van Teisterband (Family of Eberhard) by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands) | UNKNOWN Unknown (I59026)
|
| 8714 |
She was to meet her sister's body at the
train as it was being transported fron Athol,
Mass. where Edna had died, to be buried at
White Church Cem. The stress of the ordeal was
too much for her, she had a heart attack and died.
The two sisters were buried side by side with
a double headstone. | PULSIFER Virginia Estelle (I8011)
|
| 8715 |
She went by the nickname of Linny. | Warren Matilda (I53016)
|
| 8716 |
Sheen Palace. Buried in Westminster Abbey | PLANTAGENET III Edward (I22859)
|
| 8717 |
Shelby never married. | Olofsson (Wilson) Shelby Walford (I54323)
|
| 8718 |
Ship and Passenger Information:
The Ann(e) and the Little James arrived together in July (10), 1623 - "The Planters".
"The vessels parted company at sea; the Ann arrived the latter part of June,
and the Little James some week or ten days later; part of the number were
the wives and children of persons already in the Colony." - "Hotten's Lists"
Nicholas Snow, who came over on the "Anne" from Hoxton, Middlesex County, England, settled in Easton, Plymouth County, MA. He was born about 1575 and married Elizabeth Rowlles as his first wife. | Snow Nicholas (I53573)
|
| 8719 |
Ship and Passenger Information:
The Ann(e) and the Little James arrived together in July (10), 1623 - "The Planters".
"The vessels parted company at sea; the Ann arrived the latter part of June,
and the Little James some week or ten days later; part of the number were
the wives and children of persons already in the Colony." - "Hotten's Lists"
*A tradition passed down to a branch of the Joseph Anable (1773-1831) family was that Anthony first came over on the "Fortune" perhaps as a crew member as his name is not mentioned as a passenger. He then returned to England in 1621 on the "Fortune" to get his family. This was checked but could not be authenticated by checking the records of Plymouth Plantation or the passenger and crew lists of the ship. It is possible that, if Anthony Annable did truly make a trip to Plymouth in the "Fortune", prior to his fully documented trip in the "Anne" in 1623, he could have made the earlier voyage in the capacity of a supervisor or clerical representative of the ship's owner, in which case his name would not have appeared on either of the lists consulted. ("Anable Family Record", a privately kept record by a branch of the Joseph Anable (1773-1831).*
Anthony came over on the "Anne" as a "Stranger", leaving from the port of Cambridge, Cambridgehire County,England. He was not part of the religious group that came over earlier on the Mayflower. He is thought to be one of the sons of John Annable of Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk County, England.
William Annable of Dunstable was the first to use the Annable arms for a seal of a deed dated 1396.
Anthony married Jane Momford on April 26, 1619 in All Saint's Church, Cambridgeshire Parish, England. This record can be found in Cambridgeshire Parish Registers, Marriages at All Saints Church, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire County, England 1539-1837, Vol. 4. p. 9
The Will of Anthony Annable
"Anthony and Jane (Momford) Annable arrived in Plymouth in 1623 with their two daughters, Hannah and Sarah. The couple may have become Separatists while in the colony; they were among the first members of the Scituate church under the Reverend John Lothrop. They were married in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire on April 26, 1619. They had three more daughters. They moved to Scituate in 1633 and Barnstable in 1639. Jane died in Barnstable in 1643. After his wife’s death, Anthony remarried to Ann Elcock or Clark in March of the next year. They had three children and he died in 1674."source: The Annable House http://www.plimoth.org/Museum/Pilgrim_Village/annable.htm | Annable Anthony (I53429)
|
| 8720 |
Ship Captain; died 1711; Judge Samuel Sewall
mentions his death in his diary on 4 Apr. 1711.
His will dated 19 Dec. 1710 leaves to his wife
Mary, and on her death, to his sister, Margaret;
to his mother Susanna, the interest on 100 ponds
and on her death to go the his brother Richard
and Richard's son Benjamin, but "in case I
have a child, the whole estate to him when of
age. | PULSIFER Joseph (I7500)
|
| 8721 |
Shoemaker | EVANS Alpheus D. (I2764)
|
| 8722 |
Short Creek MM on 20 Apr 1819 Isaac Brown and w. Mary was granted certificate to Stillwater MM, p. 70.
Center for Archival Collections. "Short Creek Monthly Meeting: 185., Transfer Certificates 1805-1832" in "The Ohio Yearly Meeting of Friends records, 1760-1965." Roll 24. Indexed by: Carole Dutton Malisiak, February, 2000. Could this be the same Isaac Brown, son of Wright Brown? | Brown Isaac (I52688)
|
| 8723 |
Sibling
Hugues, Comte de Bourges. [1]
Marriage & Children
She married _____ UNKNOWN.
Rotger (Roger), Comte du Maine, married Rothildis Carolingian.
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, Comtes de Bourges. | BOURGES Unknown (I59611)
|
| 8724 |
Sibylle de Château-Porcien, called Sibilia in contemporary Latin documents, married Godefroi I de Namur about 1087. The marriage ended in divorce about 1104 when Enguerrand I de Boves, Comte d’Amiens, Seigneur de Coucy, abducted her and made her his mistress. Date and place of her death are not known.[1]
Sources
↑ Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, COMTES de PORCIEN | PORCIEN Sibylle (I60186)
|
| 8725 |
Sideney was working in a saw mill in June, 1880 during the time of the census. By 1910, Sidney and family had moved to Proviso Twp. Cook County, IL. He was 28 years old at the time of the birth of his first child and Ellen, his wife, was 22 years old. | Hickok Sidney Garner (I51100)
|
| 8726 |
Sidney Root lived in Atlanta, Georgia and was a major person in building up of city. Was a Political-Economic ambassador to Jefferson Davis during Civil War. He went to France and was emissary to Napleon III. Here he discussed a war with Mexico. Met General Lee on the battlefield right before Appomattox. Slept in Lees tent and advised him on how to deal with problem of slavery. How to compensate slaveholders and send Slaves back to Africa. This is all in his Autobiography. Info supplied by Sharon Whitney. | ROOT Sidney Dwight (I31121)
|
| 8727 |
Sie war die Erbin von Hoevel/Huvili, Unna, Telgte und Warendorf und wichtiger Grafenrechte. | LAUFEN Adelaid (I57877)
|
| 8728 |
Siegebert von Saarbrücken was born about 1040 and died about 1105.
In 1080, Emperor Heinrich IV of the Salic Dynasty gave Siegebert I the imperial farmhouse Vadgasen and received the management of the properties of the Metz Monastery of Saar with the Castle of Saarbrücken and the Rhine and elastasus. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:BG:Зигеберт_I_(Саарбрюкен).
J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke. Europäische Stammtafeln, Detlev (Ed.), VI 152 cited by Genealogics.
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] | SAARBRÜCKEN Siegebert (I59633)
|
| 8729 |
Siegfried Van Canossa ... He passed away in 0961. [1]
Name
Name: Sigifred //
Given Name: Sigifred
Couldn't find any valid last name at birth.
Sources
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-83098 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Johanna and others.
No sources. The events of Siegfried's life were either witnessed by Living Harder or Living plans to add sources here later. | LUCCA Sigifred (I58559)
|
| 8730 |
Siemomysł or Ziemomysł (died c. 950–960[1]) was the third pagan Polans duke of the Piast dynasty, and the father of Poland's first Christian ruler, Mieszko I
Note
Siemomys , auch Ziemomys aw, ( um 960), war ein Fürst der Polanen im 10. Jahrhundert, Sohn Lesteks (Leszeks), aus dem Haus der Piasten.
Da Siemomys nur in der Chronik von Gallus Anonymus erwähnt wird, ist seine Existenz und Regierungszeit seit dem Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts umstritten. Nach einer Mindermeinung in der polnischen Geschichtswissenschaft wurde Siemomys von Gallus An onymus oder einer seiner mündlichen Quellen ausgedacht. Diese These ist jedoch ebenso nicht nachweisbar wie die Existenz Siemomys s.
Nach einer anderen Ansicht handelt es sich bei Lestek tatsächlich um den Vater von Mieszko I., zumal dieser einen leiblichen Vater gehabt haben muss, der allerdings nicht Herrscher der Polanen war. Die wohl herrschende Meinung in der polnischen Geschichtswissenschaft des 20. Jahrhunderts (u.a. Henryk owmia ski, Gerard Labuda, Kazimierz Jasi ski) hält Siemomys für einen historischen Herrscher der Polanen aus dem frühen 10. Jahrhundert. Dagegen sind die Namen seiner Ehefrauen - es werden woll nach slawischer Sitte mehrere gewesen sein - nicht bekannt. Möglicherweise zählte auch die Tochter des um 944 regierenden Fürsten der Wislanen W odis aw dazu. Teilweise wurde vermutet, dass eineseiner Ehefauen Gorka hieß. Es ist nicht ausg eschlossen, dass erst Ziemomys und nicht sein Vater Lestek die Stämme der Polanen, Goplanen und Masowier vereinigte.
Ziemomys hinterließ mehrere Kinder, darunter den späteren Herzog von Polen Mieszko I., seinen Bruder Czcibor, der in der Schlacht bei Zehden im Jahr 972 fiel sowie einen dritten Sohn, der um 963/965 verstarb. Es wird vermutet, dass seine Töchter Ehefrauen eines pommerschen Fürsten und Gunter von Merseburg waren. Umstritten ist dagegen, ob seine mutmaßlichen Nachkommen Adelajda und Prokuj existiert haben bzw. ob es sich um seine Kinder handelt.
Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siemomys%C5%82
Medieval Lands | PIAST Siemomysł (I58084)
|
| 8731 |
Sigebert I[1] (c. 535 – c. 575)[2]
Titles
561-575: King of Austrasia [3][4]
King of the Franks [5]
Parents
Clotaire and Ingund[1]
Marriage
m. (abt 566) Brunhilda of the Visigoths.[6] Issue:[7]
Ingund "Ingundis; Ingonde" (567/8 - Autumn 586 Africa or Sicily)[8]
m (579) Hermengildo of the Visigoths (d. 13 Apr 586 Tarragona; p. Leovigildo, King of the Visigoths)
Chlodosind
Childebert II
Sources
↑ Medieval genealogy is not exact, and collaboration occasionally makes choices where print did not have to. The parents described (or lack of), were decided upon in consultation with primary sources, especially collected by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project.
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.
Wikipedia: Sigebert I | MEROVINGIAN Sigebert (I59878)
|
| 8732 |
Sigefried and Siegfried are two common modern spellings, while Latin typical spellings were Sigefridus or Sigifridus. This could be shortened to Sicco. The modern French version is Sigefroid, and this has also influenced many modern historians.
There is no clear record of when he was born. All estimates are based on speculation.
He died 27 or 28 October, but the year is not known. It was approximately 998. Many medieval death records were intended to help remember which day to pray for a dead person's soul, so that often don't name the year of death. The Henry project and MEDLANDS project both explain the records in detail.[1][2]
Sigefried was a count, but in this period this does not necessarily mean that he was connected to any specific geographical counties. We know his original jurisdictions lay in the Ardennes region between the Meuse and Moselle rivers near modern Luxembourg.[1][3]
In about 950 he was given the important position of lay abbot of Echternach monastery, which today lies in the north of Luxembourg.
In 973 he obtained possession of Luxembourg castle itself, which would become an important base for his descendants.
Note: While Sigefrid established the family's powerbase his descendant Conrad I (d. 1086) is probably the first person referred to in his own lifetime as a "Count of Luxembourg".
Parents
Mother:
Cunigonde is known to be the name of his mother, and she was a granddaughter of Louis II, king of France. She is generally believed to be the same Cunigonde who was the mother of Adalbero I the bishop of Metz, Count Gozlin, and Frederick I, the Duke of Upper Lorraine. The main reason for doubt is that it means Siegfried lived reasonably long and had children late. See below.
His father was probably one of the known husbands of the mother of Adalbero, Gozlin and Frederick, who were both dead by 923:
Wigeric of Lotharingia (d. 916/19)[1]
Richwin (d. 923/4)[2]
Other theories:[4]
Eberhard II of Hamaland
Siegbert
Giselbert, Duke of Lotharingia (Lorraine)[3]
Research notes
During the 1500s, Richard de Wassebourg, Archdeacon of the cathedral of Verdun (1567), came up with the idea that Cunigonde's second husband, Richwin ("Richizo; Ricuin" (d. 923), fathered Sigefroid. In 1900 AD, Jean Schotter and Nicholas van Werke, started promoting Wigeric as Sigefroid's father. But some genealogists and historians, do not accept either of Cunigonde's men. Péporté (2011), explains that the issue has never been cut and dry, due to the fact that no medieval source identifies Sigefroid's father.[4]
Documentation only tells us that Sigefroid's mother was named Cunigonde and her grandfather was King Louis II of France. Most historians, believe that this Cunigonde was the same as the Cunigonde who had children with Wigeric and Richwin, but this is not certain. For instance, Cawley (2006), points out problems with dating. He claims that since:
Sigefroid was probably born around 930 or 940 AD, by his estimate;[4]
and Wigeric and Richwin died by 923AD[5];
Therefore, according to some, Cunigonde of France, needs an unknown and undocumented third husband (or lover) ... to make the parentage fit.[6]
But that's not the only issue. Why assume that Cunigunda of France was Sigefroid's mother .... at all?
A detailed explanation of all evidence and most arguments is found the "Henry project" page for Cunigond.[5] Points include:
"An eleventh century genealogical table, existing also in several later versions, identifies the empress Cunégonde, the wife of emperor Heinrich II, as a daughter of count Sigefroid, son of Cunégonde, daughter of Ermentrude, daughter of Louis II of France [see, e.g., MGH SS 2: 314; 6: 32, 176; more recently, see Schmid (1994), which includes plates of the various versions of this source...]"
"Gerbert of Aurillac (later pope Sylvester II), in a letter of 985 to the empress Theophano (wife of Otto II), mentions a count Sigefridus as patruus of Godefridus, the latter clearly count Godefroid of Verdun (son of Gozlin, son of Wigeric and Cunégonde), both captives at the time ["Nam II kal. apr. captos comites allocutus, Godefridum, patruumque ejus Sigefridum, ..." Gerbert, Letters, 48 (#52)]. According to the usual definition of patruus (paternal uncle), this would make this count Sigefridus a brother of Gozlin. Although this Sigefroid is not explicitly identified with the count who held Luxemburg, this is the obvious identification."
"The onomastic evidence suggests a connection, since in addition to a daughter named Cunégonde, Sigefroid had children named Adalbero, Frédéric, Giselbert, and Liutgarde, the same names as four of the known children of Cunégonde, wife of Wigeric."
"Since Sigefroid's mother Cunégonde was a niece of Charles the Simple, the above reference of Adalbero as a nepos of Charles fits very well with him being a brother of Sigefroid, which would make Adalbero a grandnephew of Charles, well within the definitions of the sometimes ambiguous term nepos. Although "nephew" or "grandson" would be a more common meaning of the word nepos, Charles is not known to have had any sister or daughter named Cunégonde, making those interpretations unlikely."
"It is possible that Sigefroid was identical with Sigebert, brother of Gozlin. This identification, which has been widely accepted, is discussed on Sigefroid's page. Even if Sigebert and Sigefroid were distinct individuals [e.g., as argued by Parisse (1981), 23], they could still have been brothers."
Concerning the chronology they remark:
"even if Siegfried was born as early as 915, we would only have to assume that Siegfried was married at at an older than average age, say 40, to a much younger woman, that he was still having children in his sixties, that he lived until his early eighties, and that a number of his children also had long lives. While it may be unusual, these are all perfectly reasonable possibilities which happened from time to time, even in medieval times when life expectancy was much lower than it is now. Given that the supporting evidence is otherwise good (if not ideal), there does not seem to be any good reason to reject the commonly accepted identification of Wigeric's wife Cunégonde with Sigefroid's mother. "
Marriage and children
m. (ante 963) Hedwig of Nordgau (d. 13 Dec after 993;[7] p. UNKNOWN).[6] Issue:
Henry I of Luxembourg (ante 17 Sep 964 - 27 Feb 1026)[7]
Siegfried (d. after Apr 985)
Frederick (d. 06 Oct 1019).[8] Count of Salm and Luxembourg[9]
m. _____ von Hammerstein (b. 970/85)
(p. HERIBERT Graf im Kinziggau Pfalzgraf [Konradiner] and Imiza "Ermentrude or Irmintrudis"; widow of ____ von Gleiberg)
Dietrich II (bishop of Metz, 1006-1047)
Adalberon (canon of Trier)
Gislebert (d.1004), count in the Moselgau
Kunigunde (Cunigunda) of Luxembourg (d.1039)[10]
m. Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor; Duke of Bavaria; King of Italy (d.1017)[11]
Eve
m. Gerard, Count of Metz
Ermentrude, abbess
Luitgarde (965/70 - 14 May after 1005; bur Egmond)[12]
m. Arnulf, Count of Holland (950 - 18 Sep 993 Winckel; bur. Egmond)
(p. Dirk II, Count of Holland and Hildegarde de Flandre)
dau. _____[8]
m. Thietmar (d. 29 Mar ____; p. Unknown)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/siegf000.htm
↑ MEDLANDS
↑ Wikipedia article; Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia p.478
↑ 4.0 4.1 Péporté, 2011, p.27
↑ http://home.earthlink.net/~henryproject/hproject/prov/kunig000.htm
↑ Wikipedia claims that Hedwig married Eberhardt IV, but Cawley (2006), states that her parents are unknown.
↑ Annalista Saxo; Herimannus; Historia Episcoporum Pataviensium et Ducum Bavariæ; necrology of Ranshofen (Cawley, 2006)
↑ necrology of Ranshofen (Cawley, 2006)
Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, page 503
Cawley, C. (2006). "Luxembourg." Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac
Henry Project: http://home.earthlink.net/~henryproject/hproject/prov/siegf000.htm
Jackman, D. (2012). Studia Luxembourgensia. Enlaplage. Google Books.Jackman (2012), is a controversial secondary source.
Jeep, J.M. (2001). "Luxemberger." Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia. Psychology Press, (pp. 478-479). Google Books. Jeep (2005), cites his title, but gets the heritage wrong.
Péporté, P. (2011). Constructing the Middle Ages: Historiography, Collective Memory and Nation-Building in Luxembourg. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-21067-7.[13]
Reid, A. (2005). "Siegfried and the Luxembourg dynasty." Luxembourg: The Clog-Shaped Duchy: A Chronological History of Luxembourg from the Celts to the Present Day. AuthorHouse. Google Books.
Wikipedia: Sigfried, Count of the Ardennes
//** MARRIAGE NOTES FROM CAWLEY (2006)
HEDWIG and Siegfried had 11 kids:
i) [SIEGFRIED (-after [Apr 985]).
ii) HEINRICH (before 17 Sep 964-27 Feb 1026).
iii) LIUTGARD
iv) ______ daughter m. Theitmar
v) FRIEDRICH (-6 Oct 1019).
vi) DIETRICH [Theoderic] (-2 May 1047). The Annalista Saxo names "Teoderici Metensi episcopi et Heinrich postmodum ducis Bawarici" as brothers of "domnam Cunigundam, felicis memorie virginem", wife of Emperor Heinrich II[55]. Herimannus names "Theoderico Metense episcopo et Heinrico Baioriæ duce Fridericoque comite" as brothers of "Adalbero clericus, reginæ Cunigundis germanus", when recording their rebellion against Emperor Heinrich II in 1008[56]. Bishop of Metz 1006. As "Theodoric Bishop of Metz", brother of Empress Kunigunde, he is recorded as the latter's adviser in Wipo's description of the election of Konrad II King of Germany in 1024[57]. The necrology of Ranshofen records the death "VI Non May" of "Theodericus Metensis eps frater Chunigundis imperatricis et Ermindrud abba soror eius"[58]. Sigebert's Chronica records the death in 1046 of "Deoderico Mettensium episcopo" and the succession of “Adelbero fratruelis eius”[59].
vii) KUNIGUNDE
viii) GISELBERT ([980/85]-killed in battle Pavia 18 May 1004). Thietmar names a "youth…Giselbert, the queen's brother", recording his death in battle outside Pavia[67]. The epithet suggests that Giselbert must have been one of the younger children of Siegfried, maybe born in [980/85], although no other corroboration for this statement has been found. "Domna Berta, viri illustris Volcmari comitis relicta" donated property "in pago Moselensi in comitatu Waldeleuinga cui Gisilbertus comes…villa Mudenfert" to St Maximin, Trier by charter dated 996 witnessed by "Friderich comes"[68]. The necrology of Merseburg records the death "18 May" of "Gisilbertus frater imperatricis Chunigunde"[69]. The necrology of Ranshofen records the death "XV Kal Jun" of "Gisilbertus frater Chunigundis imperatricis Papie occisus"[70].
ix) ADALBERO (-after 1037). Herimannus names "Adalbero clericus, reginæ Cunigundis germanus" when recording his appointment as provost at Trier[71]. Thietmar records the election in 1008 of "Adalbero…the queen's brother and still an immature youth" as Archbishop of Trier to succeed Liudolf who died 6/7 Apr 1008 and the cancellation of the election by his brother-in-law King Heinrich II[72], which triggered his rebellion against the king60. The Vita Meinwerci names "Athelbero præpositus monasterii sancti Paulini Treveris" and "soror eius Cunigunda [regina]" in a paragraph dated 1017[73]. Provost of St Paul in Trier. "Adalbero…prepositus S Paulini Treuerensis, dominus de Ruscheio, de Serico, de Sarburch et de Berincastel" left a testament dated 12 Nov 1036, witnessed by "Godefrido duce, Gerardo comite, Arnolfo comite, Bertholfo comite, Friderico comite eiusque fratribus, Gisilberto et Theoderico, Hartmanno comite…"[74]. Another testament dated 1037 of "Adalbero…prepositus S Paulini Treuerensis" is witnessed by "Adelberti avunculi nostri marchionis et ducis Lothoringie et Iuditte amicte nostre uxoris sue"[75].
x) EVA (-19 Apr after 18 Jun 1040). "Comes Gerardus" donated property to the monastery of Fruttuaria, at the request of "conjuge Eva" for the soul of "filii sui Sigifredi defuncti", by charter dated 1020, witnessed by "Girardi, Giselberti, Folmarii comitum…"[76]. Her parentage is deduced from Thietmar naming her son Siegfried, son of Count Gerhard, "the empress's nephew"[77]. This is confirmed by "Henricus…rex" granting property "in villa Morlinga in pago Musiligeauue in comitatu Uirad" to "Abenze…ex parte sue sororis contectalis Heinrici imperatoris" by charter dated 18 Jun 1040[78]. m GERHARD Graf von Metz, son of [RICHARD Graf von Metz/GERHARD Graf von Metz] & his wife --- (-[28 Dec 1021/23]).
xi) ERMENTRUDE (-2 May ----). The necrology of Ranshofen records the death "VI Non May" of "Theodericus Metensis eps frater Chunigundis imperatricis et Ermindrud abba soror eius"[79]. Abbess. No record has yet been found which identifies the abbey of which Ermentrude was abbess. | LUXEMBOURG Siegfried (I58593)
|
| 8733 |
SIGEFROID (or SIEGFRIED, SIGEBERT), Count in Moselgau, 982, born say 915-920. He married probably about 955 HEDWID ______, (OF NORDGAU). They had six sons, Henri (or Heinrich) [Count in Bidgau; Count of Ardennes; Duke of Bavaria], Sigefroid (or Siegfried), Frederic (or Friedrich) [Count (in Hessengau?)], Gislbert [Count of Vaudrevange/Wallerfangen (in Moslgau)], Thierry (or Dietrich) [Bishop of Metz], and Adalberon [Archbishop of Treves], and five daughters, Luitgarde (wife of Arnulf, Count of Holland), ______ (wife of Thietmar), Cunegonde (or Kunigund) (wife of Heinrich II, Duke of Bavaria, Emperor), Eve (or Abenza) (wife of Gerard, Count in Alsace), and Ermentrude [Abbess]. His wife, Hedwig, died 13 December, after 993. SIEGFRIED I, Count in Moselgau, was living 26 October 997. He died 27 (or 28) October, probably c.998. They were buried at St. Maximin, Trier.
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#_Toc359915623
Parents
UNKNOWN[2]
Marriage
m. (ante 963) Siegfried (Siegfroy), Count of Moselgau and Ardennes. Issue: 11[3][4]
Sources
Royal Ancestry, Vol. V, page 503
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac.
Lewis, M. (n.d.). "Hedwige d'Alsace-Nordgau."[5]
Wikipedia: Hedwig of Nordgau;[1] Wikipedia: Sigfried, Count of the Ardennes
↑ Wikipedia's article on Hedwig of Norgau is scant.[1] Cawley (2006), does a better job of transcribing info. | NORDGAU Hedwig (I58592)
|
| 8734 |
Sigehelm was Ealdorman of Kent from 898 to 902.[1] His family origins are uncertain.
He was the father of Eadgifu, the third wife of King Eadweard the Elder.[2][3] A charter of 959, relating to land at Cooling in Kent, records him as Eadgifu's father. He held lands at Meopham, Cooling and Lenham, all in Kent.[3]
Sigehelm died fighting the Danes in the Battle of the Holme on the 13th of December 902. [4]
Research Notes
WikiTree has previously shown Sigehelm as son of Sigered, an unsourced profile for Sigered, King of Kent. A Sigered jointly ruled Kent in the 8th century, and dates mean he cannot be the father of Sigehelm.
Sources
↑ Donald Henson. A Guide to late Anglo-Saxon England, Anglo-Saxon Books, §998, p. 124
↑ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry by Sean Miller for 'Edward [called Edward the Elder]', print and online 2004, revised online 2011
↑ 3.0 3.1 Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. Entry for EADGIFU (-26 Aug 968)
↑ Michael Swanton (translator and editor). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, new edition, Phoenix Press, 2000, pp.93-93: years given in the manuscripts of the Chronicles for this period are commonly a bit inaccurate | KENT Sigehelm (I59220)
|
| 8735 |
Sighard appears in older volumes of Royal genealogy (see Sources list for examples), as King of the Saxons from 633 to his death in 691. He is the son of Berthold, King of the Saxons from 586-633, and the father of Dieteric, King of the Saxons from 691-740.
However none of these books cite any sources and no earlier works, contemporary to the period he is supposed to have lived, confirm his existence. He must be considered as totally legendary.
Research Notes
Legendary Saxon Line of Descent from Witigail to Witikind
George Fisher [1]in 1832 published his Genealogical Companion in which he presented a line of descent of princes and kings in Saxony from Hengist's father Witigail to Witikind the Great, conquered by Charlemagne. While many of these princes exist only in legend, they appear in many popular genealogies and therefore their line of descent is presented here for reference. Birth years are estimated and not part of Fisher's table.
Wihtgils or Witigail, born 380, King of the Saxons, died 434
Hengist, born 425. First king of Kent, died 488.
Audoacer or Hartwaker, born 455, succeeded his father as 15th Prince of the Saxons, died 480.
Hatwigate, born 475,Prince of the Saxons, died 524
Hulderic. born 500, King of the Saxons, died 540
Bodicus, born 525, Prince of the Saxons, died 586
Berthold, born 550, King of the Saxons, died 633.
Sighard, born 630, King of the Saxons, died 691
Dieteric, born 670,, King of the Saxons, died 740, married Dobogesa, daughter of Billung, King of the Vandals
Wernich, born 705, son of Dieteric, King of the Saxons, died 768. Wernich had a brother Ethelbard, also son of Dieteric, also King of the Saxons. Ethelbard had two sons; Albion, was baptized by his cousin Witikund the Great, son of Ethelbard, 785, and Herman was slain by Charlemagne 798,
Witikind the Great, born 755, the last King of the Saxons, conquered by Charlemagne, 785. Consentng to be baptized, the conqueror made him the first Duke of the old Upper Saxony, or on the Weser. He died 807 and was the patriarch of many great families in Europe, amongst whom may be reckoned the present Royal Family of England.
Sources
↑ George Fisher. A Genealogical Companion and Key to the history of England: Consisting of copious genealogical details of the British Sovereigns, Page 25 London: Simkin and Marshall, 1832. Accessed August 3, 2018 jhd
See also:
Anderson, J. (1732). Royal Genealogies: or the genealogical tables of Emperors, Kings and Princes from Adam to these times, London: James Bettenham. pp. 184 & 447. Retrieved from https://books.google.hu/books?id=yrqeY839bMwC
Fisher, G. (1832). A companion and key to the history of England: Consisting of copious genealogical details of the British Sovereigns, London: Simkin and Marshall. Table V. Retrieved from https://books.google.com.au/books?id=H78IAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA24&lpg=PA24&dq=Svarticke&source=bl&ots=LIS029ajep&sig=PEJVi0tbyDiAR9xzifZwE0eDhXI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi5tYvPlIjKAhVDrKYKHf9PDtoQ6AEIoAEwHQ#v=onepage&q=Hulderic&f=false
European Aristocracy
Sighard (Sachsen) von Sachsen was a member of aristocracy in ancient Europe.
Join: Medieval Project | von SACHSEN Sighard (I58000)
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Sigrade was born about 0600. Sigrade de Alsace ... She passed away in 0677. [1]
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Richard Ragland, Thursday, March 6, 2014. Replace this citation if there is another source. | de ALSACE Sigrade (I58846)
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Sigurd Hjort (Helgesson) was a legendary King of Ringerike, Norway. His father was Helge the Sharp and his mother was Aslaug, a daughter of Sigurd the Snake-eyed. [1]
Flóamanna saga
According to Flóamanna saga, king Sigurd Hjort was the son of Áslaug, daughter of Sigurd orm-i-auge, son of Ragnar lodbrok and Áslaug, daughter of Sigurd Fáfnisbane and Brynhild Budlasdatter. His daughter was:
Ragnhild, second wife of Halfdan Svarte, king of Sogn and Opplandene, mother of Harald Hårfagre.
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Halfdan the Black: Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 46
Guðni Jónsson bjó til prentunar: Íslendinga sögur: Flóamanna saga, 1. kap.
See also;
Wikipedia: Sigurd Hart | HELGISSON Sigurd Hjort (I58740)
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Sigurd Orm-i-öga hör till kategorin sagokungar, dvs de har inte historiskt kunnat bevisats. Om Sigurd var verklig bör han ha hört hemma på 800-talet (Sigurd skall ha lett, eller åtminstone deltagit i, ett s.k. vikingatåg mot England under 800-talet) och varit kung i det som i modern tid är Danmark, eventuellt även i områden som numera ligger i Sverige och Norge.
Han är enligt de isländska sagorna omnämnd som son till Ragnar Lodbrok och hans hustru Aslaug/Åslög som historiker också tror är densamma som ibland kallas Kraka/Kråka.
Vad Sigurds hustru hette verkar inte nämnas i sagorna, möjligen skall hon ha varit dotter till den anglosaxiske kungen Ælla av Northumbria. Förmodligen då medtagen som "krigsbyte" då Sigurd och hans bröder hämnades och dödade Kung Ella för att ha dödat deras far Ragnar Lodbroke. Se även Wikipedias artikel om "Stora Hednaarmén"
Sigurd skall haft barnen (Horda-)Knut, Aslaug/Åslög och Tora.
Möjligen blev han dräpt i Frankerriket 887-91.
Biography
Sigurd is said to have been one of the Vikings taking part in what the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle called the "Great Heathen Army" that had formed with the ambition of conquering and occupying the English kingdoms of East Anglia, Northumbria, Mercia, and Wessex.
Name(s)
First name; Sigurd, Sigurðr Byname; Orm-i-Øje or Snogøje (meaning snake-in-eye) Last name; Using patronymics, he would have been Ragnarsson (son of Ragnar).
Birth and Parents
According to the sagas, he is one of the sons of Ragnar Lodbrok . Some mention his mother as Aslaug/Åslög and some as Kraka, some historians suggest that they are the same person.
He would have been born in the 800's since he is thought to have taken part in the Viking coalition of war lords campaigning to conquer English kingdoms in 865.
Spouse(s) and children
His spouse is not mentioned by name in the sagas it seems. She might have been a daughter of King Ælla of Northumbria whom Sigurd and his brothers are said to have killed, in revenge for the death of their father Ragnar Lodbrok.
He is said to have had at least three known children, (Horda-)Knut, Aslaug/Åslög and Tora.
Death and burial
Nothing specific seems to be known of Sigurds death and burial. It is possible he died in a battle in Francia 887-91.
Research Notes
Date Estimates from the Sagas
Harald Fairhair is considered one of Sigurd's descendants, and several other named descendants were active around his time.
Harald Fairhair himself, who was active 865-930 and supposedly died 83 years old, thus being born about 847, was according to the sagas the son of Ragnhild, daughter of Sigurd Hjort, son of Áslaug, daughter of Sigurd orm-i-øye: 4 generations after Sigurd.
Ketill Flatnev, who left Norway during Harald's rule, wedded his daughter Auðr to Olaf Hviti. Olaf was, according to the sagas, the son of Ingjald, son of Thora, daughter of Sigurd orm-i-øye: 3 generations after Sigurd, with Ketill being 2 generations after Sigurd but still a contemporary of Harald.
Sources
See also;
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%9E%C3%A1ttr_af_Ragnars_sonum
https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardeknud_(Knud_1.)
Note: He seems not to be listed at the Danish part of MedLands | RAGNARSSON Sigurðr Ormr Í Auga (I58744)
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Sigurd Ring, fornvästnordiska Sigurðr hringr, var en mytisk sveakung som står omnämnd i Gesta Danorum, Hervarar Saga och Sögubrot af nokkrum fornkonungum, och ska ha levt under 700-talet, möjligen död cirka 770. Han var enligt sagan son till Randver och en släkting eller frände till danakungen Harald Hildetand, vilken satte honom som lydkonung i Svitjod. Han gjorde uppror och besegrade sin farbror under det kolossala Slaget vid Bråvalla, vilket inträffade i mitten av 700-talet och medförde att Östergötland övergick i svearnas välde och därefter blev han även kung av Danmark.
Biography
Sigurd Ring was a mythical Swedish king who is mentioned in Gesta Danorum, Hervarar Saga and Sögubrot by some ancient kings, and is said to have lived during the 700s, possibly died around 770. He was according to the story the son of Randver and a relative or cousin of the Danish king Harald Hildetand, who appointed him king of sound in Svitjod. He revolted and defeated his uncle during the colossal Battle of Bråvalla, which occurred in the middle of the eighth century and led to Östergötland being overthrown by the Swedes and then he also became king of Denmark.
The name "Sigurd Ring" might be fictional, though famous because of the sagas. Sigifrid was nepos of Godefrid, and Anulo was nepos of the former king Harald. Both were killed in the resulting struggle, but Anulo's party won, and his brothers became kings. It is unclear whether the two factions in this civil war (i.e., the relatives of Harald vs. the relatives of Godefrid) were two different families or two different branches of the same family.
This battle was the ultimate source of the famous (but possibly fictional) "Battle of Bravalla" which is a part of the pseudohistory given by the sagas. The two claimants, Sigifired (i.e., Sigurd) and Anulo (confused with the Latin word for ring, annulus, and translated as "Ring"), were possibly combined into the mythical "Sigurd Ring", who was made the victor (and survivor) of the battle, and Harald was transformed into the loser.
Name(s)
Sigurd Ring
Sigurðr Hringr
Parents
According to the saga Hversu Noregr byggdist, Sigurd Ring is the son of Randver. Mother not mentioned.
Spouse(s) and children
In Heimskringla, Sigurd Hring is identified by Snorri as father of Ragnar Lodbrok. [1]
Death and burial
Different sagas gives different versions. One said he lived until old age, one says he died in the battle at Bråvalla.
Research Notes
Alfhild Sigurdsdottir has been detached as his daughter, since she was born 100 years before him.
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Harald Fairhair's Saga: Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 59
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda I-IV: Hversu Noregr byggðist
See also;
Källa: https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigurd_Ring
Wikipedia: Sigurd Hring
Konigfeldt--Gen. Hist. Tab. Denm 2, p. 5
Attarskra Bjarni Thorsteinsson, Ice FH 1, p. 418
Keiser und Koenig Hist., Gen. Hist. 25, pt. 1, p. 126-27
The Viking Age, Gen. Hist. 19, v. 2, p. 433-41
Title: Lineage of the Royal Princes of England, Author: Ken Stelmaszek, Publication: Nov 2000,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigurd_Ring
The viking age: the early history, manners, and customs of the ancestors of the English speaking nations. Page 434 | RANDVERSSON Sigurd Ring (I58762)
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Silence Brown Hamilton probably died before 11 Jan. 1774 in Brookfield when her husband's estate was partitioned. | Brown Silence (I50711)
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Simon Chapacou[1][2][3]
On ne connait ni le lieu de naissance de Simon Chapacou, ni le nom de ses parents. Les recensements 1666 et 1667 lui donnent 40 ans, donc il serait né vers 1626-7. Il serait du diocèse de Saintes en Saintonge, 4 de ses enfants sont baptisés à Néré[3], au carrefour des provinces de Saintonge, Poitou et d'Angoumois.
Mariage
Simon Chapacou épouse Marie Vincente Pacaud à une date et lieu inconnus, on estime la date vers 1651 et le lieu probable comme Néré, en Saintonge[3]
Enfants connus / Known children
Jean Chapacout, bapt 2 Feb 1652 Néré[3](décédé en France en bas âge, n'est pas venu au Canada)
Louis Chapacout, bapt 23 Nov 1653 Néré (parrain Louys Pascaud)[4]; married Marie Madeleine Poutré 24 Nov 1681 Sorel
Jacques Chapacout, bapt 27 feb 1656 Néré[3] (décédé en France en bas âge, n'est pas venu au Canada)
Marie Chapacout, bapt 29 Dec 1658 Néré[5]; married René Maillot 1671
Laurent Chapacou, b & bapt 9 Feb 1665 Québec (ND); buried 13 Feb 1665 Québec (ND) @ 5 days
Marie Agathe Chapacou, b 7 Feb 1666 bapt 8th Québec (ND); buried 28 Sept 1687 Montréal (ND)
Angélique Chapacou, b 22 Mar 1668, bapt. 24 Québec (ND); married André Bouteillier, then remarried to André Lamarre dit St-André
Jean Joseph Chapacoup, b 16 Apr 1670, bapt 18 Notre-Dame-de-Foy (recorded in Québec ND); married Marie Poutré 1688
Drapeau identifiant les profils du Canada, Nouvelle-France
Simon Chapacou a vécu
au Canada, Nouvelle-France.
Il vient s'établir à Sillery en 1663 avec son épouse et deux enfants. L'aîné Louis est confirmé à Québec le 23 mars 1664. Quatre autres enfants naîtront au pays.
Il vit à la Côte Saint-Michel de Sillery lors des recensements de 1666 et 1667 et possède huit arpents de terre en valeur. Il ne sait ni lire ni écrire et en plus est sourd et muet: ces deux facteurs l'empêchent de réaliser des transactions légales. C'est son épouse Marie-Vincente Pacaud, qui s'occupe de toutes les affaires de la famille. Le 11 février 1675 avec l'assentiment de son époux, elle vend à Louis Lavergne leur habitation de deux arpents de terre de front par quarante arpents de profondeur à la Côte Saint-Michel de Sillery, pour la somme de 350 livres. Il va vivre à Berthier avec son fils Louis qui y a obtenu une concession. Il s'y trouve en 1685 mais c'est à Longueuil qu'il décède le 3 juin 1690 . [6]
Recensement 1666 Census: SAINT-JEAN, SAINT-FRANÇOIS ET SAINT-MICHEL
Simon Chapacou 40 habittant; Marie pascade 42 sa femme; Louis Chapacou 12 fils Marie Chapacou 8 Fille[7]
Recensement 1667 Census: CÔTES DE SAINTE-GENEVIÈVE, SAINT-FRANÇOIS ET SAINT-MICHEL
Simon (Jean) Chappacou, 40 ; Marie Pacaudé (Vincente Pacaud), sa femme, 40 ; Louis, 13 ; Marie, 8 ; Marie-Agathe, 20 mois ; 8 arpents en valeur.[7]
Vente de Simon Chapacou et Vincenne Pacaud, son épouse, à Louis Lavergne (11 février 1675). Vol III pg 128 Notaire Romain Becquet[8]
Introuvable sur le recensement 1681. Son fils Louis est dans la seigneurie de Villemur, seul. Sa fille Marie Agathe est en service à Beauport.[9]
Décès
Simon Chapacou décède subitement le 3 juin 1690 à Longueuil, et est inhumé le 4 dans l'église de Longueuil (enregistré à Boucherville), présent est André Bouteillier, son gendre, habitant de Longueuil. Possiblement que Simon résidait chez lui. L'acte donne environ 70 ans.[10][11]
Procédures criminelles / Criminal proceedings
Procédures criminelles contre Simon Raymond dit Deslauriers, François Huquerre dit La Réjouissance (Laréjouissance), Simon Chapacou, et sa femme Marie Pacaud, pour vol et évasion, recel . - 7 mars 1675 - 4 juillet 1675
Portée et contenu: Ce dossier en matières criminelles provient de la Prévôté de Québec et contient les interrogatoires ou les dépositions des personnes suivantes : Simon Raymond dit Deslauriers, de la paroisse de Saint-Jean, pays de Bourgogne, âgé de 26 ans, menuisier et est venu en ce pays comme soldat de la Compagnie de La Durantaye; Jacques Turet dit le Parisien, 32 ans, de la paroisse de Saint-Eustache de Paris, cordonnier; François Huquerre dit La Réjouissance, natif d'Orléans, paroisse de Saint-Sulpice, 27 ans, potier d'étain; Jean Dubosq; Simon Chapacou; Mathurin Tessier; Henriette Cartois, veuve de Michel Audebout (Godebout), habitant de La Durantaye; André Morin, habitant de Saint-Joseph; Adrien Michelon, cordonnier; Marie Pacaud, femme de Simon Chapacou. Ce dossier comprend les conclusions du procureur; une déclaration; des interrogatoires; des confrontations; un canevas d'interrogatoire; le récolement; un procès-verbal d'emprisonnement[12] ..
Jugement condamnant à mort Simon Raymond dit Deslauriers, pour vol de nuit commis à l'Hôtel-Dieu et condamnant François Huguerre dit La Réjouissance (Laréjouissance) comme complice et receleur, à être battu de verges, Marie Pacaud, femme de Simon Chapacou pour avoir participé au vol et aussi pour maquerellage (prostitution) a être battue de verge, Jacques Turet, Adrien Michelon et Pierre Conille aussi receleurs ou acheteurs d'objets volés, condamnés à 20 livres d'amende . - 22 août 1675
Portée et contenu: Transcription du texte avec orthographe modernisée : «Du vingt-deuxième desdits mois et an du matin. Le Conseil assemblé où présidait Monsieur de Tilly, et où étaient Messieurs Damours, Dupont, Depeiras et de Vitré conseillers Bazire agent de la compagnie des Indes Occidentales, et de la Martinière juge de Beauport appelés en supplément de juges. Vu par la Cour le procès criminel fait par le lieutenant général de cette ville à la requête du substitut du procureur général du Roi demandeur contre Simon RAYMOND dit DESLAURIERS, François HUGUERRE dit La Réjouissance, Simon CHAPACOU et Marie PACAULT sa femme défendeurs accusés prisonniers en la conciergerie de cette ville, sentence rendue audit procès le six juillet dernier, par laquelle ledit Deslauriers aurait été déclaré dûment atteint et convaincu d'avoir fait nuitamment et avec rupture plusieurs vols, ensemble d'avoir faussement accusé de ses vols ledit La Réjouissance; et ledit La Réjouissance d'avoir pris dudit Deslauriers des choses qui n'étaient pas à son usage et d'en avoir disposé; et ladite Pacault d'avoir acheté des couvertes sans avoir su d'où elles venaient, et spécialement d'avoir fait enlever du grain par son mari en la grange de François Hurault, pour réparation de quoi auraient été condamnés, savoir ledit Deslauriers d'être enlevé desdites prisons par l'exécuteur de la haute justice et conduit en la grande place de la basse-ville pour y être pendu et étranglé à une potence qui y serait dressée à cet effet; et lesdits la Réjouissance et Marie Pacault d'assister au pied de la potence pendant l'exécution, et à rendre et restituer ou payer à qui il appartient ce qu'ils ont eu dudit Deslauriers; et encore ledit La Réjouissance à servir par force LeMaistre qui lui sera indiqué pendant trois années consécutives, et en chacun vingt livres d'amende, et solidairement aux dépens; le surplus des biens dudit Deslauriers acquis et confisqués à la compagnie royal des Indes Occidentales, la Croix et médaille d'or mentionnées au procès remises en les mains de Jean Marnay commis au greffe pour être rendues à Monsieur le procureur général; Jacques Turet et Adrien Michelon aussi condamnés, ainsi que les autres mentionnés au procès rendre et restituer ce qu'ils ont pris et acheté dudit Deslauriers, si les choses n'ont été rendues, avec défenses audit La Réjouissance et à ladite Marie Pacault de récidiver peine de la hart; et auxdits Turet et Michelon à peine de punition telle que de raison. à la prononciation de laquelle sentence ledit Simon Raymond s'en serait porté appelant, comme aussi ledit substitut aurait par acte du huit dudit mois étant au bas d'icelle, déclaré qu'il en est appelant a minima en ce qui touche lesdits Huguerre, Simon Chapacou et sa femme, arrêt de cette Cour dudit jour huit juillet par lequel il est ordonné que lesdits accusés seraient répétés en leurs interrogatoires, et commis à ces fins le sieur Dupont conseiller pour à son rapport être fait droit sur lesdites appellations, répétition d'interrogatoire dudit Deslauriers des dix dudit mois et sixième du présent, autre répétition d'interrogatoire faite par ledit sieur commissaire audit Huguerre les dix et onze juillet, six et huit du présent mois, autre répétition d'interrogatoire faite à ladite Pacault les onze dudit mois de juillet, sept et huitième dudit présent mois, répétition de témoins des treize et quatorze dudit mois de juillet, interrogatoire audit Jacques Turet des trente juillet et sixième de ce mois, autre interrogatoire ait à Geneviève Laurence femme dudit Michelon du dernier juillet. Récolement des témoins du quatre du présent mois, confrontation d'iceux dudit jour audit Huguerre, interrogatoire de Pierre Conil dudit jour et du septième en suivant, autre interrogatoire fait audit Michelon le sixième du même mois, interrogatoire fait à Nicolas d'hery du septième de ce mois, confrontation dudit Deslauriers auxdits Michelon, sa femme, Turet, Conil et Marie Pacault dudit jour sixième du présent mois, autre confrontation desdits Huguerre et Deslauriers du huitième, autre confrontation desdits Huguerre et Marie Pacault dudit jour et du dixième en suivant, interrogatoire fait à Nicolas la Chaise du seizième. Autre interrogatoire à Jean frouin du dix-huitième, confrontation dudit LaChaise à ladite Pacault du lendemain, interrogatoire fait audit Deslauriers par le sieur de Tilly conseiller audit Conseil au lieu dudit sieur Dupont alors indisposé le vingtième dudit présent mois. Confrontation faite par ledit sieur de Tilly dudit Deslaurier audit Huguerre du même jour. Conclusions dudit procureur général du jourd'hier, tout considéré. Le Conseil faisant droit sur lesdites appellations, a cassé et annulé ladite sentence et procédures sur lesquelles elle est intervenue pour les défauts et nullités qui se trouvent en partie d'icelles, et en ce faisant déclare lesdits Simon Raymond dit Deslauriers, François Huguerre dit La Réjouissance, Marie Pacault, Jacques Turet, Pierre Conil et Adrien Michelon et sa femme dûment atteints et convaincus, savoir ledit Deslauriers des vols mentionnés au procès, du bris des prisons, de ses fers et d'évasion d'icelle, ledit Huguerre de complicité, recelé et connivence, et d'avoir profité desdits vols, ladite Chapacou d'avoir aussi participé et recelé partie desdits vols, et encore de Maquerellage. lesdits Turet et Conil d'avoir pareillement participé et recelé en quelque façon partie desdits vols, et lesdits Michelon et sa femme d'avoir acheté dudit Deslauriers sans s'informer d'où procédaient les choses à eux par lui vendues, et pour réparation condamne ledit Deslauriers d'être enlevé des prisons par l'exécuteur de la haute justice et conduit au-devant de la porte de l'église de l'Hôtel-Dieu de cette ville, nu en chemise, la corde au col, et étant à genoux tenants en main une torche ardente, demander pardon à Dieu au Roi et à la justice pour être entré dans la clôture des religieuses dudit Hôtel-Dieu et les avoir volées dans leur maison, et en outre à être pendu et étranglé à une potence qui sera à cet effet dressé en la place publique de la basse-ville. Condamne aussi ledit Huguerre d'assister la corde au col au pied de ladite potence pendant ladite exécution; ce fait à être battu de dix coups de verges a chacun des carrefours ordinaires de cette ville, et à servir par force pendant trois ans LeMaistre qui lui sera indiqué; Simon Raymond condamné à mort, François Huguerre d'être châtié et servir par force, et Marie Pacault femme de Simon Chapacou, battue de verge comme Maquerelle. Et encore lesdits Deslauriers et Huguerre en chacun soixante livres d'amende solidairement. Condamne aussi ladite Pacault à être pareillement battue de dix coups de verges a chacun desdits carrefours, ayant un billet au front auquel sera écrit, Maquerelle, et en vingt livres aussi d'amende. Condamne aussi lesdits Turet et Conil en chacun vingt livres, et lesdits Michelon et sa femme en dix livres, le tout d'amende envers le Roi; et encore lesdits Huguerre, Marie Pacault, Turet, Conil, Michelon et sa femme ainsi que ceux qui se trouvent avoir eu quelque chose desdits vols, à restituer ou payer ce qu'ils en ont eu, et tous aux dépens, savoir lesdits Deslauriers et Huguerre solidairement en ce qui les regarde, et ladite Pacault, et lesdits Turet, Conil, Michelon et sa femme, chacun en ce qui les regarde. Le tout suivant la taxe qui en sera faite par ledit sieur commissaire. Défenses à eux de récidiver à l'avenir sous telle peine que de raison; et à l'égard dudit Chapacou renvoyé absous. DAMOURS Prononcé auxdits Deslauriers la Réjouissance, Marie Pacault, Jacques Turet, Pierre Conil, et Adrien Michelon et sa femme. Lequel Deslauriers aurait dit qu'il avait quelque chose à déclarer avant qu'il fût fait lecture dudit arrêt; et lui ayant demandé ce qu'il avait à dire ; a dit que ce qu'il a déclaré en dernier lieu contre ledit La Réjouissance n'est pas véritable. a déclaré ledit Deslauriers avoir volé onze livres à la veuve Hamel peu de jours avant le décès de son mari, et cela en sols marqués et une pièce de vingt sols qu'il avait mis un morceau de lard au coffre de La Réjouissance, lequel il avait pris au-dessus d'un baril de lard chez Hubert Simon.»[13]
Biography
Flag of France
Simon Chapacou migrated from France to New France.
Flag of New France
Birth
Date: ABT 1626
Place: Saintonge (now in Charente-Maritime), France
Marriage
: Husband: Simon Chapacou
Wife: Marie Vincente Pacaud
Child: Marie Chapacou
Marriage:
Date: Abt 1651
Place: Néré, Saintonge
Death
Date: 3 JUN 1690 (sudden death)
Place: Longueuil,
Burial : Date: 4 JUN 1690
Place: Longueuil church (recorded in Boucherville).[10][11]
Notes
Fichier origine
CHAPACOU, Simon 370016
Date de naissance: Vers 1626
Lieu d'origine: Saintes (Charente-Maritime) 17415
Parents: ... et ...
Première mention au pays: 1663
Occupation à l'arrivée: Migrant arrivé avec son épouse et deux enfants
Date de mariage: 00-00-1651
Lieu du mariage: Néré (St-Pierre)
Conjointe: Marie-Vincente Pacaud
Décès ou inhumation: Longueuil, 03-06-1690
Remarques: Il fut inhumé dans l'église de Longueuil. Quatre enfants sont baptisés à Néré (St-Pierre) : Jean, 02-02-1652 ; Louis (pionnier), 23-11-1653 ; Jacques, 27-02-1656 et Marie (pionnière), 29-12-1658. Selon deux actes notariés en Nouvelle-France, Simon-Jean Chapacou «est un homme muet, incapable de stipuler et faire aucun acte de justice»[14][3]
Sources
↑ PRDH: Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (free): Pionnier: 14084 Simon CHAPACOU Statut : Immigrant Naissance : Vers 1626 ev. saintes, saintonge (charente-maritime)
↑ Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec des origines à 1730, René Jetté, avec la collaboration du PRDH, 1983, Presses de l'Université de Montréal, A-J, PDF pg 222
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Fichier origine 370016 Simon Chapacou 2014 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies
↑ Baptême Louis Chapacout, image Fichier, Ad-17
↑ Baptême Marie Chapacout, image Fichier, Ad-17
↑ Dictionnaire Biographique des Ancêtres québécois (1608-1700) T. 1, p. 379, Langlois, Michel
↑ 7.0 7.1 Wikisource: Recensements 1666-1667 Censuses selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 4, chap. 4
↑ BAnQ Notarial acts index Inventaire des greffes des notaires du régime français, par Pierre Georges Roy et Antoine Roy; 27 Vol + index 1-8
↑ Wikisource Recensement 1681 Census selon Benjamin Sulte Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 5, chap. 4
↑ 10.0 10.1 Sépulture-Funeral image Simon Chapacou Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)
↑ 11.0 11.1 PRDH: Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (membership): Acte: 4179 sépulture
↑ BAnQ: 7 mars 1675 - 4 juillet 1675 Cote : TL5,D117 Collection Pièces judiciaires et notariales - Archives nationales à Québec Id 387023
↑ BANQ recel 22 août 1675 Cote : TP1,S28,P1163 Fonds Conseil souverain - Archives nationales à Québec Id 401252
↑ Identification: DGFQ, p. 222 (Jetté)
PRDH: Le Programme de recherche en démographie historique (membership): Individu: 14084 Simon Chapacou (Programme de Recherche en Démographie Historique) Université de Montréal | CHAPACOU Simon (I60333)
|
| 8742 |
Simon was born in 1120. Simon Von Saarbrucken ... He passed away in 1182.
Birth
Birth:
Date: ABT 1120
Place: Saarbrucken, Rheinland
Death
Death:
Date: 1182-06-23
Place: Saarbrücken, Rheinland, Preußen,
Sources
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). VI 152 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00105524&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LOTHARINGIAN%20(UPPER)%20NOBILITY.htm#SimonISaarbruckendied1183A
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | SAARBRÜCKEN Simon (I59625)
|
| 8743 |
Simon was the son of Pierre Marcel. He was married to Isabelle Barbou (daughter of Bertaut Barbou). He passed away before 1348. [1]
Sources
↑ Société de l'histoire de Paris et de l'Ile-de-France. Mémoires de la Société de l'histoire de Paris et de l'Ile-de-France. Tome XXX. p199-203. Paris, France: H. Champion, 1903. | MARCEL Simon (I57829)
|
| 8744 |
Sista person som begravdes i Nikolai kyrkan | ERLING Christina (I50168)
|
| 8745 |
Sister to Timothy Hatherly, who came to Plymouth on the ship "Ann" in 1623. | HATHERLY Elgin (I37898)
|
| 8746 |
Siward Digera, eller Sigurd Digre eller Sigurd Danske (død 1055), var jarl av Deira 1032–1043, og jarl av Northumbria 1042–1055. För mer info se https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siward_av_Northumbria
Biography
Siward, Earl of Northumbria[1][2]
b. ante 1015 Denmark[3]
d. 26 Mar 1055[4]
bur: St Olaf. Galmanho ( Galmanho Monastery). York[5][6]
Titles
After 1041 - 1055: Earl of Northumbria[5]
Disputed Parents and Siblings
Siward's parents are unknown.
Bjorn is his father passed down through folklore.
p. (unknown / unproven folklore) Bjorn Bearsson[7]
sister: (disputed) Sybill/Suthen m. Duncan I of Scotland
Attempting to deduce some trace of facts in the folklore of Siward's ancestry, historian Timothy Bolton [5] suggests that Siward's father Bjorn may be a cousin of Ulf who married the Danish Queen Astrid. Essentially, however, Siward's parents are unknown. He has previously been shown as the son of Æstriðr Sveinsdóttir and an Uswulf Ealdorman. Based on the absence of any factual basis for this connection, the linkage has been removed.Day-1904 16:02, 16 June 2017 (EDT)
Marriage and Issue
m. Godifu
(unproven) Osbeorne / Osbeorn Bulax (d.27 Jul 1054)[6][5][8]
m. Aelfled. Issue:[1][9][10]
(unproven) Osbeorn Bulax (d.27 Jul 1054)[6][5][8]
Waltheof of Bamburg[1]
(disputed) Sybill/Suthen m. Duncan I of Scotland
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Simeon of Durham
↑ Old English: Sigeweard; Siward Biornsson (Medieval Lands); Alias: Grossus (the Stout)[citation needed]; Wikipedia: Siward, Earl of Northumbria
↑ may have arrived in England with the invasion of Knud of Denmark in 1015 (Medieval Lands).
↑ fmg.ac
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Wikipedia: Siward, Earl of Northumbria
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Florence of Worcester
↑ Vita et passio Waldevi comitis. (Vita Waldevi). See Wikipedia and Medieval Lands.
↑ 8.0 8.1 Wikipedia: Osbeorn Bulax. eldest son "Osbjorn" is normally said to be Aeffled's son, but he could be Godifu's instead.
↑ Roger of Hoveden
↑ m. ABT 1033[citation needed]
See also:
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Chronicle of John of Worcester
"England, AngloSaxon nobility: Northumbria." Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac.
William of Malmesbury
Henry of Huntingdon
Orderic Vitalis
Stevenson, J., ed. (1855). "Simeon's account of the Siege of Durham." The historical works of Simeon of Durham ... (Vol.3, Part 2, pp765). Google eBook.
Symeon of Durham
Wikipedia: Siward, Earl of Northumbria | NORTHUMBRIA Siward Bjornsson (I59201)
|
| 8747 |
six children | VALLEY Albert (I9802)
|
| 8748 |
Sixth Century Armenian ruler under the Sassinides Empire
Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushegh_II_Mamikonian
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mou%C5%A1e%C5%82_II_Mamikonian
Geni http://www.geni.com/people/Mousegh-I-Mamikonian-Marzpan-of-Armenia/6000000008630636069?through=3081292
Jackson Ancestors http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jackson%5Fanc&id=I6000000008630636069
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s036/f985039.htm
See also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mamikonian | MAMIKONIAN Mushegh (I57923)
|
| 8749 |
Skáldskaparmál
According to Skáldskaparmál, Haraldr inn granrauði was the father of the mother of Hálfdan svarti, and was a descendant of Hildir Hálfdansson.
Ynglingsaga
According to Ynglinga Saga, Harald Redbeard was the king of Agder. Gudrød Halfdansson the Hunter sought Harald's daughter Ása in marriage, but Harald refused. Gudrød responded by attacking Harald's home with a great force. King Harald and his son Gyrd were killed, and Gudrød abducted Åsa and took her to wife.
Ættartala frá Höð
According to Ættartala frá Höð in Hversu Noregr byggðist and Flateyjarbók, Harald Grenske was the son of Herbrand, son of Vígbrand, son of Hildibrand, son of Hildir, son of Halfdan the old (Flateyjarbók also names Hildir the fifth son of Dag, son of Halfdan the old). His descendants were:
Åse den storråde, mother of
Halvdan Svarte, father of
Harald Hårfagre
Legend
Haraldr hinn granrauði (Modern Norwegian: Harald Granraude) was a king of the district Agder, Norway, and lived in the 9th century. He was married to Gunnhild Ragnvaldsdottir, daughter of Ragnvald Sigurdsson, Lord of Huseby on Lista. He was father to Åsa Haraldsdottir and Gyrd Haraldsson, and great-grandfather of Haraldr Hárfagri, the first king of Norway.
When the king of Vestfold, Gudrød the Hunter, sent men to propose to Harald's daughter Åsa, Harald answered "No". This made Gudrød angry and he sailed with his ships the king's farm on Tromøy. He arrived at night and attacked Harald's farm in a surprise attack. When Harald saw an army was coming he retaliated with all his men. It was a hard battle, and Harald lost. He and his son, Gyrd, were killed. [1] King Gudrød looted Harald's treasure, and took and married Åsa.
A local legend says that Harald hid in an underground tunnel with his daughter Åsa during the attack, but was found and beheaded.
Research Notes
Gunnhild Ragnvaldsdottir, and her father Ragnvald Sigurdsson are not mentioned in Ynglinga Saga, Skáldskaparmál, or Ættartala frá Höð.
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglingasaga. Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 40
Edda Snorra Sturlusonar: Skáldskaparmál
Snorra Sturlusonar. Heimskringla: Ynglinga Saga, N. Linder og H. A. Haggson, 1869-1872.
Hversu Noregr byggðist: Ættartala frá Höð, accessed 4 Jun 2024
Flateyjarbók, Bind I, Reykjavík 1944-1945: Ættartölur, accessed 6 Jun 2024
See also;
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harald_Granraude
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harald_Granraude
[S713] #11577 Ættartolurbækur Jóns Espólíns Sysslumanns (1980-), Espólín, Jón, (Reykjavík: Samskipti, 1980-), FHL book 949.12 D2e v. 6; FHL microfilms 73,257-73., p. 42, FHL microfilm 73257. | HERBRANDSSON Harald Granraude (I58806)
|
| 8750 |
Skáldskaparmál
Hildibrand (Hildibrandr), father of Vígbrand (Vígbrandr), father of Hildir and Herbrand (Herbrandr). Herbrand was father of Harald Red-beard, father of Ása who was the mother of Halfdan the Black, the father of Harald Fairhair. [1]
Ynglingasaga
Åsa Haraldsdottir of Agder (died ca. 834?) was a semi-legendary Norwegian Viking age Queen regnant of the petty kingdom Agder and mother of Halfdan the Black and grandmother of Harald Fairhair, according to the sagas of the Yngling clan. Åsa was the daughter of King Harald Granraude of Agder and a reputed beauty. King Gudrød the Hunter of Borre in Vestfold proposed marriage to her after the death of his first wife, but her father refused the marriage. Gudrød Veidekonge then killed her father and her brother, abducted her and married her. One year later, she became the mother of Halfdan the Black. One year after this, Åsa took her revenge and had her servant kill her husband. She left the kingdom of Borre to her stepson Olaf Geirstad-Alf and took her own son with her to the kingdom of Agder, her birth country, where she took power. Åsa ruled Agder for twenty years, and after this she left the throne to her son. He also demanded half of his father's kingdom from his halfbrother. [2]
It has been suggested that she might be the woman who was buried in the Oseberg mound, but as her existence is entirely uncertain, this is purely speculative.
and https://nbl.snl.no/%C3%85sa_Haraldsdatter
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Halfdan the Old
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglingasaga. Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 41/42
Krag, Claus: Åsa Haraldsdatter i Norsk biografisk leksikon på snl.no. Hentet 15. juni 2025 fra https://nbl.snl.no/%C3%85sa_Haraldsdatter
Medieval Lands: Norway Improbable Lineage
See also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%85sa_Haraldsdottir_of_Agder | HARALDSDOTTIR Åsa (I58805)
|
| 8751 |
Skyline Memorial | SMITH Inez Elra (I36018)
|
| 8752 |
slain by father in tilting match | de MONTACUTE William (I2303)
|
| 8753 |
slain by Malcolm III | MacBeth, (I122)
|
| 8754 |
Slavibor was the father of Ludmila of Bohemia. His birth and death dates are estimates based on his daughter's life. He is mentioned in the Legenda Christiani,[1] and Cosmae Pragensis Chronica Boemorum,[2] Both works place him at Pšov, a burgwall[3] at the core of the later Mělník. The Prologue Legend[4] calls him a Sorbian prince.
Nothing further is known about Slavibor.
Sources
↑ Legenda Christiani. Vita et passio sancti Wenceslai et sancte Ludmile ave eius. Centrum medievistických studií Praha
↑ Chronica Boemorum, Monumenta Germaniae Historica
↑ Slawischer Burgwall
↑ Prologue Legend, Latin translation by A. Brückner in: Sborník staroslovanských literárních památek o Sv. Václavu a Sv. Lidmile, Prag 1929 | PŠOV Slavibor (I58082)
|
| 8755 |
Slavic princess Emnilda of Lusatia (Duchess consort of Poland), otherwise known as Heminilde, was born in 0968.
Emnilda was a Slavic noblewoman and Duchess of Poland from 992 by her marriage with the Piast ruler Bolesław I the Brave.
Emnilda Heminilde VonMeisson passed away in 1017.
Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/POLAND.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emnilda | von LUSTATIA Emenilda (I58069)
|
| 8756 |
small stone "Willie" son of W. and H.D. Pulsifer | PULSIFER Willie (I8069)
|
| 8757 |
Smbat VIII Bagratuni or Smbat the Confessor (Armenian: Սմբատ Խոստովանող, romanized: Smbat Khostovanogh) was an Armenian noble of the Bagratid (Bagratuni) family and one of the most important princes (nakharar) of Armenia in the mid-9th century as the commander-in-chief (sparapet) of Armenia. Taken prisoner to Samarra, he was pressured to convert to Islam but refused and died there. He was the father of Ashot I of Armenia, founder of the Bagratid Kingdom of Armenia.
Sources
Middle & Far Eastern Families, Armenia, Bagratid Dynasty, Maurice G. Boddy.
Our Royal Titled Noble & Commoner Ancestors, Marlyn Lewis.
Ancient Ancestors, p35, Ronald Wells.
Medieval Lands.
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smbat_VIII_Bagratuni Wikipedia: Smbat VIII Bagratuni.} | BAGRATUNI Smbat (I59448)
|
| 8758 |
Smbat was the son of Ashot III "the Blind". [1] [2]
Smbat married a daughter of Samuel II, Prince of Mamikonian. [1]
Smbat was killed at the battle of Bagrevand on 25 APR 775. [2]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Kings of Armenia (Bagratid).
↑ 2.0 2.1 Wikipedia:Smbat_VII_Bagratuni. | BAGRATID Սմբատ (I57912)
|
| 8759 |
Snaer "Svaer" JOKULSSON King of KVENLAND | of KVENLAND Snaer JOKULSSON King (I23446)
|
| 8760 |
Snorri says Olaf (Treefeller) got a wife Solva or Solveig, a daughter of Halfdan Guldtand. Halfdan was a son of Solve Solvarson, son of Solve the Old. [1][2]
Halfdan Guldtand skall ha haft en dotter, Solveig eller Sölva, som gifte sig med Olof Trätälja och fick sönerna Ingjald och Halvdan Vitben. Enligt Snorre blev Ingjald kung i Värmland, medan Halvdan till slut blev kung i Romerike och Vestfold, och efter Ingjalds död även i Värmland. [3]
Research Notes
His ancestors that are all named Solve are part of the almost certainly constructed part of Ynglinga Saga which has the Swedish Ynglinga line suddenly relocate to Norway. The genealogy is likely constructed to give the Norwegian Ynglinga line a link of descendancy from Solve the Old of Solør.
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. The Ynglinga Saga: Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 38
↑ Wikipedia: Olaf Treefeller
↑ Swedish Wikipedia: Olof Trätälja | SOLVASSON Halfdan (I58721)
|
| 8761 |
Social Security # 368-18-5100 | GORT Ralph (I3473)
|
| 8762 |
Social Security Death Index; 1962-1989; LDS Church CD-ROM dtd Jan 1989 Orange, CA. SSN 390107072 | Sr. Edward Edwin Brustman (I34476)
|
| 8763 |
Social Security Death Index; 1962-1989; LDS Church, CD-ROM Dtd Oct 1990, SSN 391162076; Orange, CA; Also obituary from Find du Lac newspaper. Cause of death was lung cancer. He was buried at Ledgeview Mem pk. | BRUSTMAN Clarence Ervin (I34549)
|
| 8764 |
Social Security Number: 048-02-0142
Issued: Connecticut | DAVISSON Lawrence E. (I36312)
|
| 8765 |
Social Security Number: 083-14-5509
Issued: New York | CHAMPMAN Lester Maxfield (I38333)
|
| 8766 |
Social Security Number: 159-32-4114
Issued: Pennsylvania | MAXWELL Emily Frances (I38755)
|
| 8767 |
Social Security Number: 167-10-1389
Issued: Pennsylvania | MAXSON Carlton Hershel (I38270)
|
| 8768 |
Social Security Number: 169-32-8294
Issued: Pennsylvania | HARSCH Neville Edward (I38963)
|
| 8769 |
Social Security Number: 174-07-8191
Issued: Pennsylvania | MAXWELL Franklin Stanley (I39077)
|
| 8770 |
Social Security Number: 175-50-3626
Issued: Pennsylvania | NUTTER Lucy Maxwell (I38962)
|
| 8771 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I37675)
|
| 8772 |
Social Security Number: 189-10-2565
Issued: Pennsylvania | MAXWELL James Truman (I39078)
|
| 8773 |
Social Security Number: 192-09-3526
Issued: Pennsylvania | HICKMAN David Thomas (I38912)
|
| 8774 |
Social Security Number: 203-22-7316
Issued: Pennsylvania | HILL Miriam (I37719)
|
| 8775 |
Social Security Number: 219-56-8991
Issued: Maryland | MAXWELL Ruth Virginia (I38722)
|
| 8776 |
Social Security Number: 225-28-5834
Issued: Virginia | NUTTER Austin D. (I38299)
|
| 8777 |
Social Security Number: 232-01-4489
Issued: West Virginia | REED Boyd Allen (I37691)
|
| 8778 |
Social Security Number: 232-01-6368
Issued: West Virginia | DAVISSON John Granville (I37297)
|
| 8779 |
Social Security Number: 232-02-9947
Issued: West Virginia | NUTTER Ruth (I37653)
|
| 8780 |
Social Security Number: 232-03-7347
Issued: West Virginia | DAVISSON Earl Lee (I39391)
|
| 8781 |
Social Security Number: 232-05-8366
Issued: West Virginia | LAW Vernon S. (I37561)
|
| 8782 |
Social Security Number: 232-10-7375
Issued: West Virginia | HUFF Dorsey Elden (I37538)
|
| 8783 |
Social Security Number: 232-16-9272
Issued: West Virginia | LAW Arden Lester (I37579)
|
| 8784 |
Social Security Number: 232-24-2430
Issued: West Virginia | MAXWELL John Brent (I38783)
|
| 8785 |
Social Security Number: 232-26-9045
Issued: West Virginia | MAXWELL F. Clifford (I38887)
|
| 8786 |
Social Security Number: 232-28-4618
Issued: West Virginia | LAW Ritchie D. (I37513)
|
| 8787 |
Social Security Number: 232-46-8991
Issued: West Virginia | LAW James David (I37533)
|
| 8788 |
Social Security Number: 232-50-8410
Issued: West Virginia | DAVISSON Gladys Mae (I39401)
|
| 8789 |
Social Security Number: 232-68-8139
Issued: West Virginia | CHAMPMAN Laura Elizabeth (I38316)
|
| 8790 |
Social Security Number: 232-76-7497
Issued: West Virginia | SQUIRES Laura Ethel (I38915)
|
| 8791 |
Social Security Number: 233-16-4937
Issued: West Virginia | BRAKE Philip I. (I37531)
|
| 8792 |
Social Security Number: 233-16-6619
Issued: West Virginia | HAUGHT Ralph Marvel (I38944)
|
| 8793 |
Social Security Number: 233-18-0332
Issued: West Virginia | STINESPRING William Eli (I38947)
|
| 8794 |
Social Security Number: 233-30-6497
Issued: West Virginia | JONES Ruby Fern (I38309)
|
| 8795 |
Social Security Number: 233-48-4973
Issued: West Virginia | MINNIS Mary Jane (I38946)
|
| 8796 |
Social Security Number: 233-62-2553
Issued: West Virginia | TATE Francis I. (I39412)
|
| 8797 |
Social Security Number: 233-72-1700
Issued: West Virginia | NUTTER Frankie Virginia (I38959)
|
| 8798 |
Social Security Number: 233-72-2711
Issued: West Virginia | MAXWELL Ruth Frances (I38784)
|
| 8799 |
Social Security Number: 233-74-0596
Issued: West Virginia | DAVISSON Flora Gladys (I38407)
|
| 8800 |
Social Security Number: 233-96-4626
Issued: West Virginia | BUSH Tracy Ruhana (I37669)
|
|